NankerPhelge
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I'm one of the "old guys" here who was a student when ND won a championship ('77).
We had our own traditions, some of which we created, some of which survived, and some of which did not. Contrary to what a previous poster said, however, I don't think our "traditions" had any more or less validity than those that came before us or those that are coming after. For the most part, it was just what a bunch of college kids did to have fun. And that inevitably changes over time. So, three points on this subject:
1. Couldn't agree more with KMoose. ND students and fans should be leaders, not followers. I remember in the '70's, the "wave" was a big fad at sporting events. We refused to do it, because it wasn't "ours," and the consensus was it was kind of lame, anyway. Besides, most of us were too drunk to do anything that co-ordinated.
2. Any PUBLIC traditions should at the very least keep in mind that we are students, alumni and/or fans of a school dedicated to Mary, the mother of Jesus. So, probably not a good idea to blast out Nazereth's "Now You're Messing With a Son-of-a-Bitch" or something like that over the loudspeakers to get the fans and players fired up just because somebody thinks it sounds cool. Notice I said PUBLIC traditions. Listen to anything that works for you in your dorm room, car, basement, whatever. But have a little bit of sensitivity to what Notre Dame is supposed to represent when you show it to the world.
3. Most of all, and this is what bugs me the most. Don't confuse all the peripherals, no matter how "cool" they are with excellence in the football program--ND's true tradition (I mean in this context). I've seen some of the most (to my sensibilities) ridiculous posts where some would-be Hollywood producers fantasize all kinds of stuff--flash-pots; smokescreens; music choreographed to the particular moment; fashion changes; blah-de-blah blah blah. As if we could just perfect the show, all would be right in the end. Like a movie.
All real awesome. Nobody likes a spectacle more than I do. So, do anything you want and enjoy the show. But don't kid yourself that any of this has anything to do with re-establishing the true ND tradition-being the premier college football program on earth. All this stuff is really cool, but rings hollow if we are mired in mediocrity on the field.
We had our own traditions, some of which we created, some of which survived, and some of which did not. Contrary to what a previous poster said, however, I don't think our "traditions" had any more or less validity than those that came before us or those that are coming after. For the most part, it was just what a bunch of college kids did to have fun. And that inevitably changes over time. So, three points on this subject:
1. Couldn't agree more with KMoose. ND students and fans should be leaders, not followers. I remember in the '70's, the "wave" was a big fad at sporting events. We refused to do it, because it wasn't "ours," and the consensus was it was kind of lame, anyway. Besides, most of us were too drunk to do anything that co-ordinated.
2. Any PUBLIC traditions should at the very least keep in mind that we are students, alumni and/or fans of a school dedicated to Mary, the mother of Jesus. So, probably not a good idea to blast out Nazereth's "Now You're Messing With a Son-of-a-Bitch" or something like that over the loudspeakers to get the fans and players fired up just because somebody thinks it sounds cool. Notice I said PUBLIC traditions. Listen to anything that works for you in your dorm room, car, basement, whatever. But have a little bit of sensitivity to what Notre Dame is supposed to represent when you show it to the world.
3. Most of all, and this is what bugs me the most. Don't confuse all the peripherals, no matter how "cool" they are with excellence in the football program--ND's true tradition (I mean in this context). I've seen some of the most (to my sensibilities) ridiculous posts where some would-be Hollywood producers fantasize all kinds of stuff--flash-pots; smokescreens; music choreographed to the particular moment; fashion changes; blah-de-blah blah blah. As if we could just perfect the show, all would be right in the end. Like a movie.
All real awesome. Nobody likes a spectacle more than I do. So, do anything you want and enjoy the show. But don't kid yourself that any of this has anything to do with re-establishing the true ND tradition-being the premier college football program on earth. All this stuff is really cool, but rings hollow if we are mired in mediocrity on the field.