Sideline Guy: With Nine Hours to Go

[Note: This is an entry of an ongoing Stagg Bowl blog by sideline commentator Frank Rossi. To read his previous entries, click the following links:

1) 12/17/08 – The Road (Sky) to Salem;
2) 12/18/08 – Cold Weather, Warm Reception;
3) 12/19/08 – A Night of Celebrations; or
4) 12/19/08 – Meet the Teams (and Miss Virginia).]

We’re under nine hours to kickoff as I write this, and I can’t get to sleep. It’s an exciting moment for everyone involved with Division III Football — it’s a family gathered together in Salem for an annual ritual of stories, food, drink, camaraderie and, yes, football. There’s an infectious feeling that grips fans in Salem to get them to keep coming back — like the former Carnegie Mellon University athletic director who I met today who, at a very old age, decided to drive from Charlotte, North Carolina, to Salem after his flight to the area was canceled. Nothing was going to stop him from coming to the Stagg Bowl — and I later found out that both the Stagg Bowl and the basketball championships held here are annual “must-attend” events for this man. He loves Division III, the teams, the family and everything else that comes with this experience. For some reason, I can foresee myself becoming just like this fine man.

We are all gripped right now by the economic downturn the country is facing daily — and my fear was that it would lead to major budgetary cutbacks in the events of this week. I’m thrilled to report that if any cutbacks occurred, I have no awareness of what they were. Accommodations are first class, as I’ve stated in this blog all week — and that’s provided us a sort of working holiday around here. For a transplanted Floridian who had no Christmas spirit coming into the trip to Salem, I suddenly am moving toward that spirit with less than a week to go before Santa. Better late than ever, I guess.

I took it easy for the remainder of the day after we set up the equipment for the NCAA.com Stagg Bowl broadcast. Pat Coleman and I camped out in the Hospitality Room and talked with the other coaches and the NCAA Selection Committee members who came together one final time before the big game to celebrate a successful 2008 season and playoff cycle. Even while the Division I FCS Championship Game was on the television in the background, the folks around us all wanted to know who made the D3Football.com All-American Team and what our predictions for the game are — the Richmond/Montana game was secondary here.

Regardless of the results of Stagg Bowl XXXVI, I will be walking the sideline with a different perspective today. Last year, I walked the sideline as if it were a business venture. I had fun, but I was somewhat robotic during the cold and rainy weather. This time, I’ve spent three days around everyone involved — so I’ll be much more invested in the game and trying to provide the relevant information and stories from the field. ESPN isn’t bringing a sideline commentator, so I will have the rare opportunity to potentially interview the coaches before/after the halftime break. I’m really excited and nervous right now because I don’t want to disappoint everyone involved with the media aspects of this event or the listeners who will rely on our broadcast. If I’m nervous here, I can only imagine the butterflies that the players are experiencing right now.

Yet, what I know is this: we’ll all breathe a sigh of relief after the game is over with an abundance of memories and friendships that we formed in Salem and Roanoke. That makes us all winners this week — regardless of the scoreboard. Because of this, I know where I’ll be on December 19, 2009, already.

I’ll report one more time here after the game. Enjoy the matchup.

3 thoughts on “Sideline Guy: With Nine Hours to Go

  1. as I read your post your excitement seems to jump off the page…hope you got some sleep enjoy the game…looking forward to your next post

  2. Frank you are going to do fine! They are lucky to have you there, it sounds as if you are in your “zone” and dialed in. Just enjoy it and do your thing.

  3. Kids woke us up around 7 am pac time and I am settling in with a cup of Dunkin, ready to see the game at 8.

    frank – break a leg as they say out here in Hollywood – and note that it’s probably warmer in Virginia than it is in SoCal at the moment (40 degrees here).

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