Alma Mater will get the best seat in the house
I’ve been busy moving my family into a new house this week,
but that’s given me a lot more time to think about the decision to hold
football practices right on South Lawn on Fridays during the season.
This is a significant development for three very important reasons:
1)
It proves the new regime really is listening and
really is different
The request to put some kind of practice or game run-through
right on the main campus was made publicly and privately by people not usually
associated with the financial power base in the football program. Not only did
the athletic department and the football office listen, they made it happen in
year one. For those who kept excusing the previous administrations and coaches
and insisting they were doing all they could to improve the program, this group
has proven them wrong in the bat of an eye.
2)
This makes Columbia #1… in visibility
We can complain about the fact that our football stadium and
training facility is 100 blocks north of campus all we want. But the fact is
that football, and just about all athletics, are out of sight and out of mind
at every Ivy school. Columbia was just the most out of sight and out of mind.
Now with these practices, Columbia will become the most “in your face” football
program in the Ivies in a good way. There’s a tremendous amount of people
walking along Columbia’s campus, especially on Fridays when there are few
classes scheduled for undergrads. A lot of Columbia students these days did not
grow up in the U.S. and they’ve never even seen football. This will bring the
experience to them. Alumni will also come to check out the spectacle,
especially on the Friday before Homecoming. Essentially, this could turn into a nice pep
rally every week.
New Athletic Director Peter Piling came to us from a sports
marketing firm and this guy understands marketing. It’s as simple as that.
3)
It’s one less schlep to worry about
No, the bus ride and time spent up at the Baker complex
really isn’t such a big deal. But one less trip is one less trip, and the
players are going to love the extra time and freedom this gives them. Practicing and eating on campus the day before
a game will give the team an extra shot of physical and emotional energy just
when they’ll need it most.
On the history, I was wrong about this being the first time
since the 1920’s that the team practiced on the main campus. Lou Little’s teams did some infrequent
workouts on South Lawn into the 1950’s. But that was a time when the campus
also had several tennis courts and a track right where Ferris Booth Hall
replaced those facilities and that’s where Lerner Hall now stands. Little’s
successor, Buff Donelli, ended the on campus practices when he took over the
program in 1957.
Bottom line, this is really a major positive development that
should be celebrated and supported as much as we can.
2 comments:
Yea, this new regime is not leaving us with anything to complain about. Perhaps I have outlived my usefulness as a CU Lions football fan.
Jake, J Poppe is tweeting about a huge get,on the defensive side of the ball. Any details?
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