ExtraChrisB
New Fish
It definitely wasn't the first time I'd noticed it, but during the Apple Cup about half the stadium was in The Zone until around the 5 minute mark in the 3rd quarter. In a game where we left the locker room down 7. To WSU. Our fans would rather drink wine and eat sushi or whatever the hell goes on there than watch football.
Husky football has become a casual social event. Those fans are the ones with the money, and those fans are the ones that love Sark. Sark keeps us good enough to stay relevant in Seattle and keep people casually interested.
That's incredibly dangerous territory to be in IMO. Worse than 0-12, though it could be a result of the pathway chosen after 0-12. With 0-12 you hit rock bottom and either decide that's FS and do everything in your power to get back to 12-0 or you find someone who can get you "competitive." Being "competitive" is a helluva lot easier than being a contender.
"There are few things more contagious than mediocrity."
You see it everywhere. Take NFL teams and their QBs for example. You get stuck with a guy like, say, Sam Bradford, and he's good enough/shows enough potential to keep around and win anywhere from 6-9 (10 in a "special year") games in a year (5-9 in CFB equivalent) but will never get you to a Super Bowl. It's a battle for the Wild Card year in and year out, most years out.
I'm afraid if we don't see something next year that we're officially trapped in the mediocre coach bubble.
Husky football has become a casual social event. Those fans are the ones with the money, and those fans are the ones that love Sark. Sark keeps us good enough to stay relevant in Seattle and keep people casually interested.
That's incredibly dangerous territory to be in IMO. Worse than 0-12, though it could be a result of the pathway chosen after 0-12. With 0-12 you hit rock bottom and either decide that's FS and do everything in your power to get back to 12-0 or you find someone who can get you "competitive." Being "competitive" is a helluva lot easier than being a contender.
"There are few things more contagious than mediocrity."
You see it everywhere. Take NFL teams and their QBs for example. You get stuck with a guy like, say, Sam Bradford, and he's good enough/shows enough potential to keep around and win anywhere from 6-9 (10 in a "special year") games in a year (5-9 in CFB equivalent) but will never get you to a Super Bowl. It's a battle for the Wild Card year in and year out, most years out.
I'm afraid if we don't see something next year that we're officially trapped in the mediocre coach bubble.