Showing posts with label football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label football. Show all posts

Sunday, November 28, 2010

The Georgia-Ga Tech Game

On Saturday, we headed to Athens for the Georgia vs Georgia Tech game.  We invited Josh and Tamara Brock to go with us.  We had such a great time together!  


The guys wanted to leave early - way early.  Tamara and I did our best to delay them, but we still got to Athens very early in the day!  We took a walk down memory lane, walking through downtown and eating messy hamburgers and yummy fries at The Grill.  Then, we headed to the Tate Student Center where The Tom and Chad Show was doing a tailgate.  We had fun hanging out with friends at the tailgate with Tom, Chad, and a bunch of other friends from C'ville.  It was very cold at the tailgate - and even colder once we got in the stadium!

Josh is a former Dawg himself - he played offensive line for UGA.  It was really interesting hear all his insider stories about playing for the Dawgs.  When we went into the stadium, Josh asked if we wanted to go on the field before the game.  Um, YES WE DO!  It was so exciting!  We were right there on the field - so close to all the players and coaches while they were warming up and getting ready for the game!

 



 

The weather was c.o.l.d. during the game, but all the excitement of the Dawgs vs Jackets (and lots and lots of layered clothing) kept us warm.  After the game was over, Tamara and I were ready for sleeping on the drive back.  Tamara's in her early second trimester of pregnancy and I'm a mom of a non-sleeping baby, so surely we'd be sleeping while the guys drive home, right?  Um, no.  Both husbands snored in the backseat while Tamara drove and I tried to keep her awake!  I have no idea what I talked to Tamara about - maybe state secrets, maybe lies - but we made it home safe, sound, and almost delirious at 3:00 am! 

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Let the Season Begin!

I love this article.  Although it's attributed to an AT&T Sports Marketing executive, I don't know exactly who wrote it.  Many of you may have read this already circulating email, but just in case you haven't ...

Attempting to explain the relevance, and importance, of college football in the south ...  
 
Simply put, it's different down here - just ask former Heisman trophy winner Frank Sinkwich.
"I'm from Ohio ," the University of Georgia legend once said, "but if I'd known what it was like down south, I would have crawled down here on my hands and knees."
 
Football in the south is an interesting beast. It's not a game, it's not a pastime...it's a way of life. It's a mixed drink of family, religion, politics and pageantry, spiked with shots of antagonism, arrogance and pride. .
 
Critics label our view of college football as naive and tendentious. Our response? We couldn't agree more. Southerners revel in regional bias and why shouldn't we? In the south, we transform a vast picnic area into The Grove. We see a stadium on the river and bring a Navy. We take a plain desert stone and make it magic. We have The Chop, The Chomp and The Ramblin' Wreck. We root for the same team as our dad, the same team as his dad and say "to hell" with the team of your dad's dad. We call players by their first names, anyone on the athletic staff "coach", and to the chagrin of media pundits and those who just don't understand, we say "we".

 
Southern football isn't tailgating, it's all-nighting. It's not about painting your face, it's about painting your chest. It's not about grills, it's about cookers. Inside the stadium, you don't talk to your neighbors, you yell at them. Those around you aren't strangers, they're 80,000 of your closest friends. You don't go on the road when you travel to see your team play...you go home.
 
Down here, you're not born a boy or a girl, you're born a Gamecock or Tiger. Down here, football is just as entrenched in our culture as Jesus, sweet tea and barbeque sandwiches. We say "Yes Ma'm" and "No Sir", but we also say "Roll Tide", "War Eagle" and "Pig Sooey". Down here, "two plus two equals third down and six".
 
Southern football is why you drive through Wrightsville , Georgia and see "The Home of Herschel Walker" on Highway 15. It's why hundreds of adults in the state of Alabama are named "Bear". Southern football is Billy Cannon, Bo Jackson and Archie, Eli and Peyton Manning. It's Bobby Bowden, Vince Dooley and the Ole' Ball Coach. It's detergent boxes under toilet paper, frat boys in team-colored pants - it's Lynyrd Skynyrd and Molly Hatchet in button-down shirts, Southern Living with a cowboy hat; it's a clash of styles that produces a scene often imitated but never duplicated. Ever.
 
Southern football is Erk Russell joking, "we don't cheat at Georgia Southern, that costs money and we don't have any." It's John Heisman saying, "it's better to have died as a young boy than to fumble the football." It's Bobby Dodd saying he'd rather face the lions in the coliseum than the Tigers in Baton Rouge. It's Clemson fans stating they would rather be on probation than lose to Furman.
 
The players, the coaches and the rivalries are captivating here in the south. Florida-Georgia weekend causes more people to call in sick on Monday morning than the stomach flu and strep throat, Alabama-Auburn divides households, neighborhoods and the entire state, and The Egg Bowl is a true late November fixture. The storylines are just as alluring. Think "The Choke at Doak", "Lindsay Scott!!" or the 1961 Clemson-South Carolina game where a group of USC students impersonated the Tiger football team in pre-game warm-ups, catering to the crowd and the band before flopping all over the field and mocking Clemson's agricultural background with milking hand-motions.
 
Though the press tries to hype the last week in the regular season as rivalry week, every week is rivalry week in the south.
 
Something down here makes this game different. College football has a legitimate influence on state government, a major affect on commerce and local economies and is the lifeblood and pulse of God's country.
 
Perhaps former Tennessee Volunteer radio personality George Mooney put it best:    "Southerners are proud of their football heritage, their schools, and their teams. And they share a deep pride that goes with being from the South," he said.
 
It's a match made, and currently outplayed, in heaven  - Let the season begin!!! 

Go Dawgs!

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Rain or Shine... It's Saturday in Athens!

Who's got two thumbs and insisted on going to the UGA game in spite of the downpour and flash-flood conditions across the state of Georgia yesterday?
This guy.


Yes, fellow Georgia fans who watched the game last night, we were two of the crazy kids in attendance in the monsoon.  John Mroczko gave us two tickets to the Georgia vs. Arizona State game, and we were very excited to go to Athens for a Saturday night game!  Of course, little did we know that we'd be attending the game in absolute downpour conditions.  Many people around Athens said we were crazy and tried to dissuade us, but we were going anyway, come hell or high water... and there was high water!

Saunders was  - of course - not going to not go to the game, no question.  But, I wanted to go also.  Sometimes, doing something crazy like that is kind of fun!  I do think Saunders was surprised at my good spirits - and before you ask - no, I didn't have a single alcoholic beverage the entire day.  I was just happy to be there!  Plus, it was exciting to do something absolutely insane like that together.  Walking through the hardest-raining storm either of us has ever been in was actually fun.  We just embraced the fact that we were going to  be totally, utterly soaked and enjoyed it.  At first we said, "Aren't you glad we didn't bring Katie Anne out in this?" (She spent the night with my parents.)  But then, we instantly both said that she would've LOVED the walk to the stadium and jumping the giant puddles.  I did get a little cold (aka shivered like a maniac) during the second half of the game because I was soaking wet and, after it stopped raining, it got cool fast. (My under-poncho raincoat idea wasn't smart... I think I actually got wetter because my inner hood stuck out farther than my outer hood, and water ran down around the sides of my hood inside my poncho and soaked my coat.)  However, I did not complain and just enjoyed the game!  Well, as much as you can enjoy an absolutely stressful, second-half nail biter, I did.  ;)  Let's just say I covered my eyes for almost the entire last drive.

Here are some more pictures of our fun, wet day!  And, be forewarned... the new haircut struggled a little in the rain, but what haircut wouldn't?

We started our day in Athens at about 2:30 with lunch at DePalma's.  Saunders tried something new - Fettucine Deparma.  Yum!

I skipped my classic Penne Charmaine in favor of the house speciality, Pasta DePalma- delicious!
*And, I know I look like a total speed freak here.  We took three pictures of me, and I looked the same in all of them, even when I was trying to look calm.  I didn't drink any alcohol, but I did chug a GIANT Red Bull on the walk from the car to DePalma's because I was already feeling tired ... maybe that explains the wild eyeballs!?!

After lunch, we walked to the bookstore to buy ponchos.  All the Athens stores we stopped at (Kroger and Target, and we heard Walmart was also) were totally sold out!  Thank goodness we didn't buy the highly overpriced ones we saw, because the bookstore had tons for only $3.95 each.

After the bookstore, we walked to the Carlton St. Parking Deck to meet Carlton and Trisha.  They were tailgating with some of their college friends.  It was fun getting to visit with them!  Carlton and Saunders got to talk football, while Trisha and I got to talk knitting, Christmas, blogging for money, the benefits vs. drawbacks of hair color, and dieting... just classic girl talk!  Someone had also brought some absolutely fabulous Texas sheet cake.  I'd never had that kind of cake before (almost more of a bar... you can eat it without a fork), but it was heavenly!

 
While we were visiting with them, the bottom absolutely dropped out of the clouds and it POURED rain.  The majority of people at the tail gate were not going to the game because it was raining crazy hard.  I tried to take a picture of it, and I think you can see the rain fairly clearly if you click on the picture to blow it up.

Carlton and Trisha (who didn't have tickets and drove back to C'ville by the way... nice and dry!) and their friends thought we were crazy, but we bundled up and started walking towards the stadium!  The roads were like rivers, and we were drenched in just a matter of minutes, but we still had fun laughing about it and talking about our classes in the different buildings as we walked by them.

When we got to the stadium, everyone was standing in the underhang "hallway" areas (don't know what else to call it), waiting until the last possible minute before going to their seat.


Then, it was time for the pregame stuff, and the fans poured in to cheer on the players during warm ups.  I was surprised at how crowded the stadium quickly became!  For the first half, the rain was pretty intense...

Here, I'm completely inside my poncho because it was just pelting me!

Just before halftime, the rain slacked off.  It would rain hard for a few minutes throughout the rest of the game, but the weather got much better for the rest of the game.  Unfortunately, I think the offense played better in the downpour!  However, the defense played a totally stand-up second half (especially after the turnover... that blocked kick was so exciting)!

My teeth are blue from my cotton candy... and my hair looks like Willy Wonka!


Finally, it came down to the final seconds, but Georgia pulled out a win!  This was a scene we weren't sure we'd see!


We headed back downtown, changed clothes in the car, and headed back home.  We got here about 2:30 am last night and slept in late this morning.
What a wet, wild, crazy day!



**As some faithful blog readers have noticed, we're not going to every UGA home game this year as we have in year's past.  This year, we sold the Jones block of season tickets to a friend of Doc's.  The tickets are still in the "Saunders Jones" name, but we just sold the whole lot this year.  Many people who know how much we love to go have asked us why.  Well, they're not cheap - around $4000 a season - and when it came time to put up the big cash in February, Carlton and Trisha understandably weren't sure they wanted to split them because they weren't sure whether they'd even be living in Georgia at football time.  We put out some feelers among our friends and family, and people were willing to buy individual games, but it was getting too confusing and still pretty expensive for us when you consider that part of the cost is the "donation" and part is the actual ticket price.  Also, Saunders's parents had sold the condo that he and Carlton lived in during college, so we'd have to factor in hotel rooms this year, too.  Since it was looking like a "rebuilding year" anyway, we sold the tickets and bought this instead.  We do miss going to the games, but it looks like a good year to skip the tickets since so far there's been a lot of nail biters.  Next year, we plan on buying the tickets again, but we'll make the final decision this winter when it comes time to make the donation.  So, if you're wondering why we haven't asked you to attend a UGA game with us this year, now you know!  :)

Friday, September 4, 2009

Spirit Wear Friday

In honor of "Spirit Wear Friday" at my school, Katie Anne and I both sported our matching Canes t-shirts today. Of course, I had to get Saunders to snap a few pictures of us in them before I left for work.
The shirts are courtesy of El Nopal! Free T-shirts on Tuesday nights, people! (Thanks to my parents for picking up the tab ... and these shirts ... for me and Katie Anne a few Tuesdays ago!)
As Katie Anne said last week at Kindermusik,
"We love to dress as twins."
Yes, we do!
Go Canes!

Friday, August 28, 2009

Go Mighty Hurricanes!

It takes a little more to be a Cane!
Cartersville - 14
Cass - 6



Tonight, we went to the first CHS football game of the season, which just happened to be the most anticipated rivalry game of the season - the Cartersville vs. Cass game! This game pits the city school system against the county school system, and it has been a big grudge match for years and years.

Because this is the most crowded game of the season, we arrived an hour before game time. Luckily, my dad arrived about five minutes before us and saved some seats, because the stadium was almost full - even at that early hour!

I saw lots and lots of my former students (fourth grade ones - the first graders from last year are too young to walk around the track at games, hopefully). Can you believe that my first class of fourth graders are sophomores now!? I can't! I love seeing my former students, hearing what they're doing, and getting big hugs from them. I've got twelve former students on the varsity football team and four on the varsity cheerleading squad!

Katie Anne with my four former students:
Caroline, Carey, Anna, and Erin!
I love this picture!
Those were my babies before I had my own baby -
how did they get so grown up?

Keeping a two-year-old entertained in a crowded football stadium for an hour before the game (and during the game, because I thought football wouldn't be too exciting for a toddler) was something I was prepared for... I had a big bag full of crayons, Barbies, Little People, finger puppets, fruit snacks, Goldfish, and more! Turns out, we really didn't need it - for one, it was WAY too packed to do much playing. Two, Katie Anne was pretty interested in the action. All she really needed was two hot dogs, one strawberry snowcone, her blankie, and she was set.

Intently watching the first driving of the game...
here, she is in mid-yell- "Go Canes!"

Katie Anne loved the pregame show, the band, the cheerleaders, and even the game. She wanted to know what was going on, so I told her the boys in the purple shirts were trying to run the ball this way, and the boys in the white shirts were trying to stop them. Katie Anne's very familiar with the "tackling" concept thanks to Daddy, so she yelled out, "TACKLE!" whenever anyone took another player down. She greatly enjoyed penalty flags being thrown - she got that idea down pretty fast. Whenever she saw the yellow flags go flying, she'd yell out, "Oops, the Canes made a mistake!" Unfortunately for the Canes, she was right ... Saunders thinks they had over 100 yards in penalities! It looks like it will be a long season! Fortunately, they were able to pull out the win over the Colonels 14-6.

Our little cheerleader!

Saturday, July 18, 2009

UGA Fan Day!!!

As part of Saunders's Father's Day gifts, Katie Anne and I got him a family pass of tickets to the UGA Fan Day today. We asked my parents to go with us, and the five of us had a fun day seeing the Dawgs! We got to hang out on the practice field, meet and take pictures with lots of football players and cheerleaders, and Katie Anne got to play lots of fun games. She loved the bouncy house, playing football with several UGA players, running football drills, and riding with me on the spinning ride. The weather could not have been better, too. We had such a good time! Here are a few of my favorite pictures of the fun. To see all of the best shots from the day, including lots of pictures with UGA football players, click here to see my photo album on Facebook.


Just inside the gate... lots of fun to come!Family picture with the giant Uga statue.Dad and Mom with Uga.
Katie Anne with the Chic-fil-A Cow and cheerleaders!
She was SO excited to meet the cheerleaders... it is all she's been talking about for the two days before Fan Day!
Daddy explains the football drills to Katie Anne...
And off she goes!
With a pseudo Uga
We ran into the Lancaster family!
Katie Anne had such a fabulous time!

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Football with the McWhorters

Josh and Vanessa had us over tonight for football, BBQ, and fun! Actually, as I write this, Saunders is still over there hanging out and watching Alabama! We went over this afternoon and watched the Georgia-LSU game (Go Dawgs!) with the McWhorters and a few other friends. Vanessa and I had fun hanging out and chatting. We walked Katie Anne and Lily to a Halloween festival at Dellinger Park, but it was a little over their level... the games were a little too hard for them. The guys were stressed out during the Georgia game, but the Dawgs pulled out a big victory in the end. Josh made a delicious slow cooked pork butt. The kids had a great time playing together and got along really well!


Katie Anne and Lily cook up something in the kitchen.


Katie Anne reads a book.

Brodie had a good time playing with his cousins and Katie Anne!

Lily reclines with her cookie.

Bear dumps out some toys in the foyer.

Katie Anne and Lily check out one of the carved pumpkins at the Halloween Festival...

And then Katie Anne thought she'd kiss it!