One of the strange aspects about human psychology is the irrational, emotional need of some people to "double down" when they are wrong and their pride or vanity is at stake. A good example is when you publicly criticize a person's seemingly bad behavior only to be proven wrong when the guy turns out to be innocent. The well-balanced adult says, "My bad. I shouldn't have said that", while the "double-downer" says something like, "I still think you're a bad person" or "Just wait, you'll screw up and I'll be proven right." In situations like these, the double-downer puts himself in odd ethical positions, like actually wanting another human being to fail just so he can be proven "right" and intentionally distorting what he sees in his target just to sate his own vanity. It works in reverse as well. If we have publicly praised a guy, we'll keep right on saying that this guy or that guy is a great dude even after he cheats on his wife and beats up an orphan, just to keep from admitting we were wrong in the first place. Like a gambler who stays at the table and keeps loosing hand after hand, many of us simply don't want to admit that we should have never picked up the cards.
This aspect of human nature comes to mind often when I read some of the more negative posts about UK's players, staff, and the UK administration. After the first two and a half games, it was very reasonable to gripe openly about all three. The defense was horrid, the offense misguided, the coaching inept and slow to react, and the players were generally unprepared and unimpressive. Fair enough. We all clamored that adjustments should be made, and by and large there as been improvement.
We should be happy, or at least content, right?
Not if you're a double-downer. The improvement undermines your original "we're doomed" assertions, putting you in a situation were you have to backtrack from your original comments and admit that Stoops and company may have righted the ship. At this point, a well-balanced adult would man up and admit that the team is getting better. But some people are emotionally incapable of such grace and, oddly enough, find themselves making excuses for our success: "SC is so horrid that that win really doesn't mean anything"; "Bama could have scored 100"; NM is a high school team". Once you begin criticizing your team for the crime of proving you wrong, you have to admit that you are emotionally invested in that team's defeat. How utterly, utterly sad.
This aspect of human nature comes to mind often when I read some of the more negative posts about UK's players, staff, and the UK administration. After the first two and a half games, it was very reasonable to gripe openly about all three. The defense was horrid, the offense misguided, the coaching inept and slow to react, and the players were generally unprepared and unimpressive. Fair enough. We all clamored that adjustments should be made, and by and large there as been improvement.
- Stoops has stepped in and taken over the defense, simplifying the scheme, rotating more players in the game, and holding players accountable for the mental mistakes.
- Gran has adjusted to life without Barker and transformed the offense into a ground and pound attack that focuses on ball control (to help the defense) and power running, essentially playing to our strengths.
- The players seem more prepared and are hustling every play. Both the offense and defense are being more physical and seem to be forging identities for themselves.
We should be happy, or at least content, right?
Not if you're a double-downer. The improvement undermines your original "we're doomed" assertions, putting you in a situation were you have to backtrack from your original comments and admit that Stoops and company may have righted the ship. At this point, a well-balanced adult would man up and admit that the team is getting better. But some people are emotionally incapable of such grace and, oddly enough, find themselves making excuses for our success: "SC is so horrid that that win really doesn't mean anything"; "Bama could have scored 100"; NM is a high school team". Once you begin criticizing your team for the crime of proving you wrong, you have to admit that you are emotionally invested in that team's defeat. How utterly, utterly sad.