This time, at least, they got a shot off. But the result was no different for the Longhorns – another defeat.
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Kansas men beat Texas, 69-66
Filed under News by on Jan 22nd, 2012. Comment.
Basketball wasn’t a choice for Colorado’s Andre Roberson. It was a birthright. His father played college basketball at New Mexico State. And two of his sisters played the game at high levels, too. “I’m kind of used to being around it all the time,” Roberson told ESPN.com. His oldest sister, Ashlee, averaged 12.2 ppg at Texas Tech in 2009-10. Another sister, Amber, plays volleyball at Texas. She was on the Big 12’s preseason all-conference squad.

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Get to know: Colorado’s Andre Roberson
Filed under Basketball by on Jan 11th, 2012. Comment.
By the time Texas regrouped and showed signs of life, it was too late. The Longhorns, inexplicably playing their worst game of the season, made an emphatic comeback in the last five minutes before losing to Kansas 72-67 in the Big 12 opener Wednesday night at the Erwin Center.
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Texas women drop Big 12 opener
Filed under News by on Jan 5th, 2012. Comment.
One of the few bright spots for Tennessee this season was a defense that ranked 28th nationally in total defense and did it with three true freshmen in the starting lineup. The guy running that defense was Justin Wilcox, considered one of the brightest young defensive minds in college football. He was wooed by Texas last season, but elected to stay at Tennessee. The Vols weren’t able to hold onto him this time around, as Wilcox and linebackers coach Peter Sirmon have agreed to join Steve Sarkisian’s staff at Washington.

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Vols lose Wilcox, Sirmon to Washington
Filed under Football by on Jan 2nd, 2012. Comment.
Incredibly enough, Clemson offensive coordinator Chad Morris was coaching high school football just a few years ago in the state of Texas. And who did he meet back then? None other than West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen, who was an assistant at Texas Tech and Houston at the time. “I had met Dana at a couple clinics down in College Station at the Lone StarClinic,” Morris said. “I met him there and listened to him speak. Obviously his time at the University of Houston they’d recruit in our areas.

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Clemson OC has ties to Holgorsen
Filed under Football by on Jan 1st, 2012. Comment.
Kansas has knocked on the door of its first conference win the past two weeks, losing to Baylor and Iowa State by a combined four points. On Saturday, the Jayhawks haven’t been nearly as threatening at Texas A&M. The Aggies lead 9-0 in the first quarter, after a punt snap went awry and the Jayhawks took a safety. For those counting, that’s three times as many points in a third of the time as Baylor scored last week. The Bears trailed, 24-3, entering the fourth quarter before a furious comeback forced overtime.

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Kansas’ conference win hopes look shaky
Filed under Football by on Nov 19th, 2011. Comment.
Hazboy posted a photo: The University of Texas colors are “burnt orange and white”. The team played its first football game in 1893, but did not always wear orange. They also wore gold and white uniforms. In 1895, the Texas Athletic Association moved to orange and white colors. In 1897, the Association moved to orange and maroon to save cleaning costs. The Cactus Yearbook at the time listed the University colors as either gold or orange and white until the 1899 Cactus declared the University colors to be gold and maroon. Students at the University’s medical branch in Galveston (UTMB) were in favor of royal blue. By 1899, a UT fan could have worn any of yellow, orange, white, red, maroon, or even blue

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I saw a lot of these in the stands….about 100,000 of them
Filed under Football, News, Photos by on Nov 18th, 2011. Comment.
1. Former Penn State men’s basketball coach, Nittany Lions’ alumnus and current Navy coach Ed DeChellis echoed many when he called the charges of sexual abuse by former football defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky “disgusting.’’ DeChellis said Wednesday night after president Graham Spanier and legendary football coach Joe Paterno were fired by the board of trustees, “I don’t think the board had a choice. They needed to start the healing process. I feel for Joe.’’ DeChellis chose to leave Penn State after last season for the Naval Academy. DeChellis said that Navy had a chance of playing in the Carrier Classic in an undercard game Friday but the previous coach turned down the offer. DeChellis said he would love to get into the game in the future (and playing Air Force would make sense). But organizers did want to make sure one game worked, let alone doing a doubleheader. 2. Texas A&M coach Billy Kennedy said in a text message late Wednesday night that he’s getting better in his ongoing fight with Parkinson’s disease. Kennedy wasn’t on the court for the Aggies’ win over Liberty on Wednesday night, but he was around, and did visit with the players in the locker room. Kennedy said in a text message that he did watch the game, but he’s not sure yet if he’ll be strong enough to coach the Aggies next week in the 2K Sports Classic benefiting Coaches vs. Cancer in New York’s Madison Square Garden. Kennedy has been on a medical leave since practice started last month. Steve Lavin, who was coming off prostate cancer surgery, returned to St. John’s Wednesday night. The Red Storm and Aggies are in the 2K tournament next week with Arizona and Mississippi State. 3. Central Florida coach Donnie Jones had the Knights ranked a year ago after upsetting Florida in his first season. But by the time the Knights got to Conference USA, the slide started. And it hasn’t stopped. The Knights are on the verge of possibly joining the Big East, but they better get their house in order first. Jones was suspended for three C-USA games and athletic director Keith Tribble resigned amid recruiting violations announced in football and men’s basketball. This comes on the heels of UCF suspending five players for an exhibition game. Jones left Marshall for UCF because of the hidden gem label given to the Orlando school. But UCF can’t make significant strides if it is embroiled with the NCAA or dealing with any other off-court issues. There has consistently been a failed attempt at consistency.

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3-point shot: ‘I feel for Joe,’ DeChellis says
Filed under Basketball, Football by on Nov 10th, 2011. Comment.
Kirk Bohls and Cedric Golden play Three Questions again this week, this time in regard to the upcoming Texas vs. Missouri game.
Filed under News by on Nov 7th, 2011. Comment.
Say what you will about Missouri’s decision to leave the Big 12 and head to the SEC. Accuse Mizzou of greed at the expense of tradition. Say it achieves nothing but the addition of $12 million or so to the Tigers’ athletics department’s bottom line. Call it what you want. You’re probably not wrong. But whatever the vitriol involved, however much wailing and gnashing of teeth you’re inclined to provide, at this point it’s basically a waste. It’s official now: Missouri is leaving the Big 12 for the SEC , and that, as the immortal Stone Cold Steve Austin might say, is the bottom line. (Because Stone Cold said so.) The more pertinent question, at least for college basketball fans, is how this will affect the on-floor performance of conferences involved. Missouri won’t become a SEC member until the 2012-13 season at the earliest (and possibly later depending on West Virginia’s arrival date in the Big 12), and with a new coach and so many seniors on this year’s team, it’s difficult to predict how strong Tigers basketball will be in the next few years. But what if Missouri joined the SEC right now? Could the conference — a football-dominant league where basketball has almost always taken a backseat — be the best in the country? You can certainly make that argument. In a hypothetical world in which Missouri and Texas A&M joined the Southeastern Conference tomorrow — just go with it, guys — the league would have an impressive roster of league title contenders and top-25 teams. The 2011-12 versions of Missouri and Texas A&M are ranked No. 25 and No. 19 in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches’ poll , respectively. Both have questions, but both could very well compete for the Big 12 title. That would likely be the case in the SEC too, where both squads could at least hang with the likes of No. 2 Kentucky, No. 7 Vanderbilt and No. 10 Florida. More than anything, the SEC would receive a boost in its middle-regions. As of now, the league is one of haves and have-nots — the very good programs listed above contrasted with the likes of likely doormats like LSU, Auburn, South Carolina and (suddenly) Tennessee. And both would be better than Arkansas and Misssissippi State, two talented teams with sleeper potential in 2011-12. In this hypothetical, if those two teams pan out, the SEC would have, count ‘em, eight potential NCAA tournament teams out of 14 members. It would have six teams in the preseason top 25 (tying the Big East for the most) — and three in the top 10. That’s a pretty high ratio, one few conferences could match. And in the long view, if Tennessee recovers from the Bruce Pearl mess and Mark Fox’s recruiting continues to go well at Georgia, the SEC could be a very, very deep league. In the meantime, the Big 12 would take a major hit. To be sure, the addition of West Virginia — whenever that kicks in — is a boon for Big 12 hoops; the Mountaineers are likely to remain competitive as long as Bob Huggins is at the helm, and probably longer. But the addition of TCU is a hoops non-starter. The Horned Frogs have made just two NCAA tournament appearances since 1987. Since 2005, when it moved to the Mountain West, TCU hoops has failed to post a single .500 record. After Nebraska and Colorado left the conference last season, the Big 12 arguably became the best pound-for-pound hoops league in the country. But the real-world 2011-12 season is the only time we’ll get to see that kind of league play out.

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In adding Missouri, SEC boosts hoops
Filed under Basketball, Football by on Nov 6th, 2011. Comment.
