So the announcer on ESPN says about last year:
"And they weren't even seeded, and they sent them to Alabama"
The other announcer says:
"I think everyone was devastated by that seeding. I think everyone thought that they would host. And they end up going to one of the toughest places to play, Tuscaloosa against Alabama".
Back again
...."and it was one of the worst seeding jobs ever!"
Back again
"I think everyone was so surprised by how gypped" the Gophers were.
But not the great Gopher fans. The great Gopher fans expect our players to be over it in seven days. For our fans the story isn't the seeding, the story is we took too many pitches. We didn't adjust. We showed how we couldn't play with the big boys.
I don't think the views are mutually exclusive.
The fact is yes, they were screwed over big time and that they also took too many pitches and didn't adjust at the regional. That doesn't wipe away 56-5, the double Big 10 titles or the big wins they had over Texas, LSU, Notre Dame and a bunch of other NCAA Tournament teams during the season. To me, it was a momentary snapshot under extraordinary circumstances. The only thing that really pissed me off about those losses (from the perspective of looking at it a year later), was that it was the end of the road for Sara G, Macken and Finucane.
There's no doubt they were given the figurative middle finger by the NCAA and undoubtedly, it affected their mindset to a certain degree. Against Louisiana Tech in the opener, they came out flying. The next three games were a struggle. But that didn't prove to me they couldn't compete with the big boys. To me, it just ended up being what the NCAA wanted. Namely, putting Minnesota in it's place. That's the way the NCAA has always worked. They're essentially a cartel no matter how much they tout parity and equality in sports.
And being the unabashed dickheads that they are, the NCAA made an incredibly feeble attempt to justify that middle finger and ended up looking like the political crap-sacks that everyone knows they are. If anything, I'm glad even ESPN commentators are still both mystified and pissed off about the NCAA's stunt from last year. It was the ultimate screw job and everyone knows it.
And if people are highlighting it a full year later, I'm satisfied. It means they saw the same thing that we all did, and consider it egregious enough that it still angers commentators to this day.
As for the peanut-gallery comments about "not being good enough" and the "NCAA was right", screw 'em. If that's all they took from that regional, then they don't have the brain power to waste time on.