Week 16 of NHL 2005-6

Mario Lemieux retired yesterday. Maybe this time he’ll stay retired and I think he will. He stepped down from his executive post with the Penguins since they’re for sale. I don’t have any particular opinion of him that was seriously positive or negative but I do hate to see a successful player retire on a low note. The Penguins are terrible this season. The franchise is in jeopardy of moving because the people of Pittsburgh and Pennsylvania don’t want to pony up a new arena. However, I agree on that. Taxpayers shouldn’t be forced to subsidize the billionaire owners for a team that stinks on ice. Anyway, so long Super Mario and congratulations on having a career with the same team the whole time which borders on impossible in this day and age. 
 
As with the Flyers, they finally snapped their losing streak. What a relief! They’re still only up five points on the NY Rangers and I think they can maintain that lead. Pittsburgh is out of the running for the Atlantic with the NY Islanders not too far from being knocked out as well. Then there was a surprising and expected trade. First the expected trade of Jon Sim to Florida. He was an okay player but just not someone who’d help in the long term with the Flyers’ surplus of utility forwards. The bigger surprise (which shouldn’t have been as I have analyzed GM Bobby Clarke’s patterns) was the trade of defenseman Dennis Seidenberg to Phoenix for aging forward Petr Nedved. I figure that Keith Primeau is probably done for the season so once again we grab another player who is having a disappointing run with the Coyotes (remember Tony Amonte?). What the Flyers need to get that Cup (which I got to touch last week) are faster defensemen and forwards, not big, aging guys on the last days of their careers. Nedved has been okay in his first two games, an assist and a goal. Amonte started off better too when he arrived. Then he became a $5 million albatross with John LeClair’s salary. 
 
Now on to some matches with Conference opponents that need to be defeated often since most of them may be appearing in the playoffs.

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The Stanley Cup comes to Austin

The Cup & me Mike Bolt

It’s really late and maybe I can write more about this during the day but I couldn’t wait (see, I’m already suffering from sleep deprivation). Saturday night, the Stanley Cup came through Austin again. Last year I missed out because I didn’t know how to find the Travis County Expo Center and then I didn’t have the cash for the parking. Pretty lame on my part. Thankfully it came through Austin again as part of a promotion for the Austin Icebats playing the Wichita Thunder. I was really psyched for it. The picture is okay but there was a long line behind me so I didn’t want to waste the stranger’s time doing another. Doesn’t matter, the oldest professional sports trophy is the real star. With Philly’s current losing and injury streak, my jersey may be the closest the Flyers will get to the Cup this season. I wonder how much I would’ve had to pay someone in the NHL to at least have one chance to hoist it over my head and share a moment with Gretzky, Howe, Orr, Esposito, LaFleur, Lemieux, Hull, Chelios, Sawchuk, Clarke, Roy (reluctantly) and, recently, Messier. 
 
I had to throw in the other picture with the arrow. The arrow? The red arrow is pointing toward the man whose job is to be the guardian of the Stanley Cup. Wherever it goes, he goes. Everytime the Cup is on television, you’ll see him. When it’s presented to the winner, you’ll see him. Several years ago, he starred in a MasterCard commercial about the Cup’s expenses (white gloves and polish) but being its courier (or guardian) was priceless. He didn’t have much time to talk yet I don’t think he was irked, just rushed.

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Picayune hosting issues resolved

For those of you who have been visiting my site over the last several weeks had noticed that its performance in your browser was rather sluggish. I hadn’t given it much thought because the site is hosted on a Mac Mini connected directly to my DSL router/hub. For how much I pay and where I live, I can only get ADSL with an uplink speed of 384Kbps (in English, it’s not terribly fast compared to my CapMac site hosted on at least a T1). 
 
However, the stream’s performance was annoying me in how often iTunes would drop the connection. Normally the connection would drop off after two to three days. Usually I reconnect it in the morning in order to keep it running for the convenience of Somara who doesn’t really care to know how it exactly works. When I finally got around to updating the content of KMAG, I noticed that it was really pokey in Timbuktu (remote control) and the Server Admin (turns parts of the server software on and off) were also bogged down. Then I finally realized that I had left the mail service running and my analysis of rogue smtp (sending mail) processes appearing in my Activity Monitor confirmed this. I also dug through the SMTP log to discover some jerks relaying off it (this is how you get all those annoying spam messages about pyramid schemes, porn and cheap Viagra). I had totally forgotten that I had left mail running like a complete moron. Once mail was off and I started killing every instance of smtp, the Mac Mini is barely using more than 40% of its processor capability. 
 
I apologize for the nuisance. I also want to seriously apologize for anybody who may have received spam indirectly from me, thanks to my absent-mindedness.

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Week 15 of NHL 2005-6

The road trip and homecoming for the Flyers ended on a rather sour note. Despite the mediocre victory over Chicago earlier in the week, they were completely smacked up in the third period by the Detroit Red Wings and then defeated in overtime by the Colorado Avalanche (who my friend calls affectionately al-Qedarado or Quebecarado). 
 
Being a fan, I still found a silver lining to the losses. The Detroit game was a defensive battle in the first period with neither team scoring and they kept it close in the second period. Unfortunately, hockey is a three-period game. The Flyers really lost it at the end as the Red Wings got to them and nailed the game shut 6-3. What can I say, the Wings really wanted it more. They’ve won three Cups in 10 years like the New Jersey Devils. Winning that prize is like eating M&Ms, it’s hard to stop once you’ve had just one. If the Detroit game is a preview of what may be the next Stanley Cup could be, then the Flyers better keep it up for 65 minutes, not 40. That’s the mistake they made with Tampa last season and that’s why the Cup resided in the Sunshine State before the lockout. 
 
Colorado was a different story. That game was fairly even until later when the ‘Lanche jumped out to a 3-1 lead. Hitchcock took the gamble on his players stepping up their game by pulling the goalie with three minutes remaining and the Flyers lacked the Power Play advantage so they’d only be up one attacker. There’s a recipe for the other team nailing an empty-net goal to seal the victory. It paid off. Mike Knuble put the Flyers within one goal for the closing minute. Niitymaki was put back into goal and he didn’t need to leave as Peter Forsberg nailed it with seconds to go. Sadly the Flyers were defeated in overtime. On the upside, they still walked away with a point which has gone toward them keeping a six point lead in the Atlantic Division of the New York Rangers. 
 
Finally, their PK is ranked 25th in the NHL. I would like to see it in the teens to low 20s by the Olympic Break.

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Some crow for Dell to eat

I won’t hide my great disdain for Michael Dell, never will due to all the people he abuses up in Round Rock. He’s the biggest welfare recipient in the state of Texas which also makes him the wealthiest man (on paper) in the state at the same time. The man didn’t invent anything in the PC business. He just took thejust-in-time inventory strategy (proven a failure with FEMA recently) and mixed it with Wal-Mart’s shiftless business tactics to make (allegedly) the biggest computer-manufacturer around. 
 
Apple has been a favorite target of his for years. Back when Apple’s future was pretty bleak in 1997, he opened his face and said something pretty arrogant since the media thought he had all the answers. Remember, being the biggest doesn’t always mean you’re the best. Look at the previous title holders IBM and Compaq. I think Dell and his followers (especially this jackass I worked with at Nortel) say what they say because they’re jealous. The Dell DJ is a joke compared to the iPod. Their computers aren’t exactly something people really want when I have discussions about the merits of the Mac versus the Windows-based competition. Their ad campaigns border on fraud when they show the so-called adventures of their US-residing interns answering tech support calls because you’re going to get someone in Bangalore India if you actually do call. I must admit their ad campaign with the Dude was mildly amusing, especially after the actor was busted for weed. Hopefully he received career counseling from David Leisure (Mr. Joe Isuzu). 
 
I digress (par for the course). As you can see from this New York Times story I saved for everyone (the site archives everything over a week old) to see the history of Michael Dell shooting off his mouth only to have his foot land in it eight years later. The stock market is fickle and Apple’s market capital can decline overnight but it’s nice to see that Apple is a tad vindicated by taking a long-term strategy.

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Pluto or bust

I only stumbled upon this mission from NASA over the weekend. The synopsis from the New York Times made it pretty intriguing.

Firstly it’s the first attempt to explore the farthest known planet Pluto which even the Hubble Telescope can’t get clear images of. Secondly, New Horizonswill keep on going to find out better details of the Kuiper Belt at the edge of the solar system.

The coolest thing about this mission though is how quickly the probe will arrive at Pluto, 9-10 years. So? Well, last year’s Huygens landing took seven-and-a-half years to happen due to it piggybacking on Cassini and that probe needed four gravity assists (sling-shooting off of Earth and Jupiter once and Venus twice). New Horizons will be launched from Earth at 58,000 kilometers per hour with just its rockets. That translates into it passing the moon in NINE HOURS (the Apollo missions took two to three days to arrive). It will arrive at Jupiter in 13 months to receive its only gravity assist for a slingshot out to Pluto and its known moon Charon. Recently, astromoners have found two additional moons but then again, the Hubble Telescope has difficulty with objects that small at such a distance (almost six billion kilometers from the Earth).

I hope the probe makes it since it will only check in once a week and go through a diagnostic once a year to conserve power. Previous probes Pioneer 10 and 11 both stopped sending messages in 2003 and 1995 respectively. The two Voyager probes are over 10 billion kilometers from the Sun and still hanging in there, probably working beyond their original purposes.

Fingers crossed this will go well.

Jan. 17, 2006 Update Due to wind, the launch was scrapped today and NASA will try again tomorrow afternoon. Pluto is a few billion kilometers away and takes over two centuries to orbit the Sun, so the launch window is pretty forgiving. I think Jupiter’s position is the trickier one.

Jan. 19, 2006 Update The launch finally happened during my lunch hour. Thankfully it got past the 40-second danger zone that its plutonium-based power source would make part of Florida a radioactive mess. I know it’s just hardened stuff decaying slowly to make heat but it is still dangerous. Currently, the probe is hurtling away past the Moon by 10 pm CST. After the Moon, it’s onward to Jupite in 13 months.

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Unlucky Friday 13th

Historically not a great day for me because I almost got suspended from grade school on this infamous Friday. What a thrill for my parents to deal with. 
 
Today it could’ve been as awful thanks to one customer who is a notorious support nightmare. I don’t want to drag work into this or even name names. I just want to say that it could’ve been much, much worse. I somehow managed to dodge a big, ugly bullet. 
 
Hope your Friday 13th was uneventful such as unpleasantness or some dude wearing a hockey mask chasing you.

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MacWorld 2006 Today

The first of many Intel-based Macs were revealed today. If there were a betting pool, I would’ve lost since my guess would’ve been the Mac Mini as the first since that’s the easiest and cheapest box to make. 
 
Doesn’t matter anyway. Going with the iMac (the Apple PR flagship computer) and the high-end portable (formerly the PowerBook) seem pretty wise. The PowerBook was getting long in the tooth remaining with the G4 so it had to be moved to the G5 or something had to give. Intel definitely has more experience getting their processors into portable computers and as someone from Nortel used to say, IBM couldn’t give homes to homeless with their business plans. 
 
Now before you start e-mailing me, asking me for my discount. You have to remember that customers who pay full price always get dibs on the new stuff. When enough of the orders are filled, then Apple allows us employees to buy them. It must be an optical illusion, but I could’ve sworn tha that the MacBook Pro appears darker in color than its PowerBook predecessor. Personally, I need to save money so I guess I will be holding off replacing my trusty ol’ G3-based iBook for another year. But an Intel-based 12″ iBook equivalent will be very nice.

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Week 14 of NHL 2005-6

The Flyers just lost their first regulation game during this three-week road trip. Oh well, it was inevitable. Unlike other fans, I can live with it being their regional rivals the New Jersey Devils. I only wish it weren’t a shutout loss. Won’t matter in the long run this season since the Devils will need a miracle to be in the playoffs. 
 
Last week was pretty exciting when Simon Gagne scored the second-fatest overtime goal in NHL history, seven seconds. It also put him in first place for the NHL in goals (29) until Ilya Kovalchuk of the Atlanta Thrashers had a scoring streak (32) to put him well ahead by three this weekend. The other exciting fact that no one could take away was them being the first team to hit 60 points this season at the half-way point. 
 
The remainder of the week will be exciting too. I have tentative plans for wathcing the annual Flyers v. Red Wings game at the Tilted Kilt up in Round Rock. My friend, co-worker and fellow hockey fan, Bryan will be joining me there to enjoy the match with a sixer of beer as the wager at stake. I sure hope other people will accompany us because it will be a great evening.

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Back in the saddle at Kenny’s!

Yesterday was my first shift with the WB (Wells Branch) store. Unlike my old Round Rock gig, this Kenny’s store has a full kitchen and breakfast on the weekends is a huge draw. Borders upon an aerobic workout too. I know it was work but I enjoyed the hell out of it becaue I got to wait on my regulars (maybe fans) from the RR store who’ve relocated to this WB shop. 
 
I also hope that I can work out some improvements for Kenny & Scott which will actually work. Scott warned me though, it can be hard convincing teenage co-workers to work together. I know it all too well from my couple years with a movie theater. 
 
In the end, I’m not going to obsess over what may be the negatives. I’m working there again. I’m making a little money doing something I enjoy. Come on by on Sunday mornings if you live in the Austin area, I will make sure you’ll get spoiled by me and my co-workers.

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New Year’s Resolution One: Exercise

It’s been a while since I’ve written anything in this catch-all category because what I wanted to cover doesn’t fit in Headlines entirely (since that’s news about what I’m up to) nor does it completely fit in Gaming despite the use of my PS2 for it. 
 
Huh? 
 
Well, the treadmill isn’t working correctly so Somara is trying to find out why because it launched her into the seller’s driveway at the garage sale she bought it from. However, when I put any of my weight on it, the belt/engine drop to nothing. Don’t snicker because I only weigh 233 (105.7 kg). As long as I weigh less than Homer Simpson (239 or 108.4 kg), I will always be ahead of the game. I love running too. 
 
So what’s a fat slob like myself to do you ask? As the dilemma of the category, I have taken up DDR again. DDR? Dance Dance Revolution. We bought it last year for our PS2 along with a dancepad. The stuff was all on sale and we’d read on the Internet about people who’ve lost weight with it. My oldest niece Madison got this for Christmas too. Somara says she’s really excited to kick my ass at it since she found out her goofy Uncle Steve plays it too. Despite all the sweating I did, I still have the moves! I didn’t have to scale it back to beginner, I was able to pick up where I left off on Light. I need to keep it on the hardest competition it can do. The title of that game escapes me but it will keep playing the songs you’ve chosen in order (sadly, they only last for 90-second intervals). You get to make only four mistakes per song or the game ends. There is another mode that’s more forgiving yet it doesn’t keep track of the calories or equivalent of miles run, what a pisser. 
 
With the current schedule of having to be at work by 8 am is a mixed bag. Leaving early is great too. However, the traffic is thicker for the 8 am start unlike the 9 am start so I need to leave the house at 7:15 am as opposed to 8:25 am, so exercising gets compromised. Well, if I can get the continuous mode the way I want it, break out a decent sweat and dance the equivalent of two miles, I may get under 230 this year! 
 
Glenn, Jose and Nelson. The next time we’re in Vegas, I will take on the challenge of playing that game in public too.

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Week 13 of NHL 2005-6

The Flyers’ lead over the one-line wonders (NY Rangers) continues at five points with the gap only being one game now. They’re definitely holding up really well in the injuries department too. Their winning road-game streak sadly came to an end Saturday with a shootout against the Washington Capitals (could’ve been worst, could’ve been against the St. Louis Blues) but it doesn’t bother me because they still get a point which is way better than a zero. As I feared, Niitymaki let two goals by in the shootout since he just isn’t as sharp as Esche. Today I looked at the stats. Sure Nitty has more wins, a lower GAA and a higher save percentage. So did a pyschopathic European who wore 32, had Clarke trade Brian Boucher to Phoenix and still had a meltdown on soft goals in the 2003 playoffs. For those who lost track of Philly goalies since Ron Hextall, it was Roman Cechmanek. Now Nitty is no Cechmanek in the personality department. I just feel that Philly needs to stay with Robert Esche for the season. Juggling starting goalies every season and midseason tells other steady goalies that you’re poison and fickle. 
 
Also a big salute for Sami Kapanen. He scored the winning goals in the overtime periods, twice! Both in less than two minutes too. He still has speed and skill. I believe he nailed a short-handed goal in the Washington game. 
 
The road trip continues this week with the NY Rangers, Washington Capitals and New Jersey Devils. They should at least nail four points unless the injuries start to final catch up with them. Their PK has finally stayed out of the cellar but they’re still in the bottom five. The upside is that several of the teams ahead of them percentage-wise, don’t have that much of a lead so it could fluctuate over this week. The longer-term solution is to have more discipline avoiding penalties and then killing the few they will get.

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Reason by Robert Reich

I’ll open up this review with a disclosure (as reporters and news organizations always should when they’re covering rivals or their parent corporations). I am a fan of Robert Reich ever since I first heard him speak on NPR in 1991 and he has promptly answered both of my e-mails to him. These were actually written by him too, not form letters giving the standard excuses I receive from my useless Republican Senators and Congressman. I also will stay in my car whenever he gives his weekly three-minute opinion piece on Marketplace (another NPR-based show). Finally, when I did have a subscription to The American Prospect, I usually went to the last page quickly to read his monthly editorial (Reich is a founding member of that publication). So you now know that this review will be favorable to him and his arguments, yet I don’t agree with the outcome he feels will be inevitable, if matters unfold according to his suggestions.

Firstly, this book is definitely going to annoy Republicans and especially the 30% of the country that would jump off a cliff if Bush told them to. It will also be too Centrist for the Radical Left which is very good at making a scene, yet ineffective at actually affecting much change, unless it aids the Republicans’ fear mongering. Reason is a bit of an outreach to the more rational people who vote Republican over economic, defensive and social issues (the mythical McCain camp) but it’s more of an articulation on Liberal blueprints for the future. It’s not exclusively blueprints though. There’s much debunking of the Right-Wing Noise Machine; their distortion of facts, their claims of standing up for “Everyday Americans” and how we’ve been down this road before in America (The Gilded Age is a very shameful period for the US). Reich also attacks the Right’s mouthpieces in a calm, factual manner through numbers and facts unlike his foes’ use of rhetoric, insulting and outright lies. I always laugh at the fibs about the past told by people such as Bork and Bennett. According to them, in the Fifties there was respect for elders, no need for abortions and all the other nonsense purporting that the US was Utopia until those uppity Hippies and Liberals took the country in the wrong direction. I was a little kid when Happy Days first appeared on TV in the mid-Seventies. Like all programs set in the past, it painted a more idyllic picture of the recent era. As cool as the Fonz was, my father quickly debunked my perception over Greasers by letting me know how most people like Fonzie were assholes and thugs (more like the Lords of Flatbush characters). Reich attacks the Right’s nostalgia with anecdotes and facts while wondering if Bork and company come from an alternate universe.

Much like Eric Alterman (who read the book and mentioned it on his site, altercation.msnbc.com), I wish I could share Reich’s optimism over the country’s future. I feel that the powers in charge learned their lessons from the recent past and they intend on keeping the nation on their demented track (turning the US into a larger version of Mexico when it comes to the income and social gaps). Do you recall lately how cranks such as O’Reilly and Savage have claimed how there was a Socialist Revolution in the late Thirties? They wish. FDR could be pragmatic but he was a politician first and never a friend of the Socialists. Reich doesn’t believe the Liberal agenda is inevitable after the Radical Conservatives (Busheviks, Neo-Cons and other allies of this administration) have totally looted the treasury, destroyed the national infrastructure and set the world on fire. He bludgeons the obvious: the Liberals need to do a better job getting their points across and stop letting the RadCons define them. However, he actually makes the best argument I haven’t heard in such detail from others. The argument? Since the Sixties, the RadCon camp started making their move to take over the Republicans with Goldwater and it has paid off pretty handsomely. The Democrats are currently struggling, especially with the party being sucked down the toilet by Leiberman and the Clintons with their DLC and Centrist (really Republican Lite) agenda. Forming a Third Party has always yielded failure for the last 150 years so Reich says to stop wasting energy there, we’ll never be Canada. The true Liberals, Progressives and Greens will have to lead a coup in the Democratic Party, especially in divorcing themselves from the DLC. This moving to the Center is a myth. There is no true Center, it’s just moving to a half-way point which keeps being pulled to the Right. Reich quotes Truman’s famous saying, “If you give a man a choice between voting for a Republican and a Republican. He’ll always vote Republican.” It’s time to redefine Democratic Party. If the Republicans want to cry class warfare, I say let them because I can show how they already declared war on the poor back when Reagan was elected.

I’m not going to go on much further because this is a polarized book and I don’t want my site to be part of the Red v. Blue, Republican v. Democrat, etc. mess. The country has too many of them already and most of them (especially the Right Wingers) are factually challenged. Reich’s latest book is a great, inspiring read but he won’t gain any serious converts. That’s okay though. Weeks ago, sex columnist and sexual hypocrite Dan Savage told Al Franken that the Liberal Camp shouldn’t care about converting others through their shows, books, magazines, etc. The RadCons don’t. They cater to the crowd that believes in such nonsense. Rush, Michael Savage (real surname is Weiner), Hannity, etc. preech to their own choirs. Their stormtroopers are then enthused and I have to deal with these idiots at my in-laws’ house, my coffee shop and those poisoned by their lies at work. Dan Savage argues that we need to strengthen the Liberal choir to get out there to help turn the tide. That’s where Reason stands. So if you’re in my political camp, I recommend this book. If you’re undecided or one of those contrarians who thinks they’re sooooooo independent, I can only suggest the book but go back to sticking your head in the sand (Jon Favreau, I’m pointing at you for your dumb statement on Howard Stern). Lastly, if you’re one part of the 30% still living in denial, don’t bother. You’ll waste your energy trying to discredit the book with me by showing evidence from Drudge Report, the Washington Times or anything owned by Murdoch.

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Belated picture from Dec. 30, 2005

Friday morning I received a call from my good friend (also known as the first friend I made in Austin) Sonia. She and her husband (Philippe) were in from Basel, Switzerland for Christmas and New Year’s. Sonia and Philippe always come back to Houston to celebrate with their families.

Anyway, due to her stay in the States being brief, she could only swing a day up here in Austin. I was very glad to see both of them since they have a baby due next Spring to early Summer. They also brought a lady from the UK named Ruth who originates from the Isle of Man.

We all hooked up at the Paggi House (not bad, only off by one letter with my name) for drinks, food and socializing which is where the picture was taken on 12/30/05. It was so wonderful to see them all! I know I’m looking forward to spoiling their child whenever I meet her or him. I also feel that Sonia needs to move back to the States, I think her complication has become paler from living in the UK and Switzerland. Work and other distractions (like updating the colors on the blog) kept from getting this posted but I still hope you enjoy it.

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Happy New Year 2006

Just a quick note, mainly over the theme (or color) changes.

I went with the University of Texas colors (white and burnt orange) for a couple reasons. Firstly and most obviously, to cheer them on for their shot at an undisputed championship in college football against USC (University for Spoiled Children). The Longhorns haven’t been the top dogs in decades (some say never) and last year’s close-shave victory at at the Rose Bowl was spoiled by the drubbing that happened at the Orange Bowl, thus making that winner the champ. It’s going to be tough against a school with TWO Heisman Trophy winners on their home turf.

The second (and better) reason is the upcoming hockey game (January 20 at Chapparal Ice) between the Longhorns and their true rival, The Aggies of Texas A&M (alma mater to my brother-in-law). I feel that this may be the first hockey game I’ll get to see in which UT has to actually work for it. A&M is likely to have the same level of good resources, access to talent and the rivalry always fuels more effort from both sides. Somewhat like the Bears v. the Packers.

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