Rumors have swirled about 2012 Dallas Skyline WR Thomas Johnson and the status of his commitment to Texas. On Friday, Johnson announced that he has de-committed and will take multiple other visits.
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Thomas Johnson De-Commits From Texas, Wasn’t Texas Gang Or Die
Filed under Lets Talk Texas by on Jan 7th, 2012. Comment.
FRISCO, TEXAS — Two years ago, Huntsville, Texas, witnessed an all-time classic football finish as Sam Houston State beat North Dakota State 48-45 on a field goal with 26 seconds remaining in a regular-season game. Now, the two meet again with an FCS national championship on the line. Saturday’s noon CT kickoff at Pizza Hut Park, home of the MLS’ FC Dallas, features the playoff-tested No. 1 and 2 seeds. The game will be broadcast on ESPN2 and streamed live by ESPN3.

Filed under Football by on Jan 7th, 2012. Comment.
The Longhorns’ No. 2-ranked 2012 recruiting class took a big hit Friday night when Thomas Johnson, the top-ranked wide receiver in the state, announced he has decommitted. The Dallas Skyline product, ranked sixth on the American-Statesman’s
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WR Johnson withdraws pledge to Longhorns
Filed under News by on Jan 7th, 2012. Comment.
Hazboy posted a photo: Yesterday I was in both Dallas and Fort Worth, and this morning I was in Austin. Now it was time to go up Interstate 35 North to Waco, home of Baylor University. Waco is pretty much known for two things. One is the home to the main campus of Baylor University, and the other is for the events that surrrounded cult leader David Koresh. On February 28, 1993, there was a shoot out in which six cult members of the Branch Davidians and four agents of the United States Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) died. After 51 days on April 19, 1993 a standoff between FBI agents and Branch Davidians ended in a fire that destroyed their compound located in Mt. Carmel, near Waco. Seventy-four people, including leader David Koresh, died in the blaze.

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Next stop on my trip is…..Waco.
Filed under Football, News, Photos by on Nov 26th, 2011. Comment.
Former Texas quarterback Garrett Gilbert has told officials at SMU that he intends to enroll there, a source told ESPN’s Joe Schad on Tuesday. Gilbert visited campus earlier this season, and the Dallas university is about three hours north of Gilbert’s hometown of Austin. Gilbert lost his starting job after two games with Texas this season and then had season-ending shoulder surgery. Gilbert was given an unconditional release from his scholarship to find another school. His struggles last year were pretty public, but SMU seems like a nice place to start over. It just never worked out at Texas for Gilbert. It’s hard not to feel bad for the guy who left the field to boos for the last time he played at Texas against BYU, but look for him to make the most of any new opportunities. He’s a smart guy with a lot of physical ability. He just has to find a way to turn it into on-field production. SMU coach June Jones would be near the top of the list of guys who could bring it out.

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Source: Garrett Gilbert headed to SMU
Filed under Football by on Nov 2nd, 2011. Comment.
It won’t be as easy this year. While Oklahoma completely dominated the Longhorns in Dallas this past Saturday, Oklahoma State doesn’t have the defense to shut down the Texas offense. Fortunately for the… Source: Sports Illustrated
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Andy Staples: Mouth-watering Top 25 serves as ultimate college football dining guide
Filed under Football, News by on Oct 11th, 2011. Comment.
FORT WORTH, Texas — I hope TCU didn’t think its program had peaked when it beat Wisconsin to become Rose Bowl champions last season. After being exiled from the adults table when the Southwest Conference broke up in 1996, TCU is back. “We never made an excuse. We never said, ‘Why not us?’” said athletic director Chris Del Conte. “[TCU donors and fans] decided, ‘We will take care of our own. We will get to the promised land if we work hard and believe in each other.’ And you did that. “Today is living proof that dreams do come true.” How did those dreams come true? TCU grew up under the guidance of Gary Patterson, who racked up five 11-win seasons in the past six years, capped by last season’s glorious night in Pasadena. Now, it’s time to trade in the hot dogs and mac and cheese at the kids’ table for the steak and potatoes of a AQ conference schedule. The Horned Frogs are ready. “We have an opportunity. If the Big 12 believed that we could not be competitive in this league, then they wouldn’t have asked us,” Patterson said. TCU doesn’t bring the financial punch the Big 12 would have liked. It has problems filling a stadium that will seat about 50,000 and that is currently undergoing a $164 million renovation. The Horned Frogs claim 78,000 living alumni. By comparison, Texas had 51,195 students enrolled during the 2010-11 school year. Both the stadium and the school’s enrollment (9,518) will be the smallest in the Big 12. That hasn’t changed. Though it might soon with high-profile opponents like Texas and Oklahoma preparing to make trips to Fort Worth, instead of Mountain West-flavored cupcakes like UNLV and New Mexico. TCU’s school record for season tickets (14,900) was shattered when it sold 19,100 in 2010. After winning the Rose Bowl, the Horned Frogs sold 22,000 for 2011 — higher than some total attendance numbers when Gary Patterson became defensive coordinator back in 1998. Now they’re in the Big 12, where the Horned Frogs provide what more established members (looking at you, former Big 12 North) can’t. Football credibility. After the departures of Nebraska and Texas A&M, and possibly rising program Missouri, it’s something the Big 12 badly needed. TCU? Well, under Patterson, the Horned Frogs bring it. Among other accomplishments, TCU is the only program to finish the last three seasons in the top 10 of both polls. They’re about to start bringing even better players to Fort Worth, too, after landing on equal recruiting ground with the rest of the Big 12 powers that mine the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex for talent. Undefeated regular seasons in 2009 and 2010 landed the Horned Frogs in the BCS twice. That’s the same number of appearances as Nebraska, and excluding Texas (3-1 in four appearances) and Oklahoma (3-5 in eight appearances), that’s more than any other team in the Big 12. “Being in the Big 12 Conference doesn’t make us successful,” Patterson said. “Winning in the Big 12 Conference is what makes you successful. Our goal is going to be to win in the Big 12 Conference, not just compete in the Big 12 Conference.” The Big 12 was reeling after losing three members in 15 months, and another looking to do the same. Money was secondary to stability, and the league still has $1.1 billion on the way from Fox Sports over the next 13 years and a negotiation for the league’s most valuable games coming up in 2014

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TCU, Big 12 needed each other
Filed under Football by on Oct 11th, 2011. Comment.
The game is televised by ABC. “I’m a Dallas kid and I was a Texas fan as a little guy,” said Cowboy senior wide receiver Hubert Anyiam, formerly of North Garland High School. “I grew up watching… Source: Tulsa World
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Filed under News by on Oct 10th, 2011. Comment.
Midway through the fourth quarter saw a mass exodus of Longhorns fans as Oklahoma took its foot off the gas pedal. I’m thinking OU could have scored 70 if head coach Bob Stoops had been… Source: DFW.com
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Texas-OU 2011 scene at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas
Filed under Photos by on Oct 10th, 2011. Comment.
Midway through the fourth quarter saw a mass exodus of Longhorns fans as Oklahoma took its foot off the gas pedal. I’m thinking OU could have scored 70 if head coach Bob Stoops had been… Source: DFW.com
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Texas-OU 2011 scene at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas
Filed under News by on Oct 10th, 2011. Comment.
