[Patrick Barron]

The Story 2023: Under The Banyan Tree Comment Count

Brian August 28th, 2023 at 10:04 AM

Previously: The Story 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008.

The internet (and probably some sacred documents) say that the Buddha found enlightenment after sitting under a Banyan tree for seven days. Cool! Way to go, Buddha. Ever try some goalposts?

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om [Fuller]

I cannot exactly elucidate why these images have burned themselves into my head, and the heads of many Michigan fans. Maybe it's that the happy-go-lucky McCarthy seems like a breath of fresh air to a Michigan fanbase that was, until recently, beset by woe. Maybe it's just nice to have a guy who's a little different because it makes things more interesting. Maybe, I dunno, it's a different mode of leadership fit for the 24th century:

On J.J. McCarthy’s leadership:

It’s vibrant. It’s infectious; it rubs off on everybody.

Last summer, we took a team trip around Michigan and we got into this wiffle ball game. My kids were playing — a bunch of nine-year-olds, some of Jack's friends. And you couldn’t tell who the nine-year-olds were and who the 18-year-olds were. He's running, he's diving, he’s sliding. One ball gets hit out into the street and he's running out, doesn't even look. Dove into first base one time and barely missed this tree that was planted and had the bricks around it. He missed it by that much.

He's got the enthusiasm of a 10-year-old guy. It’s a beautiful thing. It's that vibrant, it's that infectious and it rubs off on the team.

Maybe next time demand McCarthy wears pads, but… maybe not. In fact, let's not.

I know what it is now.

[After THE JUMP: what it is]

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Some years back during an edition of The Game during what I hope we will refer to as the Dark Ages, I was seated next to a gaggle of Ohio State fans. (As anyone who went to those games knows, you were always seated next to a gaggle of Ohio State fans.) At some point early in the game, Michigan converted a third down and the OSU fans near me moaned "DAMON ARNETTE" in unison to each other. Arnette was a nobody recruit who had emerged to be OSU's nickelback that year, but I'd gathered from my then-constant internet searches that OSU fans were not content with him.

This was evidently 2017, given Arnette's career at OSU; the John O'Korn game. Arnette would become a four year contributor and three-year starter at OSU before becoming a first round draft pick. And these dudes, midlevel cubicle types all, scorned Arnette like he owed them money. I was miserable—beyond miserable—but at least I wasn't that kind of miserable.

These OSU folks have been recently overwhelmed in my rankings of least reasonable sports fans by a variety of Messi truther that I have happened upon because I have the bad habit of clicking on a bunch of dumb Twitter garbage. I have been flabbergasted by this. I thought that surely the arrival of the best soccer player to ever live on our shores would induce a sort of dumbfounded wonder amongst all. No, just amongst most. There remain these people:

I was taught at age eight that if you come up against the best soccer player in the history of the world that you should just not let him score a goal. This goal.

The United States would have won the World Cup if Walker Zimmerman had just been… ah.  I cannot continue this even in jest. Some people are just programmed to be Damon Arnette haters. I can't help them. I can try to not be them.

I have been that kind of miserable and documented it on this very website in the early days… and, unfortunately, in some recent ones. I remember crushing Ryan Mundy in particular, and just last spring Erik Portillo. To do these things, to play these sports, is a privilege and an honor and a tremendous burden. For most players that latter bit overwhelms all, because of course it does. So the narrative around sports, and football in particular, is one of effort and grinding and military discipline. It's fun, as long as you're not doing it. If you're doing it, it's a war.

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Also some years back, Spencer Hall came up for a game because he had to. He'd promised whichever fanbase donated the most money to New American Pathways would get a visit and an article from him, and because Michigan always points the money cannon he came up for a grim Michigan-Penn State battle where Brady Hoke and James Franklin exchanged bogglingly bad strategic decisions. Michigan won because Devin Funchess was eventually leveraged, but the two things I remember most were thus:

  1. There was a fan a couple rows in front of us that kept screaming "Hackenberg, yer a bum!" It was impossible to discern whether this was genuine, sarcastic, or somewhere in-between. Spencer thought that a Michigan fan doing this was the funniest thing that had ever happened.
  2. Dennis Norfleet was returning punts, and he decided to bring out his frat's idiosyncratic step dance. This electrified the crowd in a game that ended (approximately, spiritually) 0 to –3, and at some point Spencer said "that guy can play for Florida."

That Guy Can Play For Florida means a lot of things, some of them good and some not so good. Florida is a sheer unbridled minecart ride of a program. What it aspires to more than anything else is to be fun. Of late it is not accomplishing this goal, but the spiritual heart of Florida football is and always will be Steve Spurrier calling Mills up two touchdowns in the fourth quarter and then devastating the opposing coach in a post-game press conference.  

There are costs to this, of course, particularly when an amoral psychopath is leading your program, but at the time I envied the sort of program that would build itself around being fun. At the time Michigan football did not seem like much fun at all.

There has been a shift, as anyone reading this is probably well aware. 84% of this is based on finally beating Ohio State, twice in a row, by lots of points. But the chairs came before the first win. The chairs:

Somewhere on that field was a person who looked at the great black emotional nothing of Michigan football and said to himself "I defy you. This is fun." Then he handed the chair to someone else, and he said the same thing, and somehow the chair won, and then the chair gave something of itself to me.

When Wisconsin played "Jump Around" that year, Michigan jumped around and jiggled the chairs. The curse lifted, and now Michigan enters this year being picked to win the national championship by people other than Desmond Howard. (Also Desmond Howard.) JJ McCarthy sits at the center of that, literally.

And the thing about McCarthy, and Blake Corum, and Mike Sainristil, and Michael Barrett, and so forth and so on, is that they all seem to have a touch of the chairs in them. McCarthy more than anyone, because he goes about the very serious business of being the Michigan quarterback like it is not serious business at all. He goes about it like he's grateful, not burdened, and in this way he is Denard Robinson:

So this thing you dared not hope for starts to coalesce just from the things that happen on the field, and then yesterday morning I was struck by a sense of profound gratefulness when I watched the MGoBlue video of Denard's postgame presser …

I love how he smiles all the time and wears his heart on his sleeve and goes "AHHHH" when someone mentions Roundtree blocking for him and seems about as amazed as everyone else at what he's doing. I love how he drops to one knee after he scores in a way that seems genuine in a way I couldn't comprehend until I saw it.

They run like my kids run. My kids do not have keys, or a wallet, or a phone. They do not have objects they carry around every day that represent demands, obligations, responsibilities. Mortgages, credit card balances, texts you have to answer from people you do not want to talk to.

Unlike my kids, they do have all of those objects, and all of those demands, obligations, and responsibilities. They've signed up for an order of magnitude more than their fair share by playing football at the University of Michigan™. But they do not seem burdened by it. They are joyful. They run like there is nothing in their pockets, nothing at all.

Comments

Germany_Schulz

August 28th, 2023 at 10:24 AM ^

Great stuff Brian. 

It's been a bit surreal these past 2 football seasons as a Michigan fan. 

Witnessing our team have a new found confidence & successes in the biggest moments while also holding this described youthful exuberance has re-energized the fanbase - and dare I say, the University community to some degree.  

Let's do this. 

Go Blue. 

 

schreibee

August 29th, 2023 at 2:27 PM ^

To fully grasp the turnaround this program made from 2020 to 2021 and beyond, look not at osu 2021 but instead at the wiscy games from '20 to '21.

How did this staff effect this turnaround with 90% the same personnel & coaching staffs?

Has there ever been a similar about face in attitude & results within a program (college or pro) that didn't make wholesale changes? I honestly can't think of one.

It must be as enraging to our rival & our wannabe rivals as it is confounding to me...🤷‍♂️

BursleysFinest

August 28th, 2023 at 10:27 AM ^

This!  I love the winning (and granted the winning probably makes the rest of it easier). But yeah, rooting for UM often just feels like drudgery, or an obligation.  But sometimes you remember, this is just our old crotchety coach sending a horde of over-sized, mature beyond their years kids out there to play a game, and you just sit back and enjoy it. 

dragonchild

August 28th, 2023 at 10:44 AM ^

I love the game.  I hate what people make of the game.  I hate how most fans are so invested in the sport that their moods are irrationally shaped by a bunch of young men running on a field.  I hate how it results in a corrupt, psychopathic culture of enabling any crime or depravity, as long as a bunch of people you've never met wearing one color of shirt beat this other bunch of people wearing shirts of another color.

It's a fucking game!  I appreciate people who make it fun, and that includes Denard, JJ, and yes, Jim Harbaugh.  Dude acts like a little kid whenever he doesn't have some bureaucratic jackass breathing down his neck.  The game needs more man-childs grinning ear-to-ear and fewer bureaucratic jackasses making everyone miserable.

goblu330

August 28th, 2023 at 10:57 AM ^

I appreciate this sentiment, but I also think pointing to “the other” when it comes to college football toxicity is not particularly honest.  College football is wonderful and awful.  The best and the worst thing.  Beautifully rendered and horribly violent. It’s America, bundled up with a bow for a weekend treat.  
 

Michigan football is part of it, for better or worse.  Do I love it?  Yes.  Do I hate it?  Yes.  But the fact is, I CARE about really deeply.  I’m not sure what the says and have stopped even trying to parse it.

 

dragonchild

August 28th, 2023 at 11:04 AM ^

It is honest in my case.  I care about the games more than I'd like, because I want to see Harbaugh's cultural approach succeed and corporate approaches fail.

As such I'm not married to Michigan.  I have at times stopped rooting for Michigan when I felt they were losing their way.  And if our rivals' fans weren't so toxic, I'd feel considerably less bad about losing to them.  I want to look forward to a UM-MSU game, but I need it to be a cleanly-played game between two well-behaved programs & fanbases.  This may be blasphemy but I wouldn't feel bad about losing to a hypothetical MSU that wasn't an incarnation of literally everything wrong with the sport.  Instead I dread reading that someone got maimed during the game. . . or nowadays, after the game.  I need the MSU we're stuck with to fail, not because I'm a Michigan alum, but because MSU is so toxic.

But it's also incredibly annoying when people project onto me.  You may be like most people, but no, you do not in fact speak for me.  And if your reflex when someone mentions fan toxicity is to play the guilt by association card, maybe you should spend less time trying to "both sides" people you don't know, and a little more time in introspection.

goblu330

August 28th, 2023 at 11:10 AM ^

I’m not trying to project on to you, but the fact that you see the toxicity between Michigan and its rivals as completely a one way street is evidence enough of what I am saying.  
 

I don’t mind being part of it.  I am part of it.  It is what it is.  And if Michigan becomes another Alabama… Go Blue.  All day.

dragonchild

August 28th, 2023 at 11:28 AM ^

Yeah, you're doing it without trying.  That means it's compulsive.  In fact, it's one of the more pervasive, toxic elements of fandom -- that "we're all guilty so don't you dare complain" bullshit.  It's invariably the first salvo against anyone who wants standards.

I'm talking about my personal feelings and the first thing you jump to is my association with a huge and diverse fanbase that no doubt has its baddies.  Of course Michigan has its faults.  I could talk about Bo's legacy or how lovely Jon O'Korn's Twitter feed must've been.  But why do I have to testify for them now?  Because I dared to complain about toxicity.  Therefore I MUST talk about Michigan's as well, at once!

It's not only toxic, it's incoherent.  We mostly talk about our own feels here, and that's all I did, but as soon as I complain about toxicity you immediately insist we're an inseparable collective that all share in the same guilt.  Dude. . . that's seriously fucked up.

DennisFranklinDaMan

August 28th, 2023 at 11:27 AM ^

With you on MSU, but ... it drives me crazy how people on this blog mock, demean, and insult MSU ("but we're joking!" they say), and then, when some (isolated) MSU fans or players act with over-the-top anger and hostility, we're outraged. ("Shocked, shocked!")

Same with the way we talk about Ryan Day or OSU, frankly. I really want to beat OSU, and I cheer for them to lose every single week during the season. But I have no idea why so many people apparently feel a need to believe Day is a bad person, or that the players who choose to go to OSU are lesser for it.

We're part of the best rivalry in sports. In all of sports. I enjoy it, even while it terrifies me. But we need to tone down the rhetoric that dehumanizes our opponents, in football, in politics, and in life, seems to me. It's possible to really want Michigan to win, without believing that the 19-year-olds playing on the other team are evil. I promise.

dragonchild

August 28th, 2023 at 11:33 AM ^

I don't think OSU players are evil, per se.  If anything the players probably have the least to do with what I hate about OSU.  And as of yet I haven't see any indication that Ryan Day is a bad person, either.

But those fans. . . heck, they can be awful to their own team.  Crissakes, Day is sending them to the playoffs and there's talk of firing him.

And the discrepancy in outrage between UM and MSU is frankly deserved at this point.  When have UM players under Harbaugh mobbed and beat the piss out of MSU players in a straight-up attack?  I don't enjoy judging MSU; I want MSU to stop being shit.

Bothsidesism it's introspection; it's a cynical political tactic to prevent discourse.

FreddieMercuryHayes

August 28th, 2023 at 10:40 AM ^

Ah, it starts.  Feels good to finally be excited for UM season like I did in my younger years.  Feels like there can be expectations that can be met and exceeded without needing crazy miracles.  I also like to go back and read the previous years' Story as a run up to this year.  Interesting to have such good documentation of being a Michigan Fan through the years.

goblu330

August 28th, 2023 at 10:46 AM ^

For me, “The Story” has always been like reading a series of inside jokes that I wasn’t in on, but not this one.  I am entirely in on this.

”Run like nothing is in their pockets.”  I get this on a number of levels.  Very good article.

JWG Wolverine

August 28th, 2023 at 10:54 AM ^

HERE WE FUCKING GOOOOOOO

I don't care what anyone else says, Brian Cook is one of the most impactful writers of our time — and The Story is the biggest encapsulation of this!

Hail-Storm

August 28th, 2023 at 11:10 AM ^

I am getting more and more into the world of youth sports as my kids age.  They are all playing soccer and the boys play hockey. I thought that they'd play with their neighborhood kids, and grow up with them, but parents seem to get in the way.  So much focus on winning now rather than developing and keeping good families together.  

I'm happy I've been able to find programs with coaches and parents in agreement that at this age, it is most important that the kids love playing.  If they love playing, they will try harder.  If they like their teammates and coaches, putting in longer practices is just more fun. And seeing parents cheer for the wins (hey we all WANT to win) but not fret about the losses and yelling at their kids is a welcome site. 

Watching sports is also supposed to be fun.  Fun to watch with friends even when they root for the wrong team.  I'm glad the team is having fun and making it fun to watch.  Having your running back throw a bomb to your reciever is fun. Denard was fun, and JJ seems fun. 

I hope this is the year, because I've also realized that special teams and special years in sports can be hard to come by, so to sit back and enjoy them when they are there.