I decided
well over a month ago that if Texas
made it to the Rose Bowl National Championship Game against USC, I was picking
USC. Actually, it wouldn't have mattered if Texas
was facing Ohio State
again, Penn State, Notre Dame or whoever else is in
the top ten, my mind was already made up.
Mack
Brown made up my mind a long time ago.
He made
my mind up when he benched Major Applewhite in favor of golden boy Chris Simms
back in 2001. Given multiple opportunities to replace Simms after he had
botched the Longhorns undefeated season to Oklahoma with four interceptions, Brown
stuck with him. Texas
was 10-1 entering the biggest game of the year: The Big XII Championship.
The same
game where Applewhite had shined brightly as a freshmen in 1998-outdoing even
Heisman winner Ricky Williams-against Nebraska.
Against a Colorado
team that Applewhite had faced several times in his still young career.
But Mack
Brown didn't understand, at least it would appear that he couldn't have
understood the significance of the game. If Texas
had won, they very likely would have played Miami for the National Championship in the
Rose Bowl.
Brown kept
Applewhite on the bench, started Simms and was rewarded with a typical Simms
Big Game performance: another four interceptions-all in the first half-leaving with
an "injury" and the Longhorns down 29-10.
Major
came in, inspired the offense as he always did, told them they would win, and
promptly rallied Texas back into the game and nearly did the improbable before
falling 39-37
Behind
Applewhite, Texas
won the 2001 Holiday Bowl 47-43 behind Major's 473 yards and 4 TD.
Major
Applewhite held 44 passing records for Texas
by the time his senior year began, yet he was sitting on the bench behind Chris
Simms, a junior. He'd thrown for nearly 8,000 yards in his career and was the
1999 Big XII Offensive Player of the Year.
To Mack
Brown, Applewhite never really looked the part of star quarterback at Texas. He was 6-foot
nothing, red-haired and freckle-faced. His helmet sat low on his eyes and
looked like one of those cute little seven year olds just starting out playing
in Pop Warner Leagues across the nation. Even to fans across the nation,
Applewhite never looked like a football player.
Until,
that is, Major unleashed darts with his wicked right arm.
And
despite all his success, everyone assumed Phil Simm's little boy would run him
off the field with talent by the 2000 season. Except during that 2000 season,
Simms didn't exactly wow everyone with precision and poise. He and Applewhite
split the starts. Then Applewhite got hurt before the 2000 Holiday Bowl, Simms
started the loss to Oregon
in that game and by February, with no competition for the job (as had been
promised), Simms was anointed the starter. Brown never pulled Simms because of bad play,
only injury.
Even
after what Applewhite did for him in his final games, Brown still said, "You
live with opinion. We've got 20 million people who graduated in coaching in our
state (Texas)."
After all
that time, Brown didn't get it. And for that, his confidence in picking
quarterbacks wavered. How is it that I
am suddenly the only person who remembers just a few years ago Brown debating
between Vince Young and Chance Mock?
Chance
Mock? The only reason there wasn't more controversy there is because he
probably graduated and saved Mack Brown the trouble.
The
Applewhite-Simms debate wasn't about who would be a better talent or better pro
QB. It's obvious that Simms wins probably in both areas. He's the starter for
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, while Applewhite is the quarterback's coach at Syracuse.
We
learned long ago that the Ken Dorsey's, Josh Huepel's, and Tommie Frazier's of
the College World don't make very good pro quarterbacks. But we've also learned
that sometimes the best pro OB's didn't make
the best College Legends, either.
Applewhite
was a leader and a winner and gave Texas
the best chance to win a National Title in 2001-though he may not have been the
sexiest choice to play the position. After that '01 Holiday Bowl, then Washington Coach Rick
Neuheisel said, "When Applewhite was 10,
I'll bet all the kids in the neighborhood would show up at his house to see
what they were going to do that day. He's that much of a leader."
That's
why I don't trust Mack Brown in big situations and big games. Because even the
opposing coach, who was a fraud and a cheat, could sense the skills Applewhite
held, but Brown couldn't. Like Simms, Brown's always been a little over-hyped.
So you may
ask what does that have to do with the 2006 Rose Bowl on January 4th
against USC?
Well,
look across the field next week, Mack. See Pete Carroll. See him stick with
Carson Palmer when nobody else did? See how he'll play Matt Leinart until he's
25 if Carroll has to, despite a talented QB named John David Booty sitting on the
bench, wasting eligibility, itching for his chance? See how other coaches can
admit to their past errors and-shockingly-learn from them?
There's a
reason USC and Pete Carroll have won two National Titles (one split in
2003). Just like there's a reason Mack
Brown's never won any National Championships-he makes 'Major' mistakes.