Daily World link
Al Boudreaux
This weekend I had the pleasure of attending the NCAA Regional baseball games in Baton Rouge.
I saw the good the bad and without a doubt - the ugly of college sports.
The good was the spirit and excitement of college baseball that was on display on the field. UL-Lafayette, Southern and Tulane were each allocated only 200 tickets per school, and quickly gobbled them up. If you work the math, the LSU fans had access to 6,900 tickets (Alex Box Stadium holds 7,500).
There were people dressed in blue and gold, red and white, green and blue and purple and gold. The school pride was wonderful and the plays made on the field were great.
Also, the family pride that was on display to cheer for Mary Dupuis' grandson Dallas Morris; the third baseman for UL-Lafayette and the son of Mike and Stephanie Morris, natives of Opelousas.
Mike and Stephanie also brought their youngest son Zack to the games.
Dallas' uncles Stevie Dupuis, Charlie Dupuis and Troy Morris were clad in red bandanas and UL attire, cheering for their nephew and the Cajuns.
However, sadly enough, this is where the good ended. The bad came in the form of the vulgarity and cursing that I heard from the Tiger faithful fans.
I grew up cheering for LSU and finished school at Loyola, so I am not favoring one school over another. I have followed and supported LSU sports for 35+ years, but what I heard on Saturday and Sunday was inexcusable.
I'm no saint, and I have heard foul language before, but it is no wonder fans from other schools around the SEC don't enjoy coming to Baton Rouge to see their teams play.
I used to wonder why so many fans from Tennessee, Florida, Auburn, Alabama would fly into New Orleans, stay in the Crescent City then bus into Baton Rouge for the game.
After this weekend, I now understand. If your school comes into Baton Rouge and gets a W, you better get out of town ASAP. The LSU fans were rude, vulgar and not hospital to the visiting fans.
I guess they just don't get it. If people from out of town come to your city, spend their money on food, beverages and lodging, everyone benefits.
But if fans stay in New Orleans, eat in New Orleans and are treated rudely in Baton Rouge, you can bet those people are not going to spend money in Baton Rouge and won't come back to Baton Rouge.
I guess that's the bad, and unfortunately, it got worse. I was seated near a UL-Lafayette contingent of fans that were doing their fair share of cheering, without vulgarity I might add.
All of a sudden over my right shoulder, a guy wearing purple and gold was flashing a knife at a UL fan.
He was escorted out of the stadium, thank goodness.
However, the impression that was left was not a good one. Has the quality of the fans that cheer for LSU gone that low?
Maybe I have not been going to enough baseball games recently, but I sure thought baseball fans had a little more class than what I saw in Baton Rouge this weekend.
If I am wrong to desire a stadium where knives are not being pulled and vulgarity is not being thrown around like a first language, instead of a gutter language, then excuse me.
I always thought Alex Box Stadium was supposed to be the pinnacle of college baseball.
However, if the behavior of the fans is not curtailed, then the Box will be reduced to nothing more than a slum. I guess the thing that gets me the most is winning is one thing, but winning with class is another.
When LSU or any Louisiana state college or university wins I am glad for that school and its fans.
However, if the fans of a school behave improperly after a win, I really wonder what message is being sent by the school for allowing such improper behavior at its sporting events.
LSU goes to Houston this weekend. I wish the Tiger baseball team the best of luck, and I'm glad I don't have to back to Alex Box Stadium anytime soon.
Lucky for me the Indian Creek Triathlon is Sunday and I won't have to watch any more college baseball this weekend, because hopefully I'll be seeing you at the race and on the roads!