Where Were You When First Shunned The Baby Blue ?

Stop right there. Yes. I know. You’ve most likely read this before. I’m also well aware that the way this year’s season has gone, it’s unlikely the story would build a crescendo of anything more than a gaping yawn with most of y’all.

However, I received a request from a teammie off that ’72 club for the story, so in lieu of some ridiculous poll post inquiry about “feelings” going into this game, Friday…Sure. Why not put it up ?
…And besides, you’re not indentured to read on. Oh…And p**s on Carolina ‘lina…

Here’s to you 1972. 8-3-1 #17 AP

( No…my mug is not in there. Lowly Frosh would never get a sniff of a Big Club shot, and shame on the library for a lousy crop.)

—————————————-

Everybody has a time and reason for making a life-long decision. I thought it might be fun to fire you up and get you recalling what it was that made you put the X in UNX and loathe the pastel blue.

I know where I was when it came to me, and if you feel like listening, I’ll tell you the story.

OK then…

I was in Kenan Stadium on the third Saturday afternoon of September 1972. This 18 yr. old freshman from Western New York was completely healthy, dressed out, and on the depth charts for the first time as a football player for the Red and White from NC STATE!

Actually, that day, it was white over white with red lids and trim, white wristbands to the elbow and white spats. (Modified to go no higher than the ankles. Holtz rules on spats. )
Dressed to impress!

The Heels were ranked. We had tied Maryland in the opener and beaten Syracuse, and were on exactly nobody’s radar. There I was, with a couple hundred Monarch butterflies ingested at pre game meal, or so I supposed. I was surrounded in light blue, with a fair share of red.

Crap, I’m getting ahead of myself. The question to the lead was…” first shunned.”

Let’s back up.

Midway through gearing up for practice on the first Monday before Carolina, in the bowels of Reynolds Coliseum, I noted a lack of jocularity coming from the upperclassmen side of the locker room. The familiar, often loud, good natured insults, and tales from Saturday night’s post game exploits, were missing.

We freshman never cut up, reserving the smarts to not draw undo attention upon our rookie dumbasses. Well, we sort’a did, in whisper-tone, amongst ourselves, but we mostly wanted to hear what was goin’ on a couple of rows over. There was not much to pick up this day. Not for me anyway, until we hit the practice field.

After quick drills, which were Lou’s form of calisthenics…hands to the helmet, hands to the thigh pads in 100 man unison, we broke into positional units like we always did prior to game plan practice. For us wideouts, it pretty much consisted of pairing up and throwing the ball to each other for about ten minutes with the frustratrated QB in us, doing his best to make the partner try and come up with the most ridiculous sideline catch ever.

On this day Steve Lester was my partner. Steve Lester was the  “other” starting senior wideout in 1972. It was Lester who taught me how to recognize and take out a pitch man. It was his voice that was particularly missing back in the dressing room earlier, too.

Before I threw my first pass to him that day, I heard him say, “Angelo.”

I kinda looked at him funny, like I expected more to follow.

“Lou Angelo,” as he snatched my quite less than perfect spiral.

When I asked him what heck he was talking about, I received no answer, just a nifty little bullet about 3 inches off the ground. The rest of the drill went pretty much silent, and Holtz’s whistle blew, signaling us to “line it up!”

Practice was routine that day, getting the package for Saturday’s gamer installed. After dinner, the offense watched a little film of the Carolina defense versus Maryland’s from the past weekend.

The thing about film was that for us wideouts, there really wasn’t a whole lot of information to be gathered. Very few teams ran the Twin Veer, so it was tough picking up tendencies watching a future opponent defend an I-formation. The best you could do is try and find the pitchman in zone and man coverage. The problem is, sometimes the outside LB was it, sometimes the strong safety, and even the DE. You never really knew until the play was in motion against the Veer.

Maybe midway through the session, I saw a safety, # 11, put a wicked hit on a back that had lined up as a flanker. A bunch of “oohs” followed the play from the room.

Someone muffled, “there’s your boy, Pat.” That didn’ t seem to go over very well.

“Fuck him.” That came from Lester. I looked over at Pat Kenney for a reaction.

Nope. Nothin’. Maybe a squint. The session soon ended, and for the second time that day, I was left with this question mark balloon over my noggin. I wanted to ask what just happened back there, but as a freshman dressing out for the first time, I felt that if they don’t tell ya straight off, ya don’t ask.

Tuesday’s practice was quite remarkable. The guys were really getting at it with each other. It was a mean practice, filled with plenty of expletive adjectives and verbs being tossed around, usually describing Carolina. I was beginning to think that this might not be just another game to win. 

Over dinner, Don Buckey broke a silence at our freshman round table. “Hey. Who is Lou Angelo? ” I looked up and asked him where he had heard that name. “Steve Lester said it to me today. He wouldn’t tell me who it was.” I told Buckey about hearing the name from Steve the day before, but knew nothing either.

As we walked out of Case for the evening, I spied Lester. I had to know. I gave Buck a head twitch and we caught up to the guy with the answer. Buck said it first.

” Who is Lou Angelo? ”

Lester looked at us like we had leprosy or sumpthin’.

” He broke his jaw! On a cheap hit! ” Lester was pointing, pointing up ahead at Pat Kenney. He what? Pat? Pat Kenney, our all everything? The player I had hoped to emulate? Broke his jaw on a cheap hit?

 Angelo, now I got it. Number 11.

Boys and girls, by Thursday, I had a whole new take on Saturday’s game. I not only was flushed by the prospects of playing in my first college game, but understood that I was now involved in some thick subplots. I was beginning to catch the current of utter despise for the coming opposition. Should I play Saturday, I was going to find a way to make Lou Angelo look bad. If the situation were to present itself, even make him pay without doing something cheap.

Midway in the third quarter, Carolina went up by 14. We came right back with a TD of our own. That’s the way the game had been going all afternoon. They’d pull ahead; we’d come back within striking distance. We played from behind, but we played with confidence. I had managed to play two complete series by the end of the third quarter. They were very unremarkable minutes. Nothing really came my way. Most of the plays were spent running off the corner or just chasing to get a pad on someone across the field.

At the outset of the 4th quarter, Carolina had punted and we took possession. Holtz threw up two fingers, meaning I was about to get another series. We moved the ball pretty well, with Roland Hooks picking up most of those yards out to about midfield. We stalled though. In fact on 3rd and long, I finally had a chance to make a play. I ran a sharp 7-yard slant and had no one in front of me. It just wasn’t meant to be, as Dave Buckey’s pass got batted down at the line of scrimmage. Down 7, we had to punt.

I held my block until the thud and headed downfield, one eye on the ball, the other on anything in pastel. Pat Korsnick had kicked a beauty. It was high, deep, and to my side.

At around the 10 yrd line I picked up the ball again. The return man was backing off, this one was gonna’ be mine baby! Inside the 5! At that moment, I got lambasted. Hit from the side and behind my knees, my arms stretched forward while my legs were planted several inches into the sod. The ball trickled into the end zone.

I was pissed! As I reached behind me to pull the sonofabitch that just got me off, I saw two things at once. On the shoulder pads of the player was numeral 11. On the ground next to me was a pretty, little, yellow hankie. We untangled and I got up first on shell-shocked pins. I extended a hand to pull #11 up along with the words,  “helluva play Lou.” Something else was uttered about cheap shot, maybe his mother, too. 

Clipping…Half the distance to the goal line.

The defense kept ’em right down there and on 4th down, Mike Stultz did what he did best that year. He took their punt to the house, man, 27-27 with 6 and change to go.

The Tar Heels mounted a time consuming drive and with under 2 minutes left, punched it in for the go ahead score. Lou collected the offense and exclaimed, “hey! hey! we’re gonna’ score!” And down the field the O went, with a Bruce Shaw bullet here and a Bruce Shaw bullet there. I think we had a big gainer on a draw by Willie Burden, too. With 00:02 and the ball resting on Carolina’s 26, we used our last time out.

Shaw came over to the sideline, and we listened to the call. Of course the guys on the sideline were a wreck, with the Baptist boys praying and the Catholic boys trying to cut deals, and the rest of the faiths putting theirs on the offense.

” Right 86″ .  Lou released his grip on Shaw. The play put Lester split wide to the left on the line of scrimmage. Pat Kenney would be flanked wide right. Steve would run a skinny post. Pat would be off to the races on a fly.

It…seemed… like…the… ball… hung… in… space… forever, near the back corner of the endzone. To my line of sight, there was nothing but that baby blue in the area. Then superman sans cape, but with a big red 25 on his chest, flew from nowhere, over the corner, and over # 11.

Touchdown. Pat Kenney. With the clock at 00:00 and the scoreboard at 34-33 and the crowd in anguish mixed with holy glee, Holtz managed to get the entire team together on the sidelines. “Men, its up to you. Go for the tie or go for two? ” You probably already know the answer to that question. Lou did, too. We were going for the win!

Lou called for a middle screen for Charley Young , and then added an odd twist. He put Buck in at QB.

The play failed, miserably.

Later in the locker room, Lou would tell us that the play was the worst he’d ever called.

Yeah, we were hurt, but we were also fiercely proud heading off the grid to the field house.

As we made our way on the cinder track to that field house, the Carolina band’s horn section was lined up on the edge of that track serenading us with a mocking rendition of “Old MacDonald.” As I passed in front of the tubas, one blasted off a note not 12 inches from my ear hole. I don’t know what possessed me, but I bent over, grabbed a handful of gravel, and rammed it right down that fat bastard’s horn…game on…forever.

I never looked back and I’ve never looked at THAT color, that awful Carolina blue, with the same eyes since.

About TheCOWDOG

Multiple ACC Championship ring bearer...If they had given us rings back then, that is. Famous for being Lou Holtz's favorite target...of flying clipboards, and responsible for the creation of wholey new obscenities off the tongue of Sam Esposito, between and outside the white lines. Son of a HoF basketball coach.

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Home Forums Where Were You When First Shunned The Baby Blue ?

Viewing 13 posts - 26 through 38 (of 38 total)
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  • #110894
    SaccoV
    Participant

    CD, another colleague of mine was Danny Medlin who just preceded you. Did you ever meet Danny? He played for Oakland for several years after he graduated from State.

    #110895
    coyotejoe
    Participant

    AsheWolf, Jerry Clower could not have dreamed up a better story than that…thanks!

    #110896
    McCallum
    Participant

    Anybody else up to start smoking a damn turkey?

    McCallum

    #110927
    packplantpath
    Participant

    Can somebody get my comment out of moderation?

    #110934
    gso packbacker
    Participant

    Unlike most here, my hatred for Carolina was cemented BEFORE my love of the Red and White.

    At 12 years old, my large, Catholic family moved to Greensboro from up north. Although their were little adjustments, we fit in well and with a family with 5 boys (4 in 4 years too) being good in sports never hurt that

    Fast forward to the 81 National Championship game betweenIndiana and Carolina. Great game from my memory, but that guy named Isaiah Thomas really chewed them up. Being a bit of an antagonist my brother and I decided to make a t-shirt and created a handmade IU jersey complete with name and number.

    The next day at school the Carolina fans weren’t just unhappy with my choice of attire, but down right ugly and racist. Yep, nothing like dropping the N word and telling me I must be a n-lover if I would root for Indiana and wear that shirt to school.

    Yep, I knew Wal-Mart fans BEFORE I even knew of Wal-Mart.

    Two years later, I comemerrated the 83 victory with a handmade Lorenzo jersey. Two years after beginning my hatred for Carolina, I began my path tkward Raleigh.

    #111246
    GoldenChain
    Participant

    This is my favorite topic! It was 1982, 2 years after my graduation and I was living in Hickory. I was at a dinner dance along with some folks I attended church with and one friend who didn’t go to unx but was a big fan brought a bunch of his App St unx fan buddies. I went into the bathroom where a bunch of guys were standing around shooting the sh!t when one guy says “and his WIFE went to State!” (yes we met our 1st weekend in Raleigh and the rest is history after 4 years of college and 36 1/2 years of marriage thank you very much, how’s your miserable life going?). One drunk ASU grad unx fan says “I’d rather say my wife was a whore than say she went to NC STATE!!!!” I resisted the urge to pop him in front of so many witnesses, two of which were attorneys, but that sealed it! Before that I sort of took the live and let live attitude toward college rivalries but no more. After that it was ‘take no prisoners’! And that’s the life I’ve lived for 34 years. GO TO HELL XAROLINA!!!!

    #111248
    jay95
    Participant

    I was taught from birth to despise the Tar Heels, come from a long line of STATE graduates. Growing up in Chatham County I was always surrounded by Tar Heel fans and their holier than thou attitudes. Went on to graduate from STATE myself in 1995 and I swear the older I get the more I hate them. I’m sure the finally revealed long standing cheating has a lot to do with that, especially since it seems that they are going to get away with it again. I don’t have any one story or time that solidified my hatred for them, I was just born this way!! I do love telling Tar Heel fans I’m not a State fan, I’m a STATE GRADUATE!!

    Class of 95

    #111249
    TheCOWDOG
    Moderator

    ^ Lookie here. GC! Was beginning to think we missed your wake.

    This story, (our story, all of us) is approaching shelf expiration. I think it’s been posted 3 times, and The Pack has come up 3-0.

    #111256
    highstick
    Participant

    Yep, heard that story from you a long time ago, but it never gets old. That 72 game would have been my last as a State undergrad, but I remember the 71 game more vividly!

    "Whomp 'em, Up, Side the Head"!

    #111259
    highstick
    Participant

    Holy Smoke! State wins, Golden Chain reappears! Now if the Cocks can beat Clempson!

    "Whomp 'em, Up, Side the Head"!

    #111294
    Fastback68
    Participant

    Subject to IIRC, it was the fall of my senior year in high school and my sister’s senior year at UNX. She invited me to spend the weekend and go to the football game with her friends. I remember dad gave me the keys to his 78 Oldsmobile Cutlass. The Police came on the radio as I hit the Uwharrie mountains. It was early in the morning and there was a line of 20 or more trucks hauling their boats waiting at the public boat ramp at Badin Lake. Without slowing down, I hit the left lane and locked that gas pedal to the floor. This was when 24/27 was just 2 lanes. It wasn’t until I had 5 more trucks to pass and was starting to hit a blind curve that I realized this could end badly. It all most did. Now I understand my 16 year old son a little better.

    It was the Duke unx game and the blue devil qb was going for the passing yards record. I don’t know if it was the Duke record or the ACC record. Anyway, the game was never in doubt and being naive I would clap every time the Duke qb completed a pass. Two rows down was your typical drunk kaki wearing, balding 22 year old douche that slowly began to take offense at my clapping even though unx was certain to win. I think I was still jacked up on my near death adrenaline rush on the highway and well pretty soon it turned into a back and forth jawing session and then the DB turns to his buddies for help. So now I’m cheering for the Duke qb to complete every pass. Eventually the record is broken and I’m yelling and the DB tells my sister to shut me up. I remember laughing and telling the guy to either grow some hair or put on a wig and do it himself. I wish I had a video, the guy faces us and attempts to take a step on the aluminum bench but falls backwards wiping out a half dozen goat fans. The attendants show up and had to physically assist 4 people up the steps including baldy. I think even today my sister is still pissed with me. I never cussed and I repeatedly said the guy was going for an individual record. Sportsmanship does not live on the hill.

    I only applied to State and I’m glad I went to that game and encountered those hole fans.

    #111299
    Pack78
    Participant

    Went to the State-unx game over at the Hole as a freshman in ’74…we came in a ranked favorite IIRC and got plowed something like 34-13. Still remember all of the taunts from the hole fans leaving that pile-of-crap stadium. Hate for the holes actually was conditioned well before that as my GT engineering-grad father explained to me as a young lad that ‘your States and your Techs actually graduate the people that do the important work in life’…the ‘universities of’ (like unx!) take care of the easier, less rigorous things. Was at the game yesterday by the way…the butthurt in the Blew Zone was epic!

    #111446
    GoldenChain
    Participant

    Guys I won’t say a decent win didn’t prompt me to look for company but the reality is I haven’t been on any message boards for about two years now because of Pharaoh expecting me to increase my brick production and took away my straw!

    Boy….glad I was missed!LOL

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