Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Two Aggies named to All American Team


Courtesy of afca.com
AFCA Announces 2012 FBS All-America Team

Baylor wide receiver Terrance Williams and South Carolina defensive lineman Jadeveon Clowney headline the 2012 AFCA FBS Coaches’ All-America Team announced today by the American Football Coaches Association.
The AFCA has selected an All-America team since 1945 and currently selects teams in all five of its divisions. What makes these teams so special is that they are the only ones chosen exclusively by the men who know the players the best — the coaches themselves.
Williams leads the nation in total receiving yards with 1,693, and averages 153.91 yards per game, which is also tops in the nation. He has 89 receptions and 12 touchdowns, and is a finalist for the Biletnikoff Award, as the nation’s best receiver. Clowney leads the nation in tackles for loss with 21.5 this season, and is tied for first with 13 sacks. He is a finalist for the Bednarik Award, Bronko Nagurski Trophy and Rotary Lombardi Award.

2012 AFCA FBS Coaches’ All-America Team
Offense
Pos.NameHt.Wt.Cl.SchoolCoachHometown (High School)
WRMarqise Lee6-0195So.USCLane KiffinInglewood, Calif. (Serra)
WRTerrance Williams6-2205Sr.BaylorArt BrilesDallas, Texas (W.T. White)
TEZach Ertz6-6252Sr.StanfordDavid ShawAlamo, Calif. (Monte Visa)
OLChance Warmack6-3320Sr.AlabamaNick SabanAtlanta, Ga. (Westlake)
OLLuke Joeckel6-6310Jr.Texas A&MKevin SumlinArlington, Texas (Arlington)
CDalton Freeman6-5285Sr.ClemsonDabo SwinneyPelion, S.C. (Pelion)
OLJonathan Cooper6-3295Sr.North CarolinaLarry FedoraWilmington, N.C. (Hoggard)
OLDavid Yankey6-5301Jr.StanfordDavid ShawRoswell, Ga. (Centennial)
QBTajh Boyd6-1225Jr.ClemsonDabo SwinneyHampton, Va. (Phoebus)
RBKenjon Barner5-11192Sr.OregonChip KellyRiverside, Calif. (Notre Dame)
RBMontee Ball*5-11215Sr.WisconsinBret BielemaWentzville, Mo. (Timberland)
Defense
Pos.NameHt.Wt.Cl.SchoolCoachHometown (High School)
DLJadeveon Clowney6-6256So.South CarolinaSteve SpurrierRock Hill, S.C. (South Pointe)
DLBjoern Werner6-4255Jr.Florida St.Jimbo FisherBerlin, Germany (Salisbury [Conn.])
DLDamontre Moore6-4250Jr.Texas A&MKevin SumlinRowlett, Texas (Rowlett)
DLWill Sutton6-1267Jr.Arizona St.Todd GrahamCorona, Calif. (Centennial)
LBManti Te’o6-2255Sr.Notre DameBrian KellyLaie, Hawaii (Punahou)
LBJarvis Jones*6-3241Jr.GeorgiaMark RichtColumbus, Ga. (Carver)
LBC.J. Mosley6-2232Jr.AlabamaNick SabanTheodore, Ala. (Theodore)
DBEric Reid6-2212Jr.LSULes MilesGeismar, La. (Dutchtown)
DBDee Milliner6-1199Jr.AlabamaNick SabanMillbrook, Ala. (Stanhope Elmore)
DBJordan Poyer6-0190Sr.Oregon St.Mike RileyAstoria, Ore. (Astoria)
DBPhillip Thomas6-1215Sr.Fresno St.Tim DeRuyterBakersfield, Calif. (Bakersfield)
Specialists
Pos.NameHt.Wt.Cl.SchoolCoachHometown (High School)
PRyan Allen6-2215Sr.Louisiana TechSonny DykesSalem, Ore. (West Salem)
PKQuinn Sharp6-1205Sr.Oklahoma St.Mike GundyMansfield, Texas (Summit)
APTavon Austin5-9171Sr.West VirginiaDana HolgorsenBaltimore, Md. (Dunbar)
*-2011 All-American

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Jack Pardee given 6-9 months to live

Courtesy of the AP and ESPN.com
  

HOUSTON -- Jack Pardee, one of Bear Bryant's "Junction Boys" who went on to become a five-time All-Pro linebacker and an NFL coach, has been diagnosed with gall bladder cancer and has six to nine months to live, his family said Tuesday.
His daughter Anne Pardee confirmed to The Associated Press that the cancer has spread to other organs and that her 77-year-old father plans to move to a Denver hospice where the College Football Hall of Fame inductee's wife, Phyllis, has been receiving care since having a stroke.
Anne Pardee said her father was in good spirits despite the diagnosis.
Jack Pardee survived a bout with melanoma when he was 28 and in the middle of his 15-year NFL playing career.
He played only six-man football at Christoval High School in west-central Texas, near San Angelo, before moving on to Texas A&M. Bryant became the Aggies' coach in 1954 and moved their preseason camp to desolate Junction, about 100 miles northwest of San Antonio.
The state endured a severe drought and historic heat wave that year, but Bryant worked his team through the brutal conditions and refused to allow water breaks in an effort to create the toughest players. Pardee was one of 35 players who made it through to the end of the 10-day camp without quitting.
Pardee played three seasons at Texas A&M and was drafted by Los Angeles in 1957. He played for the Rams from 1957-64, sat out a year to cope with his melanoma, then played seven more seasons. He finished his playing career with the Washington Redskins in 1973.
Pardee stuck with the NFL and was the Chicago Bears' head coach from 1975-77. He coached the Redskins from 1978-80 and was fired after Washington went 6-10. He served as San Diego's defensive coordinator for one season, then returned to Texas to coach the USFL's Houston Gamblers.
Pardee was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1986. When the USFL disbanded in 1987, Pardee became the coach at the University of Houston and brought along the fast-paced "Run-and-Shoot" offense that worked well with the Gamblers.
The NCAA levied severe sanctions on the program in 1988, the result of violations committed under previous coach Bill Yeoman. Houston was banned from playing in a bowl game for two years and banned from playing on television in the 1989 season.
But the Cougars led the nation in total offense (624.9 yards per game) and passing offense (511 yards per game) in 1989, and quarterback Andre Ware won the Heisman Trophy. Houston finished 9-2 and ranked No. 14 in the nation.
Pardee became the coach of the NFL's Houston Oilers in 1990, and led the team to the playoffs in each of his first four seasons. Oilers owner Bud Adams traded star quarterbackWarren Moon to Minnesota before the 1994 season, and Pardee resigned after a 1-9 start that year.
His name emerged 13 years later for the Houston job, but the school hired Kevin Sumlin instead. Pardee's son, Ted, is the color analyst for Houston football radio broadcasts.

Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press

Monday, November 26, 2012

Johnny Manziel, Heisman Contender, Talks To Media After Texas A&M Finishes Regular Season

Courtesy of Huffington Post
By KRISTIE RIEKEN 11/26/12 05:59 PM ET EST AP

Johnny Manziel


COLLEGE STATION, Texas -- The legend of Johnny Football has grown all season while Johnny Manziel piled up yards and the Texas A&M Aggies piled up wins.
On Monday, the freshman quarterback finally weighed in on his catchy nickname as he spoke to the media for the first time all season.
"I think a lot of people here in Aggieland enjoy it," he said. "But I find it extremely funny."
The success of Manziel and the Aggies is no joke. His 4,600 yards of total offense have helped No. 10 A&M to its first 10-win season since 1998, and has him among the top contenders for the Heisman Trophy.
Manziel said he respected coach Kevin Sumlin's decision for him not to speak to the media this season because he's a freshman. But says he's happy to have a chance to talk about this season.
"It's kind of nice now to be able to kind of let you guys know how I am a little bit more," he said. "There's so many question marks out there."
Sumlin, who is in his first year at A&M after four seasons at Houston, raved about Manziel and said he was a catalyst for what his team was able to do in its first season in the Southeastern Conference.
"He's a tremendous competitor and a tremendous leader, and that's something that you really don't see in a player as a redshirt freshman," Sumlin said. "His leadership on and off the field throughout the season has made our season a real successful one."
Manziel has thrown for 3,419 yards and 24 touchdowns and ran for 1,181 yards and 19 more scores in a regular-season the Aggies capped with five straight wins including an upset of then top-ranked Alabama. He is second in the nation in total offense and broke Cam Newton's SEC record for total offense in a season on Saturday.
The quarterback is a bit surprised at how well Texas A&M did in its transition from the Big 12.
"I don't think I ever really envisioned how big this season would be for us," he said. "I don't really think anybody envisioned that we would win 10 games at the beginning of this season and that we would all have so much success as a team."
The celebrity status has been shocking to Manziel, who will turn 20 two days before the Dec. 8 Heisman announcement. He's still surprised when people approach him at restaurants and other places around College Station to ask for photos and autographs, even though it's become a daily occurrence.
"I'm a small-town kid," he said. "I come from Kerrville, Texas and I still see myself that way. I don't see myself as Johnny Football, I still see myself as Jonathan Manziel, a small town guy from Kerrville who is extremely fortunate and extremely blessed to be able to play football here at A&M."
He seemed amused by the attention given to some online photos of him at a Halloween party dressed as Scooby Doo alongside some beautiful and scantily-clad young women.
"That Halloween night was something where a lot of guys on the team dressed up and kind of just wanted to get away from all the seriousness and the grind that is college football season and go out and be kids again and dress up and just have fun," he said, without specifically addressing the pictures.
Manziel said winning the Heisman is something he dreamed about as a child, but that he hasn't spent a lot of time worrying about it or any other awards. No freshman has ever won the award given to college football's most outstanding player.
"I feel like that situation will play itself out, and whatever's meant to be will happen," he said. "I'm just doing whatever coach Sumlin and them ask me to do ... so we can take care of things in a bowl game."
But Manziel did admit that when he was younger he'd play college football video games and build a quarterback that would win the award as a freshman. Funny thing is, the players he made rarely resembled his 6-foot-1, 200-pound frame.
"When I created a video game player I probably made him 6-6, probably 230 pounds," he said. "I definitely didn't make him my size. But I've played so many video games maybe a few times I did. But typically I would have made him look something like Cam Newton."
Newton was the last SEC winner of the Heisman, picking it up in 2010. If Manziel comes away with the award, maybe somewhere in a small Texas town like the one he grew up in, a young boy will build a football player on his video game that does look like the A&M star.
Manziel has trouble grasping the whirlwind this season has been for him, and considers himself lucky to have had the opportunity to be in the position he's in now.
"This season has been incredibly surreal," he said. "It's beyond my wildest imagination. It's a true testament to how this team has grown every week, because without these guys none of my individual success would be anything."

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Aggies' Nealy serving up leadership, laughs in final season


Texas A&M defensive tackle Spencer Nealy has served up healthy doses of leadership and laughs during his final season with the Aggies. Photo: Dave Martin, STF / AP

COLLEGE STATION - Texas A&M defensive lineman Spencer Nealydelivers hits, one-liners and good times daily. But the jovial senior is most proud of whom he delivered to Aggieland two years ago: quarterback Johnny Manziel.
"I don't want to, but I have to take credit for it," Nealy said, breaking into the wide grin typically adorning his friendly face. "I did what a real good host should do, and we ended up stealing him from Oregon. Now look at him."
Manziel is a favorite to become the first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy. Nealy played host to Manziel, then an Oregon commitment, two years ago on a recruiting visit - and the rest is history.
"When we build him a statue, I expect maybe a plaque at the bottom," said Nealy, before revising his request. "Or maybe a side statue of my face right next to him."
If that happens, some fans wandering by the bust will wonder why A&M has also paid tribute to the late, oft-great comedian Chris Farley. The two bear a striking resemblance - only Farley never inspired a team to an upset of the No. 1 team in the nation on the road.
That was a stunner, providing another example of Nealy's own super humor.
Following A&M's 29-24 defeat of then-top ranked Alabama on Nov. 10, the team gathered for the Aggie War Hymn. Later, Nealy saw a picture of himself from that epic moment.
"And I said, 'Who said I was undersized? Look at that gut right there,' " he said, chuckling.
Heart bigger than self
Nealy, (6-5, 280) actually is undersized for a Southeastern Conference defensive tackle - a position he agreeably shifted to from defensive end prior to this season in an effort to help a thin line any way he could. While players like Manziel and receiver Ryan Swope earn headlines for outstanding play, the Aggies wouldn't be 9-2 without the efforts of Nealy, a big-hearted soul and a rock a new coaching staff quickly found it could lean on.
For leadership - and for laughs.
"Spencer is one of those guys college football is all about," A&M coach Kevin Sumlin said. "I don't know how he does it - but he does it. You wish he was bigger and faster, but don't tell him that. He thinks he's King Kong - and it's contagious."
Nealy, a two-year starter and four-year contributor, and his fellow seniors will sprint onto Kyle Field for the final time at 6 p.m. Saturday against Missouri.
"I'm really going to embrace that last war hymn at Kyle Field," said Nealy, choking up slightly at the thought. "I'm probably not going to be able to hold it in."
Fans expect as much. Nealy has always been the first Aggie to show his emotion following a big play - offensively or defensively.
"He's our Energizer Bunny," A&M defensive coordinator Mark Snyder said. "Every team needs a Spencer Nealy. He's been gold for us."
A&M-UT possible
Two years ago, Nealy, son of former NBA journeyman Ed Nealy, deflected a pass late against Texas in Austin, and teammate Von Miller snagged the interception and sealed the Aggies' final victory over the Longhorns. A year ago Thanksgiving, UT edged A&M 27-25 at Kyle Field in the foes' final scheduled collision.
The No. 9 Aggies have a bowl to play following Saturday's home finale - and Nealy would like nothing more than a last shot at the Longhorns the final time he slips on a No. 99 jersey.
"The way this season has gone," Nealy said with a nod, "wouldn't that be a cherry on top of this whole thing?"
brent.zwerneman@chron.com twitter.com/brentzwerneman

Friday, November 23, 2012

Johnny Football: Raising a Heisman Contender

Courtesy of The New York Times



Dave Martin/Associated Press
Johnny Manziel, eluding the grasp of defensive back Deion Belue, helped lead Texas A&M to an upset of Alabama, then No. 1, in Tuscaloosa on Nov. 10.


COLLEGE STATION, Tex. — A long day spent with Johnny Manziel’s family ends in the secluded corner of a raucous party. It is late enough that Manziel’s grandmother Pat really gets going, talking about how a Manziel has never met a stranger, or always fights for a friend, about the good old boys who never grew up.

    Michael Stravato for The New York Times
    John Paul and Michelle Manziel, Johnny’s parents, with some of the awards Johnny received as a high school player.
    Michael Stravato for The New York Times
    Manziel, with a football in his hands at one and a half.
    Michael Stravato for The New York Times
    Manziel as a Packers fan at age 4.
    Michael Stravato for The New York Times
    Manziel as a baseball player at age 9.
    Michael Stravato for The New York Times
    Manziel in a football jersey at 11.
    Michael Stravato for The New York Times
    Manziel as Kerrville Tivy High’s quarterback.
    And then she tells a story. When Manziel’s father, John Paul Manziel, was young, he fought a boy named Clay every day in the schoolyard. Finally Pat got fed up and had the two boys settle their feud, once and for all, in her front yard.
    She leaned against a post and watched, as Johnny’s grandfather, known as Big Paul, drove up and said, “Hit him with the right, John Paul!”
    “Oh no, no, no, I got this handled,” Pat said, now cheering on Clay. “All right Clay, you get up and hit him with your left! Get him in the gut!”
    Soon, Clay gave up, conceding defeat. The two never fought again. Problem solved, the Manziel way.
    Yes, John Paul was a Manziel. Like his father, Big Paul, who claims he was the cockfighting world champion in 1983. And like his son, Johnny Manziel, the redshirt freshman quarterback for No. 9 Texas A&M and the Heisman Trophy front-runner heading into Saturday’s game against Missouri, a sudden star both in his father’s mischievous image and labeled with the all-American nickname Johnny Football.
    But because he is a Manziel, it takes friends, coaches and family to keep young Johnny on the straight and narrow. They all report to John Paul, 45, who vows he will make a man of his son, even if Manziel’s boyish persona — the carefree way he plays — is a large part of his appeal.
    “He’s got a big smile, he’s dynamic, he’s unpredictable; I think that’s why everybody likes him,” John Paul said, during a round of golf last Saturday morning before the Aggies played Sam Houston State. “Growing up as kids, who didn’t want to be like that?”
    It was a chilly morning, and John Paul’s back was tight. He plays golf before his son’s games to relax, to make friends and maybe some money. He said he thought he could have been a professional golfer had his parents held him accountable — a big reason he tries to make certain Johnny stays focused.
    On this day his foursome included his daughter’s boyfriend; a golfing buddy from his hometown, Tyler, Tex.; and Jim Muncie, a good friend from Kerrville, Tex., where Johnny Manziel’s legend first began to grow.
    Muncie is the unofficial president of the Johnny Football fan club, an older brother figure more than, say, an uncle. When Manziel played at Kerrville Tivy High School, Muncie called the football games on the radio, often singing his version of “Johnny B. Goode” on the air.
    Down at Kerrville Tivy there’s a quarterback
    He runs through opposing defenses like a maniac
    He runs 40 yards on the ground
    Throws the football through the air for another touchdown
    Go Go
    Go Johnny Go
    Go
    Busloads of people came from all over Texas to watch Manziel play. Antler Stadium, overlooking the Texas hill country where people came to fish, hunt and retire, overflowed. A sleepy town came alive. Stuart Cunyus, a local sportswriter and photographer, tried to capture it all. How Manziel scored six touchdowns in his first start. Or the time he handed the ball off to a smaller teammate, grabbed him by the shirt and dragged him into the end zone so he could score just once. Only Manziel was able to explain what he did. He was smart and articulate, fun to talk with, Cunyus said. It is a shame, Cunyus added, that Manziel has not been able to show that, because of Texas A&M football team rules prohibiting freshmen players from speaking to the news media. (The Heisman ceremony is Dec. 8, and Texas A&M announced this week that Manziel will be made available to the news media starting next week.)
    “After his last game, I shook his hand and said, ‘Thanks, because it’s been so much fun,’ ” Cunyus said.
    Sometimes Manziel had too much fun, skipping class and sweet-talking his way out of trouble. His father made him a deal: he would buy Manziel a new car if he stayed away from alcohol during his junior and senior years in high school. One summer night, Manziel went to Wal-Mart to buy a phone charger, the security guard smelled alcohol and the police were called.
    Manziel denied he had been drinking but was taken to jail. The next day, his father picked him up, sold the car and replaced it with a busted pickup truck that would repeatedly break down on the way to school. He refused to pay the fine for his son, and when the judge sentenced Manziel to 10 hours of community service, John Paul said: Make it 20.
    On the golf course, driving to another hole, John Paul said there came a day in every young man’s life when he had to grow up, to stop the adolescent high jinks that can be so fun and so destructive. He added, “Johnny’s not there yet.”
    For John Paul, that day arrived when Johnny was born. He and Manziel’s mother, Michelle, were bartenders at the time. Michelle, now 42, soon got into real estate. John Paul sold cars because he liked talking to people, and built homes.
    “It’ll either be a girlfriend, or a talk with me,” John Paul said of his son’s maturity, “or he’ll see his vision and how to get there.”
    For some time, Manziel thought his future meant playing quarterback at Oregon. Other colleges had doubted his size — he is 6 feet 1 inch — and his arm, wondering if the dancing and slinging would translate to the next level.
    His game needed to mature, too. So his high school offensive coordinator, Julius Scott, trained him to keep his eyes downfield when all seemed lost. They diagnosed blitzes and planned counters. They understood each other, and Manziel became an all-state quarterback, because Scott coached with the same abandon with which Manziel played.
    Scott had about 15 route combinations, calling “whatever popped into my mind.” If he wanted to audible, he yelled a player’s name and drew a new route in the air. Or if he wanted Manziel to freelance, he just nodded to him.
    Some teams found the best way to defend Manziel was to drop eight players into coverage, make him wait, be patient. To not let Johnny go, go.
    He adjusted and became comfortable in the pocket. During one game that Texas A&M had scouted, Manziel threw 75 passes, completing 41, for 503 yards and 4 touchdowns. The Aggies offered him a scholarship.
    Oregon Coach Chip Kelly had sent him weekly handwritten letters, but Manziel wanted to stay close to his family, to stay in Texas. His father made sure he called Kelly as soon as he decided to switch his commitment to A&M, news that Kelly was not happy to hear.
    John Paul is an intense man, but one who tempers his seriousness with frequent jokes. “Good hit, Maureen!” he called sarcastically to Muncie on the course. Muncie jabbed back and everyone laughed. The mood was light, even when John Paul hooked a drive into the rough. A few bad shots would have bothered him years ago, he said. Some still do.
    The family had lived near the 16th hole of a golf course in Tyler before moving to Kerrville. Most evenings, they played four holes of match play together — Michelle and Johnny against John Paul and Manziel’s younger sister, Meri. Son tried to outdo father. But John Paul and Meri went undefeated. Often, Manziel pouted in his room.
    “I think it drives us to the point you take it personal,” John Paul said of his competitiveness as he spotted his ball. He added: “You have to be it to understand it. Or it comes across as cocky, or, ‘You have an issue.’ ”
    After the round, as John Paul drove to his son’s house to tailgate before the game, the conversation shifted to the Heisman. “Nobody wants to be the first to let a freshman have it,” John Paul said. “He’s the best player out there.”
    Pulling into the driveway, John Paul parked behind a hot red, shiny Camaro, the product of another deal with his son: if Manziel were a “model citizen,” he could have the car, which was bought a week before Texas A&M upset Alabama, then No. 1.
    “We have to keep him focused; Johnny needs incentives,” Michelle Manziel said as she put away food in the house. They found, John Paul added, “Johnny needs structure all the time, because down time for Johnny is the worst time.”
    His point: this past June, amid a competition for the starting quarterback spot, Manziel was arrested and put in jail for an incident outside a bar in College Station. As he and a friend were leaving, the friend had shouted a racial slur to a man on the street. Manziel stepped in between, trying to be a peacemaker, a witness told the police, when the man pushed against Manziel, who shoved the man, precipitating a fight.
    He eventually gave the police a fake ID. The police said he appeared too intoxicated to answer questions, but he managed to apologize and ask for a ride home.
    John Paul met with the first-year Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin. Johnny Manziel was to be subject to random drug testing, undergo drug and alcohol counseling, complete more community service and have a daily schedule “mapped out to the minute,” John Paul said.
    “I’m going to hold him accountable; I’m going to make a man out of him,” John Paul said, adding that he knew the N.F.L. was his son’s goal. “He wasn’t going to get there the way he was walking.”
    John Paul walked hurriedly ahead of a horde of relatives and friends on their way to Kyle Field. Inside the stadium, settled inside a friend’s suite, he rested his head on his hand, intently watching his son play.
    Manziel coolly slipped past defenders, as if he were skiing. On one play he took on four of them, and jumped up with his mouth running after he was thrown down. Other plays broke down. He ran right, maybe left, and all would seem lost, until he found someone open. His receivers, too, had learned to trust Manziel, to keep working.
    He was straddling recklessness, and playing well, when his youth showed. A wobbly, underthrown pass on the run was intercepted. “Why would you throw that, Johnny?” his father said quietly. “That’s the last thing in the world you need to be doing.” By halftime, Manziel had accounted for four touchdowns and plenty of yards. John Paul, in a better mood, left the suite in search of John David Crow, Texas A&M’s only Heisman winner. Every home game, he had asked Crow to sign his ticket.
    “You can’t coach that,” Crow said of Manziel’s improvisational play. “He’s just born with it. He’s a chicken running around ...”
    “... with his head cut off,” John Paul finished, smiling.
    As if on cue, on the first snap he took in the second half, Manziel dropped back, calm and steady in the pocket, and flicked a tight spiral down the field. His receiver ran under it for an 89-yard touchdown. With that, Manziel became the first freshman to throw for 3,000 yards and rush for 1,000 more in a season.
    Something had clicked. This summer, he had sought out George Whitfield Jr., a quarterback guru, to optimize his footwork and release. Now he had a better grasp of Sumlin’s offense, which is nearly the same one he ran at Tivy.
    Manziel’s offensive coordinator, Kliff Kingsbury, is 33, not far removed from quarterbacking this offense himself in record-setting fashion at Texas Tech. That won him “street cred,” Kingsbury said. Manziel is learning to stick to a plan, Kingsbury says, instead of going “rogue.”
    This pass screamed progress, and John Paul leapt and pointed to the sky. He says he has seen change in his son. He bought him that Camaro, after all. He says Manziel is nicer to his sister, visits the family more often and calls him every day. And if not, John Paul will know. He bribes his son’s friends with steak dinners.
    Once the game ended, and the stress had left John Paul’s face, a friend passed around Champagne, put an arm around him, and toasted, “Hey, hey, it’s the DNA.”
    Susan Beachy contributed research.

    Wednesday, November 21, 2012

    Sumlin's switch from defense to offense pays off


    Courtesy of Sports Illustrated

    COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) - Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin has led one a top-five offense in four of the five seasons since becoming a head coach.
    If not for a push from Mike Price 23 years ago, Sumlin might have ended up focused more on how to stop offenses rather than creating them. Sumlin, after all, was a college linebacker and began his coaching career on that side of the ball.
    Price, the UTEP coach who is retiring after this season, gave Sumlin his first job as a graduate assistant at Washington State. He summoned him to his office one day and told him he'd be coaching Washington State's junior varsity team as it played area junior colleges - and that he needed to learn the offense.
    Sumlin was confused and asked Price why.
    "You need to move the offense and you need to learn what we're doing here,'' he said Price told him. "Because if you learn what we're doing here with this offense - it's a little bit different. You'll have a job the rest of your life somewhere.''
    Sumlin was sold.
    "I said: `That's sound pretty good to me,''' Sumlin said with a smile.
    Sumlin enjoyed his foray into offense and never had a job on defense again. From 1991-2007, he made various stops as an assistant working mostly as a receivers coach and then offensive coordinator. In 2008, he nabbed his first head coaching job at Houston, inheriting a quarterback named Case Keenum, and the pair used his high-flying offense to help the Cougars to heights they hadn't reached in decades. Sumlin left Houston with a 35-17 record.
    Keenum, who became the Bowl Subdivision's all-time career passing leader under Sumlin's watch, was stumped to pick just one reason why his former coach has been so successful.
    "There's probably a million reasons why,'' Keenum said. "He's a great guy. He comes on strong at first, but once you get to know him he's a players' coach. I loved him. I loved playing for him. I don't know why you wouldn't.''
    That, people say, is a big reason why Sumlin has done so well in his first season at Texas A&M. The nine wins he has led the Aggies to this season are already a record for a first-year coach at the school, and they still have two games left. A win over Missouri on Saturday will give Texas A&M its first 10-win season since 1998.
    "I had no doubt that he'd be successful and no doubt that those guys would do a great job of coaching,'' Keenum said. "What maybe has been a surprise is how well the players have adapted to him. I think everybody knows how difficult it is to go into a program first year as a head coach and change things and change the way little things are done.''
    Sumlin gives much of the credit for the team buying into his plans to the seniors who led the way. The group also helped the Aggies focus when their opener was postponed because of a hurricane, forcing the them to play their entire schedule without a break.
    "The biggest thing to me is how this team has come together and accepted this coaching staff from the beginning,'' Sumlin said. "There was a lot of tension then to now where there is some ease in talking with guys about a lot of things that have nothing to do with football. That's what makes coaching a lot of fun.''
    Price didn't have a grand plan when he pushed Sumlin into offensive work. He just thought it would make him a more well-rounded coach.
    "I wanted him to master both sides of the ball,'' Price said in an interview with The Associated Press. "What we were doing at the time was new and hot and people were picking it up. It was smart for him to do that and it made sense because he is a smart guy.''
    Price said Sumlin jumped into the task with the same enthusiasm he brought to everything he asked him to do back then. His ability to catch on to the offense quickly wasn't surprising to Price.
    "He's just got success written all over him,'' Price said. "He's charming. He's funny. He's bright. He's hardworking. He's nice to people. He's a good person to his coaches and he's a good father and a good husband and he treats people with dignity and respect.''
    There was a time when Sumlin wouldn't have imagined being a coach, even though his father, William Sumlin, was a high school coach when Kevin was young.
    "My dad didn't want me to be a coach because he was a coach,'' Sumlin said. "Anybody who's been a coach would probably say: `No you don't want your kid to be a coach.'''
    He had career plans that would have taken him far away from the football field.
    "I thought about being a lot of different things. At one point I was going to go to law school. That didn't work out. Probably should have done that though instead of dealing with you guys,'' he said, laughing as he referred to the media.
    But after he began his coaching career with Price, he never looked back. His ascent has been helped by the no-nonsense attitude he has with players.
    "He's going to tell you how it is,'' Texas A&M senior defensive lineman Spencer Nealy said. "I don't like people who beat around the bush. Coach Sumlin, from Day 1, if you were playing bad he was going to tell you you're playing bad.''
    To that end, he always looks for those teaching moments.
    One of Keenum's fondest memories of Sumlin came when the quarterback tossed an interception in the end zone that cost Houston a game. Keenum knew everyone was unhappy with him, but was relieved when Sumlin met him as he came off the field and put his arm around him.
    "It was a mistake that I wish I hadn't made, but he wanted to make sure I was going to learn from it and not do it again,'' Keenum said. "He's always teaching in every situation that he's in and I think that's a big part of who he is and him being a great coach.''
    Despite Sumlin's success at Houston, the expectations for Texas A&M in its move from the Big 12 to the Southeastern Conference were low entering this season. The Aggies have proven doubters wrong with a 5-2 record in the SEC, including their upset of then top-ranked Alabama two weeks ago behind freshman quarterback Johnny Manziel.
    Those who have known Sumlin longest expected nothing less.
    "I'm impressed with everything,'' Price said. "But it doesn't surprise me.''


    Read More: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/football/ncaa/wires/11/21/2060.ap.fbc.t25.texas.a.m.sumlin.s.switch.1st.ld.writethru.1366/index.html#ixzz2CucdHs00

    Early plans for Kyle Field rebuild released


    Courtesy of Chron.com
    By Brent Zwerneman |

    Kyle Field is due for a makeover.
    Photo: Smiley N. Pool, Houston Chronicle / © 2012 Houston Chronicle
    COLLEGE STATION - Texas A&M's redevelopment of Kyle Field will include demolition of its west side and old G. Rollie White Coliseum, according to early plans released to solicit bids for the project. But Jason Cook, A&M's vice president for marketing and communications, cautioned nothing is concrete.
    "We're still very early in the process with many significant decisions to be made," Cook said Tuesday.
    Those decisions include a final verdict on whether the Aggies will play a season or two away from Kyle during its rebuild - although that doesn't appear likely based on the request for proposal (RFP). The construction is proposed for multiple phases, according to the RFP, and "the phasing must be scheduled such that Kyle Field can continue to host home football games during the regular collegiate football season(s)."
    A&M intends to begin the rebuild in earnest immediately following the 2013 season. Highlights of the early plans include the demolition of G. Rollie, where the Aggies haven't played basketball since 1997, and the Read Building on Kyle's east side, along with that side's lower seating area.
    The preliminary west-side (closest to Wellborn Road) plans are more extensive. They include tearing out the west stands, adding six rows of seats closer to the field, and "at ground level … a grand indoor plaza that will allow for large indoor gatherings as well as a connection to the outside tailgating areas directly adjacent to the stadium," according to the RFP. The Netum Steed workout complex also will face the wrecking ball.
    In addition, early plans call for a south-side upper deck. The field will also be lowered about seven feet and shifted 18 feet to the south to improve sightlines, according to the RFP. The document also states the completion date should be no later than August 2016.
    "These are conceptual plans that are certainly open to change as discussions continue," Cook reiterated, adding that a projected capacity for the new Kyle Field "has not been decided." The project also doesn't have a final price tag, although early estimates put it in the $450-million range.

    brent.zwerneman@chron.com twitter.com/brentzwerneman

    Friday, November 16, 2012

    The legend of Johnny Football grows beyond Aggieland

    Courtesy of CNN

    By Roland Martin, CNN Contributor
    updated 2:08 PM EST, Fri November 16, 2012


    Texas A&M Aggies quarterback Johnny Manziel celebrates after last Saturday's victory over the Alabama Crimson Tide.
    Texas A&M Aggies quarterback Johnny Manziel celebrates after last Saturday's victory over the Alabama Crimson Tide.

    Editor's note: Roland Martin is a syndicated columnist and author of "The First: President Barack Obama's Road to the White House." He is a commentator for the TV One cable network and host/managing editor of its Sunday morning news show, "Washington Watch with Roland Martin." He is a 1991 graduate of Texas A&M University.
    (CNN) -- There are some sports figures who, no matter who else is playing, make you simply want to turn on the television to see what kind of excitement they will bring to the game.
    Barry Sanders. Deion Sanders. Michael Jordan. Reggie Jackson. Wayne Gretzky. Pele.
    They make up some of the greatest to ever play their respective sports, and when they hit the field, court or ice, all eyes were on them.
    Texas A&M University quarterback Johnny Manziel hasn't remotely achieved their level of stardom, but when it comes to being Mr. Excitement in college football, man, this kid can flat electrify the crowd with his play and leave his opponents shaking their heads in frustration.
    Yes, the kid is just that good.I don't care about Chip Kelly's offense or Alabama's defense or how Bill Snyder has revived Kansas State's football program. There is no doubt that Johnny "Football" Manziel has taken the college football world by storm, and maybe by the end of the season, he could be the first freshman ever to win the Heisman Trophy.
    When Texas A&M made the decision to leave the Big 12 to play in the Southeastern Conference, fans and the media alike forecasted a tough few years for the Aggies. Everyone said, "Welcome to big boy football," citing the recent national champions that have hailed from the conference.
    The critics said the noble men of Kyle Field -- Texas A&M's home stadium -- would be the doormat of the league, languishing at the bottom and following the path of Arkansas, who left the Aggies in the Southwest Conference in 1991 for the SEC and disappeared into oblivion.
    All of that changed last Saturday when the Aggies went to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, for the first time and knocked off the defending national champions and the No. 1-ranked team in the country, the Alabama Crimson Tide.
    Johnny Manziel
    Johnny Manziel
    The one play that will be remembered was the touchdown where Manziel stepped up in the pocket, ran into one of his own players, the ball popped up in the air, he caught it, rolled left and found Ryan Swope in the back of the end zone.
    He is a fearless kid. Slide after a big run? Nope. Manziel wants to take the head off a linebacker or a safety by slamming into them. He's not built like a Mack truck in the mold of Tim Tebow. But after the hit, he pops up and runs around the field like an 8-year-old ready for the next play.
    The mania around Johnny Football has taken on epic proportions. And it's only going to get bigger, which says a lot in Texas, where football has long been like a religion.
    Manziel's emergence is excellent for the ninth-ranked Texas A&M Aggies and first-year Coach Kevin Sumlin. For decades, Texas A&M has played in the shadows of its archrival, the Texas Longhorns. While A&M has enjoyed some successful teams in the last two decades, the Longhorns have long been a national power.
    The success of the Aggies with Manziel will no doubt help recruiting. And if the runaway candidate to be the MVP of the SEC continues to meet the Heisman hype, the legend of Johnny Football will only grow. That's good for my alma mater, Texas A&M; good for the SEC; and good the casual fan who desires a mythical figure to root for.