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Extraordinary HOUSTON (Jan. 4) -- Well, it would have been a miracle, but it wasnt. It was good old-fashioned hard work, an extraordinary game plan, extraordinary execution, and extraordinary players whose hearts showed what they were made of Tuesday night. I dont know when I have been more proud of a bunch of never-say-die Seniors, who led the way down that long road back to respectability. They never gave up on themselves or let the rest of the guys quit giving a hundred per cent. We all know their storythree coaches in five years, highs and lows that rivaled a roller coaster, injuries that decimated the starting lineups, youngsters filling big shoes with on-the-field training, finally having a coach whom they could trust and who believed in them. That very special group proved that it really was R Time. Truthfully, after reading Paul Hlavinkas column on the Webpage, I was jealous. I wanted to be there where he was after the game, in the locker room (or wherever the dais was,) listening to the interviews of Chase, Jarrett, Thor, Brian, and Andrew, watching the smiles spread across their faces, laughing at their teasing, and understanding their tears. I wanted to be there sharing the teams happiness, watching the celebration, maybe touching that beautiful crystal trophy that proved Rice had won the Texas Bowl in grand style. Maybe having one of them say, it was those red Hot Tamales that fired us up. I would have been content to be a littlewig standing beside those bigwigs, during that special time after our momentous 38-14 victory. I just wish I could have said, thank you to all of them. All of those unsung heroes who werent listed in the stats, who blocked and tackled and kicked and caught passes and ran a hundred routes moving us down the field need to hear thank yous. I tried Wednesday morning, but when I got to the hotel, they were still asleep, and later when I went to Rice to meet the bus, I found out that most of them has gone home with their parents. The seven who got off the bus got all my congratulations and thanks. No injuries! I guess Im like an old Mother Hen, always worried about her chicks. My first thought when the game was over was that no one got hurt. A few dings but everyone walked off. That is remarkable considering the fierceness of the contacts. I think it was the result of good conditioning and a lot of good luck. Whatever, It was a blessing indeed and a rare one at that. Today, I found myself wishing I had gotten some autographs. All those Thursday afternoons I spent with them and I never once thought about it. I was just happy to be there, happy to make them smile at my lucky red beans, happy to see them happy to be doing what they were doing. I hope now the commentators and sports
writers will quit talking about Rices not having won a Bowl game in 54 years. It was
true, but they dont have to hit us over the head with it every day. As a matter of
fact, I was there in 1954, at the Cotton Bowl, when Tommy Lewis, captain of the My husband, Tom, (Rice 43) had just
come home Christmas Day from a year and a half in Korea, and tickets to the Cotton Bowl
game were my Christmas gift to him. It had been a great year for Rice. There werent
but four major bowl games, all on New Years Day We went to Back to our most perfect game 54 years
later at the Texas Bowl, Houston Texas, December 30, 2008. Rice 38, E-mail
Joyce.... For more on Joyce, see The tradition lasts long after the flavor is gone, Rice News, July, 2007. For previous years' Joyce Hardy columns, go here.... MORE OF JOYCE'S COLUMNS FROM THE '08 SEASON... All Rice is proud to
By Joyce Pounds Hardy, Class of 45, BA '67 HOUSTON (Dec. 1) -- Front page news... RICE BULLDOZES HOUSTON OWLS OUTSMART COUGARS COUGARS LEFT SCRATCHING THEIR HEADS Of course, those are my headlines. However the Chronicle did put us on the real front page, in color, headlines "BAYOU RUNS BLUE" which was the nicest sight since the scoreboard read Rice 56, Houston 42. The Chronicle sports page also gave us top billing: OWLS TAKE OFFENSE, both with photos to die for, huge color celebrations of the team with each other and with the beautiful Bayou Bucket, which is now home with us. A super effort by every lineman, every end, every back, every coach. I have never been so proud of a team for what it showed the world Saturday: Smart offense, devastating defense, perfect execution, and a game plan that bamboozled Houston all afternoon. I have never seen our men tackle and block with such fierce resolve, their hits were crisp, hard, sure stoppers. And they were still going strong at the last tick of the clock. On this day, I could hardly wait for us to get the ball back, so that we could march down that field, with the wind or against it, and finish almost every drive with a touchdown none of those same old long passes for 6 like the U of Who, but real ground burners mixed with pass after pass for hard-earned yards, not to mention a mix of plays that were exciting to watch. Chase had time to look for his receivers, the offensive line was methodical in its protection. My only regret in the whole of the game is that Jarrett didn't get a touchdown he was wide open there a couple of times but the passes just weren't in the right places, even for him. But the record of his prowess all year long drew a crowd of Cougars and left some open spaces for others' heroics. I was happy to see Taylor catch two touchdown passes, glad to see Tommy in there catching important passes, and Toren doing his thing to add to the score. C.J. was tougher than I have ever seen him, grinding out yards through holes that our linemen opened for him time after time. And Brian tackling and intercepting passes with one arm, and Clark hitting another eight PAT's and, and, and so forth and so on. I don't know where to stop. I laughed at the play where Chase handed? passed? lateraled the ball (I never saw how he got the ball) to Jarrett who threw a pass to Chase who caught it. The announcers laughed, too, and said, "Now they are just having fun!" As for our Thor Package, our very own God of Thunder was everywhere doing everything asked of him in, over, around and through that Cougar line which didn't know what hit them half of the time. My favorite touchdown was the pass reception about ten yards from the goal line, when James spun out of one defender's arms, turned and spun (both 360's) out of another's arms and crossed the goal line standing up. It was the Casey and Casey show with a little help from his best friends. I was upset that James wasn't nominated for the Mackey Award, but then maybe the judges couldn't figure out just which position he was so good at or from or to or whatever. It would be hard to pigeon-hole his expertise into one position. Isn't there an award for Most Touchdowns From Three Different Positions? or Most Positions Played In One Game by One Player? Probably not because no one has ever done it before. There probably won't be an award for our Quarterback either, but Chase was as cool and steady, precise and intelligent as any quarterback in any league this year. He set record after record and little was ever said outside of our conference. But nine wins doesn't happen without a steady hand at the helm, and he was ours, the whole season he just got better and better and that's why we got better and better. There won't be a big name award for Jarrett this year either, probably, but no one can ever take his All America Award away from him, No one.. I have been surprised that none of the media ever called him the All American, Jarrett Dillard. That's no small honor especially from a small school like Rice. The tandem of Dillard and Clement broke every record in the book for a passing team, and that record will be there on the books for a long time. What these Seniors have achieved, having played under three different coaches, is remarkable, and I'm sure that they will be listed in some record book as the Winningest Survivors of Chaos in history. My favorite play of the game had to be a running play by a Cougar who was stopped dead in his tracks by three Rice defenders in a stand-up pushing contest with no one going down. One of the other Rice linemen reached out with one hand and pushed the struggling pyramid of four players and the whole bunch just toppled over. I didn't mean to rant on, but this team has been very special to me and to Rice. They brought us a tie for the CUSA West Division Championship with their blood, sweat and tears, surprising some naysayers, and surely, the mighty Tulsa Hurricane coach, with what his orphans accomplished in spite of him. Kudos to Coach Bailiff and his staff for making those young men successful in every way, on and off the field. Rice is proud to call them our own. Thanks for the ride, guys, and it's not over yet! Quite a story 'They will leave a legacy of winning' By Joyce Pounds Hardy, Class of 45, BA '67 HOUSTON (Nov. 24) Number Eight and counting. Great Day in the Morning, we have done it, EIGHT! How sweet it is and will be even sweeter when we beat the U. of Who on Saturday.
Once again our offense showed diversity; Chase back there pointing his finger (I don't know what he is pointing at but then neither does the other team), checking the defense, checking the sideline, checking his offensive line, checking to see where Jarett and James are, 5-4-3-2 good Heavens, snap the ball! I can see going down to 1 when you're killing time, but most of the time you're just killing me. Then a veritable plethora of receivers spray out like a shower head waiting for the bullet to come their way. It's a sight to see. Watching the game over again on CBS CS, the camera zeroed in on Chase's eyes inside that helmet, and it was spooky. He was concentrating so hard, his eyes staring out of that hole, that I felt as if he were looking right through me. Also, before the snap, there is a sort of fascinating rhythm to the turning of all the backs and receivers in sync toward the sideline before each play, while the line never moves. The first half ended with only seven points apiece. We looked punchless, but our defense held Marshall to three 3 and out's in a row in the first quarter and would have been held to another stopper if it hadn't been for a personal foul that gave them a first down and fired them up. I noticed that Rice only had 9 first downs in the first half and 27 by the end of the game.Talk about a turn-around! I was impressed with the tackling of our defense, they were heads-down, vice-clamping, ball-swarming, claws-ready, head-butting men. Everyone contributed. The offensive line gave Chase enough time to look, fake, and throw to the open receiver, and he had those happy feet moving all the time. They made good blocks and opened quick holes for some hard-running yards by Casey and CJ, too. Not much is ever said about Clark Fangmeier and his remarkable record of 60 out of 60 PAT's. It is just as sure-fire as if we made seven on the touchdown itself. Thanks, Clark. I certainly remember years when we all cringed every time our kicker aimed his toe toward the goalposts. How comforting to know that it is automatic. Two more touchdowns to add to the 48 that our duo-extraordinaire already had. Theirs is quite a story. I wonder if the San Antonio Light is having a heyday bragging on their homegrown record-breaking heroes? If not, then someone needs to wake them up. I'm counting inches again in the Chronicle, UH is way ahead this week. Big deal that "Houston is in control of its own destiny." DUH! So is Rice. Houston beat Tulsa, right, but Marshall beat Houston and Rice beat Marshall, so here we are with a huge weekend coming up and Rice is playing for more than pride this year. With Rice, we are playing for 9 wins and a piece of the pie. Houston plays Rice at home, and Tulsa plays Marshall at home and by the end of the day all the cards will be on the table. Sounds like a movie script. The good news is that we are a player in this post season madness and it is a tribute to our Seniors. Their leadership and example have made the whole team rise to new heights, and as coach says, "they will leave a legacy of winning." (A small aside because it puzzled me at the Army Game): When the game was over, the entire Rice Football Team went across the field and stood quietly in front of the Army Band while they played their Anthem. It was an impressive display of respect, and it touched me deeply. I finally asked David Saltzmann and he said that before the game the whole Army Team stood at attention while the Rice Mob played Rice's Honor. And so, we honored them in return. If Coach Bailiff told them to do it, I am very proud of him and I was very proud of our team. The game against Houston Saturday is filling my head with victorious scenarios. If our guys play with the same intensity and purpose that they played with against Marshall in the second half, we, too, can beat the "Coogs." I just hope that Coach Bailiff remembers the "spirited" words that sent the Owls back onto the field for the second half, "bruised egos" and all, and turned the game around 180 degrees. The secret is, Owls, just don't let the Cougar out of the cage.
by Joyce Pounds Hardy HOUSTON (Nov. 11) -- Chase Clement was quoted in the Chronicle as saying Weve done so much, weve come so far, that just winning isnt enough. Whoa, Chase, speak for yourself. Theres no such thing as just winning. When you have been around as long as I have and can count Rices winning seasons on ten fingers, believe me, a win is a win is a win. You may not be proud of that last game, but we are. Some of the adjectives describing our team puzzled me. Of course, Pollyanna here, didnt notice their being lethargic, hollow, fizzled, uninspiring, unfulfilled. Coach keeps saying We play one game at a time, but theres nothing wrong with some wild celebrating when that one game puts a W in the win column. As for coming out flat after halftime, I guess Ill have to start giving out those red Hot Tamales between halves since they always put a little fire in their bellies and a smile on their faces. Whos the leader of this team? Sendejo? Raines? Clement? Dillard? I cant remember who the captains are but your work is cut out for you against Marshall and Houston. We are not going to fade. Besides, I have learned over the years that the military teams get stronger as the game goes on. Their stringent conditioning as soldiers shows in the fourth quarter. That goes for Navy and Air Force, too. They never quit. I have always been grateful and proud knowing that those men are on our side when the fighting starts and when it ends. As far as the game went, I loved the first half and decided that we couldnt be stopped, if we got the ball, we made the touchdown. Well, so much for Pollyanna. However, that 80 yard pass and catch from Chase to Jarrett was a classic. I just wish it were on a tape somewhere so that I could see it over and over again. Jarrett never broke his stride. Jerome Solomon said it was gorgeous, and so it was. The memory of Chases breaking loose for a 61 yard touchdown scamper was so much fun to watch. He never looked back, but he must have heard those three Black Knights pounding behind him, right on his heels, because he was picking em up and putting em down. The most running I have seen him do in practice is a keeper where he runs through the line, then stops, turns around and comes back to the line of scrimmage to run the play again. Or he runs to the sideline to take a knee and rest, usually with Dillard and Casey. I was so happy for Corbin Smiter, what a great catch he made, pumping those long legs like pistons into the end zone. Like Pierre Beasley had last week, another first time touchdown for some young receivers in our stable. Chase spreads it around, and as success comes to the other receivers, it has a way of freeing Jarrett of multiple defenders. Thats what he was so excited about when he made that monstrous catch and TD, he only saw one man on him. Thats a no-no unless you want to give him a touchdown. I think Casey worried them more than Dillard because they were keying on him. I have lost track of all the records being broken this year by Chase and Jarrett, and probably Clark Fangmeier and his PATs. I cant remember his missing one this year, thats amazing. I CAN remember when the Owl Faithful would close their eyes and cringe knowing that the fate of the ball after a touchdown had only a 50/50 chance of going through the uprights. Oh, we have seen it all and lived to tell about it. Thats why seven wins and counting is a magical number for the Owls. Chase was right about our having come so far and done so much, but there are no bad wins, especially when they add up to a Bowl Game. Makes getting up early on a Sunday morning joyful thing by Joyce Pounds Hardy HOUSTON (Oct. 29) -- RICE ROCKS TULANE 42-17 OWLS HOLD VAUNTED GREEN WAVE RUNNING ATTACK TO SEASON LOW 34 YARDS QB CHASE CLEMENT ACCOUNTS FOR FOUR TDS TO HELP RACK UP 35-0 HALFTIME LEAD RICES OFFENSE NOT JUST A 2-MAN SHOW Now those are praises to die for. Is this our Houston Chronicle giving half-page photos and four inch headlines to our Rice Owls? What will they give us when we win number 6 and go bowling? I can hardly wait to see. It surely makes getting up early on a Sunday morning a joyful thing. However, I paid a mean price for leaving Rice Stadium at 6pm Saturday after the Southern Mississippi game and driving straight through to Round Rock so that I would be there to see Rice beat UT at Dell Diamond Sunday noon, 16-9 (or something like that) in 14 innings. We looked good, they did not. But thats another story. Anyway, I have got a humdinger of a muscle spasm in my neck and shoulder that has been telling me for a week that I am too old for such foolishness. Cheering for my Rice Owls is strenuous exercise at my age, I just wish that my internist would count it as such. At the football dinner Monday night, there were a lot of frustrated Owls who could not get the game on the radio. Good ole 97.5 FM. At least the tower had not fallen down this time because I could hear it loud and clear on my famous $100 transistor radio. It has been worth the price for many years now, because back then when I had to sit in the car for the entire game, I was one mad red-headed Owl. I recorded my usual play by play game,
and my side bar read 7-14-21-28-35 ! Five touchdowns in the first half plus Defense was outstanding indeedGarmon, Tolbert, Hill, Bradshaw, Garmon, Bradshaw, Solomon, Gascon-Nadon, Ptaszek, Bradshaw, Smith, Jones, Solomon, Calhoun, Garley, Jones, Bradshaw, and my apologies for missing some of them. Blame it on a stiff neck. What a crew. My goodness34 yards total for Tulane. Ive still got a pain in my neck that has made typing this column tough. The therapist is a Longhorn so he is not exactly sympathetic, especially since we beat UT again last Sunday in baseball at our house. Badly... As for my football team, they were full of my red Hot Tamales and fired up for a victory. I could see that in practice Thursday. I always tell them good luck and stay safe. If I had a magic wand that I could wave over their heads and keep everyone of them from getting hurt, I would do that in a New York minute. But hey! Im just the Hot Tamale Lady, not God. Beautiful game, beautiful stadium, beautiful day by Joyce Pounds Hardy HOUSTON (Oct. 21) -- Hey all of you couch potatoes sitting indoors watching your TV games, you missed a great opportunity to experience what college football is all about Saturday afternoon. It was beautiful. Of course, Rice beating Southern Mississippi, 45-40, in a nip and tuck battle of the air balls certainly made it more exciting. This was another one of those jumping games where I get all my exercise for the week in 4 hours. Not only did I jump up six times for Rice touchdowns plus a field goal, but for some unbelievable receptions for first downs, runs for tough yardage, a knock-the- ball-out-of-our- receivers-hands-fumble-bounce-catch-run- touchdown, and a grab-theball-out-of-the-opponents- hands-recovery for a Rice first down, but also an onside kick by Southern Miss in the last seconds of the game which was caught by a flying Casey, who was promptly flipped for a 360 in the air, to end the game. Who needs 24 Hour Fitness? Somehow, I got caught up in all the 7s in our victory Saturday. Weird as I am (at times.) In the Christian religion, 7 means good and three 7s mean completely good, and that is exactly what happened in our game: Casey had seven receptions, Dillard had seven receptions, and Dixon had seven receptions, and we had six seven point touchdowns. I dont know about that 6, but we did score seven times. Well, OK, so Im stretching our good luck a bit. Just remember that 7s are good; its the 6s that are bad and usually mean that you missed the PAT I didnt count how many times Rice sent out five receivers, which I never thought I would live to see, but it was a joyful thing for me, especially those three bunched up in a little triangle on the right end of the line, who scattered like a covey of quail when your hound dog noses into a bush. Jarrett and Chase connected for # 43, 44, and 45, one of them a real twister, which is gonna go on going up for the rest of the season and beyond, I hope. The offense held and held again so that Chase had time to connect 30 times for 444 yards, and even though SMs Davis hit 32 for 416. we won the foot race. One of my favorite quotes in MKs column was from Toren Dixon, If youre going to be out here, youve got to be a playmaker in THIS offense. Make every move, offense and defense, count. I took my sister, Bettye, to the game Saturday and she kept saying, Why does the announcer keep saying that your quarterback is throwing to anyone? About the third time she said it, I turned and said What? Why does your announcer keep saying that the quarterback is throwing to anyone? Doesnt he know his name? Slowly, the fog lifted and I said, Oh, hes saying 81. not anyone. Ive got to learn NOT to watch the kick for point after the TD, if I wish to see the instant replay of the touchdown. They ought to show it two times. I have been so spoiled by being able to reverse the televised play and see it over and over again, that I want to see the live touchdown again without holding my breath. I never look up in time.... In years past, at the football dinners every Monday night, we would be treated to the whole games highlights on one BIG screen for about 20 minutes, and good game or bad, we enjoyed seeing it again together. Those who wanted to leave could, but most of us just turned our chairs around and enjoyed the show. I know it was a lot of work for someone to put it together, but I miss it. I know Ive worn out the word beautiful, but sometimes there isnt another word that says it betterit was a beautiful game played in a beautiful stadium on a beautiful day. Hope you were there. Though painful, Owl mis-step needs to be put in perspective by Joyce Pounds Hardy GALVESTON (Oct. 6) -- I was so upset Sunday that I couldnt write about the game. Boy, that one hurt. I knew that we werent bulletproof, but I thought we were past shooting ourselves in the foot, not once not twice but five times. And on TV--again. I hope CBS-C paid us something for that public humiliation. Whatever it was, it wasnt enough. However, today, Monday, I forgot about our misfortune, I forgot about our loss, I forgot about the ill wind that blew, and the surge of the Golden Hurricanes that sunk our dreams, I forgot about my pain over a football game. Today, I spent seven hours in Galveston. Talk about misfortune, loss, wind, pain, this was a surge that ruined peoples lives. This was no Saturday football game with scars that will heal in a couple of months, these scars covered the Island and some of them, maybe most of them, will never heal. I have loved Galveston all my life and what I saw broke my heart. Our Bay House in Isla del Sol had very little damage, only the store room under the house itself had had five feet of water in it for days and had to be emptied , stripped, and sprayed with Clorox, but it still smelled. Everything in it floated and banged around but the walls held. The screen room only lost a few panels and the golf cart, having swung 180 degrees around a piling, was a lost cause. We still have no water, no electricity, no phones, no food, but there are Porta Pottys on every corner. Workers seem tireless, relentless, as do the bob cats, cranes, tractors, bull dozers, and hundreds of huge trucks in long lines being loaded with the storms detritus. But there is no putting Humpty Dumpty back together again, not my beautiful Humpty Dumpty. West End was covered with miles and miles of debriseverywhere refrigerators, freezers, boats, cushions, mattresses, furniture, strollers, fishing poles, reels, life jackets, TVs, bookcases with no books, palm trees by the thousands, garage doors, sides of houses, cars in the fields. Sand was piled higher than my car on either side of the road where bulldozers had pushed it so you could drive on the asphalt. All the sand from the beach and from under the beach houses had blown and floated across the roads. I could see daylight under most of the beach houses, the sand gone from under their concrete foundations, broken concrete everywhere. What hurt the most was seeing no green anywhere. Brown trees, brown shrubs, brown grass, brown sand. There seemed to be so little still alive on both ends of the Island. Houses and buildings on the East End, from the seawall to the ship channel, were gutted, their soaked treasures piled on the sidewalks, mildewing like the rest of Galveston. My Rice granddaughter-doctor and her husband, who lived close to UTMB, lost everything. They had spent 36 hours evacuating patients, until Friday evening, finally getting out of town just ahead of IKE. I dont know what this has to do with Rice football, but all of a sudden the loss to Tulsa didnt hurt as much. I dont think I will look back at my four pages of every play in the game, or ask any questions about why did the wheels come off again? or who got rattled by whom over and over and over, or what happened to our hurry-up offense which uses every second on the play clock? I choose to remember Clements pass to Dillard who scored his record-breaking touchdown, and Brian Raines, hobbled or not, being in on almost every tackle, and Clarks golden toe on our PATs. I choose NOT to remember the score, or how sore my shoulders were Sunday morning from cringing so much. My Owls will be back on green grass next Saturday week, and I will be in the stands, my feet dry, no sand between my toes, and hope in my heart that reconstruction, as it is in Galveston, is underway. It's enough to make me want to go to Tulsa.
Almost. HOUSTON (Sept. 30) -- I wanted more!! I was loving this. I didn't even know our scoreboard could go as high as 77. Our box, full of screaming, joyful Rice Owls (except for my guest
who was from North Texas) was jumping up and down as we were on a trampoline, high fiving,
and making sure that we didn't miss the replay of another amazing touchdown. The fun was
non-stop. When the news eventually reached, it wasn't
positive Three pretty bad storms for Rice to have to weather in one
week. The football team was faring about as well as their fans back in Houston, who were
without power, too. The team took off for Tennessee just before the monster, who was
swirling like a giant whirlpool covering the entire Gulf of Mexico, came ashore. So long
Rice Owls, so long Galveston, so long Bolivar, so long Crystal Beach, so long Gilcrest, so
long Houston. That did not perk up my spirits. No computer, no column. (I
found out at the football dinner tonight that that powerful tower for 97.5 FM in Beaumont
had blown down.) Still saturated with the wonder of it all HOUSTON (Sept. 9) -- Forget the Zantac!
Buck had to get the defibrillator, his mother was fibrillating. I'm wacky enough
without you all banging on my heart. However, I'll just keep the jumper nearby for all the
games and raise the decibels as I happily yell "GO RICE GO!" It was my son, Larry, calling from the hospital to celebrate with
us. "What game are you watching?" as the noise hit a massive crescendo and
Jammer (I love that name) crossed the goal line. "Rice, of course, we just made a
touchdown to go ahead of Memphis with 11 seconds left on the clock." What a difference a year makes for this
group of Owls! HOUSTON (Sept. 4) -- RICE 56 SMU 27. I know it's old news, but just rolling it off my tongue one more time feels oh so good! And I am oh so proud of those guys and the coaches for the game they executed Friday night. Every player knew where he was supposed to be and what he was supposed to do -- what a difference a year makes! I did go to watch the practices last Spring and take the team some Red Hot Tamales to put "a little fire in their bellies," but they didn't need them. I was surprised and pleased to see a huge change in their attitudes and in their performances. I have told this to everyone who would listen to me--there was no confusion anymore. Bailiff's scheme belonged to them now. Coach Bailiff had made believers out of them. Every player was quicker, surer, faster, stronger, happier. They were laughing and kidding each other on the sidelines, but when their numbers were called--they ran onto the field with confidence and a new zeal for the game. Practice or not, they were putting their hearts into every effort. I love the No Huddle Spread Option. It's a thinking team's offense. I still can't believe that's my Rice with four receivers on the line of scrimmage. How many years did I plead with Coach Hatfield to send out more than one receiver? His answer was, "Why, there's only one ball?" I guess he was being cutesy, but believe me, my answer to his question was not. There were so many heroes Friday night: Clement, Dillard, Casey, Sendejo, King, Smiter, Randolph, Ugokwe, Raines, Smith, Fangmeier, Dixon, Henderson, Solomon, Knox, Garley, Turner, Thompson, Yelkovich and 80 of their closest friends. Eight touchdowns! Rice's offense and defense were tough and tenacious, exciting and unpredictable. And what's not to love about the dynamic duo of Clement and Dillard or the Thor Package? If SMU's $2,000,000 coach was to be the Saviour of Mustang football with his old run and shoot offense, he forgot to tell his quarterback he could only shoot. No runee. A couple of days ago, I watched my video recording of the game on ESPN, and if the announcers had said one more adulatory word about June Jones I was heading for the Zantac. Ad nauseum, they said June Jones this and June Jones that, "if you wanted to play for a high-scoring team, which coach would you chose?" JJ, of course. "JJ doesn't like for his quarterback to run with the ball." Duh! Now all of the other teams know JJ is just a shoot and shoot coach, "look at JJ mentoring his quarterback, young Bo Levi Mitchell, he's creating another all American." from scratch. "Young freshman Bo Levi never threw more than ten passes in a game in his high school career, so JJ is throwing him into the fire tonight."" Bo Levi will be a great passer when he strengthens his arm and JJ....blah,blah, blah.." As a mother carried her young son who was wearing an SMU t-shirt up the steps , the ESPN crew gushed, " he'll have something to tell his grandchildren, 'I was at June Jones first game for SMU.' " YUK! Where is that Zantac? The announcers only mentioned Coach Bailiff three times and he was the real story here. At least they said that "Chase Clement has been the real deal, he plays with his mind, arm and feet," and "Jarrett Dillard is the best receiver you never heard of., probably the best in the nation." I cheered when I heard them say that and figured that after four hours maybe they had waked up to the fact that Rice was beating the stuffing out of SMU. And speaking of cheering, the sight of those two whole sections of rowdy, balloon-banging, cheering students warmed my heart beyond measure. They didn't leave at half time, nor after the third quarter, nor after the end of the game, they stayed and sang "Rice's Honor" with the team standing proudly in front of them. Some of the players even went up in the stands and got their fair share of back-slappings. The rest just congregated on the field, surrounded by grateful fans and proud parents, and hoped the big screen would keep that "Rice 56 SMU 27" glowing brightly a little while longer.
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