Why the Bearcats Cotton Bowl Loss Hurt So Much

A Sports Story of Growing Up After College

Connor "Bearcat" Martin

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Photo from Albert Cesare / The Enquirer

Sports can be a magical thing. They bring people from a community together, such as UC and Xavier fans uniting to celebrate the 2021–2022 playoff Bengals. They bring awe to whoever watches, especially if it’s David Tyree’s helmet catch or Félix Hernández pitching a perfect game. And they teach lessons of persistence, hope, and excellence (e.g., Tiger Woods, the Williams sisters, Muhammad Ali, etc.).

Or, for better or worse, sports can be a much-needed distraction from the real world. That’s what this 2021 Cincinnati Bearcats Football season was for me. But I didn’t realize that until it came to an unfortunate end Friday as the Bearcats lost their first ever College Football Playoff appearance against Alabama in the Cotton Bowl. Once I witnessed the Crimson Tide march over us to a 27–6 victory, I had a moment of clarity — realizing this was indeed a distraction from growing up and embracing life after college.

I graduated from the University of Cincinnati in late April and started working recently after, but I didn’t feel ready to commit to that next stage of life: adulthood (i.e., life after college). I was still living in my college house until my lease was up in July, so I naturally held onto the youthful college mindset for a little bit…

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Connor "Bearcat" Martin

Passionate writer | Stories involving TV/music, book reviews, quotes, faith, poetry, and more | Words for eternity | Check out my book: bit.ly/2AkskcE