One thing I would want to emphasize is that Alabama fans have showed wonderful support for the football team, and if not for that fact this wouldn't be a discussion. There's just two things that linger with me a bit. One is that I really feel like some people are missing out on how much fun A-Day can be, for kids especially. The other is that we hit 90K twice after the first big spring game, so it feels like just a bit of a push and we could hit that 100K mark at least once.
Agree. Tons of food and stuff for kids to do would help.
To me, I think the kids aspect is the one to play up. I feel like there is unrealized potential there. It's hard to get a lot of kids to a regular game, it's just too expensive. A-Day though? You can bring in a large group, they get to go into the stadium for what might be the first time, I think it would make a lot of sense to play up this aspect which would serve two purposes. First it would help fill the stadium and secondly it seems to me like a good way to recruit new fans. Get them while they are young.
Bama was first to make spring ball a colossal happening, without the rock and roll band. And the fan base has been faithfully making it a happening these past 10 years. It's like the old adage," imitation being the sincerest form of flattery." I can live with that. Of course if we break the record anytime soon, I can live with that too.
I do want to make it clear I am not trying to criticize. This is a monster Alabama fans created and we should be proud of that, but there's no shame in the fact that other schools are following our example.
One thing that gets overlooked when talking about the new spring game records is that schools and coaches are out and out begging fans to attend. That's what happened for UGA yesterday.
IMO, the 2007 A-Day game will always be set apart from any spring game records that follow because it was a spontaneous act of over 100,000 Bama fans simply being us.
To the first part, I would agree I doubt we see Nick Saban and what not out there begging fans to attend. Remarks about fan attendance haven't always gone over well anyway so he tends to take the thank them after the fact approach (and hopes they get that he thinks it matters). That means if we're going to see another big push it probably has to be fan organized which isn't so easy.
As to the second part, good point and I agree.
Maybe, but people are going to Alabama mainly because its Alabama and Nick Saban. Maybe it could impact one of those on the fence players, but I think most come for the opportunities it opens.
I guess CrimsonPride covered this well, but the first one mattered a fair bit in my mind because it was this thing that just happened and everyone took note (hearing JPW describe it last Saturday was kind of cool). That also gets into recruiting, or advertising of any sort. You need something to sell people on, and I think the A-Day game became a selling point. "Look at how much our fans care". I don't think it can ever have the same impact again, now it is more on the fence type stuff. We as fans are not going to have a major impact in the games or recruiting, but I always look at it like what if we can change just one play? What if we can impact just one recruit? May be that's the difference...
Our players deserved a full house, if nothing else, out of appreciation for yet another national title.
But our football fan base has always been a bit spoiled, and right now, it's not hungry.
To the first part, this is part of it to me. Especially since A-Day is the one chance some guys who work hard for years get to play in front of a large crowd. The second part, I don't think spoiled is quite right. Some fans are (I had one guy behind me who insisted on constantly complaining), but I think the term that's most appropriate would be complacent. I think like the players, we sometimes fight complacency.
Are we talking about practice? We talking about practice... We talking about practice...
Allen Iverson managed to lose a lot or respect with that speech, perhaps because he missed the point. They weren't really just talking about practice, they were talking about his attitude.
The thing with A-Day is it didn't have to matter. But, we made it matter so now it does. As fans we are going to have a more positive impact if 90 or 100K show up than if 60 or 70K show up. That's just how it is now. ESPN is there, people are paying attention, so the better we as fans "perform" the better the program as a whole looks.