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  • Texas A&M professor sues school after being fired for discussing gender identity

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    All faculty at Texas A&M are required to submit their course materials for review before being allowed to teach the course.

    All faculty at Texas A&M are required to submit their course materials for review before being allowed to teach the course.

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    A Texas A&M University professor who was fired for discussing gender identity in the classroom last year is suing the school, Board of Regents and interim president, according to court documents filed Wednesday.

    Melissa McCoul’s lawsuit alleges former university President Mark Welsh III was contacted by Gov. Greg Abbott’s chief of staff, who pressed to terminate her, and that Provost Alan Sams was told to not give her a required hearing before doing so.

    McCoul’s lawsuit also states that the university knowingly violated her free speech and due process rights to “appease political critics.”

    In a statement released Wednesday, McCoul wrote that she could have never imagined suing Texas A&M, and described her role at the university as her “dream job.” She was hired by the university in 2017.

    “There’s no satisfaction in doing this, only sadness,” McCoul wrote. “I had hoped to keep doing that work for many years to come. Despite how I was treated, I still love the institution, my former colleagues, and the students of A&M. I hope that this lawsuit will cause the University to think twice about treating others similarly.”

    McCoul is also asking for damages, back pay and to be reinstated to her position. She was in the second year of a three-year contract when she was terminated.

    The termination came after Texas state Rep. Brian Harrison, Midlothian Republican, posted a video on social media of a student who recorded McCoul teaching about gender identity in a summer class. The student argued her lesson was in violation of a President Donald Trump executive order. There isn’t a Texas law prohibiting gender identity teaching.

    In December, after McCoul’s firing, Texas A&M’s Board of Regents issued a guidance prohibiting faculty from “requiring or encouraging students to hold certain beliefs, particularly regarding gender or race ideology or sexual orientation, or to feel shame for belonging to certain racial or ethnic groups.”

    Texas A&M last week also ended its women’s and gender studies programs, and said that hundreds of course syllabuses have been or will be altered under a new policy regulating how gender can be discussed in class.

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    Samuel O’Neal

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Samuel O’Neal is a local news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram covering higher education and local news in Fort Worth. He joined the team in December 2025 after previously working as a staff writer at the Philadelphia Inquirer. He graduated from Temple University, where he served as the Editor-in-Chief of the school’s student paper, The Temple News.

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    Samuel O’Neal

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  • Keeler: CU Buffs transfers wonder what 2025 under Deion Sanders would’ve looked like if they stayed: ‘They missed out’

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    Noah Fenske had his luggage with him Saturday. It wasn’t Louis.

    “Just Under Armour,” the former CU Buffs offensive lineman texted me from his vacation in Nashville.

    While on the road with his fiancée, Fenske’s also been keeping an eye on an old CU teammate, Alex Harkey. Oregon’s starting right tackle? Yeah, he used to be a Buff.

    Harkey, a 6-foot-6, 327-pound redshirt senior, is prepping for a Friday night showdown with Indiana — and another former CU player, the Hoosiers’ Kahlil Benson — in one College Football Playoff semifinal. The Ducks’ bruiser helped Oregon put up 245 passing yards and convert four fourth-down conversions on The Best Defense Money Can Buy, blanking Texas Tech 23-0 in the Orange Bowl.

    He’d transferred into CU as a 305-pounder out of Tyler (Texas) Junior College, a 3-star who was weighing offers from Middle Tennessee and Old Dominion. After appearing in 12 games, largely as a reserve guard, Harkey was one of the kids from CU’s 2022 recruiting class swept out in the great Deion Sanders roster purge during the spring of 2023.

    Fenske, who played in seven games with the Buffs in ’22, was Harkey’s roommate at CU. He got swept away, too. Under Armour was out, Louis Vuitton luggage was in.

    “(Harkey has) done incredible, man,” Fenske gushed. “Because when he first came in (to CU), he wasn’t what he is now. And just seeing his transformation from being a (backup) guard on a 1-11 team to being a first-round or second-round (NFL) draft pick …”

    Big Alex could play. So could wideout Jordyn Tyson (Arizona State). And cornerback Simeon Harris (Fresno State). And quarterback Owen McCown, once he’d had some more brisket. McCown, who played as a wafer-thin true freshman at CU in ’22, threw for 30 touchdowns at UTSA this past fall — including three in a 57-20 win over Florida International in the First Responder Bowl.

    “We just stay connected, support each other’s success,” Harris, who still belongs to a group chat of former Buffs, told me over the weekend. “You’ve got to expect the unexpected. That (purge) hit us all in the mouth.”

    CU fans talk a lot — a lot — about 1-11 in 2022. About rock bottom. About Coach Prime lighting the candle for the climb out of obscurity.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Houston Football Fan Thanksgiving Weekend TV Viewer’s Guide – Houston Press

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    The holiday season is upon us, and with all due respect to Andy Williams, whose winter ditty “The Most Wonderful Time of the Year” cites the Christmas season as just that, the most wonderful time of the year, if we are going to narrow it down to one weekend for football fans, Thanksgiving weekend is the most wonderful time of the year, hands down. 

    Starting late Thursday morning, once we get our token Turkey Trots and family touch football games out of the way, the holiday gods give us license to sit on the couch for four days. Unless you’re working, the only reason you should leave the couch is for bathroom breaks, drink refills, and leftover turkey sandwiches. 

    For folks in the Houston area, there is a ton of meaningful football being played over the next 72 hours, but you might need a map to navigate all of it. So, as James Taylor would say, “that’s why I’m here!” (Not sure why I keep quoting old, male singers. But I digress.) 

    So, for your gluttony and sloth benefit, here is my guide to football watching for the Houston football fan this weekend, with a brief blurb on each of these games, and what’s at stake:

    Thursday, November 27

    Chiefs at Cowboys, 3:30 p.m. (CBS)

    Houstonians will have to pinch their nose and tolerate rooting for the Cowboys for a few hours on Turkey Day, because a Dallas win over the Chiefs would be a huge help to the Texans’ playoff hopes. 

    Bengals at Ravens, 7:20 p.m. (NBC)

    The Bengals should be getting their quarterback Joe Burrow back in this one. Similar to the Cowboys, the Bengals can become the Texans’ best friends by damaging the 6-5 Ravens.

    Friday, November 28

    Texas at Texas A&M, 6:30 p.m. (ABC)

    Texas A&M can complete an historic undefeated regular season, clinch a slot in the SEC Title Game, and get one step closer to a first round bye in the College Football Playoff. Texas is trying to keep its microscopic playoff hopes alive. Oh, also, these two schools hate each other. 

    Saturday, November 29

    Texas Tech at West Virginia, 11 a.m. 

    The Red Raiders are a 24 point favorite, but stranger things have happened on the road in college football. A win clinches a spot in the Big XII Title Game for Tech, and gets them one step closer to the school’s first playoff berth.

    Houston at Baylor, 11 a.m.

    A win for the Coogs here gets them to 9-3 on the season, and should lock up a pretty substantial bowl berth, with several projections sending them to San Antonio and the Alamo Bowl. Baylor will be staying at home during bowl season, trying to figure out what to do with head coach Dave Aranda. 

    SMU at Cal, 7 p.m.

    Hey, we’ll throw a bone to some of the Houston area Mustang alum! A win for SMU clinches a spot in the ACC title game, and gets them one step closer to a second straight playoff appearance. 

    Sunday, November 30

    Texans at Colts, Noon (CBS)

    Not much needs to be said here, as several million of you, here in Houston, will be watching the latest “most important game of the season” for the Texans. 

    Jaguars at Titans, Noon (CBS)

    The Texans remain a game back of the Jaguars for second place in the division and a wild card spot in the postseason. The Titans are the worst team in football, and similar to the Cowboys, very painful for Houstonians to root for. However, a Titan upset would be huge for the Texans.

    Bills at Steelers, 3:25 p.m. (CBS)

    These are two teams the Texans are looking up at in the standings. The Texans just beat the Bills, so the Texans have the head to head tiebreaker, if they end up tied after the season. The Steelers beating the Bills is the play for which to root here, as the Steelers winning the AFC North doesn’t affect the Texans’ playoff standing. Buffalo falling to 7-5, combined with a Texans win, would vault the Texans past the Bills in the standings. 

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    Sean Pendergast

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  • It happened. Texas finally caught Florida — just not in the category you’d think

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    Despite a surplus of money, resources and time invested in a sport that defines this state, for far too long Texas could never get its stuff together and get around Florida.

    Starting in 1983 with the Miami Hurricanes, the state of Florida has produced 11 national football champions. In that time, the state of Texas has produced one — the 2005 Texas Longhorns.

    (Note that UT reached the national title game again in the 2009 season; TCU played for the national championship in the 2022 season, where it just barely lost to Georgia).

    Here in 2025, Florida, Florida State and Miami have become an overrated, expensive, terrible joke. The state’s major football teams have combined to be the football version of “Florida Man.” It’s only fitting that a gator and a hurricane are involved.

    The consequences of SMU’s upset of then-No. 10 Miami last week in Dallas mean no team from the state of Florida is in the top 12 of the college football playoff rankings. Miami is currently 15th, and the only other team from the Sunshine State ranked in the Top 25 is the University of South Florida, at No. 24.

    This is a continuation of a decade-long trend that has seen Florida yield one playoff team; in the first year of the playoff era, Jimbo Fisher’s FSU team was blown out by Oregon, in 2015.

    Florida has fired its coach (again). Florida State will probably fire its coach (again). And fourth-year coach Mario Cristobal is “feeling it” in Miami (his buyout is too big).

    The state of Texas, meanwhile, could potentially have four teams in the playoffs.

    Texas A&M is in

    Barring a season-ending three-game losing streak, the No. 3 Aggies will make the playoffs for the first time.

    The Aggies visit Austin for their game against Texas on Nov. 28. It will affect seeding, the potential participants in the SEC title game, and plenty of woofing between Texas-exes and the maroons. The Aggies are 9-0, and even if you want to cut up their schedule, a perfect record in a power league at this point in the season is legit.

    The Aggies are going to the playoffs.

    Texas Tech should be in the playoffs

    The Red Raiders’ evisceration of BYU last week in Lubbock should put them in the Big 12 title game. Other than a four-point loss at Arizona State, Texas Tech is doing what good teams should do.

    The Red Raiders are blowing out the good and the bad. Tech wins by an average of nearly 30 points per game. Its defensive front seven is not to be messed with.

    The Red Raiders are sixth in the latest playoff rankings, and with remaining regular-season games against Central Florida and West Virginia, an appearance in the Big 12 title game should not affect whether they are a playoff team. They are.

    Texas is hanging around

    The preseason No. 1 team in the nation is a colossal failure, and the Longhorns are 7-2. Three straight 3-point wins against Kentucky, Mississippi State and Vanderbilt have the Horns in a position to potentially make the playoffs for a third straight year.

    “We are playing as a team now better than we have all season long,” Texas coach Steve Sarkisian said Wednesday on the SEC coaches conference call.

    UT has its issues, but it also has a defense that makes a playoff appearance a possibility. With the remaining games at No. 5 Georgia and at home against Texas A&M, the Longhorns need to at least split those, and show well, to have a remote chance at a playoff spot.

    Because it’s Texas, you can never eliminate the Longhorns from any discussion. About any topic.

    An outside chance for North Texas

    Despite the protesting from every SEC and ACC coach, a Group of Five team will make the playoffs, and the Mean Green have the second-best odds of any G5 team to do it. They are behind No. 24 South Florida, which hammered UNT on Oct. 10.

    That 63-36 loss did not end UNT’s season.

    Behind quarterback, Drew Mestemaker, UNT has won three straight; with remaining games against UAB, Rice and Temple, the Mean Green has a narrow playoff path. If it reaches the American Athletic Conference title game, which would probably be a rematch against USF, it likely would mean the winner goes to the playoffs.

    A win would only continue what is the best story in college football, at the expense of the second-best football team from the state of Florida.

    Mac Engel

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Mac Engel is an award-winning columnist who has covered sports since the dawn of man; Cowboys, TCU, Stars, Rangers, Mavericks, etc. Olympics. Movies. Concerts. Books. He combines dry wit with 1st-person reporting to complement an annoying personality.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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  • College Football Playoff Picture for Four Texas Schools – Houston Press

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    When college football announced they were expanding the playoff from four teams to 12 teams a couple years ago, I was probably in the minority of fans who were not very excited about the idea. It wasn’t that I thought an expanded playoff would cheapen the regular season. Instead, I just enjoyed the exclusivity and debate that came with a four team playoff, whose constituency was decided by a committee. 

    Here we are, though, in Year 2 of the 12 team playoff, and, as I suspected I would, I’ve done a 180 degree turn. I love the expanded playoff! I love the format, the first round on college campuses, but mostly, I love how we have playoff relevance for so many teams here in Texas.

    The most recent AP Top 25 poll came out on Sunday morning, with four teams from the state of Texas cracking the Top 25, all of whom can have some say in the playoff field, if they keep winning. So as the calendar flips to November on Saturday, here is a state of the state, when it comes to college playoff chances for our Texas teams:

    3. TEXAS A&M (8-0)

    REMAINING SCHEDULE: @ #19 Missouri, vs South Carolina, vs Samford, @ #20 Texas  

    The Aggies are in awesome shape right now to make the SEC title game, which is a de facto clinching of a playoff spot. It would take a monumental collapse for the Aggies to cough up a playoff spot at this point, especially with one of their out of conference wins being the 41-40 thriller in South Bend over Notre Dame. Given all the emotion surrounding last week’s trip to Baton Rouge, though, the Aggies need to keep their collective head on a swivel heading to Mizzou this weekend. 

    13. TEXAS TECH (7-1)

    REMAINING SCHEDULE: @ Kansas State, vs #10 BYU, vs UCF, @ West Virginia

    Despite the loss to Arizona State earlier this month, Texas Tech (and the bets roster money can buy) are in decent shape for the playoff, based on their remaining schedule. The game in Lubbock against BYU in a couple weeks looms as the game of the year in the Big XII, as the winner would be in the driver’s seat for one of the spots in the Big XII title game. It’s unlikely the Big XII gets two teams in the dance, so staying on track for the conference title game is crucial. 

    20. TEXAS (6-2)

    REMAINING SCHEDULE: vs #9 Vanderbilt, @ #5 Georgia, vs Arkansas, vs #3 Texas A&M

    Texas finishes the season with one of the toughest November schedules in the country, with three Top 10 teams, all in conference. A tough schedule represents extreme opportunity, though. Also, you could argue that Texas has the best loss of any team in the country, an ugly 14-7 loss to number one Ohio State in Week 1. However, style points have not been plentiful these last few weeks with ugly wins over Kentucky and Mississippi State. Texans might be the one team who can afford to go 9-3, and still have an argument, depending on how the three November wins look. 

    22. HOUSTON (7-1)

    REMAINING SCHEDULE: vs West Virginia, @ UCF, vs TCU, at Baylor

    Because they started the year kind of off the radar, the Coogs are kind of paddling upstream. Their path to the playoff likely runs through the Big XII title game. Right now, the Coogs would obviously need to win out, and the best case scoreboard-watching scenario would be for BYU to win out and remain undefeated. Both Texas Tech (who beat Houston head to head) and Cincinnati (undefeated in the Big XII) are on BYU’s schedule, and if BYU and Houston both win out, there is your likely Big XII title game. 

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    Sean Pendergast

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  • CSU Rams football coach short list: Who could replace Jay Norvell?

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    Since Canvas Stadium opened, the CSU Rams football program has tried the SEC route. It’s tried The Urban Meyer Family Tree. It’s tried a safe, steady hand with Mountain West bona fides. None of those paths have led to a consistent conference championship contender whose results have matched the ambitions of CSU’s $220 million football home.

    So with Jay Norvell out, where does Rams AD John Weber turn now? Here are nine candidates CSU should have on his short list:

    Tony Alford, Michigan running backs coach/run game coordinator: If it’s about family, nobody bleeds green the way Alford, who played running back at CSU from 1987-90, still does. At 56, he’s been looking for a chance to put a stamp on a program of his own.

    Matt Lubick, Kansas co-offensive coordinator/tight ends coach: Speaking of keeping it in the family, the son of CSU icon Sonny Lubick remains a fan favorite at age 53. Time to come home?

    Jay Hill, BYU defensive coordinator/associate head coach: Not young (50), but we already know what his Cougars can do (and have done) to CU. Bonus: Has head coaching experience, posting a 68-39 record as the top man at Weber State from 2014-22.

    Jason Candle, Toledo: Matt Campbell’s successor was supposed to find his Iowa State a while ago, having produced four seasons of at least nine wins with the Rockets since 2017. He’s still there. Although, as he’s got a contract through 2028, so he probably won’t come super-cheap.

    Collin Klein, Texas A&M offensive coordinator: At 36, the former Loveland High star and Heisman Trophy finalist is a rising star and a good guy, to boot. If Rams fans want to “lock the gates” for local recruits, this could be the guy.

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Northeast Philly Shines Nationally — Once Again. – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    Photo Courtesy of Wiki Commons.

    In the long history and deep annals of Philadelphia’s Northeast High School — the NFL has come calling before. Previous graduates Charles Wray and Brent Grimes both attended the school and went on to play in the NFL. Not far away — Northeast High School closed in 2010 was home to Bucko Kilroy — who will go into the Eagles Hall of Fame this November.

    Now Northeast High School can claim to be the home of high school success for yet another rising star.

    Texas A&M Football was #6 in the country and cornerback Tyreek Chapell are now inside that number after marquee wins this weekend against beating the Mississippi St. yesterday and previously beating Notre Dame and the Fighting Irish in South Bend two weeks ago to propel the program to #5 in the country and a perfect 5–0 for the Aggies Program in 2025.

    Designated as a (consensus) three-star recruit by major media outlets (247 Sports, Rivals and ESPN) — Chapell allowed a mere two completions against him out of 41 attempts as a junior at Northeast High School in 2019. As a Sophomore — Chapell was top-ten in the SEC in pass breakups

    Now Chapell is looking to carry his dominant coverage that started at Northeast High School to the College Football Playoff — and possibly — to the NFL.

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    Michael Thomas Leibrandt

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  • Texas A&M President Mark A. Welsh III to step down after a week of turmoil over viral classroom video

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    Texas A&M University President Mark A. Welsh III will step down on Friday after more than a week of turmoil sparked by a viral video of a student confronting a professor over gender content in a children’s literature course, the Texas A&M University System announced Thursday.

    The video, along with an audio recording of Welsh initially refusing to fire professor Melissa McCoul, first circulated online on Sept. 8 after state Rep. Brian Harrison, R-Midlothian, shared it on the social media platform X.

    Welsh fired McCoul a day later, but the move did not satisfy Harrison, or Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who did not think Welsh handled the situation properly.

    “His ambivalence on the issue and his dismissal of the student’s concerns by immediately taking the side of the professor is unacceptable,” Patrick posted on X last week. “Most parents, students, and Aggie alumni expect Texas A&M to reflect the values of our state and our nation as well as A&M’s rich history. If President Welsh will not or cannot reflect those values, then change needs to happen.”

    In a statement on Thursday, Chancellor Glenn Hegar praised Welsh but seemed to agree a change was needed.

    “President Welsh is a man of honor who has led Texas A&M with selfless dedication. We are greatful for his service and contributions,”Hegar said. “At the same time, we agree that now is the right moment to make a change and to position Texas A&M for continued excellence in the years ahead.”

    Welsh’s departure comes amid a broader campaign by Republican leaders to tighten control of curricula, hiring and speech at the state’s public universities.

    In January, Gov. Greg Abbott threatened to fire Welsh after the university’s business school invited advanced PhD students and faculty to a conference designed to recruit Black, Hispanic and Indigenous graduate students. After the threat, Welsh said Texas A&M would pull out of the conference completely.

    Abbott cannot fire university presidents, but he appoints the members of the Texas A&M University System Board of Regents, who do have that authority.

    Harrison on Thursday took credit for Welsh’s departure. Board Chair Robert Albritton stressed to reporters that regents had not listened to outside political figures and media pressure.

    On Wednesday, top faculty members and the university’s student government sent letters to Hegar and the board of regents supporting Welsh.

    One letter was signed by Texas A&M’s Executive Committee of the University Distinguished Professors, which is composed of 12 distinguished professors, the highest achievement a faculty member can earn at the university.

    “All members of this Committee write this letter collectively to strongly urge you to retain President Mark Welsh in the wake of recent events,” the letter reads.

    The other letter, signed by dozens of current and former student leaders, said Welsh carries “a steadfast love and stewardship for our University, one that inspires our faith and confidence in his leadership.” The student leaders added that they “stand united in support of his leadership.”

    Welsh, a retired four-star general, former chief of staff of the U.S. Air Force and the former dean of the Bush School of Government and Public Service, became president in 2023. Former President M. Katherine Banks had resigned following the botched hiring of journalism professor Kathleen McElroy, whose offer of employment was watered down after regents became concerned about her work on diversity, equity and inclusion.

    Welsh initially stepped in as interim president while the university launched a national search for Banks’ replacement. Four months later, then Chancellor John Sharp recommended Welsh be named as permanent president, forgoing the national search.

    “The Board is confident in General Welsh’s abilities to take Texas A&M to even greater heights,” Regent Bill Mahomes, who was then serving as board chair, said in a press release at the time. “Everything points to him being the perfect person for this pivotal moment in the history of our beloved flagship.”

    Welsh was welcomed by many faculty and students, who said he provided a much-needed steady hand during times of uncertainty. They lauded him for seeking out their input, clearly explaining his decision-making and being transparent about university operations.

    “General Welsh has almost uniform positive evaluations from those who know him, who worked with him, who agree with him, who disagree with him,” medical professor Mark Sicilio said at the time.

    Board Chair Robert Albritton said regents will appoint an interim president and initiate a national search for a permanent president “in the coming days.”

    We are “united in ensuring that this transition strengthens the university’s future and keeps Texas A&M true to its mission and values,” Albritton said in a statement.

    Nicholas Gutteridge contributed to this story.

    The Texas Tribune partners with Open Campus on higher education coverage.

    Disclosure: Texas A&M University and Texas A&M University System have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.


    Three featured TribFest speakers confirmed! You don’t want to miss ​​Deb Haaland, former U.S. Secretary of the Interior and 2026 Democratic candidate for New Mexico governor; state Sen. Joan Huffman, R-Houston and 2026 Republican candidate for Texas Attorney General; and Jake Tapper, anchor of CNN’s “The Lead” and “State of the Union” at the 15th annual Texas Tribune Festival, Nov. 13–15 in downtown Austin. Get your tickets today!

    TribFest 2025 is presented by JPMorganChase.

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  • ‘Now Texas A&M is Another Institution in That List of Cowards’

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    Last week, we ran an opinion piece by Observer contributor Austin Zook, an alumnus of Texas A&M University. In his piece, Zook reckoned with the flagging pride he felt in the aftermath of news from his alma mater making national headlines — a professor named Melissa McCoul was the subject of a viral video in which McCoul gets into a disagreement with a student while teaching a lesson on gender studies…

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  • College Football Clash: Texas A&M at Notre Dame — Four Things to Watch For

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    For anyone who thought the transfer portal, NIL payments, and an expanded playoff would somehow damage the regular season popularity of college football, you can think again. Television ratings and game attendance are thriving, as the game has taken on more of an NFL feel, up to and including the big paychecks some players are getting.

    Sure, the 12-team playoff has made losing a little more forgivable in the regular season, but if you’re an old school fan who wants de facto elimination games in September, then allow me to direct you to South Bend, Indiana on Saturday night, where the Texas A&M Aggies take on the University of Notre Dame Fighting Irish, in a rematch of last season’s season opener, in which the Irish prevailed in College Station, 23-13.

    Notre Dame lost its opener this season, back on August 31, in Miami to the Miami Hurricanes, 27-24. Meanwhile, the Aggies are 2-0, with convincing wins over UTSA and Utah State. So why is this a de facto elimination game? Well, Notre Dame going 0-2 would mean they’d have to run the table just to get into playoff consideration. The Aggies losing would mean they’d need to go, at worst, 6-2 in the SEC to get into playoff consideration.

    In other words, while it’s not a literal elimination for the loser, it does shrink their margin for error to a slice above nil. So, with no Houston Texans game until Monday night, let’s do the Friday “four things to watch for” for this crucial college football matchup with massive local flavor:

    Irish desperation, Aggie revenge
    The motivations for each team are simple. As outlined above, Notre Dame is just trying to stay alive for playoff comfort. After the win over the Aggies last season, the Irish had an inexplicable loss at home to Northern Illinois, forcing them to run the table ten straight weeks to make the playoff. In other words, they know how to play desperate. Meanwhile, the Aggies are looking for revenge after the Irish won, in perhaps the biggest on campus September game in Aggie history last season. Aggie head coach Mike Elko returns to South Bend as a head coach for the first time since leaving his defensive coordinator position for Notre Dame after the 2017 season.

    Jeremiyah Love
    In their last game, in Miami, Notre Dame’s strategy offensively seemed more centered around getting freshman QB C.J. Carr comfortable early than getting the ball into the hands of their best player, running back Jeremiyah Love. I’m guessing this won’t happen again. They’ll feed Love early and often, and they need to. In case you were unaware of Notre Dame’s history running the football, when they don’t run enough, they lose. They ran just 28 times against Miami, and lost. They ran it fewer than 28 times twice last season — in the two losses to Ohio State and Northern Illinois. The trend is there.

    Marcel Reed
    In their season opener against Miami, the Irish had trouble getting pressure on Hurricanes QB Carson Beck, and he had a solid game. Reed poses a different challenge, with his ability to run the football. Early this season, Reed has shown improvement as a passer, but the Irish will look to keep him in the pocket. If he escapes, he is dangerous, and can make it a long night for the Irish defense.

    The gambling angles
    Okay, here is where the runner meets the road — prediction time, and a lot of the numbers line up in Notre Dame’s favor. Here are a few gambling nuggets:

    * Texas A&M is 0-7 against the spread in its last 7 games
    * Notre Dame is 11-2 ATS in its last 13 games
    * Notre Dame is 5-0 ATS in its last 5 games against SEC opponents
    * A&M is 1-5 ATS in its last 6 games against Independent teams
    * Notre Dame is 5-0 against the spread in its last 5 home games
    * Texas A&M is 1-7-1 against the spread in its last 9 road games
    Texas A&M won 3 of its last 14 road games straight up
    * Notre Dame is 6-1 ATS in its last 7 home games

    Yikes! There is only one right choice here… Go Irish!

    SPREAD: Notre Dame -6.5
    PREDICTION: Notre Dame 27, Texas A&M 17

    Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

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  • Texas A&M professor fired over discussion of gender identity

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    Melissa McCoul, the Texas A&M University professor who was criticized by a student for discussing gender identity, has been fired.

    Her firing follows the removal of the dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, Mark Zoran, and the head of the English department, Emily Johansen, from their administrative positions. McCoul is appealing and considering her legal options.

    During the summer, a student in McCoul’s children’s literature class objected to the professor’s assertion that there are more than two genders. The student said this is illegal because of Donald Trump’s executive order saying the federal government recognizes only male and female genders, as assigned at birth, therefore denying the existence of transgender, nonbinary, or intersex people. The student also said her religious sensibilities were offended by McCoul’s comments. The exchange was recorded on cell phone video.

    Texas A&M President Mark Welsh announced Monday that the dean and department head would be removed from those positions, while it’s unclear if they’ll continue as faculty, but a recording reported to be between him and the student had him saying McCoul would not be fired. However, he released a statement Tuesday saying she had been terminated, effective immediately. He did not name McCoul, but other sources have identified her as the professor in question.

    The reason he gave was not specifically about gender issues but that the course material differed from the description in the catalog. After finding out that the class “contained content that did not align with any reasonable expectation of standard curriculum for the course,” he “made it clear to our academic leadership that course content must match catalog descriptions for each and every one of our course sections,” he said in the statement.

    “However, I learned late yesterday that despite that directive, the college continued to teach content that was inconsistent with the published course description for another course this fall,” he continued. Because of that, he told the university provost to terminate McCoul and ordered deans and department heads to make sure course material aligns with published descriptions, he wrote.

    Republican politicians in Texas, including state Rep. Brian Harrison and Gov. Greg Abbott, had called for McCoul to be fired. Harrison termed McCoul’s discussion “transgender indoctrination” and urged the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate the matter, which the DOJ says it’s doing. Glenn Hegar, chancellor of the Texas A&M System, which oversees Texas A&M’s main campus and 11 other universities, said he “will work with the Board of Regents to make certain that the A&M System takes the disciplinary action to ensure this does not happen again at one of our campuses.”

    McCoul is fighting back. Amanda Reichek, her attorney, told The Texas Tribune that the professor’s course content aligned with the descriptions, and she had never been directed to alter anything. She had taught the children’s literature course for several years, and there had been no problems, Reichek said. So McCoul is appealing her termination and may take legal action.

    The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, which advocates for free speech across the political spectrum, issued a statement denouncing McCoul’s firing. “After a video of a student complaining about discussions of gender identity in a Texas A&M ‘Literature for Children’ class went viral, Governor Greg Abbott demanded on X that Texas A&M President Mark Welsh fire Professor Melissa McCoul for the content of her course. Welsh promptly announced that McCoul had been terminated,” said FIRE Director of Campus Rights Advocacy Lindsie Rank.

    “The message from Texas is alarming: Professors teach at the mercy of those in power, not under the protection of academic freedom or the First Amendment. In his statement, Welsh attempted to justify the firing by alleging McCoul taught ‘content that was inconsistent with the published course description.’ However, the current publicly available description of the course in Texas A&M’s Undergraduate Catalog is ‘Representative writers, genres, texts and movements.’ This is hardly inconsistent with a faculty member conducting a classroom discussion of gender identity in children’s literature.

    “Further justifying his decision, Welsh wrote: ‘This isn’t about academic freedom; it’s about academic responsibility.’ Welsh’s attempt to wave aside Texas A&M’s binding legal obligation to uphold academic freedom does not excuse McCoul’s termination.

    “This is not the first time Texas A&M leadership has ignored the law of the land in favor of viewpoint-based censorship. FIRE will continue to fight for the First Amendment rights of all Americans — regardless of political views — in Texas and across our nation.”

    This article originally appeared on Advocate: Texas A&M professor fired over discussion of gender identity

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  • Temple Looks to Have Speed Up the Sidelines – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Temple Looks to Have Speed Up the Sidelines – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    Watch Out, Eagles and Phillies. Owl Speed Is Taking Over South Philly on Saturdays.

    Eagles fans attending home games in South Philly will have to wait until mid-September for a Jalen Hurts to Devonta Smith or AJ Brown connection. If you find yourself nervous about the wait, do not be troubled. The Phillies may not be the only team hitting home runs in the Stadium Complex on Saturdays this fall.

    Temple’s football team has a fast addition. Chester native Ashton Allen is now part of the Temple Owls football team for the 2024 season. Allen has been in consideration for football before, previously getting offers from Maryland, Michigan, Tennessee, and Pittsburgh.

    Allen spent four seasons as a sprinter for the USC Trojans on the Track and Field Team, competing with his two brothers. Although never ruling out the possibility of playing football at USC, Allen entered the transfer portal this year and will be a dynamic addition to the Owls Football Program.

    He may, in fact, have his sights set on larger goals. Sprinters have made an impact on the NFL over the years. Jim Thorpe was a multi-event Olympic competitor, and Devon Allen is the most decorated track and field athlete currently in the NFL. Miami Dolphins Jaylen Waddle and Jaylen Ramsey, as well as running backs Raheem Mostert and De’Von Achane, also have past experience in Track and Field.


    Temple basketball has also added great talent when it comes to speed. This week, it announced its first commit of 2025, a local West Chester native and three-star standout, Cam Wallace.

    At six foot five, the 8th ranked high school player in the state of PA turned down other offers from Texas A&M and Cincinnati to keep his size and speed in Philadelphia.


    The following two years will be an exciting time for Owl Athletics. And a speedy one. And besides, Philly kids always come home.

    PHOTO: Temple Basketball/X

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    Michael Thomas Leibrandt

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  • Ex-CSU Rams coach Steve Addazio joins ESPN as analyst

    Ex-CSU Rams coach Steve Addazio joins ESPN as analyst

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    The Daz is joining the Disney family.

    Former CSU Rams football coach Steve Addazio, whose Fort Collins tenure was short and tempestuous, is transitioning to television. ESPN announced that Addazio has joined the network as a college football analyst and will start calling games later this month.

    Addazio posted a 4-12 record at CSU from 2020-21 and had a 61-67 career record as a head coach with the Rams, Boston College (2013-19) and Temple (2011-12). He was fired at CSU in December 2021, a few days after completing a 3-9 season and after being ejected from a 52-10 home loss to Nevada, then coached by Jay Norvell.

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    Sean Keeler

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