By Todd
Heustess
Special to Outsports.com
I woke up Sunday morning
in the Orlando hotel to a very faint, high-pitched
ringing in my ears. As I wondering if this was some
new type of hangover torment facing me as I plod
towards 40, I began to realize that the ringing was
not alcohol induced but instead a Swamp Hangover (my
term), a byproduct of the unbelievable noise that
engulfed me as I stood in the student section at Ben
Hill Griffin Stadium (known to college football fans
as “The Swamp”) for last Saturday’s titanic SEC
contest between bitter rivals Florida and Tennessee.
For
3 ½ hours Saturday night, I stood in the North end
zone of the Swamp with thousands of wildly
enthusiastic (and hot!) UF students as Florida beat
UT, 16-7, in a thrilling, defensive (surprisingly,
at least to me) struggle in the first big game for
new coach Urban Meyer. The unending cacophony of
pure noise left me hoarse and my ears ringing but
undeniably happy because I was lucky enough to be a
part of an incredible college football atmosphere in
what has to be the loudest stadium on the planet.
|
|
|
Todd
|
|
|
|
UT cheerleaders
|
|
|
|
Gabe, Todd, Nate
|
|
|
|
Jim with Super Gators (Jose in the middle)
|
|
|
|
|
Super Gators and Todd
|
|
|
|
Before the game
|
|
|
|
Swamp Scene
|
|
|
|
Gator territory
|
|
|
|
|
Strutting their stuff
|
|
|
|
View from the stands
|
|
|
Seriously, how do the Gators ever lose a game there?
When you enter the stadium the first thing you
notice is that you have to walk down to the field,
way down. Then you wonder how on earth 90,000 fans
will fit in there because it looks like the stadium
should hold 70,000 to 75,000. Well, 90,000 + fans
were there on Saturday night and they cheered their
team on boisterously the whole game creating a wall
of noise that was numbing, deafening, and electric.
It was so loud that I couldn’t hear the UT band play
“Rocky Top” any of the 1,034 times they played it
during the game. And it was sweltering, rip-off-your
shirt hot in the stadium on this September night,
and luckily many of the UF students did just that.
It was the perfect game experience to follow a
memorable first-time tailgate in Gainesville.
Gainesville is about five hours from Miami, a little
less than two hours from Orlando, in the middle of
the state. Gainesville itself is a surprisingly
decent size city of 100,000 that is home to the
nearly 50,000 students at UF. I was joined on this
tailgate excursion by Gabe, a UF grad from Miami and
Jim, a FSU grad from Orlando, both Outsports
readers. In Gainesville, our hosts were Nate Pearman
and Brian Davis, both member of the very active
Pride Student Union (PSU) at UF. Nate and Brian took
us over the “student ghetto” near the stadium were a
crosssection of UF students, gay and straight,
mingled, drank, watched other games and got ready
for the game. Nate, who’s the Director of Campus
Relations and an Exec Board Member, told me that
this intermingling of gay and straight students was
not unusual at UF and that PSU has many on-campus
events and even participates in the homecoming
parade.
It
took a while to find a place to park because there
is no parking in Gainesville apparently. Any open
space within two miles of the stadium is fair game
for parking and once we figured this out, we were
fine. We parked in the front yard of an enterprising
first-year law student, Cameron, who provided
coolers full of beer, access to his house (including
the restroom) and grilled meats for our $20 parking
fee. It was full-service, one-stop parking and
tailgating, something I noticed was happening all
around the campus.
When we finally reached Brian’s apartment deep in
the heart of the student ghetto, we were greeted by
the sight of 10-12 shirtless college guys wearing
bright orange knee-high soccer socks standing in
front of the apartment building watching TV and
drinking. I of course was curious as to why these
shirtless studs were wearing orange knee-high socks,
so being the good journalist I started talking to
them. Turns out these guys were members of the
“Super Gators” a group of 20 or so guys who paint
their faces, wear blue capes along with the
aforementioned orange socks.
They walk to the stadium leading cheers and sit
together in the stadium. Juan, a 20-year-old junior
from Miami, told me that they are all friends
recruited by other friends. When I asked him why
they went to the games in costume and shirtless, he
laughed and said it’s because Gainesville is hot and
they’re hot. I told Juan I was writing about the
tailgate scene at UF for a gay sports site and he
got excited, saying that I had to take pictures of
them getting ready and then take more pictures of
them when they were ready to do their walk to the
stadium. When I asked him if he and his buddies
minded that these pictures would on a gay site, he
said they didn’t and that he liked the idea of gay
guys thinking he and his buddies were good-looking.
I asked him why they chose Brian’s apartment to
change in, he asked me, “Why not? No one cares if
they’re gay. That’s only a big deal to people your
age.”
So
after helping the Super Gators get ready for their
march to the stadium and fixing a few more drinks
with the Outsports crew, we marched to the stadium
watching the Super Gators rev the crowd up into a
frenzy. At the stadium I couldn’t sit with the Super
Gators (stupid, fascist UF Campus police and their
rules) but I was sitting next to members of the swim
team who go to the game in body paint, rugby
helmets, and Speedos. In fact all around the stadium
were shirtless Abercrombie, college boys who looked
like they stepped out of a Falcon video. Needless to
say I enjoyed my first game in Gainesville and I
think it ranks quite high in terms of tailgating
experiences and atmosphere. Now if I can just
convince the Super Gators to let me be their agent,
I’ll be even happier.
Rest of the Tour (other dates might be added):
Oct. 15: Texas vs. Colorado in Austin, Texas.
Nov. 5: Washington vs. Oregon State in Seattle.
Nov. 12: Southern California at Cal
Todd Heustess is a
writer based in Miami.
Discuss this article
Previous:
Tailgating with the Buffs
It's tailgate time
Sept. 21, 2005 |