This question makes me really sad both for college football fans and for the state of college football discourse.
I have said this in good years and in bad years: If 100% of your definition of "fun" involves making the playoff or competing for a nattie, you're probably living a miserable existence as a fan. (Take it from me and my family of WVU lifers.)
One of the great lessons of Moneyball (the book -- not the concept or the movie) is that only one team gets to win the last game of the season. You have to enjoy the season itself. The process itself. The ups and the downs.
You have to enjoy tailgating on Saturdays in October against a .500 team that might mess around and beat you. You have to appreciate the culture, the community, the shitposting and the rivalries and the actual sport.
Watching your team win a championship is great. But if your idea of fun is *only* about winning, it's actually a really shallow way to consume your fan and team identity.
So, I say all that to fully contextualize this: If you don't think #JMU fans are having fun in the fall, I don't know what to tell you. P Lot is a state of mind.

