ssckelley
Well-Known Member
I so wish I could fight you on this but I can't, you are right and it's sad. Back in the 70's and 80's the basketball team was probably more popular than football, people packed that old field house and then we got the new shiny Carver. The fans were into it, the students were rowdy, and going to a basketball game was a blast. Every Iowa game was televised and if you watched it from home you couldn't wait to hear a "OH MY!".Not going to happen. I’ve been an Iowa fan for over fifty years. I totally get what you are saying.You want the team you cheer for to be more successful and occasionally great. That’s just not Iowa and likely not ever going to be. If it happens it will be a fluke.
The general fan base doesn’t demand it. Cub fans know how this goes. Decade after decade they filled wrigley field. It’s a beautiful ball park to go out and enjoy on a warm summer day with your family and have a hot dog. If the cubs won on that day all the much better, but not required.
If you want a team that is going to be playing for titles every few years then chose a program that does that.
This is how it works. Let’s say in football you chose Alabama to follow. You find their forums and sign up on that chat board. You start to follow the football team. You don’t know any of the players at all but as you get on the chat room and follow the sport web pages you start to familiarize yourself with them. You learn about the freshmen players coming in. By the time those freshmen are juniors you start to know them as players and maybe some of their personal history. Your team is in the conference championship game almost every year. If they win you know they will likely play in the four team playoff title. Eventually you start to identity with the team.
You’ve still kept an eye on your old school and wished them the best. However you start to realize how much fun it is to be cheering to win the big game EVERY year while your old team gets its seven or eight wins and goes to the Outback Bowl which no one in the college football world really gives a shit about.
As the years roll by you start to follow your old team less and less until you don’t really know the players. Occasionally you come across them on the TV and see their rabid fans cheering wildly for their 7-4 team. During the least ten years your new team has played for seven conference titles and been to the four team playoff several times.
As you look at those fans of your old team you will wonder what the hell is with those people, even though you were caught up in it once yourself.
Now here the problem with all of this. Often times people grow up watching a team with their family and friends. It becomes a family activity. The moments of just going and enjoying being with family and/or friends is Priceless really.
So that is the challenge of walking away from an affiliation backed with memories with loved ones and just starting over with a strange team. It doesn’t mean you can’t slowly build memories and associations with a new team or get involved with others things with your family and friends. Community projects helping others.
Your just going to frustrate yourself wanting your team to play for national Titles in football or basketball when it likely hasn’t happened in your lifetime. It’s unlikely it will ever happen in your life time as an Iowa fan.
So if it is that important to you then do as I suggested. Pick out a prominent team that plays for all the marbles on a occasional basis and still follow Iowa.
I understand how you feel, but the simple fact is that it’s not expected at Iowa or demanded at Iowa by the fan base. Everyone is just enjoying the games and having a hotdog. That’s no knock on them as they are building memories with family and friends.
Now few give a shit. You go to the game and besides the pep band there are not many students. You got all the old geezers like Huckfinn who sit on their hands all game. I hate how far back Carver feels even if you're sitting in the first few rows.
All of this because back in the mid to late 90s there were a group of fans who felt that TD wasn't good enough and they wanted to see Iowa take the next step as a program. Going to the NCAA tournament every year and winning at least the first round wasn't good enough. So they went out and got, what was thought to be, the hottest young coach around in Steve Alford. Most of you probably know the rest of the story so I won't describe it. But let's just say Iowa as a basketball program returning to the Alford/Lickliter years could happen very easily. Fran may never get Iowa to the next level but at least the team is fun to watch and usually competitive.
It's no different than football and people hating on KF. All you have to do is look to our west to see how quickly a program like Iowa could turn into a dumpster fire.