Texas A&M and Northwestern will kick off the Meineke Car Care Bowl of Texas on Saturday at noon ET at Reliant Stadium in Houston, but here’s a look at what the Aggies have to do to grab the win. 1. Be extra careful in those third quarters. It seemed like a fluke at first. Clearly, it was not. Every time, it seems like it’s been something different. The common denominator in most of the second-half meltdowns, though, has been turnovers. Limit those in the second half, and Texas A&M should be fine.

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Car Care Bowl: Three keys for Texas A&M
Filed under Football by on Dec 30th, 2011. Comment.
Texas A&M and Northwestern will kick off the New Year’s Eve action in Houston with a noon ET kickoff at Reliant Stadium in the Meineke Car Care Bowl of Texas. Here’s a bit of what to expect: WHO TO WATCH: Cyrus Gray, RB, Texas A&M. The Aggies’ backfield has been banged up this year, and it already lost top back Christine Michael to a torn ACL. Gray was sorely missed in a season-ending, heartbreaking loss to Texas after suffering a stress fracture in his shoulder against Kansas.

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Car Care Bowl: Texas A&M vs. Northwestern
Filed under Football by on Dec 30th, 2011. Comment.
Texas A&M will face Northwestern at Reliant Stadium in Houston for the Meineke Car Care Bowl of Houston, the university announced on Sunday afternoon. The game kicks off on Dec. 31 at noon ET. Wildcast quarterback Dan Persa, aka PersaStrong, will face the very talented, but underachieving, Aggies who are now without a head coach after firing Mike Sherman earlier this week. Tim DeRuyter will handle the interim coaching duties. Who are you taking in this matchup?

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Texas A&M headed to Houston for bowl
Filed under Football by on Dec 4th, 2011. Comment.
Longhorn senior forward Gary Johnson is one of 20 players who will participate in the Reese’s College All-Star game on Friday. The contest will played at Houston’s Reliant Stadium as part of the 2011 NCAA Final Four. Tip time
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Gary Johnson in all-star game
Filed under News by on Mar 30th, 2011. Comment.
Bears during the 4th quarter of the football game against Illinois in Reliant Stadium in Houston on Wednesday. Rod Aydelotte / Tribune-Herald Dean was rooting for a bowl win, but admitted the whole 2010 season has been pretty satisfying for a Baylor fan… Source: Waco Tribune-Herald
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Baylor Nation filled Texas Bowl with a sea of green and gold
Filed under Football, News by on Dec 30th, 2010. Comment.
In 2006, the former Texas star quarterback dashed through the Houston Texans ‘ defense for the winning touchdown for the Tennessee Titans at Reliant Stadium, his first NFL game in the city where he grew up. Young ripped off his helmet, ran toward a pack… Source: WSMV Nashville
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Titans Face Texans In Houston
Filed under Football, News by on Nov 28th, 2010. Comment.
In 2006, the former Texas star quarterback dashed through the Houston Texans ‘ defense for the winning touchdown for the Tennessee Titans at Reliant Stadium, his first NFL game in the city where he grew up. Young ripped off his helmet, ran toward a pack… Source: WSMV Nashville
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Titans Return To Houston With Young In Limbo
Filed under Football, News by on Nov 27th, 2010. Comment.
Traditionally, the Big 12 is not a basketball conference. And, for all intents and purposes, the majority of schools in the current Big 12 — Nebraska, Colorado, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Baylor, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State — have always been more a bit like the casual college sports fan in general: Cool with basketball, but much, much more interested in the pigskin. The Kansas City Star, metropolitan hub of both Kansas, Kansas State and Missouri (and, in many ways, the Big 12 at large) argues that attitude might be changing. From Sam Mellinger’s commentary : Put it all together and Kansas City turns into a microcosm of a bigger conference trend in which basketball is about to become more interesting and important, starting this week and continuing next year when a Big 12 without dead weight from Colorado and Nebraska gets even better in hoops. This is the changing tide around here, both locally and throughout the region, pushing football back and basketball forward. There’s a group forming — full disclosure, I sat in on one of the meetings — trying to brand Kansas City as the college basketball capital of America, and we’ll earn that title into the future. Last summer’s conference shuffling drove home the point of how little college basketball means in the big picture compared with football, so it’s a bit unfortunate, but, well, at this point we might as well go with it. Maybe the rest of the country doesn’t pay much attention to college basketball until the NFL playoffs are over, but dammit, we do. Having never spent much time in Kansas City’s downtown before Big 12 media day this year (my grandfather lives in Kansas, but childhood trips through Kansas City were always of the “stay on the highway and avoid traffic because we’ve already been in the car for 10 hours” variety) I came away thinking one thing: Man, this would be a great city for the Final Four. Kansas City’s downtown is filled with hotels within walking distance of the city’s booming entertainment districts — especially the Power and Light District, a brand-new collection of bars, restaurants, clubs and all-around good atmosphere. Power and Light is right next to the Sprint Center, KC’s brand-new arena, a beautiful building begging for an NBA team. The only problem with the Final Four idea? The Sprint Center isn’t nearly big enough. At this point, holding a Final Four in anything less than a 70,000-seat indoor stadium (like Lucas Oil in 2009-10, or Reliant Stadium this season) is not really an option. Unless Kansas City can manage to put a roof on Arrowhead, the Final Four is probably not headed to the western plains anytime soon. (It is fun to imagine Arrowhead with a roof, though.) And without a Final Four on the docket, it’s hard to call yourself the college basketball capital of the country. Sorry, mysterious public relations committee

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Kansas City: Basketball mecca?
Filed under Basketball, Football by on Nov 4th, 2010. Comment.
Next: vs. Idaho , Saturday 8. Texas Sophomore running back Tre’ Newton scored a career-high three touchdowns as the Longhorns (1-0) pulled away from Rice in a tougher than expected 34-17 victory. Texas played Rice in Houston’s Reliant Stadium, one of… Source: Fanhouse
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FanHouse Fab 40: Boise State Tops the Chart in Week 1
Filed under Football, News by on Sep 7th, 2010. Comment.
Texas opened away from home for the first time since 1995 at Hawaii . But this could hardly be called an away game with the overwhelming majority of the crowd of 70,445 at Reliant Stadium, home of the NFL ’s Houston Texans , clad in burnt orange and… Source: Dallas Morning News
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Ex-Carroll star Tre’ Newton has big day in Texas’ 34-17 win over Rice
Filed under Football, News by on Sep 5th, 2010. Comment.
