Almost 70% view themselves as 7. That surprises me; reading individual posts does not make me think "balanced". I suspect many of the poll participants are not regular posters, and hold their opinions close to the vest.
It's still early, only about 70 people have participated in the poll so far...we can expect anywhere from 150 to 500 to, ultimately, if past polls are any indication.
But based on what we have so far, it does indeed seem that most of us think of ourselves as somewhere nearer the center of that triangle (motivated in all three ways) than the edges or corners.
That's probably a very good thing. It's good to have balance with these 3 considerations in play. You'd like everyone to enjoy success. You'd like everyone to want championships. And you'd like everyone to care for our lads. So...it's really good that most feel all three.
To do some cross-referencing, we can tease out a few more nuggets:
-- Just under 15% of us who have joined in don't spend much or any time thinking of the players as people beyond the football field. That's the folks who answered (1), (2), or (4). That means 85% of us DO care about the lads as people. It's really good that so many do, I think.
-- 12% of us don't care much or at all about winning championships (answered (1), (3), or (5)). That's a bit surprising. I would think it would be an even smaller number. You'd expect that number to grow at places that have rarely or never won any championships (say, Vandy). Maybe this number grows as we spend years out in the wilderness, and will shrink again after we get back to winning.
-- Almost 17% of us aren't enjoying the wins we do get ((2), (3), and (6) combined). Either too completely focused on the lads as individuals, or too completely focused on missed chances at championships. That's a bit sad; I feel for these folks. You gotta have some joy in life. Maybe they get all theirs in other ways.
Finally, there's probably some built-in bias to a poll like this. The way it is built and the way it is worded might tend to encourage the (7) response more than others. In reality, maybe people are a bit more pushed out toward the edges than their responses indicate. *shrug* No one ever said this was scientifically valid, heh. Just for fun.
Go Vols!