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Showing posts with label Sam Houston State. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sam Houston State. Show all posts

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Top Ten Moments in UTSA Football 2011

10. UTSA Jerseys Soft-Reveal



For whatever reason, UTSA opted not to officially reveal their jerseys as they were rumored to do one week before kickoff. We may never know why the cards fell this way, but perhaps it was for the best. One night Steven Kurfehs posted a couple of pictures of himself wearing his jersey and, well, Facebook BLEW UP. I hate using the word “viral” but it’s pretty applicable in this occasion. The jerseys were sharp and minimalist (although I’m hearing that’s changing a bit next year, possible more to come on that soon). Nearly everyone loved them. Students and fans got uber-hyped for the season, and it was all grassroots. Damn, I used another word I hate.

9. Erik Brown/Ashaad Mabry Transfers

Bob Owen/SAEN
Just a few weeks before the season started (and a week after, in Brown’s case), UTSA received an unexpected influx of talent that provided a nice boost to the on-field production of the fledgling Roadrunners. Mabry is a 6’3, 300 lb. defensive tackle that transferred from Boone Picken’s WonderWorld at Oklahoma State to a football program that, at that point, had never even played a real football game. Mabry once worked out in world-class multi-million dollar facilities in Stillwater, but now throws weight around in a steamy, underground, outdated gym that is actually a converted P.E. classroom. Mabry was a big time recruit at MacArthur HS, drawing offers from several big-name programs. And now here he is at humble UTSA. Mabry chose to transfer back to his hometown in order to be close to his ill mother. While Ashaad only started in four games, his presence was felt throughout the entire season. The victim of numerous double-teams, Mabry finished the season with 20 tackles, 3 tackles for loss, one sack, and four quarterback hurries. As a true freshman. 19 years old.


Brian Baer/SAEN

To put it simply, Erik Brown was a shot in the arm for this program. After struggling to see the field at Fresno State, Brown flew back down to San Antonio, where he led Converse Judson to a state championship in his junior year of high school before moving to Arizona. A quick, instinctual cornerback, Brown brought a sense of stability to what was likely the Roadrunners’ weakest position. Brown’s infusion couldn’t have come at a better time. Jeremy Hall and Crosby Adams were both routinely toasted by McMurry receivers in Game Two. After just a week and a half of practice, Brown saw considerate playing time at Southern Utah and then quickly evolved into a starter and consistent performer. Brown also usurped punt return duties. Thanks to UTSA’s FCS status, Brown was able to save a year of eligibility and play as a redshirt sophomore.

8. UTSA Mariachi Band

via Urban Spotlight San Antonio
It’s no secret that UTSA is desperate to instill some type of unique tradition. In a culturally rich city like San Antonio, it’s not going to take too much time. In Game Two the Spirit of San Antonio marched out with a special group of mariachi players dubbed "Los Paisanos". The crowd absolutely loved it. Mariachi is as puro as it gets and it’s crucial that we embrace our city’s tradition as we begin to establish our identity as a program and fan base. I wouldn’t mind seeing the mariachi become a staple of SOSA in the future.

7. UTSA Signs its Second Recruiting Class

via Kens5
Coker and his coaching staff made a huge splash on the recruiting trail in 2011, signing 28 outstanding, accomplished athletes to scholarships. While UTSA failed to attract the size and experience they were looking for on the offensive line, they were able to land some real steals at skilled positions. Personally, the coaching staff proved to me that they were extremely talented skill evaluators. Just take a look at all of the contributors this year that were unranked by online recruiting services: Franky Anaya, Kenny Harrison, David Morgan, Jason Neill, Brandon Reeves, Payton Rion, Alondre Thorn, Triston Wade, Josh Walker. Those are all guys that either started or saw serious playing time against Division I talent. All but two of them are true freshmen. That's not just being good at evaluating talent-- that's a minor miracle.

6. UTSA vs. SHSU

Jack Wilson
Some people might think it’s weird that I have a loss as one of my top moments of the season, but if you were there you would understand. It was UTSA’s first away game within reasonable driving distance and the Roadrunner faithful represented very well. I would say at minimum ¼ of the crowd were UTSA fans but it sounded like ¾. If you’re living in a cave, Sam Houston is playing played in the FCS national championship game and they’re still undefeated in ’11 finished their season with just one loss. UTSA almost spoiled their miracle season, but two fumbles and three interceptions from Soza gave the Bearkats too many opportunities to wrap it up, leading to a bitter 22-7 road loss. The Roadrunner defense was stifling against SHSU’s three-headed run game, holding the Bearkats way below offensive averages. After the hard-fought loss, the team came over to the visitor section to join the band and fan base in the alma mater. In that moment, surrounded by new friends with shared passion, college football at UTSA was very real. A family was starting to form. This was everything we had hoped for. There was also copious amounts of smack talked on both ends leading up to the game, which was fun.

5. First Pep Rally

via yours truly
With anticipation and anxiety running high, thousands of Roadrunner fans invaded the River Walk on Friday evening before the inaugural kick off for the program's first ever pep rally. High fives were exchanged, gallons of beer and top-shelf margs were consumed, but most importantly, UTSA staked its territorial claim on the city of San Antonio. Mobs of Blue and Orange filled downtown San Antonio in all directions. The River Walk pep rally was an awesome flair of San Antonio—as President Romo put it: “Isn’t this the coolest pep rally on Earth?”

4. Georgia State vs. UTSA


They had to have their backs against the wall to do it, but UTSA finally beat a Division I team. Both defenses took turns whacking at the opposition in a low-scoring affair. Nic Johnston, Erik Brown, Mark Waters, and Chris Johnson all stepped up with big plays to put kicker Sean Ianno in position to send the game into overtime and then later seal the 17-14 victory.

3. "Birth of a Program" on Fox Sports Southwest


After diligent work and perhaps some pestering from the UTSA administration, Fox Sports Southwest agreed to carry a six episode television series following the birth of the university’s football program. The broadcast brought the Roadrunners into the living rooms of 10,000,000 Texans and Oklahomans, providing crucial exposure. You have no idea how many “UTSA is starting a football team?” tweets I read while the show was on. While the production value varied by episode, it was cool to get a personal look at the team and whet our appetites for actual games.

2. Ticket Sales Pandemonium



On 9/3/11 a whopping, staggering, deafening 56,783 people showed up to make their place in history as UTSA started their football program against Larry Coker’s alma mater Northeastern State. While the official record-breaking announcement of the attendance was jaw-dropping, the buildup throughout the weeks leading up to the game was intense and exhilarating. Thanks to Ticketmaster’s interactive seating chart, we were able to approximate ticket sales in real time, watching as seats flew off the shelves by the dozens every time one hit F5. Season ticket sales finished at around 12,000. Average attendance set a new NCAA record for start-up programs with 35,521. Who said San Antonio wasn’t going to support UTSA football again?

1. Game One

via k0nwu in our Flickr Group
Could you have drawn it up better? The atmosphere was elite, the turnout was record-breaking, the Roadrunners looked ready to go undefeated, and the beer was a-flowin'. Everything was so flawless, from the first tunnel entrance to the echoes of "U-T-S-A" through the concourse as the masses of Roadrunner fans gloated in pride after the victory. For some, it had been a 40+ year wait for football. For others, it was just a curious walk across the street to see the new hot thing in town. For all, it was a moment not soon to be forgotten. As Mark Dyer of IMG put it, "You would have thought UTSA was playing the Texas Longhorns for the national title rather than a Division II team"



Before you bash me about how terrible my rankings are, be sure to leave your top ten in the comments section!

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Episode 8: Mid Season Review


In this week's episode, we review the Sam Houston trip Jared took, take stock of the team at mid-season, and preview U of South Alabama. We also experience technical difficulties that wipe out 25-30 minutes of quality, quality podcasting.


We recorded part two Wednesday night and it is now up.

Enjoy!



Part 1 Download


Part 2 Download


Tuesday, October 4, 2011

South Alabama Jaguars Preview


After falling just a few plays short of upsetting a strong Sam Houston State team (now ranked at #11), UTSA will host their first ever home game against a D1 opponent. Following a bye week last week, the South Alabama Jaguars will travel to San Antonio carrying a 2-2 record, with wins against West Alabama and Lamar and losses to FBS opponents North Carolina State and Kent State. While both teams sit in the dark of the proverbial FBS cellar (neither team have defeated an FBS opponent yet this year) USA should be heavily commended for playing both of these schools very tightly. South Alabama traded turnovers with NC St. until the end of the third quarter when the Wolfpack began to separate from the pack (ha-ha-ha). Kent State jumped out to a 33 point lead against the Jaguars whom would rally to bring the final score to 33-25 after a couple of squandered opportunities for South Alabama to send the game into overtime.

For those unfamiliar, South Alabama is a future FBS start up program. The team formed in 2009, but did not gain NCAA recognition as a varsity football program until 2010. This means that the team was able to play together for a year without losing a year of eligibility. USA will join the Sunbelt in a provisional role as a scheduling partner next year, then gain bowl eligibility in 2013. South Alabama has drawn a lot of attention since its inception by racking up a 17-0 record in the program’s first two years. While the bulk of these wins came against military academies and sub D1 programs, USA enjoyed notable wins against Southland Conference member Nicholls State, fellow D1 start-ups Lamar and Georgia State, and a thriller against UC Davis that was decided by a shanked field goal as the clock expired. The Jaguars were able to extend their winning streak in 2011 with home wins against West Alabama and Lamar before beginning their killer slate of two back to back FBS games.

Forewarning: USA is still undefeated against FCS opponents.

Brief aside: they totally jacked our “Still Undefeated” shirt.

As a rule of thumb, South Alabama is a team that plays with a lot of confidence and swagger. Whether this holds up during the program’s first ever losing streak remains to be seen. They hit hard, fight for every yard, and are well coached. Much akin to UTSA’s squad, the South Alabama roster is loaded with talent and flaws-- Guys that are great players but lacking in one facet, whether it is sheer speed, girth, height, or academics.

Starting in the trenches, the Jaguars' athleticsm among their big men impressed me. While their offensive line weighs in at a sub-280 lb. average, they compensate with footwork and assistance from their neighboring blockers. The Jaguars love to pull blockers on tosses and off tackle runs so Smith and Neill will need to be sure that they maintain their inner half on the line of scrimmage and clamp down on releasing blockers. USA’s offensive line does a great job of clearing out holes for their backs to jump through, providing ample space for their two feature backs to work their magic. If UTSA is able to seal up these patches up front as they did against Sam Houston State then South Alabama will be forced to drastically alter their run-first game plan. USA shifted into a five receiver set at times during their game against NC St., I would look for them to duplicate this on Saturday against UTSA's big and nasty defensive front four. Despite USA’s three senior starters on the offensive line(and three Texans), I feel confident that UTSA’s defensive line will be able to crash in and make some noise when South Alabama attempts to pass after watching North Carolina St. bull rush their way into USA’s QB C.J. Bennett’s face at will .

Cause for optimism: USA is averaging two sacks allowed per game, with 1.5 sacks per game of their own. UTSA is allowing 1.8 on average and getting to the quarterback 2.8 times per game.

On the defensive side of the line South Alabama features a lot of speed and shiftiness. The guy that caught my eye was Romelle Jones, a 6’2, 275 lb. sophomore nose tackle. Jones has great feet and does an absolutely terrific job of using his hands to generate separation from offensive lineman, thereby putting himself in good position to roam the back field. Romelle (3.5 TFL, 2 sacks) may be the best pure pass rusher UTSA has faced thus far into the season. He’s also a “leisure studies” major. Ahhh, the elusive major where porn counts as research! Flanking Jones in USA’s 3-4 base set are defensive ends Motavious Williams and Alex Page. Page and William are both undersized, coming in at 6’1, 235 lbs. and 6’2, 265 lbs., respectively. Andy Dalgleish and Randon Carnathan also see significant playing time on the line. While South Alabam’s line is small, they can cause some serious damage if you don’t latch on to them and keep your feet moving, as evidenced by their six sacks and 10 quarterback hurries on the season.

USA’s defense won’t just stay in a 3-4 look. In the couple of hours of film I watched on them, I noticed a traditional 4-3, a 4-2 nickel package, and a 4-1 dime set. Leading tackler is middle linebacker and Virginia Tech transfer Jake Johnson. Johnson is a high motor, lateral linebacker that manages to track down running backs twice as fast as himself. All roads lead through #42 if UTSA wants to get anything going on offense.
One flaw that stuck out to me while watching South Alabama’s game against North Carolina State was USA’s inability to cover the flats on wheel routes and screens; interestingly enough, this is an area that UTSA has struggled to exploit, as you probably realized after watching Tevin Williams drop two wide-open screen passes or CheRod Simpson forgetting to turn around and look for the ball after releasing for a pass against Sam Houston State.

Offensively, there’s no doubting that the Jaguars want to run the ball as much as possible, using a mixture of sweeps and tosses on the outside and a power game between the tackles. They’ll pull the ball back and throw up a play action pass from time to time, gaining an average of 189 yards through the air.

Caveat: starting quarterback C.J. Bennet (RS Freshman) has eight interceptions on the year in contrast to only three touchdowns.

 A bit of a far cry from what we’re watching Robert Griffin III do up at Baylor this year, to say the least. In fact, I can’t help but feel the quarterback position is an area of major concern for the Jaguars. Bennet goes on tears where he’ll fire off multiple pin-point passes, then systematically throw up a lame duck into coverage. If UTSA stuffs up the run and Bennet continues his two picks-per-game trend then the Roadrunners will be set up for a win.

Where South Alabama is going to rake their points in is on the back of tailback Kendall Houston. Houston is a stud back that tends to require a hard lick or multiple defenders to bring him down. While Houston is not crazy fast and isn’t going to generate his own touchdown runs, he does a fantastic job of following blocks after they have developed, displaying a sense of maturity much higher than what one would expect from a redshirt freshman. If you give Houston a decent gap at the line of scrimmage then you’re practically guaranteed a minimum of five yards.

Splitting carries with Kendall is Demetre Baker, another redshirt freshman that transferred from Georgia this spring. Baker is another great running back that is a bit more of a slasher than Houston. Baker has good closing speed and a long stride that makes him tough to arm tackle.

All in all, South Alabama is eerily similar to UTSA-- A scrappy, young team with plenty of room to grow into a good FBS team in a few years. Taking UTSA's struggling offense into account, this game is as close to a toss-up as could be in my book, but I’ll give the Roadrunners the edge thanks to home field advantage. Final score: 24-21 UTSA.

Oddities: Earon Holmes has been nominated UTSA's starting wide receiver after his return to the team from shoulder injury last week.

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Booze Fueled Instant Reaction: Sam Houston


Eric Soza lost a lot of fans tonight. He wasn’t the problem. He was a problem, however. The offensive line did a decent enough job keeping the BearKats from killing him. The bottom line is that Sam Houston lined up to stop the run. They manned up and pressed the wideouts and dared Eric Soza to exploit that and he couldn’t.

Some would say that the onus is on Kam and company to get open and make the catches. A fair assessment as that may be, Soza failed to put his corps in position to make a play. At least three times the Runners were bailed out by a pass interference call. Most often the series involved Soza not seeing wide open guys down field and throwing a poor pass to his intended target.

He is not a complete waste. I actually think he is a solid dude and has mucho potential. In trying to do so much and always make an awesome play, he is not making a solid play.

With that said, lets give a round of applause to the defense. The entire first half was spent defending the red zone or damn near it. Sam Houston’s vaunted rushing attack managed but 8 points and a lot of one and two yards gains. Kurfehs bottled up Flanders and his backups on the options and tosses. It was a thing of beauty.

Later, when Flanders broke free for a long reception on a shovel pass and later the twirling reverse-field score, it was more a symptom of tired legs than poor defense. It was always going to be a tall order to defend a side that wanted to run and stayed committed for the duration.

We availed ourselves well. If the Soza and the offense could have provided a foray or two into enemy territory in the first half this game might have a different result.

It isn’t as simple as that, though. For a 20th ranked FCS team at home, with a nasty run game to only put up 20-something points and allow one score? Well, that has happened twice already. Western Illinois lost 20-7 at Bowers. We lost 22-7 tonight. What does this mean? I posit that it means that we are young and talented and in two years probably would do the damage that I not-so-humbly predicted on the podcast.

It is yet another reminder of the state of the program. We are young and inexperienced. We have talented guys that are trying to figure things out still. Our quarterback is winning the position battle because ostensibly he has a better grasp of the offense than the other guys. After a year or two we should A) Have more competition at the QB spot or B) Have a Soza with a less-happy feet making confident, accurate throws.


Good news is that we are hanging with teams that are considered good. We have three of the last five games at home, where our offense plays much much better. As the week moves on and time begins its healing of wounds we’ll start looking at Soza’s performance in context: Sam Houston’s defense played pretty damn tough. Maybe tougher than Southern Utah’s. That is even while looking forward to SFA in Reliant.

Game day: Sam Houston State


It is game day. Be sure to check out Rowdyville, Rowdy Talk, and Mysa’s game chat for updates. 

As of this posting, we are about 30 minutes away.

Gonna try this last minute chat thing. For those of you who don't want to mingle with n00bs and/or don't  want to wait for message board updates only. 




Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Episode 7: Bacone and BearKats


In this week's episode, we review the Bacone game and look ahead to the Huntsville trip.

Enjoy!



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Monday, August 22, 2011

UTSA in Dave Campbell's Texas Football Magazine

I often have moments where I take a step back and it hits me. UTSA has a Division I football team. I had one of those ethereal moments this weekend when I picked up my annual copy of Dave Campbell's Texas Football Magazine. Dave & Co. seem fairly high on the Roadrunners. They received some good marks in the ratings section, and their recruiting prospects and commits were highly touted throughout the high school section of the magazine. I'm not going to scan the magazine or copy and paste every word because I sincerely want you all to buy a magazine. At 376 content-rich pages, the magazine is an absolute steal for $10-- bathroom reading material for a month.

Top 5 Impact Players

  1. QB Eric Soza, So.
  2. RB Chris Johnson, Fr.
  3. RB David Glasco II, Fr.
  4. LB Steven Kurfehs, So.
  5. S Mark Waters, Jr
Pretty good list here, but I don't know if I could justify Glasco at #3, even though I'm a fan of his. I'd personally bump Kurfehs and Waters up a spot then add Kam Jones to the list.

UTSA's Offense

Offensive Line - C
Running Backs - B
Receivers - B
Quarterbacks - B

Perfect. I'd maybe add a + to the RBs and subtract the OL to a C-, purely due to a lack of depth.

UTSA's Defense

Defensive Line - B-
Linebackers - B
Secondary - B
Special Teams - C-

Pretty spot on as well. This publication ran prior to Ashaad Mabry's transfer, thus I feel the DL should be a B or A-. Otherwise great stuff.

For reference, Texas State ratings:

OL - B-
RB - B
WR - B+
QB - B+
DL - C+
LB - A-
Secondary - B-
Special Teams - C

Photo courtesy of Mysa.com
The information in the main write-up is a tad outdated. It states that UTSA only has two players with FBS experience (Waters and Mike Sanchez) but of course that is no longer the case after Lekenwic Haynes and Patrick Hoog joined the squad. The article's pensmith brings up a few great points on UTSA:
  • The Alamodome is the fourth-largest collegiate stadium in Texas, lagging behind only Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial, Kyle Field, and Rice Stadium.
  • UTSA has 46 players on the roster from within a 100 mile radius of San Antonio. The actual number is certainly higher than at the time this article was composed, but it's still a great observation of the terrific job UTSA is doing in landing local talent and establishing recruiting pipelines.
  • Coker listed TE and WRs as the strengths on offense, while touting Cole Hubble, Kam Jones, Brandon Armstrong, and Earon Holmes.
Some quotes from Coker:
  • "It's tremendously exciting here because it's all so fresh. The program will follow whatever stamp you put on it, and we can decide the culture here right away. Whatever culture you establish is what you have. We can set the tone immediately for what we want this program to be. And what we want is to build it the right way, for the long haul."
  • "We think he's [Soza] is going to be a great contributor. He's a very smart player who knows the offense. It's his job to lose. He executes, he's a leader-- he's just what you want a quaterback to be internally, plus he has skills to do the job."
  • "We thought this was going to be a tough sell, but we have a lot of things that sell themselves. There's great high school football here, there's no other Division I team in the city, there's no professional team here, we've got a great facility in the Alamodome, it's a great city and we've got 30,000 students who voted overwhelmingly to fund and support this program."
A look at some of UTSA's 2011 opponents, as Dave Campbell sees them:

Sam Houston State
2010 Overall/Southland record (6-5/4-3)
Offensive Starters Returning - 11
Defensive Starters Returning - 9
Predicted to finish fourth in the Southland Conference. Roadrunners' keys to victory? Stop the run on defense, nail the big play on offense in spite of heavy blitzes.

Northeastern State
2010 Overall/LSC record (6-5/6-4)
- Won only two games in 2009. Won LSC North Division Title last year with its first winning season in TEN years.
- Trey McVay (887 yds, 12 TDs) was the LSC North Division receiver of the year.
- NSU boasts two all-conference offensive linement- gaurd Colton Ables and tackle Chris Cherry.
- Kenny Davis will lead the Riverhawks at QB in his senior year. Passed for 2,068 yards and 20 TDs last season.
- Bright side for UTSA? NSU allowed 31 points and ~400 yards per game. NSU did not face any FBS opponents last year.
- A trip to NSU's athletics site informed me that NSU's first game for 2011 will be broadcasted locally on Cox. They will face another 2011 UTSA adversary-- Bacone College. How nice of the two teams to provide UTSA with travel-free scouting! 

McMurray
2010 Overall/ASC Record - (6-4/4-4)
- McMurray landed two players on the Top 5 ASC Players pre-season list: QB Jake Mullin and Safety Will Morris. Mullin passed for nearly 3,000 yards last year with 35 touchdowns in only eight games. Morris was an all-american last year and earned ASC Defensive POY after recording 58 tackles and five interceptions.
-McMurray returns nine starters on both offense and defense. This is McMurry's last season in Division III before moving up to Division II.

Oddities:

If you haven't done so already, I highly suggest this beautiful article on UTSA football from Texas Monthly's Jason Cohen. I think it's the best piece of writing I've seen on UTSA's infantile program. Here are a few quotes from Cohen from an interview he did with Texas Monthly after his piece ran; I agree with Cohen's views on the future of UTSA hoops.

What challenges did you find in catching an institution like UTSA in transition? How do you get across its underperformance in an area like sports without making it seem like you’re putting the college down?
I would say it’s less underperformance than irrelevance—which probably doesn’t sound any nicer, but it’s just the reality of being such a young and small-sport school in a state where the measuring stick is UT and A&M (even TCU is hot stuff now). I’ve followed or covered schools like Portland State, Montana, Gonzaga, and Xavier, so I see UTSA in that same “mid-major” light. The basketball team will probably never reach the heights Gonzaga and Xavier have, but the university has still been a March Madness player, since they’ve hosted Final Fours and A.D. Lynn Hickey is on the men’s selection committee. It’s possible the basketball team will benefit more from being in the WAC than football will—or at least, it will seem more impressive if they win a couple of tournament games than it will for football to win a Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl.
Other than wins, what are the factors that help create a football tradition, in your opinion?
It’s probably all wins, isn’t it? I mean, even the teams that now seem sad-sack, when they originally established the traditions that they cling to now, it was accompanied by winning. UTSA only started sports in 1981, and they have their own hand sign (as, it seems, does every Texas school) but it’s kind of like a little indie rock band, it’s a secret. And then the basketball team makes it to March Madness a few times, and the whisper gets a little louder. And now with football, everyone in the second biggest city in the state will come to learn it—if it’s winning football. 
Given the attention on profitability in higher ed, if college football doesn’t turn a profit, how does it justify itself?
Are either of them really supposed to be profitable? Are collegiate newspapers or theater productions supposed to be profitable? My understanding is most college football programs aren’t, and even many of the ones that supposedly subsidize all the other sports don’t do that as well as its adherents might claim, because they are still subsidized by student fees (as UTSA’s football team is with a fee increase the student body voted for). But I’m not convinced that means the money they get (and revenue they generate, even if it doesn’t hit the black) would otherwise go to other aspects of a university. Or that sports isn’t an equally legitimate part of what a state university should be. 

Do you have tickets to UTSA’s first game?
I don’t have a ticket but I have a hotel reservation for Friday night, and I will probably choose to be in the stands rather than the press box. I imagine UTSA’s best memories on the field are still another season or two away, when they have a better team and better competition. But for a pure college football game day experience, the first-ever game ought to match the atmosphere of a bowl or big-time rivalry game. And if the game itself gets boring, there will still be time to get in the car and make the Texas–Rice kickoff. 

So there you go. A fairly huge post to make up for a slow week over here at Coker Chronicles. 12 days until kick off.