Sunday, April 2, 2017

A League Of Their Own

























The Kangaroos rushed up the court as the final seconds ticked down in basketball crazy Indiana. There was barely enough time to get down the court. Austin College’s Kamey Banks pulled up and launched a 3 pointer at the buzzer. For the win.

It was just off the mark. The Crusaders of Northwest Nazarene (Idaho) had escaped with their lives in the Sweet 16 round of the 1997 NAIA D2 Women’s Basketball Championship.

The Crusaders went on to win the 1997 National Championship in Angola, Indiana, and did so in impressive fashion. The average margin of victory for Northwest Nazarene excluding the Austin College game was an astonishing 24 points. Their biggest test, by far, had come against the Roos. AC returned to Sherman frustrated, but with their heads held high. Their national championship dreams were thwarted by mere inches. But they had come so far, both off the court and on.



It’s April 2nd, 2017. Tonight, South Carolina and Mississippi State square off for the NCAA D1 women’s basketball title in Dallas. The Bulldogs got to the finals by ending the University of Connecticut’s historic winning streak at 111 games in a row. Overseeing the NCAA D1 women’s tournament this year is Terry Gawlik, a former Austin College Kangaroo coach of women’s basketball. You are probably familiar with UConn’s record streak. But you may be less familiar with the college that held the NCAA winning streak record before UConn. And I bet you are also unaware that their streak was nearly broken………by Austin College.

Oh, but April 2nd is important for another reason. It’s Marjorie Hass’s birthday. President Hass has faithfully navigated the Austin College ship since 2009. She announced her departure on December 12th of last year, a red letter day in Austin College sports history. At the very moment we were celebrating online the 35th anniversary of AC’s national championship in football, Dr. Hass accepted the presidency of Rhodes College in Memphis.

The Class of 1992 will hold its 25th reunion this fall in Sherman, and reunion committee members Jenny King, Wayne Whitmire, Susan Raine, Jashondra Crockett, Angie Russell, and Marc Parrish have been hard at work. On behalf of the committee, thank you for your service Dr. Hass. We hope to see you at Homecoming 2017, or a future event.

This Roo Tale is dedicated to the 15th President of the oldest named & chartered school in the state of Texas. It’s the story of AC women’s basketball and the national struggle of women to have a league of their own.

Chapter 1: Arrival

Conflict abroad has a way of highlighting injustice at home. With war raging in Europe in 1918, the administration in Sherman made an historic decision to right a wrong. No longer would AC be all all-male institution; women would be allowed into the student body. The new arrivals were greeted with concern, suspicion, and outright hostility. It was brave to be a newly arrived woman Kangaroo.



















While the entire college celebrated Armistice Day in November 1918, the female students began the long task of acceptance. One of the first orders of business was a petition to join the all-male literary societies. The requests were denied, even ridiculed. The women responded by forming their own literary society. Kappa Gamma Chi was created by a group of rebellious female scholars during the spring of 1919. The oldest sorority on campus will soon be celebrating its 100th birthday.



One of the Kappa original founders was a woman named Grace Eagleton. The Eagleton family was already AC royalty by WWI, and Grace added to the family legacy after her arrival. Eagleton was active in student government, yearbook, and a member of the tennis team.

And she played basketball.

The first women’s basketball team in AC history was formed in 1919. Play was limited, funds were minimal, and excessive athleticism was discouraged. The first ever coach of AC women’s basketball was a male on the football team by the name of Ewell D. Walker. The “D”? It stood for “Doak”. Ewell Walker’s son Doak Walker would later win the Heisman trophy at SMU while competing in the Cotton Bowl, which is often referred to as the “House that Doak built”.



















Doris Eagleton picked up where Grace left off. Grace’s little sister was, like all Eagleton family members, an active part of Austin College life. She was also a member of the 1926 and 1927 women’s basketball teams during the Pete Cawthon era. Doris and her teammates competed in the brand new Cawthon Gymnasium, completed during the 1920s.



Chapter 2: Departure

Progress is rarely linear. Social advances can retreat if given a pretext, and the Great Depression provided. The idea of women being active was considered anathema for traditionalists, and the tough economic times in Sherman gave those in the administration, faculty, and student body just the excuse they needed to end the experiment of women’s sports. Administration declared 1931 as the last year of competition, to the anger of the Roo women athletes. The Chromascope dedication to the 1931 women’s team said it best, and was probably written by a frustrated, tireless, feisty Kappa:



“We can truthfully say that is hasn’t been what it ought to have been either from the faculty or the student body. They are entitled to every bit of support that any of the other teams have had.”

That support would wait another half-century, but it would come.

In her memoir, Katherine Switzer recalled that her high school coach discouraged women from participating in athletic activity because an “excessive number of jump balls could displace the uterus.” Fairy tales like this were frequently used to discourage participation, but Switzer would have none of it.

The Boston marathon had been an all-male affair for 70 years, and there was no reason to believe this would not continue in 1967 when a K. V. Switzer discretely registered to run. Well into the 26 miles, race official Jock Semple attempted to physically remove Switzer from the race. But he was thwarted by Switzer’s boyfriend, who sent Semple flying and to the ground with one big block. Switzer completed the marathon with a time around 4:20. The only debate about Boston Athletic Association director Will Cloney response to Switzer’s participation was whether it was more pejorative or misogynist. “If that girl were my daughter, I would spank her.”



But the women would not be denied. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, the women’s movement was demanding autonomy in the areas of law, finance, health, and career; collegiate athletics was right around the corner. At around the time that Billie Jean King defeated Bobby Riggs in straight sets during the battle of the sexes tennis match in the Astrodome, Congress passed Title IX. Title IX required equitable funding of all collegiate activities regardless of gender, and its impact was greatest on athletics.



Before 1971, only about 2% of all collegiate athletic budgets were spent on women. Parity in funding changed the landscape dramatically. In colleges around the country, women’s teams were created, funded, and provided with scholarship opportunities. Volleyball, softball, tennis, golf, and basketball were suddenly alive once again for females.



Chapter 3: Rebirth

Austin College women also had a secret weapon in Sherman fighting on their behalf. For nearly a quarter century, the face of AC women’s physical education was Gene Grinnell Day. As the political environment nationally began to change, Day began to promote the creation of women’s teams at AC. She had help from Hollywood.



As a famous Texas Governor once said, “Ginger Rogers did everything Fred Astaire did, except in high heels and backwards.” Rogers was also a women’s movement icon and friend of Austin College. She participated in theatre at Ida Green, 1972 Commencement, and was a member of the Board of Trustees in the 1970s. She was also an athlete.





Rogers’s sport was tennis, and she competed in mixed doubles at the US national championships at Forest Hills in New York. When Austin College wanted to dedicated the newly constructed Russell Tennis Stadium in 1974, Ginger Rogers was invited to play the first match. Rogers and trustee Ira Anderson squared off against Gene Day and Professor Frank Edwards.





By 1978, women’s basketball was back. Cindy Glaser Bankston competed on one of the first women’s teams since the 1920s. By the early 1990s, Jenifer Roberts, Andrea Apple (daughter of Jerry Apple), Claire Brennan, Tanya Garvey, Vanessa Johnson, Jennifer Kyle Hernandez, Kim Jacoby, and Maggie Roe were all suiting up for the crimson and gold. In 1992, the Roos chalked up the first ever winning season for AC women’s basketball.

















Maggie Roe led the NAIA in scoring in 1992, and was second in the nation in rebounding. For her efforts, she was named TIAA Conference MVP and selected as an NAIA 2nd team All-American. Roe’s dominance continued in 1993. She was ranked 2nd nationally in both points scored and rebounds, and again won Conference MVP and All-American honors. Roe had scholarship offers from Notre Dame, Texas A&M, and Oklahoma, but eventually settled on AC for its academic reputation and the positive atmosphere of D3 competition.



And the best was yet to come.

Chapter 4: March Madness

Marisa Hesse, Natasha Rodgers, Christie Holler, Rachel McNamara, Natasha Lampkin, Polly Thomason, Coshari Gardner, Riann Emch, Amy Skull, Kamey Banks, Allison McKinney, Jay Anna Harris, Kelly Grekstas, and other Roos took Austin College to the stratosphere over the three-year period from 1997 to 1999.



The 1997 squad rolled through the American Southwest Conference (ASC) play. But so did fellow conference rival University of the Ozarks (AR). By the end of the season, both schools were tied in conference and stood at 22-3. A one game playoff in Oklahoma would decide the conference championship. AC posted a dominating 24-point win over the Eagles, with Rodgers, Hesse, and two others hitting double figures. For the first time, the Kangaroos were conference champions. An invitation to the NAIA D2 playoffs in Angola, IN was their reward.







The first round matchup with St. Ambrose (IA) was a thrilling Kangaroo win. Down 5 late, Austin rallied to take the lead and then held off a furious comeback by the Bees to force overtime. In the extra period, AC took charge and secured an 80-76 overtime victory to advance to the NAIA D2 Sweet 16. Head Coach Robin Potera and Assistants Buck Buchanan and Shane Allison, however, were hungry for more.







“They came to play. They didn’t bow down to us.”, said Crusader senior Erica Walton. NW Nazarene was fortunate to advance, and they knew it. Kamey Banks’s 3-pointer at the buzzer was off, but it was “close enough for everyone in the Tri-State University’s Hershey Hall to gasp.” AC left the tournament with newly won respect. The Crusaders left as NAIA D2 champions days later. But the Roos were young, and most would be back the following year.











In 1998, Austin College made the transition from NAIA to NCAA, and the Roos picked up where they had left off. The 1998 team was 21-7 and ASC champions once again. Austin College received an invitation to the NCAA D3 National Tournament, and beat Southwestern (TX) 69-51 at home to advance. The Roos then traveled to Randolph-Macon (VA) and upset the Yellow Jackets 64-52 in Ashland. For a second year in a row, Austin College had reached the Sweet 16 of a national tournament. This time, it was the big NCAA dance. Their next opponent? The #1 team in the nation.





In addition to the top ranking, Wisconsin-Oshkosh boasted a 25-1 record. They played stifling defense, and were picked by most sports writers to go all the way. The Titans prevailed that evening in Virginia by a score of 57-44 in front of nearly 1,500 enthusiastic fans in Bridgewater, VA. It was another frustrating tournament loss for the Roos. But what an iconic moment it was. The NCAA tournament. The Sweet 16. 1,500 fans. The #1 team in the nation.









It was not to be for Wisconsin-Oshkosh. The Titans lost in the elite 8 round to the WashU Bears of St. Louis, MO. WashU then ran the table and won the 1998 NCAA D3 national championship. But they weren’t done yet; their wins kept piling up. The 1999 Bears went 30-0 and repeated as national champions. The 2000 Bears went 30-0 and repeated again. Finally, after 81 straight wins, WashU tasted defeat on January 12, 2001. It didn’t have much of an impact; the Bears won the 2001 NCAA D3 national championship anyway, their 4th in a row.





Chapter 5:  The Streak

The WashU streak garnered national attention as it approached UCLA’s record 88-game streak under John Wooden in the early 1970s. Wooden even mentioned the streak in press interviews as the Bears crept closer to UCLA; he expressed admiration for the pressure WashU was having to endure night after night. Although the Bears fell just short of Wooden’s mark, their 81-game streak remained tops in women’s basketball until it was broken by UConn.



But that WashU streak was lucky to survive in 1998-1999. The Roos were headed to St. Louis.

WashU hosted the Washington University Invitational in late November, and Austin College was invited. The Bears and Roos both advanced to the title game, and squared off on November 29th at the WashU Field House. AC came out firing on all cylinders. McNamara and Hesse were both on their way to double figures, and the Roos hit the locker room at halftime with a lead. The defending national champions and their fans were in silence. Was the streak about to end at home of all places, in the finals of their own tournament?



The Bears regrouped, and battled back. Back and forth the lead changes went until finally, at the end, WashU began to slightly pull away. Final score: WashU 87, Austin College 80. The Bears were arguably aided by some questionable home town cooking. According to Thomason, “my dad never blames officials, but he swears we lost that game because the officials weren’t going to let us win.”



The 1999 team hit 20 wins for the third time in three years. AC finished with a 20-7 record and was once again invited to the NCAA D3 National Tournament. The Roos advanced in the round of 64 by defeating a 23-4 Randolph-Macon (VA) team again, but fell in the round of 32 to Depauw (IN), 67-62. Nobody would top WashU in 1999 though; the Bears took their second of four D3 national championships in a row.



Over the course of the 81-game winning streak for WashU, the average margin of victory for the Bears was 25 points. Only five teams got closer than the 7-point deficit of Bears/Roos game in St. Louis. All five of those games were on the road, away from the friendly confines of WashU Field House. Nobody came closer to ending the “streak” on the Bears home court than the Austin College Kangaroos.





Doris Eagleton was probably beaming.

The veteran of AC women’s basketball in the 1920s and little sister of the first women’s basketball player was in Sherman in 1999 to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Austin College’s founding. Yes, Doris Eagleton would graduate and marry fellow Roo George Landolt, who himself would become a well-known member of the faculty at AC. By the 150th anniversary, Doris was well into her 90s.



While her activities with President Oscar Page were overwhelmingly academic and historic, she was likely marveling at just how far the women had come. Her squad in 1927 struggled to survive in an environment of administration and student hostility. 70 years later, that same team of women Roos were just a 3 pointer away from a national championship.

Good luck in Memphis President Haas.  And Go Roos.







Monday, March 6, 2017

Fedora, Jordan, & UNC



A hat tip to Claude Webb for pointing out this story earlier today.

Rufus Bailey was a professor in North Carolina before he headed west in 1858 to take over the presidency of Austin College.  His 4 year tenure was a challenging one.  The Civil War forced Bailey to temporarily close the college, and poor health eventually forced his resignation.  He passed in 1863, just before the death of the school's most famous trustee Sam Houston.  Administrators at UT, A&M, TCU, SMU, Rice, Tech, Trinity, and Southwestern certainly didn't struggle as much as Bailey in 1861.  Those schools did not exist. :)

Maybe it's preferable for Roos to depart for the Tar Heel state instead.


Expectations were high for the 1981-82 UNC Tar Heels basketball team.  Already at 3-0, they took to the court at Carmichael Arena against South Florida and demolished the Bulls 75-39.  It was over by halftime.  Freshman Michael Jordan had 16 points, and let the bench get some game time in the second half.  The date was December 12, 1981.

It was a pretty good day for freshman receiver Larry Fedora and the Austin College Kangaroos as well. ;)



The Tar Heels kept rolling all the way through the NCAA tournament, advancing to the finals with a 31-2 record against Patrick Ewing and the Georgetown Hoyas.  Down 1 with 17 seconds, Jordan mailed a jumper to give UNC the lead for good.  That shot, and the Tar Heel championship that it secured, propelled Jordan into global basketball stardom.



I bet ol' Larry Fedora was watching.  He was probably in Baker or Luckett Hall, marveling at yet another epic national championship ending that year.  What was he thinking?  I'll tell you what he was not thinking.  He was not thinking........."I'm gonna team up with that guy on a Carolina court in a few decades."  Funny how life's many long and winding roads meet up in unexpected places.




Jordan finished his career at UNC in 1984 as an NCAA All-American.  Ditto Fedora, whose last season in 1984 catching footballs earned him NAIA D2 All-American recognition.  Their paths since have taken them through multiple cities, sports, and professions.  But those paths crossed this week.

Jordan "Jumpman" brand of athletic gear has been the official gear of UNC basketball, and now it will do the same for UNC football.  The deal was announced at the halftime of what is likely the best rivalry in college basketball:  Duke vs. UNC.  The Chapel Hill hero had enthusiastic words for the tremendous turnaround Fedora has overseen for Tar Heel fans on the gridiron.




Great job Coach, and thanks for making us proud to be Roos.  We're all just a little bit more Tar Heel born and Tar Heel bred.



Wednesday, February 22, 2017

"Roo"nlight Graham

On a trip back to Boston in 1993, I stopped by the Field of Dreams in Dyersville, Iowa.  The film deals with many topics I love…. sport, loss, youth, fatherhood, even writing.  I highly recommend a visit.  People should visit, Ray, people should most definitely visit.  ;)

Another season of baseball is nearly here.  You’ve likely seen photos of ballplayers being shared on Facebook.  Politics is important, but can be exhausting.  We all need escapism, and baseball can provide.  Stratford HS baseball kicks off another season today, and Coach Jason Willis offered to give me a ballplayer to post as others are doing.  I asked him to give me an old timer and that I would try to link to Austin College.  Jason gave me a pitcher for the Chicago White Sox.  

This is the Roo Tale of Eddie Cicotte.


Chapter 1:  If you build it, he will come

Cicotte made his major league debut with Detroit in 1905, and was traded to the Chicago White Sox in 1912.  At Chicago, he became a star.  He led the AL in winning percentage in 1916 and won 28 games in 1917.  That same year, he tossed a no-hitter against the St. Louis Browns.  And in 1919, he was close to notching 30 wins.

30 wins was a big deal.  The salary owner Charles Comiskey paid Cicotte was $6,000, but Cicotte had a contract bonus of $10,000 if he were to hit that magic number of wins.  Legend has it that as the regular season came to a close, and with Cicotte sitting on 29 wins, Comiskey benched his star pitcher for nearly a week to avoid having to pay the bonus.  Cicotte was furious.  So were the rest of his teammates.

The 1919 White Sox advanced to the World Series, but Cicotte, Shoeless Joe Jackson, and six others threw it in exchange for cash payments.  The “Black Sox” scandal is the stuff of baseball lore, and it might never have happened if not for the injustice and greed of owners like Comiskey.  Cicotte and the other members of the Eight Men Out were banned from baseball for life.

Cicotte had a teammate, however briefly, during the 1919 season.  Austin College Kangaroo Charlie Robertson graduated in 1919, and was immediately signed by the White Sox.  He pitched in a few games at Comiskey that year, before being sent to the minor league club in Minneapolis.  From there, he watched the scandal unfold.



Chapter 2:  Ease his Pain

Robertson also never lost touch with AC.  During the offseason, he’d return to Sherman to assist with football and winter baseball.  He was back in the winter of 1922 to prepare Roo baseball for another season.  See the team photo in front of Luckett Hall.  Robertson is wearing his Minneapolis uniform, top row, far left.



Just a few months after this photo was taken, Robertson would be nationally famous.  On April 30, 1922, he threw a perfect game against Ty Cobb and Detroit at Tiger Stadium.  The feat would not be repeated until Don Larsen’s gem in the 1956 World Series.  There were a number of fine Roo ball players in 1922, all pictured in the photo.  But one of them has a special story.  Wally Dashiell.



The Black Sox scandal players are immortalized in the movie Field of Dreams, and Eddie Cicotte is one.  Played by actor Steve Eastin, Cicotte is the pitcher who faces Doc “Moonlight” Graham at the plate.  Cicotte gives Graham a brushback pitch and puts him on the ground in one scene.  Graham’s transgression?  “He winked at me”, says Cicotte.


Steve Eastin as Eddie Cicotte in "Field of Dreams."


Frank Whaley as Moonlight Graham in "Field of Dreams."

A good portion of the movie focuses on Moonlight Graham.  In 1905, this rookie was called up to the New York Giants for one game.  He was inserted into the lineup in the ninth inning, but never made it past the on deck circle.  The game ended, and Graham was sent down to the minors for the rest of his career.  He never got to bat.  In the movie, Graham’s dream is to face a big league pitcher.

After the brushback, Graham hits a long fly ball off of Cicotte to right field.  The runner at third tags, and scores.  This is actually a significant event in the movie.  A sacrifice does not count as an at-bat in the record books.  This is done to ensure that the batter is neither rewarded for an out nor penalized for an RBI.  In this way, Graham achieves his dream of facing a major league pitcher without disturbing the sacred record books with an official at-bat.  His contribution to the team is silent.

Chapter 3:  Go the Distance

Wallace Dashiell graduated from Austin College in 1922, and like Robertson was also signed by Comiskey and the White Sox.  Imagine his excitement.  This Roo was headed to Chicago, to play alongside his former Roo coach, perfect game hurler, and now teammate.  Dashiell spent 1923 in the minors, but was called up to Chicago to start the 1924 season.  He watched Robertson pitch on a few outings, and patiently waited to get the call. 

It came on April 20, 1924.

Dashiell was inserted at shortstop halfway through the game.  His first two plate appearances were both strikeouts.  The White Sox 8th inning began with the Cleveland Indians up 4-1.  But a rally was about to get underway at Comiskey, and Dashiell would be a part of it.

Chicago closed the gap to 4-3, and had men on 1st and 2nd.  Dashiell was called to sacrifice, and he delivered.  The runners advanced, and would later score on a hit and squeeze play.  Chicago won 5-4, and Dashiell was a contributor.  As he left Comiskey that afternoon, his fellow Roo teammate Robertson probably slapped him on the back and muttered “fine job.”


Dashiell would never play in the majors again. 

His career major league statistics:  3 plate appearances, 2 at-bats, 1 sacrifice hit, 0 hits/walks.  One game.

He was Austin College’s Moonlight Graham.

After a few days, Dashiell was sent back down to the minors, where he began a successful 15 year playing career.  He transitioned to manager in the 1930s and 1940s, and guided the Pensacola Flyers to numerous minor league pennants.



Chapter 4:  Wanna Have a Catch?

Don Larsen’s 1956 perfect game renewed interest in Charlie Robertson’s feat for the White Sox.  Robertson eventually retired to Texas, and passed in 1984.  It’s unknown whether Robertson & Dasheill…..the two Roos of Luckett Hall & Comiskey…….remained close.

In real life, “Moonlight” Graham became a doctor and a pillar of the Chisholm, MN community.  In a similar vein, Dashiell and family found a home in Pensacola.  He managed the Flyers for many years, ran a small business, and was a beloved member of the city when he passed in 1972.  Just this past year, the mayor of Pensacola declared August 22, 2016 as “Wally & Virginia Dashiell” day.

Like Shoeless Joe Jackson, Cicotte never played baseball in the majors again after the 1919 scandal.  He went to work for Ford Motor Company, and was a Michigan strawberry farmer in retirement.  He passed in 1965.

But just like the film, both Cicotte and Dashiell both probably had days where they dreamed of a field in Iowa to face off one last time.  Cicotte, to continue what might have been.  And Dashiell, what never was. 

“Man, I did love this game.  I’d have played for food money………. shoot, I’d have played for nothing.” – Shoeless Joe Jackson

 “We just don't recognize the most significant moments of our lives while they're happening. Back then I thought, well, there'll be other days. I didn't realize that that was the only day.” – Moonlight Graham

“Wanna Have a Catch?” – Ray Kinsella

Good luck this season to Stratford HS.  Go get 'em Coach Willis.


Photo taken by Marc Parrish of a father & son at the Field of Dreams – September 1993


Saturday, February 11, 2017

Dell Morgan, Rice Baseball, & The Smell

This post is inspired by Bill Leonard.

In two weeks, pitchers & catchers will report and Rice baseball will kick off another season. The Owls open up against the Longhorns in Austin, before returning home to Reckling Park in Houston.
Reckling Park is named after an all-star Rice infielder from the early 1950s named Tommy Reckling. The park is one of the most beautiful venues in all of college baseball.

During his tenure at Rice, Reckling played for Manager Dell Morgan..............an Austin College Kangaroo. See photo of the 1953 Rice Owls, featuring Reckling & Morgan.

Not surprisingly, the Park is named for Reckling in part due to his generosity. Tommy Reckling took his degree from Rice and made considerable sums in the corporate world. His longest stint was as an executive officer for..........the Anderson Clayton company.

Yes, Reckling Park was funded in part by profits from the mayonnaise / mustard gas / Thousand Island smell that disrupted Roo practices and games for decades. The very least Rice baseball could do would be to offer some Roo ticket discounts.............in appreciation for Dell Morgan's efforts and all of our Roo nausea.






Roo BBQ & Texas Rangers


They’re all gone.

All of those unbelievable streaks of World Series futility are no more. Since 2004, the Red Sox, White Sox, and……unbelievably……the Chicago Cubs have all won titles. The Cleveland Indians have the longest streak today, having last won in 1948.

But at least the Indians have a title. What organization owns the longest streak without ever having won at all? Well, it’s our very own Texas Rangers. Since its founding in 1961, the Rangers have competed in 56 seasons without a championship. Pitchers and catchers report next week for season #57.

Texas has been oh so close, and recently too. The Rangers have made the post season 4 times in the last 7 years, and have advanced to the World Series twice. And 2011. Oh dear lord, 2011.
Taking a page straight out of the Red Sox and 1986, the Rangers were up 3 games to 2 against the St. Louis Cardinals with a one run 10th inning lead. 2 outs. 2 strikes. One pitch away from bringing the state of Texas its first World Series Championship. Just one more whiff…….from one more batter……………


The Rangers founding year of 1961 was also the last year of Dell Morgan’s tenure at Rice University. This Austin College Kangaroo had managed Rice baseball since 1953, and amazingly was the fourth (!!!) Kangaroo coach to be associated with Rice Owls baseball. Morgan died tragically in a car accident in 1962; after his passing, Rice University established the Dell Morgan award in his honor. This award is given to the outstanding Rice baseball player every year.

Interestingly enough, the outstanding Austin College baseball player award is given in the name Cecil Grigg, who, like Morgan, was both a former Austin College sports star and Rice baseball skipper. Past winners of the Cecil Grigg award include Tony Bitros and Kelly Carver, among others.
Wayne Graham’s Rice Owls have enjoyed two decades of remarkable success, and this run began in the late 90s with the help of another Texas son. New Braunfels native Lance Berkman came to Rice, and helped lead the Owls to their first ever College World Series appearance. For his success, Berkman was twice awarded the Dell Morgan award. Berkman later contributed to Houston’s first WS appearance, and also played for the Rangers.

But that’s not how Ranger fans remember this Roo Coach award winner.

One strike against Berkman, and the Rangers were champs. That strike never came. Berkman ripped a single to right, tying the game. St. Louis won it in the 11th, and took Game #7 the next day. The Rangers are still looking for that missing piece of the puzzle to finally, finally bring home the title to Arlington.

And maybe we’ve got it Roo fans.



Lockhart Smokehouse will open up a third restaurant in 2018, within the venue of the new Rangers stadium. This BBQ joint is owned and operated by Roos Jeff Bergus and Jill Grobowsky Bergus, and the new ballpark location will be the third in the DFW area. That’s right………………Roo BBQ, the official BBQ of the Texas Rangers.

This, my friends, is the missing piece of the puzzle. Go ahead and hire Theo Epstein too if you want Rangers, that would just be gravy. The drought is gonna end and end soon, and I plan to wash that drought down with an Arlington beer at Lockhart Smokehouse.

Somebody go invite Berkman to join us.

http://www.tmbbq.com/texas-rangers-announce-a-bbq-signing/

https://www.facebook.com/MikeLeslieWFAA/videos/1520239427989556/?pnref=story