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KFDM COOP

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  1. [Hidden Content] Click on site, then click on top one that says watch, middle way into interview highlights and Coach Dodge talks about Micah.
  2. Deweville JV 22...Final Warren...JV 6
  3. WOS 9th 20........Final Silsbee 14
  4. CY Fair doesn't pass much. First play they pass and INT.
  5. Good luck to both teams!
  6. Thoughts on the Oilers this season? Returning starters etc...
  7. Thoughts on the Warriors this year? How many starters back etc...
  8. Two charged after plane buzzes football crowd SANDUSKY, Ohio (AP) — Diane Mulvin thought her son's football team needed a little inspiration. So she convinced her boyfriend to fly his plane over the Perkins High School stadium just before kickoff, leaving behind a trail of white smoke that drifted over the fans, police said. Some fans said the single-engine plane was flying just 10 to 15 feet above the telephone poles. "In this day and age, who thinks this would be a good stunt?" said Perkins Township Police Chief Tim McClung. "It was an unbelievably bad idea." The pilot, Daniel Lake, 52, was charged with inducing panic and Mulvin, 42, was charged with complicity. Both declined to comment. FIND MORE STORIES IN: Federal Aviation Administration | Sandusky According to a police report, Mulvin asked Lake to do a flyover because she thought it "would be something for the kids that was cool to get them going before the game." McClung said Lake flew over the field at an altitude of less than 250 feet, which is against Federal Aviation Administration regulations. The minimum for an outdoor event is 1,000 feet, he said. An FBI agent and an FAA official were among those at the game, police said. School officials said they had no prior knowledge of the flyover. Lake told police the smoke came from environmentally safe smoke oil used in sky writing. The flyover didn't help the home team. Perkins lost to Huron, 27-7.
  9. Good luck to all our teams.
  10. Wonder who be the next Yankees coach???
  11. Someone was asking for this thread and i finally found it.
  12. TAPPS has released its final alignment for the 2008-2010 realignment cycle. There aren't too many changes from the current cycle nor from the orignial alignment posted earlier in the month. Some appeals changed things a bit: Grapevine Faith decided they'd rather not travel to Midland Christian and so will play up in DI. That means they completely leapfrog from DIII to DI--quite a jump in competition. Grace Prep, who appealed their placement in DII, lost and will remain DII, but Giddings State, Shelton were successful and each will drop a classification from where they were originally aligned. Tomball Rosehill will play 11-man instead of 6-man as originally announced. Heath Fulton has dropped football, while Victoria Faith, Arlington North Star, and Henderson Full Armor have joined TAPPS. Finally, that 8-team district in 6-man Division I has split into a 4-team district and a 5-team district with the addition of Victoria Faith. 11-Man I-1: Gainesville State, Addison Trinity, Dallas Bishop Dunne, Dallas Bishop Lynch, Ft Worth Nolan, Plano John Paul II, Grapevine Faith I-2: Austin St Michael, Brownsville St Joseph, Giddings State, Harlingen Marine Military, SA Central Catholic, SA Holy Cross, SA St Anthony I-3: Beaumont Kelly, Houston Christian, Houston St Pius X, Houston St Thomas I-Ind: El Paso Cathedral II-1: Liberty Christian, Grace Prep, FW Christian, FW Southwest Christian, FW Temple, Grapevine Faith, Midland Christian II-2: Cedar Hill Trinity, Dallas Christian, Dallas First Baptist, Dallas Parish, Plano Prestonwood, Dallas Shelton, Tyler Gorman, Tyler Grace II-3: Austin Hyde Park, SA Christian, SA TMI, San Marcos Baptist, Victoria St. Joseph, Giddings State II-4: Lutheran North, Lutheran South, Northland Christian, Second Baptist, Westbury Christian, Fort Bend Baptist, Tomball Concordia III-1: Arlington Pantego, Carrollton American Heritage, Carrollton Christian, Carrollton Prince of Peace, Colleyville Covenant, FW Calvary, Lubbock Christian III-2: Bullard Brook Hill, Dallas Academy, Dallas Lutheran, Flower Mound Coram Deo, Garland Christian, Tyler All Saints, Dallas Shelton III-3: Austin Regents, Austin Texas School for the Deaf, Bryan St. Joseph, Waco Reicher III-4: Baytown Christian, Clear Lake Christian, Cypress Christian, Houston Mount Carmel, Katy John XXIII, League City Bay Area Christian IV-I: Amarillo Arbor, Amarillo San Jacinto, FW Lake Country, Muenster Sacred Heart, Watauga Harvest, FW Our Lady of Grace IV-2: Frisco Legacy, Irving The Highlands, McKinney Christian, Richardson Canyon Creek, Rockwall Christian IV-3: Bryan Brazos, Halletsville Sacred Heart, New Braunfels Christian, SA St Gerard, Shiner St Paul, Waco Texas Christian IV-4: Beaumont Legacy, Galveston O’Connell, Katy Faith West, Kingwood Northeast, Lake Jackson Brazosport Christian, Pasadena First Baptist, The Woodlands Christian, Tomball Rosehill 6-Man I-1: Abilene Christian, Amarillo Holy Cross, FW Glenview Christian, Happy Hill Farm I-2: Dallas Covenant, Denton Calvary, Greenville Christian, Rockwall Heritage I-3: Austin Hill Country Christian, Cedar Park Summit, Marble Falls Faith, Temple Central Texas Christian I-4: Bulverde Bracken, Kerrville Our Lady of the Hills, Christian Academy of San Antonio, SA New Life, Victoria Faith I-5: Alvin Texas Prep, Bryan Allen Academy, Dickinson Pine Drive, Tomball Rosehill II-1: Amarillo Heritage Classical, Jesus Chapel, Lubbock Christ the King, Plainview Christian, Wichita Christian, WF Notre Dame II-2: Arlington North Star, Balch Springs Christian, Dallas Tyler Street, Duncanville Christway, Ennis St. John, Henderson Full Armor Christian, Waxahachie Prep II-3: Arlington Fellowship, Brownwood Victory Life, Heath Fulton, Joshua Christian, Wichita Christian, WF Notre Dame, Waco Parkview II-4: Alvin Living Stones, Bellville Faith, Brenham Christian, Houston Texas Christian II-5: Boerne Vanguard, Fredericksburg Heritage, SA Town East, Seguin Lifegate, Waco Parkview
  13. [Hidden Content]
  14. October 18th Cy-Fair (TX) vs Cypress Falls (TX) - 6:00 PM - ESPN 2
  15. Rockets itching to play Team has had week off between preseason games As they stretch from one end of the Toyota Center bench to the other, with 19 players filling every seat and beyond, the Rockets look like a baseball team spreading across the dugout. And as they have gone through day after day of practices and scrimmages, they have been more like a football team, with six days to fill between games. Tonight, the Rockets finally will get to be a basketball team again as they play the Dallas Mavericks and return to a normal NBA life, if there is such a thing. The Rockets' third preseason game, and just their second against an NBA opponent, comes just in time. And not only to keep them from killing each other. "It was such a long layoff between games, we need to get out there and get some work, especially against an NBA team," guard Rafer Alston said. "We need to play a game. We need to see how far away we are from being ready for opening night. "We scrimmaged game-like for two days and (Wednesday), worked on some sets. It will be nice to get out there and go against opposing competition." After a week of preparing, the Rockets need a test, even the relatively modest test of a preseason game. More specifically, they need to find if they have worked out the bugs of an offense that was dangerously turnover prone against the New Orleans Hornets and Panathinaikos and in the simulated games against one another since. "I know we share the ball together," center Yao Ming said. "We swing the ball. Everybody gets touches, shoots the ball and has turnovers together. It sounds like a team." The problem with all that togetherness is that the turnover bug has been passed around like a flu someone packed along for a road trip. Everyone gets it. Coach Rick Adelman has not been amused. He put the Rockets through long scrimmages Monday and Tuesday and through scrimmages and drills on Wednesday, hoping to sweat the virus out of them. "We can't continue to make the same mistakes," he said. "I'll give you an example. Our big guys have the ball, and the guy makes a good cut, and they throw it right into the hands of their defender. It's where they are, where they have the ball. Sometimes guys are trying to make great plays. "What is hard about what we're trying to do is a guy may make a great cut and may be open against his guy, but in our league, he draws the defense. You have to see the defense. That guy makes a great cut, somebody else is probably open. We're trying to throw it to that guy without looking at the team defensively. That's a process we have to keep going through." By Wednesday, Adelman was much happier about practice. But the measure will be today against a Dallas team that last season was among the league's best defensively (fourth in points allowed, seventh in opposing field-goal percentage). "I think they're one of the better teams in the league, so it's always going to be good to see what your concentration is defensively and how you execute (offensively), because they are a good offensive team," Adelman said. "We haven't played for a week, so we'll see how sharp we are." The Rockets also will see something they have not seen in a week: an opponent trying to stop them in ways they cannot predict. The progress of a week's worth of work to make their new offense run better will be gauged when another team tries to stop it. "You see what you have to do to counter against an opponent," Alston said of facing other teams. "Opponents love to take away the first option, sometimes the second option. It will help you better read the defense and give you a better understanding of the third and fourth option in the offense, especially with the offense we have. We need the games." Adelman liked the idea of the break. The Rockets got some work in, maybe got a few things ironed out, and will get to be an NBA team again tonight. "I don't know about six (days between games)," Adelman said. "Sometimes it's good to have a break where you can just practice and not play so many games. I think it was good for us. We were able to do some things and scrimmage and put some things in during this time frame. "Usually, I put things in a lot quicker than I did this year because I knew I had this time coming. Now, we'll play more games in more days (five games in eight days), and we'll get in a little bit of a groove before the season starts."
  16. I've covered Central twice this year and i still can't figure out what's wrong.
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