Last year Barb presented us with a poster of a baseball field. The distance from home to first was the preseason, first to second was November-December, and second to third was January-February. Third base to the plate was the post season. We were tagged out at third. This year we overran first and rounded second. We tapped the bag at third and (I’ve been waiting a whole year to say this) now, boys and girls, we’re coming home.
If you have been in our gym, or anywhere near our locker
room, I guarantee you’ve heard Inner Ninja by Classified and David Myles. It was
Mel who played it the first time, and it became the theme song of the
teamroom. It’s rare for us to all
agree that we love a song, but this one just worked for everyone. I can’t count how many times I’ve heard
it – but I promise you it is a lot. At first I liked it because it combined
Classified’s hiphop with David Myles’ acoustic folk – giving something everyone
likes. The more I listen to it, the more I take from it. It’s a song about
finding strength within, and about battling against the odds. It is a song for
the underdog.
I know you never heard
this before // But I'd rather lose a fight than miss the war
There is nowhere in the world I would rather be this weekend
than right where I am. Five years of my life, and probably more than that, have
led up to this weekend. Every single sprint, drill, and rep for as long as I
can remember have been preparing us for this weekend. There are so many emotions heading into
the weekend. Nervousness, anticipation, excitement… you name it – we’re feeling
it. Regardless, I am right where I want to be.
I've been high and
I've been real low // I've been beaten and broken but I healed though
This year has been a struggle. I can’t speak for anyone
else, but my love for the game has been tested this year more than any other
year of my life. I’ve been beaten and broken but I healed though. We all have. Here I am, closing in on
the finish line I’ve been running towards my whole life. For every stumble and moment
of hurt I have learned something. As I moved through the weeks of this year I
left each one a little tougher and more resilient than I was the week before.
No sweat, no fear, no
blood, no tears // I go hard and I ain't makin' up no excuse // I'm overdue, I
don't do what I'm supposed to do // Cause you can think about it man, we're
supposed to lose // It ain't all picture perfect, ocean views
It’s no secret that we’re the underdog this weekend. Acadia beat
us every time we played them this year. But the AUS is an awesome conference to
play in – upsets happen all the time and anyone can beat anyone on a given
night.
I’m a big fan of statistics. I love what the numbers can tell you. There are equations
and models that will take all the data about two teams and run them to predict
a winner. Maybe, according to the math, we’re “supposed to lose”. But none of
those models really work. There is so much more to the game than the numbers: so
many things that matter and make a huge difference. There isn’t a stat that measures hustle plays, or pass
deflections. No one counts how
hard you hit a boxout, or how many times you shift the zone. I can’t assign a number to how good it
feels to take a charge or the feeling of a momentum shift when someone makes a
big play before the halftime buzzer. The game is full of intangibles – and that
is what makes it so great. If it were just a matter of putting some numbers
into a computer, sport wouldn’t exist. As my older brother, Simon, used to tell
me “that’s why they play the game”.
When my back’s on the wall, I don't
freeze up // Nah, I find my inner strength and I rear up // Here we go, I know
I've never been the smartest or wisest //But I realize what it takes
When was the last time you saw a sports movie that didn’t
celebrate the underdog? You probably haven’t, because they all do. I don’t care
if it’s Hoosiers or Dodgeball. They
all teach the same things: that overcoming adversity is heroic – but possible,
that each team is greater than the sum of its parts, and that the ability to
achieve greatness lies dormant within all of us.
Isn’t that what sport is all about? Sure, we celebrate Kobe
and Lebron, but wasn’t Jeremy Lin’s run just a little more magical? Does anyone
ever tire of watching highlights from the Appalachian State v. Michigan
football game? Don’t we all get chills when we someone we weren’t expecting
pulls out something great?
It's a feeling that
you get in your lungs when you run // Like you're runnin' outta air and your
breath won't come // And you wheezin', gotta keep it movin' // Find that extra
and push your way through it
For three years I lived with my amazing friend Leah
Kichmann. Leah is a professional
cyclist. One spring, post season, Leah finally convinced me to get on a
mountain bike. As we were getting ready to go Leah pointed out one last thing:
“If there is a rock or something in your path and you’re worried about hitting
it – do not look at it. If you
look at it you’ll hit it and crash. Focus on the line you want to take and look
past the rock.” The metaphor didn’t strike me until later.
Obstacles find their way into our paths all the time. On a trail through Garibaldi Park those
obstacles are rocks, protruding tree roots, and low hanging branches. In a
playoff opener maybe those obstacles are a losing record, a nagging injury, or
a team that we’ve failed to beat all year. If we focus on those we’ll crash
right into them, hurting ourselves in the process. We have a path to take, and a safe line worn into the trail
by continuous repetition. Our game plan is solid, we just need to stick with it
and execute.
Nobody's gonna see me comin'
Nobody's gonna hear a sound
No matter how hard they tryin'
Nobody's gonna bring me down
Nobody's gonna hear a sound
No matter how hard they tryin'
Nobody's gonna bring me down
There are more metaphors in this post than there are in one
of Speedy’s pregame chats (and trust me, that is a lot), but hopefully you managed to stick with
me. Tomorrow, when the ref tosses the ball for tip we won’t be the underdogs
anymore. We’ll be two teams, equals
on the scoreboard, both fighting for the joy of playing for one more day. If
you’re in Fredericton, you need to be at the Currie Centre tomorrow at 8:00 as
we take on Acadia. It’s going to be a good one.
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