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54Brunch

No doubt PB's cerebral cortex finally blew a fuse after juggling the BON, the Preview Guide, Law School, and his latest exploitation, BON Groupies & eHarmony.com (apparently Web Masters are straight pimpin' now, who knew).

So I figured I'd chime in with a little Morning Coffee starter kit of my own...I call it "54Brunch." It's not quite breakfast, it's not quite lunch, but you get a piece of burnt orange cantaloupe. So pull up a chair, grab a danish, some crispy bacon, and a side of new potatoes, and enjoy another football-less Saturday, if you can...

  • Sticking with the Java theme, Longhorn baseball fans will be interested to know that Taylor Teagarden's having a cup of coffee with the Texas Rangers this weekend on the road up in Minnesota. He started at catcher last night filling in for an ailing Jarrod Saltalamacchia, going 0-3 with two SO's. Not exactly an historic start, but then again, it looks like all the Rangers' big bats left their offense at the All-Star game getting blanked 6-0 by the Twins.

If you want to watch him in action, Teagarden should start tonight and tomorrow before getting sent back down to the minors.

He was also named to the U.S. Olympic team this week, so he's got that going for him, which is nice.

[UPDATE]: Teagarden leads Rangers to 1-0 victory over the Twins with his first Major League homerun (and hit), a solo shot in the 6th off Scott Baker who was working on a perfect game up to that point.

  • And the big story from yesterday was the announcement that UT will in fact be retiring the numbers of several Longhorn greats including football legends Bobby Layne (22), Tommy Nobis (60), and the incomparable, Vince Young (10). For basketball, it'll be Kevin Durant (35) and a real blast from the past, Slater Martin (20), who led the 'Horns to their highest NCAA finish ever (3rd) in 1947. Baseball will retire four greats...Burt Hooton (20), Greg Swindell (21), Scott Bryant (23), and Brooks Kieschnick (25).

Normally, the retiring of numbers isn't that unexpected, but considering Texas has only retired four numbers total, from any sport, in its 100+ year existence - Earl Campbell (20), Ricky Williams (34), T.J. Ford (11), and Roger Clemens (also 21) - this is big news.

When asked, "why now," Deloss Dodds simply said that there was no real reason and it's simply something they've been kicking around for quite some time.

Personally, I think the pressure to retire VY's and Durant's numbers probably served as the real catalyst (more on that below) and they realized there'd be an outcry if they didn't pay homage to some of the other greats as well.

And unless UT is announcing stars from the womens sports separately, noticeably absent from this list is softball pitching great, Cat Osterman (who is also my unrequited sports crush...Cat, call me). 

NOTE: If you've got some personal memories to share about any of the greats mentioned above, particularly the ones from way back, please share in the comments section below. I still remember Brooks Kieschnick basically willing the Longhorns to victory as both a power pitcher and power hitter. He was truly a man amongst boys.

  • Lastly a little commentary...there's a nice debate that's begun over in the comments section and while we've certainly covered the VY vs. Durant legacy debate before on the BON, I think it's worth revisiting given the latest developments.

BON'ers still seem to be somewhat divided over Kevin Durant's Longhorn legacy, especially when compared with VY's. There is no question Durant has the numbers and the hardware to make a case for retiring his number. Plus, he's just an outstanding individual off the court on top of it. But I can still imagine having this conversation in five years with someone not familiar with Texas basketball...

"Dude, did you see Durant go for 40 and 20 last night for the Sonics?"

"Yeah, he's unreal. Hard to believe he was once a Longhorn."

"No shit, he played for the 'Horns?"

"Oh yeah, he put up some sick numbers...one of the best years ever by a college basketball player."

"No doubt. So how far did you guys go in the Big Dance?"

"Not so good. Ousted in the second round."

"That's unlucky. But I'm sure Durant helped UT win the conference title..."

"Well, Texas had a chance, but Durant twisted his ankle in the Phog and we blew a big lead."

"What about the conference tourney?"

"Um, yeah, not so much there either. The Horns blew another big lead against KU in the title game. Durant had a shot to win it in regulation, but missed, and then disappeared in OT."

"But I'm sure there were some huge regular season wins where he just went off."

"Well, he did help UT beat the Aggies in Double-OT."

"The Aggies? Do they even have a basketball team?"

"Hard to believe, but yeah, they were pretty good that year."

"So what do you remember about Durant at UT?"

"Well he did win the Naismith and every other POY Award."

"Wow, your man Vince Young didn't even win the Heisman."

"No, but in my mind, VY won the trophies that mattered."

Burnt Orange People love their Longhorn heroes, but in the end, it's still the W that counts.

Agree, disagree, agree to disagree, coffee getting cold...let's read it from ya.

54b

Bonus: A little more food for thought...Dodds mentioned that the group that nominated the most recent players to have their numbers retired is also trying to come up with criteria to use for considering other players in the future. So what should the criteria be?

  • National POY Award Winner
  • Led the Longhorns to a National Championship
  • Represented the 'Horns on and off the field
  • Spent a minimum number of years at Texas or earned a diploma
  • Did exceedingly well in the professional ranks

When looking at the players whose numbers are being retired, I couldn't really identify one thing they all had in common other than they contributed significantly to their team's success.

Should there even be certain criteria in place or should a player's worthiness simply be decided on a case by case basis?   

 

 

 

 

0 recs  |  35 comments

Comments

more durant

Totally agree. Posted a comment to that effect yesterday, but let me add this: Retiring the number is a legacy thing. You can’t be a legacy if you’re on campus less than a year. Hey, some of us needed seven years to complete course work.

Thanks for the Brunch

I can’t get up early enough for the coffee.

if Bobby Layne has to wait this long to get his number retired

Durant can wait a little longer.

JMO

just b/c the department messed up...

...by not retiring some older, deserving guys like Layne, doesn’t mean they should mess up again (imo)

The Heisman

is overrated! #10 belongs to VY. I watched the 2005 championship game AGAIN last night on ESPN classsic. What a great team!

Durant deserves it. He’s getting his number retired for his athletic accomplishments, not his academics.

Cat

At UT the women’s Athletic Department is separate and Deloss said having been around only for 20 years, they did not really have the history to warrant retiring numbers.

And it's not just Cat.

How about Clarissa Davis and Kami etheredge and a NC with a whop-ass final game?

What does the Women’s Athletic Department have to do with it? There is history already there and these decisions should be made on the history, not the administrative structure. I find that thought patronizing and a bit oblivious in this day and age.

Cat vs. Durant

I think womens athletics got screwed. No way you retire Durants # and leave Cats uniform # out there.
I also think that 1 year at school is not enough. I don’t care what you did.

Taylor Teagarden

He hit a homer today for a 1-0 Ranger win.

Bad move

Using ‘National Player of the Year’ as the criterion for retiring a number makes it someone else’s decision, not ours. That’s just wrong.

Imagined conversation about Durant

54b this is the exact imagined conversation I play for my friends everytime this topic comes up. However, I disagree on one point…I don’t think it’s a conversation with someone not familiar with Texas basketball. I think 5 years from now it could be 2 people one who follows Texas basketball with a good memory and one typical Texas basketball fan that can’t remember shit. Durant’s legacy will be easy to forget. Five years later I still remember TJ taking us to the Final Four in New Orleans. I remember him coming back to beat the Sooners on Senior Day. In four more years, I think I’m going to struggle to remember Durant’s great games and who we even played in the NCAA tourney that year.

I’m glad to see the girls getting some love with respect to having their numbers retired, too.

TJ Changed the Rules

TJ is already there and he left before his senior season, so there is clearly no requirement for the athlete to stay the full time. The only question is whether KD had an impact in his one year comparable to TJ in three, and on that I’d say yes. Like TJ, VY was here for three years, but he had little impact his freshman season, but again I’d have to say his impact was even greater.

This is a better July bombshell than last year.

My observation is that if they were going to honor Slater Martin, because he elevated the
program in a similar manner in his time by going to the final four, they really couldn’t have done it without including KD. And vice versa.

At root, this may have been an old school/new school conflict and a compromise. Modern politics is just as much, if not more, about style, capturing attention and branding than substance. I suspect any mixed committee would have run into the same conflicts. Indeed, this may be why this has not be resolved for so long, regardless of KD.

So, what I see is a whole range of compromises pushed to round-up these individuals, but few hard and fast “rules” to guide them. Someone said “Do it, do it now” and they cut through the redtape.

I really think they waited way too long to honor some of these people (Layne, Nobis, Martin, the baseball players) and when the pressure to retire VY’s #10 and KD’s jersey struck, they just couldn’t do VY and/or KD without acknowledging the rest.

Like the old spittoon joke about swallowing the whole strand, they had to go all in to make everyone somewhat happy and were not going to be perfectly successful no matter who they chose. Most all of these players have been honored by the University in some matter but this was the next level and with that came to pressure to honor the past as well as the present (near present, anyway)

I wonder how much the Clemens affair bothered them. Now they’ll never have to take down the number, no embarrassing removal. What do they know? At the least, they know it won’t end well.

I think the concern here is justified and will serve as a prelude to a more formal process now that the ice has been broken in such a manner. I do like the minimum waiting period, five years at least.

And, basically not noticed in this discussion, is that a few weeks ago former Heisman winners were honored in Austin. I can’t help but feel that this had some relationship to this particular process, a critical piece of national pressure.

The rule was always about winning POY

That’s why Kevin Durant’s jersey being retired is more legit than anyone else they are doing this for. It’s not his fault they suddenly decided to lessen the rules to let other people “in the club” and that he’s now being compared to what those other people did. Earl, Ricky, TJ, all those guys had their jerseys retired by virtue of winning a POY award. It had nothing to do with how well their team(s) performed. Kevin Durant has accomplished exactly the same thing. The only thing that bothers me about it is that they’re aren’t retiring Cat Osterman’s at least at the same time as Kevin’s. She put in 4 years, won THREE player of the year awards, and is about to represent UT in her second Olympics. She deserves it probably more than any of them, including Vince.

It should be a very unique honor

to have one’s number retired and, personally, I think VY is the only truly unique one in this bunch – a once in a generation or lifetime sort of player. No one could stop him. Not true for TJ or KD; extremely great players but not gods amongst mere mortals.

But that's the problem

That’s someone’s opinion. It’s entirely subjective to say who is “a god amongst mere mortals” in college sports. A lot of people would say Kevin Durant fits the bill. A lot would say TJ Ford fits the bill. They didn’t win national championships, but Vince Young didn’t win the Heisman. So we’re back to square 1. That’s the reason the national POY rule was put in place to begin with – to have a cut-and-dried, black-or-white, yes-or-no determination of who gets the honor and who doesn’t. And frankly it’s something I was always proud of, as a Texas fan … that even with all our athletic glory through the years, only four athletes had ever received the honor of having their jersey retired. It’s not something we just gave away out of pressure from the fans or sentimentality. It was something with very specific criteria. And now it isn’t. I’m not suggesting at all that any of the players being honored aren’t worthy. I don’t think this is a decision that’s been made lightly at all, and I certainly have no qualms with any of the people they’ve decided to honor in this way. But I do take issue with the prevailing notion from our fans that Durant’s name shouldn’t have been included.

as far as the ladies are concerned

Just email Chris Plonsky, the Women’s AD. Very nice woman; loves hearing from students/alumni.

fozzy

so what is fozzys number gonna be now?

i was thinking the same EXACT thing..lol..nt whills

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