Camfantasy
Valar Morghulis
I think.......someone needs their thread creating privilege revoked.
I think.......someone needs their thread creating privilege revoked.
no, I'm pretty sure he is an example of many UT fans. I've seen numerous posts similar to this from UT fans, especially this year and I think it is just too fuckig funny...
LOL this thread is gold! Everything College Football is about Oregon guys..... remember that.
They might lose the RRSO. But I think the Longhorns win out after that, resulting in a 3 loss season, go to a easy bowl game, get the W, they get 10 wins. Mack stays one more year, because Texas looks at getting Chip Kelly the following year.
Chip stole several 5 star receruits FROM TEXAS. So we all know he can recruit, and his style would own the Big12.
mack looked like he was done last night . no fight in him like the last ten years. they will make him the AD.
Chip didn't steal anything from Texas!! Those recruits were purchased for fair market value!!
Chip has got to be thinking, WTF did I get myself into??? Had a sweet gig at UO, fucked da pooch and fled to the NFL, where he will be lucky to make it to next year....
I love my Donks....
Chip didn't steal anything from Texas!! Those recruits were purchased for fair market value!!
Mack needs to go, but to act like Texas was some powerhouse prior to his arrival that he destroyed is laughable.
They might lose the RRSO. But I think the Longhorns win out after that, resulting in a 3 loss season, go to a easy bowl game, get the W, they get 10 wins. Mack stays one more year, because Texas looks at getting Chip Kelly the following year.
Chip stole several 5 star receruits FROM TEXAS. So we all know he can recruit, and his style would own the Big12.
somebody seriously needs to get out of their basement and smell the roses.....
I hate Mack Brown..
I hate Mack Brown.
I cheered against Texas last night.
I was born in Austin, Texas to a UT alumnus. I've lived here nearly all of my life. I shook Darrell Royal's hand when I was a toddler. I knew who Fred Akers was when I was six years old. I emulated Eric Metcalf in my front yard. When Sports Illustrated published its top 25 in 1990 and Texas was ranked number 3, it was the biggest thrill I had ever had in my 11 years on this planet. I went to football games at Memorial Stadium, basketball games at the Erwin Center, and baseball games at Disch-Falk Field throughout my childhood. I attended and graduated from the University of Texas. I have a ring. My blood runs as burnt orange as anyone who ever lived. I am a Longhorn.
And for the first time in my life, I cheered against my team.
I had reasoned that, in the long run, it was good for Texas to lose this season. I had rationalized that for Texas to succeed in the future, it must fail in the present. My head thought those things, but my heart just couldn't get on board. Until last night.
I cheered for Texas against New Mexico State. I cheered for Texas against BYU. I cheered for Texas against Ole Miss. I cheered for Texas against Kansas State. I cheered for Texas against Iowa State when the game started. I did so as I always have: with pride.
But then I stopped being proud. To call what Texas put on the field last night a football team is an insult to football. It was pathetic. There are no words strong enough to describe how awful Texas played last night in pretty much every meaningful facet of the game. Iowa State is a God-awful football team, and we won by a point because the referees made repeated errors. Our players and coaches, for the most part, did not try. They did not play with pride. They did not play with passion. They were not football players or coaches. They were children. All of them. The blame for that lies squarely, and exclusively, on the shoulders of one man.
That man has destroyed something that defines who I am as much as anything else in this world. It is said that the pride and winning tradition of The University of Texas will not be entrusted to the weak or the timid. Mack Brown is weak. Mack Brown is timid. He is those things to his core. They are his essence. And he has finally, after many years, imposed those qualities on Texas Football. What he stands for is an ugly, terrible, and above all else, hateful thing. I wish I could give back the elation I felt when Texas won its first national championship in my lifetime to be rid of Mack Brown. We may not have won a championship, but at least we might still be able to be proud of our team.
I hate Mack Brown.