18 chatter(s) RIGHT NOW!  Go!    
 Mickey Plyler's Blog



Front Page
Sections
Football
Basketball
Baseball
Recruiting
InterActive
Forums
TgrActive Chat
T-Mail
Blogs
Edit Settings
Mem. Profiles
Tiger Poll
Features
Tiger Tickets
Multimedia
TigerNet Store

250 Baldwin Road,
Baldwin Pointe
Seneca, SC

Please take a moment to view the web commercial for this beautiful home at 250 Baldwin Road. You will not be disappointed!


Wednesday June 03, 2009

Agony and Ecstasy

Agony and Ecstasy
Clemson football has provided us memories that will last a lifetime. The 1977 South Carolina game was one of those games where you remember where you were when Jerry Butler caught Steve Fuller’s pass. Has there ever been a finer line between agony and ecstacy?

The same can be said for David Treadwell’s kicks against Georgia in 1986 and ’87 or Mark Buchholtz’s boot in 2007.

We are a football school and those memories last forever. However, other sports at Clemson also provide some of those electric moments. In soccer we have the national title games and the Elite Eight win on the night Trevor Adair was dealing with father’s death.

Basketball gave us moments like Greg Buckner’s dunk against North Carolina in the ACC tournament and Sherrod Ford’s walk-off dunk against Virginia Tech.

And Tiger baseball fans remember Jeff Morris’ blast in the ACC tournament, Tyler Colvin’s super regional grand slam and several walk offs against the FSUs, South Carolinas and Georgia Techs of the world.

Monday night Kyle Parker gave us another epic moment. The two-sport athlete was not in the line-up Sunday or Monday but pinch hit earlier then provided the biggest hit of the season with his two-run game-winner.

The win Monday night was exactly what this program needed. Had Clemson lost the game, agony awaited. The doubters would have had a full magazine loaded for ammunition. They would have pointed out how the program had continued to slip and in some ways they would have been correct. But winning cures all things and a two-run hit quieted the small lynch mob for the moment.

Clemson baseball is not as powerful as it once was but this also a young team who took a big step in rebuilding the powerhouse this season. Winning enough games down the stretch gave the Tigers a home regional. This was a positive step.

The Tigers now have a chance to really advance the cause and accelerate the rebuilding by upsetting the number-two team in America. Clemson will have to travel across the country to do it and will have to beat a team twice on their home field that has lost only two home games all season. A super regional win and a College World Series appearance would probably put the process a year ahead of schedule.

All of these things are still possibilities because of the fantastic come from behind win Monday. Had the Tigers not put up three runs in the seventh and two in the eighth against Oklahoma State. If not for the comeback, we would have been talking today about the collapse. We would have focusing on the three errors in one inning. We would have been talking about losing twice to a team that went 9-16 in their conference. Agony was in the neighborhood.

This was a baseball team that has been inconsistent all season but came up with the right win at the right time. This is a team that did what we have been wanting out of some other Tiger teams recently. How many times did Tommy Bowden’s teams miss out on that kind of opportunity? We have even seen basketball raise the program to the level where expectations have led to some disappointment in the post-season. Heck, even the powerful Clemson golf team suffered recent setbacks at key times.

Clemson fans needed that Monday night. Tiger fans needed to hug and high five. It has been too long since we had a chance to truly rejoice like this in a post-season contest. Despair had become par for the course.

In football we have torn down goalposts and I have actually witnessed a Clemson basketball team cutting down the nets but the Tiger baseball tradition of players jumping onto the fence to celebrate with the fans in the Cheap Seats is special and unique.

There were other memorable scenes from Monday. I thought it was a classy move when Jack Leggett acknowledged Bill Wilhelm after the game. Dabo congratulating Jack in his post-game press conference was another classy move. But I have to admit the Cheap Seats Leap is my favorite and was a sight for sore eyes. Ecstasy found us waiting on it.

Monday was one of the first special moments in what could potentially be a long line of big days for Kyle Parker. He had a very good freshman season in baseball and was named All-ACC with his memorable night in Raleigh being the one marquee of that season. This year he had balanced spring football and baseball including the spring game Saturday and his home run against Miami. Maybe Parker will have huge events on the football field in the near future but Monday was signature moment to this point in his career.

Monday night also reminded us of something we lose sight of at times. Winning is important. There is no substitute for winning. When you win you don’t have to break out the conference argument or tell anyone how tough your schedule has become. You don’t have to complain about lack of support or facilities. You don’t have to get last year’s copy of U.S. News and World Report. None of those things mattered Monday. Winning mattered and being on the good side of that fine line felt so good.

One last memory from Monday night I will take with me. After celebrating in the stadium and after all of the hugs and high fives, I was making my way back to my car when I heard a bunch of car horns blasting back in Jervey Meadows. Without knowing the situation I asked a man who was coming from the area about the commotion. “South Carolina just lost in extra innings,” the stranger explained. Hundreds of Clemson fans celebrating in ecstasy due to the agony of the arch-rivals.

Geoff Hart of WYFF-TV in Greenville wrapped it up best during his sports cast Monday when he said at 9:15 Monday South Carolina had a 6-0 lead over East Carolina and Clemson had just made three errors in one inning and trailed 5-1 in the seventh. About an hour later, it was Clemson that was advancing and the Gamecocks season was over.

It is a fine line that separates agony and ecstasy but thank goodness the Tigers were on the right side of that memorable night Monday.

The Brad Hughes All-State Insurance Agency









Prayer List
We have started a prayer list on the blog. Here are the guidelines:
*If you are offended by prayer or prayer lists then I apologize in advance. The blog is free and the prayer list will be on the bottom of the page so you don’t have to read it.
*If you would like to add someone to the list please e-mail me at mickeyplyler@hotmail.com
*If you want the reason for the prayer to be added to the name please specify in your e-mails.
*Please let me know when it is appropriate to take the person off of the prayer list

Those who need our prayers include:
Finn Brookover, Mrs. Kathleen Bowers, Larry in Naples, FL, RTG-Pawsitive Tiger, Mary-Louise Pawlowski (John's daughter), Sandy Wright, Jo Ann Bachman, Frank Taylor, Kenneth Bryant, Pruitt Martin, Got igers and his family, David Rowland, Leonard Gillespie and his family, Jim S, Christine Hepfer, Daniel Rosborough, Amy Murphey, Jack Huffman, Nancy Winkler, Dr. Nancy Strom Morgan, John Reeve, Eileen Woodrum, Ethel Southard, Vinnie Brock, Jean-Pierre Bailey, Kaitlyn L, William Perry, Delores Weaver.


Comments:

Good blog. If one (Kyle Parker) is a gamer in baseball, then does that carry over to football? If he made the clutch hit to win the game Monday night then can he make the clutch throw to win the game on Saturday come football season?

Posted by Locotiger on June 03, 2009 at 12:28 PM EDT #


My favorite Baseball moment was the whole weekend pitching effort of Chris Benson, Billy Cotch, and another starter who all had double digit strike outs and complete games against FSU! I was a youg teenager, but it was the best pitching performance I have ever seen.

Posted by CUson1 on June 03, 2009 at 01:14 PM EDT #


Loco --- I like Kyle Parker a lot and think he will be a fine QB for us in 2009 either as a starter of as a back-up.

But these baseball/football "winner" comparisons don't hold much water IMHO.

Kyle won the OSU game, but he had the very same opportunity in the ACC game versus UNC and failed, leaving it to Wilson Boyd to make the play.

Posted by apextiger on June 03, 2009 at 01:44 PM EDT #


Great closing paragraphs! Nicely done.

Loco: I think it's a different skill set to focus on one pitch versus scanning multiple receivers while evading the rush. Nonetheless, in the spring football game, he showed that he has what it takes.

Posted by Razzmatazz on June 03, 2009 at 02:48 PM EDT #


Gotta include Khalil's last at bat at Clemson walk off against Arkansas in Super Regional! That is truly the stuff of legends.

Posted by Base on June 03, 2009 at 09:21 PM EDT #


Thankyou Apex and Razz...I honestly have no idea if the ability to rise to the occasion when the game is on the line transcends different sports, but it is an interesting question. I agree 100% that baseball and football require different skill sets, but I wonder if the pressure is different for a hitter in baseball coming to the plate when the game is on the line is much different than the pressure of a QB taking a snap on third or forth down when the game is on the line. Certainly there are some people on here that have been in both situations (in little league or highschool) who could compare the situations.

Posted by Locotiger on June 04, 2009 at 09:40 AM EDT #


"Had the Tigers not put up three runs in the seventh and two in the eighth against Oklahoma State. "

That is not a sentence.

Posted by croanie on June 04, 2009 at 02:59 PM EDT #


"Had the Tigers not put up three runs in the seventh and two in the eighth against Oklahoma State. "

That is not a sentence.

Posted by croanie on June 04, 2009 at 03:11 PM EDT #


I don't want to take anything away from the team, that won the Super Regional and jumped into the cheap seats... But I noticed, at the same time, the ORU players, were in a circle with heads bowed... That was a very special time for their team...

Posted by Gray_Court_Tiger on June 04, 2009 at 06:51 PM EDT #


Post a Comment:
Comments are closed for this entry.

Archives
Search
Links



Front Page | Football | Basketball | Baseball | Recruiting
Account Settings | TigerActive Chat | TigerNet Forums | Tiger Tickets | T-Mail

Please mail any comments, corrections or suggestions
Disclaimer and Privacy Statement Copyright © 1995-2008 TigerNet

Interested in advertising on TigerNet?