That would of been a good thing if you moved. I prefer to stand and high five the people around us when at Husker games. The only people that seemed to be a problem were the fickle blue-hair golf clap crowd. Sad so many golf clappers take up good space.
Interesting, because the Tom Osborne I knew expected effort towards perfection every day, day in and day out, including Sundays. You must have met a different Tom Osborne. It could also be that Saban represents a toxic work environment whereas Tom handled his expectations in a different management style. But don't think for one second he did not demand perfection.
Whiffs matter. Going to their zones on time matters. Moving at a pace that makes the team successful matters. And when the backups come in and show they move at a better rate, something stinks. If the coach focuses too much on the front five with no real rotation, you can be sure the backups are going to hustle if they want that spot vacated in an injury situation. OR the OL coach could be working towards building competency in his group and using PT to do that so when an injury happens it is business as usual minus the guy absent.