I attended the Illinois at Michigan State game in East Lansing on Saturday. This is a great place to watch a college football game.
I drove over from Chicago early in the morning. It was a cool (39 – 45 degrees) morning, with a beautiful display of Fall foliage the entire way up. I pulled in to the campus at 10 AM. Parking was easy to find, and well marked. This is the first venue that I have attended where there was no charge for parking. There is a shuttle from the general parking area to the stadium ($4 round trip). It takes you directly to the stadium; easily the best parking and shuttle service I have encountered so far.
Getting off the shuttle, the feeling of collegiate football just engulfed me. It was a beautiful fall day, the aromas of tailgating filled the air, and the sights and sounds of an exited football community expounded. It has to be what Walter Camp envisioned when he first set down the rules for collegiate football.
The campus at Michigan State University is among the finest I have seen. It is located in East Lansing, on the banks of the Red Cedar River. It is not overly developed, and there are many wooded and open areas. This time of year, with the colors of the season at their peak, the campus can only be described as beautiful.
On this game day, the tailgating was in full force. There was plenty of imbibing, but nothing that would raise red flags. There are many families, young children, and past generations of MSU alums. Throwing footballs, playing toss games, jump houses, and other family activities are the norm. Though I missed it, the team walk to the stadium is a highlight of the game day experience. I took a walk over to see Sparty, the Spartan bronze statue that has been the victim of vandalism by visiting teams in the past. During the week of the Michigan game, members of the band stand guard at the Statue to insure that their arch-rivals do not desecrate this famous piece of the MSU campus. The sounds of the band wafted through the campus until their anticipated march into the stadium.
The longest lines of the day were those to get into the stadium. In what can only be described as TSA training, fans were thoroughly searched prior to entering. All bags, jackets, hats, and baggy pockets were fair game. Spartan stadium, like most Big Ten venues, is an older stadium. It has aluminum bench seats (cold on Winter days, I’m sure), but everything is convenient. The scoreboard is not modern by any means, but does provide instant replay, and current scores around the Big Ten. It is not as loud as other stadiums, but the fans are more on top of the field as anywhere I have been.
The cheer ‘Go Green/Go White’ was heard throughout the game. It got old after the first dozen times. Clips from the movie ‘300’ were played on the scoreboard throughout the game. Gerard Butler was in attendance on this day, and was often shown recreating his famous lines as King Leonidas in ‘300’. The half-time show by the band was very good, and the intermission period was capped off by another MSU tradition; Zeke the Wonder Dog, and his Frisbee catching prowess. Not to dis a tradition, but Ozzie would embarrass Zeke, who I have now nicknamed ‘The underachieving Frisbee dog’. Ozzie, of course, is my Australian Shepherd.
Heard in the stands: It is true that college football fans are full of doomsday scenarios. After Illinois scored first (3 points), it was as if the entire season was now lost. I heard everything from “I can’t believe we are going to collapse now” to “This is just like 2001 after we beat Michigan; we got killed the next week”. This was after a 3 – 0 score halfway through the first quarter. Calm down everyone.
To Number 42 on the Spartans defense: There was a cute blond in Section 6 who is quite a fan. I’m not positive that she knows you (she only referred to you as “Number 42”), but she has decided that she wants to have your children. She was especially enamored with how you filled out your football pants in your line backing stance. I’m telling you this because I am sure you did not hear her screams to you. I was only a couple of rows behind her, and I could barely hear her. Her shouts to Number 42 never stopped for three quarters of the game. When she left at the beginning of the 4th quarter, there was a noticeable sigh of relief from section 6.
As the first half was winding down, and the score tied at 3, Illinois was being forced to punt. Everyone in the Stadium was yelling for the Spartans to take a timeout. They did not. It was obvious they were going to let the clock expire after they got the ball. When the Illinois punter’s kick was in the air, everyone was unified in their chants of “Do not catch the ball”, “Let it drop”. Well, the punt returner muffed the kick, Illinois recovered, and scored to take a 6-3 lead into halftime. I have heard countless coaches and players tell of how they never listen to fans, never concerned with what the average fan thinks. Well, maybe you should listen more often. That was one of the worst examples of clock and game management I have witnessed. Coach Dantonio, be grateful you won. If you had lost because of this, there would be little sympathy for your medical condition.
When Coach Dantonio left the upstairs box and took to the sidelines near the end of the game, the uproar and cheers were the loudest of the day. Michigan State is now a top ten team, with victories over Notre Dame, Wisconsin, and Michigan (not to mention power-house Florida Atlantic). Excitement is running high in East Lansing, with a huge test on October 30 in Iowa.
When I began the day, I was dreading the long drive to Spartan Stadium. Driving back, I was glad I made the trip. It’s a world class campus, good fans, and a great football atmosphere.