BroadwayVik
Active member
What the Oregonian has done heretofore is to keep PSU feeling unloved and emotionally-oppressed in denying them their due glory in the press. In the press, the Oregonian really glorifies the Ducks and Beavers when they win. But even in a loss, they usually report from an angle that allows both teams to find the silver lining and to claim a moral victory.
Not so for the Portland State Vikings. When they deserve it most, the Oregonian will find the means to keep this team glory-starved in the local press---even when the national media is singing the Vikings' praises (as in the Basketball Victory against Gonzaga).
Imagine an historical first: PSU beats Oregon in football in a thrilling overtime victory, 43-40. What would the respective Oregonian headlines read? See if this doesn't ring true:
Page 1: DUCKS MISCUE FORCES OVERTIME LOSS, 43-40
Page 6: Vikings gain historical outcome in spite of "classless" play
In the Ducks' story, they would first talk about how embarrassing the loss was to the coaches and players, especially to an FCS level university (treating Portland State like an outsider) and they would then compare the Ducks' loss to Michigan in their loss to Appalachian State. They would do everything they could to spin the story to save the Ducks' faces and preserve them relatively in tact, citing the game as basically a fluke and not likely to have a repeated outcome. Meanwhile, back in Eugene, UO puts a moratorium on playing PSU for the foreseeable future.
In the Vikings' story, they would cite cold statistics and give a detached account of the game and mention that the win as a fluke, not likely repeatable. The key is they would deny the Vikings the glory of the victory they deserve and that in the team's own local press. They are treated as outsiders, as unwanted emotional-orphans. By doing this, the Oregonian is actively seeking the team's emotional harm. Certainly not their well-being.
This press reporting the day after a great victory is the sap-of-life the players need and look forward to. Healthy teams are nurtured this way, finding praise and then become willing to bust-a-gut for the next headline. Every team in this conference has that glory given to them by their local press--win or lose--and that is exactly the juice they get that is being denied our players right here in our own backyard. Denying them this expectation and right must cause build-up of a nagging, unsatisfied emotional hunger and especially when it is an historical victory.
You've heard the phrase "No guts, no glory." But the Oregonian denies PSU glory even when they deserve it!!
No wonder our team suffers from emotional malnutrition, inopportune lethargy and suboptimal performance. Maybe THIS is why Phil Nelson has been amazing at times and underachieving at others.
To guard against this, when such an historical victory comes again the Vikings' way, from what source can the Athletics Department gather up the press' praise of the PSU players? this emotional sap-of-life for athletes from the kind of press that will give them the glory they so richly deserve? The Oregonian will only offer poison. Will the Tribune then offer up praise in sufficient quantity? I believe we can always count on our national media friends, ESPN, and, of course, our own in-house Athletics writing staff.
Reporting the facts is simply not enough. Glory, spirit and honor must also be bestowed. Jon Kasper knew this and how to give Montana the sap-of-life in his writings glorifying Montana's players and coaches, and I believe his words worked wonders in the hearts-and-minds of their players. Do our players deserve anything less?
Not so for the Portland State Vikings. When they deserve it most, the Oregonian will find the means to keep this team glory-starved in the local press---even when the national media is singing the Vikings' praises (as in the Basketball Victory against Gonzaga).
Imagine an historical first: PSU beats Oregon in football in a thrilling overtime victory, 43-40. What would the respective Oregonian headlines read? See if this doesn't ring true:
Page 1: DUCKS MISCUE FORCES OVERTIME LOSS, 43-40
Page 6: Vikings gain historical outcome in spite of "classless" play
In the Ducks' story, they would first talk about how embarrassing the loss was to the coaches and players, especially to an FCS level university (treating Portland State like an outsider) and they would then compare the Ducks' loss to Michigan in their loss to Appalachian State. They would do everything they could to spin the story to save the Ducks' faces and preserve them relatively in tact, citing the game as basically a fluke and not likely to have a repeated outcome. Meanwhile, back in Eugene, UO puts a moratorium on playing PSU for the foreseeable future.
In the Vikings' story, they would cite cold statistics and give a detached account of the game and mention that the win as a fluke, not likely repeatable. The key is they would deny the Vikings the glory of the victory they deserve and that in the team's own local press. They are treated as outsiders, as unwanted emotional-orphans. By doing this, the Oregonian is actively seeking the team's emotional harm. Certainly not their well-being.
This press reporting the day after a great victory is the sap-of-life the players need and look forward to. Healthy teams are nurtured this way, finding praise and then become willing to bust-a-gut for the next headline. Every team in this conference has that glory given to them by their local press--win or lose--and that is exactly the juice they get that is being denied our players right here in our own backyard. Denying them this expectation and right must cause build-up of a nagging, unsatisfied emotional hunger and especially when it is an historical victory.
You've heard the phrase "No guts, no glory." But the Oregonian denies PSU glory even when they deserve it!!
No wonder our team suffers from emotional malnutrition, inopportune lethargy and suboptimal performance. Maybe THIS is why Phil Nelson has been amazing at times and underachieving at others.
To guard against this, when such an historical victory comes again the Vikings' way, from what source can the Athletics Department gather up the press' praise of the PSU players? this emotional sap-of-life for athletes from the kind of press that will give them the glory they so richly deserve? The Oregonian will only offer poison. Will the Tribune then offer up praise in sufficient quantity? I believe we can always count on our national media friends, ESPN, and, of course, our own in-house Athletics writing staff.
Reporting the facts is simply not enough. Glory, spirit and honor must also be bestowed. Jon Kasper knew this and how to give Montana the sap-of-life in his writings glorifying Montana's players and coaches, and I believe his words worked wonders in the hearts-and-minds of their players. Do our players deserve anything less?