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Double-T Nation Daily Diatribe :: 10.22.09

  Byrnes Returns to Practice:  LAJ's Don Williams reported yesterday that C Shawn Byrnes has returned to practice, but that LT Terry McDaniel, S Will Ford, QB Steven Sheffield and IR Blake Kelley did not practice.

  Eating the Dinosaur:  ESPN2's Chuck Kosterman has a very interesting and lengthy piece about all sorts of things, mainly about football, and Kosterman writes quite a bit about Texas Tech's Mike Leach and his offensive philosophy, which is to run a few plays to perfection rather than run hundreds of plays to something less than perfection.  I'm providing a blockquote to entice you, but go read the whole thing.  I also want to emphasize the point of running a few plays, but running them perfectly, I'd encourage you to take a look at a post I wrote over 2 years ago (it's really been that long) about the hot-hand theory, doing your job, and the entire Hal Mumme Practice Plan

Here's Klosterman:

It's easy to overlook the significance of this kind of quote, mostly because it seems obvious and casual and reductionist. But it's none of those things. It's an almost perfect description of how thinking slightly differently can have an exponential consequence, particularly when applied to an activity that's assumed to be inflexible. There is this inherent myth about football that suggests offensive success comes in one of two ways: You can run a handful of plays with extreme precision, or you can run a multitude of different plays in the hope of keeping defenses confused. The Green Bay Packers of the Lombardi era embraced the former philosophy (they rarely used more than fifteen different plays in the course of any game, but the fifteen they ran were disciplined and flawless), as did the straightforward running attack of USC during the 1970s and early '80s. Two modern coaches (Steve Spurrier and Urban Meyer) have both found success at the talent-rich University of Florida, seemingly by never running the same play twice. But the inverted thinking of Mike Leach allows Texas Tech to do both: If Texas Tech focuses on only fifteen different plays -- but runs them all out of twenty different formations -- they're instantly drawing from a pool of three hundred options, all of which could still be executed with the repetitive exactitude of the Packers' power sweep. It wasn't that Leach out-thought everybody else; it was merely that he thought differently. Instead of working within the assumed parameters of football, he decided to expand what those parameters were. For a while, that made him seem like a crazy person. But this is how football always evolves: Progressive ideas are introduced by weirdos and mocked by the world, and then everybody else adopts and refines those ideas ten years later.

I recommend you go read the whole thing,and it may take you some time, but it's well worth it.

  Offensive Newcomers:  TR's dedfischer with a good look at the offensive newcomers who are contributing to the team

  Sideline Pros:  I haven't mentioned Steven Leija in quite a while, but he's a photographer in the DFW area, but his passion is Texas Tech and made it to the game last week to take some photos which are posted at his website, Sideline Pros.  Go give Steven a visit.

  Texas A&M Aggie Links:  LAJ's Adam Zuvanich writes about TAMU freshman WR Uzoma Nwachukwu, who's having a tremendous season . . . B/CS Eagle's Robert Cessna writes that TAMU's attitude towards Texas Tech needs to change:

The fact that A&M has better facilities, more fans, more tradition, more money, etc., only drives him and the Red Raiders that much more.

And it’s worked.

. . . and Cessna with a look at how the young Aggies reacted to last week's first road trip and Nwachukwu talks about what his fellow team mates should expect in Lubbock:

"[My teammates] told me definitely keep your helmet on because those fans get real rowdy," Nwachukwu said. "But it's a rivalry game and everything like that. They don't like us and we don't like them, so just keep your helmet on."

. . . SAEN's Buck Harvey with a piece on why TAMU head coach Mike Sherman can afford to lose . . .

  Big 12 Links:  Rock M Nation's Bill C with the always fun Beyond the Box Score weekly picks (the computers are telling them to take the Aggies against the spread) . . . Columbia Tribune's Dave Matter wish a terrific look at the Big 12's new stars (an enjoyable read, and Matter is one of the best, but I don't link enough) . . . Rivals.com's Olin Buchanan with a good look at week 8 of the Big 12 (a good part is focused on Texas Tech vs. Texas A&M) . . .

  Expectations:  DT's Adam Coleman writes that both men's and women's basketball coaches, Pat Knight and Kristy Curry, have not had to face the high expectations during the media days (they are ongoing yesterday and today) and Pat Knight likes the challenge:

"It’s good we’re picked low," Knight said. "I actually did an interview with (a magazine). I’m not going to say what magazine. He had no idea about any of the players. I went down through all our players. He was like ‘Well I’m gonna move you up.’ I was like ‘No, you keep me in the basement where I know you have me.’"

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Klosterman

Chuck Klosterman is a decent writer but he really should never ever try to write about sports in depth ever. He is a moron about sports. That is all.

by CaneBreak on Oct 22, 2009 7:22 AM CDT reply actions   0 recs

Love the Mike Leach...

playbook and his style. I do agree that in 10 years lots more teams will be running fewer plays with different formations. Not real happy about the “keep your helmet on because their fans get real rowdy” quote from an A&M player. All this nonsense about batteries being thrown is all just a bunch of bull crap. These guys can’t find ways to win against Tech so they go after our character every year and start these rumors before we play that have no validity at all. I hate hearing these things because I’m at almost every home game and I have never seen anything like that. The goal post thing was years ago and yes it was stupid but that’s all I can remember being distasteful. I have been heckled plenty at Kyle field but I expect that and have no problem with it. What is wrong with these people and why so sensitive? As a Red Raider I welcome them to the Jones and Lubbock but realize you are at a football game where people pull for their team. Stop the false accusations about batteries, kitchen sinks, shoes, etc…being thrown at you. Be serious has an A&M player ever been hit by anything but a Red Raider on the field…probably not.

by Raider1992 on Oct 22, 2009 9:19 AM CDT reply actions   0 recs

I did see Franchonie get smacked with one of those plastic cups from the concession stand full of water his first time at the jones.

by ST04 on Oct 22, 2009 12:35 PM CDT up reply actions   0 recs

Well...

maybe some tortillas.

by natkcole on Oct 22, 2009 1:03 PM CDT up reply actions   0 recs

tortillas

are a lost (kinda) tradition here

by freakinout on Oct 22, 2009 1:08 PM CDT up reply actions   0 recs

no that would have been the SMU mascot getting belted with an unopened pack of tortillas. Enough force to knock him down.

by ST04 on Oct 23, 2009 10:09 AM CDT up reply actions   0 recs

Does A&M oversell their tradition?

Ok I came across the site and couldn’t help laughing at A&M. For all their talk about tradition it comes down to this:

1 national championship (1939) before my grandfather was born

2 Big XII south titls (1997, 1998) and one Big XII title 1998.

That’s it folks and they drum it up into this big monster which really doesn’t exist. The University of Minnesota has more national championships than A&M. Haha!!

http://www.nationalchamps.net/NCAA/database/texasam_database.htm

by jef on Oct 22, 2009 9:54 AM CDT reply actions   0 recs

Just because someone won a National Championship 70 years ago, yells a certain way at a certain time, has “soldier” cheerleaders, worships bonfires that fall down, and lets a dog sit wherever it pleases doesn’t mean it is a great place. To normal people, this would be classified as cult-like behavior, not something in which to be proud.

Oh yeah, and don’t forget the tradition of blaming the administration for bad coaching hires. Nothing shows school solidarity more than going to the core and admitting poor leadership.

Anyhow, there is a portion of the population that buys into this kind of garbage. To keep attracting people, they have to oversell all their gimmicky tradition bs to compensate for the actual team’s performance.

by pcrawttu on Oct 22, 2009 11:59 AM CDT up reply actions   1 recs

So does that mean that TCU is better than A&M because they have won 2 national championships?

by ST04 on Oct 22, 2009 12:39 PM CDT up reply actions   0 recs

Klosterman’s piece is incredibly interesting. It is all about innovation and creativity in the face of conservative organizations/mindset/tradition. I actually witnessed and was part of some of that in the chemical industry a few years ago. It was fun !!!

From Hal Mumme: I would take each of our pass plays and draw up what would happen if our QB were forced to scramble to his right and then repeat the process with a scramble left.

I am wondering if TTU does this as part of practice…hello !!!!

by TallMike on Oct 22, 2009 10:34 AM CDT reply actions   0 recs

Aggie band and tradition....

I know the atm is suppose to have this great band and all but what I find interesting about all their traditions is alot like the band…..they are really good because they march the same way every year since the band started. So if you do the samething for 100 years you ought to be good @ it. This also points to that there really is no substance to their “football” tradition,it’s just doing the samething over and over and expecting a different outcome. Oh, did someone call that being insane? Wreck’Em Tech

by techgolf44 on Oct 22, 2009 11:07 AM CDT reply actions   0 recs

their band is the worst. yay, go you, you can walk in a straight line. ugh.

by kayakyakr on Oct 22, 2009 11:26 AM CDT up reply actions   0 recs

The tradition that is "military marching band"

begins and ends with the Aggie band. Although I admire military marching band for the consistency of performance and how it fits into the whole atmosphere of a game at A&M, I am utterly bored by it. As a former band director, I have a problem teaching that style of performance to young kids. My theory is that the folks that genuinely enjoy that style do so because they take pride in their ability to identify a marching sequence in progress and watch it pass down the line until until the last marcher has executed the maneuver. What they may not realize is that, in the process, they are completely ignoring the rest of the band! In my view, it greatly stifles the musical expression of the young student. For those that choose to attend A&M and march in the band, more power to ‘em! I just don’t feel that it is fair to do that to a kid who can’t choose where he/she goes to school.

Also, keep in mind that A&M does not have a music school, only a music department. That makes a big difference in the quality of players available to be in the band.

by Goin' Band Fan on Oct 22, 2009 12:35 PM CDT up reply actions   0 recs

What, no warning for Aggie fans to be wary of other Aggie fans wanting to pummel them after the game, only to blame Tech fans of doing the punching?

by Chad_ on Oct 22, 2009 2:12 PM CDT reply actions   0 recs

haha! thanks chad! that’s another aggie tradition too!! pummel your fellow fans if your team loses and argue like crazy with each other.

by jef on Oct 22, 2009 3:20 PM CDT reply actions   0 recs

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