Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Transitioning into Offseason

Everyone is familiar with how tough it is to transition into season.  Working out more, trying to diet tighter, wanting sleep more because of your increased activity level all add up and make the first few weeks almost unbearable.

When in season I longed almost daily for the chance to pig out on nasty food, to take naps instead of going to a workout (a couple of times I actually tried but Rabuck dragged me to the track after my nap).  College ultimate boils down to a four year season and I wanted so bad to have an off season.

I've been in off season mode for only three days, and the transition out of season feels terrible.  I've been horking down the sugary foods, and hours later the sugar rush floors me.  As a child sugar rush manifest themselves in the ability to bounce off walls, as an adult my skin gets hot, I feel dizzy, my skin has a thin layer of sweat and my stomache feels miserable.

I miss working out already, I wake up feeling tight and throughout the day certain movement patterns become laborious.  Since I am not working out I don't get myself stretching, and since I am not working muscles like they are used to.  I'm not going to do any research to see if this is a common thing because I don't care, the point is my whole body misses doing a certain amount of work a week and not getting it makes my shit feel weak.

Morale of the story, my offseason is over.  Don't long for it because being in season feels way better and way more human than being out of season.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Regionals is the best Tournament


            Teams use results of games against Elite teams to measure the quality of their season.  They often brag about playing close against some great team or taking half or getting more breaks against them than any other team at the tournament.
            Goose used to laugh when he heard us Illinois guys talk about how we came close to a quarterfinals team or how, if our Oline didn’t collapse for 3 points, we would have beaten a semifinals team.  The thread uniting all those games was when they happened.  The regular season is a time when teams aren’t focused or in kill mode.  Elite teams don’t get stoked to play some second team from a big city, but those second teams are out there to prove themselves against the big dogs and respectable results happen.      
Good teams always have another gear.  They can always raise it when their season is on the line and when they are willing to ball hard enough to make that season last longer.  At 2010 Natties Austin predicted that Oregon would choke.  His reasoning, Oregon had been playing at a super high level all season and come Nationals their competition was going to rise to the occasion and they wouldn’t have any room to go up.
            Let’s pick on an elite team named SuperStrongFastGuys and a second tier team named NormalGuys.  During the regular season they face several times and the score differential is usually about 3-4 points.  NormalGuys are pumped, they think they are right there, they think they can put up respectable numbers every day.  The difference is that SuperStrongFastGuys aren’t focused, they aren’t even trying against the NormalGuys and they are still winning by 3 or 4.
            Then one morning its Regionals and the SuperStrongFastGuys aren’t fucking around and they whoop the poop out of the NormalGuys; the NormalGuys have to spend an hour at Taco Bell just so that they can poop again before the end of the month.
            A few times in recent past Illinois conveniently woke up on Regionals championship Sunday and decided to rage as hard as they could, the result was a ticket to Nationals.  If you fancy yourself a great team you had better be able to prove it in the big ones or every meaningful game throughout the season loses its !.