Tuesday, November 18, 2008

GROWING PAINS

If you were like me growing up, you eagerly got off the 3rd grade bus, grabbed a couple of cookies from the highest cupboard mom could hide them in and you sat down for the 3:30 episode of Growing Pains. For those of you who aren’t familiar with the hit 80's television show, I'll briefly fill you in.

Kirk Cameron played a young Mike Seaver who, coincidentally enough, experienced his own growing pains as he grew up on Long Island in a family of six. The show revolved around Mike as he grew into a mature young man. The audience was able to not only witness the trials and tribulations that Mike got himself into, but also the struggles of the remaining family as they grew together.

After watching the past three Penn State games, I've realized that the Nittany Lions are not only playing football, they're actually reenacting their own version of Growing Pains. Quarterback Darryl Clark is playing Mike Seaver, and the rest of the team is his supporting cast.

After sailing through his first eight games of the season (this is the part of the episode where Mike has some sure-fire way to cheat on his homework and everything goes as planed), Clark has drastically slowed down performance wise. He was knocked out of the win at Ohio State in the fourth quarter by a mild concussion, and threw a late interception the following week, which led to Iowa's game-winning field goal that snuffed out the BCS championship dreams. (This is part in the episode where Mike’s failproof plan fails, and things begin to fall apart).

After 2 fumbles (one inside the 5-yard-line) and an interception in the 34-7 win against Indiana, it's obvious Clark isn't playing his finest football. He's even admitted that "it can't happen, it just can't happen", speaking of the turnovers.

However, going into this week’s game against 15th ranked Michigan State, there is room for hope. Much like how Mike Seaver was always able to learn from his mistakes and make good for them - Clark did seem to gain some confidence in his throwing and running ability as his passes were crisper and he no longer hesitated to run the ball in the second half against Indiana. (This is part of the episode right before the end credits when everything is working it’s way out, Mike realizes the error of his ways, and plays a nice game of basketball with his father (Alan Thicke) in the driveway.

The Nittany Lions have a lot of work to do, and although they have Joe Paterno helping them through these tough times instead of Alan Thicke, they should be able to come together and rally around Clark into a Big Ten Championship and the Rose Bowl.

The Growing Pains theme song might state "as long as we've got each other", but the Lions have much more than that. They have the entire Nittany Nation behind them as they move past their growing pains, past Michigan State, and into the history books as 2008 Big Ten Champions.

5 comments:

AndyPsu07 said...

didn't leonardo dicaprio play in that show for awhile?

Mark said...

Good Kirk Cameron and Allen (?) Thicke shoutout. Growing pains was a greeeeaaaattt show

Jdm8286 said...

Dude, Leo was on that show and he was fantastic. I see Michael Mauti as DiCaprio. He's a young pup, far from home (Louisiana) looking for help from the Seavers, err...Penn State to make right and turn his life into something special.

Am I reading to much into this post?

Dan said...

you can never read to far into the floating lion, never.

Anonymous said...

remember when you were in third grade and hogged all the cookies and then watched growing pains on the tv when i was trying to watch my show