Orientation makes these kids happy!
With new student orientation now officially beginning, it's time to welcome all the new fans who might be reading this blog for the first time.
I'm sorry to say this sad review of what happened last season in the Orientation 2014 edition of the Columbia Spectator is dead-on accurate.
But here's a more complete Columbia Football Orientation for you:
I know probably NONE of the incoming non-athlete freshmen and freshwomen just arriving on campus today came here because of our sports teams, and that’s okay.
But those of you who are sports fans should at least know that Columbia has a football team that is filled with your hard-working fellow students. And the games are exciting and fun to go to.
Here’s my Columbia Football FAQ for incoming frosh, 2014 edition!
Who are You and Why are you such a crazy Columbia fan?
I’m a Columbia grad from the class of 1992. That makes me an ancient 43-year-old to you. And that’s okay, I’m not looking to be cool, young, or your personal buddy. The idea is to make you aware of football and how much fun it is to watch your classmates play.
I even was the color commentator for Columbia's commercial broadcasts of its football games from 2007-2009. I left the booth because my two daughters wanted to sit with me in the stands at the games and who could refuse that?
Now, let's define "crazy fan." Do I go to just about all the games? Do I get happy and depressed based on the team's performance, and then write about it online?... I answer "yes" to all of the above. Do I wear a rainbow wig, paint my bare chest light blue, and beat up opposing team mascots? No, (well there was that incident with the Dartmouth kid who dresses up like a keg back in '89, but the charges were dropped).
Actually I never really realized it until after the fact, but I was pretty much destined to be a Columbia football fan even before I set foot on campus as a freshman in 1988. My grandfather was a close friend and pinochle buddy of Columbia and Chicago Bears great Sid Luckman. Wien Stadium is named after a distant relative of my grandmother's, Lawrence A. Wien. And I'm pretty sure, my mom, who isn't much a sports fan, was dragged to the Ivy League championship-clinching win over Penn at Baker Field in November, 1961 by her then-boyfriend when she was a first-year at Barnard College.
I even was the color commentator for Columbia's commercial broadcasts of its football games from 2007-2009. I left the booth because my two daughters wanted to sit with me in the stands at the games and who could refuse that?
Now, let's define "crazy fan." Do I go to just about all the games? Do I get happy and depressed based on the team's performance, and then write about it online?... I answer "yes" to all of the above. Do I wear a rainbow wig, paint my bare chest light blue, and beat up opposing team mascots? No, (well there was that incident with the Dartmouth kid who dresses up like a keg back in '89, but the charges were dropped).
Actually I never really realized it until after the fact, but I was pretty much destined to be a Columbia football fan even before I set foot on campus as a freshman in 1988. My grandfather was a close friend and pinochle buddy of Columbia and Chicago Bears great Sid Luckman. Wien Stadium is named after a distant relative of my grandmother's, Lawrence A. Wien. And I'm pretty sure, my mom, who isn't much a sports fan, was dragged to the Ivy League championship-clinching win over Penn at Baker Field in November, 1961 by her then-boyfriend when she was a first-year at Barnard College.
Haven't You and This Blog Been Beating Up on the Team and the School for the last Year?
Nope. I've have been highly critical of Head Coach Pete Mangurian and the Athletic Director Dianne Murphy, who hired him. I don't believe either one of them deserves to keep their current jobs.
But that said, no one will be rooting harder for the Lions this season. If the team has a winning season and I am proven COMPLETELY wrong, then I will be HAPPY.
You Columbia fans make me sick. Why do you talk so much even though you haven't won a title in 53 years? You should just be quiet and leave us alone.
Yes, die-hard loyal CU fans tend to dominate Ivy Internet chat boards and the like. But we're usually not boasting; we're just talking about our team and the sport we obviously love. Also, thanks to Logic and Rhetoric classes, (you'll find out about these), we're pretty good at writing.
Fans of super-successful Ivy football teams like Harvard and Penn just aren't battle-tested enough to take things to obsessive levels. We are.
I follow just about all the pro sports and "big-time" college football and basketball too, but those sports have lost a lot in my eyes over the years. The average pro team has more turnover than a second-term White House administration, and many of the BCS football teams are filled with young men who work hard, but can't really be called "college students." Every Ivy football player is a true student-athlete. It's damn nice as a father to take my kids to a game where they can see players who have their priorities straight.
I am sick of sports anchors on ESPN and sports radio getting all high and mighty about college athletes and leagues that are corrupt and then they don't spend even a minute focusing on the players and leagues who do it right. It's hypocritical and cynical and I won't have it.
Anyone who says that the Ivy League "isn't real college football," should be reminded that BCS college football, for the most part, isn't really college.
Okay we get it, you love the team. But why spend so much time writing about it on the Internet, and what are trying to accomplish here?
Writing is what I do anyway. It's the way I make my living and I actually enjoy it. The Internet gives you a built-in audience, however small sometimes, so if you don't hate your writing, why wouldn't you post it on the 'net?
And the point of all this is to create a virtual meeting place for CU fans, players, etc. I wanted to prove that there is a large and vibrant Columbia fan base, it just needed a sounding board. As President Reagan once told his speechwriters in 1981: "The choir needs music."
Okay, so what do I get to see here?
On this blog you will get a definitely pro-Columbia slant. We are fans after all.
But this IS a FAN BLOG, not a BOOSTER blog. If all you want is cheerleading, this is not your place.
There will be fair criticism here. Coaches and the administration will be scrutinized at times and praised at others.
You'll get weekly predictions, (not including Columbia's games), including the betting lines.
You'll get in-depth pre and postgame analyses.
When do you sleep?
I'm a dad of two young girls, so I still don't exactly bank on eight hours of sleep each night. But since I don't kill myself with as much meticulous editing as I should for this site, it doesn't take me too long to get these posts online. Seriously don't worry about me, this is not as time-intensive as it looks.
I'm a dad of two young girls, so I still don't exactly bank on eight hours of sleep each night. But since I don't kill myself with as much meticulous editing as I should for this site, it doesn't take me too long to get these posts online. Seriously don't worry about me, this is not as time-intensive as it looks.
How will the Lions do this season?
I'll have my complete predictions for the Lions and the rest of the Ivies on this blog in about two weeks.
But here's a short preview:
Columbia has some very interesting individual players, especially former Stanford QB Brett Nottingham, who will try again this season after getting injured for the rest of 2013 before the end of the FIRST game.
The best defensive player is a defensive tackle named Niko Padillla, who could get to the NFL.
But CU is very questionable overall on the defensive and offensive lines. And that's where football games are won and lost. Our chances this season to win a game or more than one game seem slim, at least for now.
All my orientation leaders and upperclassmen make snide comments about athletics. What's with that?
If I learned one thing after spending four years with a bunch of kids at Columbia who were obviously smarter and more motivated than I, it was humility. I put on my cap and gown STILL not knowing what I wanted to do with my life, and that made me feel pretty pathetic next to my friends who did know and were also ready to work very hard for it.
I don't idolize athletes, even the student-athletes at Columbia who work much harder than the guys at big football factories.
But I do really admire the fact that a lot of these guys on the football team represent TRUE diversity and the ability to overcome adversity. They are kids coming from parts of the country where most people don't even know about Columbia. Many of them even have... GASP!!!... a different point of view about politics, religion and life in general than most Ivy students, (I kinda thought diversity was supposed to be about more than race, but that fact is lost on a lot of people, and Presidents of the United States).
Okay, I know I'm ranting, but this is just one token shot against against the avalanche of anti-athletics sentiment you're likely to hear from your peers in the coming days. Do me a favor and find out for yourself.
Okay, but it's not like any of these guys are going to the NFL or anything.
Wrong. Every Ivy team typically has at least one player in the NFL. Right now Josh Martin '13 is starting his second season on the KC Chiefs roster. He is a rising star.
Former All-Pro, Marcellus Wiley '97, is now doing NFL coverage on ESPN. Do you think he gets that job without an Ivy degree?
What about the fact that the stadium is so far from campus? I heard about the free shuttle bus, but I might have to take the subway...
Let me give you a little glimpse of your future. Within a year or two of graduation, you're either going to be working at a job that'll keep you cooped up inside for 10-12 hours or day, going to a job that requires you to sit in traffic for two hours each way, or both. So think a bit before you whine about a 15-minute subway ride or a 25-minute free bus trip. When I was an undergrad, I wanted to join the crew team but I balked because of those 6AM practices. Then I graduated and ended up working a graveyard shift in TV that required me to come into work at 2AM every day for seven years. What a dope I was in college!
But I'm here to help. Stay tuned for my guide to Wien Stadium coming up later this month.
For now, just remember that tickets for students are FREE! And for you adult students over the age of 21... there is FREE BEER for God sakes! Get up there!
I'm too busy texting my friends to go to football games.
Stop texting and start living.
Former All-Pro, Marcellus Wiley '97, is now doing NFL coverage on ESPN. Do you think he gets that job without an Ivy degree?
What about the fact that the stadium is so far from campus? I heard about the free shuttle bus, but I might have to take the subway...
Let me give you a little glimpse of your future. Within a year or two of graduation, you're either going to be working at a job that'll keep you cooped up inside for 10-12 hours or day, going to a job that requires you to sit in traffic for two hours each way, or both. So think a bit before you whine about a 15-minute subway ride or a 25-minute free bus trip. When I was an undergrad, I wanted to join the crew team but I balked because of those 6AM practices. Then I graduated and ended up working a graveyard shift in TV that required me to come into work at 2AM every day for seven years. What a dope I was in college!
But I'm here to help. Stay tuned for my guide to Wien Stadium coming up later this month.
For now, just remember that tickets for students are FREE! And for you adult students over the age of 21... there is FREE BEER for God sakes! Get up there!
I'm too busy texting my friends to go to football games.
Stop texting and start living.
6 comments:
Excellent, Jake. This is your best football orientation to date. One tiny quibble. To those who think ivy football isn't real college football, I would add--since we're so smart and knowledgable at Columbia--that the Ivy League and specifically Columbia invented football.
I kinda recall you beating up on Norries Wilson as well. I know much of it was warranted. After what i thought was some promising signs, he allowed his reign to become undone. Much of what Pete walked into depended on him being able to repair all of that carryover baggage. I don't think it is completely fair to judge Pete without factoring Wilson's damage as well.
It's avery tough job at this point so the next guy is going to have work twice as hard if not more.
Excellent piece of work Jake.
Yes, Al, last year was all Jim Garrett's fault. Or maybe Bob Naso. George W. bush?
No, last year was the culmination of:
1. extraordinarily bad game planning
2. the wrong coaching staff for the program with the wrong ideas on utilizing personnel (they can defend themselves any way they like, they still amount to a big fat F)
3. a weak OL being undercoached
4. the defense being pushed beyond its limits due to having to compensate for an inept offense (see 1-3)
etc, etc
point is we already know Pete and staff are the wrong fit but Wilson let the program get away from him. So any coach inheriting that is fighting uphill.
akthough i agree with most of what Al said, the issue is that it has been an uphill battle for all coaches yet they still have to be held accountable regardless of who came before them. after all, this is columbia we are talking about
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