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Ketch's 10 thoughts From The Weekend (Confidence is very, very high - Part II)

Great stuff. Your first item is very telling and should keep the Kool Aid to a minimum if people are paying attention.

Your all time list is great, but don't agree with Johnson on the list in place of Carl Lewis.

Biography​

Carl Lewis, as one of only four Olympic athletes to have won nine Olympic gold medals, is widely recognized as one of the greatest athletes of all time.

Matching Jesse Owens​

At the 1984 Los Angeles Games, Lewis emulated his boyhood idol Jesse Owens by winning gold in the 100m, the 200m, the long jump and the 4x100m relay. A superstar was born.

Further Olympic joy​

At the 1988 Seoul Games, Lewis defended his 100m title after Ben Johnson was disqualified. He also defended his long jump title and claimed silver in the 200m. Four years later in Barcelona, he won a third gold medal in the long jump, defeating world record holder Mike Powell by just three centimetres. He also anchored the world record-setting US relay team.

One last golden jump​

Lewis only just scraped into the US Olympic long jump team for the 1996 Atlanta Games. He then needed all three jumps to qualify for the final. However in the final, he majestically moved into first place with his third jump and stayed there.

Olympic records​

His success in the long jump made Carl Lewis one of only three Olympians to win the same individual event four times. He is also one of only four Olympic athletes to win nine gold medals.
Lewis isn't from Texas.
 
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Curious who was... I saw she won 10 majors.


"she wouldn't even place in a 6a competition"

Can't that be said of most track and field stars of the era that didn't have access to the technology high schoolers have now?

a. Patty Berg and Louise Suggs were both peers from her era who won more majors. There really were just a few of the same people on the circuit back then.

b. I didn't have any other older track stars on the list.
 
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I'll find a way to persevere through leaving a disgrace that his sport still hasn't fully recovered from off the list.

He has literally been stripped of his accomplishments.

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Not objecting to leaving him off. The damage from the sport was his visibility and sanctimony. What he did was nothing new and not even the worst or most “organized” (contrary to the clown at USADA). He didn’t bring doping to the sport - it was actually considered “being a pro” by almost all teams. The suspension for doping used to be measured out in weeks. Eddy Merckx, the GOAT of cycling, was popped for doping and virtually zero impact (other than getting booted from race). It goes back years and years and years. Hot take: it’s probably still going on today - we just saw someone beat the times of Lance and Marco Pantani up climbs in the Tour.
 
Lance unfortunately competed in a time when most cyclists were doping. In order to compete he had to do it. The problem was the way he handled it all.

That said, doping or not, what he accomplished us ridiculous. 7 straight Tour wins is nuts. Guys fall or get wrecked and don't even finish, doping notwithstanding.

Lance should be in the top 10 but understand why he's not.
 
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You clearly know that isn't the case I'm making here - You're also choosing not to respond to any of the valid points I'm making ;-) If specialized training and economic situation isn't such a big part of the equation here....why are so many of these all around gold medalists coming out of the US? Out of the same gyms where they're been with these coaches for so many years? Unfortunately this dynamic also had a big impact on the Nasser situation / its because of the power that the system held over their ability to reach their dreams.

I would also make the case that the old golfers are significantly over-rated on this list for the same reason....

The access to gold 50-100 years ago was not widespread.... this wasn't a sport of the masses.... The number of participants was few

Baseball players from the 1900-1960 era hold much more weight for me at the time because it was the premier sport
I'll take a stab at it osprey. Specialized training and economic situation is a factor but it's not the only factor: for years we did not emphasize certain sports in America now we are... So that matters. It always has and it always will. If you don't emphasize something even if you got the talent it's not gonna mean anything.

None of these gymnasts that are winning medals now were born rich. But after 1984 opportunities were created that allowed people to step up.

But once again before that this country didn't give a damn about gymnastics. And there are other sports that are out there that we could medal in that we don't look at very often either.

That was a eastern European and Russian province and if it hadn't been for a couple of people defecting like Karoyli it would stay that way for another decade. At least until the wall fell.

You have to remember something a lot of people in this country look down on certain sports even in the Olympics. Swimming and track and field and basketball....those were the "real" American sports back in the day and until Mary Lou Retton came along in 84 gymnastics was after thought.

And no I'm not forgetting people like Cathy Rigby back in the day. But the point is we didn't look at certain sports as the springboard thing. It wasn't until people defected we started paying attention.

Your point about Nasser and others is quite valid however when they brought the factory approach over here they brought all the good and the bad that came along with it.

You had coaches that took advantage and you had people that look the other way In the name of winning. That's a stain nothing will ever be able to wipe away completely.

But with all due respect to you for you to look down on somebody because they don't fit a mold you create it's also equally wrong. Championships are championships..... What the hell does access really have to do with it.

What kind of access did Jesse Owens have for example for him to create what he became and the stand in Berlin in 1936 with 4 gold medals and if I remember correctly 4 world records at the time. He was a world class athlete no question but he still had to earn his spot. That's on the athlete. And by the way he never would have gotten the access he got if it hadn't been for the fact Ohio State hired his dad to work for him.

When the MLB finally started putting statistics for the Negro Leagues players the purists out there were having heart attacks in there.

Now does it move the needle that much. In some cases yes but yet those men play the same game with the same ball that the other guys did And didn't earn any real respect for it.

Personally I don't pick and choose what or how the situations are to get those championships.
 
@Ketchum Are you gaslighting me on Worthy and his drops? Some of us kept telling you he was dropping a lot of easy balls and all I remember you doing is posting stats saying he was not dropping that many. Broken hand or he was dropping more than he should have at the time. I get the hand being broken didn't help but none of us screaming knew he had a broken hand. We did know he was dropping way too many easy passes.

PS. Love the rest of the column.
Agreed. Worthy had a very good year last year (not great, but very good--year before not not so good), but he did drop too many passes over his career--particularly when the game was tight.

I never got an answer as to how bad the break was--Sark only mentioned it once--and nobody else had an answer either.
And remember Worthy dropped a TD pass against Alabama this last year, it was right in his hands--and no break.

And I'm glad he's catching balls in KC--I'm rooting for him--but it's PRACTICE. Let's see how he does when KC needs a catch late in the 4th quarter, or when the game's on the line. That's when we'll really know how good he is.
 
I'll take a stab at it osprey. Specialized training and economic situation is a factor but it's not the only factor: for years we did not emphasize certain sports in America now we are... So that matters. It always has and it always will. If you don't emphasize something even if you got the talent it's not gonna mean anything.

None of these gymnasts that are winning medals now were born rich. But after 1984 opportunities were created that allowed people to step up.

But once again before that this country didn't give a damn about gymnastics. And there are other sports that are out there that we could medal in that we don't look at very often either.

That was a eastern European and Russian province and if it hadn't been for a couple of people defecting like Karoyli it would stay that way for another decade. At least until the wall fell.

You have to remember something a lot of people in this country look down on certain sports even in the Olympics. Swimming and track and field and basketball....those were the "real" American sports back in the day and until Mary Lou Retton came along in 84 gymnastics was after thought.

And no I'm not forgetting people like Cathy Rigby back in the day. But the point is we didn't look at certain sports as the springboard thing. It wasn't until people defected we started paying attention.

Your point about Nasser and others is quite valid however when they brought the factory approach over here they brought all the good and the bad that came along with it.

You had coaches that took advantage and you had people that look the other way In the name of winning. That's a stain nothing will ever be able to wipe away completely.

But with all due respect to you for you to look down on somebody because they don't fit a mold you create it's also equally wrong. Championships are championships..... What the hell does access really have to do with it.

What kind of access did Jesse Owens have for example for him to create what he became and the stand in Berlin in 1936 with 4 gold medals and if I remember correctly 4 world records at the time. He was a world class athlete no question but he still had to earn his spot. That's on the athlete. And by the way he never would have gotten the access he got if it hadn't been for the fact Ohio State hired his dad to work for him.

When the MLB finally started putting statistics for the Negro Leagues players the purists out there were having heart attacks in there.

Now does it move the needle that much. In some cases yes but yet those men play the same game with the same ball that the other guys did And didn't earn any real respect for it.

Personally I don't pick and choose what or how the situations are to get those championships.

Thanks Mardoc

I'm more saying that the greatest American Handball player of all time isn't the greatest athlete of all time.....

It isn't as popular or prestigous enough sport to warrant it -> even if someone is head and shoulders above everyone else.

I'm not downplaying her greatness / I am just saying it isn't a worldwide top sport -> if it was and specialized training wasn't such a factor / these few countries wouldn't dominate it like they do.
 
@McGuapo check out Alabama

10. John Hannah
9. Ozzie Newsome
8. Julio Jones
7. Terrell Owens
6. Satchel Paige
6. Willie McCovey
4. Bo Jackson
3. Charles Barkley
2. Hank Aaron
1. Willie Mays
Oh damn! See I knew there would be some sneaky ones. Salty, but no women?
 
The next 10 for Cali has....

John Elway
Rickey Henderson
Florence Griffith-Joyner
Billie Jean King
Jackie Robinson
Duke Snyder
Mark Spitz
Tony Gwynn
Venus Williams
Marcus Allen
OJ Simpson
Anthony Munoz
Greg Lemond
Randy Johnson

It just goes on and on and on....
I mean, we knew Cali was going to be ridiculous.
 
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I found myself thinking about the 2005 national championship team this weekend.

Originally, I was locked in on a position-by-position, side-by-side analysis of the 2024 Longhorns vs. Mack Brown's legacy squad, but before I could get knee-deep into the comparisons, I started to think about how the national championship team in 2005 wasn't a national championship team when the season started.

The Rose Bowl champions from the previous season finished fifth in the nation in the final AP Poll and fourth in the Coaches Poll. Last year's Longhorns finished third in the AP Poll and fourth in the Coaches Poll. As crazy as it might sound to compare the current team to arguably the greatest team in the history of the sport, the starting points aren't too dissimilar.

Both teams lost big-time players to the NFL. Both teams returned starting quarterbacks, a stable of running backs, an imposing offensive line, edge players to frighten opposing defenses, a single bad-ass linebacker and a plethora of NFL talent in the secondary.

In terms of returning elite players, the 2024 team returns an All-American in Kelvin Banks, while the 2005 team returned All-American Jonathan Scott. The edge that the 2005 team had in terms of elite players that returned from 2004 comes in the form of returning All-American safety Michael Huff and All-American Rod Wright. Neither were consensus All-Americans, but they were named All-American as juniors.

But, that's just the starting point.

What matters most is what the 2005 team ended with, which was seven players that earned All-American honors, including four who earned consensus first-team All-America honors. Vince Young was a Heisman Finalist. Michael Huff won the Thorpe Award. Wright was a Lombardi Finalist

That's the bar. If you're going to win a national championship, you're going to need something in the ballpark of six All-Americans to get there. That's how many Michigan had a year ago. Georgia's two championship teams from 2021-22 averaged 6.5 per year and featured four consensus first-team All-Americans on each.

When we look towards the 2024 Longhorns, you can take Kelvin Banks to the ... well ... you can take him to the bank. Outside of Banks, at least four or five more players on this team are going to need to step into the elite category if competing for a national championship is going to be a realistic goal.

The most obvious answers to the question of who has to step up reside on the SEC pre-season second-team list: quarterback Quinn Ewers, running back CJ Baxter, wide receiver Isaiah Bond, center Jake Majors, linebacker Anthony Hill, defensive back Jahdae Barron, defensive back Andrew Mukuba and defensive back Malik Muhammad. Go ahead and throw third-team edge Trey Moore into the mix.

It's possible that someone like D.J. Campbell could emerge as the type of nationally elite player that we're talking about, but most likely the 2024 Longhorns will need four or five names from the nine listed above to reach elite heights if Texas is going to win a championship. Not good or very good or occasionally great ... elite.

No. 2 - Scattershooting on the first few days of practice ...

... The next six days will be the most important days of camp. Saturday's scrimmage is the "show me" scrimmage. The coaches have said that they'll have an idea of a tentative three-deep after the first scrimmage and then they'll lock in on a two-deep after the second scrimmage two Saturdays from now. Everything after that will mostly be focused on getting ready for week one and the start of the season. If you're trying to win a position or a job or a spot on the two-deep, the time to do so is now ... not later.

... With pads coming on this week, we're going to know a lot more about what we should make of the defensive tackle position pretty soon.

... Ryan Wingo just keeps generating buzz. None of this is a fluke. He's going to play a lot.

... Silas Bolden continues to impress.

... "Nothing is really any clearer at wide receiver, except Wingo is going to play a lot," a source said when asked about the battle at wide receiver through Saturday's practice.

... Had a source mention this weekend that the next seven days of practice will be the most important days of Justice Finkley's career as a Longhorn because he's currently working with the second-team at edge, but he's going to need to elevate his play in order to hold off Colin Simmons. If Simmons passes Finkley, it's likely that he'll never look back and it will leave Finkley in potentially a no-man's land type of position when trying to carve out a role in his third season.

... It's kind of crazy to continue to hear Juan Davis' name as a standout, but he's continuing to perform well and it seems like he's definitely playing his way into certified playing time as a senior.

... How have four practices gone by and there's virtually zero Arch Manning buzz? Is the world ending?

No. 3 - Confidence is very, very high (Part II) ...

A few follow-up notes ...

a. There's a feeling that things are coming together on three fronts ... uncommitted prospects, a few flip targets and potential transfer portal targets in December/January.

b. As it relates to the non-Portal targets, confidence is high with 5-star level targets. One source mentioned to me that this class could be historically good if things come together like those behind the scenes anticipate it becoming.

c. Texas NIL's reputation behind the scenes on the national level might not be that they'll pay the most, but they do have perhaps an even better reputation ... they pay on time. Every time. The reliability factor is an area that has the Longhorns in the cat bird's seat with agents and player reps. Oh, and if you're wondering ... yes ... agents/reps are already putting out feelers for the future, including reps of players that haven't even played a down for their respective colleges at this point.

d. In order for the Longhorns to maximize their efforts, the play on the field in 2024 can't lag. There's real sense that Texas needs to be a national factor on a top-five scale. One person told me this weekend that finishing 8-12 isn't good enough.

No. 4 – Hello, Kaliq Lockett ...

We're less than 72 hours away from Sachse 2025 wide receiver Kaliq Lockett announcing his college decision and things still look very good for the Longhorns. In fact, I'm not sure that any of the schools competing for Lockett are confident at all going into Wednesday's announcement.

Just for the record, I'm not sure that anyone has been as high on Lockett during the recruiting process as I have.

Check out what I said about Lockett in February of 2023 when I debuted him at No. 5 in my LSR rankings: "You could talk me into Lockett being the best receiver prospect in the state because he' a little bigger than Moore and might be a better athlete. One thing is certain, he seems like the best after the catch receiver in the state. Just get him the ball because he's a good enough athlete once he gets his hands on the ball that he can score in just about any way you'd want to see a receiver score. Might not quite be the pound for pound football player that Moore is, but he might be slightly more breathtaking as a receiver."

Obviously, I was wrong about his athleticism ... he's not more athletic than Dakorien Moore, but it speaks to how dangerous he is with the ball in his hands that my initial impression of him is that he might have been.

The bottom line is that I love the kid and while he might not be at the level of Moore, he still would rank as one of the top six or seven wide receivers that the Longhorns have signed in the last two decades.

No. 5 - Updated Texas Longhorns Football Scholarship Board ...

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No. 6 – Just call her the G.O.A.T.

Julien Alfred went into the Olympics this week as a Mount Rushmore-level female athlete at The University of Texas.

We're talking about a woman who carried the Longhorns to a national title by becoming only the sixth woman (and first in a decade) to go back-to-back as the NCAA champion in the 100 meters. She won the national title in the 200. She led the 4X100 meter relay team to a national title for good measure.

The pride of St. Lucia was already on the short list with the likes of Cat Osterman, Clarrisa Davis and Carlette Guidry on the Texas Women's Athlete Mount Rushmore, but it might be time to acknowledge that she's the greatest women's athlete in school history. Full stop.

That's the kind of juice your resume holds when you follow up an all-time great collegiate resume with being the fastest woman in the world and a gold medal winner in the 100 meters at the Olympics.

Consider that Guidry is rightfully regarded as one of the top 10 women's athletes in the history of the state of Texas after winning a pair of gold medals in 1992 and 1996 in the 4X100 relay, but she never won a major International event as an individual. Consider that Osterman won gold in Athens back in 2004, but she never led the Longhorns to a national title. Consider that Davis led the Longhorns to a national title, but never won gold at the Olympics and was never considered the best in the world at her sport.

I don't want to be someone that is only living in the moment, but her resume is her resume. It can't be topped by a single women's athlete in the history of Texas Athletics.



No. 7 - A few more burnt orange Olympics thoughts to chew on ...

... Kevin Durant is the all-time leader in men's USA basketball in both points, points per game and rebounds. He's six points away from passing Lisa Leslie for the highest scorer in Texas USA history (regardless of sex). He's sitting on three gold medals and possibly a week away from his fourth. Opinions very on his place on the all-time great NBA players list, but it's pretty hard to dispute that he's going to retire as the greatest player in the history of Team USA. Marinate on that for a moment.

... It might be time to put Ryan Crouser in the Longhorns Hall of Honor, even if he is still competing. When a man wins gold in three consecutive Olympics, you just have to make an exception. Is he the best UT athlete that gets the least amount of appreciation? He's literally the greatest performer in the history of his sport. No other Texas athlete can quite claim that.

... All Scottie Scheffler needed to do on Sunday was shoot a 62 to win Olympics gold after starting the day four shots behind on the leaderboard. Ho hum. He did it.

... Alfred will be back on the track on Tuesday when she competes in a loaded field in the 200 meters.

... I'm not sure there's enough appreciation for what Texas athletes are doing in Paris.

... Here are the remaining UT athletes that are left to compete in Paris this week:

Men

* Kevin Durant - Men's Basketball - United States - Basketball (Tuesday quarterfinals)

Women

* Mariam Abdul-Rashid Women's - Track & Field - Canada - 100m hurdles (Wednesday)
* Rhasidat Adeleke - Women's Track & Field - Ireland - 400m (Monday)
* Julien Alfred Women's Track & Field - Saint Lucia - 200m (Monday)
* Yvonne Anderson - Women's Basketball - Serbia - Basketball (Wednesday quarterfinals)
* Emelia Chatfield - Women's Track & Field - Haiti - 100m hurdles (Wednesday)
* Tara Davis-Woodhall - Women's Track & Field - United States - Long Jump (Tuesday)
* Alison Gibson - Women's Diving - United States 3-meter - Springboard (Wednesday)
* Sara Kouskova - Women's Golf - Czech Republic - Individual Stroke Play (Wednesday)
* Chiaka Ogbogu - Women's Volleyballv - United States - Team Indoor Volleyball (Tuesday quarterfinals)
* Ackelia Smith - Women's Track & Field - Jamaica - Long Jump (Tuesday)
* Lanae-Tava Thomas - Women's Track & Field - Jamaica - 200m (Monday)
* Stacey-Ann Williams - Women's Track & Field - Jamaica - 400m (Monday), 4x400m relay (Friday)

No. 8 – BUY or SELL …

buy-sell-stock-market_1-800x445.jpg




(Sell) Jerry is 81, which means he probably has a good 20 years left in him. We all might have to wait until 2050 or so.



(Sell) He's not going to play that much, but it's amazing we're having this conversation.



(Sell) Isaiah Bond is going to be WR1. The No. 2 spot might rotate by the week.



(Sell) Come on...



(Sell) I spent a few hours pondering this ... I think I love movies more.



(Buy) That's probably the right number. I'm going to take the over.



(Buy) I'm leaning towards yes more than no.


(Sell) No, I expect Texas to do better. For example, I believe they will land Michael Fasusi.



(Sell) I believe Texas wins the game, but will be 6-1 afterwards and in the top 5.



(Sell) An SEC title vs. going out in the quarterfinals (but winning a game before the quarterfinals) is pretty easy for me ... give me the SEC title.

(Sell) No one has stunted Cook's growth. He needs to be more consistent and he'll be a critical starter in his second year.



(Sell) Nah, I don't have that vibe.



(Buy) I believe it.

white wolf GIF




(Sell) I think he's the 5-star Brockermeyer never was.

No. 9 – Scattershooting all over the place …

... Holy hell, that was some kind of men's 100 meters final. Give it up to Noah Myles for backing that talk up with action. He's officially a legend. Also, shot out to Taylor, Texas star Fred Kerley for taking home the bronze.

... Shout out to NBC for doing an A+ job of presentation throughout the Olympics. The Gold Zone channel is freaking money.

... I can't get enough of women's beach volleyball. Why isn't this on in prime time every weekend?

... Why does the USA suck so bad in 3X3 hoops?

... Novac Djokovic did some GOAT stuff on Sunday. There sure seem to be a lot of GOATs in Paris.

... We really need to appreciate the greatness of Simone Biles and Katie Ledecky. These women are for all-time.

... Bring on the pre-season NFL games. I'm ready.

... As things stand, I am not playing fantasy football this season. I just don't have the urge. Maybe I just need a break.

... Remember when many of you thought Xavier Worthy had issue catching the ball. It turns out he did ... when he had a broken hand.


... I'm not getting cocky at all, but I'm excited by what I'm seeing from Arne Slot's Liverpool squad.

... If you're a USA-born NBA superstar that isn't playing on Team USA, you're not a superstar. You're a notch below that.

... Blake Snell threw a no-hitter this weekend and I'm not sure anyone even paused to notice.

... Please, Phillies, wake the hell up!

... Terence Crawford fought this weekend ... did anyone even notice?

... Tony Ferguson has lost eight straights fights in the UFC? I feel like I blinked and he went from borderline champion to all-time losing streak, but it's been more than five years since he won a fight.

... It feels like I'm the only person in America that hasn't seen "Deadpool and Wolverine" yet. It's officially the biggest R-rated movie of all-time at the box office. Is it time to do a Ryan Reynolds Top 10?

... Aerosmith is officially done with concert tours. I'm glad I was able to see the band a couple of times along the way. Steven Tyler's voice had a hell of a run.

No. 10 – The List: Top 10 Greatest Athletes From The State of Texas …

I can't believe I've never done this before in almost two decades of writing this column.,

We're not splitting up the sexes, either. It's a combined men's and women's list.

Here are the rules...

a. Being born in Texas qualifies you, unless a person moved away from Texas before they started playing their respective sport. For instance, Frank Robinson was born in Beaumont, but moved to California when he was an infant.
b. If a person was born in another state, but spent their formative years inside the state of Texas ... they are a Texan.

(Note: Shaquille O'Neal moved to Texas when he was 16 years old right before his junior year in high school. Whether I'm right or wrong, I've decided to leave him out of the discussion, although he'd rank in the top five if included.)

Let's get on with the list ...

Last 5 out: Rogers Hornsby, Drew Brees, Ernie Banks, Jack Johnson and Adrian Peterson

10. Byron Nelson (Waxahachie/Golf)

He's the Earl Campbell of golf, retiring at the age of 34 after having won five majors, 64 professional events and posted the second-longest streak of consecutive cuts made (113). The streak of consecutive cuts is second only to Tiger Woods' 142.

9. Michael Johnson (Dallas/Track)

One of world's greatest sprinters of all time, who set world records in the 200, 300 and 400 meters, while winning back-to-back gold medals in the 1996 and 2000 Olympics. Won 16 medals at major competitions in his career and all 16 of them were gold.

8. Babe Didrikson Zaharias (Beaumont/Golf/Track)

One of the greatest female athletes of all-time. Won two gold medals in the 1932 Olympics in Los Angeles and ranks fourth all-time in gold majors victories in the LPGA. Should she be higher on the list? Maybe. Yet, she's not regarded as one of the all-time great track stars and she wasn't the best the best LPGA player of her era. She's both lifted up and held down by her era.

7. Earl Campbell (Tyler/Football)

Although his apex might have been shorter than many on this list, at the height of his powers there's never been anyone else like him ... ever. A three-time Offensive Player of the Year and the NFL's MVP in 1979, I'd feel like I was committing a sin to leave him off the list.

6. Nolan Ryan (Alvin/Baseball)

Baseball's all-time strikeout leader, a member of MLB's all-century team and the sport's all-time leader in no-hitters.

5. Patrick Mahomes (Whitehouse/Football)

A three-time Super Bowl MVP, a two-time league MVP and a player that will go down as one of the top 2-3 quarterbacks in the history of football by the time he retires.

4. George Foreman (Houston/Boxing)

A gold medalist in the 1968 Olympics and a two-time world heavyweight boxing champion, who knocked out Joe Frazier in the second round. After losing the heavyweight title in 1974 to Muhammad Ali, he won the title again at the age of 45 when he knocked out Michael Moorer.

3. Roger Clemens (Houston/Baseball)

I don't care about the HGH/steroids stuff. The man won seven Cy Young Awards, won 300+ games, struck out 4,000+ batters and was a member of MLB's all-century team.

2. Ben Hogan (Fort Worth/Golf)

One of the greatest golfers that ever lived. Is tied for fourth all-time with nine career major wins and is one of only five players to ever win all four majors.

1. Simone Biles (Spring/Gymnastics)

She's the greatest gymnast and the only athlete on the list that can make that claim about their sport. She owns seven gold medals 23 world championships gold medals and has about five different skills that have been named after her because no one else has ever done them.
As long as Earl is on the list, I’m good.
 
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Not objecting to leaving him off. The damage from the sport was his visibility and sanctimony. What he did was nothing new and not even the worst or most “organized” (contrary to the clown at USADA). He didn’t bring doping to the sport - it was actually considered “being a pro” by almost all teams. The suspension for doping used to be measured out in weeks. Eddy Merckx, the GOAT of cycling, was popped for doping and virtually zero impact (other than getting booted from race). It goes back years and years and years. Hot take: it’s probably still going on today - we just saw someone beat the times of Lance and Marco Pantani up climbs in the Tour.
I think we can all agree the sport sucks and can go to hell. ;)
 
Lance unfortunately competed in a time when most cyclists were doping. In order to compete he had to do it. The problem was the way he handled it all.

That said, doping or not, what he accomplished us ridiculous. 7 straight Tour wins is nuts. Guys fall or get wrecked and don't even finish, doping notwithstanding.

Lance should be in the top 10 but understand why he's not.
If I had expanded to 20, I would have included him. As it was, I had to leave off the NFL's No.5 all-time leading rusher.
 
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I found myself thinking about the 2005 national championship team this weekend.

Originally, I was locked in on a position-by-position, side-by-side analysis of the 2024 Longhorns vs. Mack Brown's legacy squad, but before I could get knee-deep into the comparisons, I started to think about how the national championship team in 2005 wasn't a national championship team when the season started.

The Rose Bowl champions from the previous season finished fifth in the nation in the final AP Poll and fourth in the Coaches Poll. Last year's Longhorns finished third in the AP Poll and fourth in the Coaches Poll. As crazy as it might sound to compare the current team to arguably the greatest team in the history of the sport, the starting points aren't too dissimilar.

Both teams lost big-time players to the NFL. Both teams returned starting quarterbacks, a stable of running backs, an imposing offensive line, edge players to frighten opposing defenses, a single bad-ass linebacker and a plethora of NFL talent in the secondary.

In terms of returning elite players, the 2024 team returns an All-American in Kelvin Banks, while the 2005 team returned All-American Jonathan Scott. The edge that the 2005 team had in terms of elite players that returned from 2004 comes in the form of returning All-American safety Michael Huff and All-American Rod Wright. Neither were consensus All-Americans, but they were named All-American as juniors.

But, that's just the starting point.

What matters most is what the 2005 team ended with, which was seven players that earned All-American honors, including four who earned consensus first-team All-America honors. Vince Young was a Heisman Finalist. Michael Huff won the Thorpe Award. Wright was a Lombardi Finalist

That's the bar. If you're going to win a national championship, you're going to need something in the ballpark of six All-Americans to get there. That's how many Michigan had a year ago. Georgia's two championship teams from 2021-22 averaged 6.5 per year and featured four consensus first-team All-Americans on each.

When we look towards the 2024 Longhorns, you can take Kelvin Banks to the ... well ... you can take him to the bank. Outside of Banks, at least four or five more players on this team are going to need to step into the elite category if competing for a national championship is going to be a realistic goal.

The most obvious answers to the question of who has to step up reside on the SEC pre-season second-team list: quarterback Quinn Ewers, running back CJ Baxter, wide receiver Isaiah Bond, center Jake Majors, linebacker Anthony Hill, defensive back Jahdae Barron, defensive back Andrew Mukuba and defensive back Malik Muhammad. Go ahead and throw third-team edge Trey Moore into the mix.

It's possible that someone like D.J. Campbell could emerge as the type of nationally elite player that we're talking about, but most likely the 2024 Longhorns will need four or five names from the nine listed above to reach elite heights if Texas is going to win a championship. Not good or very good or occasionally great ... elite.

No. 2 - Scattershooting on the first few days of practice ...

... The next six days will be the most important days of camp. Saturday's scrimmage is the "show me" scrimmage. The coaches have said that they'll have an idea of a tentative three-deep after the first scrimmage and then they'll lock in on a two-deep after the second scrimmage two Saturdays from now. Everything after that will mostly be focused on getting ready for week one and the start of the season. If you're trying to win a position or a job or a spot on the two-deep, the time to do so is now ... not later.

... With pads coming on this week, we're going to know a lot more about what we should make of the defensive tackle position pretty soon.

... Ryan Wingo just keeps generating buzz. None of this is a fluke. He's going to play a lot.

... Silas Bolden continues to impress.

... "Nothing is really any clearer at wide receiver, except Wingo is going to play a lot," a source said when asked about the battle at wide receiver through Saturday's practice.

... Had a source mention this weekend that the next seven days of practice will be the most important days of Justice Finkley's career as a Longhorn because he's currently working with the second-team at edge, but he's going to need to elevate his play in order to hold off Colin Simmons. If Simmons passes Finkley, it's likely that he'll never look back and it will leave Finkley in potentially a no-man's land type of position when trying to carve out a role in his third season.

... It's kind of crazy to continue to hear Juan Davis' name as a standout, but he's continuing to perform well and it seems like he's definitely playing his way into certified playing time as a senior.

... How have four practices gone by and there's virtually zero Arch Manning buzz? Is the world ending?

No. 3 - Confidence is very, very high (Part II) ...

A few follow-up notes ...

a. There's a feeling that things are coming together on three fronts ... uncommitted prospects, a few flip targets and potential transfer portal targets in December/January.

b. As it relates to the non-Portal targets, confidence is high with 5-star level targets. One source mentioned to me that this class could be historically good if things come together like those behind the scenes anticipate it becoming.

c. Texas NIL's reputation behind the scenes on the national level might not be that they'll pay the most, but they do have perhaps an even better reputation ... they pay on time. Every time. The reliability factor is an area that has the Longhorns in the cat bird's seat with agents and player reps. Oh, and if you're wondering ... yes ... agents/reps are already putting out feelers for the future, including reps of players that haven't even played a down for their respective colleges at this point.

d. In order for the Longhorns to maximize their efforts, the play on the field in 2024 can't lag. There's real sense that Texas needs to be a national factor on a top-five scale. One person told me this weekend that finishing 8-12 isn't good enough.

No. 4 – Hello, Kaliq Lockett ...

We're less than 72 hours away from Sachse 2025 wide receiver Kaliq Lockett announcing his college decision and things still look very good for the Longhorns. In fact, I'm not sure that any of the schools competing for Lockett are confident at all going into Wednesday's announcement.

Just for the record, I'm not sure that anyone has been as high on Lockett during the recruiting process as I have.

Check out what I said about Lockett in February of 2023 when I debuted him at No. 5 in my LSR rankings: "You could talk me into Lockett being the best receiver prospect in the state because he' a little bigger than Moore and might be a better athlete. One thing is certain, he seems like the best after the catch receiver in the state. Just get him the ball because he's a good enough athlete once he gets his hands on the ball that he can score in just about any way you'd want to see a receiver score. Might not quite be the pound for pound football player that Moore is, but he might be slightly more breathtaking as a receiver."

Obviously, I was wrong about his athleticism ... he's not more athletic than Dakorien Moore, but it speaks to how dangerous he is with the ball in his hands that my initial impression of him is that he might have been.

The bottom line is that I love the kid and while he might not be at the level of Moore, he still would rank as one of the top six or seven wide receivers that the Longhorns have signed in the last two decades.

No. 5 - Updated Texas Longhorns Football Scholarship Board ...

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No. 6 – Just call her the G.O.A.T.

Julien Alfred went into the Olympics this week as a Mount Rushmore-level female athlete at The University of Texas.

We're talking about a woman who carried the Longhorns to a national title by becoming only the sixth woman (and first in a decade) to go back-to-back as the NCAA champion in the 100 meters. She won the national title in the 200. She led the 4X100 meter relay team to a national title for good measure.

The pride of St. Lucia was already on the short list with the likes of Cat Osterman, Clarrisa Davis and Carlette Guidry on the Texas Women's Athlete Mount Rushmore, but it might be time to acknowledge that she's the greatest women's athlete in school history. Full stop.

That's the kind of juice your resume holds when you follow up an all-time great collegiate resume with being the fastest woman in the world and a gold medal winner in the 100 meters at the Olympics.

Consider that Guidry is rightfully regarded as one of the top 10 women's athletes in the history of the state of Texas after winning a pair of gold medals in 1992 and 1996 in the 4X100 relay, but she never won a major International event as an individual. Consider that Osterman won gold in Athens back in 2004, but she never led the Longhorns to a national title. Consider that Davis led the Longhorns to a national title, but never won gold at the Olympics and was never considered the best in the world at her sport.

I don't want to be someone that is only living in the moment, but her resume is her resume. It can't be topped by a single women's athlete in the history of Texas Athletics.



No. 7 - A few more burnt orange Olympics thoughts to chew on ...

... Kevin Durant is the all-time leader in men's USA basketball in both points, points per game and rebounds. He's six points away from passing Lisa Leslie for the highest scorer in Texas USA history (regardless of sex). He's sitting on three gold medals and possibly a week away from his fourth. Opinions very on his place on the all-time great NBA players list, but it's pretty hard to dispute that he's going to retire as the greatest player in the history of Team USA. Marinate on that for a moment.

... It might be time to put Ryan Crouser in the Longhorns Hall of Honor, even if he is still competing. When a man wins gold in three consecutive Olympics, you just have to make an exception. Is he the best UT athlete that gets the least amount of appreciation? He's literally the greatest performer in the history of his sport. No other Texas athlete can quite claim that.

... All Scottie Scheffler needed to do on Sunday was shoot a 62 to win Olympics gold after starting the day four shots behind on the leaderboard. Ho hum. He did it.

... Alfred will be back on the track on Tuesday when she competes in a loaded field in the 200 meters.

... I'm not sure there's enough appreciation for what Texas athletes are doing in Paris.

... Here are the remaining UT athletes that are left to compete in Paris this week:

Men

* Kevin Durant - Men's Basketball - United States - Basketball (Tuesday quarterfinals)

Women

* Mariam Abdul-Rashid Women's - Track & Field - Canada - 100m hurdles (Wednesday)
* Rhasidat Adeleke - Women's Track & Field - Ireland - 400m (Monday)
* Julien Alfred Women's Track & Field - Saint Lucia - 200m (Monday)
* Yvonne Anderson - Women's Basketball - Serbia - Basketball (Wednesday quarterfinals)
* Emelia Chatfield - Women's Track & Field - Haiti - 100m hurdles (Wednesday)
* Tara Davis-Woodhall - Women's Track & Field - United States - Long Jump (Tuesday)
* Alison Gibson - Women's Diving - United States 3-meter - Springboard (Wednesday)
* Sara Kouskova - Women's Golf - Czech Republic - Individual Stroke Play (Wednesday)
* Chiaka Ogbogu - Women's Volleyballv - United States - Team Indoor Volleyball (Tuesday quarterfinals)
* Ackelia Smith - Women's Track & Field - Jamaica - Long Jump (Tuesday)
* Lanae-Tava Thomas - Women's Track & Field - Jamaica - 200m (Monday)
* Stacey-Ann Williams - Women's Track & Field - Jamaica - 400m (Monday), 4x400m relay (Friday)

No. 8 – BUY or SELL …

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(Sell) Jerry is 81, which means he probably has a good 20 years left in him. We all might have to wait until 2050 or so.



(Sell) He's not going to play that much, but it's amazing we're having this conversation.



(Sell) Isaiah Bond is going to be WR1. The No. 2 spot might rotate by the week.



(Sell) Come on...



(Sell) I spent a few hours pondering this ... I think I love movies more.



(Buy) That's probably the right number. I'm going to take the over.



(Buy) I'm leaning towards yes more than no.


(Sell) No, I expect Texas to do better. For example, I believe they will land Michael Fasusi.



(Sell) I believe Texas wins the game, but will be 6-1 afterwards and in the top 5.



(Sell) An SEC title vs. going out in the quarterfinals (but winning a game before the quarterfinals) is pretty easy for me ... give me the SEC title.

(Sell) No one has stunted Cook's growth. He needs to be more consistent and he'll be a critical starter in his second year.



(Sell) Nah, I don't have that vibe.



(Buy) I believe it.

white wolf GIF




(Sell) I think he's the 5-star Brockermeyer never was.

No. 9 – Scattershooting all over the place …

... Holy hell, that was some kind of men's 100 meters final. Give it up to Noah Myles for backing that talk up with action. He's officially a legend. Also, shot out to Taylor, Texas star Fred Kerley for taking home the bronze.

... Shout out to NBC for doing an A+ job of presentation throughout the Olympics. The Gold Zone channel is freaking money.

... I can't get enough of women's beach volleyball. Why isn't this on in prime time every weekend?

... Why does the USA suck so bad in 3X3 hoops?

... Novac Djokovic did some GOAT stuff on Sunday. There sure seem to be a lot of GOATs in Paris.

... We really need to appreciate the greatness of Simone Biles and Katie Ledecky. These women are for all-time.

... Bring on the pre-season NFL games. I'm ready.

... As things stand, I am not playing fantasy football this season. I just don't have the urge. Maybe I just need a break.

... Remember when many of you thought Xavier Worthy had issue catching the ball. It turns out he did ... when he had a broken hand.


... I'm not getting cocky at all, but I'm excited by what I'm seeing from Arne Slot's Liverpool squad.

... If you're a USA-born NBA superstar that isn't playing on Team USA, you're not a superstar. You're a notch below that.

... Blake Snell threw a no-hitter this weekend and I'm not sure anyone even paused to notice.

... Please, Phillies, wake the hell up!

... Terence Crawford fought this weekend ... did anyone even notice?

... Tony Ferguson has lost eight straights fights in the UFC? I feel like I blinked and he went from borderline champion to all-time losing streak, but it's been more than five years since he won a fight.

... It feels like I'm the only person in America that hasn't seen "Deadpool and Wolverine" yet. It's officially the biggest R-rated movie of all-time at the box office. Is it time to do a Ryan Reynolds Top 10?

... Aerosmith is officially done with concert tours. I'm glad I was able to see the band a couple of times along the way. Steven Tyler's voice had a hell of a run.

No. 10 – The List: Top 10 Greatest Athletes From The State of Texas …

I can't believe I've never done this before in almost two decades of writing this column.,

We're not splitting up the sexes, either. It's a combined men's and women's list.

Here are the rules...

a. Being born in Texas qualifies you, unless a person moved away from Texas before they started playing their respective sport. For instance, Frank Robinson was born in Beaumont, but moved to California when he was an infant.
b. If a person was born in another state, but spent their formative years inside the state of Texas ... they are a Texan.

(Note: Shaquille O'Neal moved to Texas when he was 16 years old right before his junior year in high school. Whether I'm right or wrong, I've decided to leave him out of the discussion, although he'd rank in the top five if included.)

Let's get on with the list ...

Last 5 out: Rogers Hornsby, Drew Brees, Ernie Banks, Jack Johnson and Adrian Peterson

10. Byron Nelson (Waxahachie/Golf)

He's the Earl Campbell of golf, retiring at the age of 34 after having won five majors, 64 professional events and posted the second-longest streak of consecutive cuts made (113). The streak of consecutive cuts is second only to Tiger Woods' 142.

9. Michael Johnson (Dallas/Track)

One of world's greatest sprinters of all time, who set world records in the 200, 300 and 400 meters, while winning back-to-back gold medals in the 1996 and 2000 Olympics. Won 16 medals at major competitions in his career and all 16 of them were gold.

8. Babe Didrikson Zaharias (Beaumont/Golf/Track)

One of the greatest female athletes of all-time. Won two gold medals in the 1932 Olympics in Los Angeles and ranks fourth all-time in gold majors victories in the LPGA. Should she be higher on the list? Maybe. Yet, she's not regarded as one of the all-time great track stars and she wasn't the best the best LPGA player of her era. She's both lifted up and held down by her era.

7. Earl Campbell (Tyler/Football)

Although his apex might have been shorter than many on this list, at the height of his powers there's never been anyone else like him ... ever. A three-time Offensive Player of the Year and the NFL's MVP in 1979, I'd feel like I was committing a sin to leave him off the list.

6. Nolan Ryan (Alvin/Baseball)

Baseball's all-time strikeout leader, a member of MLB's all-century team and the sport's all-time leader in no-hitters.

5. Patrick Mahomes (Whitehouse/Football)

A three-time Super Bowl MVP, a two-time league MVP and a player that will go down as one of the top 2-3 quarterbacks in the history of football by the time he retires.

4. George Foreman (Houston/Boxing)

A gold medalist in the 1968 Olympics and a two-time world heavyweight boxing champion, who knocked out Joe Frazier in the second round. After losing the heavyweight title in 1974 to Muhammad Ali, he won the title again at the age of 45 when he knocked out Michael Moorer.

3. Roger Clemens (Houston/Baseball)

I don't care about the HGH/steroids stuff. The man won seven Cy Young Awards, won 300+ games, struck out 4,000+ batters and was a member of MLB's all-century team.

2. Ben Hogan (Fort Worth/Golf)

One of the greatest golfers that ever lived. Is tied for fourth all-time with nine career major wins and is one of only five players to ever win all four majors.

1. Simone Biles (Spring/Gymnastics)

She's the greatest gymnast and the only athlete on the list that can make that claim about their sport. She owns seven gold medals 23 world championships gold medals and has about five different skills that have been named after her because no one else has ever done them.
Not a bad list - switch #6 and #3 though.
 
Agreed. Worthy had a very good year last year (not great, but very good--year before not not so good), but he did drop too many passes over his career--particularly when the game was tight.

I never got an answer as to how bad the break was--Sark only mentioned it once--and nobody else had an answer either.
And remember Worthy dropped a TD pass against Alabama this last year, it was right in his hands--and no break.

And I'm glad he's catching balls in KC--I'm rooting for him--but it's PRACTICE. Let's see how he does when KC needs a catch late in the 4th quarter, or when the game's on the line. That's when we'll really know how good he is.
a. The data doesn't support the notion he had an issue with drops, which is why that replay has gone completely ignored.

b. It was bad enough that he wore a cast for about 5 weeks once the season was over.
 
Thanks Mardoc

I'm more saying that the greatest American Handball player of all time isn't the greatest athlete of all time.....

It isn't as popular or prestigous enough sport to warrant it -> even if someone is head and shoulders above everyone else.

I'm not downplaying her greatness / I am just saying it isn't a worldwide top sport -> if it was and specialized training wasn't such a factor / these few countries wouldn't dominate it like they do.
The Brazilian gymnast who won gold on the floor today was too poor for bus fare so her brothers would walk her to the gym two hours each way. That doesn’t sound very advantaged, and she beat both Americans today.
 
Their all-time baseball team would be very salty.

An outfield of Williamns/Dimaggio/Henderson
Yeah I was fearing the lineup Cali and Florida would put together, overall.
 
a. The data doesn't support the notion he had an issue with drops, which is why that replay has gone completely ignored.

b. It was bad enough that he wore a cast for about 5 weeks once the season was over.
When did he actually break his hand?
How bad was the break?
Did the staff doctors think it would affect his catching ability?
 
When did he actually break his hand?
How bad was the break?
Did the staff doctors think it would affect his catching ability?

a. With about 1/4 of the season remaining
b. I forget the specifics.
c. They thought he could play through it, but it definitely impacted him.

@Anwar Richardson

 
a. The data doesn't support the notion he had an issue with drops, which is why that replay has gone completely ignored.

b. It was bad enough that he wore a cast for about 5 weeks once the season was over.
And when Sark really needed a catch last year, he went to Mitchell, not Worthy. That speaks volumes.
 
a. With about 1/4 of the season remaining
b. I forget the specifics.
c. They thought he could play through it, but it definitely impacted him.

@Anwar Richardson

a. So your saying that he had no drop issues prior to the last 1/4 of the season?
b. Specifics I think matter, particularly when you're using this as the reason he had dropped passes
c. Maybe, but if the coaches thought he could play through it, then they made a judgement call that his hand was not hurt enough to make a difference in the game. If it did, he shouldn't have been in the games to begin with.
 
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