Actually, I don't bring it up myself too often, I just respond to others who do. But nevertheless, you're right, and I WILL move on, once Pedey's gone.Putting things behind you and moving on. Don't you bring up something that happened in 2003 a lot? <_<These aren't kids on the field, they're young men, and part of being a man is putting those things behind you, sucking it up and trying to do better next time
Might as well lose that one as well.If all the people that booed yesterday had stayed home, our sellout streak would have snapped.
How about next week with Iowa State..we just MOO at their cheerleaders?Where Do Hecklers Come From?The origins of booing.
By Sonia Smith
Posted Wednesday, May 10, 2006, at 5:57 PM ET
Yankees pitcher Randy Johnson was razzed on his home turf on Tuesday night as the team fumbled toward an embarrassing 14-3 loss to the Red Sox. The Yankee Stadium crowd booed Johnson as he left the game in the fourth inning. Where does booing come from?
The first written record comes from ancient Greece. At the annual Festival of Dionysia in Athens, playwrights competed to determine whose tragedy was the best. When the democratic reformer Cleisthenes came to power in the sixth century B.C., audience participation came to be regarded as a civic duty. The audience applauded to show its approval and shouted and whistled to show displeasure.
In ancient Rome, jeering was common at the gladiatorial games, where audience participation often determined whether a competitor lived or died. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the Latin verb explodere means "to drive out by clapping, hiss (a player) off the stage."
While people have expressed displeasure publicly since ancient times, the English word boo was first used in the early 19th century to describe the lowing sound that cattle make. Later in the 1800s, the word came to be used to describe the disapproving cry of crowds. Hoot, another onomatopoeic English word, was used as early as 1225 to describe the same phenomenon. (Ancient Greek and Latin both contain words resembling boo that mean "to cry or shout aloud," though there is no known etymological connection to the modern English word.)
If baseball had European origins, the crowd might have whistled at Randy Johnson. Whistling has long signified disapproval in Europe, as well as in South America.
So..Did it help?I have a problem with anyone who saw the way the defense played yesterday and wasn't booing. We hold these players up so high when they do good things, but we're supposed to just bite our tongues when they play like St. Mary's School for the Blind. You can't have it both ways. Don't expect real fans that care about their team to stand by and blindly accept a performance like what we witnessed yesterday. Not booing doesn't make you a better person, doesn't make you classy, and doesn't make you a bigger Husker fan. We all know how badly the defense played yesterday, some of us just weren't afraid to voice our displeasure.
Post of the week.I totally agree with you Washusker. As a student at the University who has classes with athletes and has several friends who are/were athletes here, I myself feel ashamed when others around me are booing. As a fan in the stands I feel one of my major roles is to do anything I can to help the team win (ie make noise on D, cheer for a big play), but by booing I see no benefit coming from it. Will the defense suddenly become 11 Ray Lewis' or will Cosgrove suddenly turn back into Bo Pelini, the obvious answer is no. With that aside, fans do have the RIGHT to boo if they want, but I think that it is classless and pointless.
Apparently others don't feel the same way. If you're not interested in the topic, don't click on it.another really dumb thread.......please let it die
Why do I always think of an aweful 18th century slave ship when I see your screen name?another really dumb thread.......please let it die
I could name some names...I notice you didn't name any names....way to pick one in 80 athletes
But I could name literally HUNDREDS of Academic All-Americans NU has produced.
You can boo all you want when they start getting paid. Otherwise, it's low-class.
Because you're mixing up "Armistead" with "Amistad".
19th century, by the way![]()
You know, I've thought about it, and I don't think it's proper to boo these kids. I know I've BOOOOOOOOed on this board, but I personally don't think it's appropriate for Memorial Stadium.
I'm all for booing professional teams. If I pay for a ticket, I've got some right to voice my displeasure when the team plays poorly.
But these kids are student athletes. Most are competing for the love of the game, nothing more. Most won't be wearing a football helmet in four years.
I think the proper vocal emotion is NO vocal emotion. Just go silent. And write plenty of letters to newspapers voicing displeasure with Cosgrove - nothing wrong with that. And bug the crap out of Pederson and the Ath. Dept.
But leave the players alone. If you can't yell something nice, don't yell anything at all.