Great game for Michigan . Although Harbaugh referring to the team as brave seems a bit shallow. 4yr old pee wee league kids play this game, it doesn't take bravery.
@PoliPhiNosaur sorry, but I just see people risking their lives to rescue someone like fireman brave. risking your life for highschool or college sports seems a bit nutty.
@scotter810 certainly there are more kinds of bravery than simply risking ones life.
It takes real bravery for an addict to ask for help. It takes bravery to admit when we are wrong. It takes bravery to commit to a difficult, improbable goal. It takes bravery to commit your life to partnership with someone else. It takes bravery to risk rejection, ask that someone on a date the first time.
Surely bravery must exist on a spectrum, with greater and lesser acts of bravery.
@PoliPhiNosaur I see your point, my nephew played O-line for the bullafo college bulls, he could have probably went on pro but didn't want to risk his health. His little brother got rocked a few times at Grand valley State in Michigan and felt like he shouldn't play anymore. it's kind of personal to me
@PoliPhiNosaur *buffalo
@scotter810 amusingly, you just named my (GVSU) and my wife's (SUNY Buffalo) alma maters.
@PoliPhiNosaur LOL small world!
@scotter810 well, as someone who has suffered through long-term side effects from head injuries from years of wrestling, I can sympathize with the personal connection to the problem.
Also, as someone who has tried to safely coach sports where injuries a real risk, I can sympathize with the risks atident-athletes take on.
Luckily golf was always my main sport and boys and girls golf are the only sports I still coach, while my wife coaches boys and girls tennis.
@PoliPhiNosaur sat next to out highschool QB in english, after two bad hits he was never the same. That's not bravery.
@scotter810 isn't it? What's the difference between foolhardy and bravery?
It's too bad he suffered those consequences (one of the many reasons I dislike football as a youth sport), but risking that possibility is definitely something many people would call brave.
@scotter810 every time you take the field, step up to the starting line, or enter the competition it's an act of bravery. A mediocre participant always finishes ahead of someone who was afraid to start.
Sorry...high school coach here (not football), so forgive my sermon.
Also, fwiw, there's a kind of bravery in daring to achieve at an elite level that's hard for most of us mere mortals to understand. I don't fault him for calling his team brave, even if he meant it differently than I might.