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GreenBat

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  1. Ben Knox scored 8 points in an 11 point win over SA Antonian He scored 10 points against Grand Prairie San Antonio Antonian 38, Grace Prep 47 (Saturday, Dec 8, 2007) San Antonio Antonian (0-0, 0-0) 9 7 15 7 - 38 Grace Prep (9-5, 0-0) 16 14 8 9 - 47 Scoring Summary San Antonio Antonian: Park 2, Harrington 4, Ferguson 3, Jones 13, Walker 7, Drago 9. Grace Prep: Hektner 10, Sawyer 2, Barker 3, Lee 14, Knox 8, Brewer 4, Russell 6. Grand Prairie 51, Grace Prep 61 (Saturday, Dec 8, 2007) Grand Prairie (0-0, 0-0) 7 9 21 14 - 51 Grace Prep (10-5, 0-0) 20 13 12 16 - 61 Scoring Summary Grand Prairie: Senegal 7, Harris 8, Wright 5, Williams 9, Davis 10, Loudermilk 3, Lords 8, Post 1. Grace Prep: Hektner 10, McPherson 9, Sawyer 11, Barker 3, Ahart 2, Williams 6, Knox 10, Brewer 4, Russell 6.
  2. Rumor control Just got off the phone with Southlake Carroll linebacker Derek Tomlin, who was quite shocked and said the rumor was untrue that he was changing his commitment from UNT and would walk on at Texas A&M. (I get crazy things e-mailed to me. Have to follow up on them just in case). -Trae Thompson Posted at 02:42 PM in Southlake Carroll, UNT | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
  3. WHY? It's not like they are doing anything illegal or immoral.
  4. Men's basketball: UNT men fight off hot Hawks 08:56 AM CST on Sunday, December 9, 2007 By Brett Vito / Staff Writer If ever there was a game that seemed like a trap for North Texas, Saturday's tilt with Hartford was it. UNT played without its second- and third-leading scorers due to injury and lost two additional players to foul trouble midway through the second half against the Hawks, who fell just two shy of the Super Pit record for 3-pointers made in a game with 17. Despite it all, UNT found a way to pull away late for a 105-97 victory that at times looked more like a track meet than a basketball game. "It's a good sign when you can find another way to win," UNT head coach Johnny Jones said. "That is the sign of a good basketball team. With them shooting as well as they were, our guys could have questioned themselves, but we bore our necks and continued to grind. To score 105 points says a lot about our team." What might have said just as much about the Mean Green is the way it pulled out the win. UNT (6-2) came into the night shooting 33.6 percent from 3-point range and had struggled against zone defenses. The Mean Green appeared to get over those problems while hitting 60.9 percent (14-of-23) of its shots from behind the arc against the Hawks' zone. The 14 3-pointers the Mean Green hit tied for the fifth most in school history. Freshman guard Josh White made 4-of-6 from 3-point range, which was no surprise considering he was shooting 56.7 percent from deep on the season. Several of UNT's other players who had been struggling to hit from 3-point range also came through for UNT. Senior guard Dez Willingham hit 4-of-7 shots from behind the arc, while fellow senior guard Ben Bell went 2-for-3. Junior guard Adam McCoy went 2-for-5. McCoy (12.5 percent) Willingham (10.5 percent) and Bell (7.1 percent) were all shooting under 15 percent from 3-point range for the season. "The difference was practice. We got into practice and worked with the gun," Bell said of a machine that feeds shooters the ball at the 3-point arc. "This was the kind of performance we needed to get us going shooting the ball." UNT had to turn to the trio for offense because senior center Keith Wooden missed the game after having arthroscopic knee surgery earlier in the week while junior guard Collin Dennis sat out with a high ankle sprain. Dennis was averaging 13.0 points a game, while Wooden was posting 12.7. UNT has gone inside to Wooden at critical times throughout the last two seasons, but had to turn to other players against a Hartford team that hit several big shots at key junctures. The Mean Green took its biggest lead of the second half at 82-73 on a Willingham 3-pointer with 8:29 left, but didn't put the Hawks away until late. Hartford tied the score at 93-93 with 2:23 left on a Joe Zeglinski 3-pointer. UNT didn't have much choice other than to turn to its backcourt for offensive production the rest of the way. Forwards Harold Stewart and Kedrick Hogans fouled out at the 10:24 and 9:32 marks, respectively. Freshman guard Tristan Thompson came through with a 3-pointer that sparked a 7-0 run that helped UNT pull away for the win. Thompson scored five of his career-high 18 points during the surge that finally put away a Hartford team that always seemed to have an answer for any run UNT put together, usually in the form of a 3-pointer. The Mean Green led by as much as eight points twice in the first half, the second time at 21-13 on a pair of free throws by White, who led UNT with 24 points. Bell added a career high 23. The Mean Green needed every point it could get from the duo after Hartford began to heat up from behind the arc. The Hawks hit 10 3-pointers in the first half, including four from Zeglinski. Hartford kept right on shooting and hitting from deep, forcing UNT to keep pace, a goal it met in perhaps its best shooting game of the season. UNT was particularly deadly in the second half from behind the arc, making 69.2 percent of its shots (9-of-13). Hartford shot 45.9 percent (17-for-37) from 3-point range for the game. Zeglinski made 6-of-10 shots from behind the arc and finished with 24 points, tying for a team-high with forward Warren McLendon. "I have never seen anything like it with two teams shooting the ball like that," Willingham said. "We were contesting their shots, but they were hitting them." Hartford sat back in a zone and dared UNT to keep pace, a goal the Mean Green couldn't reach in a loss to UT-Arlington earlier this season when it made just 6-of-21 from deep. UNT faced a similar challenge against Hartford and came through. "They were running that zone," Bell said. "We had to hit our shots and we did." Briefly … Senior forward Quincy Williams finished with three blocks against Hartford and moved past Shawnson Johnson into fourth place in UNT history with 71. Johnson had 69 blocks for the Mean Green in the 2003-04 season, his only campaign at UNT. … The Mean Green finished with a 36-30 advantage in rebounds, despite playing without Wooden, and has now out-rebounded all eight of its opponents this season. Wooden's average of 5.6 rebounds a game ranked second on the team heading into the game. BRETT VITO can be reached at 940-566-6870. His e-mail address is bvito@dentonrc.com. North Texas 105, Hartford 97 HARTFORD (4-6) -- Turner 2-5 3-5 8, Minor 1-2 0-0 2, Estes 2-6 0-0 4, Baker 3-3 0-0 8, Zeglinski 8-5 2-2 24, Von Rosenberg 2-5 2-2 6, McLendon 7-17 9-13 24, Torres 0-0 0-0 0, Glowiak 3-8 0-0 9, Bookman 0-0 0-0 0, Sabia 4-8 0-1 12. Totals 32-69 16-23 97. NORTH TEXAS (6-2) -- Thompson 4-5 8-8 18, Stewart 1-2 5-7 7, Williams 4-7 3-4 11, Bell 8-10 5-5 23, White 6-8 8-10 24, McCoy 2-9 2-2 8, Willingham 5-8 0-0 14, Hogans 0-1 0-0 0, Montague 0-0 0-0 0, Howerton 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 30-50 31-36 105. Halftime -- Hartford 47-45. 3-point goals -- Hartford 17-37 (Tuner 1-2, Minor 0-1, Baker 2-2, Zeglinski 6-10, Von Rosenberg 0-2, McLendon 1-6, Glowiak 3-8, Sabia 4-6), UNT 14-23 (Thompson 2-2, Bell 2-3, White 4-6, McCoy 2-5, Willingham 4-7). Fouled out -- Stewart, Hogans. Rebounds -- Hartford 30 (McLendon 8), UNT 36 (Williams 7). Assists -- Hartford 21 (Turner 7), UNT 14 (White 6). Total fouls -- Hartford 27, UNT 21. A -- 2,157.
  5. Saturday, December 8th Hartford 97 Final North Texas 105 Northern Colorado 53 Final Denver 69 Western Kentucky 77 Final Eastern Kentucky 60 Florida Gulf Coast 55 Final Florida Atlantic 69 Miami (FL) 67 Final Florida International 53 John Brown 36 Final Arkansas-Little Rock 73 Loyola NO 51 Final New Orleans 82 Alabama State 74 Final Troy 85 Central Baptist Coll 49 Final Arkansas State 101
  6. Steve Austin Monster Trucking By Brandon Lau | December 08, 2007 - The Detroit free press has an interview up today about six time WWE Champion and action movie star, Steve Austin appearing at the Extreme Monster Truck Nationals in Auburn Hills while also hosting the event. Austin will be at the wheel during opening ceremonies, then will hand over driving duties to experts like Michigan's Jim Koehler in the "Avenger." Austin is said to be excited to return to the Motor City, where he has wrestled before, and driving a Monster Truck. "I've tooled around in these trucks, even crushed a car," said Austin, who played football at the University of North Texas before switching to wrestling. "But really, driving and jumping these trucks, they're brutal, but I'll try anything once." When: 2 and 8 p.m. today. Where: The Palace, Auburn Hills. Who: Monster Truck action, featuring "Avenger," "Get Er Done" and "Ghost Rider," among others; hosted by pro wrestling star Stone Cold Steve Austin. Tickets range from $15-$22 at www.palacenet.com, the Palace Box Office and Ticketmaster. source: pwinsider
  7. I saw a piece on Ch. 8 about a month ago saying it was full of inaccuracies by the people who played at Masonic Home. I’ve read Junction Boys and enjoyed it, but it was also full of falsehoods. I worked with Jim Dent about 10 years ago and he was a pretty good guy. But he was full of $hit back then. I’m sure the book is a great read, but please don’t take it as truth.
  8. I'm sorry that they died, I wish death on no one but the MUTS (j/k). But they did break the law and I believe they vacated all of their rights, when they broke the window and entered the neighbors house. Again, I'm sorry that they are dead, but this guy should not be prosecuted for protecting his neighbors property.
  9. At least Kenny will have a familiar face in SNOT. Congrats to a stand up guy and a good coach.
  10. Sun Belt Conference Releases All-Conference Football Teams NEW ORLEANS – A breakout season for Florida Atlantic’s football program was further solidified Wednesday as the Sun Belt Conference released its All-Conference Football teams. Owl sophomore quarterback Rusty Smith was named the Sun Belt’s Player of the Year and legendary head coach Howard Schnellenberger was named the league’s Coach of the Year. The Sun Belt All-Conference teams are selected by each league head coach and a selected media panel. The awards come days after FAU accepted its first bowl bid. The Owls are the fastest start-up program to earn a bowl berth and will play the Memphis Tigers, 7 p.m., Friday, December 21 in the R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl. Smith, who passed for a Sun Belt season record 3,352 yards on the season, was also named first team all-conference quarterback. Fellow Owls Jason Harmon (Jr., TE), Cortez Gent (So., WR), Frantz Joseph (Jr., LB), Cergile Sincere (Sr., LB) and Tavious Polo (Fr., DB) joined Smith on the first team. John Rizzo (Jr., OL), Jarrid Smith (Sr., OL), Jervonte Jackson (Jr., DL) and Corey Small (Jr., DB) were named second team all-conference. Eight of FAU’s ten All-Conference first or second team players are underclassmen. Additional accolades were handed out to Troy’s Omar Haugabook (Offensive Player of the Year), Arkansas State’s Tyrell Johnson (Defensive Player of the Year), Troy’s Chris Bradwell (Newcomer of the Year) and North Texas’ Giovanni Vizza (Freshman of the Year). Haugabook, the Sun Belt’s Player of the Year, Offensive Player of the Year, and Newcomer of the Year last season, had an impressive 2007 campaign – passing for almost 3,000 yards and rushing for over 600 yards. Haugabook had 30 total touchdowns on the season (18 passing, 11 rushing, and one receiving) and led the Sun Belt in total offense. Johnson finished out his career at Arkansas State as a four time All-Sun Belt selection. He was selecting as this season’s top defender in a year in which he broke the league’s all-time tackles record. Vizza, meanwhile, put up gaudy numbers from the quarterback position in his freshman campaign. He set the NCAA record for most passing touchdowns by a freshman with eight TD tosses against Navy and tied the record for most passing touchdowns in a half regardless of class with seven against Navy. Player of Year Rusty Smith (Florida Atlantic, So., QB) Offensive Player of Year Omar Haugabook (Troy, Sr., QB) Defensive Player of the Year Tyrell Johnson (Arkansas State, Sr., DB) Newcomer of the Year Chris Bradwell (Troy, Sr., DL) Freshman of the Year Giovanni Vizza (North Texas, Fr., QB) Coach of the Year Howard Schnellenberger, FAU First Team All-Sun Belt Conference Offense Rusty Smith (Florida Atlantic, So, QB) Tyrell Fenroy (Louisiana-Lafayette, Jr., RB) Calvin Dawson (Louisiana-Monroe, Sr., RB) Cortez Gent (Florida Atlantic, So., WR) Casey Fitzgerald (North Texas, Jr., WR) Jason Harmon (Florida Atlantic, Jr., TE) Matt Mandich (Arkansas State, Jr., OL) Jesse Newman (Louisiana-Lafayette, Sr., OL) Franklin Dunbar (Middle Tennessee, Jr., OL) Kyle Cunningham (ULM, Sr., OL) Dion Small (Troy, Jr., OL) First Team All-Sun Belt Conference Defense Rodney Hardeway (Louisiana-Lafayette, Sr., DL) Tavares Jones (Middle Tennessee, Sr., DL) Erik Walden (Middle Tennessee, Sr., DL) Jeremiah Chapman (North Texas, Sr., DL) Frantz Joseph (Florida Atlantic, Jr., LB) Cergile Sincere (Florida Atlantic, Sr., LB) Boris Lee (Troy, So., LB) Khayyam Burns (Arkansas State, Sr., DB) Tyrell Johnson (Arkansas State, Sr., DB) Tavious Polo (Florida Atlantic, Fr., DB) Elbert Mack (Troy, Sr., DB) First Team All-Sun Belt Conference Special Teams Greg Whibbs (Troy, Sr., PK) Scott Love (ULM, So., P) Leodis McKelvin (Troy, Sr., KR) Desmond Gee (Middle Tennessee, So., All Purpose) Second Team All-Sun Belt Conference Offense Omar Haugabook (Troy, Sr., QB) Reggie Arnold (Arkansas State, So., RB) Kenny Cattouse (Troy, Sr., RB) Levi Dejohnette (Arkansas State, Sr., WR) Gary Banks (Troy, Sr., WR) Zeek Zacharie (ULM, Jr., TE) John Rizzo (Florida Atlantic, Jr, OL) Jarrid Smith (Florida Atlantic, Sr., OL) Adam Hill (ULM, Sr., OL) Chris Fisher (Louisiana-Lafayette, So., OL) Kelvin Drake (North Texas, So., OL) Second Team All-Sun Belt Conference Defense Jervonte Jackson (Florida Atlantic, Jr., DL) David Cooper (ULM, Sr., DL) Kenny Mainor (Troy, Jr., DL) Shawn Todd (Troy, Sr., DL) Koby McKinnon (Arkansas State, Sr. LB) Antwyne Zanders (Louisiana-Lafayette, Jr., LB) Cardia Jackson (ULM, So., LB) Corey Small (Florida Atlantic, Jr., DB) Greg James (ULM, So., DB) Bradley Robinson (Middle Tennessee, Sr., DB) Leodis McKelvin (Troy, Sr., DB) Second Team All-Sun Belt Conference Special Teams Drew Edmiston (Louisiana-Lafayette, Jr., PK) Brett Shrable (Arkansas State, Jr., P) Lionell Singleton (Florida International, Sr., KR) Michael Desormeaux (Louisiana-Lafayette, Jr., All Purpose) Honorable Mention All-Sun Belt Conference: Corey Leonard (Arkansas State, So., QB), Alex Carrington (Arkansas State, So., DE), Kris Bartels (Florida Atlantic, Sr., DB), Charles Pierre (Florida Atlantic, Jr., RB), Scott Bryant (Florida International, So., LB), Ashlyn Parker (Florida International, So., DB), Korey Raymond (Louisiana-Lafayette, Sr., DL), Grant Fleming (Louisiana-Lafayette, Fr., LB), Frank Goodin (ULM, Fr. RB), Aaron Morgan (ULM, So., DL), DeMarco McNair (Middle Tennessee, Sr., RB), Alex Suber (Middle Tennessee, Jr., DB), Brandon Jackson (North Texas, Sr., WR), Craig Robertson (North Texas, Fr., LB), Chris Jamison (Troy, Jr., OL), Sherrod Martin (Troy, Jr., DB)
  11. He's a better DB than RB, which is scary because in 13 games he as 1,453 yards on 248 carries with 28 rushing TD's, which is a 5.9 avg. per carry. He has 38 catches for 481 yards with 3 receiving TD's, which is a 12.7 avg per catch.
  12. U. of Colorado settles sex-assault suit By P. SOLOMON BANDA, Associated Press Writer The University of Colorado has agreed to pay two women $2.85 million to settle a lawsuit alleging they were sexually assaulted by football players and recruits, school officials said Wednesday. University spokesman Ken McConnellogue said the school also agreed to hire an adviser to monitor compliance with federal laws governing equal treatment of women and add a position in the university Office of Victim Assistance. One of the women, Lisa Simpson, will receive $2.5 million, McConnellogue said. The other woman, who did not wish be identified publicly, will receive $350,000. The Associated Press does not identify the victims of alleged sexual assault, but Simpson has agreed to be identified in media reports. University President Hank Brown planned to discuss the settlement at a news conference later Wednesday. The women said they were raped at an off-campus party for football players and recruits in 2001. The lawsuit sparked a scandal over CU's football recruiting practices that led to broad reforms and a shake-up of the university's top leaders. The women's lawsuit alleged the university violated federal law by fostering an environment that allowed sexual assaults to occur. Baine Kerr, attorney for one of the women, did not immediately return a call seeking comment. A federal judge dismissed the suit in 2005, saying the women failed to show evidence of deliberate indifference. In September, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals revived the lawsuit, ruling there was evidence the alleged assaults were caused by the school's failure to adequately supervise players. The recruiting scandal prompted a grand jury investigation, which resulted in a single indictment charging a former football recruiting aide with soliciting a prostitute and misuse of a school cell phone. He pleaded guilty and was placed on probation. A separate inquiry, backed by the university's Board of Regents, concluded that drugs, alcohol and sex were used to entice blue chip recruits to the Boulder campus but said none of the activity was knowingly sanctioned by university officials. The school responded by overhauling oversight of the athletics department and putting some of the most stringent policies in place for any football recruiting program. The fallout included the resignations of CU System President Betsy Hoffman and Athletic Director Dick Tharp.
  13. They are the only undefeated team in the country. I know, they haven't played anybody except Boise State, but neither has Kansas, except for a loss to the only good team they played, Missouri. You have Kansas rated higher than Hawaii in your poll, explain that. I realize there is no perfect system, except a playoff, to decide a national champion. But the playoff ain't going to happen, it makes too much sense and would take the power away from the big conferences, who think they are better than every one else.
  14. Yes, They got elimnated from the Class 5A Div I playoffs by SA Reagan, 49-28.
  15. Vizza's stats turned into the NCAA Comp.%: 58.22454308093995 Yards/Att.: 6.234986945169712 TD%: 4.43864229765013 Int.%: 5.221932114882506 NCAA QB Rating: 114.80208877284595
  16. Thanks Mr. Mosely. I hope Micah is as excited to be at NT as the knowledgable NT football fans are to have him playing for the MEAN GREEN.
  17. After watching the UCLA game, I'd have to take Texas and the points. The Longhorns are really good.
  18. You're at least half right. Democrats love terrorist.
  19. Notice: to Dallas Morning News High School Game Time blog moderator - this is the 5th time I've submitted this blog entry comment for posting in the last 16 hours and you choose not to post it. Be advised, if you do not post it immediately, based on the fairness doctrine of professional journalists and the principles of unbiased journalistic ethics, I will write a letter to the editor of the DMN about your prejudicial practices of pro-SLC editorial review and complain to your supervisors at Belo Corp. Furthermore, I am and will post this on my blog site at www.texasfootball.com which has a much wider readership than this blog on DMN SportsDay. Your call pal. Yo, yo , yo SLC misguided bloggers. Git on up outa ma grill and listen to reason, you ignorant northeast Tarrant County suburban dwellers (mouth breathers obviously) - I am not dissing SLC here and in my previous 2 posts, far from it. Under the Todd Dodge dynasty, SLC was THE 5A team in Texas and the pride of Texas to the rest of the nation - they are still great, just not so much and perhaps Abilene is now. The key reason, singular and simple - under Coach Wasson and his obvious poor judgment, SLC is not the dragon team of the Todd Dodge era. Never will be again I'd estimate. Todd Dodge and the succession of NFL-caliber QBs at SLC: Daniels, Wasson, that dude who sits the bench at Bama now and Riley, the perfect storm - one every 50 years or so do those forces line up in one team. I cannot overemphasize that absolute idiot play call - The Drags had it in the bag - chip shot FG and move on to the next round toward a 3rd consecutive 5A state championship. Coach Wasson, the lame replacement for a poorly thought out and ill-timed Todd Dodge dreadful decision to take the helm at a historically 2nd rate, back water UNT team, did not pan out...for Dodge or UNT or SLC. An out of state Miami, FL team came in during regular season and treated the Dragons like their practice squad during a nationally televised prime time high school football game - made it look like a scrimmage and then, due directly to extremely poor play-calling in the red zone in a 2-minute drill time, SLC lost for a 2nd time in the same season to Abilene and tossed away a shot at tying Abilene for the all time 5A record of consecutive state titles at three...SLC will never be there again to roll off three 5A state titles in a row- that time has passed along with the unique, once every 20 years talent pool derived from the SLC student body from 2004-2007...but, like I have noted in prior posts, "it's alright, you can't be forever blessed, ..." ("American Tune" - Paul Simon). It was time for a change anyways at the top of the 5A pecking order and Abilene just may be the answer, we'll soon see. My main points are these: (1) Todd Dodge should have sat pat at SLC and delivered the Dragons to that elusive 3rd 5A state title in 2007. Then he could have scooted right into at LEAST the Baylor head coaching job, probably the TX A&M gig rather than being trapped at UNT in a dead end coaching gig. (2) Todd Dodge would NEVER have made that ridiculous play call to snap from under center to reposition the ball for what was already a chip shot FG by just allowing the game clock to run down to 3 seconds and calling time out and not risking any screw-up on another snap - totally unnecessary and a massive error in judgment on Coach Wasson's part - if Todd Dodge had been there for SLC rather than being totally wasted at a perennially underperforming UNT team - SLC would be past Abilene and on their way to an easy match-up with an obviously inferior Lewisville Hebron team in the 5A Quarterfinals next weekend. Now Abilene has a cakewalk to the 5A Division II crown in 2007 and not SLC for the 3rd time in a row - which is what everyone in SL, TX apparently was basing their entire existence around (PS - there is more to life than HS football folks - read "Friday Night Lights" or talk to people in Odessa, oops, that perennial powerhouse, Permian fell as well yesterday - never mind). Bottom line, Coach Wasson's poor judgment cost SLC a 3rd consecutive 5A D II title and his son is a fool for leaving TX State for OU to ride the bench his crucial senior year under Sam Bradford. Young Wasson could have been a decent career back-up QB in the NFL - now he is just going to have to settle for selling insurance or real estate back home in SL, TX. (3) Riley Dodge SERIOUSLY needs to reconsider changing his verbal commit to UNT before it is too late and the major Big 12 schools lose interest in him. Rivals.com is not going to penalize Riley Dodge too much for being on a vanquished SLC team because his head coach called plays in crunch time with his head up his a**. Riley's stock is still hot and Mack Brown or Mike Leach would still welcome him with open arms, a full ride athletic scholarship and a freshman redshirt to learn big school BCS-caliber play under the potential 2008 Heisman Trophy candidates seniors Colt McCoy or Graham Harrell. Being starting QB as a freshman with backwater UNT, not so much. Fagitaboutet. (4) Now that the SLC Dragons are not going to three-peat as 5A D II champs after all, what IS up with that faggoty bleached blond hairdos that their players sport every year during the play-offs? NOTICE: a bunch of bleached blonde cry babies leaving the Texas Stadium field in tragic, last moment and shocking defeat does not look good on the AP Photo wire folks of SLC, TX. Get rid of the girlie hair doos if you are ever back at the Quarterfinal playoff level again. (5) Congratulations to a deserving and scrappy Abilene team and good luck for a 5A D II title in 2007. Your three-peat, 3 consecutive 5A state championship record is intact. Posted by: Neil Robertson | December 2, 2007 1:26 PM ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ This guy is a freelance writer for Dave Campbell's Texas Football. His bosses at Texas Football would probably like to know about his distain for one of the Major University's it covers. I am going to write adam.hochfelder@hostcommunications.com, the editor and jake.shaw@hostcommunications.com, te managing editor and tell them I am going to write to everyone of their sponsors and inform them that I will not be purchasing any of their products as long as they advertise in Texas Football Magazine, as long as the magazine employs this writer, who appears to be at-least one cookie short of a dozen. I would encourage all true MEAN GREEN Fans to do the same. Brett Tulloss
  20. Guys this game is almost 9 months away. Take a step back, take a drink and just breath.
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