Cornell 4 Harvard 1, 1/24/26

Started by stereax, January 23, 2026, 10:26:44 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

imafrshmn

They should do an earmuffs giveaway night for one of the low attendance games. This way we can satisfy the tchotchke collectors and the language sensitive fans
B.S. Cornell '09 / M.S. Michigan '17

Beeeej

Quote from: imafrshmn on January 30, 2026, 10:59:13 AMThey should do an earmuffs giveaway night for one of the low attendance games. This way we can satisfy the tchotchke collectors and the language sensitive fans

Might backfire.

"I said, 'Fuck Hahvahd!!'"
Beeeej, Esq.

"Cornell isn't an organization.  It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
   - Steve Worona

stereax

I don't think I've laughed so hard at thread derailment in a WHILE. Love you all.
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

Will

Quote from: scoop85 on January 30, 2026, 10:36:05 AM
Quote from: BearLover on January 30, 2026, 09:25:30 AM
Quote from: fastforward on January 30, 2026, 09:17:54 AM
Quote from: stereax on January 29, 2026, 09:05:21 PM
Quote from: chimpfood on January 29, 2026, 06:41:53 PMCorrect me if I'm wrong but I only remember one "fuck you Harvard" chant. I agree that it was way too much during that playoff series a few years ago, and good ok Schaf for calling that out. But, plenty of our other chants use swear words too so I wouldn't be careful as a coach so as to not overstep and discourage chants when they are not excessive. It feels like sports have shifted into more and more of a soft environment recently, and I don't think we need that to continue. It's not just the chants too, over winter break my group was standing at the back of section B, making sure not to block anyone, and we got asked to sit down by the usher. Point is, you don't need to try to control every little thing that the crowd does, unless it gets truly excessive or repulsive.
There was an older woman in the back left of C a week or three ago during winter break who was upset that I (several rows in front of her way to the side above the tunnel) was standing up and kept signaling for me to sit down.

So I slouched a bit onto the rail but absolutely did not sit down.

Screw that.

But yeah if it came through on ESPN+... hahaha.

There were definitely two chants. One at the start, one at the end.

That is my one and only pet peeve-people who don't wait for stoppages in play to go up or down the stairs, or make a whole row stand up so they can get in or out

I'm all for the chants - it's tradition
"Fuck you Harvard" isn't really tradition, it's a crude and unoriginal chant that was never much of a thing until recently. I can sympathize with parents who don't want to take their kids to a game where half the arena is screaming the F-bomb. Not something I'm losing sleep over, but I get it. Agreed they shouldn't be policing the fans, but also this chant is kinda just lame. Also, Casey calling it out in an email that none of the students read is silly.

I agree that I'm not particularly offended by the content of the chant, but rather the lame lack of creativity.
As a parent who regularly brings my 12 year old daughter to games, I agree that I'm bothered more by the chant being dumb than vulgar. (Of course, I've also been blessed with a child who has never really parroted bad language around her. I realize other parents may not be so lucky with their own children.)
Is next year here yet?

Jim Hyla

Quote from: Will on January 30, 2026, 01:34:22 PM
Quote from: scoop85 on January 30, 2026, 10:36:05 AM
Quote from: BearLover on January 30, 2026, 09:25:30 AM
Quote from: fastforward on January 30, 2026, 09:17:54 AM
Quote from: stereax on January 29, 2026, 09:05:21 PM
Quote from: chimpfood on January 29, 2026, 06:41:53 PMCorrect me if I'm wrong but I only remember one "fuck you Harvard" chant. I agree that it was way too much during that playoff series a few years ago, and good ok Schaf for calling that out. But, plenty of our other chants use swear words too so I wouldn't be careful as a coach so as to not overstep and discourage chants when they are not excessive. It feels like sports have shifted into more and more of a soft environment recently, and I don't think we need that to continue. It's not just the chants too, over winter break my group was standing at the back of section B, making sure not to block anyone, and we got asked to sit down by the usher. Point is, you don't need to try to control every little thing that the crowd does, unless it gets truly excessive or repulsive.
There was an older woman in the back left of C a week or three ago during winter break who was upset that I (several rows in front of her way to the side above the tunnel) was standing up and kept signaling for me to sit down.

So I slouched a bit onto the rail but absolutely did not sit down.

Screw that.

But yeah if it came through on ESPN+... hahaha.

There were definitely two chants. One at the start, one at the end.

That is my one and only pet peeve-people who don't wait for stoppages in play to go up or down the stairs, or make a whole row stand up so they can get in or out

I'm all for the chants - it's tradition
"Fuck you Harvard" isn't really tradition, it's a crude and unoriginal chant that was never much of a thing until recently. I can sympathize with parents who don't want to take their kids to a game where half the arena is screaming the F-bomb. Not something I'm losing sleep over, but I get it. Agreed they shouldn't be policing the fans, but also this chant is kinda just lame. Also, Casey calling it out in an email that none of the students read is silly.

I agree that I'm not particularly offended by the content of the chant, but rather the lame lack of creativity.
As a parent who regularly brings my 12 year old daughter to games, I agree that I'm bothered more by the chant being dumb than vulgar. (Of course, I've also been blessed with a child who has never really parroted bad language around her. I realize other parents may not be so lucky with their own children.)
Agree, what's the point of the chant. If anyone can tell me how it helps the team, I'm glad to listen.

If it doesn't help, and may bother some people, why do it.

As an aside, if you're standing in a student section and an "older" lady says to sit down, why not assume that this is her first game and explain to her that students stand. You can even give her my seat number L-12 23 and she can sit there.
"Cornell Fans Made the Timbers Tremble", Boston Globe, March/1970
Cornell lawyers stopped the candy throwing. Jan/2005
Restarted 2025, So far so good!

stereax

Quote from: Jim Hyla on February 03, 2026, 09:09:23 AMAs an aside, if you're standing in a student section and an "older" lady says to sit down, why not assume that this is her first game and explain to her that students stand. You can even give her my seat number L-12 23 and she can sit there.

This older lady (there were two of them, actually) was about... 5 rows behind me and in seats probably 2-3, in high C. Would've been a pain in the ass to get up there during the play and explain how Lynah works. Especially in intersession games, where it seems very few people stand and the block is mostly full of families with kids. (This was Alaska weekend, so one of those games where non-students could buy tickets in the ABCDE block.) I'm willing to give benefit of the doubt - and if it's someone directly behind me who isn't a student, I'm generally going to tell them at the beginning of the game that I'm standing and if that's a problem, to let me know, and I'll adjust if they do. But in this case, I'm far enough forward and to the side, and short enough as well, that I really shouldn't be blocking any sight lines... and if I am, I promise there are many empty seats directly nearby one could scoot over to.
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

Jim Hyla

Quote from: stereax on February 03, 2026, 09:27:33 AM
Quote from: Jim Hyla on February 03, 2026, 09:09:23 AMAs an aside, if you're standing in a student section and an "older" lady says to sit down, why not assume that this is her first game and explain to her that students stand. You can even give her my seat number L-12 23 and she can sit there.

This older lady (there were two of them, actually) was about... 5 rows behind me and in seats probably 2-3, in high C. Would've been a pain in the ass to get up there during the play and explain how Lynah works. Especially in intersession games, where it seems very few people stand and the block is mostly full of families with kids. (This was Alaska weekend, so one of those games where non-students could buy tickets in the ABCDE block.) I'm willing to give benefit of the doubt - and if it's someone directly behind me who isn't a student, I'm generally going to tell them at the beginning of the game that I'm standing and if that's a problem, to let me know, and I'll adjust if they do. But in this case, I'm far enough forward and to the side, and short enough as well, that I really shouldn't be blocking any sight lines... and if I am, I promise there are many empty seats directly nearby one could scoot over to.
So if it wasn't a student section, practically not literally, maybe many if not most were new fans.

All the more reason to not complain about them, especially if you want to increase attendance. I know it's not center ice, but maybe move to B if you don't want to talk to her/them?

My point, if you're trying to add fans, is to try and make it nicer for all. That's also why FU Harvard doesn't help.
"Cornell Fans Made the Timbers Tremble", Boston Globe, March/1970
Cornell lawyers stopped the candy throwing. Jan/2005
Restarted 2025, So far so good!