Let's Go Mountaineers! Guest Access is limited. For complete access to the WVU Talk forums, Register for free Here |
Welcome to the WVU Talk forums. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. WVU Talk was created to provide a free community based portal for WVU fans, alumni, and students. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content, upload images, play games for point rewards, participate in contests, join a link directory and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! |
| Football Discuss Connecticut Newspaper Article in the Mountaineer Fans forums; Subject: Article in Hartford newspaper Football: Mountaineer Field Is Full And Rocking November 25, 2007 Chilling is the best way ... |
![]() |
Add this thread to:
Tag This Thread Clesto Digg Reddit Furl Del.icio.us Spurl |
| |
| ||||
| Subject: Article in Hartford newspaper Football: Mountaineer Field Is Full And Rocking November 25, 2007 Chilling is the best way to describe the post game experience Saturday evening at Mountaineer Field in Morgantown, W.V. after UConn's 66-21 loss in the game that decided the Big East championship. Chilling in more ways than one. The experience on the field immediately following the game sent chills down my spine. And then there was the freeze out in the interview room following with UConn coach Randy Edsall. First, about what happened on the field. There were never any explicit directions offered as to how the media was supposed to make their way down to field level at the end of the game and by the time I had sent my early early story for Courant.com most other media members had already cleared out of the press box and made their way down behind the end zone near the visiting team tunnel on the field. So John Silver from the Manchester Journal Inquirer and I departed the press box in search of the secret way to field level. Lets just say that after about 100 "excuse me's" as we waded through fans in the stands we found our way to the Mountaineer Field turf just as the game came to an end. It was there standing on the field that I experienced something amazing. I knew things were different in Morgantown before the game when the place was 95 percent full 15 minutes before kickoff. I knew this was truly the experience of big time college football. But the post game just solidified that fact even more. No matter how hokie one might think John Denver's "Country Roads" might be, it was just absolutely amazing to stand on that field and listen to a stadium that size recite the song in unison. There we were, the game over, and there had to still be 50,000 people who weren't going anywhere. On Nov. 17 there wasn't even reason for UConn players to take a victory lap at Rentschler Field after beating Syracuse to finish off a perfect 7-0 home record this season. There was virtually nobody left in Rentschler by the time the game was over. And yet here there were more then 50,000 fans who stuck around not only until the end, but long after the end of a game that was basically over midway through the third quarter Saturday in Morgantown. This was what big time college football is about. Simply, it was a stunning experience like no other I've seen in two years covering the UConn football team.
__________________ WVU - MS, Integrated Marketing Communications, Class of '07 http://www.jonathanrundle.com |
| Sponsors |
| Remove these advertisements and get member access for free! Register Now! |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
| Affiliates: Jonathan Rundle | WVUMountaineers.net | Oklahoma City Computer Repair | Your Link Here |