• 68°
Hartselle Enquirer

The Southern football experience

By By Leada Gore, Editor
Julia Sugarbaker from Designing Women
I grew up in a football household. My dad coached, my brother played, I cheered and my mom was team mom. Our weekends revolved around games at the local YMCA in the morning and then, in the afternoon or evening, listening to Alabama games on the radio.
I distinctly remember listening to Bear Bryant dissect a game on the radio as my dad worked in the basement. I also remember my uncle – who lived in Nebraska – calling on the phone and having my mother lay the receiver down in front of the radio so he could listen to the game.
This was the 1970s, years before ESPN and satellite radio. Now, all my uncle has to do is change the television or radio channel and he’s surrounded by football.
Nowadays, there’s no need to prop a phone by a radio receiver to hear all about your favorite team. There are countless magazines, radio stations and television programs devoted to high school, college and professional athletics. It wouldn’t surprise me if there’s not a magazine somewhere out there devoted to scouting the potential for four-year-olds playing Pee Wee League. Or, maybe, someone running an on-line site that goes to the hospital nursery and then blogs about what kids seemed to have a good throwing arm while swaddled under the heat lamps.
Football mania starts early in my household. We have a mixed marriage – my husband is an Auburn fan and I’m an Alabama fan. The fandom of our daughter remains up in the air. She has both an Auburn and Alabama cheerleader outfit and her grandfather bought her a pink Alabama jersey.
Whatever side she chooses – maybe she will be a fan of her paternal grandfather’s alma mater, Mississippi State – she will be expected to know the basics of the game. The women in my family aren’t excused from knowing the differences in a spread or wishbone offense or why the third Saturday in October is important.
So, whatever team you chose, here’s hoping your season progresses as you’d like. Unless of course, you’re a fan of a team I don’t like. Then, I hope you’re really, really unhappy.

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Planned Hartselle library already piquing interest 

Brewer

Students use practical life skills at Morgan County 4-H competition

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

After 13 years underground, the cicadas are coming 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle students collect pop tabs for Ronald McDonald House

MULTIMEDIA-FRONT PAGE

Priceville students design art for SRO’s police car 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle Junior Thespians excel at state festival 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

$15k raised for community task force at annual banquet  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

4H Pig Show to be held May 11 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

‘We want the best’: Hartselle Police Department is hiring

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Council hears complaints about Hartselle business owner

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Priceville students design art for SRO’s police car 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Scott Stadthagen confirmed to University of West Alabama Board of Trustees 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle plans five major paving projects for 2024 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Future walking trail dubbed ‘Hartselle Hart Walk’ promotes heart health, downtown exploration 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Chiropractor accused of poisoning wife asks judge to recuse himself 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Hartselle seniors get early acceptance into pharmacy school  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Farmers market to open Saturday for 2024 season

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Challenger Matthew Frost unseats longtime Morgan Commissioner Don Stisher

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Cheers to 50 years  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Scott Stadthagen confirmed to University of West Alabama Board of Trustees 

Editor's picks

Hartselle graduate creates product for amputees 

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Tigers roar in Athens soccer win

Danville

Local family raises Autism awareness through dirt racing  

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Three Hartselle students named National Merit finalists  

x