A Brief Reflection from an Ohio State fan

Submitted by themostbrian on January 9th, 2024 at 10:05 AM

I would appreciate a brief dispensation to comment on this excellent Michigan team.

Today I am genuinely happy for Michigan and Michigan fans. Prior to this season, Michigan was 4-14 in its last 18 bowl games - a stretch of futility that began with a 45-17 loss to Tennessee at the January 1, 2002 Citrus Bowl. Their 4 wins during that run are mundane at best - a 2003 Outback Bowl victory to cap a 10-3 season, a 2008 Capital One Bowl victory to cap a 9-4 season, an 2011 Sugar Bowl victory to cap an 11-2 season, and a 2016 Citrus Bowl victory to cap a 10-3 season.

That's a historically miserable run for any program, let alone the winningest college football program of all time. For comparison, the Ohio State dark years under John Cooper only ran to 3-9 overall in the postseason - and one of those 3 victories was the famous Rose Bowl win against Arizona State, easily the best win Ohio State had in the 1990s.

For many, if not most, sports fans, observing a great rival being subjected to this kind of anguishing, decades-long failure would provoke a deep schadenfreude. And I have certainly experienced that at times over the last 20 years - so I am in no way holding myself above anyone else.

But, for me, this Michigan team is different. It's stocked with truly good kids who stayed through rougher times, developed their talent, and returned to school to win a national championship - JJ McCarthy, Blake Corum, Donovan Edwards, Zak Zinter, Trevor Keegan, Max Bredeson, Kris Jenkins, Junior Colson, Michael Barrett, Josh Wallace,.. and the delightful Mikey Sainristil. It's coached by one of the true greats of the sport as a player and a coach - Jim Harbaugh - who absolutely bleeds Maize and Blue. And it's a team that has endured multiple NCAA investigations while under an immensely critical media microscope (despite zero evidence that the sign-stealing program was a significant departure in scope or effect from what other teams already do).

And, in a still roiling college football landscape marked by immediate transfers and universities-as-capitalist-brands, Michigan has gone a markedly different direction by recruiting within the elite academic constraints of the university, developing lesser talent into elite production over multiple seasons, sticking with an old school I-formation and multiple tight ends offensive attack, and finally winning a title with the lowest roster talent of any national champion in at least a decade.

Contrast this with the Ohio State University's football program, which increasingly feels like a collection of mercenaries who happen to wear the same jersey. And, to be clear, I do not hold that against any of the players - they should do what is best for them to maximize their talent to reach the NFL, no question! But it is refreshing to see a throwback team that genuinely cares about the university, honors the deep history of the Maize and Blue, and has actively chosen to put aside individual glory for the pursuit of something greater as a collective. And, what's more, they did it with immense and carefree joy.

Brian already memorialized this Michigan team best:

"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."

I will never be a Michigan fan. But I'm not ashamed at all to say that I'm a fan of this Michigan team in this moment.

Bo Glue

January 9th, 2024 at 11:33 AM ^

I'm not going to hate on you for coming in peace, but I do have one nit to pick. I think you're really underselling the 2008 win against Urbz. Lloyd went out on a win and beat a team with a Heisman winner.

907_UM Nanook

January 9th, 2024 at 12:25 PM ^

Thanks for the honest & gracious acknowledgement of Team 144's accomplishments. I know we could all live in a better world if we could just "turn the page" when things don't go our way. And add a smile & a kind word for good measure. 

I've got a friend who's a buckeye fan, personal family friends of the Burrows, and he's a really stand up guy. Offered his congrats & it was genuine. There are good people in this rivalry, and most lurk outside of message boards.

True Blue Grit

January 9th, 2024 at 12:26 PM ^

And I thought rational, self-aware Buckeye fans didn't exist.  You have proven me wrong sir.  Well written, and I agree with everything you've said.  Thank you for the kind comments!  

alum96

January 9th, 2024 at 12:51 PM ^

I feel like thisisatrap.meme but I am happy to accept it. 

Did you go to THE Ohio State - it is amazing to see full sentences with correct punctuation, from someone from the state of Ohio.

themostbrian

January 9th, 2024 at 1:44 PM ^

Ha. I did! I have a B.A. from OSU and an M.A. from elsewhere. I think Ohio State's fandom is more like a professional team's fandom than most college programs - essentially because Columbus doesn't have a big professional team but it IS a large city. So OSU becomes the go to "professional" sports team of choice with almost no competition, which results in a large city fanbase that is made up of a representative sample of the entire population - there's no NBA, MLB, or NFL team within 2.5 hours of Columbus. Whereas in Ann Arbor you have the Tigers and Lions and Pistons nearby so the mass fandom probably navigates to those teams, leaving Michigan to the alums and those with a deeper connection to the university. And you have another big state school (MSU) that splits the population. Central Ohio has neither of these things.

I don't know if that makes any sense, but that's my 2 cents as to why significant elements of the OSU fanbase can seem to lack a college education - it's almost certainly because they do lack a college degree and if they had been born in a different state they would have transferred that fandom to an NFL team.

jonvalk

January 9th, 2024 at 1:44 PM ^

Appreciate the level-headed post. It's been very telling to see which of my Buckeye friends had the decency to have this type of perspective and which of them have become angry trolls over the past three years. You'd think that 20 years of dominance would have provided them with an emotional buffer, but nope, lots of venom. During the Cooper years, I was arrogant and lorded each win over my Buckeye friends, so I give them some grace and the opportunity to grow as a person. Sadly, most of them are just becoming Buckeye memes. Glad there are still some rational ones out there!

b618

January 9th, 2024 at 3:01 PM ^

Wow.  That is some impressive writing.  Salute to you, themostbrian.

As a wolverine, i get downvoted for saying this, however:  except for vs Michigan, i like to see ohio state win its games.  Because to me, the rivalry is more glorious, lofty, and vital that way.

waittilnextyear

January 9th, 2024 at 3:33 PM ^

Michigan-Ohio State is the best rivalry in all of sport, IMO.  And for that to be true, we both (Wolverines and Buckeyes) need each other.  None of us would get to enjoy those goosebump-inducing montages of the greats (Archie Griffin, Eddie George, David Boston, Charles Woodson, Desmond Howard, Aidan Hutchinson) every year leading up to The Game without mutual sentiment like this.  Thanks for dropping in.

Jonesy

January 9th, 2024 at 5:28 PM ^

I have a very hard time believing this was written by an OSU fan. Which, assuming the best, is a huge compliment to you. Sports would be a lot nicer if the rivalries weren't trending the same as recent political discourse.