A fan base stuck in the past and obsessively comparing the current teams to the past does have a major impact on the perception of a program.
Why do posts like this exist in every thread? The fan base looks bad when some fans continually try to tear down other fans, simply for being fans for longer than the last decade and remembering the great teams.
On to the actual topic, I'd rather not have ESPN do anything Nebraska related, although they have been kinder since our move to the B1G. Still don't trust 'em.
I would give you more +1's but, sadly, I can only give one per post. Agree wholeheartedly. This nonsense about forgetting the past as some kind of virtue is stupid. I have no idea where such sentiment comes from, but I have zero respect for it. We are Nebraska because of the titles in the 1970s. We are Nebraska because of the titles in the 1990s. But we are also Nebraska because of the heartache and tribulation of the 1980s and 1960s. We are also Nebraska because of the football legends of the 1920s and 1930s.
We are Nebraska because of George Flippin, because of Johnny Bender, because of Jumbo Steim, because of Dana Bible, because of [/font]Samuel Fuenning, because of Bob Devaney and Lyell Bremser and Dave Humm and Johnny Rodgers and because of Tom Osborne and Turner Gill and Mike Rozier and Steve Taylor and every player who fought and struggled and held their heads high despite never winning a championship.
We are Nebraska because of 36 straight years of beating Kansas and because of 21 straight years of beating Missouri and because of 31 straight years of beating Kansas State and because of 19 straight years of beating Colorado. We are Nebraska because we barely beat Oklahoma more than we lost to them in the greatest stretch in the history of our program.
This is who we are. It's a history that dates back 121 years. Remembering that, respecting that, cherishing that isn't wrong. It's what separates us from the rest of college football, and what sets us among the pantheon of the all-time great programs in the history of the sport.
I feel sorry for people who cant enjoy that. I pity people who have no respect for that. They're missing out on what's best about being a Nebraska Cornhusker. It's as if the definition of their fandom rests solely on this year, this game, this play or this player. Such a mindset utterly fails to grasp the grandeur of one of college football's greatest teams.
It's sad that some fans feel this way. But I don't. And I never will.
And I'll tell you this much - you're wasting your time trying to make me or any other fan who truly understands what that N on the helmet means feel like there's something wrong in recalling the glory of the past. Maybe you don't get it, but I do. More's the pity for you.