The Wall Street Journal, yes, the Wall Street Journal, reported yesterday that LSU leads all college football team fan bases in drinking:
Louisiana State University fans weren’t sure what to expect from this football season. They couldn’t have anticipated that quarterback Joe Burrow would win the Heisman Trophy, Ed Orgeron would outcoach Nick Saban or the Tigers would be a heavy favorite in the national championship.Train 'em while they are young, I say.
But there was one thing they did know: They were going to drink a phenomenal amount of beer.
So nobody was surprised when LSU fans managed to consume nearly 55,000 beers in one October game. They were proud of this achievement—at least until the very next game. That’s when LSU fans smashed their own record. By the time the game was over, Tiger Stadium had sold 60,687 beers, according to a university spokesman.
That win in October crowned LSU as the No. 1 team in college football and put the Tigers on the road to Monday’s national championship against Clemson. It was also the game that reminded the nation that LSU has always been at the top of the polls when it comes to boozing.
There is now data to support their claims of drinking superiority after the first season that the Southeastern Conference allowed member schools to sell alcohol in their football stadiums. It was a policy shift worth millions of dollars to LSU: selling booze in Tiger Stadium is a bit like selling water in a desert.
But when the LSU faithful invade other college towns, they have a nasty habit of leaving wreckage behind. They beat your football team. And then they drink your beer.
The first statistical evidence for LSU’s drinking aptitude came in 2011, when the Tigers played at West Virginia, one of the first schools in the country that sold beer. The stadium sold $255,396 worth of booze that day—or 82% higher than the average of the other games in 2011.
It was an astonishing number at the time. It’s only proven to be more exceptional since then.
But it was just another weekend for LSU—as Atlanta learned over the last month. Lee Kicker, an LSU alumnus in the city for a security conference the week of the SEC championship, felt it was his duty to share intelligence with the bartenders at the Marriott Marquis, a hotel that was about to be swarmed by LSU fans. Kicker informed them of an imminent attack on their beer.
“I was trying to give them a warning,” he said. “However much you think you need, double it. And maybe you’ll have enough.”
He turned out to be prescient. The Marriott Marquis scrambled to replenish the hotel’s beer supply as rumors of a drought spread on social media. And the hotel was ready when LSU fans came back a month later for the College Football Playoff semifinal. The Tigers won—and the Marriott Marquis doubled its alcohol sales from last year’s Peach Bowl. “They were obviously quite happy before, during and after the game,” said Paul Buff, the hotel’s director of marketing.
The same cannot be said for West Virginia. The locals were completely unprepared for what was about to happen when LSU arrived. The Mountaineers were blown out—and they fared better than the beer supply. They’re still marveling over the carnage at Morgantown bar Mario’s Fishbowl nearly a decade later.
“That weekend was definitely record-breaking,” said Kim Zweibaum, one of the bar’s owners. “We expected a lot. From what I remember, it blew away our expectations.” ..
Michael Sterchak, an officer at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, was not projecting booze-related problems when he and his future wife decided to get married in a place that happens to know something about beer: Wisconsin. They spent months planning every detail for their 2016 wedding at the Pfister Hotel in Milwaukee, but there was one thing they didn’t account for. LSU was playing Wisconsin that same night in nearby Green Bay.
Sterchak began to suspect there would be a problem when one of his groomsmen called him early on the morning of wedding day and told him to get downstairs to see the LSU fans crowding the lobby and emptying the bar. Soon a hotel staffer came to Sterchak with bad news: “We ran out of beer.” It was before noon.
This was not something he wanted to think about hours before his wedding. By the time he was dressed, the wedding planner had better news: There was still beer in Milwaukee, the bar had replenished and the hotel would position security officers outside the reception to police wedding crashers in purple and gold. “They mobilized like it was the National Guard,” Sterchak said.
Now the Tigers are playing the last game of the season in one American city that has never been confused for a place that would run out of alcohol. Sally Stiel, the LSU Alumni Association’s senior director of alumni engagement, says the group is used to working “very, very closely with food and beverage managers” to address their spiritual needs. This weekend required less work. “We’re not worried about New Orleans,” said Mignon Kastanos, the organization’s director of marketing.
The official alumni events before the game include an open bar at Walk-On’s Sports Bistreaux, a bar co-owned by an LSU alumnus and a local football aficionado named Drew Brees. Meanwhile, at the Bayou Beer Garden across town, bartenders have devised a highly sophisticated distributing method during LSU games, said owner David Demarest. They find some buckets and fill them with Bud Light and Miller Lite.
“Every bar is doing beer buckets,” Demarest said. “Even the wine bar.”
15 comments:
Will never forget seeing an LSU charter bus full of fans drive up at a game between Ole Miss and LSU in Jackson and a beer can bouncing down the steps and falling out of the door of the bus when it opened. Despite their proclivities for having a drink from time to time I will admit that most LSU fans are good folks.
As an LSU alum, this is a "proud moment". This article brings to mind the verse from the Randy Newman song, "Rednecks", "Good ole boys from LSU, went in dumb, come out dumb, too".
Some may not know or remember that LSU was serving beer in its Union 40+ years ago. LSU truly is a trendsetter.
I always enjoy that Deke video. Even though the Dekes are no longer at LSU, they had some of the best parties that I ever attended during my 4...I mean, 5 years there (the fifth year was a "victory lap").
Hell, I'd drink a lot too if I had to spend much time in Baton Rouge, particularly at LSU.
“Drunk and stupid is no way to go through life.”
What about all those consecutive years Ole Myth was rated by Playboy (and others) as a 'top party school'. You think that meant pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey, baby showers and corn-hole?
@ 3:36. I used to work for one of them and made relatively good money.
Over the past 30 years or so, I've been fortunate enough to befriend a bunch of fellas from Louisiana. They some good baws. The only negative aspect of having friends from Louisiana is trying to keep up with them when they're drinking. And if they show up in their Delcrambre white Reeboks wanting to play Bourre, hold onto your ass.
Never saw Boo-Ray spelt thataway.
Hardy Tardy: As always, you state fans are fixated on Ole Miss.
12:16; It ain't fixation - It's reality. You got a problem with facts?
This story is such a non-story. I mean like DUH! Who else would you expect to lead the pack in drinking and partying. LSU! Harvard, MIT, Stanford, etc. Would it be news to announce their leadership in academics? Texas and Texas A&M in raising money? USC and UCLA in movie stars? Ole Miss in racist imagery? C'mon tell us something we didn't know.
Hell,i didn't know lsu did anything.!!!!
Kiffin is about to put a stop to all this adolescent behavior on the OM campus...especially the stalking of young, healthy coeds. He ain't havin' it. And when they show up at his office door for guidance, he will insist on the door being left open. I promise.
This is embarrassing and humiliating. How can LSU beat us at this? We set bar sales records in Dallas at the 2008 and 2009 Cotton Bowls. Have we really dropped this far? Wait till next year!!
Ole Miss fan
Not having a dog in the hunt (didn't go to college in MS)... I never have understood where these "Top Party School" numbers come from. I've been to many colleges around the US and I wouldn't rate Ole Miss anywhere close to a "party school". They have a decent gameday with their grove tradition... but it takes much more to be a true "party" school.
Go to a school like Wisconsin, FSU, Tulane... even LSU and there's 10 times the partying than that of Ole Miss or State. Honestly, I'd put USM over MSU and Ole Miss combined for partying. Just my 2 cents.
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