Comprende', but, this is a football state & Lafayette is as much a football community as there is in the country. People see what's going on. They feel what's going on. In this case it won't just be about winning or losing to start, but about effort. There are a lot of people who are going to take pride in feeling part of ownership of the new regime & its coming success.
Great crowd of course....
The best thing about yesterday, though?
I only heard .50c being played once and do no recall hearing Cupid at all.
This was awesome.
Thanks HUD for being a fan of 80's rock.
Z
Not to dampen the enthusiasm that there really IS in Lafayette, but if you really believe Lafayette is 'as much a football community as there is in the country', you haven't travelled much.
Try buying a walkup ticket to a week 4 home game at Midland Lee or Hoover, AL. Or if you don't want to pick a big town, try the same at Celina, TX, or Goshen, AL.
Louisiana [and Lafayette] like football.. In Texas and Alabama, football isn't a matter of life and death, it's MUCH more important than that.
Naming a town that you have to get lost to find & then saying they are a better football town than Lafayette, because the only entertainment they have for a hundred mile radius on Friday night is eating at the local catfish house or going to the local High school game, is a little bit slanted comparison. Couldn't you agree with that? How about comparing apples to apples, like any major or semi major metropolitan area in the country.
This is completely off point of the main post.
Lafayette has one major obstacle to becoming like Baton Rouge...it's a fun city. Festivals galore, a great night life, enough great restaurants to choke a horse, and a cultural heritage that brings people back year after year. Those small towns and Baton Rouge all have in common the fact that there is nothing else to do in those towns than watch football.
igeaux.mobi
I actually completely agree with you. With a town like lafayette, we have 5 public high schools, just because each stadium isn't full to capacity every Friday doesnt mean our town is less of a fan than some town who fills up the only high school game each and every week.
In comparison of what Lafayette has to offer with sports/entertainment, we hold our own on game days (and still having to compete with fans leaving to go attend games east for another sporting event)
Our goal is to get fans to not want to drive an hour away to cheer for a team that they have no connection too, but just go because "it's a Louisiana school". We want to establish a sense of pride in fans that haven't felt like they needed to show it. And Lafayette has that to offer.
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