Unfortunately, your version of history is not an accurate one. I'll forgive you since I know the Pony Express doesn't stop in LaPlace every day.
Bud Adams told Houston what he needed to stay in Houston, and the city gave it to him with $67 million in renovations to the Astrodome, turning a unique facility into a soulless donut.
Then, only seven years later, he tried to hold the city hostage, again, for a new retractable roof stadium in downtown Houston (where land is a tad more expensive than out on the prairie). That is when Houston, rightfully, told him to go commit an unnatural act with himself.
And you can shove your sour grapes where the sun don't shine. It ain't about being jilted. I was never an Oilers fan. It's about being a property tax payer in Harris County (you oughta' try it sometime, as it's a whole different experience from property taxes in Louisiana) that is STILL paying for the improvements that he demanded and then bolted from in less than a decade. If he wasn't such a horses @$$ micromanager (he went to the Raymond P. Authement school of micromanagement), he could have had a much more successful franchise and made piles of money in a high school facility in this football mad city.
Finally, Houston is MUCH better off nowadays pro football wise. The Texans aren't the greatest team ever on the field, but last I checked, they've won the same number of Supes as ole' Bud's team. Additionally, we've now got one of the finest facilities in the NFL of which Bob McNair paid half the cost(ole' Bud wanted me to pay for the whole thing). Houston didn't pay ten times more, it paid half as much. We've got a fantastic owner who lets the football people run the football side of things and isn't shy about spending his money. We've got a franchise that doesn't embarrass us off the field. And most importantly, we don't have Bud Adams.
Homecoming for a Three-Headed Monster, Ragin' Cajuns to Play 1000th football Game Saturday
Posted by Paul Angelle October 29, 2008 12:15AM
Categories: Breaking News, Louisiana-Lafayette, collegiate football
Saturday is homecoming for the Ragin Cajuns, and they are undefeated in Sun Belt play.
Brown had obviously been troubled by the fact that so few Louisiana fans had bothered to attend Mitchell's last game. It had been a successful season; the Cajuns were 6-4 with a near miss two weeks earlier at #11 Alabama. The game itself was epic. Mitchell rushed for 232 yards; scoring four touchdowns [he had a Cajun-record five the week before]. His fourth score and subsequent two point conversion with less than a minute to play gave the home team a 29-28 victory. Cajun fans in attendance will never forget the image of Mitchell being carried off the field by his team mates. His NCAA record of 47 touchdowns stood for nine years. He was the first quarterback in NCAA history to pass for 5000 yards and rush for 3000 yards.
Brian Mitchell was the man.
But Bruce Brown had a reason to make this point; the next Saturday was to be Jake Delhomme's last start as a Cajun in "The Swamp." Brown did not want to see another crowd of less than 20,000, and he didn't. He'd tell you his plan worked as many more fans attended Delhomme's final game than attended Mitchell's. Delhomme became Louisiana's most prolific passer the following week.
So ... In 1989 a special senior said goodbye to a fraction of Cajun fans at Cajun Field. In 1996 another special senior said goodbye to a slightly larger fraction of Cajun fans.
Fast forward to 2008.
The Ragin' Cajuns have 15 seniors, and all of them are special, but three offensive seniors are having especially special seasons. Their seasons have been so good that NFL scouts have been hanging out at Cajun practices (something that did not happen as often for either Mitchell or Delhomme). The scouts are there to see quarterback Michael Desormeaux, running back Tyrell Fenroy, and wide receiver Jason Chery.
The offensive trio of Desormeaux , Fenroy and Chery brings fear to defensive coordinators throughout the Sun Belt Conference. The trio actually forced Cajun supporter Dr. Joseph Abraham to educate others of Ceberus, the mythological three-headed guardian of Hades.
So fans of the University of Louisiana should expect some sort of article prior to December 3rd encouraging them to not to miss the three-headed beast's last game. Fans should just wait until the final game of the season to show up. Fans should totally ignore the other games on the schedule. Fans should make sure the final game is worth the trip.
You think?
To quote the title of Baltimore Rapper SAGAT's one and only hit single, "FUNK DAT!"
This coming Saturday is Homecoming in Lafayette. The Ragin' Cajuns are 3-0 in conference play, two wins away from bowl eligibility, and they lead the nation (not the state, not the Sun Belt) in Rushing.
Sure, LSU is hosting Tulane, and Southern is hosting Pine Bluff, and Southeastern is hosting McNeese State, and ULM is hosting Troy, and Louisiana Tech is hosting Fresno State.
It is true that there will be a ton of football being played in the great state of Louisiana, and they are all playing at about the same time.
But only one school is playing its 1000th game ever.
Only one school is handing out "Tyrell Towels."
Only one school has a player 30 yards shy of becoming the 7th college football player ever to rush for over 1000 yards in a season four times.
Only one school boasts the state's highest graduation rates.
Only one school has the nation's leader in rushing yards by a quarterback.
Only one school has a chance to play in the New Orleans Bowl.
That one school is UL.
The football fans that witnessed the Cajuns' amazing, come-from-behind, last minute victory against ASU last week will be there. The out-of-state alumni who only make one game a year will be there. Cox Sports will be there. ESPN will be there too.
The place to be for a Louisiana football fan on Saturday is Lafayette, unless said fan is burdened with a rooting interest in one of the aforementioned contests. Kickoff is at 4 p.m. against Florida International, but tailgating has started already, and there are too many things that have to be seen in Lafayette.
The Sporting News gives out awards in each conference to the fans. The Ragin' Cajun fans swept these awards again. They were awarded #1 tailgating, best pre-game atmosphere, best home-field advantage and best fans.
Those who don't attend the history-making throw down on Saturday in Lafayette will not be able to say, "I was there."
Just an FYI, but Pirogue posted this and its on pg 3 now since it is his blog
Gotcha! I hadn't seen it.
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