Latest Big 12 Stories
Posted: Nov 25th 2009 5:00 PM ET by Terrance Harris (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Texas A&M, Texas, BCS, Big 12

For a game that used evoke so much emotion on either side and often divided homes and friendships down the middle, this Texas-Texas A&M rivalry has strangely morphed into that just-another-game feel.
Maybe it's the fact the
Aggies haven't seriously challenged for the Big 12 South championship this decade, while the Longhorns have seemingly been part of the division title conversation most seasons. Perhaps, it's because Oklahoma, in most years, has been the most dominant team in the South so
Texas has directed its energy toward toppling the Sooners in their annual Red River Rivalry Game every October.
Some would might even suggest Texas Tech and --gasp -- Oklahoma State have become greater rivals to the Longhorns than A&M.
Posted: Nov 25th 2009 3:00 PM ET by Terrance Harris (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Baylor, Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas A&M, Texas, Texas Tech, BCS, Big 12

Leave it to
Texas Tech coach
Mike Leach to come up with a brutal assessment of the issues surrounding
Kansas coach
Mark Mangino and the allegations last week he has been both physically and mentally abusing his players.
Kansas athletic director Lew Perkins has launched an investigation into Mangino's actions after one of his players reported that the head coach poked him during a walk-through practice a couple weeks ago. Since then, several former players have come forth to discuss Mangino's alleged abusive behavior and sometimes mean-spirited verbal attacks.
Leach has never been guilty of playing the politically correct game and he certainly didn't disappoint during this week's Big 12 football coaches call when the subject turned to the storm Mangino is facing.
Posted: Nov 23rd 2009 10:08 PM ET by Terrance Harris (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Colorado, Big 12

Colorado coach
Dan Hawkins has been adamant the past few seasons that having his son,
Cody Hawkins, play quarterback for the Buffaloes was no different than other recruit.
Hawkins did a complete turnaround during Monday's weekly
press conference, saying if he had to do it all over again he would not have recruited his own son.
"Not for him, no. Nope. Not at all," Hawkins said. "It's not fair to him. Here is a guy who is trying to do his best to win games and to help his team and does everything right, he's a good student and he's getting killed on Facebook and getting killed on his cell phone.
Posted: Nov 23rd 2009 4:58 PM ET by Terrance Harris (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, BCS, Big 12

Oklahoma State coach
Mike Gundy says he expects senior quarterback
Zac Robinson to return to the starting lineup for the 11th-ranked Cowboys during Saturday's critical regular-season finale against rival Oklahoma.
Robinson missed Thursday night's win over Colorado after sustaining injuries to his head and shoulder in a victory over Texas Tech the previous week. But Gundy said during Monday's Big 12 football coaches teleconference that Robinson began throwing over the weekend and that he would return to practice Monday afternoon. Gundy normally does not discuss injuries which means Robinson could or could not play.
Posted: Nov 22nd 2009 1:40 AM ET by Terrance Harris (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Kansas, Big 12

AUSTIN, Texas --- Embattled Kansas coach
Mark Mangino's week got off to a rocky start and it didn't get any better as the Jayhawks rolled to their sixth straight defeat Saturday night, falling 51-20 to the second-ranked Texas Longhorns on the road.
On Monday, Mangino found out athletic director Lew Perkins has launched an investigation into allegations the eight-year head coach has been verbally and physically abusive to some of his players after linebacker Arist Wright reported Mangino for poking him in the chest last Friday. Several former players have come forth to discuss the often mean-spirited abuse Mangino often fired their way.
Posted: Nov 21st 2009 11:04 PM ET by Terrance Harris (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Kansas, Texas, BCS, Big 12

AUSTIN,
Texas -- For 21 University of Texas seniors, Saturday night was their last time playing at Texas Memorial Stadium. So they made it a night to remember.
The second-ranked Longhorns overpowered
Kansas en route to a 51-20 victory that cemented them as the Big 12 South division champions and sealed senior quarterback
Colt McCoy's place as college football's all-time winningest quarterback with 43 career wins.
But the
Texas Longhorns, who are well positioned for their first BCS national championship game bid since 2005, still have quite a bit of business to finish. They will have to get past rival Texas A&M on Thanksgiving night and then North division champ
Nebraska in the Big 12 title game.
Posted: Nov 21st 2009 7:46 PM ET by Terrance Harris (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Kansas, Texas, BCS, Big 12

AUSTIN, Texas -- Okay, so let the debate began.
Vince Young or
Colt McCoy.
Which is the greatest Texas Longhorns quarterback of all time? Young led the
Texas Longhorns to a season of perfection and the BCS national title in 2005 as a junior. McCoy, a four-year starter at Texas, has a chance tonight to become college football's all-time winningest quarterback with 43 wins should the second-ranked Longhorns make it past Kansas here at Texas Memorial Stadium.
Posted: Nov 21st 2009 12:10 PM ET by Terrance Harris (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Kansas, Texas, Big 12

AUSTIN, Texas -- University of Texas coach
Mack Brown usually doesn't like to live in the past, but this week he broke out some old film for his team.
He showed the Longhorns how teams from 2006 and 2007 finished in comparison to 2005, when Texas won the BCS national title, and last season when many agree the 12-1 Longhorns should have been given the opportunity to compete for the national championship.
Brown's point to his second-ranked,10-0 squad is simple: stay focused these last two regular-season games, the Big 12 championship game in two weeks, and then biggest of prizes await the
Texas Longhorns in Pasadena. A slip up anywhere between now and the Jan. 7
BCS national championship game will lead to great disappointment for Texas.
Posted: Nov 20th 2009 8:00 AM ET by Terrance Harris (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Baylor, Colorado, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas A&M, Texas, Texas Tech, Big 12

The Big 12 North remains a ways from returning to the prominence it enjoyed when the conference first formed in the late 1990s, but if Saturday's matchup between Kansas State and Nebraska for the division title is any indication then better days are certainly on the horizon.
After years of struggles by the
Kansas State Wildcats and the
Nebraska Cornhuskers, which have coincided with a dip in the North's strength, the two meet Saturday in Lincoln for a winner-take-all showdown. Neither team has had quite the season it anticipated but each has won enough for the right to play for the Big 12 championship, likely against No. 2 Texas, Dec. 5.
"Certainly we've been in this position before, probably in different ways," said veteran Wildcats coach Bill Snyder, who broke out of a three-year retirement to return to the sidelines this season. "By the same token, I can't remember other than the very early years that playing against the Nebraska teams was not a great challenge and certainly key ball games were after those initial years after they beat us so soundly."