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James Lowell Street (August 2, 1948 – September 30, 2013) was a two-sport star athlete at the University of Texas.As quarterback, he led the team to the 1969 National Championship in football and posted a perfect 20-0 record, the most wins without a loss in Longhorns history.
This is a list of the starting quarterbacks for the Texas Longhorns football teams since 1944. [1] They are listed in order of the first game each player started for the Longhorns that season. A player is credited with a win if he started the game and the team won that game, no matter if the player was injured or permanently removed after the ...
The 1969 Texas Longhorns football team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 1969 NCAA University Division football season.The Longhorns won all eleven games to win their second consensus national championship; [1] the first was six seasons earlier in 1963.
Texas quarterback James Street scrambled for a touchdown on the first play of the fourth quarter. Longhorns coach Darrell Royal had decided before the game to go for two after the Longhorns' first touchdown to avoid a tie, and Street dove into the end zone to make it 14–8. This was an unusual decision since most teams would have delayed the ...
Freddie Steinmark (January 27, 1949 – June 6, 1971) was an American college football player for the University of Texas Longhorns.He inspired his teammates by his faith after his diagnosis of bone cancer and subsequent leg amputation during his junior year.
Longtime Democratic strategist James Carville said Democrats ran their '7th string quarterback' in the 2024 presidential election, in an interview with PBS on Friday.
For the second time in as many seasons, Coastal Carolina’s regular season came to a crashing end at the hands of James Madison on Saturday. The Dukes (11-1), coming off their first loss of the ...
Founder of the UT quarterback club. [3] Walter Slater 1946 Buzz Warren: 1943–1944 Jim Gaffney 1943 1943 season suspended due to WWII Johnny Butler 1941 Butler wore number 22. Van Thompson 1940 George Cafego: 1938–1939 Two-time All-American. Heisman finalist. Number 1 overall pick of 1940 NFL draft. Walter Wood 1937 Phil Dickens 1935–1936