Message-ID: <30311210.1075857342123.JavaMail.evans@thyme> Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2000 03:50:00 -0700 (PDT) From: truorange@aol.com To: truorange@aol.com Subject: True Orange, Oct. 16, 2000, Part 1 Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ANSI_X3.4-1968 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable X-From: TruOrange@aol.com X-To: TruOrange@aol.com X-cc: X-bcc: X-Folder: \Clint_Dean_Dec2000\Notes Folders\Discussion threads X-Origin: Dean-C X-FileName: cdean.nsf Jerry Scarbrough's True Orange Newsletter The Internet Newsletter for the True Texas Longhorn Fan Volume 11, No. 1, October 16, 2000 Longhorns Bounce Back, Trample Buffaloes Behind Great Defense, Solid Offense The Longhorns followed their worst game of the Mack Brown era with a great defensive effort and a solid offensive performance in a 28-14 win over Colorado in Boulder Saturday afternoon. The game really wasn't as close as the score indicates. Texas outgained Colorado, 474 to 133, and the Buffaloes ran only six plays in Texas' end of the field all day. The Buffs ran 72 plays and they either gained nothing o= r took a loss on 38 of them. The defense held Colorado to 22 yards total offense in the first half and would have had a shutout except for a pair of fumbles that gave the Buffs a touchdown and set up their other score. Texas is now 4-2 for the year and 2-1 in the Big 12. Colorado fell to 1-5 overall and 1-2 in conference play. This was a real gut-check game for Texas after the 63-14 whipping at the hands of Oklahoma the previous week, and the Longhorns responded with their best defensive effort in terms of yardage yielded in 12 years and their bes= t rushing yardage total of the season. The offense did struggle in the red zone, and Hodges Mitchell, who hadn't fumbled all year, fumbled on a running play and a Colorado linebacker pick= ed it up and returned it for a touchdown. Mitchell also fumbled a punt to set = up the other Colorado score. But he ran for 125 tough yards and scored the clinching touchdown on a pass from Major Applewhite, who threw for three touchdowns and 308 yards. Here, briefly, is how the game went: FIRST QUARTER Colorado won the toss and took the ball. Big mistake. Texas got the wind an= d the Buffs wound up playing deep in their own territory throughout the first half because the fierce Texas defense kept sacking freshman QB Craig Ochs a= nd forcing turnovers. That gave the Longhorn offense great field position, wi= th UT's first five possessions, extending well into the second quarter, starti= ng at midfield or in Colorado territory. Texas' first drive started at the Buf= f 42 and got to the 17 before Kris Stockton's attempt at a 34-yard field goal sailed wide left. Their next possession began at the CU 45, and got to the = 8 before Applewhite fumbled and the Buffs recovered. The third and final UT possession in the quarter started at the Texas 46 and ended at the Colorado 45. The Longhorns owned the statistics for the quarter, leading 5-2 in firs= t downs and 71-20 in total offense. Colorado never crossed its 33-yard line i= n the entire period. SECOND QUARTER The fourth Longhorn possession started at the Colorado 45, and this time th= e offense scored in two plays. First, Applewhite found true freshman WR B. J. Johnson streaking down the right sideline for 39 yards to the Buffalo 6, th= en he hit his other true freshman receiver, Roy Williams, for the touchdown. Williams outfought a Colorado defender for the ball and the score. Stockton= 's kick gave Texas a 7-0 lead only 40 seconds deep in the quarter. LB Everick Rawls intercepted Ochs' pass on the first play after the kickoff and return= ed it to the Colorado 29. But the Horns couldn't move and Stockton's attempted 45-yard field goal sailed wide right. The Longhorns started their next possession at their own 35 =01) the worst field possession they had experie= nced to this point =01) and Applewhite hit Johnson for 10 yards, then found TE M= ike Jones for 23 more yards to the Colorado 31. The Horns stalled at the Buff 8 and Stockton booted a 30-yard field goal to stretch UT's lead to 10-0 with 7:21 left. Mitchell got loose on a 19-yard punt return to the CU 32 later i= n the quarter. Applewhite hit Johnson to the 21, and Mitchell ran to the 12, but a fumbled snap on a third-and-1 brought Stockton in to kick another 30-yard FG to boost the lead to 13-0 with 1:14 left. Colorado had nine possessions in the first half and had minus yardage on six of them. The Buf= fs had only 22 yards at the half and just two first downs. THIRD QUARTER The Longhorns were moving again to start the second half when disaster struck. Mitchell was hit as he took a handoff and the ball came loose. Colorado LB Jashon Sykes scooped it up and ran it back 50 yards for a touchdown. The kick was good and UT's lead was cut to 13-7 with 12:18 left. Texas couldn't make a first down, and the Buffs drove into Texas territory for the first time before punting to the UT 5. The Horns had failed to scor= e from point-blank range in the early going, but they covered the 95 yards in just five plays. Mitchell got 10 on a draw play, then Applewhite threw an incompletion. Mitchell bounced another draw play to the outside and ran 18 yards to the 33. Applewhite found Jones open again and hit him for 25 yards to the CU 42. Williams got a step on his defender and Applewhite hit him fo= r the touchdown. The Horns went for two and Williams, who was well covered, tipped the ball away from the defender and caught it as it came down to giv= e the Horns a 21-7 lead with 6:30 left. Redshirt freshman safety Dakarai Pearson intercepted Ochs' long throw on the next play and ran it back to th= e Colorado 43. But the Horns couldn't make a first down and had to punt. The = UT defense forced a quick Colorado punt, but Mitchell bobbled the ball at the = UT 26 and Colorado recovered. A personal foul against Texas moved it to the 13 and Colorado TB Cortlen Johnson, who had been bottled up all day, got outsi= de the defenders and scored to cut the UT lead to 21-14 with 2:37 left. At the end of the third quarter, the Horns were clinging to a one touchdown lead despite having a 402-91 edge in net yardage. FOURTH QUARTER Neither team could mount a threat early in the quarter, but Texas, starting from its own 19 with 9:22 left, finally put the game away and used up nearl= y four minutes doing it. Applewhite hit 6 of 7 passes for 62 yards in the drive, including a short pass to Mitchell on third-and-4 that he broke for = a 42-yard scoring jaunt. That gave Texas a 28-14 lead with 5:36 left. Neither team threatened again. 900 Number Updated Daily I update my 900 number daily with football and football recruiting news. Th= e number is 1-900-288-8839. It costs $1.59 a minute. You must be 18 to call. Coach's Corner Coach Mack Brown said Sunday the 28-14 victory at Colorado Saturday "was on= e of the best games we've had since we've been here." "It's a little disappointing that we didn't get the shutout because the defense played shutout football," he said. He said his young defensive ends "played their best game as a group." True freshman DE Kalen Thornton had two sacks and sophomore DE Cory Redding also had a sack.. "Cory had his best game," Brown said, "and Kalen is very mature. He played really well yesterday and made some impact plays." Brown also said QB Major Applewhite, in his first game since being named th= e starter, "played well. He made some big plays for us." He said DT Shaun Rogers, who had missed two straight games with a sprained ankle, played 41 plays against Colorado and appears to be ready for full-ti= me duty again. "We need Shaun in there," Brown said. "He's just one of the premier footbal= l players in America." He said the team went back to the same basic offense it used during Ricky Williams' Heisman Trophy year. "We were in two-backs a lot more than in one-back," he said. "It's easier t= o protect (the passer) with two backs. When you are running the football, th= e safeties have to come in and get involved in the running game. Then you can hit the tight end. Then, when they get concerned with the tight end, that lets you get 1-on-1 with your receivers." He said that was the reason TE Mike Jones was able to get open so easily. Jones caught six passes for 102 yards to lead the Longhorn receivers. He al= so became only the fourth tight end in school history to post a 100-yard receiving day. Brown said the UT offensive line had its best game of the year. "Our two tackles, Mike Williams and Leonard Davis, really played well," he said. Brown also said redshirt freshman OG Tillman Holloway, who came in when Antwan Kirk-Hughes was injured, "came in and was really physical." He also said Major Applewhite remains the starting quarterback. INJURY NOTES: Brown said Kirk-Hughes hurt his shoulder and is the only player who appears likely to miss any practice time this week. He said DE Kalen Thornton, who was hurt during the game, "is fine. He got stepped on o= r kicked, but he's fine." Colorado Game Notes . . * Texas snapped its six-game losing streak to Colorado. The Longhorns last defeated the Buffaloes on Dec. 27, 1975, a 38-21 triumph in the Bluebonnet Bowl. The game Saturday also marked UT's first victory in Boulder since Sep= t. 27, 1941 (34-6). * The victory also snapped a five-game losing streak in games played away from Royal Memorial Stadium. * Texas improved to 18-0 when recording more than 400 yards of total offens= e under Mack Brown. * The Longhorns improved to 18-0 when outrushing their opponent during Brown's tenure. * UT allowed only 133 total yards, which was its best defensive effort sinc= e 1988 when New Mexico was held to 66 yards offensively. * WRs B. J. Johnson and Roy Williams became the first true freshman receive= r tandem to start for Texas since Mike Adams and Lovell Pinkney did so agains= t Texas A&M on Nov. 26, 1992. * Williams set the Texas' freshman single-season touchdown record with his two scoring receptions in the contest (6, 42 yards). Williams, who has four scoring catches this season, broke fellow teammate Artie Ellis' (2000) and Lovell Pinkney's (1992) record of three. The pair of touchdown receptions tied the UT freshman single-game record held by Ellis (Sept. 9, vs. Louisiana-Lafayette). * Johnson's four receptions pushed his season total to 17 and he moved into fourth place on UT's freshman single-season receptions chart. * TE Mike Jones had a career-high six receptions for a career-best 102 yard= s (previous: 3 receptions for 36 yards, at Stanford, Sept. 16, 2000). It is only the fourth time in school history that a tight end has posted at least 100 receiving yards in a game and the first since Kerry Cash had seven receptions for 104 yards on Nov. 3, 1990, at Texas Tech (a span of 119 games). * QB Major Applewhite threw for more than 300 yards for a school-record eighth time in his career (previous: 7, by James Brown, 1994-97). He also h= ad at least three touchdown passes for the 10th time during his career (including bowl games). * RB Hodges Mitchell had 125 rushing yards and moved into 13th place on Texas' all-time list. Mitchell now has rushed for 1,884 yards during his career. Basketball Fan Jam All fans are invited to meet the Texas men's and women's basketball teams Saturday at the second annual "Texas Basketball Fan Jam." Fan Jam takes the place of UT's previous "midnight madness" celebration whi= ch traditionally kicked off the start of basketball season. The Fan Jam, located in the grassy area/parking lot in the North End Zone o= f Memorial Stadium, will take place three hours prior to the 1:30 p.m. Texas-Missouri football game kickoff, and will conclude one hour prior to kickoff. At the Fan Jam, Longhorn fans are invited to meet and greet all the Texas' players and coaches. There will be an opportunity to get autographs from players and coaches, pl= us schedule cards, and there are games and giveaways for all in attendance. Admission is free. Baseball Stars Commit Michael Hollimon, 6-1, 170, of Dallas Jesuit, the state's top shortstop, a= nd Ryan Olivo, 6-2, 175, of Grapevine, one of the state's top second basemen, have committed to Texas. Hollimon hit .400 last season and also was recruited by Stanford, LSU, Bayl= or and Texas A&M. He narrowed his choices to Texan and Stanford and committed to the Longhorn= s Monday night after visiting Stanford last weekend. Olivo hit .450 and blasted three home runs in summer league play with the Arlington A's. He also considered Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Baylor, Kansas and Oklahoma State= . The Longhorn coaches are having a great recruiting year. They already have commitments from several of the state's top prospects. It's a Great Time to Subscribe To The Fax/E-Mail Service I'll Have Frequent Reports on Recruiting And Practice Throughout the Season ! Get Instant Updates for Pennies a Day ! Save As An E-Mail Subscriber ! The True Orange Fax/E-Mail Service is the way to keep up with Longhorn football and Longhorn recruiting =01) instantly. Follow Mack Brown and the Longhorns with frequent fax updates. There are at least 99 timely faxes a year, primarily about football and football recruiting. To subscribe, sen= d your check to True Orange, Box 26530, Austin, Texas 78755, and copy or clip the coupon below and fill in the blanks. If you want it mailed, or by E-Mai= l, just include the right numbers. o I'm enclosing $99 for the 99-fax package for the next year o I'm enclosing $130 (a $14 saving) to renew my subscription to True Orange and to subscribe to the 99 faxes. o I'm enclosing $79 for the 99-fax package for the next year by E-Mail (a $= 20 saving) o Here's $110 to renew my subscription to True Orange and to subscribe to the 99 faxes by E-Mail (a $31 saving) o Here's $99 to subscribe to True Orange by E-Mail and to subscribe to the 99 faxes by E-Mail (a $42 saving) Name Fax No. (or E-Mail or mailing address) Game Quotes . . "What a tremendous win it was for our football team. We made a decision to = be real simple, to go with more 2-back, and if we could get the running game going, get the tight end involved in the passing game." =01) Longhorn offensive coordinator Greg Davis * * * * "We didn't play well enough or coach well enough to win the game. Texas is = a good, solid football team. We're just not good enough right now to beat the= m. Their defense gave us the worst field position in the first half that I've ever seen." =01) Colorado head coach Gary Barnett * * * * "When the ball is in the air, you want to feel like it's 10 million dollars coming at you, and you don't want to miss catching that 10 million." =01) Texas freshman wide receiver Roy Williams, who caught two touchdown pa= sses and a 2-point conversion pass * * * * "Texas' defense is very fast, probably the fastest defense I've played against all year. Give them credit. They played very well. I played poorly and that's about all you can chalk it up to." =01) Colorado freshman quarterback Craig Ochs * * * * "It was fun, but it really doesn't matter how many I catch. The big thing i= s to win the ball game." =01)Texas tight end Mike Jones, after catching six passes for 102 yards * * * * "They knew we were going to try to stop the run. We just had to play tough from the beginning to the end." =01) UT sophomore defensive end Cory Redding * * * * "Last week (the OU game) was embarrassing. We worked hard all week in=20 practice and came out trying our hardest. We were just enjoying ourselves a= nd having a good time. It was a great team effort. Each phase of our defense d= id its job. We just wanted to keep the pressure on." =01) Longhorn defensive tackle Casey Hampton * * * * "It took us a half to adjust. I haven't seen a defensive line that big and that fast in my college career. You just can't simulate that kind of size i= n practice." =01) Buff running back Vince Reed * * * * "We just wanted to step up and play. If you have a man, cover him. No excuses." =01) UT safety Greg Brown * * * * "We had a lot to prove after last week. We played like this all week in practice. We didn't want the same thing to happen to us today that happened to us last week." =01) Longhorn linebacker Everick Rawls Texas-Colorado Statistics Scoring Summary Texas 0 13 8 7 =01) 28 Colorado 0 0 14 0 =01) 14 UT - Williams 6 pass from Applewhite (Stockton kick)14:20 2Q (45 yds, 2 pla= ys) UT - Stockton 30 FG 7:21 2Q (52 yds, 8 plays) UT - Stockton 30 FG 1:44 2Q (23 yds, 5 plays) CU - Sykes 50 fumble return (Mariscal kick) 12:18 3Q UT - Williams 42 pass from Applewhite (Williams pass from Applewhite) 6:30 = 3Q (95 yds, 5 plays) CU - Johnson 13 run (Mariscal kick) 2:37 3Q (13 yds, 1 play) UT - Mitchell 42 pass from Applewhite (Stockton kick) 5:36 4Q (81 yds, 8 plays) Official Attendance: 52,030 Team Statistics Texas Colorado First Downs 22 13 Rushing 10 7 Passing 12 4 Penalty 0 2 Rushing Attempts, Net Yards 41-166 36-55 Net Yards Passing 308 78 Passes Comp., Att., Int. 23-40-1 12-36-2 Total Plays, Offense 81-474 72-133 Avg. Gain per Play 5.9 1.8 Fumbles Lost 3 of 5 1 of 3 Penalties, Yards 5-46 10-65 Punts, Avg. 6-39.5 11-40.4 Time of Possession 33:28 26:32 Third-Down Conversions 4 of 17 5 of 19 Fourth-Down Conversions 0 of 1 2 of 3 Sacks by Team, Yds Lost 6-53 1-7 Individual Statistics Texas Rushing - Mitchell 25-125; Hayter 11-34; B. J. Johnson 1-11; Robin 1-0-; Applewhite 3-minus 4. Passing - Applewhite 23-40, 308 yds, 3 TD, 1 Int. Receiving - M. Jones 6-102; Williams 3-55, 2 TD; Johnson 4-61; Mitchell 2-46, 1 TD; Hayter 2-22; Trissel 2-8; Edwards 1-7; Ellis 1-4; Flowers 1-2; Robin 1-1. Colorado Rushing - Johnson 18-73, 1 TD; Flores 1-7; Hollowell 1-3; Moore 2-2; Reed 2-2; Team 1-2; Colvin 3-minus 10; Ochs 8-minus 20. Passing - Ochs 11-32, 69 yds, 0 TD, 2 Int.; Colvin 1-4, 9 yds, 0 TD, 0 Int. Receiving - Green 4-24; Minardi 3-19; Hollowell 2-17; Graham 1-8; Nemeth 1-= 3. Tackles by Texas Players, Unasst., Asst., Total Lewis 9-2-11; Rawls 5-2-7; Redding 4-3-7; Hampton 4-2-6; Jammer 5-0-5; Tubb= s 3-2-5; Pearson 4-0-4; Brown 2-2-4; Thornton 3-0-3; Rogers 3-0-3; Babers 2-0-2; Vasher 2-0-2; Walker 0-1-1; T. Jones 0-1-1; Pittman 0-1-1. Tackles for Losses: Lewis 3-minus 6; Hampton 1-minus 2; Redding 1-minus 1. Sacks: Thornton 2-minus 28; Redding 1-minus 13; Rawls 1-minus 6; Lewis 1-minus 4, Tubbs 1-minus 2.