Vince from ShamWOW
All-Conference
What a joke.
Published Wednesday October 14, 2009Big 12: Jayhawks calling for fan support in football
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kansas sports fans, long known for their diehard devotion to the school's basketball team, apparently are not yet as devoted to the football team.
Jayhawk quarterback Todd Reesing and safety Darrell Stuckey told the Topeka Capital-Journal that they are disappointed the fans, particularly students, continue to leave games in droves at halftime.
They were especially discouraged on Saturday, when the No. 17 Jayhawks had only a 20-17 lead over Iowa State at halftime in the Big 12 opener for both schools.
“It is disappointing when you're in a conference game and you're a top 20 team and you're in a close game where you could really use some fan support, and half the student section leaves,” Reesing said. “All the guys notice that on the team. It's hard not to notice.”
Highs were only in the 40s on Saturday, but Reesing said that wasn't a good excuse.
“That's football weather right there,” he said. “I really don't know why (they left). It was a homecoming game, it was close at half and to see that many people leave is disappointing, to tell you the truth.”
The complaint is not a new one at a school known for years as a basketball powerhouse. The Jayhawks football program has only recently garnered national recognition after dramatically improving under coach Mark Mangino.
The Jayhawks went to the Orange Bowl in 2007 after starting the season 11-0 and won a total of 20 games the past two seasons, the best two-year span in school history.
At a kickoff rally before this season started, Mangino implored a crowd of thousands to make Memorial Stadium a hostile place for visiting teams.
Reesing said fans might not understand how important their support is during the game.
“There's some pretty big third downs and fourth downs in the second half that, having a loud crowd and having fans cheer for our defense really helps,” Reesing said. “Hopefully that won't be a continuing trend. We're going to be playing a lot tougher games where we're gonna need that whole stadium full of people yelling and cheering for us.”
When Stuckey, a senior captain, was asked what it would be like to have a Kansas player win the Heisman trophy, he responded by suggesting maybe the fans “would start loving football a little more. I think they'd stay at the game a little longer.”
But he's trying to stay positive.
“You can't just play for the people in the stands that are leaving, you have to play for those that are still there and still love the game passionately,” he said. “Regardless how cold it is, regardless what happens, it's still a game of pride. There's still more people there than left, so look at it as half full instead of half empty.
“There's teams across the nation that struggle to get 10,000 fans there, let alone us having over 50,000 almost every game.”