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Ketch's 10 Thoughts From The Weekend (Explaining Flood's Obsession With Monsters)

I was a Sophomore at UT during Earl's 1977 season, having transferred from Washinton & Lee. I got to witness that Heisman season. Texas was coming off a 5-5-1 season. It was Akers' first season and perhaps his greatest coaching move was to ditch the wishbone and turn his prize loose. Texas wasn't even ranked in the API/UPI polls at the start of the season. Blowout wins of Boston College (44-0), Virginia (68-0) and Rice (72-15) propelled Texas into the Top 5. My favorite Earl run occurred in the first half (2nd quarter?) against OU. It was a 24-yard run, I believe. He utilized his power, shifty moves, and speed to score. Texas' kicking game and its dominant defense held on for the victory.

The following week Arkansas, with Texas ranked #2 behind Michigan, looked as though they had Texas beaten. Late in the fourth quarter, Earl takes a flare-out pass at the Hogs' 30? and runs by and over at least five tacklers to about the two-yard line. Texas scores and gets out of Fayetteville with a 13-9 victory. It wasn't until Texas defeated SMU, coupled with Minnesota upsetting #1 Michigan, that assured Texas ranked #1. The Drag went crazy wild. Everyone was honking their car horns to the tune of "We're number one!" Lastly, when Earl received his Heisman in NYC, several of us marched the kid, who was a Baylor fan, carried him several floors down, and threw him into the swimming pool. Greatness.
great stuff. thanks for sharing!
 
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Of course!

As you know, Ketch is adamant that 5 stars and high 4 stars are the key to high-level football life. Flood hasn’t always been at super schools with super talent where he mostly had to not F the talent up as a coach. I think the Rutgers info says more about him than Bama.
It says everything about him.
 
I can give you a story...four of my friends were on row 3 about the 30 yard line. Earl come around end and gets blindsided by a much smaller Texas Tech cornerback or safety right in front of us on the sideline. The crowd gasped as Earl lay on the out of bounds chalk. He was out one play ant then returned. An ambulance came onto the field and carted away the Red Raider and obviously he never returned.
:oops: :oops: :oops: :oops:

That guy has a story to share for the last 50 years.... if he can still talk.
 
We still hear a lot about Earl Campbell - and rightfully so. The man was a freaking “rolling ball of butcher knives”, lol, to steal a quote from Darrell Royal (it was not made about Earl).

But Earl’s brother, Tim, is the “forgotten” Campbell. While diminutive (5’9”?), Tim was an outstanding twitch DE for Texas, starting multiple yedras on some of Texas’ best D’s of all-time. I *think* Tim played in the NFL for awhile? I also *think* Tim played on the D when Texas played MY in the bowl game. After crushing MY, the MY QB said something like, “Those guys on Texas DL are real brutes!” Truly, one of the best quotes ever (even if I’ve forgotten the exact words).

Stephen Campbell was injured, possibly in HS, and never developed like Earl (obviously) and Tim did, but Stephen saw some action now and again. The Campbell’s say Stephen might have been the best of all but for his injury, if you can imagine that, lol.
 
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Give us a story!
Earl and Alfred Jackson lived at Village Glen apartments off Oltorf his senior year. Me and my roommate lived across the pool. Earl would sit out by the pool and study and we would shoot the breeze with him. The OU game that year was the best I've ever seen.
 
Earl and Alfred Jackson lived at Village Glen apartments off Oltorf his senior year. Me and my roommate lived across the pool. Earl would sit out by the pool and study and we would shoot the breeze with him. The OU game that year was the best I've ever seen.
Let's see photos! ;)
 
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Ketch,
I don't see how Gary Darnell isn't on your list. Yes, Bobby Jack Wright followed Darnell, but Darnell destroyed our defense after taking over from Leon Fuller. Bobby Jack probably didn't have anything to work with (right?). I remember thinking if Mackovic had kept Fuller, we would have finally had a highly ranked defense and offense at the same time and may have played for a Natty. IMO, Mackovic's undoing was making the change at DC when he replaced Fuller with Darnell. Bobby Jack was just the guy with bad timing.
 
Let's see photos! ;)
We didn’t exactly have cellphones in those days, lol. We barely had Polaroids, lol.

The Campbells were all so approachable on campus. I would always stop Earl and Tim and ask them what’s going to happen at the game, how is practice, the usual prattle.

I don’t think I ever talked to Stephen, but it was not unusual for Earl or Tim to full stop and gossip for 4 or 5 minutes.

I imagine it’s the same with most players today.
 
I think he needs to convince the staff that he is being serious. They aren't going to fall for the okey-doke.

But, if he legit wants to come and not just have Texas listed in his top 5, I think they'd make room.
Totally disagree with your putting Les Koenning as one of the worst coaches. Les coached up John Harris to a 1,000 yard receiver for UT for The first time in a number of previous years. Plus the fact that he was a multi year letterman as a receiver for us as well should earn him some respect. I’ve known Les for 40+ years and am familiar with Les and his tenure under strong. Les wasn’t canned for performance.
 
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I remember when Campbell won the Heisman Trophy, it was during final exams week. If I remember correctly it was on a Monday night...and I can't remember if it was televised or not. Somehow, I seem to remember watching it...down in the TV lounge at Jester. It's just hard for me to imagine that in the pre cable age that any network would have shown this on live TV.

Anyway, what I absolutely remember is that within minutes of this event, the campus flooded out of their dorms and apartments and whatever, and just held a huge impromptu pep rally. Austin police had gotten really good at managing the Saturday night Guadalupe Street pep rally's (so much so that later in the year they were nowhere near as fun as earlier), but I don't think they were prepared for one on a Monday night during final exams.
 
You are 100-percent correct. I wonder if Neil would be recruited in 2022.

IMO he would. Reality is he was somewhat undersized even back then but still was rated relative to a 6.0 today. He would be heavier today as a recruit. I think what likely got him big time looks was going up against Sam Adams and Shane Rink at practice. JMO
 
If you didn't get to see him play against zero-u, you're bucket list will never be complete, sorry !
The first Longhorn game I ever saw in person was 1977 TX/OU. My brother was a freshman at UT and got two tickets. I was 14 at the time and so lucky that he took me instead of one of his friends. It was awesome as you know! I was hooked and ended up following my brother in 1981. I've been to lots of game since, but will never forget watching Earl in the first one.
 
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ee0e3a40b744e2eebc3b4d949eaa9055x.jpg

The answer is Anthony Davis.

If you've ever found yourself wondering about Texas offensive line coach Kyle Flood's love affair with massive human beings, you'll probably need to go back to his early years at Rutgers to fully understand his obsession.

In his second season at Rutgers, Flood put himself on the map as a recruiter by landing a man-mountain in Davis, who not only tipped the scales at 6-5 and 341 pounds, but was a super-blue chip prospect who ranked No. 68 in the Rivals100 back in the Class of 2007. After previously coaching at Hofstra and Delaware from 1997-2004, Flood had never signed a player who was remotely close to Davis' blue chip pedigree.

That Davis ended up being an all-American and a first-round draft pick in 2010 is far from insignificant.

View attachment 3024

For months, I've wanted to comb through Flood's history at Rutgers to look for trends that might help explain his love affair with massive offensive line prospects that possess the kind of profile that he seems hell bent on building the foundation of future Texas offensive lines with. Following the commitment of Payton Kirkland this weekend, it felt like the perfect time to do so.

So, what were the main takeaways?

* The average size of the 33 offensive line prospects that Flood signed in his career at Rutgers was 6-5 1/4, 294 pounds.

* 42.4% of the linemen he signed were 6-6 or taller.

* 6 of the 33 were at least 6-5, 315 pounds. Of those six, three turned into multi-year starters at tackle.

* Flood's very first commitment as the offensive line coach at Rutgers in 2005 came from a player that tipped the scales at 6-6, 351 pounds.

* Flood signed only 4 four-star offensive line prospects during his time at Rutgers, including Davis, and three of the four emerged as multi-year starters for the Scarlet Knights and earned Big 10 honors.

In grading Flood's career of developing offensive linemen at Rutgers, you have to use an entirely different set of expectations than you would at a school like Texas because the overwhelming majority of prospects that he found himself working with were either two- or three-stars in the Rivals database. Yet, when he did get his hands on an elevated prospect ... they never totally missed.

The worst of the four-stars that he signed at Rutgers was probably J.J. Denman from the Class of 2012, a player that started at right tackle in his final two seasons.

Yet, most of his career at Rutgers was spent making wine out of water. It was all about taking players completely outside the national recruiting radar and turning them into serviceable players. Amazingly, Davis was the only player he worked with that was drafted by an NFL team during his time at Rutgers, but very few of the kids he signed ended up being total busts. When you consider what he was working with, it's pretty damn impressive.

The secret to his success seemed to be targeting a certain type of physical profile ... large humans.

What we're seeing right now with Flood at Texas isn't an accident. It's him being able to project his developmental ethos at a level that allows him to target the highest quality of massive humans that he can possibly find without the brand of his school holding him back.

Come hell or high water, Flood is going to find his next Anthony Davis.

Or two. Or three. Or four ...

No. 2 - Flood's class-by-class recruiting breakdown...

2006





Neither of his first two recruits at Rutgers emerged as notable players during his time at Rutgers, but it's hard to ignore that his first very commit was from Lange, who showed up in the Rivals database at 6-6, 351 pounds.

2007






We've discussed the importance of Davis in Flood's career, but Stapleton was also a very good player, while Ruch was a starter as a senior, which means that Flood was able to create starters out of 75 percent of the class.

2008




Forst was the second four-star prospect of Flood's career and he ended up becoming one of only six Rutgers offensive linemen to win first-team All-Big East honors in the first 21 years of being in the conference.

2009




Neither player made a real impact in their careers with Rutgers and both eventually transferred to other schools.

2010







Outside of Bujari, who started for three seasons at guard and center, this ended up being a pretty empty bunch for Flood.

2011





Flood hit pretty big on two out of three from this class, as Lumpkin was a three-year starter at left tackle and Johnson started 50 games at left guard/center. Johnson wasn't drafted, but he did spend 12 days on the active roster for the Ravens in 2015 and was on several practice squads over the course of the next three seasons.

2012







Flood cranked out another productive class with this group, as three of the five ended up being multiple-year starters along the offensive line, while a fourth (Arcidiacono) was a multiple-year starter at tight end for the Scarlet Knights.

2013



The only player in the 2013 class started 34 games in his career for Rutgers at left guard and was an honorable mention All-Big 10 player.

2014






Although this wasn't a group that Flood had a chance to coach all the way through the end of their careers, Cole turned out to be 34-game starter for the Scarlet Knights at left tackle.

2015






Flood's last class at Rutgers featured one of the best players that he recruited, even though Flood didn't get a chance to develop him. Jackson was a multi-year starter who ended up transferring to Ohio State for his senior year and was drafted in the third round by the Detroit Lions in 2020.

No. 3 - Ranking a combined 2022 and 23 recruiting class ...

This thing breaks down into tiers from my perspective.

Five stars

1. DJ Campbell
2. Kelvin Banks

High 4 stars

3. Neto Umeozulu

Mid Four-Stars

4. Cam Williams

Low Four Stars

(Note: You can pretty much rank this group in any order)

5-10

Jaydon Chatman
Connor Stroh
Trevor Goosby
Cole Hutson
Payton Kirkland
Malik Agbo

High Three stars

Connor Robertson
Andre Cojoe

No. 4 - This and That (recruiting thoughts) ...

... With Christian Jones and junior Angilau leaving after this season, the Longhorns are currently scheduled to have 19 offensive linemen on campus going into the 2023 season if you include the five current commitments. Of those 19, 12 are from the last two recruiting classes and recruited specifically by Flood. It makes me think that the attrition in the next 12 months is going to come from recruits that were in the 2020 and 2021 recruiting classes.

... Before completely freaking out over the portal rule changes that might be coming to college football, did you know that 19 of 24 NCAA sports allow for players to transfer whenever they want without having to sit out a year?

... Is it me or is TJ Shanahan trying to recruit his way into this Texas class?


... Meanwhile, the new kid is already getting his recruiting on. Sounds like Arch told him to get to work.


... Jalen Hale on Instagram after Texas landed Kirkland.
View attachment 3020

No. 5 - Quinn Ewers ...

At this point, I'm all for him growing all of the hair out as far as he can until he's mistaken for Captain Caveman.

Signed,
Bald Man

View attachment 3021

No. 6 - Updated Texas Scholarship Board...

View attachment 3027

No. 7 – BUY or SELL …

BUY-SELL.gif




(Buy) These coaches aren't turning away a super blue OL prospect.



(Sell) I'd guess between 15-20.



(Buy) Nothing has changed from my perspective.



(Buy) I don't think Sark is in the Show Friends business. It's a big year for PK.



(Buy) See you on Tuesday night. You better get a question in.



(Sell) I don't think $25K is enough money to buy happiness for most college kids. That being said, the Pancake Factory at Texas could test whether $50K is a different animal when we look for OL attrition in the next 13 months. You bring up a very good point, but I'm not sure that I know the number that truly makes it problematic.



(Sell) I don't think we'll see a trap door for any of the kids in the 2023 class, but it has to loom as a possibility after what happened last year.



(Buy) That would establish a baseline of 24 super-blue chip players on the roster after a first four-year cycle, which would rank third in the nation right now. Mix in some big-time out of state talent and you're definitely cooking with grease.



(Sell) I keep expecting more.



(Buy) Typically, recruiting sites come in real handy for coaches as they travel out of state. I can't tell you how many times in my life I've taken a call from a coach that wants to know how to best map out a travel plan that allows for them to see as many kids as possible, while sneaking in some golf at the same time.



(Buy) That's very possible, but it's going to require the kids in the 2023 class to show more patience than we mostly see in college football in this day and age.



(Sell) Top 40? Yes.



(Sell) Shawn Watson has to be on the list. So, does Larry Mac Duff. Koening probably has to be on the list because he was on the staff for less than a year before being fired by Charlie Strong. That leaves only one space. I might have Bobby Jack Wright on the list, just for his one season as defensive coordinator in 1997. That's probably not fair to Wright, who was a good coach and recruiter before he was promoted to defensive coordinator, but the decision by John Mackovic to hire him basically cost Mackovic his job 11 months later.

No. 8 - Scattershooting ...

... Here comes NFL training camps! The dead season is almost over.

... Get better and stay strong, John Metchie. We're all with you.

... Is this the most memorable play from the entire 2022 MLB season?


... Really could have done without the Cubs sweeping the Phillies this weekend.

... Watched The Gray Man this weekend. Feels like it tried very hard to be John Wick and comes up just short. Still it's one hit of dopamine after another for anyone that likes a John Wick-ish movie. I don't know if I will ever watch it again, but it was worth my two hours.

... Paddy Pimblett got me to turn into the UFC London event this weekend. It had been too long. I might be back in the game.


... We're less than two weeks away from the start of the Premier League season. My predicted top four finish ... 1. Liverpool. 2. Man City. 3. Tottenham 4. Chelsea.

... I've had a very quiet 2022 on the card collecting market, but consider me very happy to have added this to my collection this week:
View attachment 3025

No. 9 - The List: Top 10 MCU Movies ...

There have been 29 Marvel Comic movies with the recent release of Thor: Love and Thunder.

I thought this week I'd take a stab at ranking the best of the best.

10. Doctor Strange (2016)
9. Captain America: Civil War (2016)
8. Avengers: Infinity War (2018)
7. Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021)
6. Iron Man (2008)
5. Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014)
4. Thor: Ragnarok (2017)
3. Guardians of the Galaxy (2014)
2. Black Panther (2018)
1. Avengers: End Game (2019)

No. 10 - And Finally ...

Came across this photo and thought it was the perfect way to end this week's column.

Oh, how I would love to have been able to seen him play in person. Would love to see these as a throwback uniform in an upcoming season.

View attachment 3028
Back in the day students could get season tickets. For Earl's senior year mine were on the 50 yard line on Row 55 on the east side of the stadium. Hot early in the year, but it was the top row and I could lean back on the concrete wall if I wanted to. Got tickets to A&M to see Earl run for 222 yards and catch a 60 yard td bomb while annihilating the Ags. Then got 48 yard line seats to the Cotton Bowl only to see Notre Dame dominate us. I was right behind the Notre Dame bench. I went to high school with their center, David Huffman. I had run in to him on Greenville Ave and he told me that while they couldn't stop Earl from getting his 100 yards, they dominated at every other position on the field......proved to be true. He saw me in the stands and grinned the whole game.

That year was awesome celebrating on the Drag after games once we became No 1 in the nation sometime in October after an unexpected Michigan loss.

I was blessed to witness one of the best years (and best players) in Texas football up close and personal.

A little known fact......Earl had a few brothers on that team. I was told he would make the rounds to each of the classes to make sure they were attending.........What a great guy!!!!!

HOOK EM!
 
IMO he would. Reality is he was somewhat undersized even back then but still was rated relative to a 6.0 today. He would be heavier today as a recruit. I think what likely got him big time looks was going up against Sam Adams and Shane Rink at practice. JMO
Somehow, I never realized that those three played on the same high school team.

Wasn't there some recruiting visit screw up that pushed Adams away from us and to the Aggies?
 
Back in the day students could get season tickets. For Earl's senior year mine were on the 50 yard line on Row 55 on the east side of the stadium. Hot early in the year, but it was the top row and I could lean back on the concrete wall if I wanted to. Got tickets to A&M to see Earl run for 222 yards and catch a 60 yard td bomb while annihilating the Ags. Then got 48 yard line seats to the Cotton Bowl only to see Notre Dame dominate us. I was right behind the Notre Dame bench. I went to high school with their center, David Huffman. I had run in to him on Greenville Ave and he told me that while they couldn't stop Earl from getting his 100 yards, they dominated at every other position on the field......proved to be true. He saw me in the stands and grinned the whole game.

That year was awesome celebrating on the Drag after games once we became No 1 in the nation sometime in October after an unexpected Michigan loss.

I was blessed to witness one of the best years (and best players) in Texas football up close and personal.

A little known fact......Earl had a few brothers on that team. I was told he would make the rounds to each of the classes to make sure they were attending.........What a great guy!!!!!

HOOK EM!
I left out i had 50 yard seats at OU where Johnny Johnson made an unassisted tackle on Billy Sims inside the 5 yard line late in the 4rth quarter to win that game 13-6
 
Harder to draw conclusions from that time because he didn't get to see out the careers of the players he recruited and he was working with uncommon amounts of elite talent.
The fact that he got hired by the GOAT, and the GOAT wanted to retain him, along with the fact that he got kids drafted, is good enough for me. If he doesn't get credit for his time at Bama, then we can't blame Warehime or Hand for their time at Texas.....
 
Somehow, I never realized that those three played on the same high school team.

Wasn't there some recruiting visit screw up that pushed Adams away from us and to the Aggies?

He was a year younger than the two DTs. Regarding Adams, the reality is ACES has been cleaning up in those types of recruits for nearly a decade. IMO they probably going to get Adams anyway. The Shane Dronett incident allegedly involving some racial sh*t likely didn’t help. But again, it would have been a huge upset if we got him.
 
No. 5 - Quinn Ewers ...

At this point, I'm all for him growing all of the hair out as far as he can until he's mistaken for Captain Caveman.

Signed,
Bald Man
1658681135401-png.3021

Maybe he'll morph into this guy:

los-angeles-rams-v-green-bay-packers.jpg
 
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He was a year younger than the two DTs. Regarding Adams, the reality is ACES has been cleaning up in those types of recruits for nearly a decade. IMO they probably going to get Adams anyway. The Shane Dronett incident allegedly involving some racial sh*t likely didn’t help. But again, it would have been a huge upset if we got him.
Yeah, it was Dronett. That was what I couldn't remember.
 
Ketch, I had just graduated two years before Earl came to Texas. I had landed a great job in Austin and bought season tickets. I got to see him play every game his first three years before taking a job in Dallas and giving up my tickets.
My favorite play was Earl's one and only play on defense, that I remember. It was his freshman year and we were at home against Arkansas Late in first half, Earl already had a long TD run, and we had Arkansas backed up pretty deep. Punt return team came out and Earl lined up over the center. When the ball was snapped, he blew by the center and the guard, knifed into the backfield and cleanly blocked the punt, which Doug English gathered in and ran a short distance into the end zone. Earl didn't have many carries that game, as DKR used him sparingly, but that one play, to me, defined what a stud player Texas had. The rest is history.
I was a 10 year old at that game. Randy Gerdes got me and a couple of friends into the lockerroom.

I got a lot of autographs that day.
Earl was standing in a towel and to this 10 year olds eyes he was the biggest and not handsomest human being I'd ever seen.
 
What Shane Dronett incident?

The only incident I know of involving Shane was some off-season aggy harassment so Shane gave them a physical attitude adjustment.

It was not wise to cross big Shane Dronett.
 
I remember when Campbell won the Heisman Trophy, it was during final exams week. If I remember correctly it was on a Monday night...and I can't remember if it was televised or not. Somehow, I seem to remember watching it...down in the TV lounge at Jester. It's just hard for me to imagine that in the pre cable age that any network would have shown this on live TV.

Anyway, what I absolutely remember is that within minutes of this event, the campus flooded out of their dorms and apartments and whatever, and just held a huge impromptu pep rally. Austin police had gotten really good at managing the Saturday night Guadalupe Street pep rally's (so much so that later in the year they were nowhere near as fun as earlier), but I don't think they were prepared for one on a Monday night during final exams.
There has to video somewhere of this. I'd love to see it.
 
IMO he would. Reality is he was somewhat undersized even back then but still was rated relative to a 6.0 today. He would be heavier today as a recruit. I think what likely got him big time looks was going up against Sam Adams and Shane Rink at practice. JMO
What a special player he was.
 
The first Longhorn game I ever saw in person was 1977 TX/OU. My brother was a freshman at UT and got two tickets. I was 14 at the time and so lucky that he took me instead of one of his friends. It was awesome as you know! I was hooked and ended up following my brother in 1981. I've been to lots of game since, but will never forget watching Earl in the first one.
great story!
 
Ricky has to be in there.
Sure, but as great as he was, he simply was not an Earl equivalent. I saw every game Earl played. The losses in his junior 5-5-1 year all were games in which he didn’t play. His dominance as a senior is unmatched, even by Ricky’s record year.
 
Back in the day students could get season tickets. For Earl's senior year mine were on the 50 yard line on Row 55 on the east side of the stadium. Hot early in the year, but it was the top row and I could lean back on the concrete wall if I wanted to. Got tickets to A&M to see Earl run for 222 yards and catch a 60 yard td bomb while annihilating the Ags. Then got 48 yard line seats to the Cotton Bowl only to see Notre Dame dominate us. I was right behind the Notre Dame bench. I went to high school with their center, David Huffman. I had run in to him on Greenville Ave and he told me that while they couldn't stop Earl from getting his 100 yards, they dominated at every other position on the field......proved to be true. He saw me in the stands and grinned the whole game.

That year was awesome celebrating on the Drag after games once we became No 1 in the nation sometime in October after an unexpected Michigan loss.

I was blessed to witness one of the best years (and best players) in Texas football up close and personal.

A little known fact......Earl had a few brothers on that team. I was told he would make the rounds to each of the classes to make sure they were attending.........What a great guy!!!!!

HOOK EM!
 
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