A Reason to Celebrate

​Fall 1997, Ann Arbor, Mi, I woke up on a different couch this morning. I usually sleep in the living room or on the back porch but this night I was upstairs in a bedroom on a different couch. The smell of sausage cooking woke me up. It wasn't pleasant. It was foul.

It was more my breath than the sausage. I must have gone three days without brushing my teeth. Consuming massive quantities of alcohol for the last 10 days led me to believe any bacteria that brushing my teeth would have removed had been disinfected by the drink. Incorrect.

It was no time for hygiene. There were football games to be won. This particular Saturday morning was interrupted by the chaos of tailgating. I wasn't a tailgater in college. I was hardly a student. I went to bed when tailgaters were arising and was lucky to make a 3.30 kickoff let alone a noon game. But this morning there were tailgaters at "our house" earlier than usual.

They were loud and unrecognizable. They had encroached on my turf and it wasn't even my turf. "Our house" was really their house but I was claiming squatter's rights and I had been building a case for two years.

I rinsed my mouth with whatever I could find, pushed aside the bottomless two liter of sprite bobbing in the sink, rinsed again and refilled the sink. I headed down the stairs, avoiding books and empty bottles of MD 20/20 to meet the cool brisk air that was billowing through the open doors, both front and back, wondering who could live like this? And yet all the beer cans had been recycled from the night before, plastic cups stacked by the sink, beer funnels washed and re-hung from the cat walk, floors mopped and kegs stacked and re-tapped. Who couldn't live like this?

More surprising however were the group of old men in the parking lot popping champagne bottles and drinking from the neck, the soundtrack was laced with Stone Temple Pilots, The Pharcyde and Lenny Kravitz, it was 7.30 am. One of my friends was outside pal-ing around with them. I was curious.

"Tuba!" I was being beckoned. "This is the Godfather." Come again?

I was just introduced to a man who was being affectionately called the Godfather and he had no recognizable features of any Godfather's I knew on screen or in real life. Not that I had valves on my neck or a brass bell for a head so I went along with it. "And this is Captain Michigan."

And it quickly made sense. These men shouldn't go by their birth names. They were more than a common reference, more than what they had been envisioned to be. To think of them any other way today would be challenging, equally as challenging however, as having conversations with them as a 20 year old after a two hour cat nap and a foamy Solo cup full of last nights Busch Light.

I wasn't impressed nor should I've been. They're presence was not for my approval. They were someone else's family and someone else's friends and I was in no mood for socializing at such an hour with anyone not named Mystique, Aura or Destiny.

I returned to the house and watched my roommates walk past me, enamored by the old men, clamoring for a sip of champagne or a shot of Puckers. Conversing as if they were prophets from the holy land only to find out their message was more poignant. They shared stories of camaraderie, and adventures from the road and both the hardships and joy of being a part of an extended family. Knowledge I had only experienced from one perspective. The new insight was much needed.

If they didn't impress at first it was my own shortsightedness, my inability to look out past my nose instead of straight down it. And thus a quick lesson was learned. Again I had taken from Michigan more out of time and place instead of reading and writing. The men had entered my life innocuously enough, even abruptly and disturbingly. But they quickly settled on my soul with little effort.

Men who initially were someone else's friends and family had, through speed dating efficiency, become just that, friends and family.

A happy birthday to Godfather and Captain Michigan, may we continue to celebrate your advancements with our own.

Lovingly,

Tuba

Theme Alert! Banquet Alert! Soups and Stews!

We say goodbye to the seniors, and then we say goodbye to eachother.  Saturday's tailgate theme, perfectly appropriate with the weather forecast, is Soups and Stews.  The patented sausage and cheese chowder will make an appearance.  Tailgating note:  The Grill has been moved to storage, so burner space will be limited.  If you are bringing a soup or stew, you might also want to dust off your portable stove.

It will be a very long layoff with no bowl game, so we will have our annual post game banquet.  Drop me a note if you plan to attend.  Those "in the know" know where it will be.  You can also drop me a note if you think you need to be added to those that are "in the know."  Confused?  Me too.

See you Saturday for morning darkness with a side of flurries!

It's So Hard/Easy to Say Goodbye

Something that year to year we pine for, that we count the seconds to, that we hope never ends, will come to a close in just 10 days.  It's been the kind of season that has had us all looking for the fast forward button.  Get me to 2009.  Get me to 2010.  Show me that the right decision was made.  But if we had access to that button, we would have missed that which has made us grow, to appreciate the past more than ever, to appreciate victory like never before.  If what doesn't kill you makes you stronger, then we endured life support from September 28th to November 7th.

If that date range was the meat, then this season was certainly sandwiched on a couple of nice pieces of bread.  The Wisconsin miracle, regardless of its statistical insignificance, meant something to all of us.  The claiming of the jug that with Minnesota off the schedule leaves it in Schembechler Hall until 2011 showed that this team is capable of manifesting a throwing out of the record books...and perhaps that things are moving in a direction more sideways than down.

A group of seniors that returned and endured despite the shift in leadership, that "stayed," will leave here without becoming what would be defined as "champions."  Without a bowl, they will end their careers earlier than any player in 33 years.  They now play for their younger brothers, for the future.  On Saturday, they will fight for the promise of a better day.  They will muster up the courage and the drive to inspire the underclassmen in their final contest as Wolverines at home.

Their opponent, whose rich tradition can be read in seconds in the "ring of bowl games" up in Ryan Field, will come to Ann Arbor as overachievers.  At 7-3, they have already qualified for the postseason Michigan cannot get to, and few expected them to be at this level this season.  The bowl game they play in will be their 7th...ever.  EVER.  And despite that fact, and despite Michigan's performance at the Metrodome, the Northwestern Wildcats will come in with all the confidence.  There is still a scent of Maize and Blue blood floating around The Big House, and everybody wants their piece of the seemingly weak Wolverines.  The Wildcats want revenge....for previous beatings, for being an afterthought in college football, for their lot in life.  They want to take away the last chance for these seniors to get the elusive third victory walk to the maize clad student corner of Michigan Stadium.  To sing the victors one last time, to feel the admiration of those who always wanted to believe in the present, and that believe in a future where just being in the presence of Michigan is worth a touchdown or two in fear points.

And that's why Saturday is so important.  It will be a send off for those who won't get to be a part of what we all believe will be something extraordinary, and that will play with the same vigor as if they never lost.

Something

There was a 10-hour drive ahead of us, so as Mark Moundros broke the plane, we were up and on our way to the concourse.  We're Michigan fans.  A win is something we can always take for granted.  Beat the crowd, beat the traffic...it's been a long day, a long weekend in an alcohol induced haze.  We had reached the outer concourse near the 50-yard line as time expired.  The muffled roar of the spattering of Michigan fans echoed in a mostly empty Metrodome.  And I froze.  I turned and went back in, stood and watched as the team retrieved the Little Brown Jug from it's oversized case and took their jubilation to the corner where the Maize and Blue faithful got the only thing that can begin the healing process...victory.  It seems that recently only disbelief and despair has kept me watching after the game clock has read zero.  The last time there was something positive to savor was September 27th.  Hope for the season was still alive then.  Now, we are looking for hope for the future in general.

It's hard to say how much this means.  Only the next two weekends can give us true perspective.  Trying to decide if we ran into the perfect scenario of overconfident Gophers, or if we made some of the strides that we have been seemingly waiting all season to see is a question that needs deep analysis and time to answer.  Quite frankly, right now, I couldn't care less.  What Sheridan's performance does in the Threet-Sheridan debate is probably important...but again, I don't care.  Why the defensive backfield seemed to be within a step of the ball on every play when they haven't been within 5-yards all season...again important.  Again, don't care.

All that matters is that finally, with seemingly nothing to play for except an old water bottle, things came together.  They won in a way that they had yet to accomplish in the RichRod era...dominance from start to finish.  And winning, now more than ever, feels good.

Minnesota. 10 Hour Drive. Nick Sheridan. Who's With Me?!?!?

Yes, I'm still alive.  Still uninspired.  Still waiting for somebody, somewhere, to SHOW ME SOMETHING.

It's getting old, this losing shit.  They say you get used to it, and that's when the real problems set in.  Teams will forget how to win, forget what it's like to play in meaningful games, and end up needing not only to learn to play the game (or learn a new system) but need to learn how to be ready mentally again.  I don't think we've approached that point yet (the team that is) but it's not that far away.  Every game still counts, not for this season, but for next season...for future sanity.

So it's with deep remorse that I hat tip MGoBlog for this link to the Freep stating that Nick Sheridan will start in the Wolverines final game at the dark, desolate, and decidedly unspirited off-campus Metrodome.  Ya, it's only a 600 mile trek across the United States...to see Nick Sheridan lead the Wolverines onto the field.

Superlame.

So I continue to repeat to myself...

Four Winds Thursday

The Nook Friday

Al's Breakfast Saturday

Beer during game.  Beer during game.  Beer during game.  Beer during game.