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Hawaii vs Georgia last week.

For 5 straight days - bombarded by the media about some kind of war dance performed by Hawaii.

Then - they actually play the game - and get annihiliated.

Questions:

1) Do war dances help you win games?

2) Will they spend more time dancing in the off season - or actually practicing their football skills?

3) Did they do the dance after they got their *** kicked on national TV? LOL

Just wondering.
You spend a good piece of your life gripping a baseball, and in the end it turns out that it was the other way around all the time. ~Jim Bouton, Ball Four, 1970
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I'm sure the University was and still is dancing. I was out in Hawaii during the bowl game and the coverage was simply overwhelming. Yes, they got their butts handed to them and for the record I'm a GA fan, but you couldn't pay enough for all the FREE coverage Hawaii received over the last several weeks and by this post continues today. Coach May pretty much said all you need to know, they played no one all season long. They got their day in lime light, coach will now get his millions and it was a great story for the press but in the end a nightmare of a game.
I believe half the Hawaii football team is from the South Pacific. Many of the rest are from Hawaii where the South Pacific has had tremendous influence in the culture. The dance is a South Pacific tribal war ritual. If it brings team unity and pumps up the players, why not? The media jumped on it since it's not the "same 'ole, sale 'ole" they typically serve up for games.

If by SMU you mean Southern Methodist, there's a reasonable Samoan population in the Dallas area. There are high schools in the area doing the dance as a pregame ritual.

Newsclip from Dallas TV station

Here's a clip of Trinity (TX) High School. They were state champions. The guy leading this might intimidate the "average" high school player.

Trinity pregame
Last edited by RJM
quote:
How about this perspective - how about not acting like a god **** idiot.

quote:
How about this perspective - how about not acting like a god **** idiot.
That train left the station a long time ago in football. Look at the end zone celebrations. Look at the sack dances. Look at the posturing and trash talking after making a routine tackle for a two yard loss.

Look at baseball with the posturing and machinations watching a homer fly out of the park.
quote:
When you are 40 years old - are you still going to act like an ***-hole - and be proud of your classless behavior.
I'll bet most people forty and over can look back and say "I can't believe I did that!" When my kids were born I noticed teens in public places more often. I'd chuckle and think, "Yep, I used to be an *******!" It makes me grateful my kids (14 and 19) behave the way they do based on adult feedback/compliments I get.

Then again, most parents thought I was charming and well behaved. The few that saw through me laughed about it with me when I was older.
Last edited by RJM
quote:
I am really glad I cant say the same thing.
You never did anything as a high school or college kid that you looked back on and questioned it when you were older? As for continuing this exchange, for some reason I believe you're attempting to create a personal confrontation so I'm bowing out.
Source: World Wide Web CBS Evening News

Friday Night Lights Meet The Haka
All-Out Maori Tribal Dance Pumps Up Teams From Tonga To Texas
Comments 22
EULESS, Tex., Nov. 13, 2007

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VideosPhotos

The Haka just may become the new Friday night lights battle cry. (CBS)



Pumping Up With A War Dance
A Texas football team is using Haka, an ancient war dance from the Maori tribes of New Zealand, to get pumped up and kick some...football. Hari Sreenivasan reports. | Share

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(CBS) As the Trinity Trojans rush onto the football field every Friday night, the drummers drum, the cheerleaders cheer, and the players … dance?

This is the Haka, an ancient war dance from the fierce Maori tribes of New Zealand, now a football ritual in Texas, CBS News correspondent Hari Sreenivasan reports.

“It helps me a lot to get pumped up,” said player Numi Lolohea. “To get motivated to get into the game.”

“If you gonna do it you got to be serious,” said Mao Leota, another player. “[Its] about getting ready for war.”

You gotta get ready for war?

“Yes sir,” Leota said.

Polynesian players introduced the Haka two years ago. Trinity won the state championship.

They're still dancing and making bruising hits, and beautiful catches. The announcer might say: “Touchdown, Number 84! Tuomoepa!”

That tongue twister is a Tongan last name.

Number 84's mom, Martha, is convinced the Haka has something to do with it.

“Oh yeah, very, he was very shy at first,” she said.

On the field the Haka dance is a source of inspiration for one of the best high school football teams in Texas. Off the field it's a source of pride for a tight-knit community.

From their tiny Polynesian homeland, thousands of Tongans have moved to Texas to take advantage of airline jobs at Dallas-Fort Worth airport - and the flight privileges home that come with them.

So many Tongans that they have their own television program. The Haka is a point of pride, a reassuring symbol that they aren’t on the sidelines anymore.

“A reassurance from the outside world that we are part of this community - reassurance that they accept us as we are,” said Ilaiasi Ofa of the Voice of Tonga show.

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More at Couric & Co.: Do The Haka!
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And it’s not just Texas. The Haka is a worldwide phenomenon.

In New Zealand, the All Blacks rugby team has been doing the dance for decades.

College teams from Hawaii to Utah fire up fans with their own versiona.

And on YouTube, there’s even a team of gingerbread men doing the Haka as a commercial for a New Zealand bakery.

No matter who's doing it: It’s all out.

Sreenivasan asked one player: “you went hoarse doing it?”

“Yeah, I'm surprised I didn't pull a muscle!” one player said.

It just may become the new Friday night lights battle cry.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/11/13/eveningnews/m...?source=search_story

© MMVII, CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Last edited by LLorton
quote:
Originally posted by snowman:
isinthegame

Aren't you messing with kids on this thread?

Can't have it both ways.


Actually - I can - I just did it - didnt I?

Asking questions about players that act like clowns - is alot different than denigrating a specific individual because of his abilities.

So - my questions remain - and my warning to you about denigrating a specific youth player remains also.

LOL - Read that again - LOL
Last edited by itsinthegame
Stop it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! You are killing me!!!!!!!
I have to go along with PG. I would do it for alot less than 50 k. Ive made a complete *** out of myself for free many times.

Folks dont you get Gamers point? Just play the game. All dances and tribal rituals in the world will not help you make a tackle or catch a pass. Just play the game.

Kudos to the Rose Bowl folks. Stick with tradition and take Ill instead of Georgia. Nice Rose Bowl game. I bet Hawaii wishes Ill would have shown up instead of the Dawgs. Maybe they could have danced some.

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