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Rice hired Davidson football coach Scott Abell as its next coach, the university announced Tuesday.

Abell is 47-28 since arriving at Davidson in 2018 and has seven consecutive winning seasons there. He has shown an ability to win big at academic schools that have not won traditionally, which sources said made him an attractive candidate to the Rice brass.

Abell went 39-24 at Washington & Lee before arriving at Davidson, showing an affinity for turnarounds and handling recruiting at schools with high academic standards.

Abell reached three consecutive FCS playoffs before the 2023 season. During his career, he has shown an ability to put together formidable offenses.

“After spending time with Scott throughout this process, it was clear that we had found the right leader for our program,” Rice vice president and athletic director Tommy McClelland said in a statement. “He has had an immediate impact on every program he has coached and is passionate about developing winners on and off the field. He is the right person to lead Rice football into a new era of success. I am thrilled to welcome Scott and his family to Rice.”

In 2023, Davidson led the FCS in scoring offense and was among the nation’s leaders in many categories. He also enjoyed success as a high school coach in Virginia, with multiple state championships.

“He’s a proven winner everywhere he’s been, high school and college,” per a source familiar with the hire. “He brings a high-octane and unique offense. He knows what it takes to be successful at high academic institutions and is a leader of men.”

He also has a strong history recruiting players from Texas to Davidson, which was important for Rice.

Abell replaces Mike Bloomgren, who was fired this season after going 24-52.

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Brown fired by Tar Heels, to coach vs. Wolfpack

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Brown fired by Tar Heels, to coach vs. Wolfpack

North Carolina announced Tuesday that Mack Brown will not return next season, one day after the Hall of Fame coach declared his intentions to return to the Tar Heels.

Athletic director Bubba Cunningham informed Brown of his decision on Tuesday. Brown, 73, will coach the team in the regular-season finale against NC State on Saturday, but a decision has not yet been made about whether he will coach the Tar Heels (6-5) in their bowl game.

“While this was not the perfect time and way in which I imagined going out, no time will ever be the perfect time,” Brown said in a statement. “I’ve spent 16 seasons at North Carolina and will always cherish the memories and relationships Sally and I have built while serving as head coach.

“We’ve had the chance to coach and mentor some great young men, and we’ll miss having the opportunity to do that in the future. Moving forward, my total focus is on helping these players and coaches prepare for Saturday’s game against N.C. State and give them the best chance to win. We want to send these seniors out right and I hope our fans will show up Saturday to do the same.”

In two stints at North Carolina, Brown has gone a combined 113-78-1. Brown, who won a national championship with Texas after his first UNC tenure, returned to the Tar Heels in 2019 and took them to an ACC championship game appearance in 2022.

“Mack Brown has won more games than any football coach in UNC history, and we deeply appreciate all that he has done for Carolina football and our university,” Cunningham said in a statement. “Over the last six seasons — his second campaign in Chapel Hill — he has coached our team to six bowl berths, including an Orange Bowl, while mentoring 18 NFL draft picks.

“… Coach Brown has led the Carolina football program back into the national conversation as we improved the program’s facilities, significantly increased the size of the staff, invested in salaries and bolstered our nutrition and strength and conditioning programs. He also has been a dedicated fundraiser, strengthening the football endowment while also supporting our other sports programs. We thank Coach Brown for his dedication to Carolina, and wish him, Sally and their family all the best.”

Brown ranks eighth all time among FBS coaches with 288 victories, and he’s the only coach with 100-plus wins at multiple FBS schools — 113 at North Carolina and 158 at Texas.

With Brown out, there are now just two active FBS head coaches who have won a national championship: Georgia‘s Kirby Smart and Clemson‘s Dabo Swinney.

As Brown finishes out the season, Cunningham and Chancellor Lee H. Roberts will begin the search for a new head coach.

Brown has three years left on his contract, which pays him $5 million annually. The school said the remainder of the contract will be paid by the UNC athletic department and not through state funds.

The announcement Tuesday concludes what had become months filled with speculation about Brown and his future with the school. After allowing a school-record 70 points in an embarrassing home loss to James Madison in September, Brown told the Tar Heels in the locker room that he would step down if the team felt he could no longer do the job. His comments leaked publicly, and Brown had to announce that he was not resigning.

North Carolina lost three more games from there, then had to deal with the loss of receiver Tylee Craft, who died in October 2½ years after being diagnosed with cancer.

Brown told ESPN in a recent interview that his perspective had changed after that, with him believing the team now needed him more than ever “to step up and be strong and try to help them learn to navigate through these storms and this turmoil.”

After winning three straight — including Brown’s first win over his alma mater, Florida State — North Carolina stumbled in another poor performance at Boston College last weekend, losing 41-21.

That did not stop Brown from announcing during his weekly news conference Monday that he intended to return to North Carolina. However, he also said he hadn’t yet met with Cunningham to discuss his long-term future.

“Not one player has ever come to me and asked me about my future. Not one coach has ever come to me and asked me about my future. That’s what happens this time of the year,” Brown said Monday. “It’s really funny, if you lose a game now, you’re fired. It’s 100%, it’s unbelievable. So why worry, you just got to do your job.”

In 35 years as a head coach, Brown has gone 282-149-1. He got his head-coaching start at Tulane in 1985 and, after three seasons there, went to North Carolina. Following back-to-back 1-10 seasons, Brown transformed the Tar Heels program, taking them to nine or more wins four times. Texas hired him in 1998, and he won the most recent national championship for the Longhorns in 2005.

Following his departure from Texas in 2013 after 16 seasons there, Brown spent time working as a television analyst at ESPN. He returned to North Carolina following a five-year coaching hiatus to try to build back a stagnant Tar Heels program. During his most recent stint, he took North Carolina to the 2022 ACC championship game and helped Drake Maye become a first-round draft pick in 2024.

Big starts to the 2022 and 2023 seasons — including rising as high as No. 10 in 2023 — ended in disappointment as Brown didn’t get North Carolina to the 10-win mark. The 2024 season got off to a rough start when starting quarterback Max Johnson broke his leg in the opener and was lost for the season.

Still, the way Brown’s team responded to adversity, and the death of their beloved teammate, is something Brown told ESPN last week that he will always remember.

“It is one of the most satisfying years I’ve ever had because of the way people are responding to each other,” Brown said before the Boston College game.

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Sources: Florida flips another in FSU-bound RB

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Sources: Florida flips another in FSU-bound RB

Florida flipped four-star Florida State running back Byron Louis on Tuesday morning, sources told ESPN, securing the Gators their fourth 2025 commitment in the span of less than 24 hours and dealing the latest blow to the Seminoles’ incoming class this fall.

Louis, ESPN’s No. 11 running back prospect in 2025, committed to Florida three days after the rusher from Plantation, Florida, visited the Gators during the program’s win over No. 9 Ole Miss in Week 13. His pledge follows Florida’s Monday morning flip of USC inside linebacker pledge Ty Jackson (No. 54 in the ESPN 300) before the Gators added offensive tackle Jahari Medlock (Cincinnati flip) and wide receiver Muizz Tounkara (Arizona flip) later in the day.

Florida’s flip of Louis — No. 196 in the ESPN 300 — comes as the Gators prepare to visit Florida State to close the regular season on Saturday. Between Louis, quarterback Tramell Jones and offensive guard Daniel Pierre Louis, Florida has now added three former Seminoles pledges to its 27th-ranked 2025 class since Nov. 17.

Louis initially committed to Florida State over Georgia, Miami and Wisconsin on Sept. 21. With his move to Florida, he now represents the eighth prospect to pull his pledge from Mike Norvell’s 2025 class since the beginning of the regular season, joining five other ESPN 300 prospects who decommitted from the Seminoles across the program’s 2-9 start this fall.

Without Louis, a Florida State class that once boasted 12 top-300 pledges approaches the early signing period with only six commitments from inside the ESPN 300, headlined by five-star offensive tackle Solomon Thomas, ESPN’s No. 3 offensive tackle prospect in 2025. The Seminoles received a much-needed recruiting boost last week when it flipped four-star Oklahoma quarterback pledge Kevin Sperry (No. 132 in the ESPN 300) into the program’s 2025 class following Jones’ decommitment from the program earlier this month.

Security around Napier’s future at Florida and the Gators’ strong on-field finish this fall has given the program a jolt on the recruiting trail in the run-up to the early signing period.

Louis marks Florida’s eighth addition in the 2025 class since the school announced Napier would remain as the program’s head coach on Nov. 7. The Gators have hosted a series of high-profile recruits over the past two weekends, including four-star wide receiver Jaime Ffrench and Dallas Wilson, as Florida works toward a strong finish in the 2025 cycle.

As the Gators and Seminoles battle on the recruiting trail into the final days before the early signing period, Florida visits Florida State Saturday night at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN 2.

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Remembering the Longhorn Band’s olive branch to a grieving Texas A&M community

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Remembering the Longhorn Band's olive branch to a grieving Texas A&M community

COL. JAY BREWER is the epitome of an Aggie. His dad played for Texas A&M’s 1939 national championship team. He arrived in College Station in August 1977, joined the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Band and never left.

For 40 years until his retirement in 2020, Brewer was one of the directors and also served as the voice of the Aggie Band, with his authoritative trademark — “Now forming at the North End of Kyle Field,” or wherever the Aggies were playing — punctuating each performance.

As Texas and Texas A&M prepare to resume a heated neighbor-against-neighbor rivalry in College Station on Saturday (7:30 p.m. ET, ABC), ticket prices are soaring for the first Lone Star Showdown since 2011, when the Aggies left the Big 12 for the SEC.

But you won’t hear any vitriol toward the Texas Longhorns coming from Brewer’s mouth. They earned Brewer’s enduring gratitude on Nov. 26, 1999.

While the rivalry’s return centers on the hate between the two schools, their 1999 meeting looms large in the minds of many in Aggieland. That year, the Aggie bonfire — the giant symbol for their burning desire to beat Texas — collapsed, killing 12 students and injuring 27 others.

During a game the Aggies won in dramatic fashion, the Longhorn Band paid tribute to its rival university with a remarkable halftime performance. And 25 years later, the unprecedented show of unity between the two universities and their fans remains an indelible memory for many Texans. “It’s one of the most memorable days in my 40-year career,” Brewer said this week.


BREWER WAS JOLTED from his sleep on Nov. 18, 1999 at nearly 3 a.m. by a phone call from the band’s top cadet commander, who told him the bonfire “stack” — the 55-foot-tall rows of giant logs arranged like a tiered cake — had fallen. Every year since 1909, students had built the towering structure on campus, with construction organized by the school’s Corps of Cadets.

“We think we have everybody from the band accounted for,” the cadet told him.

Brewer thanked him for the update and laid back down, groggy and unaware of the severity of the situation. Then it hit him. He thinks he has everyone accounted for?

Brewer rushed out, jumped in his pickup and drove to the A&M polo fields where he saw the 5,000 logs — more than a million pounds of timber — strewn about like matchsticks. He could see the lights from emergency response vehicles. Even more shocking, he realized he was following two hearses through the gates.

As dawn broke, the news started to spread. Eventually, it was confirmed that 12 students died.

Football — and especially a halftime show — was an afterthought. The Texas A&M football team canceled practices. The players were among the rescue workers lifting logs off the pile as they looked for survivors.

“They are still in a state of shock,” Aggies coach R.C. Slocum said the next day. “It’s hard for them to realize their fellow students died working on a project to recognize the spirit that comes with the game.”

In Austin, the news stunned the Longhorns.

“I drove to the office with a tear in my eye this morning,” Texas coach Mack Brown told reporters. “I can promise you nobody here is thinking about football. Our thoughts and prayers are with those kids and their families, and all of the people at Texas A&M.”

Texas held a blood drive at the football offices, with Brown estimating that 400 to 500 people participated.

UT students wore white ribbons in memory of the Aggies who died, and the Longhorns’ Hex Rally — a tradition dating to the 1940s when fans burn red candles before the A&M game — was transformed into a unity gathering with a candlelight vigil in front of the UT Tower, which is traditionally illuminated but was darkened for the occasion. Brown fixed a white ribbon on his car’s antenna.

“We had the memorial with a lot of students and fans from Texas A&M, which was a night that I’ll remember for the rest of my life,” Brown told ESPN in 2021.

As the week went on, the coaches and officials from both schools started to talk about the football game and whether it should be played.

The decision was to play the 106th edition of the game, as the two schools had done the week after John F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1963 and in wartime. The 10 a.m. game on a Saturday in late November would serve as a sort of memorial, in front of 86,128 — then the largest crowd to watch a football game in the state of Texas.


THE AGGIES AND the Longhorns have played 118 times. They have often been cultural opposites: A&M was founded as an agricultural school in a rural college town and Texas occupies prime real estate in the state capital. Texas A&M was an all-male military school until 1963, when women were first admitted, while Texas kept Austin “weird.” Both of their fight songs mention the other.

There’s not a lot of precedent for the two playing nice, as former Texas A&M quarterback Bucky Richardson once explained when he was playing for Aggies in the late ’80s. “You see ’em every day. You work with them. They live next door. Your kids know their kids,” Richardson said. “You want to like ’em, you try to like ’em. Heck, you’d really like to be their friend. But there’s just something different about you and them. Deep, deep down, there is this feeling you have when you see ’em wearing that color, or you hear them talk. … There’s a difference between Aggies and Longhorns. It’s a hate thing.”

On Nov. 26, the day of the game, Kevin Sedatole could tell things were different. The Longhorn Band director said there was a different tone as the members entered Kyle Field. Sedatole is a Texas native and Baylor graduate whose father was a high school band director in the Houston area. He knew the Aggies’ passion well.

In the parking lots and at tailgates outside, fans in maroon and burnt orange congregated. Trash talk gave way to hugs and handshakes. They shared plates instead of trading insults.

“It was very weird going into the stadium because people were being so nice,” said Sedatole, now the director of bands at Michigan State. “The band has to come in through the gauntlet of the Aggie tailgating.”

He was already concerned with how to manage the rah-rah pageantry of a marching band on such a somber occasion, and he struggled to find a balance.

“The first time that we played ‘Texas Fight’ was weird,” he said. “It felt like we shouldn’t really be doing this. But there are also people saying, ‘Look, we need to treat this as normal as it can.'”

But the occasion called for more than a standard performance. Sedatole and his counterparts in College Station were all friends, despite their bands being a study in contrasts. Texas’ Showband of the Southwest is known for elaborate themed shows, while the Aggie Band is defined by discipline and tradition.

“All of us here have always had a great deal of respect for the Longhorn Band,” Dr. Tim Rhea, the current director of the Aggie Band said. “They do what they do extremely well. And I think we do what we do extremely well. They’ve always been wonderful colleagues for us.”

Every year before the game, Sedatole and his staff would meet with their counterparts in the Aggie Band, led by Lt. Col. Ray Toler and his assistant, Rhea, who took over when Toler retired in 2002.

But this was no ordinary year. No one knew how to proceed. The Aggies were busy scrambling to make their own plans, and Sedatole and his staff opted to stay out of their way.

Every year, at the final home game, the Aggies perform a fan-favorite drill known as a “four-way cross” — an intricate precision marching maneuver in which band members from four different directions pass within centimeters of one another. Rhea scrapped it, feeling it didn’t suit the tone of the occasion.

Sedatole called Rhea, a close friend, to ask if they were even going to have halftime. Rhea said yes, but that the Aggie Band probably wouldn’t perform.

Since Texas was the visiting team, they had to go first, which concerned Sedatole. He had an entire show planned around “Carmen,” the opera, but opted to just keep “The Flower Song” from the show, which he calls a “healing melody.”

Then, the Longhorn Band played “Amazing Grace.” They held Texas and Texas A&M flags side-by-side as they played, and then lowered the Texas flags and kept the A&M flags aloft. The LHB then added a Marine band rendition of “Taps” to the end as a tribute to the students who had died.

“That never happens,” Sedatole said. “We were just trying to make sure that people knew that we were there with them. I’ve never heard Kyle Field that silent. You could hear the wires hitting the flagpoles.”

Fans wept in the stands.

Thomas Gray of Houston, a Texas fan who said he was one of the only Longhorns fans in his section on the third deck, remembers Aggies turning around and thanking him personally.

“I felt weird accepting compliments on their behalf,” he said.

In the press box, the Aggie band staff was floored.

“We had no idea they were going to do it,” Rhea said. “I remember thinking, ‘This is the classiest thing I have ever seen in my entire life.'”

The stands were still full as the Texas band performed, and Aggies fans gave the members a standing ovation. Over the loudspeakers, the Longhorn Band announcer said:

Our two institutions are great rivals, but more importantly great friends who have the highest amount of respect for each other. May the Longhorn spirit and the Spirit of Aggieland never die.

“It was very moving and I appreciated what they did so much,” Toler said. “It was what I hoped that I would’ve thought to do had the roles been reversed. That was very special what they did.”

Said Brewer: “I’m up on the third deck and you could have heard a pin drop in that stadium. The first half of the game just ceased to exist for those moments. I don’t know that I’ve ever heard a more beautiful rendition of ‘Amazing Grace’ than I did that day.”

The Aggie Band — which often marched in the shape of the Longhorn logo with the horns separated, a nod to the “Aggie War Hymn’s” encouragement to “saw Varsity’s horns off” — opted to form in their classic “Block T” formation in silence before walking silently off the field.

“It was so silent that you could hear the spurs clinking on the cadets’ boots, even up in the third level,” Gray said. “There have only been a few times in my life where the hair on the back of my neck stood up; this was one of them.”


MORE TEARS WERE shed in College Station after the Aggies stormed back in the fourth quarter to beat the Longhorns in a dramatic finish. Trailing 20-16, quarterback Major Applewhite drove Texas to the A&M 46 before Jay Brooks sacked him and forced a fumble, which was recovered by Brian Gamble with 23 seconds left. Gamble stood up, then fell to his knees, and held his arms out wide to the sky.

“We had the thought and memory of those 12 in our hearts and minds every single play,” offensive lineman Chris Valletta, who had the names of the victims written on his undershirt, said after the game. “I hope this win can ease the pain a little bit. I personally want to send this to all of them, from all of us.”

In 2013, Brown resigned after 16 years in Austin, and once again showed his respect for the Aggies in his farewell news conference after being asked if there was anything he wished he could’ve changed during his tenure.

“I would want the bonfire [collapse] to not have happened at A&M,” he said. “Playing A&M on Thanksgiving, I thought about the families. … When you lose your children, there is nothing worse than that in the world. I think about that every Thanksgiving because there are 12 families that don’t have a good Thanksgiving. That’ll never go away.”

The series (seemingly) ended in 2011 with Texas remaining in the Big 12 while Texas A&M went to the SEC. At that game, the Texas band presented Rhea with a parting gift: One of those Aggie flags they held high on the field is framed and on one of the walls of the Aggie Band hall.

But this week, the historic rivalry returns, and so does the halftime contrast between the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Band and the Showband of the Southwest, the state’s two showcase bands will once again offer their signature styles.

There’s no longer an on-campus bonfire (there is a student-run one off-campus in nearby Bryan). In June, Texas A&M president Mark Welsh III decided against reinstating an official university-sponsored bonfire for the renewal of the Texas series, despite a committee’s recommendation to restore it, albeit with professional construction.

On this Nov. 18 as they do every year, Aggies gathered at a memorial on A&M’s campus at 2:42 a.m. in remembrance of the 12 who died.

For Brewer, it was a reminder to treat the upcoming game accordingly.

“It’s an athletic event between two big-time rivals in the great state of Texas, and that’s all it is,” he said.

The Aggies fans probably won’t be as nice when the Longhorn Band marches in. The fans probably won’t thank the Longhorns after their band performs. The Texas coaches aren’t going to make peace with an Aggies win. Brewer probably won’t get his wish of a new generation of fans — who grew up without this rivalry — keeping their perspective.

But it’s also just a football game, and not a makeshift memorial service. And for that, everyone is thankful. The hate might return, but the Aggies and the Longhorns will always have the memory of a day when they were all mourning Texans.

“A lot of the bitterness and the hate and all that kind of went away,” Rhea said. “When you have a tragedy, it does tend to unite your human spirit together.

“I hope we never have to do it again.”

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