Still cheering on the Nimrods

May 2, 2012

Early in 2004 the nation discovered Watersmeet, Michigan. Funny, because the hunting and fishing paradise nestled in the Ottawa National Forest along the western edge of the Upper Peninsula was likely more familiar to Wisconsin residents than the inhabitants of its own home state given its border location.

But when 81-year-old Watersmeet resident Dale Jenkins, clad in classic hunter’s orange, closed one of ESPN’s “Without Sports” commercials with fists clenched while proclaiming “Go Nimrods,” it became a basketball hotbed.

Moreover, people nationwide didn’t just want to root for Nimrods; they wanted to be Nimrods.

Clothing orders began pouring not only from around the country, but in some cases overseas. Fitting for a place that might as well have been the end of the earth prior to the ad spots. Sometimes a branding campaign just finds you.

Below is an Associated Press account of the mania that followed ESPN’s exposure of the tiny U.P. town., and following that is a look back by Watersmeet administrator and coach George Peterson:

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In most places, calling someone a “nimrod” might earn you a cold stare or a fat lip. Not in Watersmeet, a rural township of 1,500 in the western Upper Peninsula of Michigan, where “Nimrods” is a badge of honor, the nickname of sports teams at the local school, which serves all grades and whose principal also doubles as coach and superintendent.

Now that the oddball moniker has inspired a series of commercials on ESPN, it has become a claim to fame.

The cable television network began airing three 30-second spots featuring the Watersmeet Township Nimrods boys' basketball team. They are part of ESPN's “Without Sports” advertising campaign, which celebrates the social and cultural importance of athletics.

Two of the ads show the Nimrods playing against another team as local residents voice pride in their team. In the third, 81-year-old Dale Jenkins, who played with the original Nimrods in the 1930s, sings the school fight song.

Each ends with the narrator asking, “Without sports, who would cheer for the Nimrods?”

The spots have struck a chord.

Watersmeet Township, a K-12 school with 228 students, including 77 high school students, has been deluged with requests for merchandise with the Nimrods logo, some coming from as far away as Germany. The school has sold more than $35,000 in T-shirts, sweatshirts, hats, coffee mugs and other items.

In the midst of the Nimrod explosion, Jenkins and coach, principal and superintendent George Peterson III flew to Los Angeles to appear Monday on NBC's “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.”

“It's unbelievable,” Peterson said.

The community has basked in the attention – poetic justice after the ribbing they have taken over the years, he said.

“It builds character for our kids,” Peterson said. “It's taught them a lesson that you need to find out about people before judging them.”

“Nimrods” apparently wasn't considered disparaging in 1904, when the school named itself after a biblical character described in Genesis as a mighty hunter and great king.

Hunting is a way of life in Watersmeet, located in the Ottawa National Forest about eight miles north of the Wisconsin line. The school logo depicts the head of a bearded hunter wearing a coonskin cap.

But why not change the name later, when it became a putdown? When scenes from the sitcom “Cheers” showed Carla the barmaid deriding patrons Norm and Cliff as “nimrods”?

Peterson surveyed the student body in the late 1980s. The response: Nimrods forever. “To them, the only insult was being asked” whether to abandon their beloved tradition, he said.

Excitement ran high when the ESPN crew visited in December. Jenkins, a retired mechanic, was filmed singing the fight song in his garage, surrounded by fishing gear.

“Both of my daughters were cheerleaders when they were in school, and they were always coming home and singing the song,” he said. “You can't forget it.”

The opening lines: “Watersmeet, the school that can't be beat, where the spirit's always high. Friends or foes, we have no cares or woes, for we are good sports, win or lose or tie.”

ESPN marketing manager Kevin Kirksey, who filmed the ad, said he was smitten with the community's wholesomeness and loyalty to its team.

“We're playing on the funny name, but the real story is how sports brings people together in small towns across America,” he said.

“Whatever happens, we're Nimrods and proud of it,” Peterson said.

***

Watersmeet Administrator/Coach George Peterson recalls ...

“When ESPN arrived we didn't have a school store. Producer Brett Morgen asked me if we had a few shirts or hats laying around and I replied I had about a dozen hats and shirts in my office closet. He replied, ‘You may need a few more!’ After ESPN, “The Tonight Show,” and “CBS Sunday Morning” we asked for help from the community to get our merchandise out to all parts of the world. We pulled in a gross revenue of just over $500,000 in the first two years. We quickly were able to open a store in our beautiful school and had a full-time manager to run it for about a year. 

"You couldn't imagine it; Nimrod gear being sent to Australia, England, Canada and all  50 states. We quickly teamed up with Bob Lanier Enterprises from Milwaukee, Wis., so people could order Nimrod merchandise online. We are still partners today.

“In recent years, the sales have fallen considerably. We still have the store which is now run by my office and the school business office. Around the holidays it can get busy. All the profits go into a scholarship fund for any Nimrod who continues their education beyond the K-12 setting. One day last summer I had a busy afternoon with people from Tennessee, Indiana, New York,  Iowa, and Illinois stopping in.  We do well during the summer and snowmobile season.”

TOP PHOTO: Dale Jenkins sang the Watersmeet fight song as part of a 2004 ESPN commercial that featured his hometown Nimrods.

Today In The MHSAA: 3/22/21

By Geoff Kimmerly
MHSAA.com senior editor

March 22, 2021

The first of four consecutive jam-packed high school sports weekends to finish the winter saw postseason and regular season championships as most basketball teams played their final games before playoffs and the rest of remaining MHSAA sports advanced through another round of their tournaments – with the state’s top female wrestlers celebrating statewide championships Sunday as well.

1. Wrestling: Bullock Creek’s Sydney Kutzke reached 100 career wins Saturday at her Division 3 Individual District, then won her weight at the Michigan Wrestling Association state finals Sunday – Midland Daily News

2. Hockey: No. 5 Novi downed No. 4 Livonia Stevenson 2-1 in a Division 2 Regional Final – State Champs Sports Network

3. Hockey: Top-ranked Calumet downed No. 6 Houghton 3-1 to claim a Division 3 Regional title – Houghton Daily Mining Gazette

4. Boys Basketball: Detroit Martin Luther King defeated Detroit Pershing 56-48 to claim the Detroit Public School League Tournament title – Detroit News

5. Bowling: Tecumseh swept girls and boys team and individual Division 2 Regional championships – Adrian Daily Telegram

6. Girls Basketball: Bloomingdale clinched its first Southwest 10 Conference championship in this sport, downing Centreville 59-38 – Sturgis Journal

7. Boys Basketball: Grand Ledge downed Holt 75-65 to clinch the Capital Area Activities Conference Blue title, its first league title since 2003 – Lansing State Journal

8. Girls Basketball: Haslett clinched the CAAC Red title with a 46-32 win over Williamston – WILX

9. Boys Basketball: Eaton Rapids won a title-clinching matchup of first-place teams in the CAAC White, defeating former co-leader Lansing Catholic 62-48 – WILX

10. Competitive Cheer: Reigning Division 2 champion Allen Park claimed its fourth-straight District title – Southgate News-Herald

Also of note …

Boys Basketball: Detroit U-D Jesuit edged Bloomfield Hills Brother Rice 64-62 to claim the Detroit Catholic League Tournament title – Detroit News

Girls Basketball: East Lansing downed Grand Ledge 79-43 to finish a perfect run through the CAAC Blue – Lansing State Journal

Boys Basketball: Ubly clinched its first league title since 2011 with a 35-33 win over Harbor Beach in the Greater Thumb Conference East – Huron Daily Tribune

Boys Basketball: Charlevoix clinched the Lake Michigan Conference outright championship with a 49-45 win over Elk Rapids – Petoskey News-Review

Boys Basketball: Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart finished an outright title run in the Mid-State Activities Conference with a 63-26 win over Coleman – Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart

Girls/Boys Basketball: The Big Bay de Noc girls and Kinross Maplewood Baptist boys clinched Northern Lights League championships – Escanaba Daily Press