[Patrick Barron]

Guest Post: Here We Are Comment Count

andyreid14 November 30th, 2022 at 1:02 PM

Ed-Seth: UFR is going to be late because I was knocked out with a nasty illness that now has my whole family it is grippe. Andy Reid (@misterAndyReid) is a former Michigan beat writer who couldn't not write after Saturday. So here's something to read while you wait.

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Do not try to explain this feeling to your friends and loved ones who have never been, like you and me, stricken with College Football Madness. Your words will be meaningless. They know Michigan is having a great season, and they are happy and excited for you, but there is nothing you can say or do that will suddenly open their eyes and make them see what this really means. How can you make someone feel what 10-year-old you felt when A-Train punished another defender? When you found a book in the elementary school library about the Little Brown Jug and the depth and myth-making history of this amazing program unfurled before you? When, as a child, you learned what it meant to take pride in something you love, by watching your Maize & Blue heroes vanquish those ne'er-do-wells from Columbus? And when, after decades of ill-defined malaise, the Wolverines strutted into Horseshoe and smacked the ever-loving hell out of the Buckeyes, claiming their rightful place atop the college football landscape and shouting to the world, “The fallow period is finally over”?

[After THE JUMP: A flood]

I never chose to be a Michigan fan. It would feel less permanent if I had ever had an actual chance to. It is part of me, and always has been, from the first picture of me in my crib, swaddled in a Block ‘M’ blanket, to my first trip to the Big House, when I laid across the laps of my grandpa and dad for a second-half nap, because I was too young to make it through a whole game. Michigan football seeped through the soil of my identity and took root deep, deep down, near the core of everything that makes me, me. My favorite memories with my grandpa are watching the Rose Bowl in his cozy basement den or darting through the tailgate, pretending each packed-in car was an oversized Buckeye defender, and I was Biakabutuka, churning my legs through contact and refusing to be taken down. My favorite memories with my family are road trips to Outback Bowls and losing our damn minds together in Section 37 as Braylon snagged yet another miraculous touchdown in our endzone against Michigan State. My favorite memories of college are wrapped up with the team, too, driving all over the Midwest with my Michigan Daily beatmates and crushing the State News in our annual flag football game. My first real job was covering the team for The Wolverine Magazine. When the magazine restructured and I was laid off, I pulled myself through that disappointment, in part, by realizing that Michigan football was no longer my job and I could enjoy it as a fan, once again.

For me, Michigan football is family. Michigan football is history. Michigan football is home. My childhood is defined by it. My adolescence certainly is, too, My young adult life. My highs and lows. Me. I have moved around and changed careers. I have grown and evolved. I have taken steps back and found my footing again. I have quit and been quit on. I have known success and failure. I have been strong and weak. The one constant throughline, from childhood to now, the passion that never dulled, the love that never faded, is Michigan football. It is who I am.

And, for my entire adult life, this fundamental piece of who I am has been largely… underwhelming. Disapproval isn’t the same thing as disavowment. We Michigan fans have, since the entire college football ecosystem erupted in joy when Appalachian State destroyed the Michigan mystique with one well-timed blocked kick, learned to balance love for our team with disappointment with the state of the product on the field. But it is hard to carry the burden of unmet expectations  — season after season, Ohio State loss after Ohio State loss. To be mad, to be hurt, to feel the burden of spoiled promise and know that you will eagerly sign up for more pain when next year’s season ticket applications are mailed out. College football is weird that way, different from other obsessions: it can — and surely will — hurt you, but it can’t hurt you enough to make you walk away.

I will never be able to quit the Wolverines. But, sitting at the peak of that 45-23 lambasting of Ohio State in Columbus and looking back at the hideous valley out from which we have been climbing for the last 15 years, I can see the few dark crevices that definitely shook my faith and tested my fandom in ways I never thought possible.

The RichRod era was certainly unstable, but 2008 was new and different enough that, even though it is unquestionably the worst Michigan team I have ever seen, I never waivered. The next two years were total chaos, but there was definite incremental improvement and, of course, Denard and every thrilling and inexplicable thing he did in a winged helmet. I witnessed first-hand the infamous Josh Groban moment at the 2010 postseason banquet and never thought of loosening the emotional grip Michigan football had on me.

No, there is something worse than being loudly, entertainingly, Capital B Bad.

Sitting in a half-empty Michigan Stadium in 2014 and watching the team run out of gas against Maryland, ensuring that the Wolverines would lose to both them and Rutgers in their inaugural Big Ten season, was gutting. Hearing the boos drown out that day’s announcement that the streak of consecutive 100,000-plus crowds had continued when it so clearly hadn’t was, simply, depressing. The gigantic waitlist for season tickets had dried up. The Michigan Union was advertising that a Coca-Cola purchase in the basement general store came with two free tickets. This was something new. Something awful. Apathy, everywhere. And it was so much more unbearable than another loss to Ohio State.

And then Harbaugh pointed his energy cannon at the problem and immediately made everyone care again. But we know that’s not the end of the story. And maybe the well of emotions that rose up when MIke Sainristil popped that perfect pass out of Cade Stover’s enormous hands wouldn’t have been quite so overwhelming, had Harbaugh simply strolled in and waved a magic wand. No, we weren’t quite done suffering. There was still work to do.

The next, and somewhat more existential, threat to my passion for the Wolverines was the COVID-shortened 2020 season. Harbaugh, it seemed, was not the answer. The apathy was back, heightened by distance — both physical, from the crowd ban at games, and emotional, because the world was so strange and weird, it was hard to jump feet first into the season — and losses and a dreadful feeling that the baldfaced greed that had tightened its influence on college football for the last 30 years had finally gone too far, that forcing the unpaid kids to play a game for our enjoyment, while they were stranded away from their families on an empty campus, slogging through a season no one enjoyed, was simply too much to stomach. These were forces both in and out of Michigan’s control, but, near the conclusion of that miserable campaign, I seriously considered whether I could continue investing myself emotionally in this thing I have loved my entire life. I told my wife at one point that I will be happy to attend games with my family, have fun tailgates and enjoy myself, but I didn’t think I could continue to stir up the same fervor I usually reserve for Michigan football.

Now, here we are.

The heartache that baked itself into the fabric of Michigan fandom is gone. Every streak has ended. The dread has lifted; the storm has passed; the skies are clear and Michigan is — at long last and with no qualifications, nor any ifs, ands or buts — an excellent football team. We are great. There is no team to fear. There is no giant collapse on the horizon. Novembers are no longer poisoned with withering performances and merciless stumbles to the finish line, instead replaced by glorious attention and celebratory joy of a team that has, for two straight seasons now, accomplished its mission. 

I had forgotten this feeling. I had forgotten how electric and kinetic and ALIVE this all felt. Rooting for a team this good is FUN. For so long, the Wolverines could not ascend the mountain this high. My love for Michigan did not dwindle, but the unending misery of consecutive and unalterable mediocrity had certainly dulled the edges. I stuck with it. I cheered. I lamented. I talked about the pieces that were in place for next year. I daydreamed about catching the Buckeyes on the right afternoon. I hoped, but knew better.

There is no more daydreaming. There is no more hoping. The expectations have been met, exceeded and destroyed. We Michigan fans have endured the long winter, and spring has sprung, and our hearts are full, and our team is fantastic, and we can all just be along for the ride. We don’t have to worry. We don’t have to fret. We don’t have to get worked up about missed opportunities or crippling mistakes. We get to bask in the glory of consecutive unforgettable seasons. Consecutive ass-kickings of that team that has kicked our ass for so long it felt like we might always get kicked, never do the kicking, again. Extended success. Dominance. Glory.

Michigan clawed its way back from the brink of the abyss at the end of the 2020 season and gave us a truly special year. When Michigan beat Ohio State in the 100th game of the series in 2003, I was not allowed to join the throng of fans hurling themselves over the Big House walls to rush the field. I was a sophomore in high school, and my dad said it was too dangerous. I would have plenty of time to rush the field after a big win. By the next time Michigan fans joined the players on the field in celebration, it was 2011, and I was a working journalist and couldn’t participate in the festivities. I am so grateful to that team for allowing me to check that off my bucket list — the entire magical ride of the 2021 season, for me, can be summed up in the thrill of hoisting myself over the railing and landing, too hard, on my heels on the playing surface below, streaking for midfield in a mass of euphoric chaos to join the chorus of revelers telling each out to Pump It Up. You gotta Pump It Up, don’t yah know?

That team, led by Aiden Hutchinson’s infectious energy, completely revived my passion. It wasn’t just that they were good. They were fun. And they were having fun, and it was so fun to watch them have fun.  It felt like a magical ride, an incredible confluence of events that snapped a perfect fairytale into reality to help remind us about all the wonder and joy that college football can bring. I had given up on the idea that Michihgan could consistently compete with the truly elite echelon of the sport — I had resized my expectations toward a good program, not a great one.

And once again, now, here we are.

I have never been so happy to be wrong. These Wolverines are better than that special team from last year. They are maulers. The floor is so much higher than I ever thought it could be in the current landscape. The Wolverines have won their most recent game against every other program in the Big Ten. They are 24-2 since that insufferable COVID season. They are reigning and hopeful Big Ten Champions and College Football Playoff participants. They are a team that dominates Ohio State. They are elite. They are an incredible football team.

Last year was purely cathartic. This was something else. The first quarter was overflowing with signals that this would be just like every other version of The Game we have come to expect since Jim Tressel seized control of the rivalry. The Buckeyes scorched right down for an easy opening-drive score. Michigan’s best player, the anchor of the entire offensive identity, made one cut and limped off the field, clearly not able to go. This is where the turtling happens. This is where camera shots of the sideline reveal taut, stern faces. This is where wins turn to losses, and where the overwhelming confidence from the Scarlet force simply drowns out any hope that Michigan could string together enough luck to overcome Ohio State’s obvious advantages in both athleticism and strategy.

And, yet once again, here we are.

It was the Wolverines who were smiling, laughing, and making plays with everything on the line. It was the Michigan side outsmarting Ohio State at every possible turn. It was the Buckeyes who puckered up and played tight. For decades, it has felt like Michigan entered this game with the overwhelming pressure to just win one. On Saturday, one look at Ryan Day’s funereal grimace was all the evidence we needed to know the fulcrum had shifted. It’s now the Buckeyes who are playing like they are afraid of what will happen if they lose. JJ McCarthy, Cornelius Johnson, Mike Sainristil, Donovan Edwards all became legends on Saturday afternoon, grabbing the last albatross around the Wolverines’ neck — a 22-year drought in Columbus — and hurling it into space, like Hercules with the bear. Every burden on the Michigan program has been erased. Every dreadful streak, every pin that could possibly be pricked. The curse of being a Michigan fan these last 20 years has been the knowledge of how great our beloved program used to be, and the ever-creeping doubt that it would ever be able to reach those heights again.

Here we are.

I sincerely want to thank everyone involved with the program for what they have given us these last two years. We have learned, the hard way, that getting to this point — and staying there over the course of multiple seasons — is an incredibly difficult thing to do. The fans are so grateful for this run. I will always love this team. But I will be disappointed when they’re disappointing; mad when they’re maddening; frustrated when they are frustrating — which has been the case for so much of the last 15 years. Right now, I am happy. Thrilled. Ecstatic. Excited. Because my favorite team — my team! — is terrific.

It’s Great

To Be

A Michigan Wolverine.

Comments

tybert

November 30th, 2022 at 2:43 PM ^

Very nicely documented journey!

As a 59 year older, my road through ups, downs, sideways, etc. has a few more twists and turns but more positives.

My first memories were crying as a 3rd grader when we lost the 1972 RB on a last second FG to Stanford. Didn't even feel like playing games with my (mostly) new Christmas toys that night.

The back-to-back losses to Ohio in 73 and 74 when Mike Lantry (always a HERO for his service in Nam prior to UM) missed last second FGs made for long winters because of the BS B1G/PAC8 bowl rule (no RB, no bowl).

First real euphoric experience was getting to go to TWO home games as an 8th grader in 1976 (combined 96-0 wins over Stanford and Dungy's Minny) followed by 22-0 in Columbus (Saturday's 22 point win tied that mark, behind our biggest win in C-BUS 58-6 in 1946).

The HS years were seeing us go 8-4 in 79 but was there to see Wangler to Carter vs. Indy. 1980 was like 2021, except we won our bowl (Bo's first RB win).

College was definitely down then up. As frosh in MMB, we lost at home to Ohio 14-9 and dropped (along with UCLA which lost to USC that day) from RB to Bluebonnet Bowl. Finished well with 85's win over Ohio and perhaps JH's best game as a player (15-18 3TDs, 0 ints) winning 27-17. Stormed the field as a senior that day in fricking freezin weather.

Starting in the mid-80s, UM went on a roll, going from 85 thru 03 winning 13-5-1 (including 1-2 vs. sweater vest to start his career there). I think the real slide happened not in 2001 but in 2004. 

That 2004 team was superior to Ohio and got schooled by Soph Troy Smith (who started the season as a backup to uberhyped Justin Zwick, who was their equivalent of Shane Morris). We should have won at home in 2005, but Lloyd chose the old fake FG, pooch punt from his 34, opening the door to a final Ohio TD. 

When fully healthy and motivated, that 2007 team should have beaten Ohio, but Henne and Hart was lame that day, and a somber 14-3 loss in the rain followed.

We went 1-14 from 2004-19, which drained morale, especially the spot game in 2016 and being favored in 2018 but losing 62-39 (62-31 until a garbage TD).

I don't buy that Day is Coop 2.0. I think he adjusts by getting a mobile QB like Fields. Also, it will take a few years, but get better on both lines. The good news is that we SHOULD win next year in A2, which would give us the first 3-game win streak since Woodson-Griese years of 1995-97. Buckle up, I think we FINALLY have a real rivalry happening this decade.

BEAT PURDUE!

Bluetotheday

November 30th, 2022 at 3:32 PM ^

Perfect encapsulation of Michigan fandom, I can relate. It choose me. Hell- every person in my life knows how deeply passionate I am about Michigan football. 
 

in business or when I meet people that ask if I am Spartan (went to school there for the last two years-Michigans B school was number 2 at the time), I immediately make sure they know I am diehard Michigan fan. 
 

nothing will ever change that! 

M-Dog

November 30th, 2022 at 3:43 PM ^

I had begun to think that winning at the highest level in college football was structurally impossible for Michigan.  It was something we just needed to accept, and even embrace.

The secret, I told myself, was compartmentalization.  Just re-define the arena you are competing in.

The CFB National Champion can never hold a candle to the Super Bowl Champion.  There are better football teams than college football teams.  But the CFB National Champion is still in heaven when they win it.  Their arena has been defined as college football, not all of football.    

The Ivy League Champion can never hold a candle to the CFB National Champion.  There are better football teams than Ivy League teams.  But the Ivy League Champion is still in heaven when they win it.  Their arena has been defined as Ivy League football, not all of college football. 

And so on.

So the answer, I told myself, was to compartmentalize.  Focus on just the The Big Ten.  Focus on just beating MSU and Penn State and a quality OOC opponent.  Focus on an occasional New Year's Day bowl.  Focus on the Rose Bowl in the years that Ohio State abdicates it for the CFP.  That can be Michigan's defined arena.   

And just ignore Ohio State.  Just ignore the CFP.  That is not our realistic arena.

Now here we are two straight Ohio State wins and a CFP appearance later.  With an undisputed Big Ten Championship under our belts and a shot at another this weekend.  And a shot at another CFP where will will be the favorites in the first game, and not a crazy longshot if we make the final.

I need to re-define my re-defined arena.  I need to re-define it back to as big an arena as is possible: All of college football.  Up there hanging around with Alabama, Georgia, Ohio State. 

We are at the top and there is no higher mountain to climb.  And it looks like we are planning on staying there.  

I am still numb thinking about that.  I honestly did not think it was possible anymore in this era of college football.   

UMForLife

November 30th, 2022 at 5:02 PM ^

Wow. This is some great writing. How our lives are interwoven with Michigan Football is beyond explanation to our loved ones. Thank you writing this. Hope you get to Michigan Football for a living, as we get to enjoy more excellent writing like this. Go Blue!

Shuperstar

November 30th, 2022 at 5:03 PM ^

I have heard 'confidence' defined as stacking success upon success.  This has certainly been true in my own life, but for the last 16ish years it has been missing from my thoughts and feelings about this program.

Welcome back confidence... We have missed you!

Midukman

November 30th, 2022 at 5:04 PM ^

Dam near brought a tear to my eye. I’m almost 50 and to was a fan before I had a chance to chose. Spent Saturday after Saturday setting in section 9 cussing the RR Hoke years and cheering through the 80s and 90s. My boys now truly know how it feels to feel the way I felt. Roll through the playoffs and give Harbaugh and these guys the trophy they deserve. 

jackw8542

November 30th, 2022 at 5:18 PM ^

As a lifelong Michigan fan (and alum and father of an alum and son of a fan who was not an alum), the Michigan way has always been as important to me as the outcome, although, like every fan, I want to win (and win and win and win ...). In spite of that, I have never understood the reaction to the 2020 season. It was COVID, not football, and it has always been my belief that Coach Harbaugh cared more about protecting the health of the players than anything else that year. It is, quite frankly, a season that should not have been played, at least from my point of view. As a result, I never understood the dissatisfaction that some fair weather fans seemed to be expressing. To me, Jim Harbaugh was the right coach from the day he was hired until today, and my belief in that fact has never wavered.

I have, of course, enjoyed these last two years much more than any of the others, but if you ignore 2020, the team from 2015-2019 had won 72% of his games. Now, if you ignore 2020, it is up to 78%, about the same as Bo during his tenure. It's all good, although the last two years have been even better than that.

Ecky Pting

November 30th, 2022 at 5:48 PM ^

10-year old me watched Ricky Leach going 0 for 6 on forward passes (his only completion was to the other team!), but pitching option tosses all afternoon to Rob Lytle, who went for 165 yards on 29 carries to shutout the Buckeyes in Columbus, 22-0 ... featuring a wily 2-point conversion run by the PAT holder to go up 15-0 in the 3rd quarter.

Tator Salad

November 30th, 2022 at 6:06 PM ^

Man did the first two paragraphs describe my childhood to a tee or what, all the way down to also having seats in section 37. My first Michigan memory was Desmond getting held in our endzone to end the game in '90, my second being his catch against ND in our corner the next year. From there my fandom grew through my teenage years until '97 and going to the Rose Bowl. I went to the same high school as Drew Henson and smiled like an idiot every time I passed him in the hallways as he wore his Michigan gear his senior year, just thinking of what was to come for my Wolverines. Then Tressel happened, then Rich Rod, then Hoke. The past 20 years of Michigan fandom have been hard. Up until last year, the BPONE was real and made cheering for the maize and blue hard sometimes. Last year was the release of so much pent-up frustration, it was incredible. I didn't care that we lost the CFP game, I just enjoyed being there, finally able to say we did it. This year I'm getting greedy. I want it all. Mostly because I know how fleeting it all can be. I was 16 when we won it all in '97 and I never would have imagined it'd be 25 years before another shot. As Michigan fans, we know all too well how fast the descent can be and how long the ascent can take. We're at the top again, finally. It's been an incredible ride, I just hope that we can finish the last few steps. Go Blue!

Parkinen

November 30th, 2022 at 6:58 PM ^

My arch of remembrance is about 50 years.  There’s a lot of good and bad mixed in there….but I remember and cherish  mostly the good.  When the bad happens I recall Kurt Vonnegut “So it goes” and go out to weed the garden.  

MaynardST

November 30th, 2022 at 9:11 PM ^

This is wonderfully written.  I have a somewhat similar experience except yours felt like deja vu to me, other than the fact that the talented Daily writers were engaging in relatively responsible journalism during the latest drought.  My dad went to Michigan from 1938 to 1942, and graduate school from 1946 to 1951.  I spent my whole childhood listening to stories about Harmon, Westfall, Chappuis, Elliott, Derricotte etc., but the team I watched was mediocre at best. 

I began as a student in 1965 when the Wolverines were actually coming off a Rose Bowl win, but in my freshman year the record was 4-6.  I then joined the Daily and wrote a lot about the problem, including questioning conditioning when the team was losing multiple games by being outscored in the fourth quarter. 

While the Wolverines were somewhat successful despite a weak start and finish in my senior year, what I was writing was so negative that Don Canham, the new athletic director, told me I was hurting people.  Assistant coach Tony Mason said he would make sure I would never get a job in journalism.

Maybe I wasn't censored (much) because people were more worried about being drafted than anything else. However, Canham was at Michigan for many of the same years my father was.  He kicked Bump upstairs and hired Bo after the 1968 season during my last semester.  I went off to law school elsewhere hoping to avoid the draft. I wasn't sure about Bo, but I did understand that Canham wanted to fill the seats, because during those years only the MSU and OSU games sold out.  It turns out that this hire was mission accomplished. I do wish that some Daily sports writers during the 21st century were immature and sophomoric like I was.

TorontoBlue

December 1st, 2022 at 1:40 AM ^

UM is in my DNA.  My dad played 4 years, graduating in 1948.  My  pregnant parents stayed in Benny Oostebaan's room in Columbus after the "Snow Bowl" in 1950.  I was born the following February.

Don Canham sent out prints of a snarling wolverine autographed by Bo to alums as a fundraiser in the early 70's.  My dad gifted his to me and I had it professionally framed and hung it over my fireplace in Upper Arlington (Columbus) when I lived there from "73 to '77.  Lots of fun cocktail parties!

Many highs. For me, Under the Lights #1 with Denard is a standout - google the vids post game.  Epic.  Biggest low was the UM vs Oklahoma Orange Bowl.  First year they lifted the bowl ban and we lost!

I like the theme thru these posts.  That this team is having fun, and it's fun to watch them.  Brian mentioned in an earlier post that watching them is like a Caribbean vacation.  Agree 100%.

GO BLUE beat Purdue.

 

uminks

December 1st, 2022 at 2:28 AM ^

I guess I was spoiled following Michigan in the 70s, 80s and 90s. Then things turned sour once Carr retired and RR took over. At first, I thought Hoke was going to restore our glory. He only had one good season before things fell apart. Harbaugh was our hero to truly save the program and he did a good job through 2019. Winning 8 to 10 games per season but always losing to OSU and losing too often to MSU. 2020 was a step backward for Harbaugh but I wanted to keep him as coach. Wow, what a transformation during the last 2 seasons under.Harbaugh, finally he delivered and this may be a start for a great run,