Sunday, March 24, 2013

Fab Five



Speaking of videos that are two years old, ESPN's 30 for 30 crew produced a documentary that aired two years ago on the the Fab Five--Michigan five freshmen who started together, went all the way to the national championship game (twice) and started new trends in shorts, socks and on-court demeanor.  I hadn't shown the video to any class until last week.

It was interesting to see reactions to the video, especially mine.  I figured my students would enjoy a story about a group of brash young trash talkers, who turned out to be nice guys.  What I didn't expect is that I would gain an appreciation for the group.

The Fab Five arrived in Ann Arbor in the fall of 1991, the same semester I went off to college, so we're all the same age.  And I liked to follow the careers of people who were the same age as me, like Marshall Faulk.  The Fab Five were an anathema to me, though, for all of the reasons my students today liked them--baggy shorts and the trash talking...especially the trash talking.  I was overjoyed to see them lose to Duke and UNC in the tournament (and I now know I would never root for those two schools in that manner again).

Why the change? I'm not sure.  Maybe I'm more tolerant of self-expression.  Maybe we all grew up.  In any case, it was an entertaining tale all the way around.

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