Your home for IU basketball analysis and previews PLUS various and often sarcastic thoughts on sports, music, and other stuff.
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
IU-Michigan State: immediate reaction
Sunday, December 11, 2011
IU-Kentucky: The Aftermath
Saturday, December 10, 2011
IU vs. Kentucky preview
Bandwagoning: Why it really shouldn't matter
NOTE: This is a guest post by good friend of IMB Pat Sebanc. You can get more insight from Pat by following him on Twitter, @PatrickRSebanc.
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Considering this is a guest post, I feel like I should introduce myself to some extent. I’m Pat Sebanc, I’m a college student and I love sports; that’s really all you need to know. I’ll probably reveal more about myself as time goes on, but I don’t want to bore you with a biography (despite the fact that it would be filled with awesome stories and mind-blowing factoids). So yeah, now I’m going to get to the main reason for this post.
People are literally crazy over sports, that’s nothing new. People are dedicated to their favorite teams and people will defend those teams to the death. That’s admirable and that’s what makes sports great, but an issue I see everyday with sports is that sometimes that dedication can be a little over-the-top. As soon as a team starts getting featured on Sportscenter or Twitter or wherever they can find publicity, you see people flocking to the fan section and becoming what most people call “fair weather fans”.
They’ve known about the team, or maybe they haven’t, but now they’re supporting them and cheering for them every game. Maybe it’s just through social networking, but I’ve noticed that fans tend to get annoyed when they see people rooting for their favorite team when they know they haven’t been lifelong fans.
To me, that’s just completely backwards; I mean why WOULDN’T you want someone rooting for you favorite team? Why WOULDN’T you want another person to converse about your favorite team with? Are people seriously regressing to the caveman era and becoming that territorial, and over a sports team? I just don’t get it. I personally am ecstatic when I find another person to talk about the Red Sox (best team ever by the way, no bias) with or when I can chat it up with another Indiana native about the Pacers or Colts. To me, communicating with other fans is the coolest thing about sports. To find someone who is just as passionate about a certain team, or even just a certain sport, is just a joy to me; I’ve made numerous friends just through sports (i.e. the creators of this blog).
Now I know there’s no way that this type of behavior is going to stop because nothing ever stops, it just goes under the radar. But I feel like people should just lay off and just enjoy sports. If you want to get technical, sports are just big games played by people ten times as talented as the average person.
One example I can give where people have gotten annoyed with a newly gained fan base is the recent adoration of IU basketball. I’ll be honest, I’m a lifelong Purdue fan, almost my entire family went to Purdue, I grew up rooting for Purdue and I’ll always root for the Boilermakers. But at the same time, I’ve never been a “hater” of IU, I’ve talked trash, I’ve rooted against them in the past, but I’ve never disliked them like a normal Purdue fan might.
To me, rooting for IU is just like rooting for Butler or Notre Dame; I support any and every team from the state of Indiana. Hell, I’d even support the Fort Wayne Mad Ants if it came down to it. I just love this state and everything about it. I was a huge fan of Bob Knight, I loved his style and I still do to this day. But after Knight left and Mike Davis and Kelvin Sampson both had their respective eras at IU, I lost interest in the Hoosiers (as did a lot of people from the Hoosier state). But now that the Hoosiers are heading in a bright direction down the right path, you would think that people would embrace and encourage newfound support for a once struggling program; but in fact, I’m seeing a lot of the opposite.
I’m noticing some resentment, some anger, some frustration. As I said before, I just don’t get it. People are alienating and degrading people they should be supporting and welcoming. If one of my friends who happens to be a Yankees fan told me he was going to become a Red Sox fan, I would be happy for him. First, I’d heckle him and make countless jokes, but I wouldn’t be bitter that he became a Red Sox fan. I guess the point I’m trying to convey here is that, despite, when someone became a fan, how someone became a fan or even why someone became a fan, it shouldn’t matter. A fan is a fan, and that’s all that really should matter. If you’re a supporter of the same team as me, that’s great, I’m happy.
Now, I’m not trying to pick on IU, I mean I’m now a fan (I live in Bloomington, I basically have to [it’s not forced though, I’m truly becoming a supporter of Indiana University]). I’ve seen it in the NBA with the Pacers and I’ve seen in the NFL with numerous teams. People all over the country are just rabid with having too much pride to accept newfound fans and newfound interest. I guess I’m just noticing people don’t like when other people like the same things that they like. This kind of thing happens in music as well, people get peeved when their favorite underground artist gets on a commercial or gets a Grammy award (Bon Iver fans from 2007 have got to be PISSED!!!!).
With that being said, I’m going to conclude this with something for you guys to think about; are sports fans just gigantic hipsters who get infuriated when their team gets some form of recognition from the not-so-normal supporter? Thanks for reading and I hope to do this again. Have a good one, America.
Friday, December 9, 2011
Not so fast, Chris Paul: The David Stern story
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Me vs. Boise State haters
This is a triumphant return to the blogosphere for ol' J-Weezy and a lot has happened. The obvious thing is that IU basketball is sort of good again, but oddly enough, this is not what this post is about.
THIS POST IS ABOUT BOISE STATE. YEAH BUDDY.
Well, not necessarily specifically Boise State. Boise State serves as an example for a larger issue that I have with college football. But I'm still probably going to mention Boise State a lot.
I always hear people talk about how teams like Boise, TCU, Houston, etc. don't deserve a chance at the national championship game. And this year they're probably right. Houston got crushed at home and didn't even win their conference (hey, just like Alabama) and Boise lost at home to a lesser team also. That seems to happen almost every year; when a team like that is poised for a BCS bowl game, they blow it in the latter parts of the season.
But let's imagine that we live in a world where Boise State went undefeated this year. Let's imagine that Boise State worked their magic at the end of the TCU game this year and won 36-35 instead of losing by the same score. Is there any chance in hell the BCS selects Boise State over Alabama for the national championship?
I think not. I think, at best, Boise State is fourth, behind LSU, the aforementioned Alabama, and Oklahoma State. They COULD be ahead of OK State, but obviously this is up for debate.
So Boise State, sitting at 12-0, gets shut out of the national championship game. Again. Why? Because they play in a small conference and they don't get to play fantastic teams like Ole Miss and Tennessee throughout the year. They play a weaker schedule, sure. They crush the SEC Eastern Division champions at the beginning of the year, but we always conveniently forget the fact that Boise State always beats the "big name" team they play at the beginning of the year.
Incidentally, we also usually forget (or ignore) the fact that Boise State, in the last three years, has beaten Oregon, Virginia Tech, and of course Georgia. All of those teams are definitely big name programs. They beat them all.
This is but a small thread in the giant quilt that is the snubbing of small school teams in the national championship picture. These teams -- Boise State, TCU, Utah before their move to the Pac-12, and (to a lesser extent) Houston -- are looked down upon simply because they play in smaller conferences. Last year, Oregon (the national runner-up) had a weaker schedule than both Boise State and TCU. But they play in a big conference, so nobody cares. This is a trend.
So now we go to this year. Two very deserving teams are in the national championship this year in LSU and Alabama. Although I would have preferred Oklahoma State over Alabama, since I frequently had visions featuring the sweet embrace of death during round one of the Battle of Dropped Passes and Missed Field Goals, there is no denying Alabama's worthiness of contending for the national championship, because their defense is unbelievable. I can freely admit this, although I have a distaste for Alabama. Foreshadowing.
But, there is most definitely a debate for Oklahoma State to be in the national championship game too. The computers ranked them higher, and they have a stronger schedule and more wins against top 25 teams than Alabama does (I'm a little bit fuzzy on the details there, so feel free to correct me if I'm wrong). The biggest claim that Alabama has is that their one loss was to the #1 ranked team in the country by 3 points in overtime, while OK State's loss was to unranked Iowa State in double overtime. A very valid claim.
Another claim that I have seen multiple times from multiple people, that is the driving force behind this post, is the claim that Alabama is more deserving because they beat the crap out of their inferior opponents and that, coupled with barely losing to the best team in the country (at home), makes them the most worthy.
Alabama won their 11 games by an average of 29.7 points per game. Boise State won their 11 games by an average of 27.2 points per game. Oklahoma State won their 11 games by an average of 26.2 points per game. (Oklahoma State's hindrance here is a one point win at then ranked #8 Texas A&M.)
Here is my big problem with this defense that some, not all, Alabama fans are using. This is the same argument that Boise State has, year in and year out. They don't play in the SEC or the Big 12. They play in a much less heralded conference, the MWC, which I'm pretty sure is going to be a future acronym for a Call of Duty game. Modern Warfare Clutch or something.
My point here is not that Boise State is as good as Alabama, because I don't believe that this year's team is better than Alabama. My point is that the Boise States of the world use the argument of beating inferior opponents by a lot, and they are mocked for it. Alabama fans are arguing the same point now. How is that not hypocrisy?
This is not to suggest that Alabama fans are the biggest hypocrites in the world or anything. It just so happens that this year, they're the team who has to defend their team's appearance in the national championship game. And this doesn't even necessarily pertain to fans of Alabama. Just Alabama backers, I guess.
But the fact is that it is still hypocrisy. I, for one, am perfectly okay with the defense of "my team beat the crap out of most of the teams they played" because I think that if you play a weak-ish schedule and you win all of your games by 25+ points or something, then you're probably a very good team. But you can't spend 5 years saying that it doesn't matter how much you win your games by if you still play bad teams, and then turn around and use that as a major point of defense for your team.
We always remember when Boise State loses a game. You remember the TCU loss this year and the Nevada loss last year. I remember victories over Virginia Tech and Georgia. But it goes deeper than Boise State. You remember Hawaii getting crushed by Georgia in the Sugar Bowl. I remember Boise State-Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl, Utah crushing Alabama in the Sugar Bowl, and TCU beating Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl last year in a game that was, for my money, better than the national championship game. You focus on the one loss they have and decide that they don't deserve a shot, and I focus on when they beat the best team they play all year and then lose a heartbreaker at the end of the year.
These teams have proven that they at least deserve a chance to play in the national championship. These teams HAVE beaten very good teams in big bowl games in the past. Boise State haters are just too wrapped up in making fun of Boise State to notice.
And why? Why do you do this? The only reasonable explanation I have is that you'd be embarrassed if your team lost to one of these teams, so you don't even want to play them. Because you're scared of Boise State. You're scared of the possibility of Boise State beating your team, because you know that it is very possible, so you'd rather just make fun of them all year and pray that they don't go undefeated so you don't have to live in a world where a Boise State national championship is possible.
That's the only explanation I have. And what a sad explanation that is.
The hypocrisy of Boise State haters is hilarious to me. They think their team is good because they beat of the crap out of all of their opponents, even though they don’t beat anyone that’s really that good. But if Boise State goes undefeated and, by some gift of God, plays for the national championship, everybody complains about how they don't play anyone good.
Just stop rooting against Boise State for lame reasons. I get that there are teams that some people just don't like. I have no real reason to dislike the Chicago Bears, but I hope they lose every single game. I understand that there are people like this with regards to Boise State. But I don't say that I hate the Bears because their defense hits people really hard, because that's exactly how my favorite team, the Steelers, plays defense.
It's not like everybody has to root for Boise State or anything, but don't use hypocrisy as the basis for your hatred of them.
Okay. Wow. Quite a return, huh? Excuse me for rambling, I tend to repeat myself a lot, especially when I haven't written in a while. And if you're one of these Boise State haters, don't think that I hate you and your opinions about sports or anything. Always remember that I'm friends with a lot of Purdue fans, so it's literally impossible for me to stop liking somebody due to sports-related reasons.
I'll most likely be posting stuff more now, because I actually have stuff to talk about now that 3 of my 5 favorite teams are any good now (with the Pacers remaining to be seen)...as opposed to the one team I had last year. It's always way easier to talk about sports when your teams are good.
Peace, nerds.
P.S. I need a new thing to put at the end of my posts.