Logan Ryan joins Mike Cugno to discuss if there is anyone cooler than the Rutgers cannon guys in college football.
What would be cool is if they had a guest person to fire the cannon at the opening of game. Maybe bring in the McCourtys for a game each, Brian Leonard for a game, Pacheco, etc. Maybe it would get fans in seats early. Make it an event where the knight on horse comes in early, hands a sword to the guest of the day, gets the crowd cheering, while horse trots off (horse near cannon not good), then guest fires cannon w cannon crew, team runs out on field, etc.
It might be a very cool thing to do but a dangerous one the Crew would never allow. During the 250th celebration down at Old Queens, the crew fired off the cannon but not before some idiots stood 30 yards in front of it so they could take a "nice picture." No one fires it without a lot of years experience doing it. The Second Regiment, Middlesex County Militia oversees its firing and they even have activation papers from the Governor of New Jersey that affiliates it with the National Guard.What would be cool is if they had a guest person to fire the cannon at the opening of game. Maybe bring in the McCourtys for a game each, Brian Leonard for a game, Pacheco, etc. Maybe it would get fans in seats early. Make it an event where the knight on horse comes in early, hands a sword to the guest of the day, gets the crowd cheering, while horse trots off (horse near cannon not good), then guest fires cannon w cannon crew, team runs out on field, etc.
We have had a game or two where we were on the verge of being shut out and the visiting fans chanted, shoot the cannonSo much WRONG in that interview. Logan Ryan doesn't even remember the canon being fired when he was here? WTH?
I knew a guy who was one of the guys who went to pick up that canon at a foundry.. maybe in PA?... and it was maybe the late 70s or early 80s...
I’m sure something could be figured out.It might be a very cool thing to do but a dangerous one the Crew would never allow. During the 250th celebration down at Old Queens, the crew fired off the cannon but not before some idiots stood 30 yards in front of it so they could take a "nice picture." No one fires it without a lot of years experience doing it. The Second Regiment, Middlesex County Militia oversees its firing and they even have activation papers from the Governor of New Jersey that affiliates it with the National Guard.
It is a gift from the Rutgers Class of 1949 and was suppose to be ready for the 1969 Centennial Football Celebration. But it wouldn't be until October 23, 1971 that it rolled into Rutgers Stadium and was first fired at the Rutgers-Columbia game.
How about a variant to it then… the cannon crew stays by themselves in current corner of end zone, knight on horse trots in and heads toward cannon, stops, pulls sword out and points to cannon crew, then darts back across field toward student end zone corner, hands guest star the sword, guest leads students in RU cheer, guest points sword toward cannon corner. Cannon crew fires cannon, and team runs out on fieldIt might be a very cool thing to do but a dangerous one the Crew would never allow. During the 250th celebration down at Old Queens, the crew fired off the cannon but not before some idiots stood 30 yards in front of it so they could take a "nice picture." No one fires it without a lot of years experience doing it. The Second Regiment, Middlesex County Militia oversees its firing and they even have activation papers from the Governor of New Jersey that affiliates it with the National Guard.
It is a gift from the Rutgers Class of 1949 and was suppose to be ready for the 1969 Centennial Football Celebration. But it wouldn't be until October 23, 1971 that it rolled into Rutgers Stadium and was first fired at the Rutgers-Columbia game.
It might be a very cool thing to do but a dangerous one the Crew would never allow. During the 250th celebration down at Old Queens, the crew fired off the cannon but not before some idiots stood 30 yards in front of it so they could take a "nice picture." No one fires it without a lot of years experience doing it. The Second Regiment, Middlesex County Militia oversees its firing and they even have activation papers from the Governor of New Jersey that affiliates it with the National Guard.
It is a gift from the Rutgers Class of 1949 and was suppose to be ready for the 1969 Centennial Football Celebration. But it wouldn't be until October 23, 1971 that it rolled into Rutgers Stadium and was first fired at the Rutgers-Columbia game.
According to the September 24, 1976 Targum, “Against William & Mary last year, Mary Ann Peterson ran across the field to count down the touchdown points when the cannon went off in front of her. She had to be hospitalized for minor injuries.”I’m sure something could be figured out. I’m mean it’s not like a cannon ball is coming out of it.
You’re take this too literally (the “shooter need not be trained”)… the Celeb Cannon Shooter can wear a tri-corner hat and instruct the cannon crew with “Ready Aim FIRE” followed by the fight song and/or RU chant. It could be a cool tradition (like the purdue drum or the Minnesota Vikings horn).It might be a very cool thing to do but a dangerous one the Crew would never allow. During the 250th celebration down at Old Queens, the crew fired off the cannon but not before some idiots stood 30 yards in front of it so they could take a "nice picture." No one fires it without a lot of years experience doing it. The Second Regiment, Middlesex County Militia oversees its firing and they even have activation papers from the Governor of New Jersey that affiliates it with the National Guard.
It is a gift from the Rutgers Class of 1949 and was suppose to be ready for the 1969 Centennial Football Celebration. But it wouldn't be until October 23, 1971 that it rolled into Rutgers Stadium and was first fired at the Rutgers-Columbia game.
He is right that no one trained for that stuff would be allowed nearby. As I said they are very professional. They don't do it any other way. You may think that's a silly rule. They do not.You’re take this too literally (the “shooter need not be trained”)… the Celeb Cannon Shooter can wear a tri-corner hat and instruct the cannon crew with “Ready Aim FIRE” followed by the fight song and/or RU chant. It could be a cool tradition (like the purdue drum or the Minnesota Vikings horn).
This would be better than the current celeb RU chant.
PS - Source … Love your content … keep it coming
Ginger wouldn’t have done that.According to the September 24, 1976 Targum, “Against William & Mary last year, Mary Ann Peterson ran across the field to count down the touchdown points when the cannon went off in front of her. She had to be hospitalized for minor injuries.”
You’re missing my point. I realize and agree a non-trained person would not and should not be the literal shooter. However the celebrity can be the “superior officer” directing the crew with Ready Aim Fire. Once again this could be a cool tradition. TV coverage always shows this kind of thing … it would be a Rutgers Trademark IMHO.He is right that no one trained for that stuff would be allowed nearby. As I said they are very professional. They don't do it any other way. You may think that's a silly rule. They do not.
That's a really good idea...What would be cool is if they had a guest person to fire the cannon at the opening of game. Maybe bring in the McCourtys for a game each, Brian Leonard for a game, Pacheco, etc. Maybe it would get fans in seats early. Make it an event where the knight on horse comes in early, hands a sword to the guest of the day, gets the crowd cheering, while horse trots off (horse near cannon not good), then guest fires cannon w cannon crew, team runs out on field, etc.
Exactly - we're talking about a ceremonial role, not an operational one - I assumed that was obvious.You’re missing my point. I realize and agree a non-trained person would not and should not be the literal shooter. However the celebrity can be the “superior officer” directing the crew with Ready Aim Fire. Once again this could be a cool tradition. TV coverage always shows this kind of thing … it would be a Rutgers Trademark IMHO.
You mean like this