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Ketch's 10 Thoughts From the Weekend (The true task that awaits Tom Herman...)

Who is talking about playoffs? 9-10 is hardly unreasonable. Hell the most negative poster on the board is throwing out 10. If he wins 8 and shows good things most prob won't bitch either. There isn't much excuse for Texas to not be a good team this season with a great head coach and solid staff.

I'm not big into fetching rocks, but I'll toggle you as comments are made expecting 10+, B12 champ and CFP. I'll be happy with 8 wins this season, but I think majority will not. If 8 wins is "good" for this year then we are aligned.
 
These kids have to be trained to learn how to win and perform like winners under stress at this level.

That is not a given.
The team/roster changes every year. Charlie was the anamoly. New coaches often win right away. Tom Herman has shown that he can.

It is not a given, but I believe it just as strongly as I knew CS would fail. The UT problem was coaching, not "loser" players.
 
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Sell) I believe that the staff will look around, but these rainbow unicorns are easier to find in the imagination than they are sometimes found in reality.


@Ketchum You weren't nearly this kind to Strong on the transfer QB deal as this statement is. As I recall you raked him over the coals for not doing more to address this need. Why the different take? No accusations just a question.
the answer to your question is in J Tull's post above:

" The difference in Charlie having Swoopes and true freshman Heard vs Herman having Sophomore starter Shane and true fish Sam after going thru a spring is enormous. The difference in those two situations is easily worth 1-3 wins. We were horrible with Swoopes and Heard, even with a solid D that year. Neither could consistently complete a pass."
 
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The team/roster changes every year. Charlie was the anamoly. New coaches often win right away. Tom Herman has shown that he can.

It is not a given, but I believe it just as strongly as I knew CS would fail. The UT problem was coaching, not "loser" players.
Texas has more than one problem. It wasn't just Strong.
 
the answer to your question is in J Tull's post above:

" The difference in Charlie having Swoopes and true freshman Heard vs Herman having Sophomore starter Shane and true fish Sam after going thru a spring is enormous. The difference in those two situations is easily worth 1-3 wins. We were horrible with Swoopes and Heard, even with a solid D that year. Neither could consistently complete a pass."
Texas was pretty horrible at times last year.
 
Anybody paying shouldn't be that surprised by Allen ' s play. He and Jones are having very solid years.
 
Not that anyone cares but my opinion on why the team lost so many "winnable games" last year was a lack of attention to detail. We can argue the causes, but there is no doubt Special Teams were completely overlooked, and defensive discipline was a joke. I just think Strong was a big picture guy, and not a detail oriented guy. It's certainly not an insult because I would lump myself as the same.

Tom Herman is a detail guy, a perfectionist, and for him it will about getting every little detail dialed in. Bad habits are hard to overcome, but it can be done, and I feel pretty safe that Tom Herman isn't going to let any bad habits fester. Eradicating those bad habits started last week and will continue until the first snap of the season.

Accountability with Herman is huge and while I am sure Strong held his guys accountable, by the time he did (firing and replacing coordinators at least) it was entirely too late. Herman knows his staff members and he knows what he wants and he know what it's supposed to look like. If it doesn't look correct, he will make sure it does. We have all read by now the stories of Herman chewing out his coaches in front of the entire team for underperformance by their position grouping in a game.

This stuff makes a difference - how much I don't know, but I honestly believe that this team will finally learn what it means to be prepared and that will make the difference in being a 5-6 win team and a 9-10 win team. We will soon see.
 
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Former Texas defensive backs coach Duane Akina used to have a favorite expression when discussing players who weren’t quite ready for prime-time.

“It’s not an add water, instant player,” he’d say time and time again throughout the years.

I’ve been reminded of Akina’s tried and true remarks several times the last couple of weeks whenever I’m engaged in discussion about the upside of Tom Herman’s 2017 Texas Longhorns. With calls for Herman to win nine or 10 games in year one, especially in light of Charlie Strong’s comments during the 2016 season about 2017 expectations, I find myself thinking the same thing over and over and over.

A lot of Texas fans don’t get it.

After years of steady decline that reached the basement in three consecutive losing seasons, the Texas Longhorns are not an add water, instant success kind of job.

The task that Tom Herman has been given is not an easy one, regardless of the talent Charlie Strong left him with the remains of the 2015 and 2016 recruiting classes.

Many of you reading this won’t want to hear this, but Texas is a losing program right now. It a program full of players that most of you would flinch to call losers, but they sure as hell aren’t winners at this level. Outside of Antwuan Davis, Jake Oliver and Naashon Hughes, there’s not a single Texas player that has ever experienced a winning season, which is an incredibly low bar to set when you consider where the bar for this program should be.

This program is currently a loser. The proof of that is 6-7, 5-7 and 5-7.

Oh, and the Kansas game.

The good news for Texas fans is that Herman has been in this spot before. When he took over Houston in 2014, it was a program that was a combined 13-12 in the previous two seasons and needed an internal reboot to get back to real relevance. Considering the Cougars went 8-5 in 2013 under Tony Levine, it’s not a radical thought to suggest that Herman inherits an even bigger reboot than the one that landed him this job.

So, when I hear that Herman is challenging his players and not making friends among them or their parents a chief priority, I totally get it.

I even understand his desire to push the media outside of the program’s inner workings as much as possible.

You might like a little sausage in the morning with your breakfast, but there’s a reason why the sausage-makers prefer that you not see the sausage-making process. What needs to take place in the program won’t be easy or pretty, which is why Herman wants as much internal privacy as possible.

When I think about what Nick Saban or Urban Meyer would do if they were the ones taking over the Texas gig, I have no doubts that being a jerk to pretty much everyone would be part of the deal. These players don’t need friends, they need someone to completely rebuild their inner-wirings in a way that prohibits constant losing.

This program needs to be made to feel incredibly uncomfortable because constant comfort is one of the reasons why this program needs Herman in the first place.

There will be plenty of time to make friends in the future, but Herman has work to do and it requires more labor than anyone around these parts probably wants to admit.

Oh, a cake has been baked, alright. It’s just too bad that it’s the kind that will make you violently ill from the use of expired eggs and butter.

No. 2 – Gary Johnson’s commit sends a statement ...

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Three things really jump out to me when I think about what happened on Friday when the Longhorns picked up a commitment from one of their top two targets remaining on the board.

a. Todd Orlando has some serious talent to work with at the linebacker position. While his boss might be telling everyone that no one on the team currently has a starting position, I have to believe deep down Orlando has every intention of putting Johnson into a position where he’s playing right away, which is understandable because Johnson might be the most ready-made impact interior linebacker prospect the Longhorns have recruited in a long time.

When you consider that the linebacker position already has as much talent as any on the team, the addition of Johnson is adding strength to strength and it’s easy to see that Orlando’s group of players might be the unit that leads this team on Saturdays in 2017.

b. Johnson’s commitment has to be a wake-up call to guys like Malik Jefferson, Jeffrey McCulloch, Anthony Wheeler, Edwin Freeman and Erick Fowler. It’s going to be survival of the fittest and if I’m in that group, I’m going to be living with Orlando in the off-season, while digesting everything that’s important to him.

c. It’s a great sign when elite-level recruits are passing up visits to the likes of USC because they are ready to jump on board after a Texas official visit. Considering this staff is behind the eight-ball in tracking so many of these players, it says quite a bit that the coaches were able to turn Johnson to Texas so quickly.

d. How about Orlando? His reputation as a recruiter is pretty non-existent, yet he’s the guy who is ultimately responsible for landing the staff’s first true impact prospect. Attaboy, Orlando. I see you working.

No. 3– Don’t look now, but ...

The Longhorns are currently ranked 34th in the Rivals.com 2017 Team Rankings with 10 days to go until National Signing Day.

From an average star ranking per prospect standpoint, The Longhorns rank 15th in the nation with an average of 3.47, which is less than a full tenth of a point behind the likes of Notre Dame, Penn State and USC.

Eight of the 15 commitments in the class are rated four-stars by Rivals and three more are high three stars.

This class still has needs that it needs to have filled, but it’s a better class than most realize and it has a chance to get in the top-20 range if it can close out strong in the final days of the 2017 window.

No. 4 – Scattershooting on the Longhorns/recruiting …


… For a guy who doesn’t say much to reporters, K’Lavon Chaisson sure loves to gush about the Longhorns online, especially with social media. If his online vibe means anything at all, he’s all Longhorn. If he chooses LSU, it’ll forever serve as a reminder that online vibes can sometimes be nothing more than someone playing the recruiting game right back at the game that tries to play them. Oddly enough, Chaisson is the only person on Twitter that I’ve ever followed that deletes his Tweets as he goes. Literally, all but one of the tweets he’s made in the last week-plus are still in existence.

Interesting update today on four-star cornerback Chevin Calloway from the Arkansas Site in the Rivals network. While he said very nice things about his visit to Arkansas this weekend, it didn’t sound like he was overwhelmed.

"It was cool," Calloway said. "At first I thought it would be weird because we're all from different states, but we all came together and had fun and laughed. When we got down to business and talked schemes and stuff everyone knew what they were talking about. It was good to come together and communicate."

He also provided an idea of what to expect from here on out.

"I'm going to take a couple of days of just getting off the high of being here," Calloway said. "Getting all this stuff thrown at me. Then I'm going to sit down and look at the pros and cons of each school.

"If there is (a decision) before signing day, I probably won't announce it before signing day, but I will let the coach know that's the school I'm going to."

… For a guy with such a monster offer list, I’m not really sure I understand the low three-star ranking for Winter Park, Florida wide receiver Jordan Pouncey. I’m going to have to find out from one of our Rivals recruiting guys why the former Notre Dame commitment is viewed so lightly. It just doesn’t make a ton of sense.

… Westfield running back Daniel Young calling his visit this weekend “pretty dope” makes me feel like I’m not as old as the birth date suggests I am. #bringprettydopeback

… In order to finish with a top-20 class, I think they probably need to finish with Chaisson, Chevin Calloway, Stephen Zabie and a couple of three-stars to give themselves a chance. That would give the Longhorns 11 four-star commitments.

No. 5 – Buy or sell …

BUY or SELL: Texas flips a big recruit nobody is expecting right now?

(Sell) I don’t think it’s completely out of the realm of possibilities, but it’s getting to be late in the game and I don’t know that a big recruit is going to suddenly change directions in the last 10 days without an official visit. I suppose Kary Vincent might represent a possibility if we’re talking about players that the majority of people don’t believe Texas will land and not candidates from left field.

BUY or SELL: Tom Herman will pick up a transfer or Juco QB before Summer?

(Sell) I believe that the staff will look around, but these rainbow unicorns are easier to find in the imagination than they are sometimes found in reality.

BUY or SELL: The high volume of OOS offers will hurt Texas with some Texas high school coaches?

(Sell) No, Herman has already established himself inside the state and has a ton of assistants with endless connections. I don’t think we’ll so much as hear a single bad word about it moving forward from coaches around the state.

BUY or SELL: This 3-4 defense will have 4 LB on the field at the same time more the 25% of the defensive snaps?

(Buy) Oh yeah.

BUY or SELL: With the most recent addition to the Texas linebacker core, Malik Jefferson becomes the outside edge blitzer he was always destined to be?

(Buy) I fully expect Todd Orlando to be very creative in his use of Jefferson this season and that will include using him as a pressure player.

BUY or SELL: Kirk Johnson is healthy by fall two a days?

(Buy) I think so. There’s very little Kirk Johnson talk this year, especially compared to last season when his name was all the rage.

BUY or SELL: Texas loses one of its current commits between now and NSD?

(Sell) This is really a question about Temple defensive end Taquan Graham and I think he’ll be a Longhorn on National Signing Day.

BUY or SELL: Bob Stoops will continue to "look the other way" and recruit known trouble-makers and allow players who have broken laws to play? Meaning the Mixon episode will zero impact on how Stoops conducts his business in Norman.

(Buy) That old dog ain’t trying to learn new tricks. I’m guessing he’ll try and make a public example out of a guy or two for optical purposes, but we know what he’s about after all these years. There are too many examples to suggest otherwise.

BUY or SELL: Is Aaron Rodgers still the most physically gifted and accurate qb ever?

(Buy) Nothing has changed.

BUY or SELL: Jurgen Klopp wins a Premier League title before Tottenham?

(Buy) In Klopp, I trust. As he continues to fine-tune the roster and find pieces that fit his style, I believe that Liverpool will take the next step ahead of the Spurs, although the Spurs have a roster that could easily prove me wrong if it ever completely comes together.

No. 6 – The day Jarrett Allen became a star …

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I think there were probably two things on the minds of at least 90 percent of the Texas fans that are still hanging with the men’s basketball team this season following Saturday’s gutsy performance in Lawrence.

“Oooooh, so this is why Jarrett Allen was rated as a five-star recruit.”

“I hope he doesn’t do what he did on Saturday too many more times this season.”

For those that missed it (and I’m guessing a lot of you did), Allen dropped 22 points, 19 rebounds and three blocks in 34 minutes of action against one of the best teams in the country on its home floor. Although it was a different kind of performance than the one Kevin Durant had in Lawrence a decade ago, it brought to mind those types of memories because of its sheer dominance in moments.

Although he’s scored in double figures in nine of his last 10 games and has averaged 16.5 points and 11.3 rebounds per game in his last four, Saturday truly seemed to represent a breakout moment for the freshman from Austin.

As he starts to show flashes of his upside, it’s hard not to wonder if he’s playing his way into possible lottery territory as an NBA draft pick and what that might mean if that kind of projection exists.

Don’t laugh.

In what is considered to be a fairly deep 2017 Draft, Allen is currently rated as the No. 23 prospect by DraftExpress.com in its updated rankings.

The vibe for most of the season has been that he’ll definitely return, but Saturday was the first time it really crossed my mind that his only season in Austin might be this disaster of a lost one, while everyone waits for Matt Coleman to arrive.

It changes the way we’re all going to watch the rest of this season, well … those of us that are still watching this 7-12 basketball team.

No. 7 – Words I never thought I’d write …

The New England Patriots better be careful because the Atlanta Falcons, led by former Texas wide receiver Kyle Shanahan, might be an unstoppable force of nature.

When Atlanta finished the regular season as one of the highest-scoring teams in NFL history, I think most people thought it was a cute story, but there weren’t a lot of people proclaiming that the Falcons were about to overwhelm the rest of the NFC like it was Bruce Leeroy and they were Sho Nuff.

Now?

Now, when someone shouts, “Who’s the master?”, you say, “Matty Ice!”

There’s actually a lesson in what we’re watching with Matt Ryan, who was never special in his first eight seasons in the NFL, but in his ninth season at the age of 31, he’s become a force of nature while surrounded by a monster supporting cast. The Falcons have waited and waited and waited for Ryan to be THAT guy and finally… after the entire Obama administration… he has arrived.

Personally, I think we’re getting ready to watch one of the all-time great Super Bowls.

Early prediction: Atlanta 37 New England 34 in overtime.

No. 8 – Eternal Randomness of the Spotty Sports Mind …

… Favorite Tweet of the Weekend


… Watch the hell out, NBA. The Golden State Warriors are starting to find their stride midway through the season and monstrous beatdowns of Cleveland, Oklahoma City and Houston this week while playing B+ games was quite the signal that the power of the Death Star might be quite immense by the time we get to May.

… Over the course of those three wins, Durant scored 91 points on 51 shots (34 of 51) and was +77 while on the floor.

… Speaking of Durant, after all of the pettiness we’ve seen from Russell Westbrook since July, can’t we all agree he made the right decision to get out of Oklahoma City? The more he swears that he’s not bothered by it all, the more it’s pretty obvious that he’s actually still pretty wrecked by what happened.

… Kawhi Leonard is so freaking good. It’s a crazy historic time in the league where he can’t get much run as a top five player in the game because of the presence of LeBron James, Kevin Durant, James Harden, Russell Westbrook and Steph Curry. If we’re talking about this year and this year alone, you have to at least move Curry out of the way to get him in that grouping.

… Joel Embiid-Related Tweet of the Weekend


… What a record-breaking goal by Wayne Rooney on Saturday to steal a result when it looked like Stoke was headed for three points. It really was a break-taking moment.

… No one is catching Chelsea. The EPL race is over. Too many teams just keep giving away too many points.

… One team that has given away points in more needless fashion than anyone this year is my beloved Liverpool. For the first time this season, I thought I was watching the Brendan Rodgers’ Reds instead of Jurgen Klopp’s Reds on Saturday. In inexplicably losing to Swansea, the Reds kissed away any real chance to try and track Chelsea down. Now this season is about staying in the top four.

… The officiating in the EPL seems to get worse each week and each of the two biggest games of the last two weeks have been decided by poor officiating decisions.

… As a pretty big UFC fan, am I allowed to admit that none of the upcoming cards really do anything for me?

… The only thing even remotely interesting about the Australian Open is the prospect of a Williams sisters making the final, whether it is Serena, Venus or both.

No. 9 – This and That ...

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Oscar nominations will be announced on Tuesday and after knocking Hacksaw Ridge and Lion off my “need to watch list” this week, I’m pretty sure I’ve seen all of the films that will earn Best Picture nominations.

Unless Nocturnal Animals makes the cut.

Of the top 11 favorites in the incredibly historically accurate AwardsCircuit.com, I’ve knocked out 10 of the top 11 favorites out of the way with more than a month to go until Oscars Night.

Personally, I think it’s been a pretty exceptional year of movies. In fact, it’s been such a good year that when it comes to Best Picture, I’m kind of torn between four or five different films and since walking out of Lion this weekend, I’m more confused than ever about the order of the top films.

Therefore, before I give my updated rankings, here’s what’s been floating around in my head for the last few days (without giving away spoilers).

a. Lion completely knocked me over, head over heels. I don’t know that this has ever happened to me while watching a movie, but I pretty much had tears rolling down my cheeks for two straight hours. Maybe it connected with me to such a degree because I’m a parent to two young children, but at one point I could hear what seemed like a dozen people around me who were audibly impacted. Yes, I could hear people crying in the movie. It’s just a beautiful piece of cinema in almost every way.

b. There’s a part of me that wonders if we’ve all overrated La-la Land because we’re completely in love with Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone as an on-screen couple. It’s a wonderfully fun movie that made me feel happy while watching it, there’s so much to like, but I find myself torn over the question of whether it’s a special movie. As someone who is married to a woman that has spent her life obsessing over Gene Kelly movies, I’ve seen enough of them to know that the performance levels in the truly all-time great musicals surpasses what Gosling and Stone are capable of.

c. I’m going to get some pushback on this, but I just didn’t love Moonlight. Don’t get me wrong, it has some incredibly special qualities and the first ⅔ of the movie is the stuff of an Oscars winner, but I just didn’t feel like the movie closes the show in a way that holds up the same quality of the first two segments. There’s such a drastic jump in the final section of the movie and there was just too much unexplained about a main character that I feel like the audience is completely invested in. I just had so many questions (in a distracting way) when the movie was over and none were answered.

d. Although Manchester by the Sea is one of the most depressing movies of all-time, Casey Affleck’s performance is hauntingly awesome, so much so that I volunteered for a second viewing so that my wife could see it, in part because I was so wowed by all of the little moments inside his performance that impacted me as a viewer. I got into a mini-debate about the movie with a couple this weekend and I found myself rattling off about 10 scenes that stood out to me as “moments” throughout the movie.

e. Andrew Garfield isn’t going to win, but you can make the case that he should be nominated in the Best Actor category twice.

f. The most underrated performance of the year is Jessica Chastain in Miss Sloane.

g. Dev Patel should win Best Supporting Actor and it’s not even close. Same with Viola Davis in Best Supporting Actress.

Ok, here’s my updated list based on movies that I have seen.

(Still need to see: 20th Century Woman, Captain Fantastic, Elle, Loving, Jackie and Nocturnal Animals

Best Picture

1. Lion
2. Manchester by the Sea
3. Arrival
4. Silence
5. La-la Land
6. Moonlight
7. Hacksaw Ridge
8. Fences
9. Hidden Figures
10. Hell or High Water

Best Actor

1. Casey Affleck (Manchester by the Sea)
2. Denzel Washington (Fences)
3. Ryan Gosling (La La Land)
4. Andrew Garfield (Hacksaw Ridge)
5. Andrew Garfield (Silence)

Best Actress

1. Jessica Chastain (Miss Sloane)
2. Emma Stone (La La Land))
3. Amy Adams (Arrival)
4. Taraji P. Henson (Hidden Figures)
5. Marion Cotillard (Allied)

Best Supporting Actor

1. Dev Patel (Lion)
2. Mahershala Ali (Moonlight)
3. Issey Ogata (Silence)
4. Andre Holland (Moonlight)
5. Jeff Bridges (Hell or High Water)

Best Supporting Actress

1. Viola Davis (Fences)
2. Michelle Williams (Manchester by the Sea)
3. Naomi Harris (Moonlight)
4. Octavia Spencer (Hidden Figures))
5. Lupita Nyong’o (Queen of Katwe)

Best Director

1. Kenneth Lonergan (Manchester by the Sea)
2. Denis Villeneuve (Arrival)
3. Damien Chazelle (La La Land)
4. Barry Jenkins (Moonlight)
5. Garth Davis (Lion)

No. 10 - And finally …

God bless this wonderful country of ours.

With all that took place over the weekend, I couldn't help but think of words once spoken by Ronald Reagan.

"Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same."
La La Land is a masterpiece of cinema, imo. Phenomenal movie. Chazelle, with Whiplash and now la la land has become one of my favorite writer/directors.
 
- I'm sticking with eight wins in 2017. Jumping from five wins and a loss to Kansas to 10 wins and competing for the Big 12 title is asking a lot.

- Man, almost forgot about Erick Fowler. That was a wasted redshirt.

- I was expecting to see those old Falcons fall flat on their faces. Dan Quinn is the real deal.
 
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- I'm sticking with eight wins in 2017. Jumping from five wins and a loss to Kansas to 10 wins and competing for the Big 12 title is asking a lot.

- Man, almost forgot about Erick Fowler. That was a wasted redshirt.

- I was expecting to see those old Falcons fall flat on their faces. Dan Quinn is the real deal.
The Falcons offensive personnel is pretty scary.
 
"Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same."

same for our savior
 
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Here's my original question:

"Sell) I believe that the staff will look around, but these rainbow unicorns are easier to find in the imagination than they are sometimes found in reality."


@Ketchum You weren't nearly this kind to Strong on the transfer QB deal as this statement is. As I recall you raked him over the coals for not doing more to address this need. Why the different take? No accusations just a question.
 
Most of these kids have experienced winning big in high school so a couple of down years in college isn't that hard to overcome. Plenty of talent in a relatively weak conference to do well right away.
 
Saw some movies this weekend. Hidden Figures was solid. The Lion was really good. Patel should win for that role. Arrival is still my favorite of the year.
 
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