I kind of agree with both of you. Maybe if they put the jalapeno bacon mac-n-cheese kid in one the Brady Bunch-style boxes at the end it would add a little zip.By the way, what does everyone think of this commercial? I’m kind of meh on it. When I mentioned that to my wife she looked at me and said “well it’s better than “great pick.”
Happened to me in 2008 lolBack in the 70s I remember telling a non-local adult cousin I was going to go to UConn. She thought I meant Alaska.
It has to rhyme with "blue".The only bad part about the song is “Connecticut U”
As a student I remember learning it asUConn Husky
UConn Husky, symbol of might to the foe.
Fight, fight Connecticut, it’s victr’y, Let’s go
Connecticut UConn Husky, victr’y again for the White and Blue
So go, go, go Connecticut, Connecticut U. Fight!
C-O-N-N-E-C-T-I C-U-T. Connecticut,
Connecticut Husky,
Connecticut Husky, Connecticut C-O-N-N-U. Fight! (repeat)
This isn't exactly as I remember it, but my memory isn't exactly as I remember it, either.
One could surely sandwich that line in the middle of a Haiku.... the teacher-looking woman emphasizes the "Symbol of might to the foe" line, which is definitely one I didn't recall. Great line.
Perhaps [a different time] in which the singer needed to distinguish a "Connecticut UConn Husky" from a Y-u-k-o-n husky?
Like the joke about the guy visiting Boston who was told to try the local fish scrod while there, he gets in a cab and asks the driver, "do you know where I can get scrod around here?"I must have sung that song a thousand times in Storrs.
The version I was taught went:As a student I remember learning it as
UConn husky; symbol of might to the foe
Fight fight Connecticut, it’s Vic’try let’s go
UConn husky; do it again for the white and blue
Go go go go Connecticut; Connecticut U
Because we would sing it before and after every single sport event. Truly a great fight song
Yeah we in the student section would have a back and forth with “go” and “fight” but the “fight” wasn’t essentialThe version I was taught went:
UConn Husky, a symbol of might to the foe.
Fight, fight Connecticut, it’s victr’y, Let’s go (Let's go!)
Connecticut UConn Husky, do it again for the White and Blue
So go, fight, go, fight, go, fight, go Connecticut, Connecticut U. Spell it!
C-O-N-N-E-C-T-I C-U-T. Connecticut,
Connecticut Husky,
Connecticut Husky, Connecticut C-O-N-N-U. Fight!
(Red text denotes deviations from the originally posted lyrics.)
How about “Connecticut’s U”?It has to rhyme with "blue".
Unless you want to find a different lyric to rhyme with "Connecticut".
Thinking back on it the "a" preceding "symbol" might have been inserted by me. I and other cheerleaders definitely said "spell it", but it could have been invented by one of us and thus stayed contained in our group.Yeah we in the student section would have a back and forth with “go” and “fight” but the “fight” wasn’t essential
Never remembered a “spell it” nor “a symbol”
I feel like I remember the lyrics up on the big screens at the dozens of games I had been to
I can see cheerleaders adding in “spell it” to engage the crowdThinking back on it the "a" preceding "symbol" might have been inserted by me. I and other cheerleaders definitely said "spell it", but it could have been invented by one of us and thus stayed contained in our group.
I guess I'm stuck on how you a) never memorized the words and b) are just pondering the first line of the song? I mean, the part you like is literally two words in. Weak sauce, amigo.Embarrassed to admit that I never memorized the words to the UConn Fight Song, but I am liking the UConn commercial they're showing during our games where they sing part of it, and the teacher-looking woman emphasizes the "Symbol of might to the foe" line, which is definitely one I didn't recall. Great line.
I wasn’t in the band, a cheerleader, part of any spirit group or fraternity, etc. so I never had to memorize it. I was just a drunk kid attending games. I would yell “Connecticut UConn Huskies” and hum, laugh, chortle and scream nonsense for the rest.I guess I'm stuck on how you a) never memorized the words and b) are just pondering the first line of the song? I mean, the part you like is literally two words in. Weak sauce, amigo.
You caught me. I did know "Connecticut UConn Husky". But for effect, it's better to say I didn't know any....you didn't even know UConn Husky was in there?
Back in the 70s I remember telling a non-local adult cousin I was going to go to UConn. She thought I meant Alaska.
I don't know. I wasn't in the band, a cheerleader or in any spirit group either and I know every word to it. I kinda thought most fans did and would be interested in a poll.I wasn’t in the band, a cheerleader, part of any spirit group or fraternity, etc. so I never had to memorize it. I was just a drunk kid attending games. I would yell “Connecticut UConn Huskies” and hum, laugh, chortle and scream nonsense for the rest.
You should do one then.I don't know. I wasn't in the band, a cheerleader or in any spirit group either and I know every word to it. I kinda thought most fans did and would be interested in a poll.
Interesting that both times I wrote Y-U-K-O-N, it was 'corrected.' It makes my post semi-nonsensical, but, oh well, and now I know how it's supposed to be done.One could surely sandwich that line in the middle of a Haiku.
My first live game was quite possibly the first time I ever heard the sound of where I was going. I knew there was such a thing as "UConn," but didn't know where or what was, other than cold & icy.
After probably the longest nighttime car ride I'd ever taken on a school night, we went for a long time after passing through downtown Hartford. The roads were mostly dark and rural, before I had such a word, years before I-84. The walk from the parking lot to the Field House felt like the longest such walk I'd ever taken, and along the way, there were snow piles and rising steam from beneath the paved surfaces, before we entered my first building with a dirt floor that wasn't a barn. For all I could comprehend at such a young age, it could have been THE "UConn."
I'm sure that whatever question I asked in search of clarity brought a chuckle to my dad and his two friends.