Saturday, July 4, 2009

No reason for pessimistic outlook on 2009 season

A few weeks ago, I got a visit from a good friend. Like me, he's a BYU graduate and a sports editor at a daily newspaper in the western United States. As we visited, he informed me that even though he lives a good distance from Provo, he'd purchased season tickets.
He followed that announcement with something like this: "After last season, I'm totally pumped for this year."
That line took me by surprise. After all, last season left me with a completely different taste. I told him as much.
"I just told my wife that I'm done with the Cougars," I said. "Last season was so disappointing that I'm just not excited about BYU football this year. I'm really planning to give up the obsessing, the summerlong Internet searching for stories, etc."
And at that point, those were really my intentions. Usually, by late May, I am fullbore in BYU football mode. But I wasn't feeling it this year.
Then my friend's words started to swirl around my head. That's when I remembered reading numerous posts on CougarBoard and other sites last summer where fans said that 2008 would be a great year, but not THE year they were really looking forward to. That was 2009, when the top skill players on offense and the bulk of the defense would be returning.
2009 would be BYU's year to make a run at the BCS, they wrote. 2008 would simply be a good primer.
Of course, most of Cougar Nation shrugged off those arguments, consummed lethal quantities of Cougar Kool-Aid and anticipated our 13-0 run to glory.
When TCU annhiliated BYU last Oct. 13, the Quest for Perfection in the Win-Loss column was over. And by the time the Cougars limped off the Las Vegas Bowl field with a dismal loss to a mediocre Arizona team, the air was all but deflated from the BYU fan base.
But why? Why the pessimism?
Was last year disappointing? Sure. But only because of too lofty expectations.
Ten-and-three ain't bad, especially when two of those losses came on the road to teams ranked Nos. 2 and 7, respectively, in the final AP poll. And with the talent returning, 2009 should be special.
Yet, ask a BYU fan how the Cougars will fare this season and you'll hear "eight-and-four" or "maybe nine-and-three if we're lucky."
Truth be told, BYU should go 11-1 this season. Oklahoma is the only game on the slate that looks like a certain loss. With TCU and Utah at home, BYU should prevail. Same with Florida State.
Max Hall is a senior. Harvey Unga is healthy. There is a host of young talent at receiver and on the O-line.
The defense is experienced and should be strong as long as a few players step up at defensive tackle and in the secondary.
And 11-1 could be good enough for a BCS berth if BYU can at least have a respectable showing against the Sooners.
So hang those heads no longer. Rise and shout. Drink some Cougar Kool-Aid.
It's going to be a special year for Bronco's Boys. Let the Quest for 11-1 begin!

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