College Sports Culture!
The following is an computer-generated summary of the video transcript.
Ellen, you sports aren't like a huge deal, but it's so fun to attend games, so basketball men's basketball is very popular. It's a lot of fun to go to those, especially when we play Pepper Dine, which we just recently did. So if you've done that in the past and a lot of people would just play pick up games, can you say pick up games for talk? No, but essentially, that's what they dio. Then I've also been a hockey games, which are very fun. They have buses that take students out there to watch, and then some players aren't always on the ice all the time, so that'll just be sitting in the audience crowd Theatre Tech might be. We'll sit in the crowd with the students who came, and they will talk to you about what's going on, get everyone hype, which is always a great time. We have, like every sport available except football in tennis. Well, there's club tennis, but we don't have football. We do say we're undefeated because we don't have a team pretending you do have a team. Basically, we have never lost a game in football because we're just really undefeated like that. Without a football team at LMU, it's a controversial topic. It's a little bit sensitive yeah, we say we're undefeated, even of shirts. It's not like big public schools where there are huge tailgate and stuff like that. That doesn't usually happen before the Pepper dine game. Yeah, so it's just like sporting events are, eh? Central factor of Ellen. They're pretty big when it's a big event when it's a big rival school that we're competing against. Otherwise it's not like it's not like University of Michigan Gonzaga like, not like big state schools. How they're they have those huge tailgates, but they are very fun. The students get very into it, and we have this group called the Cage. It's like this really high spirited group of students who are very into the games. Well, you pay a fee and then you get a bunch of stuff like cool stuff in, like, three attendance to games and whatnot. That's the sports culture, Alan, You..