deedsker
All-Conference
^^^^thisSometimes I think we are more loyal to the sellout streak than the actual program.
^^^^thisSometimes I think we are more loyal to the sellout streak than the actual program.
Yeah, but they went five straight years without a winning season, 4 straight without a bowl, and Blake's years were more miserable than anything Callahan produced at Nebraska. Can we honestly say that if NU strung together multiple years of the same putrid magnitude that our fans would act any differently? We saw a taste of that ugliness during the Callahan years, but thankfully it didn't last long enough to send us completely over the edge.If you want a great example of fair weather fans, you have to look no further than Oklahoma. When OU was down in the mid-90's, you couldn't find a person to admit they were OU fans and you couldn't give away OU memorabilia. But as soon as they started winning again, holy sh#t, they're all of a sudden "life long fans" who support the team thru thick and thin.
Read St. Paul Husker's post.I don't think I am because the fans kept coming back too. They showed up that week after getting embarrassed at Wisconsin, they showed up every week during the Callahan era. I don't think leaving a game early or booing is being a fair-weather fan. They still spent their money to be there. I guess it all depends on what you consider a fair weather fan. The problem now is that the fanbase is divided. It will be real hard to mend it with Pelini here, even though I am against firing him at this point.
I do think there is something to his quote. People were booing because they cared. They were upset with the performance or coaching and they felt a need to vocalize it. Do you cheer for Taylor when he throws a bad interception? How about when Abdullah fumbled against UCLA? How is booing much different than sitting there silently? A fair weather fan, to me, is someone who is only a fan when things are going good, and they jump off the bandwagon when we start losing. I don't think anyone stopped caring, they just didn't support the effort on the field. It's no different than when Pelini gets in a players face.Read St. Paul Husker's post.I don't think I am because the fans kept coming back too. They showed up that week after getting embarrassed at Wisconsin, they showed up every week during the Callahan era. I don't think leaving a game early or booing is being a fair-weather fan. They still spent their money to be there. I guess it all depends on what you consider a fair weather fan. The problem now is that the fanbase is divided. It will be real hard to mend it with Pelini here, even though I am against firing him at this point.
How does booing fit your definition of a fair-weather fan?
Really!??!? I don't think there is any farther this conversation can go with logic like that.How is booing much different than sitting there silently?
Not quit forever. But if they left, they obviously didn't care any more that night.A fair weather fan, to me, is someone who is only a fan when things are going good, and they jump off the bandwagon when we start losing. I don't think anyone stopped caring, they just didn't support the effort on the field. It's no different than when Pelini gets in a players face.
For the record, I don't boo and I have never left a game early, but would it have made a difference in those years if the fans stayed the whole game? You leave when the game is over, and many times the game was over at half time. But no matter what happened the game before, we still filled the stadium the next game and cheered the players as they came out fo the tunnel and the place stayed loud until it didn't make a difference.When our team was bad, I mean when it was really bad, Memorial Stadium was half empty before halftime.
Don't know that anything else needs to be said.
I still don't think it was a lack of caring. I can't speak for anyone else, but I can relate this to games like the Big Ten Championship game. I quit watching that game because I hated seeing my team look so pathetic. It doesn't mean that I quit caring.Really!??!? I don't think there is any farther this conversation can go with logic like that.How is booing much different than sitting there silently?
Not quit forever. But if they left, they obviously didn't care any more that night.A fair weather fan, to me, is someone who is only a fan when things are going good, and they jump off the bandwagon when we start losing. I don't think anyone stopped caring, they just didn't support the effort on the field. It's no different than when Pelini gets in a players face.
Here's what I don't get... almost every time the players get asked about the crowd during the Bo era, they act like they don't pay attention to it. They say they block it out. They say the defense would prefer the crowd not make so much noise... it makes the communication pre-snap harder. They say they don't care about what the crowd wants or expects.
But when a very small percentage of the crowd boos and leaves early in one game, Bo and all the players are furious. Even Rex said he was "ticked".
How frustrating... 99% of the fans are great 99% of the time, and the coaches and players simply block them out. But one incident in five years that involved maybe 2-3% of the fans in the stadium, and it's infuriating.
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Saying it doesn't bother them and not bothering them are two very different things.Here's what I don't get... almost every time the players get asked about the crowd during the Bo era, they act like they don't pay attention to it. They say they block it out. They say the defense would prefer the crowd not make so much noise... it makes the communication pre-snap harder. They say they don't care about what the crowd wants or expects.
But when a very small percentage of the crowd boos and leaves early in one game, Bo and all the players are furious. Even Rex said he was "ticked".
How frustrating... 99% of the fans are great 99% of the time, and the coaches and players simply block them out. But one incident in five years that involved maybe 2-3% of the fans in the stadium, and it's infuriating.
Saying it doesn't bother them and not bothering them are two very different things.Here's what I don't get... almost every time the players get asked about the crowd during the Bo era, they act like they don't pay attention to it. They say they block it out. They say the defense would prefer the crowd not make so much noise... it makes the communication pre-snap harder. They say they don't care about what the crowd wants or expects.
But when a very small percentage of the crowd boos and leaves early in one game, Bo and all the players are furious. Even Rex said he was "ticked".
How frustrating... 99% of the fans are great 99% of the time, and the coaches and players simply block them out. But one incident in five years that involved maybe 2-3% of the fans in the stadium, and it's infuriating.
And it was not a small percentage booing that night.
I don't have time to dig right now, Landlord. Hopefully you know I wouldn't just make it up out of thin air.