Honest answer. My comment is more about emotional investment. Been there/done that to some degree. I have conscientiously tried to be better at supporting the program but not be too emotionally invested in on ice success. Regardless of results, these “kids” bust their butts in the weight room, in practice, in the classroom, on the ice, and wish even more so than the fans that the results were better. As fans we have to remember that. If our programs survive the budget crisis, UAA will put together a string of rivalry game victories. Hang in there. Remember you are talking to Nanook fans, pros at handling multi-sport disappointing seasons. This post will self destruct in….
To be honest I have these feelings and expectations because of how the players are treated. If you look at the facilities available to these players, even at UAA, I don't feel it is wrong to have expectations of these "kids".
When I was a college student I would've loved to have had a personal lounge that I could study in, a fitness training staff to help me work out, all of my hockey gear provided for free, people to help me study for classes etc. I do not think it is wrong to say, given the results, "you are not good enough right now."
I really do mean it when I say "this is embarrassing" it really is embarrassing. In the eyes of many, UAA hockey is a joke. If I wear a UAA hockey shirt around, people laugh. I work with people involved in hockey at various levels in Anchorage, who know I'm a UAA fan, and say "why do you watch? They're a joke, they can't even beat Fairbanks let alone any other team in that league." It stings dealing with UAF alums who laugh and say "7 years!"
I'm frustrated by this loss of pride. But what really gets me is, publicly the team doesn't seem to care. Thomas doesn't seem to care, the players don't either. It just seems these people are given these perks (and salary in the case of Thomas), are losing, and don't seemed, publicly, bothered by it. That's really frustrating.