Stories Inside the Man Cave
Stories Inside the Man Cave
Ep 340: The Pass Rush with Stevie & the Legacy of the Smalls: Sports, Education, and Family Pride in Austin's History
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Stepping into the shoes of the Small family feels like walking through the pages of Austin, Texas history, where every corner reveals a story about education, sports, and unshakeable family pride. Clint and Ed Small joined us in a heartwarming celebration of their ancestors, taking us back to the times of Ed's great-grandfather and the middle school that stands as a testament to his legacy. The family's athletic prowess isn't left in the past, though, as we reminisced about Ed's grandfather's iconic catch for the University of Texas, a moment that's more than just a highlight—it's a thread in the fabric of their rich heritage.
Venturing beyond family tales, our dialogue took a turn through the hallowed halls of academia, with personal anecdotes of how college shaped our careers—not just within the lines of a sports field but beyond it, in the realms of building and construction. Education was the compass that guided us, and the mentorship of individuals like Will Pryor acted as a beacon, proving that the influence of a good teacher reverberates through generations. As we tackled the evolution of high school athletics, the hurdles today's student-athletes face became apparent, underscoring a landscape that's shifted and grown more complex over the years.
We capped off our discussion with a forward gaze, looking ahead to the future of sports seasons with the same competitive spirit that's been the hallmark of the Small clan. Ed's decision to play both football and baseball, a path less traveled in college athletics, opened up a conversation about the benefits of multi-sport participation. As we wrapped up, we couldn't help but throw in some predictions for the sports seasons ahead, debating the likely outcomes with the same passion that's fueled the family's love for the game for over a century.
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You, you, how about this? This is a true Family legacy. Happens to be friends of mine up in the top right. When we started this it was like the Brady Bunch switch positions over here, but Clint Ned Small next to me on the right and then of course, big Stevie Lee on the bottom. He's carrying our weight. I mean, that's kind of like your golf game, right? You care everyone's weight, stevie.
Speaker 2No, I don't.
Speaker 1Hey, before we get going, we got to give a shout out to our primary sponsor, hard-growing roofing at a street port. They have done a great job of Building their brand here in central Texas, obviously tied to the pride of Shreveport, that being Stevie Lee. He, no one does it better their main slow marketing slogan than Stevie Lee. I mean Stevie, how does it go? Teaches how to say it properly.
Speaker 2You got to get a real deep voice. You got to get your Barry white voice on. You got to go hard-growing roofing no lose on your roof.
Speaker 1Love. It's my favorite part of these episodes with you every Sunday. But, yeah, they do a great job. I have a couple of friends who use them quick, efficient and they're now local. They're off of Ashdale, off of Ashdale and Burnett Road and they will coach Ab, will take care of you and be sure to like and subscribe to our YouTube page and all of our social Media platforms. So this is kind of new for the past rush instead of a regular episode. But these guys, they're just good people.
Speaker 1And Clint Small, the dad, and there's his son, ed, and it's just a great story that the small family Ed is now. I mean, if you haven't heard of his him yet, he is a two-spark Mega superstar growing in the state of Texas. I mean, he's going to have his choice of where he wants to go in either sport. But I'll start with you, ed, and when you, when you start, people start talking about the small family, when they realize all the Austin roots that you have and then realizing who your dad is, your grandfather and great-grandfather, I mean, where do you begin with that story?
Speaker 3Probably began with the beginning, my great-grandfather and then how, my grandfather. We have small middle school near after him. I get a lot of questions about that. They always ask me a small middle school near after you? And I go yes, it is. It's just a rich history here in Austin and it's really cool to be a part of the small middle school named after your great-grandfather, right Great-grandfather. No, grandfather, I grandfather actually yes.
Speaker 2Yes, sir, yeah, got you. That's awesome. And where is it located?
Speaker 4It's moderate Oaks in 290 Southwest Austin. So did you grow up in that, in that area, clint. No, sir, I grew up in Central Austin, went to Austin High Daddy went to McCallum. My grandfather moved down here when he went to Texas and Anyway they're both very involved with the school district, very involved with education in the legislature and the school district in 98 99 had some new schools coming on and they decided to name that middle school after my grandfather.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's awesome, that's awesome.
Speaker 1Clint, I mean I will one thing I want to tell the viewers, whether you're here in Austin or across Texas, other parts of the country, I mean we're gonna backpedal this to two or three generations ago. I mean, clint, I want one thing about this family. You could probably flip a coin to figure out whose name? What? Because really only two names. That Is, it's Clinton and it's just a pride, prideful part of their family, but it's on the left, that's your, that's your grandpa and that's main thing for the most part right.
Speaker 4Yes, that's my grandfather, charles Clinton, small junior, and so we're on the fourth Clinton, ed's the fifth Clinton, or Edward Clinton, but, yep, but if you look at him closely and you look at Ed closely. There's there, they're pretty. They resemble each other a whole lot. If you look at my father they there's a famous Zim ones that runs through us all pretty strongly.
Speaker 2Wow, that's a strong jaw on that young fellow right there man.
Speaker 4That's. That's 1935, Stevie.
Speaker 2Yeah man, he looks like an all American.
Speaker 1I mean, when you move on to Clint, your dad, ed, your grandfather, played it's tied in for Daryl Royle right at Texas out of McCallum High School. I mean there's the picture on the right. That was a huge catch against Oklahoma and he had a bigger one in a different game that I'm missing, or was that? Was he known for this one against Oklahoma?
Speaker 4That was his big catch. That was that beat Oklahoma in 67. Oklahoma was undefeated and ended up going on and winning the national championship that year, but they didn't have bowl games. Or they had bowl games but they have a national championship game. That was their only loss of the season. And the next picture, which I don't know if you have, you see him getting hit under the back hip on the left side. Yeah, he kind of gets flipped over. He ends up catching it the ball between hands and down between his elbows, but he hangs on. But it's pretty amazing when you see that picture being blowed up. You can see the fans faces in the background. You know the black and white it's, it's it's. It's pretty neat to see everybody's expressions. You know of that picture.
Speaker 1Ed, when you see the, I mean what age did you finally? When you saw these and you realize, wow, that's my great, great grandfather, my grandfather. And when did you realize, wow, I have not. You have to fulfill, do what they did. But that kind of motivates you to realize where you're from and maybe what your potential could be as far as athletics.
Speaker 3Yeah, definitely. I actually have the picture on the right hang up my room. It's in these like big wooden panels in my room, which is pretty cool. Yeah, it's definitely a rich history of athletics in my family. I mean, even down to, like my generation. Almost all my cousins are playing D1 sports right now or are still in high school. But it's really cool to see and just it motivates me and, I guess, my cousins, to go on that path and pursue athletics like my grandfather, grandfather.
Speaker 2Well, what? What year in high school are you? I'm a junior, you're a junior, and so do you have that short list of colleges yet?
Speaker 3I don't know. I'm still got to keep my options up right now.
Speaker 2So I hear you. No, I hear you. I want you to reveal anything with these kids doing those, those college reveals, like doing gender reveals nowadays, and I know I'm going to let you keep your thunder man. So Clint man, or Papa Clint I should call you how did you get away from Austin and go all the way up to Vanderbilt?
Speaker 4Wow, so you know, we were talking a little bit beforehand and you had your. You told me about your path and your options were open and it was similar with me. I didn't have the skill set that you did, I didn't, I didn't go to get the same visits that you did, but my, I was pointing in the direction of getting a, you know, a great education and so I got pointed in that path. I was excited about Texas. David McWilliams came and looked at me several times. I wouldn't, I wouldn't quite big enough. The offer me to come, you know, be a P W O and do that, do that deal. And and then I was looking at a bunch of Ivy schools and some academies and SMUs and TCUs of the world. And then Bandy called and went up there and just went up there and just absolutely fell in love with it and ended up there.
Speaker 4And you know best friends in my life and great education. And you know one of your mentors and one of my mentors is, you know, our good friend Will Pryor. And you know I just love the fact that I chose Vanderbilt and it was. It was great for me and for my. You know where I am today? No man, I think that's.
Speaker 2That's a great great story because I feel the same way about the University of Texas with the people that I've met when I, when I, when I got there, how I'm lifelong friends with them now and I had.
Speaker 2We do have a mutual friend from back in Shreveport, wilbur Wilbur Pryor, will Pryor, and when you said that you know going to academic route and going and going to a school like Bandy, I think that's a great, great story.
Speaker 2Like Bandy, will is probably one of the smartest people I know and when I was in high school when I met him, he, he just dropped knowledge and wisdom on me, you know, and I always wanted to be around him whenever our our mutual friend Will Will and I's mutual friend Marshall he's, who's also an attorney in Shreveport, would get us all together and and, honestly, man, that was the first time that I met a young, very, very successful black attorney in Shreveport, louisiana, you know.
Speaker 2And so it was just inspiring that he, you know, pulled himself up by his bootstraps, went up to to Vanderbilt, got a great education, played football and and got to have a really good friendship and relationship with you. But he was just inspiring to me as a young man in high school, thinking outside of football, because I knew then that football was just a catalyst to get me to where I need to be. Football was my body was going to go out on me at some point, to where I needed to do something else and Will put that in my head that there's going to be life out of football and you need to be thinking about that. So that was that's. That's my little two cents on the camaraderie that you get within college, you know.
Speaker 4Yep, yes, sir.
Speaker 1So before, before we keep that love I'm a big, since I'm an ADHD guy. I love photos, love this. You know you'd think I was eight years old. I'm always looking at photos. But if you look at Clint, I mean, don't sell yourself short, Clint. This is when he was at Austin High, loyal, forever, Maroon. There's a striking resemblance there with you and Ed and I have to admit not because I'm an AISD homer or product of, but this was on the front end of the last great decade of AISD athletics or for football, and back then you played. What was it? There were, it was the district champion and the runner up got into the post. That was a good district right.
Speaker 4Two of us. Yes, sir, and Westlake had just come in, but only two teams UIL, two teams for district came out. And so you know, we back then. I can go on a soapbox, but I go into inner city schools. Any school district over over three high schools is they are handcuffed relative to single member school districts these days, and so that was not the case back then. So you had Dallas Carter's and you had the Houston Yates right, and then you had some big programs coming out. But in Austin you had LBJ, you had Reagan right, you had we weren't Austin High. It wasn't any good. But you know Crockett would jump in there every now and then, and Westlake Mark Burdock, they would make some runs, and so it was a different time. You know missed those days, especially for AISD. We're very, very supportive of AISD and want the best for AISD and all AISD athletics, but it's we're up against it today relative to 1990. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1It's changed drastically and you know I had to throw it up there. I mean, I know this is about this family and Ed right now, but also I mean for everyone's always looking and Steve and I talk about this a lot for some form of motivation. This is the beginning of a new year. Everyone has a goal or a resolution or several, but you kind of utilized your relationships and from Vanderbilt to where you are now with your company I mean Clint Small Custom Homes I mean how did all that start? I mean you have it's quite a background, quite a story I know Well yeah, I coming out of Andy.
Speaker 4You know our friend Will Pryor, steve, he's in our mentor. He's mentored me and both Steve. But he was attorney and I got into the LBJ school and went to public affairs school back here in Texas and went to capital. I was thinking I'd be an attorney, similar to my father and grandfather and quite honestly I just could not stand to wear a suit and ride at work every day. I just got tired of it after about four years and nobody wears suit and ties anymore. But you know, in the early 90s we still were in the mid 90s and so I got out and learned from my father, my grandfather, working out at the farm, just building stuff, working with the hands, and I ended up getting a great job with a builder named Brian Bailey and he was one of the best and I've been building ever since.
Speaker 2So you do have a degree from the University of Texas.
Speaker 4Almost, steve. I went to the LBJ school and I walked across the stage and I have a piece of paper that says when you turn, your thesis will give you your diploma. And that was almost 30 years ago.
Speaker 2Did I hear somebody laughing in the background?
Speaker 4That's a running jug in the family, but I put that in. Not that I use resumes anymore, but I'll put thesis pending. And I had terrible grades at Vanderbilt. I did my best I could, but when I went to LBJ school, I don't know I had a three, five or better and I never wrote my thesis and I just come on man, come on, are you able to go ahead and write that in turn, then I would love for you to write that for me, ai.
Speaker 1AI will do it.
Speaker 4I'm not a really good example for my kids. As far as I think about it, Nah, he's okay man, he's like dad.
Speaker 2It's okay. That thesis gave me a. That, without having a thesis, gave me a great life. So you're good man.
Speaker 1We're gonna bring up Circleback. You're in about 10 or 12 minutes about your wife laughing in the background about her and your daughter. I definitely. I just want to show talk about more about Ed, because this is, this is unreal what you're. You're, you're gonna pretty much write your ticket if you continue this path where you are. I know right now you're one of the, I would say, the top five baseball players in the state of Texas for your class football and I'm going to bring up the stats in a minute. But Stevie, I mean I don't know, I've never met whether it be friends with or in my former career, someone who is as high a performer or the top 5% of for two different major sports. I mean, ed, you don't even think about it. You just it's just love. I mean passion, I mean what I mean. Now you've got some big decisions and I know in the end it's gonna be your decision.
Speaker 3Yeah, sir, yes, sir, um, definitely, uh, this spring will be big um, which is baseball, and then recruiting for football.
Speaker 4Um Well, back up and tell him. Tell him how it started in ninth grade.
Speaker 3Um well, it really started in eighth grade, eighth grade, so my eighth grade spring I heard my arms. I didn't really play, but then, when the summer of my eighth year going into my freshman year, I had a really good summer in baseball. Um, then I started talking, because baseball recruiting starts a lot, uh, earlier than football does. So I had a few calls with I think it was like Tennessee, tcu, stanford, like a few in Texas too, and in Duke maybe, and then, but Texas was calling me the most, it seemed like. And then I went to a camp, um, the following January and I did well at that camp and then the next weekend I got offered for baseball and then I committed right on the like, right after I got the offer, um, which is pretty cool yeah.
Speaker 2You committed to Texas. Right now, are you you kind of backing out of that?
Speaker 3I'm still committed for baseball, yes, sir.
Speaker 2You're still committed for baseball.
Speaker 3Yes, sir.
Speaker 2Okay, all right, man, you're about to break my heart because I saw the, uh, I saw the commitment to Texas right here, man, and so congratulations. That's awesome, dude. And Clint, that's actually awesome to have a kid, um, that you don't have to pay for to go to college. You know what I mean.
Speaker 4Yes, I have a daughter at Dartmouth, and so I, yes, I feel you. There you go.
Speaker 1So this is what I was talking about, stevie Um, since it's freshman year, I mean not many people can dream up these numbers and he still hasn't season to go in football. I mean it's unreal 153 receptions, almost 2,500 yards. This is just receiving, and or is that? Is that receiving, or did I get it wrong, or is that?
Speaker 3combined. I think that's receiving, but I my freshman year got cut short because I uh so.
Speaker 4So you didn't get his freshman year stats, what he's trying to say, but he has uh. He has uh to kick off returns, uh for touchdowns as well.
Speaker 3I've thrown to. I mean, he's thrown to touch. I didn't get one this year, which kind of which was unfortunate. I was hoping to get one every year, but maybe we get one this coming year.
Speaker 1Stevie, he's one of those guys that teams, I'd say, two thirds of the time they have to gang tackle every time.
Speaker 2That's you. You know what I would say, something you must got that, uh, that, that lower body strength like your dad. Huh, sir, sir.
Speaker 3I got to speak to my mom and strength from my dad.
Speaker 2There you go, man Cause. I talked to Wilbur William prior and, um, he told me your dad's nickname. Do you know your dad's nickname From college? Yeah, and he wrote to me. He said, not from the rapper, but from other reasons. I'll let him tell you that reason.
Speaker 1Why don't we have Clint tell us where he got, how that name came about?
Speaker 4I mean it was, it was the first day of two of days and so back then Stevie, uh, actually year a little bit later, so I don't know if y'all broke off, but freshman came in still um, and when I was there at 90 and we had four days of two of days with the freshman only and the varsity and they varsity was all around, but they were, you know, they weren't practicing with us the very first day from, uh, uh, derek Bozier, from Hansville, louisiana, where Hansville is a big boss man, big boss man, he walking around and I'm going to shower and and he just says, gosh, damn, you have the biggest ass of any wife I've ever seen. And you know I was in biggie Smalls, was blowing up, and I mean, from then on I was biggie, smalls, smalls. I'm my kids, everybody knows it. You know, I'm just biggie.
Speaker 2So yeah, I love it, man, that's awesome. So, uh, you get your lower body strength from your dad, yeah.
Playing Multiple Sports at High Level
Speaker 1Let us in from mama. Yeah, man, so this is so I gotta. I gotta say thanks again, because who goes to San Antonio, which is 80 miles away or, depending on what's out of town, a hundred, but plays golf, hustles back for a podcast and that's. This is the reason why I mean the all-american, which is the high school all-star game. All-american game is san itinerary. They have a national combine for underclassmen, is that right? Well, I mean, you've been in a few of these, right? Is this the biggest one you've been a part of?
Speaker 3This is the biggest one I've been a part of so far.
Speaker 1What, uh, did you kind of have an opportunity? I mean, is it basically the top positions, top at each position in the country?
Speaker 3Yeah, so there's a. There was like 600 or so people there, so it was a pretty big event and they send out invites like throughout the fall. They have like recruiting coordinators that go to games all across the country, and then I got invited after the Dell Valley game this year because there was a guy there from I think it's uh, same as Anthony Williams.
Speaker 3Oh yeah, great good, human Williams, little coach, yeah. And then we got there the day before it was on Friday, we got there Thursday and then it was all all day Friday. It was a long day, but it was a lot of fun.
Speaker 1No, that's well worth it. And you got to play one of the golf courses on my list that probably don't want me there, because I will create a ton of divots in this beautiful course. There's absolutely no doubt that'll happen. Stevie, that will. I mean. I need lessons from you.
Speaker 2No, you don't need lessons from me at all. My uh, my golf game consists of a lot of cigars and drinking, so it's social, it's a social hour for me, that's a great question. I got a quick question, man. Um, being a two sport athlete, uh, do you get this all the time. I want to ask you where are you leaning what? What sport are you leaning towards?
Speaker 3I'm leaning towards football right now.
Speaker 2Yeah, now do you want to be one of those dual athletes in college?
Speaker 3I'm thinking about it. I'm not quite sure right now. I'm gonna see how the spring goes, just with baseball. It's with every one. Yeah, because we?
Speaker 2we don't hardly see that these days, right, clint?
Speaker 4No, sir, no it's, it's uncommon, um, you know, just, I'm his dad, but but I can, I'm gonna be. Uh, I think I can be honest about it. He has the ability to do it and it will. It will take, but it will take the right situation right. It'll take the right institution coaches to understand and to be willing to, to let them play both. Uh, skill wise, physically he can, he can play both at a power 5d1 level. Um, but uh, it's just gonna take the right opportunity and the right coaching and the right, you know uh, support staff.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1I was gonna ask you know, coaches and I this is something that, um, I mean my opinion does not matter, but you hear it a lot with a lot of you know, some of the 5a, 6a schools in Texas, uh, focus on one sport more. I'm totally against that. Yes, sir, I mean, surely you're a huge advocate against that, because everyone matures differently as far as their body physically. And Clint, you know, I mean you, you work with young people and develop in baseball. I mean, are you an advocate of that too, or am I off base on that?
Speaker 3No, I mean I I think it's great, just because I mean, first of all, if you play one sport year round, you can get burnt out real easily, and so taking breaks from each one is very important just to get your mind reset to play the sport and the season that it requires. Um, because baseball means a long season, I mean I'll start, I mean we'll start in a few days when we get back to school, and then it'll go till May and then I've been playing summer ball and that goes till the end of July. So the season's real long and it's easy to just get caught up in it and like get lazy and like a mindset of playing every day and so taking a break in the fall playing football, um, it's great just to get everything reset and have a just a new perspective on the sport.
Speaker 1I mean I'll have to add. I mean, if you have not seen him play um to me, I don't think you you've never not enjoyed every down. You're having fun. Yes, sir, I mean, and Clint, do you kind of see? I mean I know we're tied to Anderson high school, but and uh, stevie, you gotta watch this next season. Seriously, just check, check him out. I feel like you've kind of elevated everyone else around you. Is that a fair assessment?
Speaker 3I think so. I think, just as I've like grown each year. Um, it was kind of hard to leave freshman year because I was like the new guy on the bar, but then it built into sophomore year and I was more vocal, and especially this past year I was definitely more vocal and just lifting everyone up, especially because we had a, a young team. This year we had a bunch of sophomores having to play and we didn't have. We had like how many seniors like 15? I mean like 15? A lot, yeah. So we barely had any um, but now our, our junior class is pretty strong. So I think this this next year should be at least my best year here at Anderson and hopefully make the push for the playoffs.
Speaker 2Well, whenever we finish a season, man, we never call ourselves juniors anymore. You're a senior now. I guess I am a senior you are a senior now.
Speaker 2So, uh, in the off season workouts in the summertime, man, you take, take control of the team, just like you're a senior, because you are now. You are the leader on the team and it already sounds like you. You know that, but I'm just, I'm preaching to the choir. You are a senior now. So take, take control of it, man, and have fun. Just have fun. I, I remember my high school days. I'm sure your dad remember his high school days, and just that's the main thing right now. It's just to have fun, relax and play your game. Yes, sir, yeah.
Speaker 1Hey, clint, I was gonna ask you you know you talk about. I know we were harped on everyone playing multiple sports right now, but at that high level I mean we saw it when we you and I were younger. You saw the Seymour Rens do it, peter Gardier do it at Texas. There were a couple of Johnny Walker baseball football. Do you think it's just too much of a demand or just takes a very unique talent or person, because nowadays it just seems like there's more of a demand to do that at that high level.
Speaker 4I think coaches, the high school coaches, will preach playing multiple sports. I think they believe in that. Some programs, bigger programs that are I'm going back to a single school district just big craziness and and I think there's actually a little bit more pressure from parent to family and to to to focus on one versus the other within the group. But I, I think every head coach would say if you want to play basketball, you want to play baseball. If you want to go wrestle, you play football, don't do all that. I honestly think they'll see that Now, to do it at a high level is is something.
Speaker 4It takes a little. Somebody special as a baseball team, a select baseball team in the summer is one of the top 10 in the country for the last three, four years and on that team he's got, you know, players who I would say until last year but there were half of them at least were dual sport athletes, right and so, and they are high level baseball guys. I think are seven guys on his summer team that are already committed to play college and more 10 now and so and so there's a when you get to that level, it's, it's, it's great, but to then to your point to be able to play both in college. You know it takes, it takes, it takes an institution and it takes a player and a family to to make all that come together.
Speaker 2So yeah well, I've had this argument before with, uh, with friends, I think um, I think it still can be done. I just don't think that coaches are being collaborative, right? So the baseball coach wants it full time and then the football coach wants it full time, and um and so. But for a two sport athlete to actually be successful at both, these two coaches going to have to work together to mentor and uh and lead this athlete. You know what I mean.
Speaker 4So so our head baseball coach is Ed's wide receiver coach.
Speaker 2Oh, there you go oh, there you go, so, and that's why we got it right now. So if that wasn't the case, then we may be looking at something totally different.
Speaker 4So you have to have the institution, whether it be college or high school, but the coaches have to be aligned right.
Speaker 2They have to be aligned and collab together, man and um, what do we say? Uh, collab without ego, right, because there's going to be times where the baseball coach's going to need them more and the football coach is going to have to kind of put the backseat on practice a little bit, you know, and so they just really have to collab, I guess. So I don't think that college coaches are doing that nowadays. It's just, I think, the pressures of high salaries that we're paying these guys too that they want to keep their, their, their athletes to themselves, you know.
Speaker 4I think Allison uh told me other day I think there's seven to nine, 15 division, one uh athletes that are playing both in power, five. There's only you know two or three and so it's hard, that's that's a very minute.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's very, very small. That's um in a and a sport with what? 116 d1 schools, you know, and so you only have five players doing it.
Speaker 1So I'm happy to be sitting here with somebody that's going to be doing it, you know hey, ed, speaking of that, I mean you're not going to allow pressure from anyone or any direction to you know, push a date on you or make a decision, ideally. How do you want to handle this as far as when you finally make up, do you have a time frame, or is it just you're going to go with your gut feeling?
Speaker 3um, I'm definitely going to wait until next fall and just see how it all hands out. I don't want to rush anything really, yeah, okay okay, first I heard that I don't know.
Speaker 2No, I mean say listen, hey. And now so back in the days when we were being recruited, clint, like they didn't fly our families out and things that you know, you all enjoy the fruits of his late or your labor and his labor's man, these schools, um yeah yeah, but no, you're right.
Speaker 4I mean we didn't. We didn't go on. We didn't go on a recruiting trips. We didn't talk to anybody other than a letter and a mail until November of your senior year. Yeah, and you get a six weeks to figure it out.
Speaker 2Yeah let these, let these schools spend all this money on him. Man, yeah, man. So if you don't do it, the hey man make a commitment on the last possible day that you can, you know man, that's uh you know, money you can't get man because we didn't get it yeah, that's another factor.
Speaker 1I mean that's I don't know how much that's been discussed on your recruiting, but now I'm starting to hear from, uh, other friends of mine's who kids are going through it and NILs are entirely different animal as far as recruiting. I mean, I I don't know how much that'll sway a decision, but man, if someone can provide me a salary for just showing up and going to class and practicing, that would weigh heavy in my decision.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's our decision, though, man. That's because of us. I'm sure that Ed has everything that he needs and he can make a decision based on academics and athletics. He doesn't have to worry about the NIL money, but get as much as you can, sir. But you know, it would have been different for me, man, it would have been the money, the academics, football, the high second.
Speaker 1Tweet a little bit, make an Instagram appearance.
Speaker 4Yeah exactly. We haven't talked to anybody about NIL. Made zero conversations.
Speaker 4That's kind of encouraging actually Getting committed to Texas baseball for two years, zero conversations. You know TCU offer zero conversations. Other school, just that That'll. I think that'll just be organic and that'll happen. When it happens. That's not going to be something that we bring up. You know it's Ed's decision for the right institution, the right academics, the right fit, the right feel, the right playing time, right the right you know. So it's. You know he's a. He's a slot receiver and in most people's mind he can play outside all day long, but he's six foot and a lot of coaches may just put him as a slot, and so he also got to find out what the best offense is for a slot receiver, got you, got you.
Speaker 1That's a really good point.
Speaker 2Ed, did you ever play any defense?
Speaker 3I did in middles. I did all like all grown up. Yeah, I haven't since. I might play some next year though.
Speaker 2What do you like better? Did you like offense better? I?
Speaker 3yeah, well, I played running back from Pop Warner all the way to eighth grade and then when I got to Anderson I played receiver, I played outside of receiver in my freshman year and then I played slot the last two years. That's awesome.
Speaker 1He's built for the slot. Let's talk about two young ladies here. First of all, clint's wife, your mother. She's the only Hall of Famer in your family.
Speaker 4Yeah, I'll bring her in, I'll hold them. Yeah, she said not. Okay, she said absolutely not. She is the only Hall of Famer in our family.
Speaker 1Yes, she was at a division. What is it? She's division three.
Speaker 4She went to Denison. She's in their Hall of Fame and she still holds the record for most points scored, and I guess her senior year she was an all-American division three basketball player point guard.
Speaker 1Look at that. Wow, lots of ballers in the small family.
Speaker 2Wait, so wait. Your wife played basketball. Yes, sir Okay. And your daughter played lacrosse. Yes, she played lacrosse at Dartmouth. Yeah, yeah, gotcha man, just athletic family all around.
Speaker 1Ah, that's beautiful. That's a pretty cool story. Hey, you guys, this is something we've had. I know this was this episode 340. We've had at least. Everybody wants to offer two, we try to get one. So we had over 600 different man cave stories, which are phenomenal. I mean, some of the stories they should not have told because they came from the locker room, but it was hilarious, I loved it. Is there anything that any story that you guys as a family remember that happened, or maybe anything sports related that is as comical today as it was when it happened?
Speaker 4For me, you know it stuck with me. For you know, the last 40, 35 years was when big boss man Derek Rosier, nick made me biggie, you know. Day two going into the showers, like you know, you got the biggest ass many white men have ever seen. And that's just carried on for 35 years. Yeah, man.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 4A locker room story.
Speaker 1That's good stuff. Did you get those big ass genetics Ed?
Speaker 3Yes.
Speaker 4Unfortunately, everybody on our side of the family, man or woman, has that strength. Now it's a positive right now on their playing athletics and as a cousin who's starting a freshman at Georgia volleyball, she's center. She's six to another cousin starting Michigan lacrosse. She's a senior, she's a middie sisters starting up a Dartmouth attack and then his younger cousins are working their way in that direction too. All of them have pretty thick, pretty thick legs, pretty thick thighs and asses.
Speaker 2That's good stuff, man. It runs in the family bro.
Speaker 1Oh, that's awesome. That is good. It's a little bit of ghetto, you know you got to get that. Little thickness is never is never a bad thing.
Speaker 7No, no, no no.
Speaker 2You went to certain ranks, a lot huh SLA tricks with an Oakland moody Baby got back in here huh, one of the teams that didn't make it but had a great year.
Speaker 1But we'll start with Ed. You know you've got Michigan, midwest type team physical. Then you got Washington, the team that knocked Texas out, who I think a lot of people think the best quarterback in the country who wins.
Speaker 3I think Michigan's going to win just because their defense is so good and Washington's receivers are pretty much unguardable. But Will Johnson's Michigan's best corner and he's going to be on what's his name? The number one on Washington. It's like Rome and doon say he's going to go out in the whole game. I think Michigan's going to slow it down to where it's lower scoring.
Speaker 4What do you think, clint? We were fortunate to go up to the Michigan Ohio State to the game, thanks, and and I actually not going back to the house, we're one ticket short. But Michigan stout, right they are. They are defensively in offensive line, even though they lost that left guard center in that game. They are just really strong and I think that they're. I think they're on a mission you know for for hardball for the last three years getting knocked out. I think. I think it's their year.
Speaker 1I agree, stevie, you kind of feel the same way.
Speaker 2No, not at all. Not at all. No, I got Washington man, even though they kicked us out. Yeah, pinnocks, if you really watch the game against us Texas and Washington game our DBS were actually there. Yeah, yeah, that he was so good. Pinnocks just can't be stopped. Yeah, he was dropping the ball in the exact spot where it needs to be. We even got hands on the ball and they still caught it right. So you can't be a quarterback when you are guarding him perfectly.
Speaker 2There was some big plays and they beat us off of explosive plays. Right, we had a few explosive plays in the end because we had to get them, but we were like driving down the field like you're supposed to do and eating up the clock. We were playing the game like we wanted to, on offense for the most part. There were some drives that stalled, but Pinnocks found a way to win. He's the X factor that had them winning the game because, just like and getting his receivers in stride, our DBS were there on them with almost perfect coverage, and the only reason I don't say perfect coverage because the receiver caught the ball, just because where the ball was placed, and so I got Washington. He's going to continue to do that. He is the best quarterback in the country. Shout out to the kid from LSU that got the Heisman. But once again they got it wrong. They got it wrong because we all know that Vince. Can we all agree to venture the one over Reggie Bulls?
Speaker 1Yes, Absolutely Hands down.
Speaker 2Thank you. You rolled your eyes a little bit, Clint, when you said that.
Speaker 4Because it's just such a silly comment, it's a statement, of course. I mean, he's the best all year. All Reggie did, he was great, but he had that one flip in the end zone on the left side and he had another got to flip the on the right side and he got eyeballs and that was it.
Speaker 2Yeah, and sports writers sometimes should not be sports writers.
Speaker 4It was 100%.
Speaker 1I will agree on that one.
Speaker 2The ones that vote should not be voting sometimes you know.
Speaker 7So no, no.
Speaker 2Pinnocks is. I believe he's the best quarterback in the country and he's going to lead his team to victory, I believe.
Speaker 1I'm with Ed and Clint the reason why I say that.
Speaker 2Come on man.
Speaker 1Oh, listen, listen. You saw how well Texas ran against that defense. They couldn't stop the Texas run until they started fumbling. That's Michigan's run, a game they're going to eat, they're going to win time of possession, maybe double it, and they're going to run all day. That's all they need to do, okay.
Speaker 2All right Okay.
Speaker 1But they're going to give up 27 points.
Speaker 2No more than that. More than that, Pinnocks cannot be stopped. No one stopped them yet.
Speaker 1I'll say 31, 27, michigan.
Speaker 2Okay, all right.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2All right, all right. So y'all going to all be buying me a drink and a pizza.
Speaker 1Hey, clint and Ed, I appreciate you guys making time for this. Really do it's a. It's too good a story Not to tell. Everyone needs to know. I know it's a. When you guys do interviews, it's made about what what Ed is doing right now, when's he about recruiting, and I know it's repetitive, but you and your family have a great story and I was like man, we can't miss this Especially right now because you're going to be gone before it's all said and done.
Speaker 1Then we get into a university. We can't talk to you, no.
Speaker 2I think that you guys the story is awesome. I love that you guys can can trace it and go all the way back to 1935, man, that is, that is something that you should hang on to and chairs. And then you're you know, clint obviously marrying up with Marrying another athlete. You know, and you know, people tell me all the time I'll kick my coverage too. So yeah, thanks, clint, so yeah.
Speaker 1I mean it's a.
Speaker 2y'all have a great story, man. Y'all embrace it and you can tell that you guys are, are tight knit family. So, man, just continue to love on each other, and, and, and, and. Wish you all the success in the world, man. Thank you, yeah, yeah, we'll definitely keep in touch.
Speaker 1And, by the way, stevie, what cool story there. When he was playing for Matt Brown, his now wife, summer, was a cheerleader at Texas. How about that?
Speaker 4Pretty cool story.
Speaker 2Yeah, I married up man. I'm telling you, dude, I'll kick my. What we have to do, do what.
Speaker 1I tried once and it failed, but it won't these days. We'll do it again. No time soon, though man Don't worry about it.
Speaker 2It's a story of life. Hey, thanks guys. I appreciate the opportunity.
Speaker 1You guys, you guys, happy new year.
Speaker 4We'll see you guys soon and on the other side.
Speaker 1Look, we have two division champions in the Lone Star State. We'll talk about. I cannot wait to hear Stevie's feedback on that and we'll talk about it. I'm going to talk about it. I'm going to talk about it. I'm going to talk about it, I'm going to talk about it, I'm going to talk about it. Let me explain. Haha, we'll be back on that.
Speaker 6준's set a record. But for now here's a Stevie Lee acting here at Hargrove Roofing. We tried to think outside the box, to kind of get the creative juices flowing. So I brought in my friend Stevie Le, harmful highest tackle for the Texas Longhorns.
Speaker 2Uh, he's going to help the team strategize, really motivate them light of fire. This guys going to block down. Mike Linebacker gets free to do what.
Speaker 6Not only are they gonna learn a thing or two, but they're gonna also leave with a great attitude and a bunch of smiles on their faces.
Speaker 1I'm sorry, what does this?
Speaker 3have to do with roofing. Exactly, get out Right now. I said get out.
Speaker 6For me, that's what it's all about. It's just having fun making our employees have a great time. Hard-grow Roofing Know who's on your roof.
Speaker 2We got special people in this room. This is a special group of men. Believe it.
Speaker 1Continue to lean on each other, continue to trust in each other, we can go as far as we want to go. How about that, dude who? Would have guessed the Texas, they've won. I mean, they've lost like 26 games in the last two years. And here we go, the Brady Bunch boxes all over the damn place. I just think CJ Stroud, if he would not have missed two games, he's probably the player of the year.
Speaker 2Yeah, he came along towards the end of the year, man, I was surprised at the way he played and picked up the offense that easily. But it's really cool to have the two Texas teams in the playoffs this year.
Speaker 1Man, it's really neat 10-7, the Texans record, and I've you know. Here's something funny D'Amico Ryan's the Texans head coach Toward the last see. I covered the Texans in person when they started with the training camp. D'amico Ryan's, I think, arrived in the third or fourth year. I think in the fifth he was a defensive lineman. And look full circle, man, he's the head coach. Well spoken, incredibly intelligent, knows how to relate players and dig, to touch and reach every player who's a grown man, man that's saying something in three, 26 losses in the previous two years. And look at him now.
Speaker 2Yeah, no, they're definitely on this upward trajectory. I think they're ahead of schedule right now too. Yeah, so they could be good for a long time if they you know draft correctly and make some the correct trade to get some people around CJ, and they can be good for a long time.
Speaker 1How about them?
Speaker 2cowboys baby. How about them cowboys man? You know? Funny story. I was in AT&T stadium this morning, my friend Philip. I went to go see his son play Flag football the you know the whole flag craze going across the world. He had playoffs this today so I went up there to watch him play and His nine you team Wanted championship, so it was really fun to watch. Yep, yeah, man.
Speaker 1So you were there. You gave them good luck. Cowboys, third straight year they finished with 12 wins in the regular season. Nfc East champions. Everybody thought early I mean every game. People need to learn that don't get so caught up in the lead, such as Philly had early in the year, but that press got 35 touchdown passes this year. I really think he's had a great year. I really do. And you know Micah Parsons tremendous. I mean, it's unreal what he has done. He is the leader. I think he's had 40 plus sacks Already already. But guess who they play?
Speaker 2they're gonna host the wildcard round, they're gonna host Green Bay and Green Bay has Dallas's number in the postseason mmm it's time to end that the Houston Texans and the Dallas Cowboys are in the playoffs and you know the University of Texas was represented in the college football playoffs. Man, texas football is looking really, really good right now, all around well.
Speaker 1They are. But there are some questions here because, as you move forward, I mean, we're all. We all know that the transfer portal is not going anywhere and it and I like is it's existence.
Speaker 1It just needs to evolve. But here's all the and it's. Some of these shocked me. In addition to the guys who declared for the NFL draft, that being Jonathan Brooks, byron Murphy, jt Sanders, ryan Watts going to the NFL draft, of course, jordan Whittington and X Xavier Worthy, these are all the portal entries from the Longhorns. I Mean what does this tell you? I mean we you got jaren Thompson, who has played significant downs for Texas over the last three years, leaving. What does that tell you? As someone who is a lot more in the know than I probably am, more than likely.
Speaker 2Honestly, clint, sometimes I don't know. Yeah, like jaren, I don't know why he would. He would go into the transfer portal, right, and there's some. There's some other kids at other schools that I don't know why. Now it could be he needs a payday, so putting himself out there and this is just speculation, I don't, I don't know this for sure and anything like that but he may need the money At this point to go out there and test how much he could get in the transfer portal. That could be a factor, I don't know, but it's mind-boggling to me.
Speaker 2When you get significant playing time, you know you're gonna get even more playing time coming up. Why would you hit the portal, you know? So we do need to figure this whole thing out and see what's actually going on and and and why these kids or are and again, we don't get paid the big bucks to figure this out, no, the coaches do right, and I've got a feeling there ain't four raises coming up this year too. So they got to figure out how we need to keep the people that we want to keep. Yeah, and the same breath in the same breath.
Speaker 2Now, you know, we don't know if our coaches are telling these kids. Well, you know, we got somebody else coming in that we're gonna take a hard, hard look at, so that person might be playing a little bit more and then some of these kids on this list may get Disgruntled with that, right you know. So it's a, it's a lot that goes on and into it to try to figure out if you're gonna transfer or not. And I hope these kids aren't taking this lightly because this is a big deal, you know no, I agree.
Speaker 2Yeah. So I don't know, man, it's, it's. I want to get to the bottom of it and I think I'm gonna take that as a mission.
Speaker 1Yeah, you know I wanted to do. Saw your Gorham Welch Justice by everybody seeing his name too, because it was covered up right here, you know. But yeah, you know, that's the name of the game now ever. The fans have got to adjust. The fans have got to understand. This is where we are now and it gives kids an opportunity. It's just you, I just don't. I think we need to eliminate Multiple transfers. You get an opportunity to go go somewhere else. It's a better fit without losing. You should never lose eligibility if you're not happy, but you shouldn't be able to go multiple times.
Speaker 2Well, isn't it now to the second transfer? You have to sit out, you lose a year.
Speaker 1Something may have changed today, and I'm not aware of some.
Speaker 2Let's just a wild, wild west man tick talking in a man cave.
Speaker 1Two people I know actually Sam Gannon was my predecessor or successor in Oklahoma City. She's now in Dallas, fort Worth, and she and Mr Ducey, who is the well established Sports director at the Fox affiliate, and that the fddup. Well, they're a team and they do great work and so they're taking on. They took on one of the social media trends and this was absolutely spot-on and hilarious.
Speaker 7Co-hosts. Of course, they paired you with someone 30 years younger to create a different dynamic.
Speaker 5We're co-hosts so of course, every time we're out in public, I get referred to as your dad or, even worse, your grandpa.
Speaker 7We're co-hosts, of course we're gonna complain about different things at the same time, so neither of us can get a word in edge-wise. We're co-hosts, so of course I have to bore you with stories about the good old days and how these days never, ever could compare to the good old Days we're co-hosts, of course, I have to pretend like I'm hearing your stories for the first time and react with the same Enthusiasm, even though I've heard it about 500 times.
Speaker 5We're co-hosts, of course we enjoy doing the show as much as we say we do, just wish I had a little more airtime, you know what I mean, sam.
Speaker 6Gannon.
Speaker 1Mike Ducey that watch or watch them online. No, hmm, they do good work.
Speaker 2That's good stuff.
Speaker 1That's funny, oh my god. That was hilarious and I gotta let her know she finally made the cut on stories inside. The man gave Sam Gannon.
Speaker 2There you go.
Speaker 3Hey, man, tell me something good.
Speaker 1Stevie Lee, it was a rough week getting back into work after all the holidays. Yeah, last week went to work, I showed up and it was sure was difficult mentally. But tell me something good brother.
Speaker 2Man something good. I'm just keep it into Austin. Keep it Austin. Man. Weather's great right now. Get out and do something else, doersie, the Sun is out, it's not too hot, it's not hot at all. Brisk, breezy Air out there, man. Get out and do something, you know. Get some vitamin D, get some sun on you, man.
House Remodel and Personal Reflections
Speaker 1Everyone needs D. I certain amount each day, absolutely, man, tell you something good. I didn't create any graphic for it, but I Thought it was really cool. You saw it. I didn't expect it to be a, the experience it was, but I know where you're going. Yeah, my mom's house.
Speaker 1I sold it to a young couple and the husband reached out to me and asked me I want to take a tour of they, they, they aligned with the right contractors, everything. The home is stunning, beautiful. He asked me a question. He said what we think your mom would think of this and I said you know, my mom was so stuck in her ways that, oh, this is my beauties, is my palace. I don't want to ever change it. She would have stood in that living room and Chin on the ground and man, I wasn't sad, it was just man, great job, you poor. It was a beautiful home for the, the two prides of Shreveport that being hard-groomed roofing know who's on your roof? Not as good as Stevie and Stevie Lee and his beautiful family and the OG man cave boys that being hardball, hard big Mike and coach phone Little bit tells. Okay, wait we out.
Speaker 6You see that shit, baby, I'm fitted, I'm in my car nかった. Yeah, yeah you.