Holiday Bowl

Watching the game on ESPN360.com is disconcerting. It’s about seven minutes behind the game on the Longhorn Sports Radio Network, and the Web game audio is hard to understand because it keeps cutting in and out. But the halftime score, 28 to 10, Longhorns, is easily understandable. Texas is threatening to walk away with it. If Arizona State keeps up the turnovers and Texas keeps on sacking their QB, this is going to be a rout.

UPDATE:  It pretty much was, Texas winning 52 to 34. Only wish they’d played like that all season–which they ended 10-3. Losses to Oklahoma and A&M in the same season really stung.

0 responses to “Holiday Bowl

  1. If you weren’t so cheap, you could get the proper packages to watch college, pro football, basketball, baseball etc instead of having to video in one medium and audio in another. But I guess that is what journalists do to keep the media happy. (ha, ha). Joe

  2. If you weren’t so cheap, you could get the proper packages to watch college, pro football, basketball, baseball etc instead of having to video in one medium and audio in another. But I guess that is what journalists do to keep the media happy. (ha, ha). Joe

  3. If Time-Warner wasn’t such a rip-off–boosting its basic service about 50 bucks a month before you can even get ESPN–we would have it. Actually it worked pretty well. I much prefer the local radio sports guys to any talking head on national television and would have listened to them, instead, either way–Webbing it or watching television. ESPN is about entertainment, not college football. Certainly not about Texas football. ESPN’s Brent Mussberger, or however you spell his name, is of no interest to me, whatsoever. So, no, I won’t pay 60 bucks a month to watch/listen to those weenies. A little inconvenience doesn’t bother me much. Especially when it’s free.

  4. If Time-Warner wasn’t such a rip-off–boosting its basic service about 50 bucks a month before you can even get ESPN–we would have it. Actually it worked pretty well. I much prefer the local radio sports guys to any talking head on national television and would have listened to them, instead, either way–Webbing it or watching television. ESPN is about entertainment, not college football. Certainly not about Texas football. ESPN’s Brent Mussberger, or however you spell his name, is of no interest to me, whatsoever. So, no, I won’t pay 60 bucks a month to watch/listen to those weenies. A little inconvenience doesn’t bother me much. Especially when it’s free.