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John Jeansonne | Newsday sportswriter emeritus/Hofstra University journalism adjunct
Might the Strauss-Howe Generational Theoryâa psychohistorical supposition that describes recurring cyclesâapply here? The return of the University of Missouri football team to the Gator Bowl during the recent holidays, though obviously a minor occurrence among lifeâs circumstances, nevertheless was a vivid ghost-of-Christmastime-past appearance for this old Mizzou alum.In December of 1968, my senior year, I was one of two football beat reporters for our Journalism Schoolâs Columbia Missourian daily newspaper. (Remember newspapers?) That fall, classmate Joe Rhein and I covered the footballersâ exploits in whatâbelieve it or notâwas our scholarly duty, our semesterâs assignment for a reporting class. Which made the so-called âMissouri Methodâ of J-Schoolâlearning by doingâabout as much fun as one can have without laughing. (Though we certainly had some yukks along the way.)Rhein and I alternated the driving chores to away games in Kentucky, Illinois, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma, mixed in with witnessing five home games. And when the gridders had the good fortune of being invited to a high-visibility post-season event in Jacksonville. Fla., Rhein and I were afforded special scholarships (valued at a whopping $100 apiece) to fly to the Sunshine State and chronicle the teamâs preparation and bowl participation.Over the yearsâmany, many yearsâI continued attempting to commit sports journalism for Long Islandâs Newsday, assigned to Super Bowls, soccer World Cups, Olympic Games, Triple Crown races, tennis Grand Slams, NBA playoffs, March Madness, World Series, Stanley Cup playoffs, on and onâduring which I was introduced to various cultures, fascinating people and exotic locales. Still, that the â68 Gator Bowl was an early step into the Big Time.So to notice, more than a generation later, that the Mizzou lads were returning to that scene from 57 years ago conjured the old Mark Twain quote: âHistory doesnât repeat itself, but it often rhymes.âAlmost everything about this sort of do-over was different. In 1968, the Gator was a big deal, one of only 10 major college bowl games. This winter, there were 41. That â68 game was played in the original Gator Bowl stadium, demolished in 1994 after 48 years. But the Gator Bowl game, now burdened with one of those sponsored titles so common in sportâs relentless money grab, still is played on the same site, in what is now the NFL Jacksonville Jaguarsâ palace, and has retained the west upper deck and ramping system from the original infrastructure.The old joint, the one I attended in â68 and again on assignment for Newsday to cover the 1980 Gator Bowlâbecause it featured that seasonâs Heisman Trophy winner George Rogers of South Carolinaâhad been home to the eponymous bowl game since 1946. That included the one in 1955 that was the first nationally televised bowl game.The Beatles, during their first American tour in 1964, had played the Gator Bowl, though only after the Fab Four demanded that concert organizers nixed plans for a segregated audience. The Gator Bowl stadium also was host to the annual Florida-Georgia game, in which a football rivalry broke out amid the repeatedly raucous tailgating that caused the event to be known as the âWorldâs Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party.âAll of this history is just a reminder of how old I am. Yet that theory devised by William Straussâauthor, playwright, theater director, lecturerâand Neil Howeâauthor, consultant, senior associate at the Center for Stategic and International Studiesâ Global Aging Initiativeâasserts that stuff that happened long ago comes back. Major crises and societal reconstruction, things like revolution and wars.Sure enough, 1968 was a year of global upheaval, the Vietnam Warâs Tet Offensive, the assassinations of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, widespread anti-war and civil rights protests, violent clashes at the Chicago Democratic Convention.And here, as 2025 slipped into 2026, we have conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine, political unrest regarding migration and the Trump administrationâs autocratic, bullying leanings, what feels like unremitting gun violence, uncertainly regarding AI and robotics, struggles with climate disasters.So Missouri was back in the Gator Bowl on Dec. 27, playing (and losing to) the University of Virginia, this time while I was thousands of miles away at my daughterâs place in London, and the 1968 date with Alabama came to mind:First day in Florida, there in late December, we saw Santas roaming around in shorts, not what blow-ins from the Midwest expected. It was 70 degrees. Rhein and I waded in the ocean and did our duty reporting on all happenings related to the teamâs game preparation, including the fact thatâduring the teamâs leisure time at the beach, assistant manager Stan Biggs had his right eye blackened by a stray surfboard.There was a pre-game banquet at which Missouri coach Dan Devine told his kidding-on-the-square joke on Alabamaâs enormously successful and widely venerated coach, Paul Bryant, whom everyone knew as Bear.âOne night in the winter,â Devine said, âBear had just gotten into bed and Mary HarmonââBryant always called his wife by her full maiden nameââsaid to him, âGod, your feet are cold.â And Bear said to her, âYou can call me Paul.ââDays before the game, Devine dismissed a key offensive lineman from the teamâa player he called the best blocking center he had hadâfor what he called âunwillingness to abide by team rulesâ and never further clarified the offense. (Would that happen now?)In the game, Mizzou rolled Alabama like dice in a surprising 35-10 victory that didnât include a single completed pass by the winning side. The academic research of Strauss and Howe aside, that statistic may never be repeated.;Network & Infrastructure
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