Jump to content

GoHorns1

Supporters
  • Posts

    3710
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by GoHorns1

  1. Tech got an excellent return of investment. Got more than million dollar worth advertising for Tech.
  2. NATIONAL CHAMPIONS!!!!!! 🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘
  3. Welcome to the 40 acres Josh Livingston and family. Hook em 🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘
  4. About damn time!
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VsHtMndKWQg
  6. Stanford scored 129 of max 132.
  7. Having 4 400+ batters is a great accomplishment and must be recognized .
  8. 4 400 and up batters to lead off games
  9. Tech will win one the games against BlowU
  10. WEST WINDSOR, N.J. – Texas Rowing wrapped up a successful run at the 2025 NCAA Championships with a third-place finish at Mercer Lake on Sunday. It marks the eighth-consecutive top-four finish for the Longhorns. In addition, Texas has finished inside the top-three in six of the last seven national meets including three national titles, all under head coach Dave O'Neill. Texas totaled 118 points – the fifth-highest points total at a national meet in program history. Stanford won the title after compiling 129 total points, and Yale finished as the national runner-up with 121 points. Following third-place Texas (118 points), Washington finished fourth (117), Tennessee fifth (106), Princeton sixth (99), Brown seventh (95), Rutgers eighth (83) and California and Virginia tied for ninth (79) to round out the top-10. Forecasted strong winds moved up Sunday's schedule with the first race for the Horns kicking off at 7:08 a.m. CT. Mercer Lake saw clear skies and 7-8 mph winds throughout Grand Finals. The wind started to pick up at the start of the I Eight Grand Final. The Texas First Four commenced Grand Finals by clinching its sixth-straight top-three finish at the national regatta, placing third in 6:59.548 to earn a spot on the podium. It was a tight race from start-to-finish between third-place Texas, first-place Stanford and runner-up Washington. Stanford won it in 6:56.532 followed by Washington (2nd-6:58.598), Texas (3rd-6:59.548), Yale (4th-7:01.820), Rutgers (5th-7:01.858) and Tennessee (6th-7:12.228). The II Eight registered a fourth-place finish after crossing the finish line in 6:17.213. It was a hard-fought battle for the Horns against Stanford (1st-6:13.075), Washington (2nd-6:14.931), Princeton (4th-6:15.021), Yale (6:19.535) and Virginia (6th-6:27.933). The Second Eight has finished inside the top-four in back-to-back seasons after posting a runner-up finish in 2024. The II Eight has also notched a top-four finish in five of the last six national regattas. In the final race of the 2025 campaign, the Texas I Eight had a podium finish after placing third in 6:09.848. Yale won in 6:06.138 followed by Stanford (2nd-6:08.336), Texas (3rd-6:09.848), Tennessee (4th-6:10.912), Washington (5th-6:12.538) and Brown (6th-14.088). With the clutch effort by the I Eight, Texas was able to fend off the Washington Huskies to solidify a third-place team finish to cap the weekend. The I Eight has tallied a podium finish in six of the last seven national meets. Final Team Scores (Team – Points) Stanford – 129 Yale – 121 TEXAS – 118 Washington – 117 Tennessee – 106 Princeton – 99 Brown – 95 Rutgers – 83 California, Virginia – 79 Michigan – 74 Syracuse – 67 Harvard – 65 Indiana – 58 UCF – 52 Dartmouth, Pennsylvania – 39 Oregon State – 33 Northeastern – 27 Boston U – 20 Rhode Island – 12 Fairfield – 6 Lineups: I Eight: Amy Werner (Cox), Sue Holderness, Imy Grey, Marg Van der Wal, Ilva Boone, Phoebe Wise, Lucy McFarlane, Lucy Searle and Abby Dawson. II Eight: Bronwen Holmes (Cox), Rhiannon Luke, Katherine Nordheim, Phoebe Robinson, Allie Alton, Amelia Gleed, Savvy Jerome, Taryn Kooyers and Ellie Rodriguez. I Four: Paris West (Cox), Nadja Yaroschuk, Daniela Thiermann, Jess Colbran and Paula Becher.
  11. Third behind Stanford and Yale
×
×
  • 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.