The article said a lot, and really, the "journalist" said a lot. In some ways it is entirely fair to ignore some of the "journalism", but it's also not fair to really judge Terry on what could have very easily been edited comments. It's sadly commonplace for people to participate in an article, that turns out to be very negative about them, and obviously they wouldn't have done so had they been aware. So, I am going to continue with the somewhat unfair theme of taking what could have been edited comments from Terry, and to go with the so called journalist's interpretation of them. I'm talking about fan support and attendance.
I think context absolutely matters in this entire debate. I've seen the other side enough to understand and appreciate how some Alabama fans respond negatively, because they have gone to great lengths, and they might feel like that one time they slipped out early for something important, makes them the target of criticism. I don't think anything Nick or Terry said, or that even I said for that matter was intended to target those loyal Alabama fans that have to leave with 5 minutes to go in the game because of a child or something.
I personally didn't really "get it" myself, until Nick Saban said that A-Day game attendance helped him land the #1 recruiting class. Then, I got it, we're not just going to the game to be entertained, to watch Alabama play, we're part of it. We're there to support the entire process and if we do a good job, we're helping and if we do a poor job, we're hurting. I don't even think any of this really applies to people that are more than a couple hours away from Tuscaloosa, there's plenty of fans in the Birmingham area, there's more than enough to fill that stadium up each time, and there's enough students to fill a heck of a lot of seats to. We have some people from Virginia, or Texas or what ever, that take exception but it's something else entirely when someone heads back to Birmingham in the third quarter because they don't want to miss supper, contrasted with someone who has traveled from a couple of states away (in that case why on earth would they dream of leaving early?).
To me this is mainly talking about the students, and to some extent the local area season ticket holders who simply are not very excitable. In that context, we've seen remarks from Nick, from Terry, from players, and from recruits, that in some way or another allude to the importance of showing up and cheering, yes, even for A-Day, even for a "
glorified scrimmage". Things were at a tipping point after the Arkansas game. The stadium cleared out in the third quarter, and this is a traditional football power! This isn't a nobody, this is a top 25 all time football program! The realization that fans won't stick around for that game, meant that suddenly you only had one or two games a year you could count on fan support for. Only one or two games a year you can get a big game atmosphere, only one or two games a year you can invite recruits. That's a problem! On the flip side, it seems fans did get the message and for the LSU game they literally had the stadium rocking! The two paths are clear, and as Kevin Norwood said after the LSU game (about the atmosphere), "
That's how it should be every game".
I took a couple of pictures from the Chattanooga game, and I think that they ended up showing the contract between what unappreciative and appreciative looks like. Remember, this was Senior Day, this was AJ's final home game, this was Norwood's final home game, this was an important day for these players and their families.
This shot was unintentional, I took a picture in the second half, and well I was holding the camera out in front of me and got the crowd by accident. When I downloaded the pictures I was alarmed by what I saw. This, to me is what "unappreciative" looks like.
The second shot is actually a little over 40 minutes later. You look at that picture, and in the distance you see even more empty seats, but you also can see right in front of me what appreciation looks like. I can't for the life of me understand why fans wouldn't want that kind of atmosphere, why they'd prefer empty seats and slow walks back to their cars, over being in a stadium and enjoying every moment. Each of us that stays, and cheers, we don't just make it better for the team, we make it better for ourselves! What if that guy has no one to high five? What if he ended up in a section where everyone left?
(sorry for the size of this post)