blackdog
- Champaign
In the full video "dont be casual". Thats the difference between being a quality program and not. Accountability and doing the little things right every time.
fightingillini.com
Another thing I've noticed, too, is outside of Penn State and Purdue we've always won our "rematch" game to a team we lost to the previous year. This year only Wisconsin could be that team and the game we lost is 2023 so I'm not sure if it counts.As I start to consider what my ~official~ predictions are for this season, I was looking back at the past three seasons ... and there are two things I am fairly sure of going into this year...
Their OC is Grimes who was OC at Kansas last year. They were gashing us with Neal and then just went away from it for reasons I haven't quite figured out.Another thing I've noticed, too, is outside of Penn State and Purdue we've always won our "rematch" game to a team we lost to the previous year. This year only Wisconsin could be that team and the game we lost is 2023 so I'm not sure if it counts.
Yeah, badgers seem to think Grimes is going to fix everything and they will get back to where they were during the peak of the Bret/Chryst days offensively, but not sure I see it.Their OC is Grimes who was OC at Kansas last year. They were gashing us with Neal and then just went away from it for reasons I haven't quite figured out.
I was less than impressed with his play calling, though later in the season they looked much better offensively.
Basically what I'm saying is hit em hard on offense and don't let up for a second.
If Valentine learns to block, the monster could have 3 headsa 2 headed monster is a good thing and I really, really hope Feagin hits the hole quicker this year
I’ve heard he’s looking a bigger this yearIf Valentine learns to block, the monster could have 3 heads
God, he was a great running back.Howard Griffith used to work for me during his playing days in Champaign. I remember he told me he squatted at least 700 pounds, and his lift was the best on the team.
I don't understand why the home opener doesn't sell out all the time. We always play a favorable matchup, the weather is good, and we've won the home opener every year, with the exception of the COVID year, for as long as I can remember, even in the bad years. And especially with the anticipation and excitement of this season, it seems like it should be a hot ticket. Is it because of the Thursday/Friday scheduling?we may very well sell out all games except the opener
Friday is tougher for anyone not living nearby. It’s also High School football night, so there’s competition for fan attention, at least those with kids in school.I don't understand why the home opener doesn't sell out all the time. We always play a favorable matchup, the weather is good, and we've won the home opener every year, with the exception of the COVID year, for as long as I can remember, even in the bad years. And especially with the anticipation and excitement of this season, it seems like it should be a hot ticket. Is it because of the Thursday/Friday scheduling?
People travel on labor day weekend. Add in a FCS opponent and a Friday night. I will be there, but I go to every game except for the Thanksgiving game because I travel that week.I don't understand why the home opener doesn't sell out all the time. We always play a favorable matchup, the weather is good, and we've won the home opener every year, with the exception of the COVID year, for as long as I can remember, even in the bad years. And especially with the anticipation and excitement of this season, it seems like it should be a hot ticket. Is it because of the Thursday/Friday scheduling?
yupI don't understand why the home opener doesn't sell out all the time. We always play a favorable matchup, the weather is good, and we've won the home opener every year, with the exception of the COVID year, for as long as I can remember, even in the bad years. And especially with the anticipation and excitement of this season, it seems like it should be a hot ticket. Is it because of the Thursday/Friday scheduling?
I think it is a combo of factors:I don't understand why the home opener doesn't sell out all the time. We always play a favorable matchup, the weather is good, and we've won the home opener every year, with the exception of the COVID year, for as long as I can remember, even in the bad years. And especially with the anticipation and excitement of this season, it seems like it should be a hot ticket. Is it because of the Thursday/Friday scheduling?
Really hoping to see the tight ends catch alot more balls this year, without diminishing the wideout roles.
I agree in theory, as I always felt like it should be more like the MLB, where even the teams that get bad attendance can draw a huge crowd for Opening Day. I would say a couple factors play a part:I don't understand why the home opener doesn't sell out all the time. We always play a favorable matchup, the weather is good, and we've won the home opener every year, with the exception of the COVID year, for as long as I can remember, even in the bad years. And especially with the anticipation and excitement of this season, it seems like it should be a hot ticket. Is it because of the Thursday/Friday scheduling?
A major difference is that baseball fields are substantially smaller than filling a football stadium. You can get Memorial Stadium at roughly 2/3 capacity (probably would not call it a very large crowd) and still have a larger attendance than what you would see at the Sox or Cubs Opening Day if they both sold out. In addition, in late March/early April, there is much less competition for things to do, relative to Labor Day weekend when the Illini tend to have Home Opener.I agree in theory, as I always felt like it should be more like the MLB, where even the teams that get bad attendance can draw a huge crowd for Opening Day. I would say a couple factors play a part:
1. Attendance takes a long time to "build up" ... it tends to lag behind success. Our attendance in 2023 when we were 5-7 was A LOT better than in 2022 when we started off 7-1, simply because we hadn't built up the attendance floor yet. The flip side of this is that we actually had better attendance for basketball in 2008 (when we had the most losses in school history) than we did for our 2024 Elite Eight/BTT championship season.
2. While our attendance has improved significantly, we still SOMEWHAT rely on visiting fans. Programs like Michigan, Iowa, OSU, etc. provide a couple thousand fans to push us toward that finish line of a sellout.
3. The day of the week definitely plays a factor, IMO. If you look at the ticket website, the attendance looks better for the WMU game than it does for this one. I venture to say that if you put the WMU game/time (6:00 pm on a Saturday night) on Labor Day Weekend for the home opener, we would be looking at a sellout or very close.
That's fair, but I have always felt attendance tends to naturally be proportional to each sport. In other words, ticket prices and people's habits will adjust for the capacity of baseball vs. football vs. basketball, and the crowds will adjust accordingly. Basically, I still feel there should be much more of an attendance bump for a home opener than there seems to be.A major difference is that baseball fields are substantially smaller than filling a football stadium. You can get Memorial Stadium at roughly 2/3 capacity (probably would not call it a very large crowd) and still have a larger attendance than what you would see at the Sox or Cubs Opening Day if they both sold out. In addition, in late March/early April, there is much less competition for things to do, relative to Labor Day weekend when the Illini tend to have Home Opener.
The only baseball stadium that has a near close capacity to Memorial Stadium would be Dodger Stadium (which holds 56,000 people). Every other baseball stadium holds <50,000 people. I really think it is apples-to-oranges comparison.
8 TDs in one game!God, he was a great running back.