A Brief History Of Pat Fitzgerald Getting His Soul Crushed Comment Count

Ace October 3rd, 2018 at 10:00 AM

[Bryan Fuller]

When you get a prompt this good, you use it.

As we've covered this week, Pat Fitzgerald has everything going for him to be difficult to dislike—local kid returns to alma mater in time of turmoil, runs a program that's historically bad, is funny and charming in press conferences when he's not saying batshit stuff about RPOs and communism, etc.—and yet, when you see him on the opposing sideline, it becomes pretty easy to find the guy obnoxious.

The feeling can be acute when Northwestern is unexpectedly winning and Fitzgerald goes full-blown cheerleader. Which is fine. It's fine. I'm not mad. This didn't bother me at all after one of the more miserable opening quarters in recent memory.

Definitely not mad, he said, while squeezing the remote until the battery case snaps.

Anyway, we never have to stay mad at Fitz for long, because his teams always find a way to gack it away to Michigan, usually in exceedingly comical/painful fashion.

[After THE JUMP, one man's emotional rollercoaster.]

2012

For our purposes, at least, it started in 2012, when a personal foul on Michigan prompted Fitzgerald to display behavior normally reserved for contestants on The Price Is Right. 

His self-described "knucklehead" motivational tactic briefly paid off as the Wildcats took a late lead. To make Fitz sad, Devin Gardner—filling in for the injured Denard Robinson—would have to get a Borges/Hoke offense down a lot of field in not a lot of time to have a chance at a game-tying field goal. He accomplished that with the help of Roy Roundtree and the Hand of (Angry Northwestern-Hating) God, then secured the victory himself with a gallop to the pylon in overtime before Kenny Demens put a thunderous end to the proceedings. Let's check in on contestant's row.

Must've overbid.

2013

Fitz got demonstrative encouraging this punt before doing the Charlie Brown walk when it turned out to be miserable shank.

For a man willing to exhibit such public lack of dignity, especially in a game to that point comprised entirely of field goals, he maintained his Jaw of Grating Confidence.

Just when it looked like the Cats would finally scratch one out, Drew Dileo powerslid into our hearts, and the game-tying fire drill field goal resulted in this brutal scene.

Yes, going 0-4 against Brady Hoke as a head coach will haunt you forever, and Fitzgerald knew that before he'd officially gone 0-3.

2014

The infamous M00N Game. What depraved soul could get any joy out of the first half?

But of course.

To Fitz's credit(?), even he couldn't maintain a facade of positivity as this game proceeded into the second half.

It eventually ended in regulation with some points on the board. This was merciful for most. Not Fitz.

There is no mercy for a man who willfully employs Mick McCall.

2015

A shutout buttwhoopin' so anomalous in this recent stretch that the wrong Northwestern staff member—Some Guy—ended up featured in the game's most memorable GIF, when Jourdan Lewis' ganktastic pick-six blew a random staffer's mind.

This unnamed man is clearly right for Fitzgerald's staff, and I presume is still on it, since I don't think they've abandoned anyone related to the program other than burgeoning union leaders since the mid-aughts.

Northwestern fandom: still better than it used to be!

2016-2017

Off the schedule. Fitzgerald compensates with a number of other brutal losses outside the GIF coverage of this blog.

2018

Once again, it started well. One might argue too well, if they'd perhaps been through the experience of being repeatedly bashed in the soul-dong. Theoretically, you know. Someone who'd maybe been an All-American linebacker before becoming the coach of A Few Private School Kids' Big Ten Team. Hypothetically. He may look like this man.

You know, if he hasn't learned. Hypothetically.

You're on this blog this week. You've also been on Earth for the last several years, presumably, and still have some belief despite the bloodymindedness of a certain beloved local football program that past results are often predictive of future results. You know where this is going.

I should stop to explain, for those who haven't noticed, that gfycat assigns a random string of words as the URL for each GIF. The words appended to the above GIF's URL: ComposedFlawlessCats.

I'm worried gfycat has become sentient.

Anyway, other than losing to Actual Brady Hoke, this is pretty much the saddest way to end a football game.

All he wants to do is politely shake the hand of the opposing coach and leave the crowded field with cameras all over for a more private setting in which to unleash his frustration. Instead he's walled off by the team celebrating his squad's defeat.

Pat Fitzgerald, this is your life.

Comments

THE TEAM cubed

October 3rd, 2018 at 2:00 PM ^

Wow.  This brought up some bad memories.  First time I’ve ever checked out of a season was 2014.  A lot of work that was done around the house on those  2014 Saturday’s.  The moon game is the reason my basement is so organized.  

BursleyHall82

October 3rd, 2018 at 2:11 PM ^

This is literally the best thing that's ever been on MGoBlog.

Everybody on this blog needs to shut it down and find other jobs, because none of you will ever do anything in the future that will ever measure up to these standards.

Goggles Paisano

October 3rd, 2018 at 2:17 PM ^

This is THE best post I have seen in a long time.  Well done Ace! 

As I watched the game and the end, I saw that Pat Fitzgerald was trying to shake someones hand and got a celebratory Michigan team that TOTALLY ignored him.  His expression was priceless and I wished someone would make a GIF out of it.  And here it is to live forever.

Also, as many times as I have seen that JD pick-six, I never noticed that Northwestern staffer.  That is gold!  

SFBlue

October 3rd, 2018 at 3:11 PM ^

A nice retrospective, and you are right to credit Fitz for running a solid program despite the inherent disadvantages Northwestern has.

For me, what's missing here is the following context: stunning upsets and heartbreaking losses by Michigan to Northwestern in 1995, 1996, and 2000.

In 1995 Michigan was undefeated and ranked No. 7, and lost a bitter defensive struggle. Michigan turned it over 4 times, out gained Northwestern considerably, and were ahead at the beginning of the third quarter 13-9, losing 13-19. That game changed the course of the season. With a win, I bet Michigan's win against Ohio sends them to the Rose Bowl.

In 1996, Michigan lost at Northwestern in a game where Michigan led 16-0 at the beginning of the fourth quarter. They somehow lost 16-17. Again, Michigan was undefeated going into the game. It was a season-changing loss. Again. 

So, in the 4th quarters in 1995 and 1996, Northwestern outscored Michigan 27-0. 

In 2000, all Michigan had to do was run out the clock, and Anthony Thomas fumbled leading to the game-winning score. 46 second left on the clock. Second and three. Thomas had been mauling them. Northwestern had two timeouts left. Thomas breaks through the line, into the open field, and drops the ball. Had he not fumbled, he may have been gone. Had he just taken a knee after four easy yards, the game is over. First down and Michigan can just burn out the clock by taking three knees. That loss cost Michigan the Rose Bowl, without qualification. Two turnovers. The second one was totally unnecessary. 

Taking a step back, those losses in 1995, 1996, and 2000 were far more costly than the wins since then have been valuable. By a factor of between 100 and 1000.  

PaulWall

October 3rd, 2018 at 5:50 PM ^

What's the purpose of this post? Michigan won.  Emotional antics or not,  game over,  Michigan won.  Let it be.  People wonder why Michigan fans get a bad rap. Id say this has something to with it. Win and move on.  This is something id expect from sparty. 

slimj091

October 3rd, 2018 at 8:09 PM ^

The "fist pump what the fuck" guy from 2015 is still there. I'm sure he's the same guy that expressed extreme exuberance when Shea got tackled after converting a 3&6 with an 11 yard scramble at 9:48 in the 3rd quarter.

greatlakestate

October 5th, 2018 at 5:54 PM ^

Considering the appalling lack of character of some of the other B1G coaches, I'm fine with Pat Fitzgerald's exuberant antics, though I might feel less magnanimous if we had actually lost.