Monday, July 6, 2009 -11 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com ,H . Fans could learn a lot from NASCAR It starts early on a Saturday morning as the fans flock from the furthest reaches of Ann Arbor and congregate on State Street to take part in the sacred- union of pre-gaming. They march from fraternity houses and dormi- tories alike to the front steps of the revered Michigan Stadium - an arena with over 100 years of tradi- tion and a follow- ing that extends across the entire country. And then, as fans file into the Big House, the Wolverine 4 enthusiasts turn on their "inside CHANTEL voices" and the JENNINGS oncerowdymass of fans becomes an inaudible sea of maize, whose, shirts are louder than their battle cries. It's astadium known for its football tradition, the block 'M' and the quietest 100,000 fans in America. In 2007, Mike Hart pleaded with fans as he looked off the field and into the stands for the backing he and his team needed during games. "That's when you need the sta- dium," Hart told The Wolverine in the 2007 Football Preview Issue. "That's the one thing we really need to do this year as fans, as everyone - make it extra hard for teams com- ing in here. Show them it's not the same Big House. It needs to be a lot crazier." But nothing has changed. We're still quiet. We still show up late in a drunken stupor and leave early, stumbling home to nap before we leave for late-night adventures with the game out of sight and out of mind. Oh, how quickly we forget the moments we will never forget and instead, move onto escapades few will be able to remember the next day. Something needs to change. And we need to look to someone to show us how. During football season at Penn State, "Paternoville" - a tent city outside of Beaver Stadium in State Fans tailgate by their homemade bike rarnp at Michigan International Speedway prior to the Lifelock 400 on June 14 We go to the "Harvard of the West," but we can't figure out how to layer clothing? We put on Ugg Boots during welcome week but for- get them when its freezing outside? We can paint our chests and turn men's shirts into dresses but it's a useless show of school spirit if we only stay for a quarter. Didn't Bo say, "Those who stay will be champions?" Sorry Bo: We, as fans, have failed you. We, as fans, have failed the team. That's one thing diehard NASCAR fans will never compro- mise. Their cholesterol? Sure. Their refinement? You bet. But their loy- alty? Not a chance. During one interview I asked a man, "So, win or lose, Dale Earn- hardt Jr. is your guy, right?" He looked at me, petrified, and questioned why I was asking about gay rights. Decades of being a NASCAR fan had deteriorated his hearing to the point that "guy, right" sounded like "gay rights." But later, he agreed - win or lose, he would support Earnhardt. And it was pretty clear partial deafness didn't phase his staunch fandom. If anything, it made the sound of the cars on the track more therapeutic. You can't say as much for Michi- gan. After a single losing season, some fans have already begun to doubt Rich Rodriguez and the Wol- verines. Last April, an article appeared in USA Today that said "The Wolver- ines must improve dramatically in Rodriguez's second season, or one of the nation's biggest fanbases will become restless" (Michigan - Team Notes, 04/28/2009). Alosing recordshouldn't make us restless. It should make us hungry. The fervor of NASCAR fans opened my eyes to what the Big House couldbeifwe step away from our acceptance of what we have been and look to what we could be. Sept. 5 is coming faster than you think. Our offseason is slowly dwin- dling into preseason, and what have you done to prepare? Do you really think Michigan football fans bleed maize and blue? I haven't seen so much as a paper cut recently. College, Pa. - governs the students' lives starting every Thursday. Stu- dents have to earn seats close to the field based on dedication. They take football so seriously that there is a registered student group that actually governs Paternoville. They have a website with rules and regu- lations, a Facebook and a Twitter. The Izzone is whatgivestheSpar- tans a true home court advantage at the Breslin Center. You have to earn your spot in the Izzone by missing no more than two games - if you make the cut, that is, by attending the annual Izzone campout and are a returning Izzone member. The Spartans can get 3,000-plus fans to show up wearing all white and are one of the best student sections in college basketball. But I will uphold our validated stubborn view and refuse to look at any other Big Ten school as superior to Michigan - at anything. So I took it upon myself to step away from the collegiate sports and set out and find our own personal "super fan" - a paradigm of fandom in all its stupefying glory. I just didn't think I would find my muse on a cloudless Sunday at the Michigan International Speedway. I was pretty skeptical when I showed up to MIS. I had never had a desire to watch or learn or even be around NASCAR. After arriving at MIS, it didn't take me long to meander out of the grandstand area toward a throng of Winnebagos heavily scented of bratwursts and Bud Light. It's here that I was quickly enveloped in a society of fandom I had never expe- rienced. In the NASCAR world, unlike Ann Arbor, fans don't limit their tailgates to the day of the event. Some came as early as Wednesday afternoon to start the preparations for Sunday afternoon's race. Some students don't even know who Michigan's opponent is until Fri- day. One couple I met had called in sick to work on Wednesday, Thurs- day and Friday so they could drive to MIS from Traverse City. They would do anything to set up asclose to the Speedway as possible. Still, the closest spot they could find was 15 Winnebagos away. They told me nothing could keep them away from their long weekend in Brooklyn, which has become a yearly tradition for them. Come rain or shine, Hell or high water, they would annually camp out for five days to watch cars race around an elliptical track for no rea- son except that they want to. Most don't have an affiliation to the team or driver, unlike us Wolverines that are expected to be Michigan fans because of our enrollment at the University. As I sat with them under their awning, listening to their stories of dedication from past campouts and races, I could only think of last sea- son's game against Northwestern on Nov. 15 in less than favorable condi- tions. In the Wolverines last home game of the season, only 40,000 total fans made it to halftime - with the student section only about 20 percent full.