Top 10 Posts of 2012

It is that time again, the time that we look back and reflect upon our accomplishments. It’s a time when we go the stats page and see what people have been reading. It’s a time to think about how I’m making an impact for the Kingdom of God. So, without further wordiness, here are the Top 10 Posts of 2012. Please note, some of these posts may not have been posted in 2012, but were the most read in 2012.

Number One — Blue Bell Ice Cream: Top 10 Flavors — Yes, coming in at number one, making an impact for the Kingdom of God, is this little ditty that I posted back on July 5, 2011, and comes it an number one with 9,394 hits. Apparently the post got snatched up by Google and every time someone Googles Blue Bell Ice Cream, my post come up. It’s amazing how many people are interested in Blue Bell Ice Cream. This is a good way to increase stats. Take something very popular, and write about it. I did the same thing with Oreo Cookies, but it didn’t make the Top 10 list for the year.

Number Two — Mike Sherman Shows His True Character – This one was simply a repost of Mike Sherman’s letter to high school coaches in several newspapers across the state of Texas. It comes in at number two with with 6,352 hits, but is remarkable because it holds the number one post of all time hits in a single day. I got 2,610 hits the day I posted it, showing that what he wrote at the time was really of interest to people. I posted it because it showed that Sherman truly is a man of character. I was completely surprised by how many read it.

Number Three — The Dreaded Brown Recluse Widow Tarantula — A humorous piece that pokes fun and our fear of spiders, this one actually started gaining traction long after I posted it on April 29, 2011. It falls into this position with 1,119 hits for the year.

Number Four — Cremation or Burial: A Biblical Perspective — Finally, we get to something of significance, something that deals with our views of life, something that has eternal ramifications. However… this is one of the pieces that I wish were NOT in the Top 10. After reading it over and giving it some thought, I feel the piece is full of holes and leaps in logic and therefore, really not well argued. So please, don’t read it.

Number Five — Top 10 Most Noble Jobs in the World — The premise is that since these are jobs that no one longs to do, they are noble because they are so necessary to our lives. It comes in at number five with 995 hits, and is the first one that drops below 1,000 hits.

Number Six — Top 10 Reasons I Love Christmas — This one came on with a surge as the year came to a close and finished with 978 hits.

Number Seven — Neil Boortz: Excellent Commencement Speech — This is a speech that was never given, but what Neil would say if given the opportunity. This post received 909 hits.

Number Eight — We Cry Abba/Father, Not Daddy — Finally, one that is theological that I actually like. I’m making the point that Abba does not equate to Daddy as some have tried to say. It makes the list with 873 hits.

Number Nine — Top 10 Reasons Christianity is Far Superior to Any Other Religion – This one is getting a lot of play because of those opposed to the faith more than those who are for it. Those of us “in Christ” know the real reason Christianity is superior is because of Christ and all that comes with being “in Christ.”

Number Ten — The About Page — guess people were trying to figure out who I am. The next was the page on Calvinism, followed by Against the Cults page.

BTW, the overall readership of my page is up over the past year. For instance, the number one post for 2011 was The Godfather which had 4,292 hits for 2011, while this year’s number one post more than doubles that hit count. This shows that if you just stay at it, you will build up readership.

Texas Aggies Come From Behind to Beat Ol’ Miss 30-27

I can’t tell you how proud I am that A&M pulled out the victory over Ol’ Miss tonight. I know, it’s Ol’ Miss, but you have to hand it to Johnny Manziel and the Aggies for pressing on despite six turnovers that seemed to stifle the Aggies at every turn. Yet, that didn’t stop them from pressing on and they managed to come from a 10-point deficit to win the game.

I have to admit, I was already finding ways to not let the defeat bother me. After all, this is what A&M is use to. But the “use to” didn’t come about and the Aggies won. It seems that head coach Kevin Sumlin has fully shaken the bad mojo that was left on the program from the Mike Sherman/Dennis Franchione days. Sumlin has taught the team how to win by coming from behind.

This was the Aggies first SEC road win. Now that is out of the way and they can press on for the rest of the season. I think it was Ol’ Miss’s 20th consecutive conference loss.

Here is what ESPN had about it:

The legend of Johnny Manziel continues to grow.

No, Texas A&M’s freshman quarterback was nowhere near as impressive as his 453 yards and three touchdowns in last week’s drubbing of Arkansas. In fact, he contributed to three of the Aggies six turnovers in Texas A&M’s 30-27 win against Ole Miss on Saturday night.

Manziel’s performance against the Rebels might have been more impressive, though — if not as statistically sound. Trailing 27-17 in the fourth quarter of the first SEC road game of his career, Manziel led Texas A&M on scoring drives of 88 and 39 yards in less than nine minutes to steal a 30-27 win from Ole Miss.

It looked for all the world that the Rebels had sealed their first SEC victory in more than two years when they recovered a muffed punt on Texas A&M’s 5-yard line in the last minute of the third quarter. Ole Miss quarterback Bo Wallace found wide receiver Donte Moncrief for a 4-yard touchdown two plays later, and the Rebels held what looked like an insurmountable 10-point lead.

Manziel didn’t do much to dispel that notion when he threw his second interception of the night on his first drive of the fourth quarter. Five minutes later the freshman came inches away from a safety when he was sacked near his own goal line. But the magic kicked in on 3rd-and-19 from the Aggies’ 3-yard line, when Manziel found Mike Evans for an improbable 32-yard gain.

Two plays later, Manziel darted around four Ole Miss defenders and raced 29 yards to a touchdown to cut the score to 27-23. Faced with giving the ball back to Manziel, Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze opted to go for it on 4th-and-1 from his own 39 — a run the Aggies promptly stuffed.

From there, Manziel needed just four plays to find receiver Ryan Swope for a 20-yard touchdown and the lead with just 1:46 to play. Wallace, who threw for a career-high 305 yards on the night, could not hold serve on Ole Miss’ last-gasp drive, as he tossed his second pick of the night to the Aggies defense.

All told, Manziel threw for 191 yards and a score, and he provided 129 of the Aggies’ whopping 290 rushing yards. Since dropping the season opener to Florida, the freshman has led Texas A&M to a 4-1 record and a 2-1 mark in its new conference. Not too shabby.

It Happened: 100,001 views all-time!

Timothy Matters surpassed 100,000 view this morning. Just a small mile marker in the world of blogging. I’ve been blogging since 2005 in which I ran through two different blogs. I killed the first two for various reasons and tried to give it up all together. The only one with a blog was Elisa and she wasn’t using her blog. So in 2006, I performed a corporate takeover and made her blog mine. She didn’t mind.

I renamed the blog Timothy Matters, or things that matter to Timothy when I switched it from Blogger to WordPress in April 2010. The stats that I have only reflect my blogging since that point.

My biggest all-timt month is January 2012 with 10,583 hits. I reposted Mike Sherman’s open letter to high school coaches and it set my blog on fire. WordPress actually contacted me to see if I wanted additional advertising for a fee. The offer quickly went away once the hits dropped back to normal, but it was exciting for the moment.

The next milestone is crossing the 2,000 post marker. I should hit that in a couple of months. Thank you to all my regular readers for keeping this blog alive.

Mike Sherman Shows His True Character

While Texas A&M fired Mike Sherman at the end of the season, he truly shows that he is a man of character in this open letter he wrote to high school football coaches. We can all learn something from his words.

I found this over at I Am the 12th Man:

I want to take this opportunity to thank all of you for allowing my staff and me to come into your high schools, recruit your players and share ideas with you. I am forever grateful for the access and opportunity you’ve offered me over the last four years.

Other than going to practice every day and being on the field with my players, the one thing I am going to miss the most is visiting with high school coaches, listening to you talk about your kids and your programs, and watching practices and off-season workouts. Since this will be my last letter to high school coaches, besides thanking you for the opportunities to visit with you, I wanted to share with you some of the things I learned over the years that might be of help to you down the road. Sometimes I think as football coaches we are so competitive we are reluctant to share ideas. This profession has been good to me. I believe giving back when you can is important. These are my ideas – not suggesting they are for you. They are some of the things I came away with.

He followed up with this:

I. Core Values

If a player learns anything from me, he’ll learn that you have specific core values to live his life. These ‘core values’ are his guiding light in the decisions he makes not just as a football player, but as a man.

Our ‘core values’ for our team were simple.

Truth and Love. I believe these are essential elements to run a football team, a business, organization, government or family.

A. Truth:

Be who you say you are.

Do what you say you are going to do.

Be truthful to yourself and others.

Be accountable.

No excuses.

Seek the truth.

Demand the truth.

Tell the truth.

Live the truth.

If there is no truth, there is no trust.

If there is no trust, there is no relationship.

If there is no relationship, there is no value or substance to what you are doing.

As coaches we must¡¬

Never, never lie or mislead a player.

It’s simple. He has to trust you. You have to trust him. There is no trust when truth isn’t at the forefront.

You cannot fix something unless there is absolute truth.

Never, never let a player get away with lying to you. Go the Nth degree if necessary to confirm what he is telling you is true. He’s got to know you will not accept dishonesty and there are consequences for not being honest. Without absolute truth, there is no relationship. Without relationships there is no chemistry. Without chemistry, you lack a major component towards winning championships.

B. Love:

Love your God.

Love your family and friends.

Love your country.

Love your freedom and those who protect those freedoms.

Love your teammates, coaches and school.

Love the game of football.

Love competition and winning.

Love all things that equate to winning.

Love is a passion that can bring great success to your life and to your team.. It is one emotion that always plays out positively. It is the glue for your team and promotes great chemistry. Watching this year¡¯s Texas H.S. State Championship games, I saw a lot of this on the field and on the sidelines.

I must admit, this is something I’ve learned over time. I have not been a “touchy feely

guy” and have been a fairly private person with my words and actions, but once I began to tell players that I loved them I could see it started to make a difference in their lives. I’ve said it to my wife and five kids often but it was not natural for me to say it outside that circle. A lot of my players like yours never hear that word. It took a conscious effort on my part. After disciplining a player I always would say, “you know I love you, right?” Reluctantly they would agree and eventually say it back. When I was dismissed as the HFC, I can’t tell you how many players texted me to tell me “love ya coach.” This brought great closure to me because I feel we impacted them in a positive way – even beyond the game of football. This was a great lesson I learned that will stay with me forever.

II. Be Honest But Positive

One thing I’ve learned is that young men respond better to honesty than “blowing smoke” at them. Too many people – parent and friends – tell them they are all this and all that. People tell them they are ¡°great. Everyone is worried about self-esteem so much , no one tells them what is real. Kids today have a false sense of confidence and bravado that when the first time things go bad in their lives or on the field, they can’t handle it. They have to know where they truthfully stand and what they need to do to get better. I do believe this is the best approach. Honesty however, must be buoyed by positive encouragement not negative criticism.

III. Embrace Your Players

Another thing I’ve learned the past four years is that you need to physically embrace your players with a tap on the back, arm around the shoulder, hand shake, hug. They not only need to hear your care about them but feel you care about them. They need to know you love them and care for them beyond just their ability as a football player. They have to feel you are going to be their coach for life, not just until they graduate and they are done playing for you. They have to trust that you will be there for them in the long term.

IV. Be Harder On Your Star Players

To become a great team I believe you must push your star players harder than the rest of the team. You cannot concede your principles because you know these players are the ones who will help you win games. Become more demanding of them, not less. The lesser players will respond to this in a positive way because you do not play favorites. The star players will also benefit from this because they will not be thinking they are something they are not. (See Tom Brady – perfect example.)

V. Be Respectful and Positive Toward the Lesser Talented Kids in Your Program

It’s not necessarily their fault they can’t play as well as you would like. As long as they are part of the program, as long as they are working hard, they deserve your respect as well as respect from your entire staff. Empower them whenever you can. If they earn it, say things like “great job by our scout team today -best in the country.” Compliment them on their little accomplishments. They won’t forget you for that. They are the ones in ten years that will come back to visit their Coach.

I promise you, they may not all play in the game on Friday or Saturday, but they share a locker room with every member of the team all year long. If you empower them, you will have a tighter, stronger team. You will have a better locker room, and ultimately, if you don’t have a good locker room, you can’t win.

VI. Have Components of Championship Play

Have specific components for Championship play for offense / defense / special teams. These are your components that you believe are most valuable in your quest to win a Championship. You must reference them three times a week. Do not stray from them. Be committed to them. Constantly reinforce these components.. It’s what you believe and it’s what the staff and players must believe. (See the end of this letter for my components.)

VII. Delegate to Your Assistant Coaches

I believe I tried to do too much at times. Step back so you can be more objective about problems that arise. You can fix them better from this perspective as a Head Football Coach.

This is difficult for me since I love to coach every play. I tried to fix every problem and player. I think I would have been more helpful in other phases if I wasn’t so consumed. I tried on occasion to step away, but certain issues arose that brought me back to it.

VIII. Break Down Barriers

When I got to campus at Texas A&M, I felt there were barriers between our student body and our athletes. I felt our players had an overly high opinion of themselves but the students had a low opinion of our athletes. I have adamantly explained to our kids that they are “special” on Saturday when we play the game as well as when they practice and prepare to play. But during the week, walking across campus, they are students just like everyone else and should act and engage themselves that way. We were able to include the student body and faculty in a lot of football functions. This helped us eliminate the barriers.

I wanted our faculty and student body to embrace our players and wanted our players to embrace them as well. I believe we accomplished this. I believe when players play for something bigger then themselves, they player better.

IX. Never Throw a Player Under the Bus

I see this all too often at the college level. The Head Football Coach has to assume all responsibility publicly for the player’s performance. Privately it is different. Hold them accountable one on one and in team meetings in front of their peers.

X. Players Have to Play for You

The only way this happens is if they ultimately believe in you and trust in you. Other than pure talent, there is no greater component towards winning than this. Schemes, practice plans, game plans, off season, concepts, philosophy and ideas mean nothing if you can’t get the players to play for you. This is key. Relationships with players have to be at the forefront of who you are as a coach.

XI. Peer Pressure is a Valuable Tool

Although I will not throw a player under the bus publicly, I will call him out in a team meeting when he displays behavior contrary to what we want to accomplish as a team, whether it be on or off the field. As long as you are consistent with this to all players, it will be very effective.

XII. Battalions

One of the best things I did was break our locker room down into 6 battalions. The seniors drafted players to their battalions (locker room section). Battalions are about accountability. As a player, you are accountable to yourself, but you are also accountable to your battalion. When a player steps out of line, the player is punished, usually a difficult conditioning run, but if it happens a second time, the entire battalion runs. Stepping out of line usually revolved about class and study hall attendance, but it wasn’t limited to that. The seniors who understood the purpose of battalions drafted not based upon talent, but based upon accountability. One of our very best players talent wise was the last player drafted this past year. He had no idea his teammates viewed him this way. He was embarrassed and disappointed that he was viewed this way. It changed him instantly and dramatically. He didn’t want to be that guy.

The lesson I learned about battalions is that players will sometimes let themselves down, but very few are willing to let their team mates down.

XIII. Fundamentals Fundamentals Fundamentals

There were times this past season I felt our fundamentals were not at the level I wanted them. I talked about this weekly to coaches but I felt it was an area we could and should have been better at. Sometimes players forget what got them to be the players they are.

Sometimes coaches get too tied up in the scheme and they sacrifice fundamentals in the process. There has to be a consistent commitment to this from beginning to end of season. It’s still a game of blocking and tackling, throwing and catching. That will never change. If you do those things well, you will win regardless of what scheme you run.

XIV. Never Pass Up an Opportunity to Practice Tackling

Whether in pads or in shorts, your team can always practice the techniques of proper form tackling. Breaking down, coming to balance, bending knees and keeping eyes with a form fit can be practiced every day and in every drill. With pads or without – always coach the proper angle and fit on a tackle.

XV. Hiring Staff

When hiring a staff, always take your time and get the right fit and what you want. Not everyone should be the same personality or talent. You need different personalities, different strengths, but all on the same page from what you as Head Football Coach want to accomplish. You are only as good as those around you. Take your time here. Very critical to get the right fit, staff talent and chemistry is key. It carries over to the players.

XVI. Dismissing a Staff Member

If someone is not doing their job the way you want it done, it is imperative you tell them immediately. I think it is unfair to fire someone without letting them know they are not meeting your expectations first. I believe you give a staff member three opportunities to fix what needs to be fixed. You hired him, you fix him. You owe him that . If you can’t, you owe it to the rest of the staff and team to make a change.

I tell the staff every pre-season what my expectations are. I tell them I will be up front and honest with them about their performance. I tell them if during the season I don’t like something, you’d better fix it.

It’s important to separate the professional criticism from the personal. You may like the person but you may not like how he is doing his job. When relieving someone of their duties, never let it get personal. This was always the toughest part of being a head coach. Your obligation is to the overall team and you cannot allow poor performance keep you from getting there. If you have been up front and honest with the coach, he can have no qualms about the direction you eventually decide to go.

XVII. Take Care of the Person and the Football Player Will Come Out

I tell our coaches this all the time. The players have to know you care before they will care about what you want them to do. Be involved in their lives. Ask questions about their families and girlfriends. Know their likes and dislikes. They have to know your care and are concerned about them as men first, players second. They have to know you care about their lives outside of and after football.

XVIII. Never Let the Negative Criticism Get to You

As Head Football Coach, you must assume total responsibility for your players and coaches performance. In order to handle this responsibility you must keep your head above the fray. Do not let things on the outside influence you. Be the leader you were hired to be.

Never let other people define you. You and you alone define the coach and the man that you are. No matter what happens, they can’t take that away from you. Hold true to your principles regardless of the circumstances or consequences.. Your players are watching how you react to these situations. In times of adversity are you who you say you are? Anybody can make it work when you are winning and everyone is happy. More importantly , your own family watches you and will learn a lot about their husband and dad in these adverse situations..

XIX. The Burst

You have to coach “the burst.” This is the fine line between making a tackle and not making a tackle, scoring a T.D. or not. Wins and losses are dictated and determined by a player’s ability and desire to show a burst. In season and out of season, you must coach this. They have to know the difference between running to the ball and bursting to the ball- running toward the end zone or ¡°bursting¡± toward the end zone. We always reward/acknowledge “the Burst of the Week” whether it be in season or out of season.

XX. More Game Are Lost Than Won

At times this past season, I thought we might be trying to do too much. You win games when players are comfortable and know what to do. Thinking too much can cause hesitancy. You want them to be aggressive, play with good fundamentals, do not make the game too hard for them. From watching tapes of different teams and even my own, I’ve come to the conclusion that the best coaches are the one who don’t feel they have to out smart the opponent, but would rather out coach and out play them. You do this with fundamentals.

If players on defense know what to do and recognizes offensive schemes faster, they will make plays and create turnovers.

If players on offense know what to do and recognize defensive schemes, they will make plays and not turn the ball over. Ultimately in football, the team that makes plays and creates turnovers and doesn’t give the ball away, wins games.

XXI. Common Language

I believe it is imperative to have certain principles of the game of football defined the exact same way by all staff members. Effective communication is the key to success. Players cannot hear the same concept defined multiple ways. Definitions must be consistent.

A. Physical Play – finish each play in a dominant position

B. Mental Toughness – complete the task at hand regardless of the circumstances

C. Fanatical Effort – the maximum level of strain or speed toward the successful completion of the play

These are just a couple of examples but a common vocabulary on certain fundamentals is critical for the ultimate success of teaching and evaluating those fundamentals. You ask ten coaches to define “physical play” you will have ten different interpretations. As the Head Football coach, you determine how you want it defined and demand everyone use that definition.

XXII. Leadership

Different situations call for different styles of leadership. Players and coaches must know that if things do not go right in preparation and practice, the Head Football Coach may snap or vent or lose it to those not working toward the desired goal that week.

Preparation time requires a different form of leadership than game time.

On game day, however, the Head Football Coach – in my opinion – must keep his composure and not show panic but rather calmness and direction in adverse situations. Losing it in this situation does not necessarily create the desired result conducive to winning.

This concept of leadership was re-enforced on my trip to Iraq two years ago in visiting with General Odierno and others in position of leadership. Cool heads must prevail when adversity strikes. Players (soldiers) do not and will not follow panic driven reactionary leaders, but rather those with confidence, composure, and direction of purpose.

Leadership does require that you be yourself and not try to be someone you are not, but it requires the best version of yourself.

XXIII. Maintaining Balance

Keep everything in perspective is keeping everything in ¡°balance¡°. There have been times in my career I have lost this balance. As a football coach, it is so easy to become consumed by it all. We are evaluated publicly every Friday night or Saturday afternoon. The pressures we impose on ourselves to be the best and to win are vastly greater than those pressures we face on the outside. Our competitiveness is a great thing- although if not kept in check- can be our downfall as well. You have to have balance in your life to make it all work effectively. Make sure you keep vision on your principles. Faith and family cannot take a back seat to football and winning.

I have made this mistake in my career at times.

Trust me when I say this, and I say it from my own experience, the more balanced you are, the better coach you will be. Do not neglect the essential elements of your life. If you win a state championship but miss seeing your son dress up as Brett Favre at Halloween or see your daughter play her viola in a Christmas recital ¨C what have you gained in the long term compared to what have you lost? I do believe you can have both but it takes a conscious effort and discipline to maintain balance in your life and make it work. You will be a better coach, husband, father and man if you do this.

It’s been a hectic couple of weeks for me to say the least. I’m disappointed I won’t have the opportunity to finish what we started at Texas A&M. We have come a long way in my four years here. I believe in the foundation we have laid both on and off the field. Talent levels and expectations have increased dramatically. We had record crowds at Kyle Field this year. Graduation rates and GPAs are higher than they’ve ever been. We have great kids in the program that know how to work. They understand the principles of the university. We have kids who have core values which will not only help them be better football players but men, husbands, and fathers as well. I feel good about that.

Last season we exceeded expectations with a young football team. This past season we had opportunities to do some great things , but they literally slipped through our fingers. Our season basically came down to 5 or 6 plays. If we made those plays, we could have ended up with a 10 or 11 win season. Winning and losing is a fine line- we ended up on the wrong side one too many times. As the Head Coach, I am ultimately responsible for that- me and me alone.

This season has been difficult because we have not been able to meet the expectations we ourselves have created with what we accomplished in the previous season. Our season this year was a lot like the Houston Texans last year. I do believe this, however, if you stay true to your principles, and given the opportunity, you eventually will win out in the long run. My Dad always told me many years ago¡¬ ¡°the cream always rises to the top¡± and I still believe that

I do feel the future is bright for Texas A&M Football, however.

Kevin Sumlin will do a great job as the new Head Football Coach at A&M. He is a good coach and a good man.

In closing I want you to know that if there is ever anything I can do for any of you, do not hesitate to contact me. You’ve always been very gracious towards my staff and me and I thank you for that. It’s meant world to me.

Again, I appreciate the opportunity to have met and talked with many of you. Of those I haven’t met, I want you to know I respect the work you all do with your high schools, teams and players. I believe high school football coaches are the most influential leaders of their high schools and communities. Their impact on not just the football players but students and administration, as well as the cities and towns they live is huge.

Coaching high school football is not an easy job. If you all got paid by the hour, you’d be very wealthy men. With that said, coaching is an extremely rewarding and honorable profession. The game of football is so special on so many fronts. Winning is the ultimate goal and there are few things more fun than being in that locker room after a hard fought victory. I never remember scores of games, but I do remember locker rooms after we won- faces of players and coaches all huddled together yelling, screaming, smiling and laughing, ¬acting totally emotional and truthful- devoid of any apprehensiveness or inhibitions, ¬just enjoying the moment. There is no doubt that it’s the competition week in and week out that keeps us going- wanting to relive that experience again.

We must never lose sight, however, that with the opportunity to coach these young men and experience victory together, there also comes the huge responsibility to make a difference in their lives. We must never lose sight of the fact- “once their coach always their coach.” Where others may have failed them , we as coaches cannot. Where others have created mistrust, we must bring trust . Where others have created disrespect, we must bring respect. Where others have let them down, we must support them. We owe that to them regardless of their talent or ability. We owe that to them regardless of wins and losses.

We owe that to this great game of football which constantly challenges us- week in and week out. What job could anyone of us have that does that? This game we coach not only challenges us to keep our egos in check when we win, but forces us to face our fears when we lose. This “game” also has the ability to bring out the very best in us at times as well the very worst in us at times. Here is hoping that it brings out the very best in each and every one of us all the time.

Best wishes for great success both on and off the field.

God bless , Merry Christmas, and Happy New Year.

Mike Sherman

These words really show that Sherman was more than just a coach, he was a man of character.

Mike Sherman Has Been Fired

News reports indicate that Texas A&M head football coach Mike Sherman has been fired today by the Board of Regents. Sherman was 6-6 for the season and 25-25 for his tenure as the Aggies head coach. He has been a constant disappointment and only had one winning season, which was last year when the Aggies went 9-4 for the year.

We should have known it would end this way. Sherman started his dreadful career as head coach with an opening loss to… Arkansas State University. The dreadful 4 years is finally over and Texas A&M can start looking for another head coach.

Too bad Urban Meyer has been hired by Ohio State. He once stated that he would like to coach at A&M, but that is before he went to Florida. Whoever A&M gets, they will need someone that can win in the SEC since A&M debuts in that conference next year. One thing for sure, Sherman wasn’t that man. In all the games in which he faced SEC opponents, he didn’t win a single game.

A&M Disappoints Again!

For the second week in a row, the second year in a row, Texas A&M went into half time with a comfortable lead, and managed to blow that lead in the second half and lose the game. Last week, it was against “I’m a Man!” OSU Cowboys, this week, the Arkansas Razorbacks. Next week… Baylor? O my, does this mean we are about to lose to Baylor too?

Anyway, the point is that these two loses are coaching problems. We saw this last year, and we are seeing it again. We have plenty of talent on the field. It’s time to pull the trigger and fire Mike Sherman. I said it last year, and I’m saying it this year too. The only difference this year is that others are beginning to say it as well. Even Beergut, who runs I Am the 12th Man at SB Nation, is agreeing with me. The following is our conversation:

 

This is the second week in a row

Where we had the lead at half time and lost the game. Also, the second year in a row. This is a coaching problem.

by Hammons128 on Oct 1, 2011 12:47 PM PDT upreplyactions

Actually

I think that it’s a confidence problem, but it’ll make you guys better

by hornraiser on Oct 1, 2011 12:57 PM PDT upreplyactions

 

 

 

 

Was Sherman’s style any different in the NFL?

He doesn’t have any fire in his belly. They should the lewd video of “I a man!” dancing after they beat us. As ridiculous as that is, it still shows the man to have some fire in the belly, and the ability to fire up his team.

This is sickening to dominate that way the first half and collapse again.

by Hammons128 on Oct 1, 2011 12:53 PM PDT upreplyactions

We need a coaching change. By the way, this is the 7th consecutive loss to an SEC in a row. I guess we needed to move to the SEC so we could finally find a team in the SEC we can beat. It’s certainly not LSU, Alabama, Georgie, or the Razorbacks. Maybe Vanderbilt, but I’m not getting my hopes up as long as Sherman is on the sidelines.

Texas Aggies Need Big Finish in Cotton Bowl

Yesterday, LSU fan and friend Wade H pointed out on his Facebook page that Aggies tend to forget two of their most negative traditions: playing second fiddle to t.u., and losing bowl games. OUCH! That one stung. But it only stung because … it’s true! The entire reason the Big 12 remained a conference is because A&M didn’t bolt to the SEC this year like they should have. Not that we would run rampant in the SEC, but we would be a much better team by going there. A&M caved to some unexplainable forces and kept the Big 12 alive so they could remain with t.u…. blah.

The other aspect of Wade’s point is that A&M has a history of under performing in bowl games. For some reason, playing the Redneck Gallery Furniture Dot Com Bowl just doesn’t seem to get A&M’s maroon blood going. Yawn… But they are NOT playing in some third tier bowl this year. They are playing in the Cotton Bowl. Now is the time for the Aggies to step up and make a statement. After all, they are playing LSU in the Cotton Bowl. To beat the Tigers would be a fine statement on the season and the future of the program. After all, the Tigers have been in the Top 10 polls for the last 10 years or so, and won a couple of National Championships to boot. Not that they are National Championship caliber this year, but it will still mark a turning point for the Aggies if they exit this season with a win over the Tigers.

I’m not the only one saying this. David Ubben at ESPN is saying the same thing:

IRVING, Texas — Texas A&M became the biggest story in the Big 12 with its six-game winning streak to close the season, knocking off a pair of top-10 opponents and doing what almost no one gave them a chance to do midway through the season.

Sitting at 3-3, the Aggies rescued one of the most hyped seasons in recent memory with the season-ending streak to reach the Cotton Bowl for the first time since the 2004 season.

But now that they’re here, a win could mean even more than any of the six that preceded it.

“This is huge,” defensive coordinator Tim DeRuyter said. “This can put an exclamation point on our season. We’ve made some strides this year, but playing a team that’s been in the top 10 all year long, that has the tradition that LSU has had — past and recent tradition of championships — playing in a great, great league, if we can find a way to get these guys on Friday, I think it sends our seniors out the right way and it really launches us into next year and confirms that our guys really have made the strides we wanted to make.”

The Aggies haven’t punctuated a season like that in quite some time. Losers of their past four bowl games, the Aggies have finished the season with a bowl win just once since 1995. The one win came in the Gallery Furniture Bowl, a now-defunct game that was played just five times and lacks the prestige of the Cotton Bowl, which marks its 75th edition on Friday night.

A new bowl tradition for the Aggies could begin with a win over LSU.

“I don’t even know the last time A&M won a bowl game,” junior receiver Jeff Fuller said. “I just feel like winning, beating Nebraska, Oklahoma and Texas was a huge step. That’s the first time we’ve ever beat all three of those teams, but to turn it around and have the Cotton Bowl against a team like LSU, possibly putting ourselves in the top 10 for next year, this game is definitely really important to us.”

All this to say that A&M needs to win against the Tigers. If they don’t win… well, you know what is coming next: A&M needs to send Mike Sherman packing! Win or hit the road! (That’s my obligatory call for his firing… after all, it’s tradition now that I’ve called for his firing six games in a row, and he has managed to win six games in a row.)

Aggies Beat No. 8 Nebraska Cornhuskers 9-6

What a sweet game. I admit that I was on the edge of the couch for most of the night, and unable to sit down during the 4th quarter as the No. 19 Texas Aggies beat the No. 8 Nebraska Cornhuskers 9-6 in a defensive struggle for the ages. I have to say that the fans really came through for the Aggies as they made so much noise that the Cornhuskers were getting penalized over and over again. It even got to the point that Bo Pelini, the hothead coach for Nebraska, got a penalty thrown on him he was so mad.

But alas, cooler heads prevailed as Pelini’s former head coach, Mike Sherman, coolie guided the Aggies to the victory. What an exciting game. Hopefully, the Aggies will continue their winning ways and add another victory to their 5-game winning streak when they play the t-sips on Thursday. I’m so excited I can hardly contain myself. What a game.

Not only that, they are bound to bounce up in the polls again, and if they beat t.u., get a really good bowl bid to finish out the season. It’s hard to believe they have turned around so much after their early 3 game skid in the middle of the season. Gig ‘em Aggies!

Special thanks go to Les and Debbie as they watched the game with me. Also to my lovely wife who made a wonderful dessert and fresh, homemade cornbread to go with my homemade chili. Made for a perfect evening. Now, I just need to double that chili recipe because there never seems to be much left afterward.

Texas A&M College Football Update

Smack Talk

Yup… Bo Pelini, head coach of Nebraska gave the Aggies some good bulletin board smack talk.

As the Twelfth Man scrambles to set the all-time record for most students at a football game, Nebraska coach Bo Pelini provided the famed fan base with some ammunition days before the anticipated primetime matchup between No. 18 Texas A&M and No. 9 Nebraska.

“Our fans are better than Aggie fans,” Pelini said at the weekly press conference.

With over 87,000 fans expected at Kyle Field Saturday night, Pelini will get a first-hand chance to see if his observation is true.

Yup… should be a good one. I know that he is only saying what any coach should say. But given that the Aggies are shooting to set the record for Guiness with the most students to attend a game ever, it will be really loud. The last time the A&M crowd really got fired up was the 1999 Aggie-t-sip game. The players said at halftime, their ears were ringing. I imagine given Pelini’s line above, the same will be true on Saturday night.

Broadcast Time

I will NOT miss the game this week like I did when the Aggies played Baylor. Last week, Fox Sports South picked up the game and was even listed on my cable channel. But the Memphis station preempted my poor Aggies in order to show us the Memphis Grizzlies basketball game. That was stupid on their part, given that college football rates much higher than the NBA, especially since most of us don’t care about the NBA until it really matters, the seventh game of the championship. And then it only matters if we really, really have nothing else to do. NBA stands for the National Boring Association. Here’s the typical call, “the pass goes to generic 7 footer, who dunks it again. O, what a slam dunk. He got all of that one. He took that to da house, he is the next Michael Jordan, blah, blah, blah.”

Given that the Girlies are so popular, I’m sure the audience for that game was only slightly larger than a Keith Olbermann broadcast on MSNBC.

This won’t happen this week. The Aggies are playing at 7 p.m. CST, on ABC. I’m thinking about cooking up a pot of chili and inviting over some of my football-watching friends. You can see, I’m really thrilled about the game. If they win, Aggies return to prominence. If they lose, fire Sherman!

A&M Picked to Upset No. 9 Cornhuskers

I like this. ESPN’s David Ubben has picked the Aggies to beat the Cornhuskers tomorrow night. Here are his reasons:

No. 19 Texas A&M 27, No. 8 Nebraska 24: I’ll call my shot here in an upset special. I barely missed when I picked the Aggies to beat Oklahoma State. I missed by, let’s say, a wide margin, when I picked Missouri to beat the Huskers. The third time’s the charm, right? Let me explain:

1) Texas A&M got a lot of practice defending the zone read against Baylor last week, with Robert Griffin III and Jay Finley. They gave up a few big plays in the first half, but played a lot better in the second half. That’ll continue this week.

2) Conservative, average, punchless, whatever. Call it what you want. Mediocre has many names. That’s what Nebraska’s offense has been without a full-strength Taylor Martinez. I have my doubts about how healthy Martinez’s ankle is, and in this game, where Nebraska will have to put points on the board, that’s a big deal. Offensive coordinator Shawn Watson sounded optimistic on Wednesday, but if he’s not 100 percent healthy, their running offense won’t be as effective. Even if he is, the Aggies have athletes on the edge and in the middle at linebacker in Garrick Williams, Von Miller and Michael Hodges who can make the stops necessary to keep the Huskers at bay.

3) Oklahoma State couldn’t stop Nebraska’s offense. Missouri couldn’t move the ball against Nebraska’s defense. Texas A&M, however, has a better pass rush and a better secondary than Oklahoma State, and can run downhill with power, versus Missouri’s slow-developing, east-west running attack that got swallowed up by the Huskers speed on defense. Taylor Martinez isn’t throwing for 300 yards against Tim DeRuyter’s defense, and as long as Cyrus Gray gets 20-plus touches, the Aggies should be able to run the ball where Nebraska has been vulnerable: right in the middle of the defense. The Aggies offensive line is getting better fast, and those two freshman tackles have turned from a liability into a strength, coach Mike Sherman said this week.

4) Missouri doesn’t have the talent at receiver to get open, but Texas A&M does. Jeff Fuller probably won’t have a big day against Prince Amukamara, but Uzoma Nwachukwu will occupy Alfonzo Dennard, and opportunities over the middle should be there for slot men Ryan Swope and Kenric McNeal, as well as tight end Nehemiah Hicks and Gray out of the backfield. Ryan Tannehill will find them enough to help the Aggies spring the upset and finish the season strong.

You gotta love it!

Mike Sherman is On Double, Secret Probation

Double-Secret Probation

Yes, I know the Texas Aggies have won three games in a row now. But now is not the time to get all soft when it comes to head coach Mike Sherman. He is still on double, secret probation and if he loses any of the next three as head football coach, then Bill Byrne should still have Sherman tender his resignation.

Remember, the Aggies have three streaks this season. The first one when they went 3-0. The second one when they went 0-3, and the third one in which they went 3-0, for a 6-3 record. There are three more games left of the season. If they continue this pattern, they will end up 6-6, with an invitation to the Preparation H Bowl, where they will probably lose to whoever they play. If this happens, then Sherman will have another losing season on his hands, at 6-7. That will mean four straight years of losing seasons.

Yes, Sherman managed to pull off a win against No. 8 OU. But again, this is no time to get soft on the man. He needs to win out and win a bowl. I can’t remember the last time A&M actually won a bowl game, and I certainly cannot remember the last time they won a bowl game of significance.

All this to say, he is still on probation. He needs to win the rest of the games of the season AND the bowl game, otherwise, he needs to be fired.

The Baylor Game

A&M is playing Baylor tomorrow. Normally, Baylor has been a doormat for the league, even though A&M hasn’t been able to capitalize on that fact for a number years. This year, however, the Bears have a real team. A&M should not get cocky, even though they knocked off No. 8 Oklahoma last Saturday, 33-19. Bleacher Report is picking Baylor for this game, and for them to win, would be an actual upset since A&M is ranked and Baylor is not. Here is what Tim Kinslow writes:

Just because Baylor lost to Oklahoma State last week and fell out of the Top 25, it doesn’t mean the Bears can’t get it done.

Baylor takes on Texas A&M this weekend and I think the Bears get back into the BCS with a win this weekend over the Aggies. Baylor is the type of team that will hang around and make just enough plays to win the game.

Notice that? A&M could get upset this Saturday. Now, I hope this inspires the team to play harder and more focused so that they win. My fear is that Sherman will fail to miss an opportunity to build on the three-game winning streak and the team will slip back into mediocrity where they feel really comfortable.

Sherman Not All Bad

Yes, I must admit, I’m being hard on Sherman. I tend to give my loyalty too quickly to people and once I’ve burned, it’s hard to get it back. This applies to sports figures only. Those people in my life are shown a great more deal of grace because I know that they show me a great deal more grace than I deserve.

That being said, Sherman has done some things to really improve the offense this year. I like this story by the Houston Chronicle’s Brent Zwerneman. He writes that the conditioning that the Aggies’ office has gone through has made it like basketball on grass. Sherman makes the wide receivers run back to the huddle as fast as they just sprinted down the field. This wears out the defense and really opens up the offense to make the quick strike, like A&M did against OU when Ryan Swope snagged a pass for a 64 yard touchdown.

It’s an expeditious arrangement engineered by coach Mike Sherman calling for a receiver to hustle back to the line of scrimmage about as fast as he split it.

“For a receiver running all the way down the field and then running back to the huddle — and doing it over and over again — it’s tiring,” Swope said.

And in the end, the effort is worth it.

“It’s fun, when you get that tempo going and start making big plays,” Swope said. “And when a defense gets tired, it just opens up the whole field.”

I have to give it to Sherman. He’s thinking outside the box and trying to innovate. This could lead to something great. But we have to be cautious. Remember the Run & Shoot offense that the Houston Cougars ran for years? After everyone figured out how to defend it, it was nicknamed the run & poop, or the run & hide offense. But this does remind me of that line in the movie The Miracle where the coach told the players after having them do those brutal skating drills, “You may not be the best team on the ice, but you will be the best conditioned team on the ice.” That is one of my favorite movies. Let’s hope Sherman is making one of my favorite stories as he looks to take his team from mediocrity into something great.