After the debacle in the desert, I had hoped that the leaders of the Oregon football team might figure out that they had begun to stray too far from the mentality that led to a 46-7 record over 4 seasons, including a 33-3 record in conference play.
Well, it looks like those days are gone forever. Mark Helfrich cannot grasp the concept; apparently.
Today, Kerry Eggers has a quote from Helfrich that says:
“It’s more important this week for us to play better, for us to execute, to compete, to play our way.”
Do you see that? The head coach of the University of Oregon has said that one game is more important than any other. And that is a problem. The moment you allow yourself to say that Game A is more important than Game B, you also allow yourself a different preparation mentality for each game. If Game B is less important, so too is the preparation for Game B.
As a power lifter, every single set I perform has to have the exact same set up, the exact same form; everything has to be the same. So when I am warming up, I approach the bar at 135 pounds the same as I do for 550 pounds; consistency is what makes greatness possible. Inconsistency breeds mediocrity.
Former Heisman front runner Marcus Mariota has joined the parade of players lending more weight to a rivalry game than other games telling Eggers:
“But no, in all honesty, talking around the community, this game does mean a lot,” the sophomore quarterback from Honolulu said. “It means a lot to the state. It’s an honor to be able to play in it. To be able to represent this community the best we can is what we’re going to try to do.”
Look, I love rivalries as a FAN… but that is who rivalries should be for; the fans. Media can talk about rivalries; fans can talk about them as well. The moment players begin to add special value to one game versus another, they begin to breed inconsistency.
The only game that matters more than any other game? Right now, it is the BCS title game. Next season it is that first playoff game, followed by the second playoff game.
After reading the talk about this week’s Civil War, I am more convinced than ever that Mark Helfrich has abandoned the Win The Day mentality where each game was “the Super Bowl.”
I doubt that translates to a loss this coming Friday; but it does not necessarily bode well for the future.