Every fall since we have owned an RV, we take a pilgrimage over the Coast Range to witness the gladiatorial victories and defeats of the Oregon State University football Beavers. We go over to Corvallis the night before the first home game of the year and park in a lot close to the stadium. We cook some steaks over the grill, drink a lot of beer and scotch, and have a great time visiting with other football fans and friends who are on the pilgrimage with us. We party into the wee hours of the morning, toasting the team with increasing slurred yells of BEEVERRRRS, for that is the last night of our innocence. Tomorrow we are playing some unranked team few of us have ever heard of who most likely are going to kill us. Deep down we all know this. It is how the world works. Yet somehow, we manage to make this pilgrimage every year in the hope that glory will come again and that the spirit of Bill Enyart will arise from his ashes and rekindle the glory of Beaver football. For this is the first game of the year and there is still hope. Maybe just maybe, Southwestern New Mexico State’s one-eyed, lame, and deaf quarterback will have an off day.
It wasn’t always this way. The Beavs were once a powerhouse, led by the likes of our 1962 Heisman quarterback Terry Baker who led us to a glorious victory in the Liberty Bowl. We were coached by legends like Tommy Prothro, and the giant killer himself, Dee Andros. Those were the glory days when I was in high school and an undergrad at Southern Oregon College. My father would slip out Saturday evening to listen to the game on the car radio as the Beaver games were not broadcast locally and only the car radio could pick up the AM station that carried them. Sitting in the car on those cool, Medford, OR evenings he would constantly tune the radio trying to hear amongst the static just enough of the play by play to follow his glorious Beavers. The next morning Dad would purchase the Sunday Oregonian which would have the stats and summaries. Those were the days of power T football and burly fullbacks like “Earthquake” Enyart who would run over tacklers who foolishly got in his way. He had proven his greatness in 1967 when we shockingly upset #2 ranked Purdue. But then USC, the number one team in the nation came to OSU. They were unbeatable as in their arsenal they had a god in the guise of a mere human.
His name was Orenthal James Simpson. In football there has been nothing like him before or in my humble opinion since. He would be right there in front of a would-be tackler, then in less than a heartbeat he would juke three feet to one side or another, leaving his erstwhile tackler gasping in the vacuum he left behind. He was unstoppable and they either gave him the ball or faked it to him on every play. We were doomed. Yet somehow, with dogged tenacity, we held them out of the end zone. It might have been the rain. OJ might have had a bad day, though he did gain over a hundred yards. In the end we beat them three to zip. The students charged the field and tore the goal post down. We went on that year to tie UCLA (ranked #2) but because we had two losses to lesser teams, USC was selected to go to the Rose Bowl where they claimed the mythical national championship, while we sullenly had to wait till next year. But next year never came. By the time I got to OSU as a grad student in 1971, the glory was over. Power T football as a strategy was made obsolete by giant linemen who were fleet of foot and steroid strong. The earth still trembled as Dee Andros led his now Orange clad team onto the field, but that was only because he now weighed 400 pounds. He was no longer the giant killer; he had become the Great Pumpkin. He ended his coaching career in 1975 compiling an overall losing record. He was replaced by the likes of Joe Alvazano and Kreig Fertig. Names that you have never heard of because they were all losers, big time. For two decades we never had a winning season. We were lucky if we won three games.
My Dad only saw one Beaver football game in his life. We lost. My uncle had come up with his son for the same game. Jimmy was a gifted athlete but was not enthusiastic about going to college. Uncle Bob had hoped that by bringing him to a college football game he might get interested in college, where he would have been a pretty good footballer. But we lost and Jimmy turned to a life of crime. When USC came to town we were slaughtered, when we were foolish enough to visit their turf, a slaughter would have been a mercy as the game was over the first time USC touched the ball. When the Great Pumpkin was still the coach, he always managed to beat the University of Oregon Ducks but even that redemption soon failed us. The great Bill Enyart faded from glory. He played for a few years with the Buffalo Bills, blocking for OJ, but blew out a knee or shoulder or some other vulnerable part of his anatomy needed to play football. I asked my dad what happened to him after that and he said he was working for Pepsi Cola back in Medford with his tail tucked between his legs if he had a tail. OJ played on to a faded pro glory, but soon destroyed any hope of a life after football by “acting” in those “Naked Gun” movies. Although he did make a stab at resurrecting his fame later.
While the team was losing it was still fun to go to the games. When I was a student it was free and you could sneak beer into the stands, gallons of it in gallon jars which male students would try to chug in one long sloppy drink to the cheers of students who needed to root for something. On warm September opening days, we took Wes to the games while he was still in diapers. He could crawl up and down the concrete stairs to his heart’s content, perfectly safe and much to the delight of scantily clad coeds wearing nothing but crotch hugging cut-offs and red bandanas over their firm young boobs. God, I miss those days. For even though we were losers there was always hope at that first home game. You could almost believe that this year could be different. But by the third quarter the hope was gone, and the band began playing the fight song for first downs instead of touchdowns.
My father was old by the time he was 55 and died when he was 60. I am not saying that year after year of OSU losing seasons was a contributing factor, but it didn’t help. Shortly before his death he confided in me that what the Beavers really needed were some “fast blacks”. This statement was a real shocker to me, but not because it was racist. My father’s racism was no surprise to me. Racism was something that his parents had taught him and what he and my mother had unsuccessfully tried to teach me. What shocked me was that he was willing to concede that black people were good for something and that he had called them “blacks” instead of the other term I had grown up with. I am being a little hard on my father as he was racist out of ignorance rather than malice. Kind of hard to be a full-blown racial bigot in Oregon because African Americans were and still are a rarity in most of the state. How someone can be biased against a people they have never even talked to eventually became a mystery to me. But as a child I accepted his racial facts. Facts like “niggers carry razors in their shoes and will slit your throat if you give them a half a chance”. I always wondered how they managed not to cut their feet, as the only razors I was familiar with was the double edge verity that Dad used in his Gillette. Dad also informed me that “if you give a nigger an inch, they will take a mile”. That is also confusing. Although grammatically incorrect, it implied ambition, which according to my father was a good thing for me to have. When I got to college, I met a few spear chuckers, spicks, redskins and rag heads. Maybe the ones I met were not typical of their race. Maybe the queers I have studied and worked with over the years are part of a vast homosexual conspiracy that exists only to destroy my now 50-year marriage to Judy or to infect my children with their perversion. Maybe. Maybe someday monkeys will fly out of my butt.
During those Beaver losing years our kids grew up. Wes and especially LoriAnne became rabid Beaver fans, complete with Beaver t-shirts, Beaver coffee cups, Beaver stadium blankets, Beaver bath towels and matching slippers. Every time we go to a game LoriAnne applied for the same credit card for the fifth time just to get another free t-shirt. How silly. I quit after three.
I remember one particularly terrible game we were losing in an especially inept manner. Our coach at the time had resurrected the wish bone option offense. For those of you unfamiliar with football (may God have mercy on your pathetic souls), the option offense involves a quick footed quarterback who sprints out parallel to the line of scrimmage and if he finds a hole in the line, heads down field. If he does not and is about to be tackled, he laterals the ball to a slightly trailing back who then finds the hole. For the Oklahoma Sooners of sixty years ago it was an effective offense. For the Beavs it resulted in a lot of fumbles. When we played USC, their tackles were as fast as our backs and three times their size. By half time we were playing our third stringers who fumbled the ball as soon as it was lateraled to them to avoid the bloody fate of their first- and second-string predecessors.
By the third quarter the stands were nearly empty except for a small knot of people who were sitting around us. Every time some of them would try to leave, LoriAnne would force them to sit back down.
“Why are you leaving?! You’re a Beaver Fan! You know they are going to lose; they are the Beavs, but you’ve gotta love them anyway! How would you feel if you were down on the field playing against homicidal monsters like that and saw your parents leave the stands? Sit your ass back down!”
And sit back down they did, where they stayed till the end of the game while avoiding eye contact with the crazy girl with the big jugs.
As an adult her Beaver fever even affected her social life as she refused to date Duck fans. When one Duck fan offered to switch allegiances for a date, she went into a tirade,
“Isn’t that just like a Duck fan! No loyalty! You people are all a bunch of flakes!”
She didn’t get a lot of dates. Maybe it was the Beaver tattoo on her forehead.
Over the 80’s it was same-o, same-o. High hopes, maybe a couple of early wins over inferior WAC (Western Athletic Conf) teams, then the inevitable loss to Pac 10 lower echelon teams like Washington State or Stanford, followed by the inevitable rout by USC, UCLA, Washington, and the evil and vile Ducks.
Then something happened. To this day I am not sure why. Was it karma? Did the Beaver Club secretly sell their souls to the devil? Whatever the reason, we started to win. Mike Riley was the coach and he led us to our first winning season in something like 20 years. He was immediately lured by the NFL to coach the San Diego Chargers. For about a week we were all terminally depressed. How could he leave us just when we had hope again? But then there was the announcement. Denis Erickson was to be his replacement.
Erickson! He had led the Gators to a national championship. He had turned around the Washington State Cougars. Although he had failed to bring victory to the NFL Seattle Sea Hawks, that was not his fault for if anything could be more pathetic than the Beavers at that time it was the Sea Chickens. We had high hopes for the Beavers with him in charge, and our hopes were not disappointed. Like a miracle of nature, the next year he took Riley’s team to the Honolulu Bowl which is a silly ass bowl game as the Hawaii team always seems to get invited to it. We lost, but the team apparently had a good time the night before with only two arrests and one stabbing.
The next year Erickson recruited well and we were now a contender, with a really good Heisman quality running back, absolutely great wide receivers who later both played for years in the NFL, and a short, walk-on quarter back who somehow could find them through a forest of giant pass rushers and miraculously pass the ball in their general direction. All it took was getting it close to either of the two and it was caught. And then we beat USC! Oh My God! We were ranked in the top five in the nation and went to the Fiesta Bowl to play Notre Dame and we creamed them!
Home games were no longer self-flagellations to purge our souls of sin, but fun, with
drunken orgies after the games under the awning of our parked RVs and rousing and hearty yells of “BEAVERRRRRRRRS” causing echoes of the same to reverberate from RV to RV. It is a carnival complete with thrill rides in a trailer pulled behind a golf cart driven by drunken undergrads, who only charged you a beer. Judy of course goes twice. She came back the second time coated with beer and mud but would have gone for another ride again in a flash if the golf cart driver had not gotten that DUI. Our time in football hell was over.
Then Erickson left us to try his skill with the pros again. We felt doomed, but then Riley came back, and we had hope again. He managed to take us to another bowl game where we beat Notre Dame, again! But then the darkness started to return.
We seemed to lose games we should not lose. Although we had one of the finest running backs in the country, we just didn’t seem to have it. We began to lose by lopsided scores. Wes and LoriAnne began to curse our new/old head coach. Although I was able to convince LoriAnne that he was probably not the antichrist, I couldn’t assure Wes that his contention that he fucked farm animals was in error. Yet somehow each year after mid- season he would manage to win just enough games to keep his job. OK maybe he was the anti-Christ.
2006 was no exception. We played our usual early season plethora of lower echelon patsies then got destroyed by Boise State. I admit that part of our problem with BSU is that damn blue Astroturf that they play on. It hurts my eyes and I have only seen it on TV. It must be pure hell in person. It should be illegal to play on a blue field while wearing matching blue uniforms. While this gaudy camouflage might give them a touchdown or two advantage, it cannot be used as an excuse for the 42 to 14 can of whoop-ass they opened on us. Then we had our PAC 10 opener against California who destroyed us 41 to 13. After that game Wes started to show signs of his annual football season depression. The next game was a 13 to 6 loss to the hapless Washington State Cougars. It could have been a lot worse, but it was hard for their wide receivers to catch passes and spit tobacco at the same time. That loss had Dee Andros turning over in his grave as there was a 5.1 earthquake after the game. The Beavers were reverting to form and you could not even numb the pain with booze as alcohol could no longer be snuck into the stadium. Although this was not a new rule, the fuckers were actually enforcing it.
The bastards checked you at the gate, forced you to walk through a metal detector, and even if you managed to sneak a plastic hip flask through, there were despicable bite-in-the-ass pricks watching you from the sidelines to make sure that there is no drinking in the stands. The ticket prices have gone through the roof and it cost us forty bucks to park the RV in the lot overnight. What a sorry state we were in. They even renamed the stadium. It was now Reeser Stadium. I can only hope that there is a cold spot in hell for whom ever sold the Beaver soul to a company that makes peanut butter.
Then USC cane to town. They were ranked #2 in the nation. We had peanut butter breath. Even the weather had deserted us. We beat them in 1967 in the rain. Played them tough in ‘05 in the fog, but that day in late October was sunny and unseasonably warm. But somehow, we got a lead in the first half. Maybe their minds were not in the game. Maybe they ate some bad peanuts on the plane. Whatever the reason, we were leading substantially at half time and somehow managed to hang on by our fingernails in the second half to eke out a 32 to 30 victory. We stormed the field. Might have got those damn goal posts down except we were not as young as we were in 67 and the bite in the assers were now protecting the goal posts. We went on that year to beat the nationally ranked Ducks (30 to 28) and ended our season in the Sun Bowl by beating Missouri 39 to 38, coming back from a 14 point deficit with 10 minutes left in the fourth quarter. That was considered the most exciting bowl game of that year until Boise State beat Oklahoma in overtime with a statue of liberty play that had not fooled anybody since the 19th century. Then the guy who had scored BSU’s winning points proposed to his cheerleader girlfriend on National TV. Now that is football.