Hanging Ain't Today Comment Count

Brian

imageAt the beginning, I apologized.

I was standing in front of a big group of people in a bar in midtown New York City, and I knew that the year before I had wandered in in a suit and told them that this would be an off year for Michigan football because the quarterbacks were probably bad and the offensive line probably worse. That sounds right from 10,000 feet, but I'd splashed an Alamo Bowl logo up at the end of the presentation when I should have put up a map of Tajikistan underneath the title MOVE HERE IMMEDIATELY.

So I had a slide at the beginning that noted some of the things I'd been very wrong about the year before, and I noted my errors, asked for forgiveness, suggested that football was a crazy game, and promised them less than I'd promised the year before but more than they'd gotten. That seemed to go okay.

Around here, I asked Paul to splice together a bunch of highlights and set it to a song that seemed particularly apropos and posted it on the eve of the season. To call it hopeful sells it short. A bunch of good plays strung together that ignores last year's woe is hopeful. One that acknowledges them and then flashes to color when the good stuff kicks in is closer to an explicit promise.

It's not a surprise that as the season has dragged along, the team an increasingly unrecognizable piece of roadkill grinding away the remnants of a jaw along the highway of the Big Ten, that more than the occasional comment or email references "Sometimes When You're On" as a source of gallows humor. Sometimes there's no humor and the emailer is just lamenting the hope that has transubstantiated into misery. That's considerably worse.

Kennedy is dead and I'm sitting here telling anyone who will ask "things are going to be all right" and now, finally, it's not working. And deservedly so.

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In 2002, I was in Ireland for the summer. I'd graduated from undergrad and had a chunk of money saved up from summers spent interning at engineering firms and my girlfriend of over a year had broken up with me in slow motion and I thought I'd have an adventure. I planned on working. A friend of mine had spent a chunk of time in Ireland working IT when jobs were available for anyone with working knowledge of a screwdriver, but the Celtic Tiger had imploded dramatically with the rest of the tech world in 2001 and I was reduced to wandering around wondering why the hell I needed a resume to pick plates up and put them other places. Surely there was some sort of spatial reasoning test that could be done on the fly.

So I didn't work. I rented a room in a Galway house shared by a bunch of marine biology students—when The Abyss was on TV, the rig-envy was palpable—and screwed around. One of the things I did was watch every game of the World Cup, because why the hell not? Ireland was in it after a famous upset of Holland, not that I knew about this, or how infrequent Irish World Cup appearances are, at the time. I got up at eight in the morning—impressive to me, at least—to watch them tie Cameroon in their first match.

The second match day was a huge, nerve-wracking one with the US taking on Portugal and Ireland staring down the Germans and freaking Oliver Kahn, the robot goalie. Kahn would become a personal sporting bête noire over the course of the tournament, a man worthy of his last name. He would win the Golden Ball as the tournament's best player, the only time in World Cup history that the award has gone to a goalie. And his team didn't even win. He was good.

The USA could really use a win in their first match; Ireland just needed a draw with Saudi Arabia the last game on the schedule.

I debated heading down to the pub at eight in the morning, but eventually decided against it mostly because it was a twenty minute walk. But the US scored, and scored again, and scored again, and with the game 3-1 at halftime and my house abandoned I said "screw it" and spent halftime scurrying downtown. I watched Jeff Agoos score a spectacular own goal while nursing a pint of cider* in a moderately full pub. The USA won and that was well and good. For everyone else, it was a small moment of schadenfreude in before the main event.

So here's the main event: Ireland goes toe-to-toe with the Germans, putting more shots on goal but unable to crack Kahn. In the 19th minute enormous robot striker Miroslav Klose puts the Germans up, but from that moment on they're on the back foot. Ireland presses to no avail. Kahn seems everywhere. He makes three insane saves to keep Ireland off the board. I loathe him. I hate his incredibly German hair, and his insane excellence.

Then it's gone. Ninety minutes are over and they're just kicking it around in stoppage time. Ireland has made their desperate substitutions, sticking creaky old Niall Quinn, a 6'4" battleship of a target forward, out there in the vague hope he can get his head to the ball. In the 92nd minute some defender boots the ball upfield as people do at the end of the game when there's no time and no hope. Quinn finds this ball and flicks it down to an onrushing Robbie Keane. That bastard Kahn is out, though, out fast and in position and Keane has to shoot after one touch and the shot actually deflects off that fucking bastard Kahn…

You have no doubt experienced some variety of sports pandemonium in your life, but you probably haven't watched an entire country take the day off to drink next to the river. In the immediate aftermath I remember hugging some guy who looked like he was from Pakistan. I was instantly recognizable as an American, so maybe that made sense. Ever since, I've rooted for Kahn in his losing battle against preening Jens Lehman, and maybe that makes sense, too.

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On Wednesday, Ireland missed the World Cup on the most flagrant handball since Diego Maradona.

It has not been a good fall. Since Michigan scraped by Indiana, the team they are vying with for outright possession of the Big Ten cellar, I haven't watched Michigan beat any team that plays at scholarship parity with them in two different sports. Football hasn't beaten a I-A team since September 26th. Hockey is currently languishing at 4-6 after consecutive sweeps at the hands of Miami and, of all teams, Michigan State. In that series, Corey Tropp scored in a game that finished 3-2. Hell, the one hockey game I've listened to on the radio this year was the dismal 2-0 defeat against Fairbanks to open the year.

It's been hard for me. In the past my strategy when sports were more pain than they're worth has been to disconnect as much as possible, but that's obviously not possible any more. So I've seen everything that's happened the last two years somewhere between four and eight times.

But it's been hard on everyone else, too. Johnny emerged from his slumber to write something beautiful about Brandon Minor

On Saturday he will be there. Maybe not on Thursday or on Friday, but you don’t prepare for the deranged violence.

…and this is how life repays him:

Out

David Molk (knee)
Brandon Minor (shoulder)

He sent me one of the semi-annual IMs we exchange to ask me what percent chance I put on Minor playing. I said "I don't know," and that was that. This is life at the bottom.

Everyone who's joked or not joked about "Sometimes When You're On" is hurt because their expectations have not been met, because they hoped for more. I've played a role in that, and for that I'm sorry. There are days when two minnows come up against world powers and win, or tie their asses off, though. When I went to RBUAS I saw that Jake and Mike and Chad had given way to a new era, however brief it will be:

image

A beautifully futile gesture. Johnny had the old guys up there forever, and it wasn't hard to figure out why. But what I said after the Notre Dame game still holds, even if it's cast in a different light by the events that followed: this is Michigan now. Though they're still plainly deficient, they'll be there Saturday. I don't know if things are going to be all right anymore. But I'll be there, too, and God help anyone who talks about "heart" within earshot.

Saturday contains itself. For three hours, let hope bloom, and think about the consequences afterward.

*(Don't judge me. It was before noon and somehow Bulmers has this marvelous nutty tinge if you get it from the tap in Ireland. I've had the stuff stateside and it suffers far more than Guinness does.)

Comments

Boo-erns

November 20th, 2009 at 2:24 PM ^

This puts my feelings into words perfectly...which kind of weirds me out. As Mgoblog has grown Brian's excellent writing has influenced a much wider audience than blog readers. I dutifully repeat the perfectly reasoned things i learn from reading this blog to my girlfriend, fans of other teams, and people wearing michigan shirts that i meet on airplanes. Some of these people, no doubt, spread these ideas to their friends. I dont mean to say this is bad (brian almost always use reason and logic in a way that is uncommon in sports writing), but its weird that one persons opinion and analysis can have such a broad effect on how people think about football. I really dont have a point here...at least we are united by this, though one more year (or even loosing the opener next year) will tear this fanbase to shreds.

bddutchg

November 20th, 2009 at 2:28 PM ^

op⋅ti⋅mism [op-tuh-miz-uhm] –noun 1. a disposition or tendency to look on the more favorable side of events or conditions and to expect the most favorable outcome. 2. the belief that good ultimately predominates over evil in the world. 3. the belief that goodness pervades reality. 4. the doctrine that the existing world is the best of all possible worlds. Inherently, optimism is unrealistic. But, dammit, it's worth a try. This is why I read this damn blog every day.

Wazoo

November 20th, 2009 at 2:52 PM ^

It's posts like this one and a few others over the past year or so that I hope get linked to Brian's future posts when Michigan football gets back on course. Not that it's going to make tomorrow any easier to take, but memories of the struggle will make the jubilation from the top much more sweeter for those who are not bandwagon supporters.

jarjar

November 20th, 2009 at 3:11 PM ^

I just want to see Pryor get sacked, throw an interception, Denard get a run like in the Western Michigan game and Stonum take a kick return all the way.

zlionsfan

November 20th, 2009 at 3:14 PM ^

I remember waking up early-early for the USA-Portugal match, watching in my bedroom in my apartment, really, really wanting to shout after every goal and barely able to keep it in (neighbors on all sides) ... same thing for USA-Mexico. Unbelievable days, and that was for a team in a country that was ambivalent about international soccer. I can't imagine what it would have been like in Ireland. Also, screw France. cheaters. I suspect that some time on Saturday I will be thinking about the 2002 World Cup (and maybe 2010), and not so much about what's happening on the TVs around me. But I will be ready when next season starts, and I will be cautiously optimistic, because next season there will be hope again. And every now and then, you get a 1997. (Hell, even the Lions made the playoffs.)

ahottenstein

November 20th, 2009 at 3:21 PM ^

Cheer up Brian. You are the man, this blog is amazing. You have more followers and appreciators than you could possibly imagine. We all love Michigan Football, and are hurting because of it, but you have done nothing but enhanced our collective experience 1000 fold. Thank you for making educated viewers and followers out of all of us. You are doing a fantastic job.

maximus_spaniard

November 20th, 2009 at 3:30 PM ^

... to say: Brian, there is nothing to apologize about. If anything, all your readers should THANK YOU for finding the reasons for the tough times Michigan is going through. You have shown lots of courage in sticking to your guns, whether it's here or in the radio, giving people perspective, helping people see "The Big Picture". A friend of mine told me a couple of days ago that the reason we get passionate about teams is because we view the teams as our best friend. We treat our team as our best friend, we care for them, we want them to do well, to succeed. But as in life, our best friend might go through a bad time, but we pull for them, help in any way we can. We don't abandon our friend when he/she needs us the most. The Michigan Wolverines are my best friend in the sports world. We became friends in an unlikely manner; I'm in no way associated with The University of Michigan, other than going to Ann Arbor (from Venezuela) and living there for a year, in 1979. I was 12, I hated football at the time because I didn't understand it. But someone took the time to explain the basics for me, while watching my first ever football game on TV; that game where Notre Dame blockecked what would have been the winning field goal and Michigan lost 12-10. My first Michigan heartbreak. Then I went to my first game. Indiana @ Michigan and remember like it was yesterday, 0:06 seconds showing in the scoreboard, John Wangler to Anthony Carter... you know the story, I was hooked, forever! So in two games, my new friend had provided me the emotions of a heartbreak and the excitement of a last second victory. I was grateful for that and since then I have been loyal to him for throughout my life. I left Ann Arbor, back to Venezuela, but somehow stayed in touch. First through a Sports Illustrated subscription and later on through a satellite dish, since 1988, and I have been through thick and thin with him... the last 2 years of Bo, Gary Moeller, the Kordel Stewart throw, Lloyd Carr, 1997, Tom Brady, the 2000 Orange Bowl. Too many excitments. But then came Jim Tressel, the bully from down south and started messing up with my friend, and I just can't abondon my friend now. My friend is hurt, but he is corageous... and it pains me that I won't be able to be among the 110,000 who will be cheering from my friend. But I'll be watching, alone in my apartment. Maybe I'll laugh, maybe I'll cry, but I'll be proud of having The Michigan Wolverines as my best friend. I know my best friend not only will be back, he will be back with a vengeance. Maybe it begins Saturday at noon. Michigan Wolverines, thanks for the memories, and here's to many more! GO BLUE!!

greeno

November 20th, 2009 at 3:30 PM ^

Back in August, I'm sure we all said UM would be lucky to be 6-6 or 7-5 this year . After it got to 4-0, I think everyone changed expectations. Wasn't you alone Brian. Keep up the good work. I read this blog every day. Can't handle any other media right now. Was just at lunch and had to listen to Rob Parker blather about RichRod being fired on E*PN. Thankfully this site exists...a sane UM group of fans that supports the TEAM. Also, I watch the video on a nightly basis now. Hope remains... GO BLUE

Son Of Zoltan

November 20th, 2009 at 3:52 PM ^

On top of everything else, you have to sit next to that 'Cope' d-bag on WTKA. Oh my Christ, I cannot stand that guy. From his endless terrible impressions to dime a dozen movie quotes that he uses, all while acting as though he alone stumbled upon underground classics like Caddyshack. To sum it up, I 3 Brian, I HATE Mark Copeland. FACT.

mgovictors23

November 20th, 2009 at 4:40 PM ^

Don't be sorry man, this blog is what keeps everyone sane with all the ESPN garbage we have to hear. This blog is amazing and has been something to really help through these tough times.

arod

November 20th, 2009 at 6:59 PM ^

I We are the hollow men We are the stuffed men Leaning together Headpiece filled with straw. Alas! Our dried voices, when We whisper together Are quiet and meaningless As wind in dry grass Or rats’ feet over broken glass In our dry cellar Shape without form, shade without colour, Paralysed force, gesture without motion; Those who have crossed With direct eyes, to death’s other Kingdom Remember us—if at all—not as lost Violent souls, but only As the hollow men The stuffed men. ... III This is the dead land This is cactus land Here the stone images Are raised, here they receive The supplication of a dead man’s hand Under the twinkle of a fading star. Is it like this In death’s other kingdom Waking alone At the hour when we are Trembling with tenderness Lips that would kiss Form prayers to broken stone. IV The eyes are not here There are no eyes here In this valley of dying stars In this hollow valley This broken jaw of our lost kingdoms In this last of meeting places We grope together And avoid speech Gathered on this beach of the tumid river Sightless, unless The eyes reappear As the perpetual star Multifoliate rose Of death’s twilight kingdom The hope only Of empty men. V Here we go round the prickly pear Prickly pear prickly pear Here we go round the prickly pear At five o’clock in the morning. Between the idea And the reality Between the motion And the act Falls the Shadow For Thine is the Kingdom Between the conception And the creation Between the emotion And the response Falls the Shadow Life is very long Between the desire And the spasm Between the potency And the existence Between the essence And the descent Falls the Shadow For Thine is the Kingdom For Thine is Life is For Thine is the This is the way the world ends This is the way the world ends This is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper.