When juniors Jaron Willem and Neal Nankani attended their first basketball games freshman year, they found themselves surprised by the small and quiet presence in the stands. Inspired, the two then set to creating a solution, leading them to forming Oglethorpe 6th Man.
Nankani, the president of the club, and Willem, the vice president, described 6th Man as a place “where we bring students, athletes, and people at Oglethorpe – and in general anyone – to these home games and unite the community.” By incentivizing attendance with themes, food, and gameday highlights on social media, 6th Man worked to bring the turnout basketball, volleyball, and soccer games exhibited to other sports and campus events.
As a part of the organization’s initiatives for the ‘24-’25 academic year, Nankani and Willem pieced together a new, bigger event: a pep rally.
“Most people were familiar in high school with a pep rally,” Willem said. “[Petey’s Madness is] good for not only new, first year students, but people that don’t know about athletics at Oglethorpe. Part of the incentive is to meet people and see what it has to offer.”
‘Petey’s Fair,’ involving activities like yard games, music, giveaways, and club tabling outside the Dorough Fieldhouse, would occur two hours prior to the actual pep rally, ‘Petey’s Madness.’ The rally, starting at 7 p.m., Sept. 5 in the Dorough Fieldhouse, would include a dunk tank, a three-point contest, and team introductions. Through this, 6th Man hoped to appeal to a wide range of students, not just athletes, and expressed the vitality of connection on campus and team support.
“We don't have a football team, we don't have game days, we aren't on TV, so we have to find ways internally to build up that hype at Oglethorpe,” Nankani said. “Athletics and sports are something that brings everyone together. It’s a time where you can come for a couple of hours a day and put away events that are going on in the world, or your political views, or anything going on in your life that is stressful for you and unite and get behind something.”
Ultimately, 6th Man hoped students looked forward to ‘Petey’s Madness’ and that the rally eventually became a tradition on campus.
“I think the beautiful thing about Oglethorpe is that you are given a platform to not only express your own thoughts but do your own thing,” Nankani said.
“Part of it is going out of your comfort zone,” Willem added. “Meeting people and [getting involved] allow you to become who you are. And I think uniting people has to do with becoming who you really are.”