I have two degrees from UAB. I've attended many UAB basketball games through the years (season ticker holder in the early 1980's) and a few (about a dozen) football games over the years. I also attend about a 6-8 Alabama basketball games a year and, on average, 2-3 Alabama football games a year. Like many here in Birmingham, I grew up a huge Crimson Tide fan but I chose a career in health professions and administration so the logical choice for my education was UAB. I was at the very first UAB basketball game against Nebraska in 1978.
With all that being said, UAB athletics has never had the ground swell of support from the rank and file of the university nor the student body. When the basketball program started under Gene Bartow, the support was from Birmingham basketball fans, not UAB basketball fans. The BJCC coliseum didn't fill up because of the school. Much of the support was from people like myself that grew up Alabama fans, attended UAB, and loved basketball. The commuter students at UAB like myself at the time worked a full time job and continued their education at UAB. And I, like many others, could support both.
All of that went out the window years ago when Bartow decided to get in a ****ing match with Wimp and the University. Bartow didn't realize how many fans like myself that supported his program from Birmingham area he had alienated with his antics.
The only way UAB football would have ever been able to succeed here would have been from the support of Birmingham football fans, (not UAB fans) that grew up with loyalties or ties to both schools in some way, but by in large, simply loved football. And all that got screwed years before the program ever got up and going.
So did the BOT sabotage the UAB football program? Nope. UAB and Gene did that years ago. Do some on the BOT have long memories? You better believe it and they certainly were not going to bend over backwards to help. Grudges and politics? Absolutely without question.
The sad thing is that both could coexist with good success if not for some purely childish behavior and egos. It made me "draw a line" and make a decision, as a fan, where my loyalty lies and which program vies for my entertainment dollars. And that is the program in Tuscaloosa.
I use to tell my kids as they grew up a simple thing to remember when it comes making an emotional or visceral response to a situation: "The face you slap today may be attached to the fanny you have to kiss tomorrow."