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Re: Booing Injured Players

Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:16 pm
Posted by atlau
Member since Oct 2012
5264 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:16 pm
He says a lot in this article that I agree with especially about injured players. Glad someone finally addressed it.

quote:

First, Auburn fans: stop booing injured players. Stop that now. Auburn men and women shouldn't do that. Our offense goes so fast that marginally nicked up players can't get off the field fast enough. So, rather than get a penalty for limping off the field as the ball is being snapped, they go to the ground to stop play. This isn't faking an injury. But even if it were, STOP BOOING! Young men regardless of uniform color deserve respect for the sacrifices they endure to fight for their glory and our enjoyment three hours a week in the fall.


LINK
Posted by AUbagman
LA
Member since Jun 2014
10561 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:19 pm to
Yeah, every time our fans do that I cringe.
Posted by NorthGwinnettTiger
Member since Jun 2006
51809 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:19 pm to
Damn work filters.
Posted by atlau
Member since Oct 2012
5264 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:20 pm to
quote:

Auburn family. We need to talk. This letter is in response to the fans in my section the other night, but I don't think they're alone so let's all talk.

Saturday night, Auburn lost to a young Texas A&M team. It was the first game Gus Malzahn lost as head coach that we were supposed to win. The people in the stands were upset. So was I. But I was upset for different reasons.

First, Auburn fans: stop booing injured players. Stop that now. Auburn men and women shouldn't do that. Our offense goes so fast that marginally nicked up players can't get off the field fast enough. So, rather than get a penalty for limping off the field as the ball is being snapped, they go to the ground to stop play. This isn't faking an injury. But even if it were, STOP BOOING! Young men regardless of uniform color deserve respect for the sacrifices they endure to fight for their glory and our enjoyment three hours a week in the fall.

Second, based on the reactions in the stands around me, I'm afraid that Auburn fans have started to believe that winning every game is our right. People who believe that will never enjoy football again. Winning brings no real pleasure because you're merely doing what you're supposed to do. Losing feels like betrayal.

I grew up in an Auburn where Pat Dye said after a loss in 1981, "There's going to be a lot of days where you lay your guts on the line and you come away empty handed. Ain't a damn thing you can do about it but go out there and lay them on the line again. And again, and again . . . You keep fighting like you did today, you keep playing like that, we can build a foundation we can live a long, long time on here at Auburn." Even near the peak of his program, after winning his third straight SEC title in 1989, Pat Dye said, "Sure, I'd love to be 12, 11-0, but I'm gonna tell you something, I wouldn't swap this year for any year that I've been at Auburn. I wouldn't swap it men, because I've watched you struggle, and I've watched you wrestle with them angels, and I watched you grow up and become men." What I took that to mean (and what I believe strongly) is that having a team and coaches that represent Auburn well on and off the field is more important than wins and losses.

Being an Auburn fan has never been about national titles. Being an Auburn fan hasn't even been about conference titles. Being an Auburn fan is about wanting a team that will play any team in America on any field in America on any Saturday and represent our school well. It's why we begged Tennessee to play us annually in the 50s even though they were a significantly better program. It's why our Amen Corner traditionally involved three SEC bluebloods, Florida, Georgia, and Alabama. If we wanted titles, we could have scheduled Kentucky, Vandy, and Ole Miss every year instead.

This year's team wasn't about a title either. We saw that schedule at the front of the year and knew what was ahead. Impossible looking road trips to Georgia and Alabama, with difficult road tests at Miss State, Ole Miss, and Kansas State. South Carolina, LSU, and Texas A&M rounded out the toughest schedule Auburn has had ever. We all knew that no matter how good this team was, it would take an amazing amount of luck to navigate that schedule unscathed.

What we expected was this: a marquee matchup every week with an exciting offense, good coaching, and (we hoped) an improved defense. We've gotten that.

This year's Auburn team is not perfect. We have a talented but inexperienced secondary prone to blown coverages and miscommunication. Our defensive line is generally fine against the run, but (due in part to Lawson's injury) have no pass rush ability. Our running backs are very good, but we don't have a Ronnie Brown or Cadillac Williams in the group. Our offensive line has been injury prone and isn't as dominant as last year's unit. None of the H-Backs are bad but they aren't Jay Prosch. But despite all the injuries and limitations, Auburn is 2-1 in three games against top national competition on the road.

Last year, during the Iron Bowl, whenever the game was in danger of slipping away, you could hear the crowd start. Softly at first then growing in intensity, "I said it's great to be, an Auburn Tiger, it's great to Be AN AUBURN TIGER! I SAID IT'S GREAT TO BE AN AUBURN TIGER!" Auburn won that game in part because every time the team could have quit, the crowd wouldn't let them.

Saturday, at least in my section, I heard scattered boos when drives stalled. I heard people cussing Coach Malzahn and Johnson. People calling for Jeremy Johnson. People who wouldn't stop calling Brandon Fulse worthless even as he laid one key perimeter block after another in second half drives. Not once, not even after the last fumble did the students start the chant to let the world know that it's great to be an Auburn Tiger.

If you want a well-oiled, predictable killing machine with a strangling defense and to be surrounded by fellow, entitled fans who expect perfection each week, we have another rooting option in this state that may suit you. If you want to continue watching a team held together with chewing gum, bailing wire, and an unorthodox offense scatter, smother, dice, and pepper the best teams in college football each week, you belong at Auburn.

These players aren't perfect. The coaches aren't infallible. But watching them over the last two years is the most fun I've ever had in a football stadium.

It hurts to lose when you have a wide open path to the title with a month of football left. But Saturday night in Jordan Hare, I saw a team that didn't quit. Texas A&M scored five touchdowns in the first half and six points in the second. Auburn's offense was four yards and two fluke fumbles from completing a remarkable comeback. This team doesn't quit; it deserves fans that won't quit.

Maybe the problem is that Gus and the boys have made the miraculous look routine for so long that we were actually surprised and disappointed when they didn't do it again Saturday. Please do not take this remarkable run for granted.

Auburn matches up well against Georgia on both sides of the ball. We have no worse chance against Alabama this year than we had last year. We may win nine games. We may win ten. All hell may break loose like it did in 2007 and Auburn may wind up in the playoff. But no matter what happens, it will always be great to be an Auburn Tiger.

Act like you believe it.
Posted by Gnar Cat21
Piña Coladaburg
Member since Sep 2009
16836 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:29 pm to
Didn't read any of that. Stop booing... Got it
Posted by AUbagman
LA
Member since Jun 2014
10561 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:31 pm to
Congrats?
Posted by Gnar Cat21
Piña Coladaburg
Member since Sep 2009
16836 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:32 pm to
Thanks?
Posted by Nortizzle
Posibarner™ Captain
Member since Nov 2006
23170 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:40 pm to
It wasn't posted for you.
Posted by AUbagman
LA
Member since Jun 2014
10561 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:46 pm to
Sure? I just laugh when someone feels the need to state they didn't read something.
Posted by Weagle25
THE Football State.
Member since Oct 2011
46176 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:48 pm to
Meh...unless they're seriously hurt (like Treadwell) who really gives a shite if they're booed or not?
Posted by Gnar Cat21
Piña Coladaburg
Member since Sep 2009
16836 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:49 pm to
That's your right. Laugh away brother
Posted by PJinAtl
Atlanta
Member since Nov 2007
12741 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:54 pm to
I agree with this line of thinking 99% of the time, because you don't know if adrenaline is keeping the pain away for a few seconds or what.

However, when you see certain coaches (St. Mark of Athens comes to mind) yelling at kids who are trotting off the field and pointing at the ground and then the kid goes down like a sniper popped him, that is all done on purpose to mess with the offense's pace. Not only does it allow them to sub, it gives the players a chance to catch their breath.
Posted by AUCE05
Member since Dec 2009
42557 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 1:58 pm to
I'll boo whoever I want to boo. This is the SEC. Go play at Troy if you don't like it, buddy.
Posted by PuntBamaPunt
Member since Nov 2010
10070 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 2:05 pm to
Uh, no, they were saying "Boo-urns, Boo-urns".
Posted by TigerPaw1
Chattanooga, TN
Member since Apr 2011
16979 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 2:56 pm to
quote:

This year's team wasn't about a title either. We saw that schedule at the front of the year and knew what was ahead. Impossible looking road trips to Georgia and Alabama, with difficult road tests at Miss State, Ole Miss, and Kansas State. South Carolina, LSU, and Texas A&M rounded out the toughest schedule Auburn has had ever. We all knew that no matter how good this team was, it would take an amazing amount of luck to navigate that schedule unscathed.


Frick this man. I hate this about some of our fans. As an Auburn man I expect Auburn men and women to bring their best each week. If I suck at school and my GPA drops certain percentage AU pulls my scholarship or kick you out of school. See what happens if you don't pay your tuition. These coaches are paid millions of dollars to when football games and these kids get free rides and all the help they could ask for to get a great education to play a game. I expect us to hold Auburn men and women to a high standard in whatever they do and when they don't meet it then call them out on it.

Gus deserves criticism for what happened Saturday. As does the whole defensive staff. Does that mean I am abandoning Auburn and wishing ill on all these guys? No it means I expect them to bring their best each week. We didn't Saturday. Another team came into Jordan Hare and wanted it more. No excuse for that to happen.

As for booing I prefer that we don't boo but it's hard to contain yourself when you are hyped up, AU is rolling down the field and a guy clearly goes down. Overall I found this article to be so pretentious and dumb that I hope most fans dismiss it
Posted by HailToTheChiz
Back in Auburn
Member since Aug 2010
48889 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 3:01 pm to
At first with your post I was like wtf

But then I was like ok
Posted by atlau
Member since Oct 2012
5264 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 3:04 pm to
quote:

TigerPaw1


I don't think he's making excuses for the players not playing their best. Look out how downtrodden Marshall was on the sidelines at the end. Look at CAP in his interview following the game and Reese. Problem is a lot of people got spoiled last season. AU wasn't supposed to be in the NC. Probably the worst thing that could have happened for Gus and team bc this year the expectations were huge. And from everything Gus has preached and the team has said since the beginning of the season, they wanted to be 13 seconds better than last year.

You can hold the players and coaches to a high standard without "giving up" on your team. I think he's telling the fans not to be so negative. I saw numerous tweets about people leaving the game really early.

Just to clarify this is an opinion piece and not an article. Big difference.
Posted by TigerPaw1
Chattanooga, TN
Member since Apr 2011
16979 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 3:09 pm to
quote:

You can hold the players and coaches to a high standard without "giving up" on your team. I think he's telling the fans not to be so negative. I saw numerous tweets about people leaving the game really early.


This I agree wholeheartedly with. Frick people that bail early, I hate when people do that. I have no problem with people being negative when things go poorly because we all care so much. As long as those same people show up and yell loud next week then we are all good.

I should clarify too that I am proud of the way the guys fought back. This team doesn't give up and I didn't think the fans did either. Everyone came out flat and A&M punished us for it. But I get tired of seeing posts and articles from AU fans getting mad at people that say negative things about coaches. Gus is paid big bucks and can take a little criticism. He probably agrees with most of it.

Overall I just didn't like the tone of the piece. I come in every season expecting AU to win it all and to win each game but know that it won't happen all the time. But that doesn't mean I shouldn't expect great things or be upset when we fail. Because next week I will be right back there cheering them on to whoop up on the dawgs
Posted by atlau
Member since Oct 2012
5264 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 3:09 pm to
Posted by AUbagman
LA
Member since Jun 2014
10561 posts
Posted on 11/10/14 at 3:55 pm to
OK, I will drama queen.
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