This is exactly why we're going to waste $30 million whether we fire him now or 3 years from now. By keeping him we just extend the mediocrity another 3 years, and there's a huge opportunity cost in doing that. In fact, it might end up costing us more.
Reminds me of my running argument with my wife over the years. Her answer to everything is to spend less money. My answer is to make more. You can only cut spending so much, but you can always make more. There's no way to account for how much retaining Herman will end up costing us.
A lot of apples and oranges in those comments. First off, I’d like see us kick the tires of a different HC, like a Fleck, Franklin, even Rhule. But we are where we are and I’ve seen how these negotiations go first hand. How do I think it’s going to work out? I don’t see Herman hiring himself out of this one. I think he wanted Beatty here this year and quite possible next but probably won’t get him. Regardless, Herman is not going anywhere for at least a year.CTH is a dead man walking, not particularly well liked in coaching circles and his entire coaching tree consists of three dudes that are about to be fired and one that’s already out of football (Major).
It’s a pipe dream to think that the hottest OC in football is going to come to this shit show.
And spare me the money whip argument. Ask Sterlin how derailing his career by hitching himself to the wrong coach worked for him.
Your points have merit except to say if he was getting results they’d feel different. Trust me, Saban and Meyer are not the lovey dovey types to their players. He’s going to have to bring in a group of coaches in that can regain the teams trust. My concerns are his ship might have sailed with his philosophy that didn’t work. Winning cures a lot of ills, so we’ll see if can get the wins again.I don't feel the players even really bought in with TH, even like him much. I just don't see this team going all out for him, like the players did for CS, even dough he was APOS, the players, played hard for him. TH need to create a bond with his players instead of being the Bad Cop. Love your players and your players will love you and play hard for you. I don't see that here.
Recruiting matters.
You've heard me say it a million times. Pretty much every year (except this year), you've seen me break down the metrics from each NFL Draft in a way that makes things pretty plain for you to see. One of my goals as a long-time recruiting analyst is to make recruiting as transparent as possible in terms of what a commitment means when projecting possible NFL upside when the commitment is actually received.
Well, that's not what this column is about.
Quite the contrary, actually.
Using the same data that I've acquired over the last half-decade, I'm going to present you a new two-letter declaration that needs to reside right next to my "recruiting matters" mantra. Ready for it? Here goes ...
Development matters.
Too often when I've written about the metrics of recruiting through the prism of the Rivals recruiting star system, I think I've focused too much on the success of the higher-ranked prospects and not enough on the failure rate, which potentially paints a picture that might just change the way you look at the importance of having quality coaching.
Using a four-year average of NFL Draft data that I accumulated from 2015-2018 (2018, 2017, 2016 and 2015), I want everyone to take a look at the the Rivals star system in terms of failing to develop into drafted NFL Draft prospects.
Five stars (6.1) - 31.84-percent
High Four Stars (6.0) - 62.04-percent
Mid Four Stars (5.9) - 76.84-percent
Low Four Star (5.8) - 82.75-percent
High Three stars (5.7) - 89.26-percent
Mid Three stars (5.6) - 93.07-percent
Low Four Stars (5.5) - 95.39-percent
The biggest takeaway I want you guys to have from this set of numbers is that while a low four-star prospect projects as a future NFL drafted player at nearly three times the rate of a mid-three star prospect, a prospect with that high of a ranking still fails to develop into an NFL drafted player at a 82.75-percent clip, while the mid-three star prospect checks in with a 93.07-percent failure rate.
Why is all of this important to you as a fan of the Texas football program?
Well, your talent isn't as good as all of the years of highly-ranked prospects might suggest that it is. For years I've been trying to tell everyone that the only recruits that really warrant special attention are those that rank in the national top 70-75 (or so), but in focusing on the top-rated players, the relative smaller margins among the rest of the four stars and all of the three stars seem to get lost along the way and I want that to stop.
When we look at the University of Texas roster, you'll find only nine players on the entire roster that arrived with a ranking in the top two Rivals tiers. Those players are: WR Devin Duvernay (2016 - 6.0), DB Caden Sterns (2018 - 6.1), DB BJ Foster (2018 - 6.0), DB Jalen Green (2018 - 6.0), WR Brennan Eagles (2018 - 6.0), DB Anthony Cook (2018 - 6.0), RB Jordan Whittington (2019 - 6.0), WR Jake Smith (2019 - 6.0) and DB Tyler Owens (2018 - 6.0)
What that means is that the other 70+ scholarship players on the roster all arrive in Austin with a projected 76.84 failure rate at best. What is also means is that when the Longhorns take on a program like Baylor, its advantage over a team that doesn't have a single 6.1 or 6.0-ranked player on its team is relatively meaningless once you get beyond those nine players listed above.
If one player fails to develop into a drafted NFL player at a rate between 76-82-percent and another player fails to develop into an NFL drafted player at a rate between 89-95 percent, we're somewhat splitting hairs about the advantage that exists when one roster has a bunch of four stars and high three stars, while another has a roster full of mostly three stars.
Is there an advantage for the Longhorns on paper? Yes.
Is it relatively minor, especially when the majority of the nine players the Longhorns have that represent the biggest talent advantage are all very young? You bet.
It means that what happens to those players once they enter college and the kind of hands-on development they receive matters significantly.
In dismantling the Longhorns by two scores on Saturday, the Bears didn't pull off some sort of miracle. All that happened is that Baylor's players were coached and developed at much higher levels than the Texas players received from their staff. In a sport where the fine margins are often so significant, it turns out that the Longhorns merely wasted their built-in advantage on paper and the Bears erased their disadvantage with better 365-day preparation.
Recruiting matters, but for most programs outside of the truly nationally elite, it matters less than player development. It makes having the best of the best in the way of coaching/strength and conditioning incredibly important.
When comparing the Longhorns to their competition in the Big 12, the numbers make it clear that what the program is getting from its coaches and developmental staff isn't good enough.
No. 2 - Just to be clear ...
There have been a lot of questions about the dynamics in the Texas locker room and what might be happening behind the scenes that has led to the collapses on the field this season.
It's really as simple as this - Herman's older players seem all-in with the direction of the program, while it seems like the younger players in the program, all of whom were recruited by Herman, seem to have more question marks. When I say "younger players," I'm mostly talking about the players from the 2018 and 2019 recruiting classes.
For some players, there are questions about the relationships with assistant coaches. For some others, playing time is an issue. For some others, it's just a general level of unhappiness.
Herman mentioned coming out of the bye week a couple of weeks ago that he had taken steps to address some of these issues by meeting with individual players on a one-on-one basis during the bye week, but there's likely more work to do on this front.
No. 3 - Five Players I'm Still Thinking About 24 Hours Later ...
Parker Braun - It just hasn't come together for Braun this season like I thought it might. Don't get me wrong, he's still been better than any alternative that the Longhorns would have otherwise had at left guard this season, but he hasn't been the force I thought he'd be. Like every single starting lineman on the roster, regression seems to have occurred this season and perhaps never more than on Saturday against the Bears. The fact that he was escorted back to the locker room in the fourth quarter, even though he was not officially thrown out of the game, speaks volumes about several things.
Chris Brown - The junior might actually be the best performing defensive back on the roster. When he's on the field and healthy, the Longhorns are better for it.
Sam Ehlinger - In terms of efficiency rating, Saturday was the third-worst game of his career and only one of three times he's ever posted a sub-100 rating. Ehlinger has had two of his worst performances in a three-year career in the last four games. Since the start of October, he's posted sub 123 ratings in four of seven games. That's incredibly poor.
Jalen Green - I'm not sure there was a single time in his match-up against Denzel Mims when he didn't either hold or commit pass interference. There might have been times when it wasn't called, but there was always some tugging and pulling on the jersey down the field at a bare minimum.
Juwan Mitchell - Where the hell was he and why didn't he play? Maybe we'll get a definitive answer from Tom Herman on Monday.
No. 4 - The key to Texas basketball this season ...
When Jericho Sims is fully engaged and on, the Longhorns can be more than a handful against really good teams.
When Jericho Sims isn't fully engaged and on, the Longhorns likely won't be more than a handful against really good teams.
For the season, he's averaging 8.5 points and 6.8 rebounds per game, but he's capable of being a double-double type of guy.
No. 5 - One Texas volleyball thought from the weekend ...
After handling Kansas in four sets at home over the weekend, the Longhorns have only one remaining Big 12 match left in the regular-season before the Texas heads into post-season play.
Considering the Longhorns will likely share the regular-season Big 12 crown with Baylor, it feels like these two could have one more match-up left between them this season.
If it happens, it will likely occur in the Final Four or in the national championship game.
No. 6 - If I had a vote that mattered ...
1. LSU
2. Ohio State
3. Clemson
4. Georgia
5. Alabama
6. Utah
7. Oklahoma
8. Minnesota
9. Michigan
10. Oregon
No. 7 – BUY or SELL …
(Sell) For one damn time, the University of Texas needs to flex some damn financial muscle and make the kind of dynamic, big-boy hire that guarantees success. That's not what the Tom Herman hire was. That's not what the Charlie Strong hire was. Those were the best hires available because Texas subscribed to the theory of not being the force that lifts coaching salaries in the sport to the kind of levels that cause academic people to cry out in vain. I don't think Texas will ever be the force I think it should be, but it's what I believe it should aim to be.
(Sell) If the Longhorns moved on from Herman right now, it would mean that Texas will have set more than $30 million on fire in dead coaching money in a shade over 1,000 days. That's just not going to happen, not unless the people who are responsible for these types of decisions completely change their moral codes.
(Sell) I think he's coaching next year somewhere else. Besides, I believe if the Texas admin flinched over "red flag" concerns with Herman, it would fall over itself when vetting Meyer.
(Buy) In a heartbeat.
(Buy) I believe they'll reach out, but LSU will match any offer he receives, which probably makes landing him a pipe-dream.
(Buy) The powers at be will give Herman whatever he needs in terms of money for his coaching staff and in support staff, which nets them at least an 8. Scoring higher than a 9 or 10 would likely mean doing things without a moral compass and that's not UT.
(Sell) There's not a single reason to give the school the benefit of the doubt on this topic.
(Buy) Did the lack of a response from his head-butting Malcolm Roach at midfield yesterday before the game not give that away? Humpty Dumpty needs to be put back together again.
(Sell) Inside Bellmont, they are praying Herman saves them from the extension gaffe it made in the spring.
(Sell) Texas won't lose that many 2020 commitments in my opinion, but the program averages double-digit numbers of attrition every year, so you might want to double your transfer numbers.
(Buy) Yup.
(Sell) The answer to that question is Charlie Strong.
(Sell) I've been watching Texas football closely for more than three decades, went to the University as a student and don't plan on leaving the Austin area anytime soon. My habits ain't changing.
(Sell) Did you just out Sally Brown's handle?
(Buy) It's not rocket surgery.
(Buy) His history suggests he'll bunker down with guys he knows and has relationships with. My money is on Larry Fedora being the offensive coordinator next season and under normal circumstances, that would represent one hell of a hire. I just wonder if this program doesn't need someone that's not already here with fingerprints on this year's failure.
No. 8 – Eternal Randomness of the Spotty Sports Mind …
... Oklahoma is just begging to be dethroned as Big 12 champions and I don't think anyone has the spine to pull it off. The Sooners are going to win a fifth straight by default.
... Mike Gundy has very quietly had a very good year.
... Ed Orgeron said this about beating Arkansas on Saturday: "There wasn't going to be a celebration for beating Arkansas, they haven't beaten anyone in a long time." Yikes.
... Call me crazy, but I think Michigan gives Ohio State one hell of a game this weekend.
... Kevin Sumlin is exactly who we thought he was.
... Surprise! The 6-5 Dallas Cowboys struggled to make the key play in any phase of the game against a team the quality of the Patriots. Nothing but fool's gold in silver and blue.
... Frank Gore is officially No. 3 on the NFL's all-time rushing list. That's a real thing.
... Speaking of things that actually happened...
... Luka Doncic has my vote for early season NBA MVP. And he's still just a baby.
... Before they both retire, Patrick Beverly and Russell Westbrook have to be allowed to fight each other in an NBA game without punishment from the commish.
... It wasn't pretty, but it still counts. Liverpool 2 Crystal Palace 1. YNWA.
No. 9 - Two Quick Movie Reviews...
Ford Vs. Ferrari (B)
I've seen this movie called the Dad Movie of the Year and that's probably fair. More than the star-studded acting, which sometimes had me asking questions about the casting of the movie, the thing that stands out from the pack in this movie are all of the bad-ass cars. I'm not even a big car guy and I found myself salivating over some of the greatest cars ever made. That the story stays mostly very true to the facts made me very happy. It was just a well-executed story. Definitely worth the trip.
It's a Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (A)
It's easily one of my favorite movies of the year, as I walked out of the theater wanting to be more like Fred Rogers in every aspect of my life, while also wanting to watch as many of the greatest hits of Mister Rogers on Youtube as I could find. Tom Hanks absolutely nails his role of our childhood hero and the story was incredibly moving. I can see this being a movie that I watch on cable a lot once it makes it there.
No. 10 – And Finally ...
I'm not sure anything touched my heart this week more than this video. Get your tissues ready.
Maybe your intramural flag football team won a natty that year, but the Texas football team won a National Championship. And they beat the defending national champions in their home town. A team with a great coach in Pete Carrol.We haven’t had a head coach at Texas who actually developed players since I can remember. Why is that? Sure, we won a natty, but I tend to believe that we went thru that year in perfection in spite of, not because of, the coaches.
I have no desire for anyone associated with this offensive abortion to be at the helm of the Longhorns next season. Fedora is freaking depressing.
Guess you don’t read much then.Maybe your intramural flag football team won a natty that year, but the Texas football team won a National Championship. And they beat the defending national champions in their home town. A team with a great coach in Pete Carrol.
To state as a fact that Texas went undefeated in 2005 and won in spite of the coaching, not because of it, is absolutely the dumbest thing I've ever read on this board.
Amen! And we’ve all known since year one that beck wasn’t the guy for oc. Hell Herman had to take playcalling away from him. Yet here he still is. The problem is in front of his face but his ego won’t allow him to fix it because the fans can’t be right about anything.You know what really pisses me off? Orange bloods let those arrogant pricks know they were tipping plays, and they blew it off. OBs were calling run vs pass throughout the game, and apparently Baylor was doing the same thing to our OL. I literally hate this coaching staff.
And you equate those with murder? Based on his convictions, it seems extremely likely that the shootings he was convicted for weren't his first. So many red flags with this guy yet Urban kept him in the fold. Did you read the article?Mack Brown had players like Robert Timmons, Andre Jones, Robert Joseph, Erik Hardeman, Cayleb Jones and Ramonce Taylor...and you probably think Sergio Kindle really just fell asleep driving...
Trust me brother, I know how you feel.You know its a sad state of affairs as as a fan & that you've become somewhat emotionally detached & jaded when you DVR both the Dallas & Texas games, & then proceed to fast forward through much of each game because: 1. You don't want to be emotionally sucked in anymore only to find out that you were once again sucker-punched, and 2. You pretty much already knew what the final outcome was going to be anyway so why kid yourself into thinking that somehow this time was going to be any different from any of the times before. Such is now the norm of low expectations these 2 teams have cultivated.
What he said!Your last Buy is nails. I expect exactly that. Fedora will be thrilled with calling plays by committee and not knowing who the hell might be on the field at any given time.
Without a helluva lot of honesty and humility, TH will never lead these guys again. The fan base may forgive. But the players will not forgive the fraud that is offensive guru. How do you willingly follow TH up that hill?
He really doesn’t have any conviction offensively. Who can describe our go to? And defensively, don’t... how many times do you sacrifice 200 lb DB’s to get stoned by a guy that’s 6-4 320 before you start correlating that to injuries and missed tackles by the position group that comprises 50%+of you 11?
Are those guys really developing, or just recruiting so much better than everyone else?
Matt Rhule seems to do a damn good job. Coaches at a place like Utah sure seem to do a good job.
And Rhule is doing a great job. BU will regress on D next year. Hope you're ready.
Here is the ever-vaunted Dabo's record in the all-powerful ACC his first few years before recruiting (read: depth) became a juggernaut:
2008: 4-3 (took over for a 8-5, 9-4, then 3-3 team under Tommy Bowden)
2009: 9-5
2010: 6-7 (Third year: FIRE HIM!)
2011: 10-4 (loss in the Orange Bowl)
2012: 11-2
2013: 10-3
2014: 14-1
2015: 14-1
... etc.
Herman's Record:
2017: 7-6 (took over for a 6-7, 5-7, then 5-7 Charlie Strong team)
2018: 10-4 (won the Rose Bowl)
2019: 6-5 (Third year: FIRE HIM!)
Chill out... Develop real depth and see what happens. If the defense wasn't the worst we've seen after stupid levels of attrition (lose 8 starters, then 5 more due to injury), then we likely win two more games (Aimes, TCU).
Expensive..but inI don't know what those "color-blind prevention" glasses cost, but someone ought to start a gofundme so he can keep the things.
It doesn't seem fair that he would have to give them back.
Maybe i just misunderstood something, but it seems cruel to be given the gift of color and then have it taken back....
Next.B/S: While it would not be a popular hire, Major Applewhite would both improve the offense and Sam’s performance.
(Buy) His history suggests he'll bunker down with guys he knows and has relationships with. My money is on Larry Fedora being the offensive coordinator next season and under normal circumstances, that would represent one hell of a hire. I just wonder if this program doesn't need someone that's not already here with fingerprints on this year's failure.
Agree - the number of elite coaches who demand nothing but excellence is low.Who would that be? I know you're not thinking of Meyer because you would never suggest he be hired because you despise him. There aren't many of those types of Coaches. Saban isnt gonna leave Alabama and I'll bet Dabo would be the same.
I remember when CDC 'made' Patterson hire the OC and transformed TCU.CTH needs his version of Dick Tomey and Greg Robinson kind of hire(s) IMO.
My concern with this logic is that it’s having it both ways. Most of what we lost last season were Strong players. So if all we need to do is to recruit more talent then that implies we didn’t have the talent necessary to win. If we didn’t have the talent necessary then why are we worse after losing the guys that weren’t as good?Chill out... Develop real depth and see what happens. If the defense wasn't the worst we've seen after stupid levels of attrition (lose 8 starters, then 5 more due to injury), then we likely win two more games (Aimes, TCU).
Agree. Mack and Urban are actually friends too.Urban or UT football is set for another lost decade. It’s really as clear as that.
Don’t tell me it’s a money thing. The net buyout for CTH this year or next is the same if you hire Urban.
Don’t tell me it’s a moral thing. Mack covered for Cleve who was accused of sexually harassing multiple football employees and sexually assaulted at least one of them (whom Mack was close with) multiples times - including in the damned football complex.
It’s about not wanting to make CDC look like an idiot for extending Herman and not having the balls to take on the Leftists in the academic side.
Recruiting matters.
You've heard me say it a million times. Pretty much every year (except this year), you've seen me break down the metrics from each NFL Draft in a way that makes things pretty plain for you to see. One of my goals as a long-time recruiting analyst is to make recruiting as transparent as possible in terms of what a commitment means when projecting possible NFL upside when the commitment is actually received.
Well, that's not what this column is about.
Quite the contrary, actually.
Using the same data that I've acquired over the last half-decade, I'm going to present you a new two-letter declaration that needs to reside right next to my "recruiting matters" mantra. Ready for it? Here goes ...
Development matters.
Too often when I've written about the metrics of recruiting through the prism of the Rivals recruiting star system, I think I've focused too much on the success of the higher-ranked prospects and not enough on the failure rate, which potentially paints a picture that might just change the way you look at the importance of having quality coaching.
Using a four-year average of NFL Draft data that I accumulated from 2015-2018 (2018, 2017, 2016 and 2015), I want everyone to take a look at the the Rivals star system in terms of failing to develop into drafted NFL Draft prospects.
Five stars (6.1) - 31.84-percent
High Four Stars (6.0) - 62.04-percent
Mid Four Stars (5.9) - 76.84-percent
Low Four Star (5.8) - 82.75-percent
High Three stars (5.7) - 89.26-percent
Mid Three stars (5.6) - 93.07-percent
Low Four Stars (5.5) - 95.39-percent
The biggest takeaway I want you guys to have from this set of numbers is that while a low four-star prospect projects as a future NFL drafted player at nearly three times the rate of a mid-three star prospect, a prospect with that high of a ranking still fails to develop into an NFL drafted player at a 82.75-percent clip, while the mid-three star prospect checks in with a 93.07-percent failure rate.
Why is all of this important to you as a fan of the Texas football program?
Well, your talent isn't as good as all of the years of highly-ranked prospects might suggest that it is. For years I've been trying to tell everyone that the only recruits that really warrant special attention are those that rank in the national top 70-75 (or so), but in focusing on the top-rated players, the relative smaller margins among the rest of the four stars and all of the three stars seem to get lost along the way and I want that to stop.
When we look at the University of Texas roster, you'll find only nine players on the entire roster that arrived with a ranking in the top two Rivals tiers. Those players are: WR Devin Duvernay (2016 - 6.0), DB Caden Sterns (2018 - 6.1), DB BJ Foster (2018 - 6.0), DB Jalen Green (2018 - 6.0), WR Brennan Eagles (2018 - 6.0), DB Anthony Cook (2018 - 6.0), RB Jordan Whittington (2019 - 6.0), WR Jake Smith (2019 - 6.0) and DB Tyler Owens (2018 - 6.0)
What that means is that the other 70+ scholarship players on the roster all arrive in Austin with a projected 76.84 failure rate at best. What is also means is that when the Longhorns take on a program like Baylor, its advantage over a team that doesn't have a single 6.1 or 6.0-ranked player on its team is relatively meaningless once you get beyond those nine players listed above.
If one player fails to develop into a drafted NFL player at a rate between 76-82-percent and another player fails to develop into an NFL drafted player at a rate between 89-95 percent, we're somewhat splitting hairs about the advantage that exists when one roster has a bunch of four stars and high three stars, while another has a roster full of mostly three stars.
Is there an advantage for the Longhorns on paper? Yes.
Is it relatively minor, especially when the majority of the nine players the Longhorns have that represent the biggest talent advantage are all very young? You bet.
It means that what happens to those players once they enter college and the kind of hands-on development they receive matters significantly.
In dismantling the Longhorns by two scores on Saturday, the Bears didn't pull off some sort of miracle. All that happened is that Baylor's players were coached and developed at much higher levels than the Texas players received from their staff. In a sport where the fine margins are often so significant, it turns out that the Longhorns merely wasted their built-in advantage on paper and the Bears erased their disadvantage with better 365-day preparation.
Recruiting matters, but for most programs outside of the truly nationally elite, it matters less than player development. It makes having the best of the best in the way of coaching/strength and conditioning incredibly important.
When comparing the Longhorns to their competition in the Big 12, the numbers make it clear that what the program is getting from its coaches and developmental staff isn't good enough.
No. 2 - Just to be clear ...
There have been a lot of questions about the dynamics in the Texas locker room and what might be happening behind the scenes that has led to the collapses on the field this season.
It's really as simple as this - Herman's older players seem all-in with the direction of the program, while it seems like the younger players in the program, all of whom were recruited by Herman, seem to have more question marks. When I say "younger players," I'm mostly talking about the players from the 2018 and 2019 recruiting classes.
For some players, there are questions about the relationships with assistant coaches. For some others, playing time is an issue. For some others, it's just a general level of unhappiness.
Herman mentioned coming out of the bye week a couple of weeks ago that he had taken steps to address some of these issues by meeting with individual players on a one-on-one basis during the bye week, but there's likely more work to do on this front.
No. 3 - Five Players I'm Still Thinking About 24 Hours Later ...
Parker Braun - It just hasn't come together for Braun this season like I thought it might. Don't get me wrong, he's still been better than any alternative that the Longhorns would have otherwise had at left guard this season, but he hasn't been the force I thought he'd be. Like every single starting lineman on the roster, regression seems to have occurred this season and perhaps never more than on Saturday against the Bears. The fact that he was escorted back to the locker room in the fourth quarter, even though he was not officially thrown out of the game, speaks volumes about several things.
Chris Brown - The junior might actually be the best performing defensive back on the roster. When he's on the field and healthy, the Longhorns are better for it.
Sam Ehlinger - In terms of efficiency rating, Saturday was the third-worst game of his career and only one of three times he's ever posted a sub-100 rating. Ehlinger has had two of his worst performances in a three-year career in the last four games. Since the start of October, he's posted sub 123 ratings in four of seven games. That's incredibly poor.
Jalen Green - I'm not sure there was a single time in his match-up against Denzel Mims when he didn't either hold or commit pass interference. There might have been times when it wasn't called, but there was always some tugging and pulling on the jersey down the field at a bare minimum.
Juwan Mitchell - Where the hell was he and why didn't he play? Maybe we'll get a definitive answer from Tom Herman on Monday.
No. 4 - The key to Texas basketball this season ...
When Jericho Sims is fully engaged and on, the Longhorns can be more than a handful against really good teams.
When Jericho Sims isn't fully engaged and on, the Longhorns likely won't be more than a handful against really good teams.
For the season, he's averaging 8.5 points and 6.8 rebounds per game, but he's capable of being a double-double type of guy.
No. 5 - One Texas volleyball thought from the weekend ...
After handling Kansas in four sets at home over the weekend, the Longhorns have only one remaining Big 12 match left in the regular-season before the Texas heads into post-season play.
Considering the Longhorns will likely share the regular-season Big 12 crown with Baylor, it feels like these two could have one more match-up left between them this season.
If it happens, it will likely occur in the Final Four or in the national championship game.
No. 6 - If I had a vote that mattered ...
1. LSU
2. Ohio State
3. Clemson
4. Georgia
5. Alabama
6. Utah
7. Oklahoma
8. Minnesota
9. Michigan
10. Oregon
No. 7 – BUY or SELL …
(Sell) For one damn time, the University of Texas needs to flex some damn financial muscle and make the kind of dynamic, big-boy hire that guarantees success. That's not what the Tom Herman hire was. That's not what the Charlie Strong hire was. Those were the best hires available because Texas subscribed to the theory of not being the force that lifts coaching salaries in the sport to the kind of levels that cause academic people to cry out in vain. I don't think Texas will ever be the force I think it should be, but it's what I believe it should aim to be.
(Sell) If the Longhorns moved on from Herman right now, it would mean that Texas will have set more than $30 million on fire in dead coaching money in a shade over 1,000 days. That's just not going to happen, not unless the people who are responsible for these types of decisions completely change their moral codes.
(Sell) I think he's coaching next year somewhere else. Besides, I believe if the Texas admin flinched over "red flag" concerns with Herman, it would fall over itself when vetting Meyer.
(Buy) In a heartbeat.
(Buy) I believe they'll reach out, but LSU will match any offer he receives, which probably makes landing him a pipe-dream.
(Buy) The powers at be will give Herman whatever he needs in terms of money for his coaching staff and in support staff, which nets them at least an 8. Scoring higher than a 9 or 10 would likely mean doing things without a moral compass and that's not UT.
(Sell) There's not a single reason to give the school the benefit of the doubt on this topic.
(Buy) Did the lack of a response from his head-butting Malcolm Roach at midfield yesterday before the game not give that away? Humpty Dumpty needs to be put back together again.
(Sell) Inside Bellmont, they are praying Herman saves them from the extension gaffe it made in the spring.
(Sell) Texas won't lose that many 2020 commitments in my opinion, but the program averages double-digit numbers of attrition every year, so you might want to double your transfer numbers.
(Buy) Yup.
(Sell) The answer to that question is Charlie Strong.
(Sell) I've been watching Texas football closely for more than three decades, went to the University as a student and don't plan on leaving the Austin area anytime soon. My habits ain't changing.
(Sell) Did you just out Sally Brown's handle?
(Buy) It's not rocket surgery.
(Buy) His history suggests he'll bunker down with guys he knows and has relationships with. My money is on Larry Fedora being the offensive coordinator next season and under normal circumstances, that would represent one hell of a hire. I just wonder if this program doesn't need someone that's not already here with fingerprints on this year's failure.
No. 8 – Eternal Randomness of the Spotty Sports Mind …
... Oklahoma is just begging to be dethroned as Big 12 champions and I don't think anyone has the spine to pull it off. The Sooners are going to win a fifth straight by default.
... Mike Gundy has very quietly had a very good year.
... Ed Orgeron said this about beating Arkansas on Saturday: "There wasn't going to be a celebration for beating Arkansas, they haven't beaten anyone in a long time." Yikes.
... Call me crazy, but I think Michigan gives Ohio State one hell of a game this weekend.
... Kevin Sumlin is exactly who we thought he was.
... Surprise! The 6-5 Dallas Cowboys struggled to make the key play in any phase of the game against a team the quality of the Patriots. Nothing but fool's gold in silver and blue.
... Frank Gore is officially No. 3 on the NFL's all-time rushing list. That's a real thing.
... Speaking of things that actually happened...
... Luka Doncic has my vote for early season NBA MVP. And he's still just a baby.
... Before they both retire, Patrick Beverly and Russell Westbrook have to be allowed to fight each other in an NBA game without punishment from the commish.
... It wasn't pretty, but it still counts. Liverpool 2 Crystal Palace 1. YNWA.
No. 9 - Two Quick Movie Reviews...
Ford Vs. Ferrari (B)
I've seen this movie called the Dad Movie of the Year and that's probably fair. More than the star-studded acting, which sometimes had me asking questions about the casting of the movie, the thing that stands out from the pack in this movie are all of the bad-ass cars. I'm not even a big car guy and I found myself salivating over some of the greatest cars ever made. That the story stays mostly very true to the facts made me very happy. It was just a well-executed story. Definitely worth the trip.
It's a Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (A)
It's easily one of my favorite movies of the year, as I walked out of the theater wanting to be more like Fred Rogers in every aspect of my life, while also wanting to watch as many of the greatest hits of Mister Rogers on Youtube as I could find. Tom Hanks absolutely nails his role of our childhood hero and the story was incredibly moving. I can see this being a movie that I watch on cable a lot once it makes it there.
No. 10 – And Finally ...
I'm not sure anything touched my heart this week more than this video. Get your tissues ready.
definitely development, and see post about designing schemes around talent, this is a large part as well IMOAre those guys really developing, or just recruiting so much better than everyone else?
Matt Rhule seems to do a damn good job. Coaches at a place like Utah sure seem to do a good job.
- but not if he acts decisively and makes the needed changesTexas just sucks right now. CDC will have a hard time living down that poor decision.
When Jericho Sims is fully engaged and on, the Longhorns can be more than a handful against really good teams.
When Jericho Sims isn't fully engaged and on, the Longhorns likely won't be more than a handful against really good teams.
For the season, he's averaging 8.5 points and 6.8 rebounds per game, but he's capable of being a double-double type of guy.
No. 6 - If I had a vote that mattered ...
1. LSU
2. Ohio State
3. Clemson
4. Georgia
5. Alabama
6. Utah
7. Oklahoma
8. Minnesota
9. Michigan
10. Oregon