The Texas softball team was ranked 18th in the USAToday/NFCA Preseason poll and 19th in the ESPN.com/USA Softball Preseason poll. Defending champion Arizona State topped both
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Softball team picked 18th, 19th in nation
Filed under News by on Jan 25th, 2012. Comment.
The Texas softball team was ranked 18th in the USAToday/NFCA Preseason poll and 19th in the ESPN.com/USA Softball Preseason poll. Defending champion Arizona State topped both
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Softball team picked 18th, 19th in nation
Filed under News by on Jan 25th, 2012. Comment.
Texas A&M has reportedly found the man to lead it into the SEC. Houston coach Kevin Sumlin and the Aggies were finalizing a contract on Saturday morning, a source told ESPN’s Joe Schad. Sumlin lead Houston to a 12-0 record this season before a loss in the Conference USA Championship to Southern Miss, whose coach, Larry Fedora, was also a candidate at Texas A&M. Fedora took the job at North Carolina. Sumlin was an assistant coach at A&M from 2001-02.

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Source: A&M decides on UH’s Kevin Sumlin
Filed under Football by on Dec 10th, 2011. Comment.
Hazboy posted a photo: This was taken during of the the University of Texas Longhorn Band’s number before their game in Austin against Texas Tech

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The University of Texas flag looks a lot like the University of Tennessee flag…..just a bit darker orange
Filed under Football, News, Photos by on Nov 23rd, 2011. Comment.
Hazboy posted a photo: I think they were performing “The Eyes of Texas”, which is a song they do at every home and away football game by the band

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The University of Texas Longhorn Band in action in Austin, Tx
Filed under Football, News, Photos by on Nov 21st, 2011. Comment.
Hazboy posted a photo: I think they were performing “The Eyes of Texas”, which is a song they do at every home and away football game by the band

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The University of Texas Longhorn Band in action in Austin, Tx
Filed under Football, News, Photos by on Nov 21st, 2011. Comment.
USA Today has released its annual survey of college coaching salaries. It’s always fascinating stuff. You can see the breakdown of where the money comes from there. Here, we’ll just deal with the total numbers. And as always, it’s time to have our own survey of their survey. First things first, here are the raw numbers, according to USA Today. Each coach’s national rank is in parentheses next to his conference rank. 1. Mack Brown, Texas – $5,193,500 (1) 2.

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Fun with Big 12 coaching salaries!
Filed under Football by on Nov 17th, 2011. Comment.
Every week, your humble college basketball hoops blogger (er, me) will respond to your questions, comments and nonsensical rants in this here Hoopsbag. To submit a query, visit this page by clicking the link under my name in the upper right-hand corner of the blog. You can also email me or send me your entries via Twitter . (Honestly, the best way to get me is Twitter.) Per the usual, we begin with video. @ Purdidit writes : Each year has one or two: Which preseason top 10 team is most likely to fail to live up to expectations? Eamonn Brennan : This one’s actually pretty easy. It’s Memphis. For much of the summer, I thought the Tigers’ preseason ranking was going to be too high; with all this young talent, it’s easy to forget that Memphis was basically a so-so C-USA team for much of the 2010-11 season. Sure, the Tigers finished strong, and there’s reason to expect scaled improvements from a team that features so many sophomores that played big minutes as freshmen. The addition of highly-touted recruit Adonis Thomas helps, too. But top 10? Didn’t that seem just a little optimistic? What was I missing? I put Memphis at No. 17 in my preseason top-25 ballot . I thought that seemed fair. Then Ken Pomeroy released his preseason rankings (Memphis is ranked No. 20) and ESPN Insider and Basketball Prospectus maven John Gasaway broke things down in this Monday piece for Insider , and I’m more convinced than ever that Memphis isn’t a top-10 team. As John wrote, that doesn’t mean they won’t be a top-10 team by the end of the season. It may even be earlier than that. But the team with the worst offense in Conference USA — the only team to score less than a point per possession in C-USA last season — can’t possibly be the ninth-best team in the country. It may happen at some point, but I’d be shocked if the Tigers didn’t struggle at times, especially early in the season. People will say they were overrated. But whose fault is that? (Speaking of Memphis, by the way: Josh Pastner just keeps snatching up elite recruits . The present was already bright, but jeez, that future! Look out.) @ LakeRosenberg writes : In honor of The Mid-Majority , what team from below The Red Line can go the furthest in the NCAA Tournament? Brennan : It’s a new season with (hopefully) new readers, so I won’t assume everyone knows what The Red Line is. You can get up to speed right here . The short version: The Mid-Majority’s Kyle Whelliston wanted to define what, exactly, a mid-major is. He cut through the usual nonsense about tournament bids and school enrollments (people used to come up with some really wacky mid-major arguments) and instead created an intuitive, simple mechanism: The Red Line. If your conference’s average athletics department spends more than X number of dollars, you’re a high-major league.

Filed under Basketball, Football, News by on Nov 9th, 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.
Stanford is the biggest beneficiary of Clemson’s first loss. The Cardinal, which needed three overtimes to beat USC 56-48 at the Coliseum in Los Angeles on Saturday night, jumped two spots to No. 4 in the BCS standings released on Sunday night. The Cardinal moved past Clemson, which fell at Georgia Tech 31-17 on Saturday night, its first defeat of the season. Stanford also moved ahead of No. 5 Boise State, which was idle this weekend. Stanford’s next big test comes on Nov. 12, when the Cardinal plays host to No. 8 Oregon in a game that might decide which team wins the Pac-12 North Division. First, the Cardinal plays at struggling Oregon State on Nov. 5. The top two teams in the final BCS standings released on Dec. 4 will play in the Jan. 9 Allstate BCS National Championship Game at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans. Right now, SEC West rivals LSU and Alabama and surprising Oklahoma State are in the driver’s seat in the BCS championship race. The No. 1 Tigers play the No. 2 Crimson Tide at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Ala., on Saturday. Both SEC West teams were idle this past weekend, but LSU saw its lead over Alabama in the BCS standings increase from .0075 points last week to .0143 points this week. While Saturday’s game between LSU and Alabama is being billed as another “Game of the Century,” it’s becoming increasingly clear that Oklahoma’s Dec. 3 trip to rival Oklahoma State for the Bedlam game will also be very important in the BCS championship race, as long as those teams keep winning. Oklahoma, which saw its BCS title hopes take a serious hit with last week’s 41-38 loss to Texas Tech, didn’t need long to rebound. The Sooners blasted then-No. 8 Kansas State 58-17 on the road on Saturday. As a result, the Sooners are in the best position among one-loss teams, jumping to No. 6 in the BCS standings. The No. 3 Pokes still play Kansas State (home), Texas Tech (road) and Iowa State (road) before playing the Sooners. Oklahoma State is ranked No. 1 in five of the six computer rankings used in the BCS formula (the computers make up one-third of the formula; the Harris Poll is one-third; and USA Today coaches’ poll is one-third), so an upset of the Pokes would do wonders for Oklahoma’s BCS ranking. A few other observations from the latest BCS standings: I’m not sure if an 8-1 team has ever gotten less respect than Penn State. I know the Nittany Lions are offensively challenged, but their only loss came against No. 2 Alabama. I thought they’d be higher than No. 16 after defeating Illinois 10-7 on Saturday. There’s something to be said for playing defense, which the Nittany Lions can do.

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Stanford jumps in latest BCS standings
Filed under Football by on Oct 31st, 2011. Comment.
