When walking up to the tailgating area during this weekend's game against Western Kentucky, I was bombarded with a sea of crimson and cream. There were thousands and thousands of people
everywhere! I remember thinking to myself, “Wow, this game is going to be packed!”
I even foolishly compared it to the storied crowds of Texas A&M and the “12th man,” Michigan and the “Big House,” or LSU and “Death Valley.” I thought to myself, "Indiana football is back."
Boy, was I mistaken. See, I am a new transfer student and this was my first tailgate. As the day went on and we drank, yelled, sang louder and louder, I took a break from playing corn hole and checked my phone to see the time- it was 2:15. The game should have been somewhere in the 3rd quarter. I then looked around and I noticed that the crowd hadn’t dwindled. Nobody went to the game!
I mean don’t get me wrong- I was guilty of it too, but that’s not how I envisioned it. Aren’t we supposed to party, drink, play corn hole, blast music,
then go to the game and watch our beloved Hoosiers run all over our opponents?
We Hoosiers are missing the biggest part. Now I know that the ticket prices are a little high and we don’t have the tradition that maybe some of the other Big Ten schools may have, but if we packed into that stadium like we packed in that field maybe things would turn around.
Our football program in on the rise thanks to the legacy of Coach Hep and it’s about time we start packing “The Rock.” It’s almost a shame - an enjoyable shame may I point out - that we come out in the hundreds of thousands to tailgate but can only muster 30,000 fans into that stadium.
I’m buying a ticket for next week’s game against Murray State and I hope everyone else does too. We may see a trickle down effect and see more big time talent wearing the cream and crimson. Perhaps more funding for better facilities as well.
Maybe our football team will respond and we can start putting together a football powerhouse to go along with our basketball and soccer dynasties. Let’s party hard in the fields and then party harder in the stands.