Mixed sport allegiances
Hey everybody!
Glad to see a couple of blogs here on SBNation dedicated to the Indiana Big Ten Schools. It's still early, but The Crimson Quarry and Hammer and Rails both look to be quality additions.
I'm posting because I am stuck in an awkward predicament. You see, I am something of a College Sports polygamist.
As a child I grew up in central Indiana. I was closer to West Lafayette, but my dad graduated with an Indiana degree. My grandmother (God rest her soul) was an avid Boilermakers fan. I ended up spending most of my formative years in Lafayette, spending all of my K-8 years there. Most assumed this would lead me to Boiler solidarity. Enter my best friend, Clay.Clay's parents had met while his dad was getting his law degree in Indianapolis, following 4 years in Bloomington. Over many years I grew to love Hoosier basketball. I worshiped Bob Knight (and his foul mouth). I revered Damon Bailey, Calbert Cheaney, Alan Henderson, AJ Guyton, Kirk Haston, Jared Jefferies, Tom Coverdale, AJ Moye, and more recently DJ White and Eric Gordon. Not only did the Crimson and Cream repeatedly put out a good team, I also loved being able to antagonize my Boiler-loving friends and teachers growing up.
But I had a new problem. In about the 4th grade, I discovered football. My first love was professional: I love the Indianapolis Colts. But a young sports fan still needs something to watch on Saturdays! IU has never been known for their football prowess. For that matter, Purdue hasn't always been a great football school either. However, IU was bad enough that the only game that was ever broadcast locally was the Old Oaken Bucket game. Most, if not all, Purdue games were covered.
And so I began my love affair with the Purdue football Boilermakers. They teased at first. Coach Jim Colletto and Mike Alstott led subpar teams with expected results. But then came Joe Tiller and "Basketball on Grass." This is exactly what an Indiana boy wanted to hear and see! I was initially amazed by Billy Dicken, Vinny Sutherland, Chris Daniels and Adrian Beasley's big Alamo Bowl (1997) performance. And then something very incredible happened. Drew Brees, namely. But he wasn't the whole show. There were stars on both sides of the ball: Stu Schweigert, Rosevelt Colvin, John Standeford, Chukky Okobi, Matt Light, Chike Okeafor, Niko Koutouvides, Gilbert Gardner, Akin Ayodele, Dustin Keller, Kyle Orton and Kory Sheets.
This all came to a head during the 1999 season. My brother was an athletic training student at Purdue. That season he was with the football team. He got me tickets to several games, including the Notre Dame game and the closer-than-expected Bucket game. I was allowed into the locker room once. For Christmas that year, I got a Purdue football signed by every member of the team and Coach Tiller. It still ranks as the coolest gift I've ever received.
I have resigned myself to my current polygamist state. It's much too late to switch allegiances or form new ones. So here's my problem: I need a way to sort out information from these two new blogs. I want every detail about Tom Crean's valiant turnaround effort in Bloomington. I'm excited to see what Coach Hope can do at Ross-Ade Stadium next fall. I use RSS feeds for all my blogs. It's nothing personal, as I know some people really like the traffic; but I read a lot of them, and Google Reader just makes it go much, much faster. I need a way to get only football news from Hammer and Rails. I only want basketball news from The Crimson Quarry. I don't know how much you all can help me. Maybe this is a problem that only SBNation has the solution for.
Please let me know if anyone has any suggestions!
Also, I would love to meet/talk to others who have similar problems/stories regarding their own sports loves. Feel free to comment away...
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Further complicating matters...
I went to the University of Evansville. I root for the Purple Aces in basketball as well. I don’t feel too bad about that though, because the stature of the programs are so vast. I suppose if it came to it, in a head-to-head matchup, I would take the Aces. However, the two teams aren’t likely to play each other, and even if they did, I imagine the game would not be too close (the current Hoosier season notwithstanding).
Wow.
That’s one I haven’t come across before. I certainly have met people who don’t completely hate both schools (IU students who grew up in WL and whose parents work for Purdue, etc.). I have mixed loyalties myself: my grad degree is from ND, and to complicate things for my kids, my wife went to Purdue. But an IU basketball fan/Purdue football fan is a new one on me.
I don’t know much about RSS. There are tags on each post, so I suppose it’s possible to filter them that way on the reader end. All of my basketball posts have a “basketball” tag.
by John M (The Crimson Quarry) on Mar 12, 2009 9:03 AM EDT reply actions
my parents
grew up in South Bend and even though i was born and raised in Connecticut, i have a lot of family still up there. my grandpa was an usher at Notre Dame Stadium and my dad grew up a rabid ND football fan. both of my uncles went to Notre Dame, along with three cousins, and my sister went to Saint Mary’s. i was raised an ND football fan.
my parents were both IU alums and i went to IU myself. i was raised a IU basketball fan. but, it’s not like i don’t pull for IU football. i had season tickets three of the four years i was in college. considering they haven’t played ND since 1991 (i think), i’ve never really run into any issues.
i didn’t understand how much this pissed people off – especially Purdue fans – until i first came out to Indiana for school. i think considering i have ties to both teams, that i should be allowed to root for both.
even though Purdue football/IU basketball is a weird tie, your explanation fits.
Ewing with the step...YES! and the foul!
by Anthony Masons Haircut on Mar 12, 2009 10:38 AM EDT reply actions
Heh.
“Especially Purdue fans.” Yes, it’s interesting that the loudest objections to this arrangement come from people with no skin in the game. I feel protected since I have a diploma from each school, and I’m a big IU football supporter, and had season ND hoops tickets in the McLeod era.
by John M (The Crimson Quarry) on Mar 12, 2009 3:08 PM EDT up reply actions
Interesting.
I cross-posted this at Hammer And Rails and I have picked up a lot more flack over there than I have here. Of course, for Boiler-backers this ND stuff (especially ND football) is almost completely unacceptable. :)
Root for IU Hoops
The important thing is to only root for IU basketball. I graduated in 2001 from IU and I think I went into Memorial Stadium about 5 times, only once staying for an entire game. I am a huge Hoosiers fan, but I have to be realistic about the football program. I can only hope that with the addition to the stadium and facilities that it will help recruiting. The best way to get people on board is to win and the best way to win is to get players, but that is easier said than done. That being said, it has been hard to root for IU football over the years, I do not consider myself a fair weather fan, but at some point people want to cheer for a winner, so I say root for who you want, as long as you never lose your passion for IU hoops because there is no excuse for that. The hoops team is headed in the right direction under new leadership and the players are already starting to come to the program, so get ready for a big resurgence.
Seth
www.thesports-guy.com
by Sports By Seth on Mar 21, 2009 11:23 PM EDT reply actions
Football is pretty important to the overall financial health of the athletic department. IU is fortunate to have a very profitable basketball program, but better football crowds would be good for the whole department, including the basketball program. One of the really frustrating things about IU’s culture is that indifference to the football program is worn almost as a badge of honor. That has to change. You are correct that winning is the only way it will change.
by John M (The Crimson Quarry) on Mar 22, 2009 10:50 PM EDT up reply actions
Football
No doubt a successful football program would be a huge economic boom to all of the sports programs. One thing that surprised me when I arrived at IU was how bad the crowds were for football games, but look at me now only caring about hoops. I am a great example of the problems with the fans.
Seth
www.thesports-guy.com
Seth
www.thesports-guy.com
by Sports By Seth on Mar 23, 2009 10:57 AM EDT reply actions

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