bearchamp said:
Anyone find some irony in the fact that football and basketball defenders want to justify staying at the Claremont as a way to enhance performance, but no one suggests emulating swimming and water polo where the student athletes stay in dorms, apartments, fraternities and sororities before contests. Although I won NCAA silver and gold, I never stayed at a hotel before a contest except when travelling. Maybe the lack of successful performance
in the "money" sports can be traced to the failure to treat the athletes as humans and the failure to demand their mature behavior as part of participation in the sport. Just a thought....
Actually having been with the team on these overnights (I was once bed checked by Coach Gould who wanted to know why I had a girl, my wife, in the room), so here are my reasons football and swimming our different (I'm paraphrasing Okaydo a lot):
1) Hotel stays before home games have been a college football staple for more than 40 years as coaches try to keep players focused and away from the distractions (other students, relatives, etc.). There is importance of ensuring teams are properly rested and focused. If an individual swimmer screws-up its mostly on him, if the left tackle sleeps through the game, you may be carrying out your QB on a stretcher. Every college campus is different, but usually the night before a home football game, campuses get more rambunctious. Swimming, I don't think so.
2) There are recruits going through the process on their visits and so this matters for recruiting. That really doesn't happen in other sports.
3) I guess swimmers just do other things, but football player time is modulated and spoken for, as to when to eat, what football film to watch, sessions with coaches, study time, bonding time (usually a movie) and sleep. Unlike with swimmers who go out and swim this is a team sport that requires a controlled environment. As pointed out there is no resort time.
4) I'm going to guess you earned the gold and silver at an event where you stayed at a hotel. But it didn't matter if you blew a home meet. As long as you did well in the NCAAs, both the team and you profited. Every game matters in football, which gets me to point 5.
5) There is.way more money at stake, hence the controlled environment. Swimming is a great sport with a wonderful tradition at Cal, but it doesn't' pay for the deficits on other sports. Football does. Each win can mean millions more.
6) Finally there are ease of team logistics. You get everyone, on time, fed and thorough the swarm around the stadium though buses with police escorts. Again, I just don't see the issues or the analogy to swimming and other sports (other than maybe hoops).