Posts Tagged ‘LSU’

Off-topic: So long to a special old ballpark

June 10th, 2008

A piece of college baseball history, as well as my life back home in Louisiana, is now officially history. Last night LSU beat UC-Irvine 21-7 in the final game of the Super Regional baseball tournament at Alex Box Stadium in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. With the win LSU advances to the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska. Sadly though, this game was the last game to be held in Alex Box Stadium, which next year will be replaced by an updated Alex Box Stadium on a different site.

Alex Box Stadium has been the home of LSU Baseball since the 1938, and in the 70 years since it opened it has seen a great deal of drama and excitement. The old ballpark hosted 17 NCAA Regional tournaments, 4 Super Regional tournaments, and 4 SEC tournaments. There were plenty of amazing wins, along with a few disappointing defeats. It was the home for the “Program of the Decade” for the 1990s, when LSU teams won national championships in 1991, 1993, 1996, 1997, and 2000. For a long time, LSU was the premier baseball program in the nation.

The Box, as it was affectionately called, was the perfect setting for this great program. Although it may have lacked many of the modern ammenities some expect from the modern ballparks, the ballpark had a great deal of character. It was simply a great place to watch a baseball game.

I was 13 years old when we got season tickets to LSU baseball in 1992. In the nine seasons between then and my graduation from LSU, many of my days were spent communing with my fellow LSU baseball fans, who are among the most knowledgeable and rabid fans anywhere. Over the years we grew to be close friends with many of the folks with seats around ours. They were like family.

This feeling was evidenced throughout the ballpark over the years as fans organized themselves into groups, usually complete with banners announcing their presence. Our little group was first named “Cooley’s Corner”, after LSU left fielder Chad Cooley. After he graduated, we had to change names and came to be known as “LSU’s Home Run Hecklers”, a tribute to the Gorilla Ball style of LSU Baseball in the 1999s. On our banner we would hang inflatable baseballs, one for each home run during the game. We also had a home run counter, which would be updated after each ball flew over the wall. I remember one game where we ended up with eight inflatable baseballs hanging from our banner! Those baseballs and the counter even made their way into Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha for the College World Series, although we had to sneak back to the gate to steal back the balls after the ticket takers confiscated them upon entry. Back in the day the counter ended one season at 188, which I believe is still an NCAA record.

Of course we weren’t the only fan group. The Bullpen Bullies started the trend, followed by the Left Field Lunatics, then us, and later Coon’s Corner. Other groups would come and go through the years. There was just a certain amount of brotherhood that almost all season ticket holders felt for those seated around them, grounded in our great love for baseball and the Tigers.

The time together wasn’t limited to the nine innings in the stands. We also tailgated for baseball. For each weekend series there would be something cooking before each game. We would hang out before the game enjoying our meal, during the game cheering, and often after the game lounging around discussing the action we just witnessed and the matchup in the upcoming series.

I was lucky enough to get to go to two of the Regional tournament games a couple of weeks ago for one last time in The Box. It has been several years since our last championship, but the program seems to have rebounded and it felt a lot like old times. Many of my old friends still had their same seats. The stadium had changed a little but was still mostly the same. The players were of course different, but the atmosphere was still the same. Almost like old times.

Alex Box was a great place to watch baseball. I feel like a chapter of my life is being closed with the gates to this old ballpark. Things have changed a great deal since I first set foot in that park. I now live in a different state. I’m a college graduate. I’m married with twins. I guess everything changes over time, and this is no different.

So it is an odd feeling I have this morning. I am thrilled that LSU has won and is headed back to the College World Series, but at the same time I am sad that a place where I spent so much time and that was such a big part of my life is officially gone.

Oh well, I guess that is enough of our trip down memory lane. GEAUX TIGERS!

Off-topic: An LSU fan’s take on the BCS

December 2nd, 2007

As an LSU fan, I will make a statement that will surprise most. LSU does not deserve to play for a national championship.

There. I said it. However, don’t take that to mean that I’m not happy that my team will get the chance to play for it all. I just realize that my team was in a position to control its own destiny with regards to the BCS championship and blew it twice. Not to take anything away from Kentucky and Arkansas, but a team that really deserved to play for it all would have found a way to win those games. Losing two games in the second half of the season and still making the championship game makes Les Miles one of the luckiest SOBs on the planet. He needs to go out and buy a lottery ticket so he has some income after the college football world figures out he’s a crappy coach and gets fired. As an aside, I really hope Miles turns out to be a traitorous bastard like Nick Saban and bolts for Michigan. Just look at the number of penalties committed by LSU each game. A well-coached team doesn’t commit that many penalties.

Although LSU doesn’t really deserve the opportunity, I don’t really think anyone else has done anything to deserve it either. Ohio State loses a game in November against a cupcake Big 10 schedule. Georgia and Kansas aren’t even good enough to play for their own conference championships, much less a national championship. Oklahoma looked impressive, but lost to two unranked teams. USC? One word: Stanford. Virginia Tech is the champion of a crappy conference and got embarrassed by LSU, losing by 41 points. Champions don’t lose to anyone by 41 points. Hawaii may be undefeated, but they played the equivalent of a high school schedule.

Overall I think this may have been the best matchup possible, but honestly no one really deserves to be champion. Especially in a weird season like this, we really need some type of playoff so we can at least say that whatever team is crowned as champ did something to deserve it.

Just look at the BCS failures seen in the last few years. LSU vs. Oklahoma instead of LSU vs. USC in 2003 and the split championship (LSU is the true 2003 national champion by the way, not the co-champion! Flawed as it is, the BCS is what everyone, including USC agreed to as how to decide the champ). An undefeated Auburn team being completely shut out of the game in 2004. And now this year when at least half a dozen teams have a claim to play for it all. There has to be a better way.

As flawed as the selection process was, this game will still decide our champion. I think it looks good for LSU, as the lay off will give Glenn Dorsey and Matt Flynn time to heal from injuries. My bold prediction: LSU over Ohio State 42-21.

Off-topic: LSU loses to Kentucky

October 14th, 2007

This was a very sad weekend for me. As I have mentioned before, I am originally from Louisiana and also a graduate of LSU. I’ve been a Tiger fan for years, and in the good years and the bad there has always been one certainty – LSU will always beat Kentucky in football. Even during the darkness of the Mike Archer and Curly Hallman years, Kentucky was almost always an automatic win for us. So who would have thought that an LSU team ranked number 1 in the country would lose to a Kentucky Wildcat team, regardless of what their ranking happens to be this year? This is the same team we beat last year 49-0, after all!

Well, those of you who follow college football know what happened Saturday. LSU lost to Kentucky in 3OT, dropping the Tigers out of the number 1 spot. While I am sad about the loss, I have to admit that Kentucky played one heck of a ballgame and totally deserved to win. There may be some debate as to talent levels between the two teams, but Kentucky definitely wanted it more and played harder, and the final score reflects that. I had my doubts about our ability to go through the entire SEC schedule undefeated, but I was shocked it was Kentucky that ended up being the bump in the road.

The way this season is going, we might not be out of it, but this certainly doesn’t help the cause. But I do look at the top teams in the polls being Ohio State, South Florida and Boston College and can’t help but think it is completely absurd. With the possible exception of South Florida playing Auburn, none of these teams have played anyone worthwhile. How are any of them worthy of a top five ranking, even if they are undefeated? Put any of these teams against a one or two loss team from the SEC and I’ll guarantee you the SEC team would win 9 of 10.

There was a great column on Yahoo sports this morning about this, which you can read here.  Perhaps the columnist is right that all we need is a national championship game with South Florida or Boston College to have fans across the country screaming for a playoff in college football. I’m sorry, but it takes more than just putting together a cupcake schedule for me to consider you worthy of playing for the national championship. I can guarantee you this would be the lowest rated championship game ever televised, and ratings equals money, which is what controls the whole scheme anyway.