What is Faithful?

Started by Dale, October 08, 2003, 06:42:15 PM

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Dale

I'm just doing a little personal research and I would be interested in hearing from the cognoscenti who lurk hereabouts. What is/are the "Lynah Faithful?" What is it that makes one a member of the Lynah Faithful? What does the "Faithful" mean to you?

If this has already come up in past threads, please forgive me and ignore. Thank you.

Will

If you have to ask, you'll never know. :-P

Just kidding.  I'll come up with a better, real answer a bit later.

Is next year here yet?

Dale

Okay, I should have seen that one coming! It's not that I don't have my own definition nor that I have any questions about my own "Faithful"ness (almost 20 years now, same seats, etc.), I just want to hear some other ideas. Thanks.

Larry72

There are many definitions of being one of the Lynah Faithful.  For me, it's been a love affair with Cornell Hockey that began as an Ithaca High School student in 1966 watching guys like Dryden, Lodboa, Ferguson and Ned.  It lasted through four years at Cornell, a short time away from Ithaca and ever since I've lived, worked, and raised a family here.    

It's been the ability to get to know a bunch of guys who played for Cornell and ended up in Ithaca...people like Ed Ambis, Bill Duthie, Wayne Stokes, Pete Tufford, Mike Schafer, Murray Death and others.

My "affair" with Cornell hockey is now multi-generational. And it's not just that I watched Brian McCutcheon play when I was a student and now his son Mark is freshman on the Big Red.   I brought my two young sons to the games in the early to mid 1980s, introducing them to the Cornell Hockey tradition and to the game of hockey via Ithaca Youth Hockey.  

My older son is now a senior at RPI, plays in the pep band and had the experience of playing in Lynah with the RPI pep band last season.  He said there was nothing like it even though he was in the RPI band.

And my younger son...well, now you read his postings on this forum under CalgAri07.  He's  a freshman in the ILR school and has been a member of the Lynah Faithful since he was about 3 years old or so.  At age 5 he told me that he'd go to Cornell one day and stand in Section "B".  It might sound corny, but his love of Cornell hockey probably pushed him in school as much as anything to excel academically.  And his seats are in "B".  

I have friends all over the country who I went to Cornell with who always ask me about how Cornell Hockey is doing even though they haven't seen a game in many years.  Last spring, I must have received  several dozen e-mails and phone calls from Cornell classmates and others asking about the team during the Frozen Four run.  They may not be able to be here for every game, but to me they will always be part of the Lynah Faithful.

Larry '72
Larry Baum '72
Ithaca, NY

jtwcornell91

Never booing our own team and never leaving a game early are two traditions that fit the literal definition of faithfulness.


Robb \'94

Amen, JTW.  Even during 93-94, when the rink was only 2/3 full, and plenty of people were yelling "shoot" during the power plays, I really don't remember people booing.  Also add "showing up for the warmups" to the list.

ugarte

Bringing newspaper (the Sun when it is available) - which means getting to the game (at least) in time for introductions.  Smuggling fish into the Harvard game.  Going over the glass to celebrate a big win (even if they open the zamboni doors).  Knowing the score of last night's game even though you haven't been to campus in five years.  Getting sports bars to dedicate a TV to Cornell hockey during March Madness.



Post Edited (10-09-03 11:29)

Dale

"Never booing our own team ..."

In my nearly 20 years, I do remember a time when there were a few boos from the crowd, but only a very few. I can't remember exactly which season it was, but it was only one or two games and only that one season.

Actually, shortly after Schafer arrived, there were a number of boos from the crowd at the end of the American anthem. The players had a habit of putting their helmets on and leaving the line well before the anthem ended and some people took offense. I admit, I did find it a bit offensive myself, especially since we always sing the Canadian anthem as well (unlike some other schools - can you say Hahvahd?!). At the time, it wasn't just a case of a few seconds early, they were moving away well before the end of the anthem. I e-mailed coach Schafer, not to complain myself, but just to let him know that some people in the crowd were not happy (I figured he couldn't hear the boos from the bench) and it must have worked because the players have been better about it ever since. I know I have never booed the Big Red!

cquinn

[Q]Going over the glass to celebrate a big win (even if they open the zamboni doors). [/Q]

You need a caveat on this one.  Fans can't climb over the newer seamless glass at Lynah.  The glass would break.

Jeff Hopkins \'82

Faithful is being one of only 12 in your entire senior class who voted to buy a new zamboni for Lynah as a class gift instead of spending the money on "campus beautification."

Faithful is flying to Grand Rapids in the middle of winter for an opening round NCAA game that the team has only the smallest of chances to win.

Faithful is driving three hours through an ice storm to get to the 4-5 play-in game in Lake Placid.

Faithful is coming back to campus on January 3rd to stay in a fraternity house where they've turned off the heat until classes start because there are home games between semesters.

Faithful is skipping spring break to ride 8 hours in the back seat of a Datsun 200SX to get to the ECAC tournament in Boston, then doing it two weeks later to get to the NCAA tournament in Providence.

Faithful is going to visit family 20 years after you graduated and locking yourself in the computer room for 2 hours to listen to the other conference tournaments so you can figure out where Cornell will be playing in the NCAAs.

Faithful is buying a Cornell hockey jersey for your 4 year old nephew who lives in Boston, just so he doesn't wind up with a BU one.  This is after you gave him a toy zamboni for his 2nd birthday.

Faithful is hearing your brother-in-law tell you that if that same 4 year old nephew "gets a scholarship to Harvard, he's accepting it.  Sorry." and you get upset.

JH

rhovorka

Before I give my own answer, does anyone really know approximately when the term "Lynah Faithful" was coined?

To me, Faithful means...

...knowing that you'll see the same faces and hear the same cheers in your section every week.  

...coming up with nicknames for people you don't know who are doing something amusing somewhere in the rink.

...doing the same routine before, during, and after games because the team is winning.

...planning roadtrips months in advance.  Including tickets, places to stay, researching places to eat, getting driving directions, etc.

...driving countless miles to small towns that are hardly considered tourist destinations.

...finagling your work, school, or social schedule from October through April so you can leave early on Fridays to get to games.

...getting that "what do we do now?" feeling at 10 pm Friday night, wondering what you can do to fill the 20 hours before the doors open for the next game.

...grabbing a roster sheet to get the opposing goaltender's name and to see if there's any opposing player with a name worth making fun of.

...chuckling at "that guy" in your section who may have gone a little too far or botched a taunt, but still admiring his fire, spirit, and loudness.

...seeing the look on the faces of ushers and fans at other rinks when a small group of Cornellians just out-cheered their fans.

...answering the ushers at non-ECAC arenas that "yes...we did just drive all that way for this game."

...knowing that whatever bar you go to during roadtrips, you'll probably run into other members of the Faithful.

...calling the place where the games are played a "rink" instead of an "arena," "center,"  or "auditorium."

...seeking out places to find a stack of free newspapers.

...Knowing who the starting goaltender actually was for the 1970 undefeated, untied team.

...wandering the main street of a small town on a cold Saturday afternoon trying to find something to do besides seeing the lame movie playing in the only theater.  And seeing several packs of red-clad nomads doing the same.

...learning stories from older fans, and telling stories to younger fans.

...shrugging off a major winter storm as a "small obstacle" that you'll drive through no matter how bad it really is.

...checking eLF and/or USCHO forum a little too often at work.

...sprinting down any concourse or aisle you can find, hugging anyone in Red you see doing the same after a playoff OT win.

...feeling a sharp rise in your blood pressure whenever you see the first Harvard player hit the ice.

...thinking the the mixed odors of fish, zamboni exhaust, hockey player funk, and beer smells pretty good.

...trying hard not to drop a spoiler on Lynah Chat.

...booing the Cleary Cup.

...getting to a radio or computer as fast as you can after games to catch the "out-of-town scoreboard."

...calculating the possible outcomes for PWR and KRACH on your laptop.  (sometimes during the game, eh JTW?)

...finding out things like the "best wings in Rhode Island" still aren't very good.

...driving a half-hour into broadcast range of the radio broadcast and listening to the game in the car.

...giving in and going to Crossgates Mall again, even though you said you would try to find something else to do.

...thinking the atmosphere at pro hockey games is stifling and dead.

and my personal favs:
...asking your GRE Physics subject test proctor what the earliest time we can hand in our tests is because you know you have a 3-hour drive to Troy.

...that same trip, getting stuck on I-88 due to a jack-knifed semi, and finding that there are 3 cars full of Cornell fans next to you, so you all get out and listen to the 1st period on our radios.

...drinking out of the Whitelaw Cup.
Rich H '96

Ken71

I first heard the term "Lynah Faithful" in Sam Woodside's broadcasts of the games on WHCU in the late 60s.  Sam was a classic.


Ken '71

jkahn

Faithful is
....  having a team to root for that you always love and never get aggravated at
....  waiting on line and sleeping on line three days and nights for hockey tickets (yes there was a line back in Ned's era too).
....  telling your math professor who scheduled a prelim for Saturday of the ECAC's that you need to take a make-up because you are going to be in Boston for the tournament
....  when your math professor says he doesn't believe that's a good reason to give a make-up exam and says "you have to decide where your priorities are" telling him "I have decided. I'm going to Boston."  (note: as I started to walk out, he said, "all right, I'll give you a make-up").
....  going to 23 games of the 29-0 season
....  attending the ECAC'S 13 out of 14 years from '68 to '81, missing only one when I was sent by my company to the Bahamas to be basically an errand boy and coordinator with the home office during a Board of Director's meeting.
....  sitting in a rental car in the Bahamas listening to WBZ so I can get the Cornell hockey score
....  knowing the names, uniform numbers and usual lines of each player on the '67, '70 and '03 teams
....  watching the clip of Matt McRae's goal over and over again
....  knowing that I could add a few hundred more items to this post
....  loving this website

Jeff Kahn '70 '72

jtwcornell91

QuoteRich H '96 wrote:
...calculating the possible outcomes for PWR and KRACH on your laptop.  (sometimes during the game, eh JTW?)
Hey, it was only during the intermissions. :-D


Jeff Hopkins \'82

With several others of us gathered around you, John, waiting for the results ::nut::

JH