Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Why Mike Sherman, .500 in 50 games, likely will be back


COLLEGE STATION – There’s a lot of wishful thinking going right now concerning the football head coaching job at Texas A&M. Then there’s reality.

Multiple A&M insiders have told me that coach Mike Sherman, he of the 25-25 record, will be back for a fifth season, and will lead the Aggies into the Southeastern Conference after likely hiring an offensive coordinator (he calls his own plays right now and essentially is consumed with the offense).
The reason he’ll apparently be back after the stunning disappointment of this year’s 6-6 finish to the regular season primarily comes down to money. And in this situation, it’s easy for angry fans to call for his head – but not so easy to come up with the roughly $9 million needed to buy out Sherman. He has four years remaining on a contract paying him $2.2 million annually.
Keep in mind A&M will still have to pay an exit fee to the Big 12, and the athletic department is paying back a $16 million loan to the university. I realize there are grass roots movements among the SMAs and MMAs (Small Money Ags and Medium Money Ags, not to be confused with the Big Money Ags), and I’m a fan of grass roots. But those are going to have to be some serious movements in a fairly short amount of time.
As for any BMAs stepping up? Who do y’all have in mind, especially in these economic times? Again, it’s easy to spend others’ money when you’re mad and want change.
As I’ve written for the past couple of months, the decision makers (and where are they going to get the money to make a change again?) are hanging their hats on the idea that Sherman had five close calls this season, and has put together a strong 2012 recruiting class.
This is one of those don’t shoot the messenger situations, because it doesn’t take a rocket scientist (in other words, my brother) to figure out Sherman has been perfectly mediocre through 50 games. Or about what many expected from a coach who’d been away from the college game for a decade and might have thought it was fairly easy to compete in compared to the mighty NFL (that’s the part where hopefully you smile just a bit).
Anyway, all indications are right now Sherman will get a fifth season, and the main reason is money.
brent.zwerneman@chron.com
twitter.com/brentzwerneman

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Texas, A&M make each other, rivalry


Maisel
By Ivan Maisel
ESPN.com


The intellect will tell you that rivalries cannot die because they do not live. There is no pulse, no emotion, no feeling. A rivalry is a thing.
The heart will tell the intellect to take a walk.
[+] EnlargeRicky Williams
AP Photo/Eric GayRicky Williams shattered the all-time NCAA rushing record against the Aggies.
What can you say about a 117-year-old rivalry that died? That it was beautiful. And brilliant.
That it loved "The Aggie War Hymn" and the "Theme from 'Patton.'" And "The Eyes of Texas."
Texas and Texas A&M first played football in 1894, when a game consisted of two 35-minute halves. They first played on Thanksgiving Day in 1900, when a field goal earned five points. They will last play on Thanksgiving Day, in all likelihood for the foreseeable future, in 2011.
The rivalry between the state university and the agricultural school has been made flesh on football fields in state after state. But in few places did it engender the pride and passion and even playfulness that it did in the state of Texas.
And now that has been traded in for a pouch of magic SEC beans. At least that's what Texas fans say when they sneer at Texas A&M. Or it has been sacrificed as an offering to Mammon, if you ask the Aggies.
They got tired of competing on a playing field where everything tilted toward Austin.
The intellect will tell you that the rivalry is not dead because it can be restarted. Perhaps death is not as accurate as divorce. The end of the Texas-Texas A&M rivalry is a divorce of two parties that refuse to move as much as one inch toward halfway.
No, wait, that's not a divorce. That's Congress. Grown-ups in College Station and Austin, as in Washington, live behind the lines they drew in the sand. The Aggies are fleeing to the Southeastern Conference for financial security and respect. The Longhorns don't deign to miss them.
Former Texas head coach David McWilliams, who runs the association of former Longhorn players, said his members "don't really have a broad opinion of 'Screw 'em!' It's more like, 'Naw, I wouldn't play 'em.' It becomes a recruiting issue."
In the end, both sides ended the rivalry as a business decision, which is so not how the Aggie-Longhorn rivalry thrived for then a century. It always had a sense of playfulness, of college men pulling pranks because that's what college men do.
In 1916, Texas fans decided to brand their Longhorn mascot with the score of the Texas victory over the Aggies that season, 21-7. Texas A&M fans caught wind of the idea and drove down from Waco to brand the steer with the score of the Aggies' 13-0 victory in 1915. The Texas fans cloaked the Aggie brand by changing 13-0 to BEVO, and a mascot underwent its christening. By fire, actually.
Without the Longhorns, the Aggies wouldn't have one of the great fight song lyrics in college sports. Every Aggie bellows "Goodbye to texas university," because Aggies do not consider it The University of Texas.
Without the Aggies and their "Gig 'Em" signal, a Texas student named Harley Clark wouldn't have come up with the "Hook 'Em" sign in 1955.
Without the Longhorns, the Aggies wouldn't have had Bonfire, both the decades of wonderful memories and the tragedy of its demise.
That's the thing. Texas A&M wouldn't be Texas A&M without Texas, and vice versa.
The Longhorns have beaten the Aggies by nearly a 2-to-1 margin (75-37-5, .662). That hasn't lessened the intensity between the two schools. Each has victories over the other pressed into its family bible.
[+] EnlargeBonfire
AP Photo/Pat SullivanThe two sides came together in times of tragedy, like the 1999 bonfire accident.
In 1957, Darrell Royal, the first-year coach of No. 15 Texas, used the quick kick early and often to outsmart Bear Bryant and No. 4 Texas A&M 9-7.
In 1963, the undefeated Longhorns' drive to the national championship nearly went off the trail against the two-win Aggies. Two fourth-quarter touchdowns secured a 15-13 victory, although Texas A&M fans maintain to this day that Jim Willenborg did notjuggle an interception in the end zone.
The Aggies dominated the rivalry in the 1980s, when quarterback Bucky Richardson led them to three consecutive victories. He was denied a fourth in 1990, his senior season, when Texas stopped a two-point conversion to win 28-27 and stay in the national championship race.
With one 60-yard touchdown run against the Aggies, Longhorns tailback Ricky Williams secured not only the NCAA career rushing record but the 1998 Heisman Trophy, as Texas upset the Big 12 South champions 26-24.
A year later, Texas A&M returned the favor, upsetting division-winning Texas 20-16. It may have been the only season when Longhorns fans didn't feel bad about losing to the Aggies.
When the bonfire stack collapsed days before, killing 11 Aggie students and one alumnus, the schools bonded with such raw emotion that both sides believed their relationship had been changed forever. Texas darkened the lights on its bell tower and refused to hold its "Hex Rally." Texas A&M responded by shelving its use of the cheer "Beat the Hell out of t.u."
After the Aggies won, Ray Bowen, then the president of the university, said of Texas, "They came to us in a way no one could have expected. We love them for doing that."
That was only 12 years ago. Texas and Texas A&M will leave Kyle Field on Thursday night and go their separate ways, two public institutions bound by their common dislike of one another. One of the oldest rivalries in college football has transformed into one of the oldest rivalries, period. Texas and Texas A&M have become Jacob and Esau.
Ivan Maisel is a senior writer for ESPN.com and hosts the ESPNU College Football podcast. Send your questions and comments to him at Ivan.Maisel@ESPN.com.
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Thanksgiving marks end of era for Texas football rivalry


University of Texas football coach Mack Brown prepares to light the first red candle during the Hex Rally on the main mall in Austin, Texas November 21, 2011.   REUTERS-Julia Robinson
University of Texas football coach Mack Brown prepares to light the first red candle during the
Hex Rally on the main mall in Austin, Texas November 21, 2011. 

REUTERS/Julia Robinson

COLLEGE STATION, Texas | Wed Nov 23, 2011 3:09pm EST

(Reuters) - In the middle of a plot of sparse land near the Texas A&M University campus, a 45-foot-tall tiered pile of timber represents the Aggies' "burning desire" to beat arch-rival the University of Texas in the teams' annual Thanksgiving Day football matchup.

This year's game marks the end of a rivalry that dates back to 1894 between the two biggest universities in the Lone Star State, as A&M is preparing to leave the Big 12 for the Southeastern Conference next summer. So the bonfire and other traditions at both universities hold special significance.

The game, which is in College Station this year, is the end of not only a sports rivalry but also a tradition deeply embedded in both the state and universities' identities. Earlier this year, Texas Governor Rick Perry, a onetime A&M yell leader who is now a Republican presidential candidate, joked that he had promised his wife, Texas First Lady Anita Perry, that he would avoid controversial topics such as A&M's decision to leave the Big 12.

"It's really about more than just football," said Travis Springer, a senior at A&M who helped organize the bonfire, which is made from wood collected and chopped by students over several months and is topped with an outhouse decorated in UT burnt orange. Because of a widespread burn ban in Texas, the structure will not be set ablaze for this year's ceremony, but students and fans are visiting the site before the game.

In Austin on Monday night, about 2,000 students decked out in burnt orange crowded in the center of the University of Texas campus holding candles for their own tradition called the Hex Rally. Student groups, cheerleaders, dancers and a school choir led the rally for the football team as the marching band played school songs. Parents put orange-clad children on their shoulders for a better view of the band and dancers.

Former UT football player Ahmad Brooks pointed out that Texas has won 75 of the 118 matchups between the two teams.

"This is one team we have beat more than any other team in America," Brooks said to the roaring crowd of students and alumni, many of whom had their faces painted orange and white. "So, anyway, we're good."

Texas Coach Mack Brown called the night "historic."

"This will be a night you remember for your kids and your grandkids," Brown said. "It will be something that will go down in history."

The Hex Rally dates back to 1941, when a group of students from Texas sought the advice of a fortune teller before facing A&M, which was undefeated that year leading up to the game. Madame Augusta Hipple told the students to burn red candles before the game to send a curse to their opponents. Following her advice, the Longhorns cruised to victory. The tradition continued and eventually became an official university event in the 1980s.

The A&M bonfire dates back to 1909, but became disassociated with the university after the then-55-foot-high bonfire collapsed in 1999, killing 12. That year, Texas A&M won the Thanksgiving game against Texas, playing with determination. The bonfire is now run and organized independently from the university with a smaller structure than the one that toppled 11 years ago.

Both universities and student groups have said they would like to continue their respective traditions. A&M student bonfire organizers have said that next year's event will center around whichever team they play during the week of Thanksgiving. The outhouse that tops the structure will simply be painted a different color. The future of the Hex Rally is uncertain.

Darrell Royal, who coached the Longhorns from 1957 to 1976, told Reuters that the game was always important to him because winning meant an edge for enticing the best recruits in the state. As the coach with the most wins in the team's history, he is the namesake of the Darrell K Royal - Texas Memorial Stadium, the Longhorn's home turf.

"They were a great rival and we were too; it was just a question of who was going to eke out that victory," Royal said.

Fans from both schools said that growing up in Texas, it is hard to escape the teams' rivalry, with families and friends pitted against one another in friendly sparring over the maroon and burnt orange teams. When families gather on Thanksgiving Day, it is likely loyalties may be divided even within a family as they watch the matchup on television.

Many families, however, learn early on where their loyalties should lie. Springer joked that his mother probably removed all the orange crayons from his box when he was a child.

The two universities are similar in size, but a key distinction between UT and A&M lies with their urban versus agricultural roots, respectively.

While many Aggie traditions center around jeers and taunts aimed at their rival, the Longhorn attitude is generally one of a perceived hubris over their maroon counterpart as a lesser competitor.

Those who followed Texas A&M's exodus from the Big 12 point to the creation of Texas' Longhorn Network, which features Texas' sporting events, as the tipping point for the university's decision. Fans of both teams and sports analysts expressed disappointment that the teams would no longer face each other, but recognized that the SEC may mean greater visibility and recruiting leverage for A&M.

Students from A&M and UT said they are disappointed at the end of the era but that the move will be an opportunity to hash out new rivalries.

Jonathan Woo, a senior at the University of Texas, said the rivalry between the two had begun to dissolve into little more than a habit, as Texas focused on other rivalries, such as one with the University of Oklahoma.

"The A&M rivalry is about verbal sparring back and forth," Woo said. "It's a traditional thing."

Springer, a third-generation Aggie, said students on campus are generally disappointed but believe that the move to the Southeastern conference is the right choice in the long run.

"We see it as A&M getting out on top and getting out of Texas' shadow," Springer said. "It will definitely be different though. I mean, hating a team in Gainesville, Florida is different from hating one in Austin, Texas."

When the Aggies sing their fight song at the game, these words may seem more significant: "Goodbye to Texas University." The Longhorns also devote part of their fight song to their rival: "And it's goodbye to A&M."

Royal, 87, said he will attend the game in College Station on Thursday, but offered no prediction for the outcome.

"I wouldn't miss it," he said. "It was a great contest between the two schools and it won't be the same without Texas A&M being in the position they are in now."

(Editing by Corrie MacLaggan and Greg McCune)

Last UT-A&M football matchup a big deal for small town


Courtesy of The Houston Chronicle
Updated 01:40 a.m., Wednesday, November 23, 2011

 / HC
Add caption
  
DIME BOX - Harold Hannes, his face smudged with grease and his worn Longhorns baseball cap cockeyed from working on a truck Tuesday, pondered the gravity of Thanksgiving night's last scheduled Texas-Texas A&M football game.
"I never much liked the Aggies," he finally said.
Then Harold glanced over his shoulder toward his brother,Alvin Hannes, who was laboring inside Alvin's Service Center along Highway 21.
"My brother's an Aggie," he said, grinning.
He likes Alvin, Harold reassured his visitor, and "I've got some good friends who are Aggies." But, he reminded, this is the time of year when typically tight family members draw lines in the sand over the state's grandest rivalry game. And as for Alvin? He can't believe the 118th meeting between the Longhorns and Aggies is the last on tap for the foreseeable future.
"This game is part of the holiday season," Alvin said, shaking his head. "You've got to know who's going to have bragging rights for another year. Everybody around here is either an Aggie or a tea-sipper, and it can get heated around Thanksgiving."
Texas A&M is leaving the Big 12 for the Southeastern Conference next year, but has indicated that it would like to keep playing the Longhorns as a non-conference opponent. UT has countered that it no longer has room for A&M on its schedule if the Aggies don't care to be in the same conference.
"I guess everybody moves on at some point," said Troy Els, a train conductor from Ledbetter who gave a speech at the Dime Box School on Tuesday. "But that game is one tradition I sure hoped would stick around."
Halfway, either way
If Aggieland is heaven for Aggies, and Longhorns believe Austin to be paradise, this stretch of farming and ranching community smack between the two could be considered the purgatory of the state's flagship universities. Instead, it's proudly dubbed Dime Box.
Well, Old Dime Box and New Dime Box, depending on whether a traveler exits the "Old" and heads up Farm Road 141 toward the school, railroad tracks and Dime Box Heritage Societytucked next to Prosperity Bank and across from Dime Box Lumber, among other downtown gems.
The town's few hundred residents were in a fine mood Tuesday after a heavy rain had Yegua Creek flowing again and stock tanks long dry from the drought finally holding a little water.
Patty melts and pies
"This is a little town with a big fight," said Erwin Iselt, who was cracking pecans with a pair of pliers while sitting in Iselt's Concrete and Pump Shop.
It's also the midpoint between Austin and Aggie­land, one the schools' dignitaries enjoy on their drive from one ivory tower to the other.
"I love the Elm Creek Cafe and stop there any chance I get," Bill Byrne, A&M athletic director, said of the Highway 21 eatery on the Austin side of Dime Box. "I love the patty melts and any of their pies."
The Dime Box Longhorns (yes, that is correct) don't play football - the school is too small - but make no mistake: The town loves the sport. Especially the brand played about 60 miles away in Austin and about 50 miles away in College Station.
"My family is all a bunch of Aggie fans," said Erin Jatzlau, who works in Barefootz Grocery in the downtown area. "So I root for UT."
So why do her relatives pull for the Aggies?
"Because they're nuts," Jatzlau said, chuckling.
In many ways, the Thanksgiving showdown, with nutty fans on both sides, is a celebration of small towns across the state. A&M players hail from the likes of Marlin, Hutto, Roscoe and Lexington, the last a Hail Mary pass from Dime Box. UT players hail from the likes of Elysian Fields, Kermit, Bellville and Cameron, the last a Hail Mary pass from Dime Box.
Rural leanings?
"This is a very special game, with former Texas high school football players going against each other," A&M coach Mike Sherman said.
So which way does Dime Box truly lean when it comes to the Aggies and Longhorns? It depends on whom you ask.
"People tend to go for the Aggies because College Station is a little closer," said Susan Lombardo, who runs Barefootz Grocery. "They're our home team here in Dime Box."
She paused and smiled. "Of course, you're going to talk to people who say 'No way' to that," she added.
Dorothy Rackel, who was visiting the downtown bank, said there's another reason Dime Box might lean slightly toward the Aggies.
"A&M is more of a country school," she said. "And the kids fit in better there than they do at UT."
No more lines in sand
Thomas Jatzlau, president of the Lee County Banking Centers, agreed with that line of reasoning.
"A&M is a better fit for here because it's a rural area," he said. "Now, it's not a rural college, but it is more agriculturally oriented."
Then Jatzlau, one of the family members whom Erin Jatzlau had good-naturedly admonished, couldn't help himself.
"Plus," he said, grinning widely, "Texas is just too arrogant."
The Jatzlaus, like so many other families in Dime Box and countless other small towns across the state, will gather late in the day Thursday to take in the state's grandest game. On Friday, they'll brush out that line in the sand.
"I've got six grandkids," said Charles Butler Jr., working at Shows Hardware and Lumber in Dime Box. "Half are for UT, and half are for A&M."
And Butler, a Longhorns fan who says he cherishes the rivalry, wouldn't have it any other way.