Jump to content

Blake Munroe

Moderators
  • Posts

    4948
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Blake Munroe

  1. I didn't get to go last year. I also planned on going turkey hunting over the spring and didn't. Sucks. I haven't even fished as much as I would like over the past 12-18 months, unfortunately.
  2. I hope I do too. I'm going to get into bow hunting and the number of applicants goes way down for that. I want to get some elk, sika and an axis. Elk obviously I'm going to have to travel for, but I would love to get one.
  3. Definitely worth the wait! Tastes great and rewarding. What more can you ask for?
  4. I did. Legacy just didn’t sound right, ever.
  5. I got to go back to sleep for about an hour thankfully. Now it’s time to get my oldest up for football practice.
  6. I’m normally not up THIS early. My youngest woke me up at 3 and won’t go back to sleep. Usually I’m up at 5:15-5:30.
  7. We are now down to just 17 days before the Longhorns head to Columbus to face off against Ohio State. Who is your favorite No. 17 to play for Texas? Some options today include: Cameron Dicker Adrian Phillips Willie Mack Garza Current No. 17s are DB Xavier Filsaime and WR Daylan McCutcheon. Bonus No. 17- National champion Teagan Kavan
  8. Join us for Coffee and Football starting at 8:15ish AM, as we talk the Horns and answer your questions! https://www.youtube.com/live/WoacdfaaVhE?si=CJDmEKeRPUBhh4fl
  9. From AwfulAnnouncing.com: A week after the announcement that ESPN and the NFL would partner in a mega-deal, which will see the league take an equity stake in the dedicated sports network, there are still plenty of questions to be sorted out. Perhaps the most pressing is a potential regulatory battle the transaction may face from the Trump administration. But there’s plenty of other knock-on effects for a deal this big. One such impact might center around the scheduling of the first round of the College Football Playoff. Many will remember last year, the first of the expanded 12-team playoff, there were some significant scheduling conflicts with the NFL during the first round. Prior to the expanded playoff, that Saturday had traditionally belonged to the NFL, with the 12-team format, that changed. The CFP played three games that Saturday, two of which went directly against an NFL doubleheader the same afternoon. But with the recent deal between ESPN and the NFL, there’s now a direct link between the two competing football entities. ESPN, of course, is the exclusive broadcaster of the CFP. Now, the NFL will likely own part of ESPN as soon as next year. Whereas a stalemate between the two sides for ownership over that weekend may have been a reasonably likely outcome prior to this deal, it now seems less likely. The question is, which side will win out? Read the full article here: https://awfulannouncing.com/college-football/espn-nfl-deal-cfp-first-round-schedule.html
  10. Yes, Texas is the underdog here. That could change in the next two weeks, even though I don’t expect it to. It might go down to -1 or -1.5 tOSU. For the OTF crowd who doesn’t gamble… usually playing at home accounts for 3 to 3.5 points of the point spread. This game is a pick em (at worst)/slight Texas lean on a neutral field and Texas is the favorite if it were being played in Austin. It’s also worth mentioning that the stat is slightly skewed because most No. 1 teams don’t open the season with a top 3 matchup on the road. That never happens.
  11. Link to article at bottom of story…. Good morning, and welcome back to The Morning Win. If you're a Texas Longhorns fan, it's more like a great morning. For the first time in school history, your football team is the preseason AP No. 1-ranked team in the country. Life is good for the Longhorns, who continue an upward trend after consecutive trips to the College Football Playoff. And now the Arch Manning era is officially here to push them over the top. Unfortunately for Steve Sarkisian's squad, that reign at the top isn't expected to last very long. In fact, Texas may not make it past the first game with a "1" next to its name. Opening their season on the road against the preseason No. 3-ranked team, Ohio State, the Longhorns are actually underdogs in Week 1. Despite holding top odds to win the national championship at +475 at BetMGM, they're getting 2.5 points and +110 odds on the moneyline for the opener in Columbus. Absolutely wild for a team everyone expects to be the best in college football. Unless the line flips, Texas will be the first No. 1 team to open a season as an underdog. On one hand, this is really cool. It's nice that we'll get to see two amazing teams square off this early in the season in a rematch of the College Football Playoff semifinal at the Cotton Bowl. On another, it's quite meaningless... these teams will be drastically different at the end of the season (likely for the better) than they will be in the opener. There won't be much we can glean from a game on Aug. 30. Regardless, a loss will no doubt flip these teams' place in the AP rankings. And if Ohio State grabs the top spot, it won't likely relinquish it until hitting the heart of its conference schedule in mid-October, at the earliest. Considering the SEC gauntlet Texas has to play, the Longhorns may never get that top seed back -- no matter how the Buckeyes play. So, enjoy this little bit of history while you can, Texas. There's a chance it doesn't last long. But hey, there's always a national championship to play for at the end of the year. https://ftw.usatoday.com/story/sports/2025/08/12/college-football-preseason-ap-rankings-texas/85625290007/
  12. I already told you I’d autograph the one I wore, also write “Go Ducks!” and ship it to you for $200. limited time offer.
  13. That would be awesome too. I’d love to get one of those as well for the meat.
  14. Have any of you ever done the public land hunt drawings from TPWD? If so, did you have any luck? I entered a couple because I want to hunt Sika deer without having to pay thousands for a guided hunt. I also tried a couple of others for Whitetail for the hell of it Was just curious what your experience was like.
  15. I must say, this line cracked me up: Said ESPN analyst and former Alabama quarterback Greg McElroy, who went to high school just outside of Austin. For those unaware, McElroy went to Southlake Carroll, which is roughly 205 miles (or 3 hours and 15 mins) from campus.
  16. From The Athletic: AUSTIN, Texas — The offseason remodeling of Texas football has mostly focused on the installation of a famous new starting quarterback for the Longhorns, but it also included a stylish makeover of their headquarters at the Moncrief-Neuhaus Athletic Center. Open-concept, modern and sleek, the updated lobby doubles as a trophy room. An assortment of impressive awards welcomes visitors: the Golden Hat that goes to the winner of the Red River Rivalry against Oklahoma; just about every bronze statue a college football player can win from Heisman to Thorpe to Ray Guy (shout out, Michael Dickson); and, of course, a couple of national championship trophies. Notably, there is plenty of space to add more hardware. Smart planning. After two consecutive appearances in the College Football Playoff semifinals and a program-record 23 players selected over the last two NFL Drafts, head coach Steve Sarkisian and the Longhorns seem to be just getting started. For the first time, Texas will enter a college football season as the No. 1 team in the country, as the Associated Press on Monday proclaimed the Longhorns the preseason frontrunners. The Coaches Poll did the same last week. It’s yet another milestone for a program that is well past the point of being merely “back.” Now, the Longhorns are trying to solidify the elite status that comes from churning out national title contenders on a yearly basis. “If you talk to any of our players, or you just listen to their discussions … our players are talking about national championship,” Sarkisian told The Athletic this spring, when the lobby project was still exposed drywall and wires hanging from the ceiling. “They’re not talking about a rebuild. They’re not talking about, ‘Well, we’ll see how this goes.’ There’s a standard here. There’s an expectation, and they understand that they’re held to the standard.” In short, Texas is becoming the new Alabama. No, that doesn’t mean the Longhorns are going to rattle off a half-dozen titles in the next decade. But this is the season Texas puts its staying power on display. There is always another draft pick. There is always another All-American. The talent conveyor belt is fully operational — and well-funded. The days of stumbling as a 12-point favorite at home appear to be over. Texas stepped into its new conference last year SEC-ready. Only Georgia kept the Longhorns from immediately running the league. The Longhorns maneuvered past Alabama and created a new pecking order in the SEC. This year will determine whether it sticks, but everything appears to be in place for Texas to take the Crimson Tide’s spot alongside Georgia as the conference’s biggest bullies. There is only room for so many superpowers in one conference. Coach Kalen DeBoer enters Year 2 in Tuscaloosa with a roster talented enough to return the Crimson Tide to the ranks of the national championship contenders, but Alabama still faces questions about what its post-Nick Saban reality will be. Especially after DeBoer’s debut produced a 9-4 season, highlighted (or maybe lowlighted) by some losses that had previously been unthinkable. Meanwhile, Texas has moved into a new phase of its development under Sarkisian. With Arch Manning ready to step in at quarterback, the Longhorns believe the arrow is still pointing up. “I think Texas is in a phenomenal place,” said ESPN analyst and former Alabama quarterback Greg McElroy, who went to high school just outside of Austin. “There’s no denying, Sark’s got access to everything he wants.” Much like Kirby Smart did when he left Saban and Alabama to take over at Georgia, Sarkisian implemented the Bama blueprint at a school with more resources and easier access to talent than Saban’s old school, building a program to rival the Tide. At a time when how much a school can spend has never been more directly tied to how good the team can be, no school is better positioned to fund a championship roster than Texas. Reports that the Longhorns built a $40 million-plus roster this year are difficult to confirm but not hard to believe. “They can outspend anybody if they wanted to,” McElroy said. As college football tries to move away from unregulated name, image and likeness spending and into a capped revenue-sharing system, the market advantage should shift to schools — and their collectives — that can align with companies big and small to provide athletes deals on top of rev-share payments. Business is booming in Austin, which has become a hub for tech companies. The Texas One Fund has at least 20 sponsorship partners, including Texas-based Benchmark Bank. “The area to differentiate any university is, how many outside — call it true NIL or whatever you want to call it — how many of those opportunities are out there for student-athletes?” said Patrick “Wheels” Smith, president of Texas One Fund. “And having the best model not only is good for your university and you can recruit better and win, but it’s also good for kids to get opportunities. So our plan is to continue on that whole for-profit space, to get as many opportunities as we can for our student-athletes in the for-profit brand space.” But the Saban way is not so much about a place or a plan as it is a culture that stifles complacency and prepares the next wave of blue-chippers to step up when it’s their time. Saban’s message to players: This will be hard, but the payoff is plentiful — championships, individual accolades and the NFL Draft. Fun? The fun is in winning. That culture has been difficult to build at Texas. Coaches who have been at Texas talk about an “I have made it” attitude that often arrives in Austin with highly touted recruits. Sarkisian and his staff have tried to change that. “Doing games with Sark in his first year, he was like, ‘We have got to get kids that hate to lose. They cannot after a loss be OK with playing well.’ And I think that took a year or two,” McElroy said. “Ultimately the goal is to win the last game of the season,” Longhorns guard Cole Hutson said. “Still working on that, but they’re looking for people that have the want-to and the drive to kind of make sure that when things get rough that they’re going to push through, and they’re going to persevere.” Third-year receiver DeAndre Moore talked about watching Sarkisian dial up plays for DeVonta Smith during Alabama’s last national title run in 2020, wanting a piece of that action. That’s what led the top-150 recruit from California to Texas. Moore also noted that at one point the Tide had four future first-round draft pick receivers on their depth chart, and it was Smith who went on to win the Heisman after being fourth in line behind Jerry Jeudy, Henry Ruggs and Jaylen Waddle. Moore enters his third year with Texas looking to take a leap from complementary player to one of Manning’s top targets after the Longhorns had three receivers drafted within the first two rounds over the last two years. “Not gonna sit here and tell you that everything was just fine, you know, all rainbows and sunshine,” Moore said. “And there were definitely some days where I was just like, man, this is tough, but I knew there was a pot of gold at the end of this rainbow.” Texas high schools consistently pump out more blue-chip recruits than any other state in the country. That’s a good thing, of course, for the Longhorns, who don’t have to go far to lay the foundation of a championship team. The downside, McElroy said, is the well-oiled machine that is youth football in the Lone Star State also produces a preponderance of players who are near maxed out as teenagers. “Oftentimes they might be a five-star and they get on campus and they’re the same guy for four years,” McElroy said. “While they want to take kids from Texas, you gotta take the right kids.” Sarkisian, who broke into big-time college coaching at USC under Pete Carroll, tries to blend Saban’s process-driven discipline with Carroll’s cool competitiveness. “Those guys were both uber successful, crazy successful coaches that instilled their personality into their building, into their culture, into their teams, and rebuilt those teams year after year,” Sarkisian said. “I think at the end of the day, anybody who’s been around those two guys would probably tell you I’m probably a little bit of both of them. And so I would say our culture, our team, is probably a little bit of both of those two.” When Texas players are at practice or in workouts: no jewelry, matching socks, shirts tucked in. Hats off during team meetings. That’s Saban coming out of Sark. “But also I think my ability to engage with people, and not that Coach Saban didn’t, but, man, it was definitely like a fear factor with him,” Sarkisian said. “And with Coach Carroll, it was more like, hug you. And I’m probably somewhere in the middle there. I try to engage with people. I try to relate to everybody in our building. My door is always open for our players and in recruiting, and I think that’s allowed some of that connectivity.” Sarkisian can incorporate Saban’s process while not facing the pressure that comes with following the seven-time national championship coach. As DeBoer tries to chart his own course at Alabama, the specter of Saban and the unprecedented standard he set looms over the Tide. “In the end, we know we gotta win more games and we want those expectations, absolutely,” DeBoer told The Athletic this summer. “That’s what matters. You can come up with every excuse. It doesn’t matter. No one cares, and we understand that. But as a coach myself, having been at different places, there is a process that you have to go through. And every place, it’s been different challenges.” While the first season fell short of the standard at Alabama, a top-five recruiting class coming in this year and another in the making for 2026 are a good sign. Revenue sharing and NIL should continue to spread talent around college football more than when Saban was at his peak and it seemed only two or three teams in any given season could hope to compete against Alabama. Just because the Longhorns are thriving doesn’t mean the Tide can’t keep rolling. But right now, the program in Austin is closer to the one Saban left behind than the one in Tuscaloosa. “Excellence is exhausting, but it’s worth it,” Sarkisian said. “(The players) see the success of their peers, and they’re like, I want that, you know? The Outland trophies, the Thorpe awards, the All-Americans, the first-round picks, the draft picks, the College Football Playoffs. The on-the-cusp-of-a-national-championship. I want that. So how do I get there? It’s pretty simple. The only thing I just keep looking for is, is there a complacency? Because complacency is, that’ll get you. And we’re fortunate. We’ve got no room to be complacent, because we haven’t won the thing yet, you know?”
  17. This Friday, August 15th, No. 10 ranked Grayson (Ga.) opens their season against Collins Hill (Ga.). Grayson, of course, is led by Texas five-star linebacker commit Tyler Atkinson and is currently on a 14-game win streak, which includes a state championship along the way. Collins Hill is no slouch and it's worth noting that they handed Grayson their ONLY loss of the season in 2024. That team features LSU DT commit Deuce Geralds, who is considered to be a national Top 100 prospect by some recruiting services. This game will be available, for free, to watch online and is MaxPreps Game of the Week. Use this link to watch the game: https://www.maxpreps.com/game-of-the-week/ Some other prospects to know- Collins Hill: EDGE Katrell Webb (Committed to Purdue) WR Atticus Joseph (Committed to Stanford) DL Ronald Moore (Offers from South Carolina, Purdue, etc) Grayson: QB Travis Burgess (Committed to UNC) LB Anthony Davis (Committed to Ole Miss) S Hannibal Navies (Committed to KSU) DL Cameron McGee (Committed to Arkansas) EDGE Lawrence Brown (Committed to UNC) EDGE T.K. Cunningham (Offers from Florida, Ohio State, Michigan, Miami, etc) DL Waylon Wooten (Offers from Florida, Auburn, Michigan, Arkansas, etc) LB Eli Harris (Offers from Auburn, Ole Miss, Michigan, Baylor, etc) DB Rilee Drew (Offers from KSU, Penn State, Auburn, etc)
  18. Worth noting that Texas has THREE 18s on the roster.
  19. By the way, good luck to all the teachers, parents and kids who start school this week! I meant to post this yesterday and forgot. My little 16 year old Ray of sunshine is up and at em now getting ready for (limited) football practice and then his first day of his junior year.
  20. Join us for Coffee and Football at 8:15 AM (haha), as we discuss the latest Longhorns news and notes, plus take your questions. https://www.youtube.com/live/P9AX83fjYEU?si=7vcyzDWYoS94Cmh7
  21. We are down to just 18 days before the Longhorns face off against the Buckeyes for the season opener in Columbus. Who is your favorite Texas player to wear No. 18? Some options today include… Stanley Richard Donnie Wigginton Liona Lefau
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.