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AJC > Sports > Tech > Blog > Archives > 2007 > September > 12

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Will fans step up, too?

It’s great covering college football. It’s even better when the environment is electric, with a full house and loud, energized fans. Last season’s Georgia Tech opener against Notre Dame was that kind of game. So was this season’s opener at Notre Dame, and both of my trips to Virginia Tech, and the Clemson game Calvin Johnson’s freshman year, and every Georgia Tech-Georgia game I’ve ever seen.

Saturday’s game ought to be like that. Two ranked teams. Both 2-0. A beautiful stadium, with an outstanding view of the Atlanta skyline. A home team with great football tradition (and a repaired Rambling Wreck).

But I spoke with Scott McLaren today and learned the game isn’t sold out. It could be, if there’s a late rush for tickets, but it’s not likely given the pace of ticket sales to date.

Will Tech fans step up to make Saturday’s atmosphere what it ought to be? I’ll be curious to find out.

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Jackets believe they can win

It’s a tough thing to evaluate faith, or confidence, but my bat senses tell me more every week that Georgia Tech players and coaches are coming to believe completely in what they’re doing.

There is a lot of wiggle room for interpretation on something like this, but I’m convinced most teams “think” they can win most of the time (not Samford last week), but in the back of players’ and coaches’ minds they know in many instances that they’ll need to have a few breaks, win the turnover war, etc. to actually achieve success.

In short, I’d be willing to bet that if put through a lie detector test a majority of players and coaches (everywhere, not just Tech) would say they “hope” to win. I see the hope range as the huge middle part of what might as well be a bell curve. On the far left, though, you have players and coaches who know they have little or no chance (Samford last week), and on the far right you have players and coaches convinced they’re going to win, or that it will take something like a miracle for them to lose.

In the middle, hope.

I’m not going to trot out any player quotes, or Gailey quotes here because to a great degreet the quotes are the same most years, and not just at Tech I imagine.

This is more about conviction, the way things are said, the body language of the people saying them, the intonation, inflection — all the above and more.

To be clear, I’m not saying any of this means Tech will win Saturday. But I think over the long haul having a belief system like this — as long as it is not falsely implanted — helps a heck of a lot. It sets players, coaches — teams — up better to deal with adversity when they face it because their faith is that much tougher to shake.

And just about everybody faces adversity.

It can go too far. Ohio State felt itself unbeatable in the national championship game last January, and wasted its time in practice leading up to the game. That was gross, big-headedness to the nth degree.

Tech’s nowhere near that point. But I think the Jackets have moved past hope, and are on the right side of my bell curve.

Matt

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