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January 8, 2025 โ€ข 16 mins
Weโ€™re talking all things Longhorn football with the legendary Craig Way! ๐Ÿˆ From game-day stories to NIL deals, SEC drama, and the Ohio State showdown, this episode has it all. ๐ŸŽ™๏ธ Plus, some surprising trivia about Longhorns' iconic colors and uniforms! Donโ€™t miss the laughs, insights, and behind-the-scenes stories. Watch now or listen wherever you get your podcasts! ๐Ÿงก๐Ÿ‚ #Longhorns #HookEm #CollegeFootball
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
We're back with Craig Way, a voice of the Longhornsports.

(00:03):
Longhorns playing this weekend in Dallas and actually in Arlington
at AT and T Stadium in the Cotton Bowl semi final,
the College football Playoff. They're playing Ohio State, which is
slowly becoming a rivalry game if you ask me, going
back many years, but before we went to the break,
I asked Craig, if you had to do one of
the sports that you call, you know, Craig does football, basketball, baseball,

(00:26):
which one would you do for free?

Speaker 2 (00:28):
That's like asking you would you would you spin Duran,
DURAN or ABC for free? You know, back at the
eighties there, you know, It's like it's like who was
once to work for free?

Speaker 3 (00:38):
Right now? I love I love what I do obviously.

Speaker 2 (00:42):
And that's a variation what you said, Sandy on the
question when folks ask me what's your favorite sport to do?
And I always give the broadcaster cop out answer. And
while it is a cop out answer, it is rooted
in truth. And that is whatever's in season. And what
I mean by that it's more of a physiological and

(01:02):
psychological thing in season. For example, in September, on a
Saturday evening. There's no place I'd rather be than dk
R Texas Memorial Statedum's one hundred and one thousand fans there,
and you feel like you're supposed to be there. I
will also tell you that in March in the NCAA
basketball tournam there's nothing quite like describing a Final Four

(01:23):
or an NCAA tournament game. There you feel you're supposed
to be there. Same story in Omaha for the College
World Series, that's a unique event. It's kind of a
two week fortnighte that just kind of slowly unfolds and
you feel like you're supposed to be in Omaha. I
had somebody once call it the town that time forgot
because every day for about two weeks, you get up,

(01:45):
it's about eighty something degrees, You go to the ballpark,
you do a game. Then you go to either to
an Italian restaurant or a steakhouse or in Omaha what
they have a lot of or Italian steakhouses. You go
there for dinner, You get up the next morning, you
do it all over again. Certain times a year, you
feel you're in the right place and should not be
anywhere else, And it just depends on the time of the.

Speaker 4 (02:06):
Year, Craig, did you know I grew up in Omaha.

Speaker 5 (02:09):
No, I didn't know that, though I love it in summertime. Yeah,
it's a great tent, all right. Trust you're on the spot.
You got to ask Craig a question. If you don't
have one, I can whisper one to you and you.

Speaker 6 (02:19):
Can't ask them.

Speaker 7 (02:20):
Okay, but when I ask it, give me a look
to make tell me if it's a stupid question. A right,
But I have two questions, not unusual for me. My
first question, what of this past Longhorn season, this current
Longhorn season? What was the game you loved calling the most?
Who did they play? What was the most exciting game
for you this season?

Speaker 2 (02:38):
Okay, I would say, you know, it's kind of hard
not to get excited about a win over those guys
ninety five miles to the year, and the mere fact
that it was the restoration of the rivalry between Texas
and Texas.

Speaker 3 (02:57):
And yeah, I like the fact.

Speaker 2 (02:58):
That the company that sponsors, that has the title sponsor
on the game is a restoration company. So that's why
they called it the restoration of the rivalry and not
just the renewal of the rivalry that was that was
really cool on Thanksgiving weekend.

Speaker 6 (03:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
I've got a lot of great memories in Texas against
Texas A and M on even on Thanksgiving night. So
I think a lot of that was really really cool.
So that probably that one.

Speaker 7 (03:21):
Okay, So that's funny that you say that, because my
second question is I love it when the Aggies wear
they're all black uniforms and they're all blacked out. Is
that something we can get the Longhorn stew because I
think that's so intimidating and super cool.

Speaker 4 (03:36):
I keep asking Sandy and he's like.

Speaker 6 (03:38):
I don't know. I don't know if they would do
that or not.

Speaker 3 (03:41):
Trisha, are you an Aggie?

Speaker 4 (03:42):
No, I'm not an Aggy, But they are all black uniforms.
Why can't other people do it too?

Speaker 6 (03:48):
It's scary.

Speaker 3 (03:49):
Well a lot do do it.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
And what we've seen over the last fifteen years probably
is an elevator of black as a third designated home color.

Speaker 3 (04:05):
For a lot of teams.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
Oregon with its Nike based uniforms, you know, and all
that has all those different uniform combinations. Listen, there's two
things that come to my two quotes. Two things that
come to my one, the athletic director of Crystal Conti
has said, our colors are orange and white. They're classic.
We don't want to mess with them that much. The
other is an old classic quote from when Daryl Royal
is the head coach and JB and Sandy are old

(04:30):
enough to remember Daryl Royal so that you know, somebody
asked them about why wouldn't you add another you know,
wear some black or something. This question goes all the
way back into the seventies to early eighties, and they said,
why wouldn't you change the uniform and where's something different?
He said, He goes, Hell, these are work clothes. We're
not going to candy them up. That was his quote

(04:53):
back then. I think there's probably the athletic department is
it feels pretty cool about out what they have. And
I will tell you guys, this Texas is going to
wear white in the Cotton Bowl on Friday Night. Even
though Texas is the designated home team. They've gotten really
fond of wearing those icy whites. Last year they were
the designated home team in the Big curlt Championship and

(05:16):
they wore those white uniforms when they blasted Oklahoma State
in the big CURLT championship game. The players choose that.
A lot of folks say, oh, I can't be are
they super? The players like wearing what they call those
icy whites, white helmet, white jersey top, white pants, or
as I say, on the air, trousers, white socks, white
shoes with burnt orange numerals, lettering and trim. They like

(05:37):
wearing those, and that's why they'll wear white again on
Friday Night.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
Craig Gay, quick question for you, A little trivia question
about burnt orange. Do you know who claims to have
kind of invented that color for the Longhorns.

Speaker 2 (05:50):
I've heard a lot of different stories about this. I
heard it had to do with color shortages during World
War Two, I heard, I heard lots of different they
tell me educated.

Speaker 4 (06:00):
Did you ever hear the name Rooster Andrews?

Speaker 3 (06:02):
Of course I remember the Great Rooster Andrews.

Speaker 1 (06:05):
Yeah, he kind of told JB and I once that
he was somewhat responsible for that classic burnt orange Texas color.

Speaker 4 (06:13):
Whether it's true or not, and it was.

Speaker 6 (06:15):
It wasn't secondhand, He did say that directly to us.

Speaker 2 (06:18):
So yeah, at the time, that would make it, would
it would fit the timeline because Rooster played in the
mid forties during World War Two. How else would a
guy four feet eleven inches tall be even allowed to
be on party Rock kick an extra point against Texas
A and m as did you?

Speaker 3 (06:36):
You know?

Speaker 2 (06:36):
But it might have started out if you go over
to dk R Texas Memorial statem, you go inside Moncrief
there with the athletic displays of trophies and things like that.
There's a helmet there from the early fifties and it's
a brighter orange shoe and then it went more burnt
orange as the decade progressed, and I'm sure Rooster probably

(06:58):
had some input in that.

Speaker 4 (07:00):
Craig Way is our guest JB.

Speaker 6 (07:02):
Yeah, I got to know this because you have a
distinct voice. You know, it's very comforting over all these years,
I'll say that very distinct voice. And in this era
of AI cloning, has has anyone duped your voice?

Speaker 3 (07:17):
Yet?

Speaker 6 (07:17):
It's happened to Joe Rogan. You know, you'll hear some
livery and you're like, wait, that's not me. Has this
happened to you? Because there's a very high monetary value
of your voice, and.

Speaker 4 (07:29):
Especially especially in gaming.

Speaker 6 (07:31):
Yeah, how do you protect that has anything happened and
not how could you protect that if needed?

Speaker 3 (07:37):
Yeah, that's a great question. Nobody.

Speaker 2 (07:39):
Nobody's done it yet. They probably haven't valued my voice enough,
and that's fine. I have friends who do sports radio
in Dallas, guys I went to college with, and they
do what they call the fake Craig Way, where they'll
are mimic some play by play of a high school.
They call a game every week, the Craig wait Orial

(08:00):
high School Game of the Week.

Speaker 3 (08:01):
And the first thing I told them was memorial, I'm
not dead, but.

Speaker 2 (08:05):
They'll they'll take my voice and they'll do goofy things
with it and things like that. So I've also had
people take what's called the uh. They took this, i
think from Jimmy Kimmel, the unnecessary editing of Craig Way,
and then would take like actual play by play calls

(08:26):
of mine and then bleep out certain words to make
it sound like I was actually cussing on the air.

Speaker 3 (08:33):
Oh look at that, you.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
Know, and it sounds like I'm actually cussing. There was
a game against Baylor and Basketball a few years ago,
and there was a tense moment in the game where
the two teams almost got into an altercation. They kind
of got nose to nose And what I actually said
on the air was the better be careful, there's about
to be some serious stuff happen here. Well, I dragged

(08:57):
the word S a little bit when I said serious stuff,
and it sounded like I said the fourth out of the
S worden when those guys got a hold of it.
There's some serious you know. So people have had fun
with it, JD. But I don't think anybody's aied it yet.

Speaker 1 (09:13):
Craig Way, our guests calling the game this weekend, Let's
talk about the game. Ohio State a team that took
a loss to Michigan earlier this season. That may be
the best thing that ever happened to them, because they
sure looked good against Oregon. And how do you see
the Longhorns matching up with the Ohio State Buckets right now?
They're six and a half point underdog.

Speaker 2 (09:33):
Yeah, first time Texas this season has been an underdog
in any game. And this was a this is a
this will be the most difficult test easily. Ohio State
most of the season looked really good. They've lost by
a point.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
Out at Oregon in Oregon at the time was unbeaten.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
Clearly they've avenged that with what they did to the
Ducks in the Rose Bowl game last week. They had
that one big stumble at Michigan, and I know folks
are fond of comparisons in Texas. Of course, went to
ann Arbor early in the season and really just dominated
the game against Michigan. But a good friend of mine
is Paul Keels, to play by play voice of the Buckeyes.
I had him on my show yesterday on A thirteen

(10:11):
Under the Zone, and he was talking about how they've
played angry since that game. And you think about their
two playoff games, the win over Tennessee, a good Tennessee team,
and the win last week in the Rose Bowl over
Oregon were games where they got out of the gate
very quickly and dominated and just blasted both of those teams.
And that's one thing the Longerd's gonna have to guard again.
Don't dig themselves a deep early hole, because it's going

(10:35):
to be extremely difficult to rally against its Ohio State
defense that way. I think, then stand toe to toe
with them. Offensive line will have to play really well.
They're going to have to run the ball better than
the fifty three total yards rushing they had against Arizona State.
I do think the passing game is set up to
have success against Ohio State when yours is feeling better physically,
I think the wide receivers will be ready to go.

(10:57):
And then on the defensive side, there are a Mecha
Buku and Jeremiah Smith are two explosive receivers. The log
Warts haven't really encountered two like that in the course
of a season. They're going to have to deal with that.
And Ohio State has much like Texas does with Contrabuan
Weisner and Jadan Blue. They have a two headed monster

(11:18):
at running back and they're going to have to do
in Quinn Shawn Judkins and Trebion Henderson, so they're going
to have to be buttoned up against the run as well.
This is this is gonna be their biggest challenge with
the season, no doubt.

Speaker 1 (11:29):
Well it should be because they're playing for a chance
to win to play in the National Championship Game. So
hopefully Longhorns can pull it off this weekend. TB go ahead.

Speaker 6 (11:37):
Yeah, I do have one more question because I've there's
no one to ask about this, because no one's an
authority on this subject. You're the closest person I can
think of, Craig. So we're going to the Cotton Ball,
you know, on Friday, in the Cotton Bowls in the
AT and T Stadium, all right, And I always hated
that every other year we take the game out of

(11:57):
Austin enough to Dallas? Why do we have so much
to Dallas? But the real question is is the Cotton
Bowl itself dead? Is it just the state fair that's
keeping it alive?

Speaker 4 (12:08):
How do you talk about it?

Speaker 3 (12:10):
Your Cotton Bowl itself? The game's not having there?

Speaker 4 (12:13):
Yeah, I mean is it is it.

Speaker 3 (12:15):
End of an era?

Speaker 6 (12:16):
Is it time to let that go? Or is it
so classic it needs to stay.

Speaker 4 (12:20):
Well.

Speaker 2 (12:20):
I think there's two different, two different elements at work here.
First of all, with the Cotton Bowl stadium itself and
why the Texas hou game has played on the fairgrounds
of the state of Texas every year, and listening to
past athletic directors, the lost odds for Texas, the current
athletic director at Oklahoma jokistigleone and even crystal'conte CDC the

(12:42):
ad at Texas Now it's it's always been about being
a part of the festivities of the State Fair of Texas,
and the two teams, Texas and OU are almost identically equidistant.
I think one ninety six one hundred ninety six miles
and two hundred and one mile.

Speaker 3 (12:57):
Something like that.

Speaker 2 (12:59):
So it's it all and there's tradition. They've played that
game on those fair grounds continuously since nineteen twenty nine.
There was even before the current Cotton Bowl Stadium itself
was built. In the early thirties, they had an old
fairground stadium, wooden stadium, burned to the ground, and then
they built the new concrete stadium. And if you had

(13:20):
that tradition of it being exactly halfway split down the middle,
no other college football game has that, where the north
end of the stadium is all burnt orange and the
south end of the stadium is white, and it ends
right at the fifty yard line. I always said that
if I wasn't broadcasting the game, I'd like to sit
on the outside of that row right at the fifty
where Texas ends and OU begins, and vice versa, and

(13:42):
just listen to the conversations. So there's a lot of
tradition and history that goes to that. Also, City of Dallas,
to their credit, put up about fifty million dollars in
renovations back several years ago. Now they'redue for more and
I think that that's been approved because the toilet's still
overflow in the cop Ball Stadium. I'm that people have
told me so there's there's things that need to go.

(14:05):
But that's the tradition of why that game is there.
I will tell you this JV. If they ever decide
that they're not going to play that game in the
Cotton Bowl Stadium itself at the State Fair, Texas, it'll
go home and home. They're not going to go to
Jerry World. It's a different thing at at and T Stadium,
Jerry World as we know it in Arlington. That's where

(14:26):
the Big twelve Championship game is played every year. It's
part of the college Football Playoff. The number one reason
why that Cotton Bowl Stadium, Cotton Bowl Game, the Cotton
Bowl Classic as they call the Cotton Bowl Game, moved there.
Climate controlled environment. You know January games. Think about it
this this Friday night. What the temperature is going to
be like in dow the Dallas for where there's going

(14:48):
to bee in the low twenties with possibly snow so
that you know when Sark was playing for BYU, they
played in the Cotton Bowl Game in ninety six against
Kansas State and therember snow everywhere all over the ground.
He said, we were used to it because it was
at BYU, you know where they were in the Wasatch Mountains.
But uh, they in order to be part of the
Cotton Bowl Game and someff it needed a newer, modern

(15:10):
look and that's why they moved that to AT and
T Stadium at Arlington. It's in the rotation and it's
hosted national championships. In fact, the last time Ohio State
won a national title, it was in the AT and
T Stadium.

Speaker 3 (15:22):
So that is there to stay.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
I think for the foreseeable future, the Texas OU Game
is going to remain at the Cotton Bowl Stadium on
the fairgrounds of the State Fair of Texas. If it
were to ever leave, I think they'd go home and home.
But I think they're planning to keep that there as
part of the history and tradition and in environment and
atmosphere of the State Fair.

Speaker 6 (15:44):
As to say I had a feeling you you would
sway my opinion on that, I mean a cold tempts
would certainly favor Ohio State.

Speaker 4 (15:52):
You know, great point, great.

Speaker 3 (15:54):
Point, it'll be nice to be indoors.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
I remember saying that everybody was really really happy that
the playoff game at home against Clemson. It was sixty
five degrees, wonderful and the sun is shining at his
great time. And then I remember thinking, as Texas finished
off that game, they're indoors the rest of the way
to Atlanta. And by the way, it was cold when
they won the Peach Bowl that day. It was cold

(16:17):
Atlanta and then here, and if they win again, it's
back to Atlanta one more time for the National Championship.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
Catch Craig Way every afternoon on our sister station AM
thirteen hundred Zone. Of course, he's got the call of
the game this weekend against Ohio State.
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