ADVERTISEMENT

Ketch's 10 Thoughts From the Weekend (Xanax should sponsor this week's Big 12 Championship...)

How can you do my man Elway like that? Went to 5 Super bowls and dragged crap teams to three of them.


I agree.....I put Elway in and take out Favre, the most overrated QB of all time. And Rodgers deserves to be on the list but down in the bottom 5.....must have rated him on "looks" and ability, not performance.
 
Emmitt Smith routinely gets bumped outside the Top 5 all-time NFL RBs due to the "he ran behind the greatest offensive line in NFL history" line of thinking, even though only 1 of those offensive linemen has been selected to the Hall of Fame. Shouldn't that same standard apply to Steve Young? What did he accomplish without a Hall of Fame wide receiver catching his passes? Young didn't actually become the full-time starter until he was in his 30s, but he was the full-time starter in SF for 7 seasons, and 3 of those 7 seasons he was throwing to Jerry Rice and Terrell Owens. If ever there was a player who should get the "that was the system, not the player" treatment, it's Steve Young.
 
  • Like
Reactions: txfight
Montana's career isn't as good as a lot of people think it is because of injuries.

The four rings are a checkmate moment for some, but I don't think he was actually better than Steve Young.

Boy we sure are remembering different Joe Montana’s- I recall him being as good a two minute QB with everything on the line as there was-!tied with Roger Staubach in my book

Not only that but the first SB he won was with very little offensive talent around him. He also broke my heart that year with “The catch” and the late Dwight Clark. By his last Super Bowl the talent around him was extremely good - Roger Craig, Jerry Rice, John Taylor, Rathman and a criminally underrated offensive line.
 
  • Like
Reactions: cordpetee
@Ketchum - we don't always agree, but you are absolutely correct about the rematch between Texas and Oklahoma. In many ways, it is a lose-lose situation.

Texas in many ways cannot afford to lose this game more so than ou. They have a shot to go to the CFB which is huge, but they have been in the CFB previously.

Whereas Herman's win over ou back in October is what has helped defined this season and created the motivation that Texas is back. Yes, there have been some silly loses (MD, Okie St and WVU), but Texas cannot afford to have the win against ou back in October lessened. That win is vital for recruiting and for how the season is seen as a whole going forward.
 
Good for you putting Brady over Rodgers.

Also, Baker is a douche, but Hue Jackson rides the same douche bus.

Rodgers belongs on the list.........just way down the list. Seriously over Staubach or Manning and Montana? Seriously?
 
  • Like
Reactions: TheAssquatch
Some people still think pretty highly of Muschamp as a head coach. I’ve always voiced him being handed the keys as a big player in our demise and he’s shown how poorly he did at Florida and is currently doing at SC as a trend of bad coaching as the head guy.

I know @Dr. Leo Marvin and a few others seem to still think highly of him, but facts are facts.
 

This is the game that the Big 12 has been dreaming of for almost two decades.

Texas vs. Oklahoma ... for everything.

For so long, it was the championship game that couldn't happen, even if the two programs were always the two best teams, because of their placement in the same division. However, the only thing holding the game back the last couple of seasons with the reemergence of the title game was Texas not being very good.

That is no longer an issue with the resurgence of the Texas program this season, which means on Saturday we get a game that has an extremely high set of circumstances. It's one thing to declare that the winner of this rivalry puts itself in the pole position for a Big 12 title and it's another to actually determine the title.

When Roy Williams leaped over Brett Robin in 2001, it wound up not mattering in the big picture. The same is true of Colt McCoy and Co. winning in 2006. Or Charlie Strong getting his biggest win as the Texas coach back in 2015.

Fast forward to December and what we have in front of us is a situation that renders what happened in October as virtually useless. Of course, Texas wouldn't be in this game without the 48-45 win earlier in the season, but the usual spoils from that game are suddenly gone.

If the Longhorns win on Saturday, the totality of a two-fer over the Sooners, which would include a Big 12 Championship celebration, would create a level of disappointment that the Oklahoma program has never known before. Hell, who has?

Alabama has never had to play Auburn twice. There's never been a Michigan/Ohio State rematch. Perhaps the only thing that surpasses the stakes in a rivalry re-do was in January of 2012 when Alabama and LSU played for a second time in the national championship game, which is probably the best example of the stakes in this game for the Longhorns.

Ask that 2011 LSU team how valuable beating Alabama once, but losing the second time around was. The reality is that if Texas loses, very little that's positive will remain from that win in October. Argue with me if you like, but Oklahoma fans will be celebrating a fourth straight Big 12 title throughout the process.

Frankly, I'm not sure that either fan base has completely absorbed the stakes on Saturday, partly because we haven't lived through this before. It's the difference between playing in a $25,000 poker game with someone else's money vs. playing with all of the money you've got in the bank. Yes, you might double it all, but you might also end up with nothing.

Don't get me wrong, I'm all for this game with the highest stakes, but I'll completely understand if some of you get a refill on Xanax this week.​
No. 2 - This week's Sam situation ...

The reality of this week's game is that Sam Ehlinger has to be great against the Sooners, as he was back in October.

Not very good. Not sometimes great. One hundred-percent great.

Kyler Murray was pretty damn good in this game back in October and it wasn't quite good enough. The two times that he truly flinched were the difference in a game that featured zero flinches from Ehlinger.

With all due respect to the Texas defense, which has played its best football in the last two games, it's going to take 40+ points to win on Saturday against the Sooners and the Ehlinger that played his worst game of the season coming off a re-injury of his throwing shoulder on Saturday won't be good enough.

Considering none of us know how close to 100 percent he'll be this weekend, it's an unfair set of circumstances to be rushed into, but fairness ain't got nothing to do with any of this. If fairness mattered, Texas wouldn't have to beat Oklahoma twice just to make the first win still count. If fairness mattered, Oklahoma would need to beat Texas in a best two-of-three format.

It is what it is and nothing is changing any time soon, which means that Ehlinger has to be great on Saturday, not just for Texas to win the game, but for Texas to still be in the game in the fourth quarter.

No. 3 - Todd Orlando's goal on Saturday ...

The Longhorns have to get to Kyler Murray, early and often. While it's true that pressure is often the kryptonite for all quarterbacks at every level, it's especially true of Murray.

Believe me, I get it. If I was 5-8 and weighed 180 pounds, I'd want no part of getting hit by players that weigh more than 100 pounds more than me, either.

If you look back at the game in October, Murray turned the ball over twice, mostly because he didn't want any smoke from any Texas defender. Of course, you can't hit what you can't catch, and that's the rub with defending Murray. If you play too aggressively, he's going to find a running lane and scoot 75 yards on you. However, you can't drop eight and pray, either.

You have to bring pressure and it has to get there. Period.

It makes the play of B.J. Foster, Anthony Cook and any other Texas player Orlando sends on exotic blitzes incredibly important. Your big guys aren't going to get to Murray, not on most occasions. It might have to be the kids (true freshmen) that do the heaviest lifting.

Bottom line - Texas has to turn Murray over and the only way to do that is to make him feel as if he has to protect himself.

No. 4 - Mack Brown to UNC ...

Man, I don't get it.

Mack Brown is 67 years old and hasn't really been all-in as a college head coach in almost a decade. If we're keeping it 100, the Brown that turned Texas into a college power vanished in 2008-09 when the Longhorns named Will Muschamp as the head coach in waiting. From that moment on, he turned a lot of the heavy lifting in recruiting and season preparations over to Muschamp and his assistants, which is why there was so much speculation that Brown would step down after the national championship game in January if 2010 ... had the Longhorns won the game.

Go back to that 2010 season and one of the burning issues that tore the program down was Mack blaming his assistants for what happened that season when he basically had mailed it in throughout the off-season.

He spent the final three seasons in Austin trying to reignite the spark that once made him great, but he couldn't find the fire device needed to make it happen.

In the final days of his tenure in Austin, Brown mentioned that he was killing himself with work in recruiting. You know what other coaches call it? Monday. Or Tuesday. Or Wednesday. You get it?

Personally, I'll be rooting for him to have success at North Carolina because as a human being, I totally understand wanting to leave the area of your greatest success on a high note or on your own terms, which is not what happened in Austin.

Yet, I'd argue that Mack Brown from 1998-2008 won't be walking through the doors at North Carolina when he holds his first team meeting. That was another guy from another time.

No. 5 - Compare and contrast ...

Continuing our way through the class of 2015, we take a look at the defensive tackle position, which featured two four-star prospects and eight total prospects on the Rivals Texas Top 100. It's a position that has struggled across the board in recent years in the state of Texas and this list will cause depression more than anything else.

Previous position breakdowns: Quarterbacks, Running Backs, Wide Receivers, Offensive Linemen, Defensive ends, Linebackers and Defensive Backs

Top In-State prospects

1. Daylon Mack (Signed with Texas A&M) - Has been an absolute bust for most of his career, but has been a solid starter as a senior, producing a career-best seven tackles for loss and three sacks in 11 games.

2. Darrion Daniels (Signed with Oklahoma State) - A solid multi-year starter for the Cowboys, who has missed the majority of his senior season because of a hand injury.

3. Du'Vonta Lampkin (Signed with Texas) - Proved to be as good of a college player as he was a Spanish student, starting two games in his career before declaring for the NFL draft. The NFL didn't view him as a draftable player and he's not currently on anyone's roster.

4. Kingsley Keke (Signed with Texas A&M) - A three-year starter for the Aggies, Keke has nearly 150 total tackles and 11 sacks in his career.

5. Bryce English (Signed with Kansas State) - Transferred from Kansas State to North Texas, but hasn't yet emerged as a starting-level player in his junior season.

6. Joseph Broadnax (Signed with TCU) - Was a solid role player for the Horned Frogs as a defensive lineman the last few years, but injuries took a toll and it looks like his playing days are over.

7. Zach Abercrumbia (Signed with Rice) - A multi-year starter and co-captain for the Owls during his junior season in 2018. Ranks second on the team in tackles.

8. Ross Donelly (Signed with Mississippi) - A back-up throughout his career.

Beyond those eight, there really wasn't anyone worth mentioning four years later from the three and two stars from the state, which means Daniels and Keke are as good as it gets.

Overall reaction?

giphy.gif


No. 6 – If I had a vote that mattered …

1. Alabama
2. Clemson
3. Notre Dame
4. Georgia
5. Oklahoma
6. Ohio State
7. Central Florida
8. Texas
9. Michigan
10. Washington

Heisman Top 3: Tua Tagovailoa, Kyler Murray and Will Grier

No. 7 - Don't look back, Texas hoops ...

In beating North Carolina and challenging Michigan State for about 30 minutes last week in Las Vegas, the Texas Longhorns men's basketball team under Shaka Smart proved that it can play a high-level brand of basketball against the nation's elite.

As someone that watches every game, my request for everyone in the program is simple - don't turn back.

This team has the defense and potential guard play to produce exciting and inspiring play, night in and night out. The problem was that until the games in Vegas on Thursday and Friday, we hadn't seen a lot of it.

Now that we have, there's no reason to go backwards. None.

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



... Just once ... just once ... can the Aggies win a big game without acting like Aggies? That was a pretty epic when over LSU on Saturday night, it's just too bad that the Aggies did that thing where they act like horrible sports by attacking people on the field and generally acting like people that have never been successful without massive levels of cheating before. Of course, maybe that's part of the problem. In it's previous combined 20 games against rivals LSU (previous eight) and Texas (previous 12), the Aggies had won three of them. I thought Jimbo Fisher officially became an Aggie earlier in the year when he blew a game that he should have won. The truth is that you only become an Aggie when you or your family do the things that go against the mythical Aggie code, which is why when his kin allegedly punched an LSU coach with a pacemaker and then made no attempt to make the situation right, he truly became an Aggie.

Signed,
Someone that watched A&M members of the corp assault countless Texas fans on Kyle Field back in 1995.

... Speaking of needing to be better, Fox announcer Gus Johnson and his cohorts treating Urban Meyer as some sort of victim from his failures as a human being this season and spouting off about Saturday's win over Michigan as some sort of tale of redemption was just a little bit tone deaf. And by tone deaf, what I really mean is that it was incredibly tone deaf.

... Chris Peterson completely outclassed Mike Leach over the weekend.

... Baker Mayfield was pretty great on Sunday in a win over the Bengals, but I found his comments about Hue Jackson crossing some sort of ethical line by joining the Bengals to be fairly rich. After all, he's the guy that transferred from Texas Tech to Oklahoma. That dude just doesn't have any self-awareness at times.

No. 9 - The List: Top 10 NFL Quarterbacks of All-Time ...

I don't feel like we've argued about this in a long time.

1. Tom Brady
2. Aaron Rodgers
3. Joe Montana
4. Peyton Manning
5. Drew Brees
6. Dan Marino
7. Steve Young
8. Roger Staubach
9. Brett Favre
10. Johnny Unitas

No. 10 – And Finally ...

Finally, my heart aches for former Longhorn basketball player Jonathan Holmes, who reported on Instagram over the weekend that he was sexually molested as a child and had been keeping it quite for more than 15 years.

"Come out and speak your truth no matter what," Holmes said. "I've gone through depression, suicidal thoughts, and more pain than I can express.

"At my core, I am a dope person with nothing but love and happiness, and the people who truly know me know that for a fact.

"Don't let abuse ruin your life no matter what the consequences for other may be. Including myself."

Amen, Jonathan. Amen.

Regarding no.3 I will add that part of the equation should be to rush Murray in a way that funnels him to the middle. He does not want to be in there so you cannot let him break containment laterally.

Very good point on no.7 and totally agree. There are no excuses moving forward. You didn't just have an "on" night against N.C. You followed it up with a similar performance for the first 30min of the Mich St. game. Exhibiting true progression as a program. Any regression barring injury is directly on Smart's shoulders and he should be treated harshly.

Stay strong Jonathan Holmes. Don't let one person have the power over your life forever.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Mr Biscuit
Concerning the Big XII championship game, I just can not wrap my head around how much this concept sucks.

In total agreement. Thought it was a stupid idea when announced, think it's a stupid idea now.

If Mack can hire two coordinators to manage the games and a staff that is balls to the walls at recruiting, so that all he has to do is charm Mama; deliver great pregame, halftime, and postgame speeches; and clap, he may well succeed. I wish him well.

It will be tough to not look back with Shaka when he loses games because his players can't throw the ball into the ocean or when he looks lost on the bench, but I also hope those days are behind us -- I like this team, but we'll see.

I remember when Brady was drafted... oops, I stopped watching long before then... amazing what he has done with the Pats. Tough to leave Elway and Bart Starr off any "Top QB" list, but who would they replace? Who imagined years ago the Brees would make that list? Certainly not a certain Texas Head Coach, nor Dave Wannstedt, who said as a Dolphins head coach (paraphrased) when Brees left SD and was looking for a team to latch onto, "We already have Jay Fiedler -- no difference."

Sam is a "pain tolerance" QB now, which means the throwing shoulder is nowhere near 100%. Not a good sign, but here's hoping.

Hook 'em!!!
 
  • Like
Reactions: Cure4BizCancer
Not accurate. Montana was absolutely golden in clutch situations. Rogers is beautiful to watch and has certainly flashed at times but at this point he has not achieved the goals several others have. This rating should not be based on unrealized potential.
 
Orlando needs to look at what Royal and Campbell did to Roger Staubach in the Cotton Bowl. They practiced surrounding him all week, not giving him a place to run, forcing him to try to beat us with his passing. Roger had, as I recall, negative 92 yards rushing and we had the NC. I don't think we are fast enough to prevent Murray from both passing and running. I say make him pass. Do not, under any circumstances, give him an opening to run. This will require a controlled, disciplined rush by 4 or 5 on every play, but if we fail to contain him in the pocket we will lose.
I think this is the right plan as well but we have to be prepared for some home runs to Brown and Lamb. Like it or not, giving Murray time for those two to get open against Boyd and Davis scares the bejeezus out of me.
 
We have to pressure Murray while containing his running. That's a pretty daunting challenge. Maybe have Foster spy on him most of the time?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Horns9397
Well we wouldn’t have a chance to be big 12 champs this year without it.
Actually this is a pretty damn good point that I hadn't thought of.

But how bad would it suck to be OU who should have wrapped up a conference championship after having played everyone and then have to go do it again? Not that I feel sorry for those F-Sticks.
 
Last edited:
1. Daylon Mack (Signed with Texas A&M) - Has been an absolute bust for most of his career, but has been a solid starter as a senior, producing a career-best seven tackles for loss and three sacks in 11 games.

I cannot say I am all that surprised. While he was the top prospect ion eth DL in that class, he seemed a bit too "look at me" during eth recruiting process. Criticizing the decisions of players who went to Texas, for example. Just did not appear to me like a big time personality.
 

This is the game that the Big 12 has been dreaming of for almost two decades.

Texas vs. Oklahoma ... for everything.

For so long, it was the championship game that couldn't happen, even if the two programs were always the two best teams, because of their placement in the same division. However, the only thing holding the game back the last couple of seasons with the reemergence of the title game was Texas not being very good.

That is no longer an issue with the resurgence of the Texas program this season, which means on Saturday we get a game that has an extremely high set of circumstances. It's one thing to declare that the winner of this rivalry puts itself in the pole position for a Big 12 title and it's another to actually determine the title.

When Roy Williams leaped over Brett Robin in 2001, it wound up not mattering in the big picture. The same is true of Colt McCoy and Co. winning in 2006. Or Charlie Strong getting his biggest win as the Texas coach back in 2015.

Fast forward to December and what we have in front of us is a situation that renders what happened in October as virtually useless. Of course, Texas wouldn't be in this game without the 48-45 win earlier in the season, but the usual spoils from that game are suddenly gone.

If the Longhorns win on Saturday, the totality of a two-fer over the Sooners, which would include a Big 12 Championship celebration, would create a level of disappointment that the Oklahoma program has never known before. Hell, who has?

Alabama has never had to play Auburn twice. There's never been a Michigan/Ohio State rematch. Perhaps the only thing that surpasses the stakes in a rivalry re-do was in January of 2012 when Alabama and LSU played for a second time in the national championship game, which is probably the best example of the stakes in this game for the Longhorns.

Ask that 2011 LSU team how valuable beating Alabama once, but losing the second time around was. The reality is that if Texas loses, very little that's positive will remain from that win in October. Argue with me if you like, but Oklahoma fans will be celebrating a fourth straight Big 12 title throughout the process.

Frankly, I'm not sure that either fan base has completely absorbed the stakes on Saturday, partly because we haven't lived through this before. It's the difference between playing in a $25,000 poker game with someone else's money vs. playing with all of the money you've got in the bank. Yes, you might double it all, but you might also end up with nothing.

Don't get me wrong, I'm all for this game with the highest stakes, but I'll completely understand if some of you get a refill on Xanax this week.​
No. 2 - This week's Sam situation ...

The reality of this week's game is that Sam Ehlinger has to be great against the Sooners, as he was back in October.

Not very good. Not sometimes great. One hundred-percent great.

Kyler Murray was pretty damn good in this game back in October and it wasn't quite good enough. The two times that he truly flinched were the difference in a game that featured zero flinches from Ehlinger.

With all due respect to the Texas defense, which has played its best football in the last two games, it's going to take 40+ points to win on Saturday against the Sooners and the Ehlinger that played his worst game of the season coming off a re-injury of his throwing shoulder on Saturday won't be good enough.

Considering none of us know how close to 100 percent he'll be this weekend, it's an unfair set of circumstances to be rushed into, but fairness ain't got nothing to do with any of this. If fairness mattered, Texas wouldn't have to beat Oklahoma twice just to make the first win still count. If fairness mattered, Oklahoma would need to beat Texas in a best two-of-three format.

It is what it is and nothing is changing any time soon, which means that Ehlinger has to be great on Saturday, not just for Texas to win the game, but for Texas to still be in the game in the fourth quarter.

No. 3 - Todd Orlando's goal on Saturday ...

The Longhorns have to get to Kyler Murray, early and often. While it's true that pressure is often the kryptonite for all quarterbacks at every level, it's especially true of Murray.

Believe me, I get it. If I was 5-8 and weighed 180 pounds, I'd want no part of getting hit by players that weigh more than 100 pounds more than me, either.

If you look back at the game in October, Murray turned the ball over twice, mostly because he didn't want any smoke from any Texas defender. Of course, you can't hit what you can't catch, and that's the rub with defending Murray. If you play too aggressively, he's going to find a running lane and scoot 75 yards on you. However, you can't drop eight and pray, either.

You have to bring pressure and it has to get there. Period.

It makes the play of B.J. Foster, Anthony Cook and any other Texas player Orlando sends on exotic blitzes incredibly important. Your big guys aren't going to get to Murray, not on most occasions. It might have to be the kids (true freshmen) that do the heaviest lifting.

Bottom line - Texas has to turn Murray over and the only way to do that is to make him feel as if he has to protect himself.

No. 4 - Mack Brown to UNC ...

Man, I don't get it.

Mack Brown is 67 years old and hasn't really been all-in as a college head coach in almost a decade. If we're keeping it 100, the Brown that turned Texas into a college power vanished in 2008-09 when the Longhorns named Will Muschamp as the head coach in waiting. From that moment on, he turned a lot of the heavy lifting in recruiting and season preparations over to Muschamp and his assistants, which is why there was so much speculation that Brown would step down after the national championship game in January if 2010 ... had the Longhorns won the game.

Go back to that 2010 season and one of the burning issues that tore the program down was Mack blaming his assistants for what happened that season when he basically had mailed it in throughout the off-season.

He spent the final three seasons in Austin trying to reignite the spark that once made him great, but he couldn't find the fire device needed to make it happen.

In the final days of his tenure in Austin, Brown mentioned that he was killing himself with work in recruiting. You know what other coaches call it? Monday. Or Tuesday. Or Wednesday. You get it?

Personally, I'll be rooting for him to have success at North Carolina because as a human being, I totally understand wanting to leave the area of your greatest success on a high note or on your own terms, which is not what happened in Austin.

Yet, I'd argue that Mack Brown from 1998-2008 won't be walking through the doors at North Carolina when he holds his first team meeting. That was another guy from another time.

No. 5 - Compare and contrast ...

Continuing our way through the class of 2015, we take a look at the defensive tackle position, which featured two four-star prospects and eight total prospects on the Rivals Texas Top 100. It's a position that has struggled across the board in recent years in the state of Texas and this list will cause depression more than anything else.

Previous position breakdowns: Quarterbacks, Running Backs, Wide Receivers, Offensive Linemen, Defensive ends, Linebackers and Defensive Backs

Top In-State prospects

1. Daylon Mack (Signed with Texas A&M) - Has been an absolute bust for most of his career, but has been a solid starter as a senior, producing a career-best seven tackles for loss and three sacks in 11 games.

2. Darrion Daniels (Signed with Oklahoma State) - A solid multi-year starter for the Cowboys, who has missed the majority of his senior season because of a hand injury.

3. Du'Vonta Lampkin (Signed with Texas) - Proved to be as good of a college player as he was a Spanish student, starting two games in his career before declaring for the NFL draft. The NFL didn't view him as a draftable player and he's not currently on anyone's roster.

4. Kingsley Keke (Signed with Texas A&M) - A three-year starter for the Aggies, Keke has nearly 150 total tackles and 11 sacks in his career.

5. Bryce English (Signed with Kansas State) - Transferred from Kansas State to North Texas, but hasn't yet emerged as a starting-level player in his junior season.

6. Joseph Broadnax (Signed with TCU) - Was a solid role player for the Horned Frogs as a defensive lineman the last few years, but injuries took a toll and it looks like his playing days are over.

7. Zach Abercrumbia (Signed with Rice) - A multi-year starter and co-captain for the Owls during his junior season in 2018. Ranks second on the team in tackles.

8. Ross Donelly (Signed with Mississippi) - A back-up throughout his career.

Beyond those eight, there really wasn't anyone worth mentioning four years later from the three and two stars from the state, which means Daniels and Keke are as good as it gets.

Overall reaction?

giphy.gif


No. 6 – If I had a vote that mattered …

1. Alabama
2. Clemson
3. Notre Dame
4. Georgia
5. Oklahoma
6. Ohio State
7. Central Florida
8. Texas
9. Michigan
10. Washington

Heisman Top 3: Tua Tagovailoa, Kyler Murray and Will Grier

No. 7 - Don't look back, Texas hoops ...

In beating North Carolina and challenging Michigan State for about 30 minutes last week in Las Vegas, the Texas Longhorns men's basketball team under Shaka Smart proved that it can play a high-level brand of basketball against the nation's elite.

As someone that watches every game, my request for everyone in the program is simple - don't turn back.

This team has the defense and potential guard play to produce exciting and inspiring play, night in and night out. The problem was that until the games in Vegas on Thursday and Friday, we hadn't seen a lot of it.

Now that we have, there's no reason to go backwards. None.

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



... Just once ... just once ... can the Aggies win a big game without acting like Aggies? That was a pretty epic when over LSU on Saturday night, it's just too bad that the Aggies did that thing where they act like horrible sports by attacking people on the field and generally acting like people that have never been successful without massive levels of cheating before. Of course, maybe that's part of the problem. In it's previous combined 20 games against rivals LSU (previous eight) and Texas (previous 12), the Aggies had won three of them. I thought Jimbo Fisher officially became an Aggie earlier in the year when he blew a game that he should have won. The truth is that you only become an Aggie when you or your family do the things that go against the mythical Aggie code, which is why when his kin allegedly punched an LSU coach with a pacemaker and then made no attempt to make the situation right, he truly became an Aggie.

Signed,
Someone that watched A&M members of the corp assault countless Texas fans on Kyle Field back in 1995.

... Speaking of needing to be better, Fox announcer Gus Johnson and his cohorts treating Urban Meyer as some sort of victim from his failures as a human being this season and spouting off about Saturday's win over Michigan as some sort of tale of redemption was just a little bit tone deaf. And by tone deaf, what I really mean is that it was incredibly tone deaf.

... Chris Peterson completely outclassed Mike Leach over the weekend.

... Baker Mayfield was pretty great on Sunday in a win over the Bengals, but I found his comments about Hue Jackson crossing some sort of ethical line by joining the Bengals to be fairly rich. After all, he's the guy that transferred from Texas Tech to Oklahoma. That dude just doesn't have any self-awareness at times.

No. 9 - The List: Top 10 NFL Quarterbacks of All-Time ...

I don't feel like we've argued about this in a long time.

1. Tom Brady
2. Aaron Rodgers
3. Joe Montana
4. Peyton Manning
5. Drew Brees
6. Dan Marino
7. Steve Young
8. Roger Staubach
9. Brett Favre
10. Johnny Unitas

No. 10 – And Finally ...

Finally, my heart aches for former Longhorn basketball player Jonathan Holmes, who reported on Instagram over the weekend that he was sexually molested as a child and had been keeping it quite for more than 15 years.

"Come out and speak your truth no matter what," Holmes said. "I've gone through depression, suicidal thoughts, and more pain than I can express.

"At my core, I am a dope person with nothing but love and happiness, and the people who truly know me know that for a fact.

"Don't let abuse ruin your life no matter what the consequences for other may be. Including myself."

Amen, Jonathan. Amen.
Thanks, Ketch. Great write up.
 
The rules favoring offensive football have changed so much in the last few decades, one wonders where these guys would stack up if playing the same game as Johnny U. did. QBs in those days took a pounding. No throwing the ball OB to avoid a sack, hitting the QB (and everyone else) in the head was not only allowed, but taught, offensive holding rules are loser, defensive pass coverage rules are tighter. Those of you under forty should watch several games played in the 60's just to get some perspective. Just saying.

Yea, someone needs to post that old classic picture of Y.A. Tittle after he got leveled with the blood dripping down his head. Talk about getting some perspective.
 
  • Like
Reactions: dougphelan
Some people still think pretty highly of Muschamp as a head coach. I’ve always voiced him being handed the keys as a big player in our demise and he’s shown how poorly he did at Florida and is currently doing at SC as a trend of bad coaching as the head guy.

I know @Dr. Leo Marvin and a few others seem to still think highly of him, but facts are facts.

I do think very highly of Muschamp but will concede he's not a good or great head coach at this point and may not make it at South Carolina. He's had a rough go being at Florida with FSU kicking tail in recruiting and now at South Carolina with Dabo at Clemson.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Texas Diesel

This is the game that the Big 12 has been dreaming of for almost two decades.

Texas vs. Oklahoma ... for everything.

For so long, it was the championship game that couldn't happen, even if the two programs were always the two best teams, because of their placement in the same division. However, the only thing holding the game back the last couple of seasons with the reemergence of the title game was Texas not being very good.

That is no longer an issue with the resurgence of the Texas program this season, which means on Saturday we get a game that has an extremely high set of circumstances. It's one thing to declare that the winner of this rivalry puts itself in the pole position for a Big 12 title and it's another to actually determine the title.

When Roy Williams leaped over Brett Robin in 2001, it wound up not mattering in the big picture. The same is true of Colt McCoy and Co. winning in 2006. Or Charlie Strong getting his biggest win as the Texas coach back in 2015.

Fast forward to December and what we have in front of us is a situation that renders what happened in October as virtually useless. Of course, Texas wouldn't be in this game without the 48-45 win earlier in the season, but the usual spoils from that game are suddenly gone.

If the Longhorns win on Saturday, the totality of a two-fer over the Sooners, which would include a Big 12 Championship celebration, would create a level of disappointment that the Oklahoma program has never known before. Hell, who has?

Alabama has never had to play Auburn twice. There's never been a Michigan/Ohio State rematch. Perhaps the only thing that surpasses the stakes in a rivalry re-do was in January of 2012 when Alabama and LSU played for a second time in the national championship game, which is probably the best example of the stakes in this game for the Longhorns.

Ask that 2011 LSU team how valuable beating Alabama once, but losing the second time around was. The reality is that if Texas loses, very little that's positive will remain from that win in October. Argue with me if you like, but Oklahoma fans will be celebrating a fourth straight Big 12 title throughout the process.

Frankly, I'm not sure that either fan base has completely absorbed the stakes on Saturday, partly because we haven't lived through this before. It's the difference between playing in a $25,000 poker game with someone else's money vs. playing with all of the money you've got in the bank. Yes, you might double it all, but you might also end up with nothing.

Don't get me wrong, I'm all for this game with the highest stakes, but I'll completely understand if some of you get a refill on Xanax this week.​
No. 2 - This week's Sam situation ...

The reality of this week's game is that Sam Ehlinger has to be great against the Sooners, as he was back in October.

Not very good. Not sometimes great. One hundred-percent great.

Kyler Murray was pretty damn good in this game back in October and it wasn't quite good enough. The two times that he truly flinched were the difference in a game that featured zero flinches from Ehlinger.

With all due respect to the Texas defense, which has played its best football in the last two games, it's going to take 40+ points to win on Saturday against the Sooners and the Ehlinger that played his worst game of the season coming off a re-injury of his throwing shoulder on Saturday won't be good enough.

Considering none of us know how close to 100 percent he'll be this weekend, it's an unfair set of circumstances to be rushed into, but fairness ain't got nothing to do with any of this. If fairness mattered, Texas wouldn't have to beat Oklahoma twice just to make the first win still count. If fairness mattered, Oklahoma would need to beat Texas in a best two-of-three format.

It is what it is and nothing is changing any time soon, which means that Ehlinger has to be great on Saturday, not just for Texas to win the game, but for Texas to still be in the game in the fourth quarter.

No. 3 - Todd Orlando's goal on Saturday ...

The Longhorns have to get to Kyler Murray, early and often. While it's true that pressure is often the kryptonite for all quarterbacks at every level, it's especially true of Murray.

Believe me, I get it. If I was 5-8 and weighed 180 pounds, I'd want no part of getting hit by players that weigh more than 100 pounds more than me, either.

If you look back at the game in October, Murray turned the ball over twice, mostly because he didn't want any smoke from any Texas defender. Of course, you can't hit what you can't catch, and that's the rub with defending Murray. If you play too aggressively, he's going to find a running lane and scoot 75 yards on you. However, you can't drop eight and pray, either.

You have to bring pressure and it has to get there. Period.

It makes the play of B.J. Foster, Anthony Cook and any other Texas player Orlando sends on exotic blitzes incredibly important. Your big guys aren't going to get to Murray, not on most occasions. It might have to be the kids (true freshmen) that do the heaviest lifting.

Bottom line - Texas has to turn Murray over and the only way to do that is to make him feel as if he has to protect himself.

No. 4 - Mack Brown to UNC ...

Man, I don't get it.

Mack Brown is 67 years old and hasn't really been all-in as a college head coach in almost a decade. If we're keeping it 100, the Brown that turned Texas into a college power vanished in 2008-09 when the Longhorns named Will Muschamp as the head coach in waiting. From that moment on, he turned a lot of the heavy lifting in recruiting and season preparations over to Muschamp and his assistants, which is why there was so much speculation that Brown would step down after the national championship game in January if 2010 ... had the Longhorns won the game.

Go back to that 2010 season and one of the burning issues that tore the program down was Mack blaming his assistants for what happened that season when he basically had mailed it in throughout the off-season.

He spent the final three seasons in Austin trying to reignite the spark that once made him great, but he couldn't find the fire device needed to make it happen.

In the final days of his tenure in Austin, Brown mentioned that he was killing himself with work in recruiting. You know what other coaches call it? Monday. Or Tuesday. Or Wednesday. You get it?

Personally, I'll be rooting for him to have success at North Carolina because as a human being, I totally understand wanting to leave the area of your greatest success on a high note or on your own terms, which is not what happened in Austin.

Yet, I'd argue that Mack Brown from 1998-2008 won't be walking through the doors at North Carolina when he holds his first team meeting. That was another guy from another time.

No. 5 - Compare and contrast ...

Continuing our way through the class of 2015, we take a look at the defensive tackle position, which featured two four-star prospects and eight total prospects on the Rivals Texas Top 100. It's a position that has struggled across the board in recent years in the state of Texas and this list will cause depression more than anything else.

Previous position breakdowns: Quarterbacks, Running Backs, Wide Receivers, Offensive Linemen, Defensive ends, Linebackers and Defensive Backs

Top In-State prospects

1. Daylon Mack (Signed with Texas A&M) - Has been an absolute bust for most of his career, but has been a solid starter as a senior, producing a career-best seven tackles for loss and three sacks in 11 games.

2. Darrion Daniels (Signed with Oklahoma State) - A solid multi-year starter for the Cowboys, who has missed the majority of his senior season because of a hand injury.

3. Du'Vonta Lampkin (Signed with Texas) - Proved to be as good of a college player as he was a Spanish student, starting two games in his career before declaring for the NFL draft. The NFL didn't view him as a draftable player and he's not currently on anyone's roster.

4. Kingsley Keke (Signed with Texas A&M) - A three-year starter for the Aggies, Keke has nearly 150 total tackles and 11 sacks in his career.

5. Bryce English (Signed with Kansas State) - Transferred from Kansas State to North Texas, but hasn't yet emerged as a starting-level player in his junior season.

6. Joseph Broadnax (Signed with TCU) - Was a solid role player for the Horned Frogs as a defensive lineman the last few years, but injuries took a toll and it looks like his playing days are over.

7. Zach Abercrumbia (Signed with Rice) - A multi-year starter and co-captain for the Owls during his junior season in 2018. Ranks second on the team in tackles.

8. Ross Donelly (Signed with Mississippi) - A back-up throughout his career.

Beyond those eight, there really wasn't anyone worth mentioning four years later from the three and two stars from the state, which means Daniels and Keke are as good as it gets.

Overall reaction?

giphy.gif


No. 6 – If I had a vote that mattered …

1. Alabama
2. Clemson
3. Notre Dame
4. Georgia
5. Oklahoma
6. Ohio State
7. Central Florida
8. Texas
9. Michigan
10. Washington

Heisman Top 3: Tua Tagovailoa, Kyler Murray and Will Grier

No. 7 - Don't look back, Texas hoops ...

In beating North Carolina and challenging Michigan State for about 30 minutes last week in Las Vegas, the Texas Longhorns men's basketball team under Shaka Smart proved that it can play a high-level brand of basketball against the nation's elite.

As someone that watches every game, my request for everyone in the program is simple - don't turn back.

This team has the defense and potential guard play to produce exciting and inspiring play, night in and night out. The problem was that until the games in Vegas on Thursday and Friday, we hadn't seen a lot of it.

Now that we have, there's no reason to go backwards. None.

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



... Just once ... just once ... can the Aggies win a big game without acting like Aggies? That was a pretty epic when over LSU on Saturday night, it's just too bad that the Aggies did that thing where they act like horrible sports by attacking people on the field and generally acting like people that have never been successful without massive levels of cheating before. Of course, maybe that's part of the problem. In it's previous combined 20 games against rivals LSU (previous eight) and Texas (previous 12), the Aggies had won three of them. I thought Jimbo Fisher officially became an Aggie earlier in the year when he blew a game that he should have won. The truth is that you only become an Aggie when you or your family do the things that go against the mythical Aggie code, which is why when his kin allegedly punched an LSU coach with a pacemaker and then made no attempt to make the situation right, he truly became an Aggie.

Signed,
Someone that watched A&M members of the corp assault countless Texas fans on Kyle Field back in 1995.

... Speaking of needing to be better, Fox announcer Gus Johnson and his cohorts treating Urban Meyer as some sort of victim from his failures as a human being this season and spouting off about Saturday's win over Michigan as some sort of tale of redemption was just a little bit tone deaf. And by tone deaf, what I really mean is that it was incredibly tone deaf.

... Chris Peterson completely outclassed Mike Leach over the weekend.

... Baker Mayfield was pretty great on Sunday in a win over the Bengals, but I found his comments about Hue Jackson crossing some sort of ethical line by joining the Bengals to be fairly rich. After all, he's the guy that transferred from Texas Tech to Oklahoma. That dude just doesn't have any self-awareness at times.

No. 9 - The List: Top 10 NFL Quarterbacks of All-Time ...

I don't feel like we've argued about this in a long time.

1. Tom Brady
2. Aaron Rodgers
3. Joe Montana
4. Peyton Manning
5. Drew Brees
6. Dan Marino
7. Steve Young
8. Roger Staubach
9. Brett Favre
10. Johnny Unitas

No. 10 – And Finally ...

Finally, my heart aches for former Longhorn basketball player Jonathan Holmes, who reported on Instagram over the weekend that he was sexually molested as a child and had been keeping it quite for more than 15 years.

"Come out and speak your truth no matter what," Holmes said. "I've gone through depression, suicidal thoughts, and more pain than I can express.

"At my core, I am a dope person with nothing but love and happiness, and the people who truly know me know that for a fact.

"Don't let abuse ruin your life no matter what the consequences for other may be. Including myself."

Amen, Jonathan. Amen.
Brady,Montana,staunach,brees,manning,Marino,elway,aikman,Rodgers,fouts
 
If fairness mattered, Texas wouldn't have to beat Oklahoma twice just to make the first win still count. If fairness mattered, Oklahoma would need to beat Texas in a best two-of-three format.

I don't get this point at all. Without a Big 12 Championship Game being added to the mix, we would already be preparing for our Bowl Game as the 2nd place team in conference and OU would already be celebrating another conference championship.

If we wanted to make this argument then we should have at least had the same conference record as OU. We lost the right to make that argument by losing two conference games.
 
If fairness mattered, Texas wouldn't have to beat Oklahoma twice just to make the first win still count. If fairness mattered, Oklahoma would need to beat Texas in a best two-of-three format.

I don't get this point at all. Without a Big 12 Championship Game being added to the mix, we would already be preparing for our Bowl Game as the 2nd place team in conference and OU would already be celebrating another conference championship.

If we wanted to make this argument then we should have at least had the same conference record as OU. We lost the right to make that argument by losing two conference games.
Actually we would be preparing for our final regular season game as we did a few years ago before the CCG was reinstated
 

This is the game that the Big 12 has been dreaming of for almost two decades.

Texas vs. Oklahoma ... for everything.

For so long, it was the championship game that couldn't happen, even if the two programs were always the two best teams, because of their placement in the same division. However, the only thing holding the game back the last couple of seasons with the reemergence of the title game was Texas not being very good.

That is no longer an issue with the resurgence of the Texas program this season, which means on Saturday we get a game that has an extremely high set of circumstances. It's one thing to declare that the winner of this rivalry puts itself in the pole position for a Big 12 title and it's another to actually determine the title.

When Roy Williams leaped over Brett Robin in 2001, it wound up not mattering in the big picture. The same is true of Colt McCoy and Co. winning in 2006. Or Charlie Strong getting his biggest win as the Texas coach back in 2015.

Fast forward to December and what we have in front of us is a situation that renders what happened in October as virtually useless. Of course, Texas wouldn't be in this game without the 48-45 win earlier in the season, but the usual spoils from that game are suddenly gone.

If the Longhorns win on Saturday, the totality of a two-fer over the Sooners, which would include a Big 12 Championship celebration, would create a level of disappointment that the Oklahoma program has never known before. Hell, who has?

Alabama has never had to play Auburn twice. There's never been a Michigan/Ohio State rematch. Perhaps the only thing that surpasses the stakes in a rivalry re-do was in January of 2012 when Alabama and LSU played for a second time in the national championship game, which is probably the best example of the stakes in this game for the Longhorns.

Ask that 2011 LSU team how valuable beating Alabama once, but losing the second time around was. The reality is that if Texas loses, very little that's positive will remain from that win in October. Argue with me if you like, but Oklahoma fans will be celebrating a fourth straight Big 12 title throughout the process.

Frankly, I'm not sure that either fan base has completely absorbed the stakes on Saturday, partly because we haven't lived through this before. It's the difference between playing in a $25,000 poker game with someone else's money vs. playing with all of the money you've got in the bank. Yes, you might double it all, but you might also end up with nothing.

Don't get me wrong, I'm all for this game with the highest stakes, but I'll completely understand if some of you get a refill on Xanax this week.​
No. 2 - This week's Sam situation ...

The reality of this week's game is that Sam Ehlinger has to be great against the Sooners, as he was back in October.

Not very good. Not sometimes great. One hundred-percent great.

Kyler Murray was pretty damn good in this game back in October and it wasn't quite good enough. The two times that he truly flinched were the difference in a game that featured zero flinches from Ehlinger.

With all due respect to the Texas defense, which has played its best football in the last two games, it's going to take 40+ points to win on Saturday against the Sooners and the Ehlinger that played his worst game of the season coming off a re-injury of his throwing shoulder on Saturday won't be good enough.

Considering none of us know how close to 100 percent he'll be this weekend, it's an unfair set of circumstances to be rushed into, but fairness ain't got nothing to do with any of this. If fairness mattered, Texas wouldn't have to beat Oklahoma twice just to make the first win still count. If fairness mattered, Oklahoma would need to beat Texas in a best two-of-three format.

It is what it is and nothing is changing any time soon, which means that Ehlinger has to be great on Saturday, not just for Texas to win the game, but for Texas to still be in the game in the fourth quarter.

No. 3 - Todd Orlando's goal on Saturday ...

The Longhorns have to get to Kyler Murray, early and often. While it's true that pressure is often the kryptonite for all quarterbacks at every level, it's especially true of Murray.

Believe me, I get it. If I was 5-8 and weighed 180 pounds, I'd want no part of getting hit by players that weigh more than 100 pounds more than me, either.

If you look back at the game in October, Murray turned the ball over twice, mostly because he didn't want any smoke from any Texas defender. Of course, you can't hit what you can't catch, and that's the rub with defending Murray. If you play too aggressively, he's going to find a running lane and scoot 75 yards on you. However, you can't drop eight and pray, either.

You have to bring pressure and it has to get there. Period.

It makes the play of B.J. Foster, Anthony Cook and any other Texas player Orlando sends on exotic blitzes incredibly important. Your big guys aren't going to get to Murray, not on most occasions. It might have to be the kids (true freshmen) that do the heaviest lifting.

Bottom line - Texas has to turn Murray over and the only way to do that is to make him feel as if he has to protect himself.

No. 4 - Mack Brown to UNC ...

Man, I don't get it.

Mack Brown is 67 years old and hasn't really been all-in as a college head coach in almost a decade. If we're keeping it 100, the Brown that turned Texas into a college power vanished in 2008-09 when the Longhorns named Will Muschamp as the head coach in waiting. From that moment on, he turned a lot of the heavy lifting in recruiting and season preparations over to Muschamp and his assistants, which is why there was so much speculation that Brown would step down after the national championship game in January if 2010 ... had the Longhorns won the game.

Go back to that 2010 season and one of the burning issues that tore the program down was Mack blaming his assistants for what happened that season when he basically had mailed it in throughout the off-season.

He spent the final three seasons in Austin trying to reignite the spark that once made him great, but he couldn't find the fire device needed to make it happen.

In the final days of his tenure in Austin, Brown mentioned that he was killing himself with work in recruiting. You know what other coaches call it? Monday. Or Tuesday. Or Wednesday. You get it?

Personally, I'll be rooting for him to have success at North Carolina because as a human being, I totally understand wanting to leave the area of your greatest success on a high note or on your own terms, which is not what happened in Austin.

Yet, I'd argue that Mack Brown from 1998-2008 won't be walking through the doors at North Carolina when he holds his first team meeting. That was another guy from another time.

No. 5 - Compare and contrast ...

Continuing our way through the class of 2015, we take a look at the defensive tackle position, which featured two four-star prospects and eight total prospects on the Rivals Texas Top 100. It's a position that has struggled across the board in recent years in the state of Texas and this list will cause depression more than anything else.

Previous position breakdowns: Quarterbacks, Running Backs, Wide Receivers, Offensive Linemen, Defensive ends, Linebackers and Defensive Backs

Top In-State prospects

1. Daylon Mack (Signed with Texas A&M) - Has been an absolute bust for most of his career, but has been a solid starter as a senior, producing a career-best seven tackles for loss and three sacks in 11 games.

2. Darrion Daniels (Signed with Oklahoma State) - A solid multi-year starter for the Cowboys, who has missed the majority of his senior season because of a hand injury.

3. Du'Vonta Lampkin (Signed with Texas) - Proved to be as good of a college player as he was a Spanish student, starting two games in his career before declaring for the NFL draft. The NFL didn't view him as a draftable player and he's not currently on anyone's roster.

4. Kingsley Keke (Signed with Texas A&M) - A three-year starter for the Aggies, Keke has nearly 150 total tackles and 11 sacks in his career.

5. Bryce English (Signed with Kansas State) - Transferred from Kansas State to North Texas, but hasn't yet emerged as a starting-level player in his junior season.

6. Joseph Broadnax (Signed with TCU) - Was a solid role player for the Horned Frogs as a defensive lineman the last few years, but injuries took a toll and it looks like his playing days are over.

7. Zach Abercrumbia (Signed with Rice) - A multi-year starter and co-captain for the Owls during his junior season in 2018. Ranks second on the team in tackles.

8. Ross Donelly (Signed with Mississippi) - A back-up throughout his career.

Beyond those eight, there really wasn't anyone worth mentioning four years later from the three and two stars from the state, which means Daniels and Keke are as good as it gets.

Overall reaction?

giphy.gif


No. 6 – If I had a vote that mattered …

1. Alabama
2. Clemson
3. Notre Dame
4. Georgia
5. Oklahoma
6. Ohio State
7. Central Florida
8. Texas
9. Michigan
10. Washington

Heisman Top 3: Tua Tagovailoa, Kyler Murray and Will Grier

No. 7 - Don't look back, Texas hoops ...

In beating North Carolina and challenging Michigan State for about 30 minutes last week in Las Vegas, the Texas Longhorns men's basketball team under Shaka Smart proved that it can play a high-level brand of basketball against the nation's elite.

As someone that watches every game, my request for everyone in the program is simple - don't turn back.

This team has the defense and potential guard play to produce exciting and inspiring play, night in and night out. The problem was that until the games in Vegas on Thursday and Friday, we hadn't seen a lot of it.

Now that we have, there's no reason to go backwards. None.

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



... Just once ... just once ... can the Aggies win a big game without acting like Aggies? That was a pretty epic when over LSU on Saturday night, it's just too bad that the Aggies did that thing where they act like horrible sports by attacking people on the field and generally acting like people that have never been successful without massive levels of cheating before. Of course, maybe that's part of the problem. In it's previous combined 20 games against rivals LSU (previous eight) and Texas (previous 12), the Aggies had won three of them. I thought Jimbo Fisher officially became an Aggie earlier in the year when he blew a game that he should have won. The truth is that you only become an Aggie when you or your family do the things that go against the mythical Aggie code, which is why when his kin allegedly punched an LSU coach with a pacemaker and then made no attempt to make the situation right, he truly became an Aggie.

Signed,
Someone that watched A&M members of the corp assault countless Texas fans on Kyle Field back in 1995.

... Speaking of needing to be better, Fox announcer Gus Johnson and his cohorts treating Urban Meyer as some sort of victim from his failures as a human being this season and spouting off about Saturday's win over Michigan as some sort of tale of redemption was just a little bit tone deaf. And by tone deaf, what I really mean is that it was incredibly tone deaf.

... Chris Peterson completely outclassed Mike Leach over the weekend.

... Baker Mayfield was pretty great on Sunday in a win over the Bengals, but I found his comments about Hue Jackson crossing some sort of ethical line by joining the Bengals to be fairly rich. After all, he's the guy that transferred from Texas Tech to Oklahoma. That dude just doesn't have any self-awareness at times.

No. 9 - The List: Top 10 NFL Quarterbacks of All-Time ...

I don't feel like we've argued about this in a long time.

1. Tom Brady
2. Aaron Rodgers
3. Joe Montana
4. Peyton Manning
5. Drew Brees
6. Dan Marino
7. Steve Young
8. Roger Staubach
9. Brett Favre
10. Johnny Unitas

No. 10 – And Finally ...

Finally, my heart aches for former Longhorn basketball player Jonathan Holmes, who reported on Instagram over the weekend that he was sexually molested as a child and had been keeping it quite for more than 15 years.

"Come out and speak your truth no matter what," Holmes said. "I've gone through depression, suicidal thoughts, and more pain than I can express.

"At my core, I am a dope person with nothing but love and happiness, and the people who truly know me know that for a fact.

"Don't let abuse ruin your life no matter what the consequences for other may be. Including myself."

Amen, Jonathan. Amen.

Aikman would be in my top #10.
 
ADVERTISEMENT