I'm sitting here watching Virginia Tech hang in there against Number
One North Carolina in the ACC tourney semis, and the thing that keeps
crossing my mind (other than: My GOD the refs protect Tyler Hansbrough!
He consistently initiates the contact, and yet the foul is called on
the defender; my only consolation is that he won't get that treatment
in the NBA) is this: Why am I not rooting harder for Carolina to lose?
As a Kansas native and graduate of the University, by the Generally Accepted Principles of Collegiate Fandom As Codified by Will Blythe,
I should be happy to see Carolina fail. Tar Heel coach Roy Williams
is, of course, the man who broke the hearts of Kansas fans in 2003
when, after 15 fine years as the Jayhawks head coach (and, oh by the
way, no national championships) fled for the Carolina job just days
after his team lost to Syracuse in the national title game. Perhaps the
most irked were his players--"I gave my right arm for that man,"
said forward Wayne Simien, who played much of that season with an
injured shoulder, and there were plenty of bad feelings all around.
Much
of this, it must be said, is rooted in the insecurity that comes with
being a Kansas fan. After all, if the program is such a good job, why
would anyone want to leave? Except that, compared to North Carolina, or
Duke, or UCLA, um, maybe it isn't. Unlike all the other traditional
college basketball powers, Kansas is located in a rapidly depopulating
state (the island of Manhattan, my current home, has more people
residing along its 13-mile length than live in my home state), with
little local talent to draw on. Recruiting is always a hassle (though
Lawrence has its charms, they're mostly hidden in February, when the
daily weather forecast is always some variation on this theme: "Gray.
Cloudy. 19 degrees. Wind. Blowing. No relief. Freezing rain. Hope
fading. Remember sunshine? What happened to that? Oh for the love of
God, where did the sun go?"), and there's a real feeling that all it
would take is two bad years for Kansas to fall into a permanent
second-tier funk. Remember when Holy Cross was a national basketball power? Yeah, me neither.
So, you know, the stakes are high. Now, though, it's five years
later, Williams is beloved at North Carolina (where he finally did win
that championship) and Kansas is coached by Bill Self, who, despite the
fact that he has an entirely different coaching style, has pulled off
the very neat trick of replicating both the regular season success and
the postseason stumbles that characterized the Williams era. Me? I'm a
fan, sure, but a subdued one. I've been hurt before.
(As a side note, isn't it wonderful that now, thanks to the miracle of
YouTube, I can watch all those wrenching tournament losses all over
again? Yeah.) I've become more philosophical ("I appreciate that
they're well-coached, and play hard, and are fun to watch") and, unlike
my brother-in-blogging Devin Gordon, I no longer refer to my
University's team as "we."
Of course, that could change with a good tournament run. Check back with me in a couple of weeks.