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13 Jan 16:21

Daily Round Up: All About Charlie

by A. J. Hooper
Ryan Mustard

If you click through to the article titled "Oh. My. UT's new coach is black!" you would get to read this line.
"... another example of Twitter making wordplay lemonade out of racist lemons."

Disclaimer: Before you proceed, just remember that none of the links are vetted and you may be reading something written by a 13-year-old, a so-called sports journalist or Clay Travis (is there really any difference between those options?). Read at your own peril.

Charlie Strong's desire to succeed was evident from a young age. [Dallas Morning News]

What do Big 12 coaches think of Charlie Strong? [Fox Sports]

Oh. My. UT's new coach is black! [Texas Monthly]

Does a black head coach make a difference? [Buzz Feed]

Has Texas made a Strong statement? [Sports On Earth]

Who are the top 10 players going into the 2014 season? [ESPN]

Mack might show up at your tailgate next fall. [Dallas Morning News]

Another Outstanding piece from a guy who probably lives in his mother's basement. [Bleacher Report]


13 Jan 16:21

Shawn Watson introduced as Longhorn QB coach, OC yet to be named

by Scipio Tex

Shawn Watson, new Longhorn QB coach, not OC.

Per ESPN and Max Olson's Twitter machine.  Nice job, Max.

Source: Shawn Watson was introduced as Texas QB coach in team meeting tonight. OC has yet to be named.

— Max Olson (@max_olson) January 13, 2014

Watson had a solid reputation as a pure QB coach, even before nurturing Teddy Bridgewater into a spectacular career at Louisville.  If you can turn Nebraska's Joe Ganz into an effective college QB, you've got some baseline coaching ability.

Here's Dagga's outstanding breakdown of his resume:

Shawn Watson, Louisville OC

RESUME

2011-pres. - - - Louisville (Offensive Coordinator/QB Coach)

2011 - - - Louisville (QB Coach)

2007–10 - - - Nebraska (Offensive Coordinator/QB Coach)

2006 - - - Nebraska (TE/Recruiting Coordinator)

2000–05 - - - Colorado (Offensive Coordinator/QB Coach)

1999 - - - Colorado (QB Coach)

1997–98 - - - Northwestern (QB Coach)

1994–96 - - - Southern Illinois (Head Coach)

1992–93 - - - Miami OH (QB Coach/Recruiting Coordinator)

1990–91 - - - Miami OH (WR Coach)

1987–89 - - - Miami OH (TE Coach)

1986 - - - Illinois (WR Coach)

1985 - - - Illinois (TE/OT Coach)

1983–84 - - - Illinois (Graduate Assistant)

1982 - - - Southern Illinois (Graduate Assistant)

1978-80 - - - Player, Illinois/Southern Illinois (FS)

STATS

Watson_medium

OBVIOUS UPSIDE

  • Extensive QB and skill position coaching credentials.
  • Currently jobless and may be willing to accept co-coordination or position coach duties. And he seems like a nice enough guy.
  • Solid oral hygeine and he smells faintly of butterscotch.

OBVIOUS DOWNSIDE

  • Runs a slow-paced fairly traditional West Coast offense. Charlie Strong has now said twice, on the record and as a rehearsed talking point, that he wants to run fast tempo.
  • Has the airs of a kindler, gentler Mackovic. Not sure that will go over well with the fanbase.
  • Muschamp made him look downright awful, twice. And those were huuuuuge games for Nebraska.
  • Overall, his OC track record is one of general competence interspersed with episodes of suddenly lackluster production. To some extent he just had bad luck with his QB's. But on paper it's not a resume that shouts "Top Five candidate". Or even Top Twenty to be honest. IMHO...as an OC, Watson's just a guy. He'd be a much more valuable asset to Texas as a position coach, if we have the room

Watson only assumed OC duties at Louisville in the fourth game of 2011, after Strong was dissatisfied with the direction of his offense.  Could Strong be making an aggressive young hire with Watson as an option coming off of the bench if that OC doesn't get it done?

Looks like the Longhorns still have a shot at a compelling OC hire.

We'll get an announcement soon.

08 Jan 23:04

Charlie Strong likely to be replaced at Louisville by...wait for it...Bobby Petrino

by Scipio Tex
Ryan Mustard

Some great writing in here.
"offensive genius and ethical infant"
"the Moneyball ridge of my reptilian brain swims in appreciation chemicals"

Oh, my.

Break out the Purell and penicillin.

The culture continues to shorten the public humiliation career resuscitation timeline from decades to months in politics and media and Louisville is doing their bit for the sporting world.

It looks like offensive genius and ethical infant Bobby Petrino will try to make it happen again at the 'ville.  He'll join Rick Pitino to form the creepiest football-basketball tandem in America.  I defy any of you to put forth a combo in revenue sports with a superior coaching ability to creep factor.  This is a masterful niche to exploit if you truly don't give a damn about appearances and the Moneyball ridge of my reptilian brain swims in appreciation chemicals even as the human being portion of my brain retches uncontrollably.

The Cardinals are also bringing in Charles Haley to head up Human Resources where he'll spearhead his new awareness campaign: LAY DEM NUTZ OUT CARDINALS, SHEEEIT.  This according to new school president, Anthony Weiner.

The potential implications for the Longhorns is that, if true, it guarantees little retention of Strong's former staff, whether by Petrino's choice, or because they fear he will embezzle money from them and say weird things to their 16 year old daughters.  Will an intensely loyal Strong watch while his buddies pound the pavement looking for jobs when he has several wide open here at Texas?

While it is Strong's Texas football ship to captain, many are hoping for a cherry-picked staff that included the best and brightest from Louisville, Texas and the nation's elite or up-and-comers.

Let's see how it shakes out.  However, if you'd like to perform LAP Longhorn Advance Panic, have at it below.

I'm not panicking yet, as I'm still marveling at the idea that Bobby Petrino will soon be standing in front of cameras lecturing Kentuckians on doing things the right way, accountability, honesty, and integrity.

We're living in truly bizarre times.  Yet another demonstration of the gap between the realities of college athletics and its dreamy propaganda.

03 Jan 16:39

Ars 2013 images of the year: rockets, medieval war, and Hulk judges

by Ars Staff

We spent 2013 obsessing over image quality at the Orbital HQ. Not only does the front page have more of them than ever before, but our brilliant tech team built out full-width galleries and started creating custom design layouts that demand something more than PR images and stick figures. Needless to say, this would become an all-staff challenge.

2013 marked our first full year with this visual focus, and, looking back on what we have to offer, it's been a pleasant surprise. We took a few moments to reflect on some of our favorite Ars images from the year that was, and they're shared below for all your "Open Image In New Tab>Save As" wallpaper-making needs.

Rocket speed and rocket work

Lee Hutchinson

An F-1 engine on display at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. Author's wife at right for scale.

3 more images in gallery

Reviews Editor Lee Hutchinson has a job even his father doesn't believe. But in between taking copious notes on everything from LEGO bricks to water-repellent miracle materials, Hutchinson will step behind the camera and capture some wonder for the rest of us to see. Among his favorite images from 2013 are the above trio, bursting with power. "This [first] shot shows my darling wife standing next to a Rocketdyne F-1 engine," he says. "This is the largest single-chamber liquid-fueled rocket engine ever actually built, producing 1.5 million lbs of thrust and gulping down one ton of fuel and two tons of oxidizer per second—and a Saturn V moon rocket was powered by five of them. Everything about it was enormous, especially the engines required to start it on its journey from the Earth to the Moon."

Read 12 remaining paragraphs | Comments

28 Dec 01:01

All hail: Kentacohut

20 Dec 17:41

Photo

Ryan Mustard

Wes Anderson



19 Dec 02:35

A documentary by Keanu Reeves about Film vs. Digital. Side By...



A documentary by Keanu Reeves about Film vs. Digital.

Side By Side (Official U.S. Trailer) (by Tribeca Film)

15 Dec 13:54

The Alabama Crimson Tide's Strength & Conditioning Coach is fun to watch.

by Sailor Ripley

From a 60 Minutes Sports special.

14 Dec 01:25

The first smartring has an LED screen, tells time, and accepts calls

by Ron Amadeo
Ryan Mustard

Ridiculous wave of "smart" things coming in 5.. 4.. 3..

Forget smartwatches—smartrings are the new thing now. An Indiegogo campaign for a product called the "Smarty Ring" has hit its funding goal. Smarty Ring is a 13mm-wide stainless steel ring with an LED screen, Bluetooth 4.0, and an accompanying smartphone app. The ring pairs with a smartphone and acts as a remote control and notification receiver.

The ring can display the time, accept or reject calls, control music, trigger the smartphone's camera, and initiate speed-dial calls. It will also alert the wearer with light-up icons for texts, e-mails, Facebook, Twitter, Google Hangouts, and Skype. It supports dual time zones and comes with a countdown timer, a stopwatch, and an alarm. It can work as a tracker for your phone, too—if your smartphone is more than 30 feet away from the ring, Smarty Ring will trigger an alarm.

The ring supports Android and iOS—as long as your device has Bluetooth 4.0, it should be compatible. The creators are promising 24 hours of battery life from the whopping 22 mAh battery, and charging happens via a wireless induction pad.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments


    






11 Dec 17:00

Spotify gives tablets on-demand streaming, phones playlist streaming

by Casey Johnston
\m/.

After rumors earlier this week, Spotify announced new music streaming capability for mobile devices Wednesday, with the full on-demand service extending only to iPads and Android tablets. Ad-supported users on tablets will now be able to pick and choose which songs to play instead of being restricted to Spotify-directed radio streams.

The new self-directed streaming feature notably excludes ad-supported users on smartphones. However, Spotify also announced that ad-supported users will now be able to stream their own playlists as well artists’ catalogs of their own choosing, though they must be played on shuffle and will still be sprinkled with ads. $9.99-per-month subscribers retain the exclusive ability to play those playlists and catalogs offline on their smartphones, as well as the ability to select songs for on-demand play.

At the announcement event, Spotify reasoned that the tablet app’s functionality should be more like that of the PC app, given that PC sales and ownership are declining while tablet ownership is rising.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments


    






11 Dec 15:00

I’m sure you’ve seen the knitted cap/beard combos...



I’m sure you’ve seen the knitted cap/beard combos that look like they keep your face so cozy.  This is the next logical step.

(via Dangerous Minds | Knitted ‘Alien’ Facehugger to keep your face warm on cold winter nights)

10 Dec 22:46

Mack Brown denies to 247Sports that he is resigning

by Wescott Eberts
Ryan Mustard

Notice that the "denial" from Mack only says he hasn't decided to step down. Not that he "won't" decide to step down. He doesn't go offensive and say "I will be the coach at Texas next year". This is a classic non-denial denial. Doesn't mean he's stepping down, but he's not clarifying the situation either.

And now the denial part of the process begins.

There's a certain cadence to retirement songs with the Texas Longhorns recently -- there's the report before the official announcement, the denials from the principals, and then the official announcement.

Welcome to the denial stage of the process, the most irritating and worthless part of it all!

After the Orangebloods report broke early Tuesday afternoon that head coach Mack Brown will step down this week, the originator of the 48 hours report that immediately preceded Chip Brown going all-in with Brown's resignation, Horns247, actually spoke with Brown, who is in Florida recruiting running back Dalvin Cook, currently a Florida pledge who is expected to flip his commitment to Florida State at some point before Signing Day.

Brown told Bobby Burton that he hadn't seen the article before offering the following statement:

"I'm in Florida recruiting. If I had decided to step down I sure wouldn't be killing myself down here. I have not decided to step down."

The quote from Brown about killing himself doing his job didn't go over so well:

Just got this text from a college coach: "Great quote by Mack 'killing himself"..That's what other people call 'working'"

— Bruce Feldman (@BFeldmanCBS) December 10, 2013

Indeed.

So not only is the same process that happened with the retirement of former athletic director DeLoss Dodds repeating itself-- report, denial, announcement -- it's also worth pointing out here that Brown really doesn't like hates Chip Brown and probably agreed to communicate with Burton in an attempt to damage Browns' credibility as much as to merely deny the report.

There's also a conspiracy theory going around that the leak to Chip Brown was designed to accelerate the process and help force a change by the administration:

Yep > RT @engeljen: If Mack's recruiting in Florida, as reported by others, this leak was planted internally in hope of pushing a change.

— Jimmy Burch (@Jimmy_Burch) December 10, 2013

Conspiracy theories exist by definition because of a lack of information.

In this case, that lack of information is about what's actually going on behind the scenes -- there's been a meeting between new athletic director Steve Patterson and Mack Brown that was described as "positive and productive" by a source likely pushing the university's agenda.

But there may not have actually been the conversation between whatever powers are making the call and Brown that he's done, which would suggest that Chip Brown's report is on rather thin footing.

Tweets like this, for instance:

Several top UT officials are caught off guard by report of Mack Brown stepping down. They all say its wrong. @statesman

— Brian Davis (@BDavisAAS) December 10, 2013

As much as Chip Brown still receives criticism for his strongly-worded comments about Texas A&M not leaving for the SEC, he did break the DeLoss Dodds retirement story. And he's putting his reputation on the line in a much more significant way in this case -- he'll have little credibility remaining if Brown does indeed come back for another season.

Given that Chip Brown has been around the business long enough to understand the stakes here, as well as the modus operandi of the university in previous situations, Chip Brown's report seems more credible than the denials coming from Mack Brown and the school -- none of that reasoning should exactly come as a surprise by this point.

So can we maybe just fast-forward past all the denials and get to the part where Brown actually announces his resignation?

Thanks,

Texas football fans

08 Dec 07:19

Before Steve Sarkisian was a highly sought after college...



Before Steve Sarkisian was a highly sought after college football coach, he dabbled in acting.

Mathesar from Galaxy Quest

29 Nov 14:57

Hungry helicopter eats delicious soldiers

by Jason Kottke

Hungry Helicopter

Scheming boxes and this hungry helicopter are neck and neck for the greatest example of pareidolia (aka faces in things).

Tags: pareidolia
21 Nov 00:00

R. Kelly improvised love songs

by Aaron Cohen
Ryan Mustard

Setting aside the peeing on people, R. Kelly is pretty awesome.

R. Kelly is some sort of random love song generating genius apparently. On a recent visit to the Rolling Stone offices, R. Ess asked R. Kelly to sing to them about dolphins, ice hockey, newspapers, and Italian heroes. The results R. Hilarious.

(via @leecrutchley who has a new book out.)

Tags: music   R. Kelly   Rolling Stone   video
18 Nov 16:54

Apple Reportedly Set to Acquire Israeli 3D Body Sensing Firm PrimeSense [Updated]

by Eric Slivka
Ryan Mustard

I'm not saying Apple is above "copying" as it were, but if they just out and out copy the kinect style motion sensing it seems bad legally and perceptually.

primesense_sensorBack in July, Apple was reported to have been looking at acquiring Israeli firm PrimeSense, the company behind the original 3D body sensing technology used by Microsoft for its Kinect platform, for around $280 million.

According to Israeli newspaper Calcalist [Google Translate, via SlashGear], a deal is now on the verge of being completed, with Apple agreeing to purchase PrimeSense for approximately $345 million. The report claims that the contract was scheduled to have been signed earlier this month but that one final legal issue has delayed the process. The contract should be finalized within the next few days, with an official announcement coming in the next two weeks.

kinect_disney
Apple has expressed interest in Kinect-like motion control of such products as appliances and vehicle instrumentation, but the main area where the company has been rumored to be using the technology is in television. Reports have indicated that Apple is looking at Kinect-like motion control for its future television set, although the project is said to be seeing continuing delays due to difficult content negotiations with Apple shifting its near-term focus to wearables such as the "iWatch".

Update: AllThingsD has confirmed that Apple is indeed in talks with PrimeSense, but while a deal is "close" to being completed, final details such as liquidity preferences have yet to be worked out. Apple has declined to comment on the matter, while PrimeSense has released the following statement:
"PrimeSense is the leading 3D technology in the market. We are focused on building a prosperous company while bringing 3D sensing and Natural Interaction to the mass market in a variety of markets such as interactive living room and mobile devices. We do not comment on what any of our partners, customers or potential customers are doing and we do not relate to rumors or re-cycled rumors."

    






15 Nov 18:07

"Life in Ikea is impossible"

by Jason Kottke

The trailer for Alfonso Cuarón's "Ikea", a film about a man and a woman lost in the vast nothingness of Ikea.

(via ★interesting)

Tags: Alfonso Cuaron   Gravity   Ikea   movies   trailers
15 Nov 00:04

The coach who never punts

by Jason Kottke
Ryan Mustard

Me thinks this guy would be substantially cheaper than Saban.

Kevin Kelley is the head football coach at Pulaski Academy in Little Rock, Arkansas. In games, he instructs his team to never punt, to never receive punts, and almost always onside kick.

The numbers Kelley cites are that eye-popping. And he isn't cooking the books: Cal professor David Romer concluded that teams should not punt when facing fourth-and-4 or less; NFL stats analyst Brian Burke has detailed the need to rethink fourth-down decision-making; Football Outsiders has conflated punts with turnovers. You've even read about it on this site. Most fans and analysts who are willing to accept that change is a fundamental part of life have embraced the idea that automatically punting on fourth down doesn't make sense.

Since Kelley took over, Pulaski is 124-22 and has won three state titles.

Tags: football   Kevin Kelley   sports   video
14 Nov 21:00

WSJ Reports That Snapchat Rejected $3 Billion Buyout Offer From Facebook

by John Gruber
Ryan Mustard

Snapchat turns down 3 Billion? What in the hell?

Reuters:

Mobile messaging startup Snapchat rejected an acquisition offer from Facebook Inc that would have valued the company at $3 billion or more, according to a Wall Street Journal report on Wednesday.

Facebook representatives reached out to Snapchat in recent weeks to discuss the all-cash deal, which would have been Facebook’s largest acquisition ever, the report said, citing anonymous sources.

It wasn’t too long ago that Facebook was on the other side of such a decision.

14 Nov 16:15

Polygon’s PlayStation 4 Review

by John Gruber

Well-written, well-considered, and splendidly designed review of Sony’s new console. Dig those animated vector illustrations.

13 Nov 19:22

Players step up to take control of magical Texas run

by Wescott Eberts
Ryan Mustard

I love this quote from our Green Baret Special Forces long snapper Nate Boyer talking about seeing Chris Waley crying after the injury.

"I know those tears aren't for me, what's going to happen now with my future, and blah-blah-blah. Those tears are because he feels like he's letting down his team, and there's nothing he could have done. He gave everything he could."

Will it all come to an end on Saturday? Perhaps that isn't the point.

A couple of weeks ago, Texas Longhorns head coach Mack Brown of his team, "This is what I thought we'd at the start of the season."

Brown was referencing his team starting to achieve to its potential after the dominating road win over TCU that included a much better response to the weather delay than that shown against BYU earlier in the season, but what he probably didn't expect at the start of the season was for the Longhorns to become a player-led team that seems as tough of any in recent memory.

After the losses to Ole Miss and BYU, the coaches and the team faced a crossroads -- to splinter, divide, and fall apart or to come together and work towards their common goal.

"After Ole Miss we really came together and decided let's not talk about it, let's be about it, and we really put our minds to preparing just week after week, just on each opponent, and really just believing in each other that we can do it and building off of the momentum we've had after the K-State game and going into OU and just those type of wins, especially in Iowa State, really speaks about our character as a team," said fullback Alex De La Torre on Monday.

A big part of the process was a players-only meeting held after the Ole Miss game. Defensive end Cedric Reed said that the team talked about trusting each other more, while fellow defensive end Jackson Jeffcoat added that the defensive leaders got together first to discuss what needed to change and then took it to the defense and then the rest of the team.

The message was one of accepting coaching not only from the staff, but also from each other.

"Earlier on in the season when we started, we had two losses and everybody would think that the team was starting to get down on each other, start tearing apart and breaking apart, but we really started getting closer and really started to understand each other more. I mean, we're like brothers, so we understand. We understand that we can tell each other, 'Hey, you need to do better on this,' or 'Hey, you need to get better on this,' and not let it get personal, like people think, 'Man, he doesn't like me,' and things like that, " said Jeffcoat.

The impetus for the meeting stemmed from advice handed down by the strength and conditioning staff, Jeff Madden and Bennie Wylie. Both told Jeffcoat and the other leaders on the team that the most successful groups they had coached motivated and policed themselves -- they were player-led teams.

For quarterback Case McCoy, a lot of it has been about players putting aside the quest for personal accolades, something he said doesn't exist at the high school level, where the longtime bond forged by friends growing up together helped produce a special Graham team his senior season.

Brown also deserves some credit for his positive attitude, one that he has forged over the years after a notable incident as an assistant that Troy Aikman said nearly broke him at Oklahoma after Brown lit into the team at halftime, prompting head coach Barry Switzer to tell him after the game that his teams don't discuss losing in the locker room.

So on the sideline just before the crucial fourth-down play that decided whether the Horns were still in the game against the Mountaineers, there was Brown grinning like a madman.

"Do you know that every player and every coach on the team was looking at me to see how I respond? Every one of them," the Texas head coach said on Monday. "And if I'm tight, they're tight. If I show confidence in them, and why wouldn't I because they've always made those plays and then I told them, 'this is who we are, how much fun is this, we're exactly where we like to be.'  We're going to make it, and then after Case (McCoy) and Jaxon (Shipley) did it, I pointed to Case and said, 'you did it again, now we're going to score and win the game,' and he said, 'you're right.'"

"But it's important. If I'm screaming and shouting and threatening them, then they think there's some doubt in my mind whether they're ready for this. I always say, hey, this is up to you. Do your job, be proud, and this is fun. This is what you come here for. This is what you want.  We said there would be adversity on the road, you've got it. You're overloaded with it so handle it and let us win and get home."

After the fourth-down conversion, Texas was able to drive into the red zone before yet another drive stalled out inside the 20, sending the game into overtime. The critical touchdown on the first possession on the third-down pass to De La Torre caught the West Virginia defense off guard and put the pressure on the Mountaineer offense to score a touchdown to keep pace.

Thanks to a leaping pass break up on third down and a leaping interception on fourth down, linebacker Steve Edmond broke out into a spontaneous celebration that took him the length of the stadium.

"I felt like I won the lottery because I didn't know what to do, I just took off running," said Edmond. "The first thing I did, I just held the ball up and I took off running to my right, and all I saw was just West Virginia people, just people looking at me. They weren't really doing anything, they were just staring at me just running across the sidelines."

"And then I just saw all my teammates coming from my left, and like the week before West Virginia I got hurt celebrating with Chris Whaley, and I was thinking, I'm like, 'I cannot get hurt celebrating with my teammates again,' so I took off running away from them. And then I saw my fans, I'm like, 'They can't hurt me,' so I'm going to go over there and celebrate with them."

Two of the team's emotional leaders, running back Johnathan Gray and defensive tackle Chris Whaley, both went down with season-ending injuries against West Virginia. Two years ago, after running back Fozzy Whittaker tore his knee ligaments against Missouri, beyond the lack of depth with Malcolm Brown and Joe Bergeron already out, there was a noticeable let up from the team, a loss of energy.

It would have been understandable if something similar had gone down in Morgantown on Saturday after Whaley left in tears on a cart. Instead, the Longhorns pulled out the win and multiple coaches and players spoke in glowing terms about the atmosphere in the locker room after the game.

"The dressing room was special," said Mack Brown. "You saw the way those players took the field after the win.  I don't think I've ever seen them more excited than that. And in the dressing room, as sad as it was to lose Johnathan Gray, who was leading throughout the game, he was running up and down the sideline on his crutches. And Chris Whaley who was distraught leaving the field because he knew how badly he was hurt but him still coming right back out there. And then those two stood up and addressed the team at the end of the game and talked about how proud they were, and we're moving forward and we're not letting up, is really a special moment."

For the players, it was something that they haven't experienced before since wearing the burnt orange and white of the Texas Longhorns.

"It was just a different atmosphere than it's ever been before in the locker room," said cornerback Quandre Diggs, like many players on a team a guy who has rebounded from early struggles. "I feel like we put a lot into that win. We really wanted it. We wanted it bad. We continued just to weather the storm all through the game. We had a lot of ups and downs, and it was good to get that win. But also to see two of your leaders down and knowing they would be out for the season, it hurt us, but getting that win, it made it so much more sweeter. Like a lot of people have been saying on this team, we love this team.This team is just tremendous, the bond we share together is something that I haven't experienced since I've been here."

Deep snapper Nate Boyer felt the same way about the post-game experience.

"We're already so excited about that big comeback win, and you go in the locker room and you see those guys, and they're on crutches and they're dancing around with us," he said. "I know that had to hurt, but it didn't matter to them.Actually I watched replay of the game last night, and seeing Chris getting carted off the field and the tears in his eyes and the emotion, I know that man, I know those tears aren't for me, what's going to happen now with my future, and blah-blah-blah. Those tears are because he feels like he's letting down his team, and there's nothing he could have done. He gave everything he could."

The loss of Whaley had a particular impact on his back up, defensive tackle Desmond Jackson, who dedicated the rest of the game to his fallen teammate and responded with eight tackles, three of them for loss.

"It hit my heart once I saw him get carted off and he was crying," said Jackson. "I love Chris. Chris is like a brother to me, my older brother. He's always a guy you can just go and talk to so just seeing him get injured like that it just hit me hard.I told him during the game that I'm playing my heart out for you. I got you. That's what I kept telling him: I got you, don't even worry about it, I got you, I got you."

And he did -- exactly what this team is all about right now.

In many ways, the Horns have come to exemplify the motto that Boyer set for them at the start of the season, one that appeared as imperiled as the season following the campaign's third game. It's a motto taken from the military that says, "For the man on my right and the man on my left."

There's now a difference sense on the sideline during games at critical times, Boyer says.

"I'm going to admit I've had doubts in the last couple seasons at times in games where I'm just like, 'Here we go again.' Having that feeling, that's a horrible feeling to have and you should never feel that way, but I have. And I just don't have it anymore, and I definitely didn't have it on Saturday; I just knew," said Boyer.

"Just to be around those type of people is amazing. I mean, we're so lucky. I honestly don't know if there's another team in any sport in the world that has what we have. Maybe, but I think it would be hard-pressed to find it. There's just not a lot of animosity between anybody on the team, and the way that we have dealt with the beginning of the season adversity and the losses, which whatever, it's losses, and have come together and the way these guys have grown as men, yeah, I mean, people stepped up that night and became leaders just because that's what had to happen."

"We just knew that -- you work so hard at something, why would you quit, why would you roll over, why would you start blaming other people and all that when you know that's not going to fix anything? Why wouldn't you just take a look at yourself. What can you do, what little things can you do to fix it and help this team move forward, and everybody did it."

And now the Longhorns are in a position few besides Brown and perhaps certain members of the team thought they would be -- undefeated in conference play after six games and still in position to win the Big 12 title.

Maybe it all comes to an end this weekend when a good Oklahoma State team comes to town having won on their last two trips to Austin. Maybe it comes to an end on Thanksgiving against a reeling Texas Tech squad. Or maybe the Longhorns get run out of Waco in the Floyd Casey finale by the high-flying Bears.

Right now, at this moment, with three days left until game time, why not sit back, take stock of how far this team has come, and savor every instant that they remain undefeated in conference play, whether that be three days or three weeks?

11 Nov 17:46

Texas RB Gray, DT Whaley out for season

by Max Olson
Texas announced running back Johnathan Gray and defensive tackle Chris Whaley have both been lost for the season after leaving the game with injuries on Saturday.
11 Nov 13:49

Daily Round Up: Stats aren't always for losers.

by A. J. Hooper


Stats weren't for losers on Saturday. [ESPN]

The Horns continue to amaze Mack Brown. [WV Metro News]

And, finally, more from Klatt on Texas coach Mack Brown: "Mack Brown has done maybe his best job at Texas to date this season. Think about the adversity he has faced. He lost a starting quarterback that was the most experienced quarterback in the conference and they keep winning ballgames. He had to fire a defensive coordinator – that’s hard to do. So all of that being taken into the equation,

"I’m not even going to talk about (Nick) Saban because Mack Brown could be the coach of the year in the Big 12. The guy has done a phenomenal job. Because of all this talk, I hope Mack Brown wins the Big 12, wins a BCS game, rides off into the sunset and says, ‘Have your job.’" [Houston Chronicle]


A Texas state representative thinks that UT SYSTEM regent regent Wallace Hall should resign. [Barking Carnival]

Earl Thomas may have a post-NFL career as an advice columnist. [SI]

In more entertainment news, John Mackovic is writing a college football column during the season. [The Desert Sun]

Big 12

How can Bob win another title? [Tulsa World]

Everything you ever wanted to know about Art Briles! [SB Nation, NY Times]

Open Range

Now I really want Nick Saban to take the Texas job. [Dallas Morning News]

The Scarbrough HIgh School in Houston has a 46-game losing streak. [NPR]

The Agricultural and Mechanical Department

ESTABLISHMENT OF UNIVERSITY; AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT. The legislature shall as soon as practicable establish, organize and provide for the maintenance, support and direction of a University of the first class, to be located by a vote of the people of this State, and styled, "The University of Texas," for the promotion of literature, and the arts and sciences, including an Agricultural, and Mechanical department. - Texas Constitution

Johnny Manziel is absolutely, positively coming back to A&M next year. [San Antonio Express-News]

Kyle Field is getting a makeover. [@AggieFootball]

As Bellmont Turns Resignation Watch- Day 57

Will Dodds announce today? Will Brown announce today? Will Oliver Luck take the AD job? Will Nick Saban leave the Redneck State and join western civilization as we know it? Or will Art Briles, or Gary Patterson, or David Shaw, or Charlie Strong, or Will Muschamp become our next coach? Will Rick Barnes resign? Will Augie Garrido resign?Tune in tomorrow for possible answers...

02 Nov 14:22

The man who invented the calendar

by Jason Kottke

For the New Yorker, B.J. Novak writes about the guy who invented the calendar.

February 1st-Another small fuckup: I put an extra "r" in all the copies of the calendar I handed out, even though I already told everyone the next month coming was called Febuary. But Alice came up with the best solution! She said, "Just tell everyone it's spelled 'February' but pronounced 'Feb-u-ary.' That way, they'll feel stupid!" Alice is the best.

February 14th-Alice stuff weird. Tonight we were having a nice dinner at the same place we always go, but she was unusually quiet. Finally, I asked if anything was wrong, and she said, "Do you know what day it is today?" I said, "Yes, of course I do, I invented the calendar. It's February 14th. Why?" She smiled a really tight smile, said, "Yes. Yes, it is," and then walked out. What's that about?

February 15th-So cold.

February 28th-I hate this month. I can't take one more day of it. This month will just have to be shorter than the rest, and if people don't like it they can go fuck themselves.

Tags: B.J. Novak   time
22 Oct 03:13

Teddy Wayne’s Unpopular Proverbs: Criticism by Teddy Wayne

People in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones—I’m speaking specifically about the guy at the end of our street, John, in that huge glass house. I saw him throw a stone off his lawn the other day, and I’m sorry, I know this is sort of sexist and antiquated and everything, but he throws like a girl. Like, I could throw more fluidly with my non-dominant arm. But that’s not really a fair example, because I’m what’s called cross-dominant—it’s not ambidexterity, where you’re equally good at everything with both hands. I do fine-motor skills with my left hand, like writing and brushing my teeth, and play sports with my right. I think I’m supposed to be a natural lefty, but I learned to throw a baseball with a righty’s glove. Anyway, like I was saying, John shouldn’t throw stones, because it’s embarrassing for me to watch a forty-five-year-old man use a motion that an eight-year-old girl might—yes, I know, I shouldn’t use that comparison. His house is gorgeous, though. And he’s the most morally upright guy on the block.

18 Oct 17:30

Making cheese with artisan Swiss cheesemakers

by Jason Kottke
Ryan Mustard

Awesome pictures. I don't know if the fisheye makes it seem steeper, but those mountains look steep!

Swiss Cheese Journey

If you're into cheese, you'll want to take this photographic journey into a season with Swiss cheesemakers.

In Gruyeres, western Switzerland, from mid-May to mid-October, the fifth generation of the Murith family produces its distinctive mountain pasture Gruyere cheese. Each wheel of cheese weighs between 25 and 40 kilograms, and takes a minimum of six months to mature. The family produces 200 wheels each year to sell locally, using unpasteurized milk from their own herd of cows. Reuters photographer Denis Balibouse spent time with the Murith family over this past grazing season, capturing days and nights in the alpine pastures of Switzerland.

Tags: cheese   food   photography
18 Oct 17:23

The Wes Anderson Collection: The Motion Picture

by Jason Kottke

Matt Zoller Seitz is doing a video essay series based on his new book, The Wes Anderson Collection. The first two installments, on Bottle Rocket and Rushmore, are already up:

I love what he says about Rushmore:

There are few perfect movies. This is one of them.

The book and video essays came about because Anderson saw Seitz's earlier video essay series, The Substance of Style, an examination of Anderson's stylistic influences. Great resource for fans of Anderson and film.

Tags: books   Bottle Rocket   Matt Zoller Seitz   movies   Rushmore   video   Wes Anderson
15 Oct 16:09

Apple Sends Out Invitations for October 22 Media Event: 'We Still Have a Lot to Cover'

by Eric Slivka
Ryan Mustard

Fuck yes. Retina iPad mini, here I come.

In line with its usual timing, Apple has just issued media invitations for its October 22 media event where the company is expected to introduce its next-generation iPad and iPad mini models and offer a number of Mac-related announcements, reports AllThingsD. The event will be held at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco and will begin at 10:00 AM Pacific Time. The invitation tagline reads "We still have a lot to cover."

oct_22_2013_invite
The October 22 date was first reported by AllThingsD earlier this month, and was quickly confirmed by the The Loop's ever-reliable Jim Dalrymple.

The original AllThingsD report claimed that event will focus on the iPad updates, but that OS X Mavericks and the redesigned Mac Pro will also be featured at the event. Apple is due to release a number of other product updates, perhaps most notably new MacBook Pros, but it is apparently still unclear whether those updates will be a part of next week's event.
    






14 Oct 13:38

Tex on Fire

by Ulysses S. Cocksman
Ryan Mustard

Never saw this before the game. Great clapping gif.

You, no doubt, recall that our last fews trips to the state fair haven't turned out especially well, ending in shock, unspeakable horrors and terrible, cleansing fire.

Burning-mack_03_medium

And there is sadness in this – seeing that which you love openly and without shame burned to the ground and destroyed utterly. But there is also hope, the promise of renewal. From these ashes, the mighty phoenix of Texas Football has risen, undefeated and leading the conference.

We are rebuilt, retooled, stronger.

Our offense is leaner, sleeker, with 50% fewer coordinators.

Our defense is unencumbered by the dead weight of the coach who installed the catastrophic system, and recklessly taught it for the entire offseason and first two games of the year.

And our glorious leader? He is reborn, having somehow survived these recurring decimations intact. Why, it defies belief!

And yet here he is, looking better than ever, the road to redemption clear before him.

Our time.

Clapping-big-tex-static-1_medium

Our conference.

Clapping-big-tex-static-2_medium

Our destiny.

Clapping-big-tex-static-3_medium

OUR ORANGE SLICES AND CAPRI SUN AFTER THE GAME WIN OR LOSE NOW LET’S GO OUT THERE AND TRY TO KEEP IT CLOSE

Clapping-big-tex-2_medium

14 Oct 13:38

Dale Watson To Save Failing 'Chickenshit Bingo' Landmark Ginny's Little Longhorn Saloon

by Katie Stroh
Dale Watson To Save Failing 'Chickenshit Bingo' Landmark Ginny's Little Longhorn Saloon Ginny's will keep its name, and the spirit of its owner: Ginny will return each week to host rounds of chickenshit bingo. [ more › ]