Dallas, TX
Plano East’s unexpected turnaround resembles other Dallas-area comeback seasons
Tony Benedetto remembers how difficult it was to go seven straight Friday nights with no wins last football season.
He was in his first year as head coach at Plano East, which finished 3–7 overall and winless in District 6-6A to miss the playoffs.
“It’s hard to come back after you work 90 hours a week and you come back with a defeat,” Benedetto said. “That was not easy.”
But this season, Plano East defied expectations by finishing 6–4 and clenching a playoff spot on Friday after a 30-18 upset win over Flower Mound Marcus.
Plano East meets Prosper on Friday for the first round of the postseason.
“I get emotional thinking about [the players],” Benedetto said. “There were tears on Friday night. There were even tears earlier in the season when we won games that no one thought that they could.”
Plano East is one of several teams in the Dallas area that turned things around this season to make the playoffs and change the narrative about their programs.
Area coaches attribute the shift to developing new strategies for success, building team morale and maintaining patience with younger players still in development. Others say they had to hold themselves accountable as well.
“I had gotten comfortable,” North Forney head coach Eric Luster said. “‘I’m a good man. I’m a good husband. I’m a good dad. I’m good.’ 3–7 wasn’t good.”
Similar to Plano East, North Forney lost all of its district games last season. North Forney finished 8–2 this season and is playoff-bound.
To compete with the big guys in Class 6A, Luster knew his players needed to get stronger, so they hit the weight room.
Luster also invited local pastors to meet with his team and encourage them so that, as the coach described it, they could go from losers to winners.
While last season hurt, it put North Forney on a positive trajectory.
“When your body hurts, it’s telling you something’s wrong,” Luster said. “You’ve got to feel some pain in order to fix things.”
To start its playoff run, North Forney will meet Garland, which went 4–4 in District 9-6A to miss the postseason in 2022.
“We were pretty bummed out about that, but we were a young team starting lots of sophomores,” Garland head coach Danny Russell said.
Admittedly, this year’s Garland team is still pretty young with 18 sophomores on varsity. Just one senior starts on Garland’s offense and four start on defense.
Despite this, Garland posted a 7–3 season this year with six district wins.
“They’ve really dealt with all that really well,” Russell said.
At Carrollton Newman Smith, head coach Robert Boone felt heartbroken after last football season.
In a decisive game against W.T. White, Newman Smith was ahead but ultimately relinquished the lead in a 3-point loss. Newman Smith finished 6–4 on the season.
“In the fashion that we lost and having a winning record and not getting in … I was just ready to be in the playoffs for those kids,” Boone said. “I knew that going through those situations, we were only going to grow. Only going to get better.”
And Boone was right. Newman Smith clinched a playoff berth this season, finishing 8–2 overall and 6–2 in District 5-5A Division I. Boone’s team beat W.T White, another playoff team, 40-28 in Week 10. Newman Smith will play Frisco Reedy this week.
One key component of Newman Smith’s success this season was Boone getting more time with his players. He saw them everyday during the offseason.
“We wanted to build a habit of winning in everything that we do,” Boone said. “Behavior, grades, being on time. I knew that if we could win all of those things, it could easily translate to the field.”
Hurst L.D. Bell head coach TJ Dibble also changed the narrative about his program this season. When he took over at his alma mater in 2021, L.D. Bell finished 2–8. Last season, L.D. Bell finished 6–4 to miss the playoffs again.
In 2023, L.D. Bell posted a 7–3 record and beat longtime rival Euless Trinity on Friday. That was L.D. Bell’s first win over Trinity since 1997. Yet, L.D. Bell missed the playoffs this year, too.
Fort Worth Boswell, which beat L.D. Bell 29-27 in Week 8, grabbed the fourth District 3-6A playoff spot. That win over Trinity was sweet, but Dibble wished his team could be competing this week.
He’s not letting that disappointment get him down though.
“I’m an eternal optimist. I’m proud of where our program is at, but the people that we surround ourselves with here on our coaching staff and our kids, I think, are probably more motivated now than they ever have been,” Dibble said. “There’s a lot of positive things happening at Bell High School, and it’s not just about football.”
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Dallas, TX
Dallas police identify victim in Saturday morning shooting
DALLAS – Dallas Police have identified a man who was shot and killed before 5 a.m. Saturday morning.
Officers were called to a shooting in the 9000 block of Soverign Row, which is off of John Carpenter Freeway near Regal Row.
Investigators believe 21-year-old Joseph Ortega was shot by an unknown suspect.
Ortega died at the scene.
This is an ongoing investigation.
Anyone with information is asked to contact Detective Frank Serra at 214-662-4552 or frank.serra@dallaspolice.gov.
Dallas, TX
Dallas City Council meltdown over city manager search an embarrassment
An already questionable search process for Dallas’ new city manager has unfortunately lapsed into all-out dysfunction.
Dallas City Council, it’s the holidays. Please take a breath of fresh pine air and work out this search in a new spirit of cooperation before nobody ends up wanting the job.
Given what’s already happened, chances of that are dwindling. Three of the five semifinalists already pulled out of the running late last week.
There was trouble from the start with the resignation of former City Manager T.C. Broadnax in February. He said a majority of the council lost faith in his leadership, but the timing of his “involuntary resignation” rightly raised eyebrows. Mayor Eric Johnson questioned whether his allies on the council helped him orchestrate the move so he could take a job as Austin city manager and also collect on a hefty severance.
The City Council named Broadnax’s top aide, Assistant City Manager Kimberly Bizor Tolbert, as interim manager just days after his resignation amid reservations of some of the council. Since then, the table has seemed set for her to assume the permanent role, underscored by the lack of pushback Tolbert’s received as she’s implemented sweeping changes at City Hall during her interim role. We can’t help but wonder about the chill that’s had on other potential candidates.
Another wrinkle came when the outside search firm hired to vet candidates, Baker Tilly, circulated a draft brochure advertising for the job that featured a photo of the Houston skyline. That was in late August, and since then some council members have blamed both the firm and an ad hoc search committee for moving too slowly and without transparency to the full council.
Tensions erupted this month when three council members — Paula Blackmon, Gay Donnell Willis and Jaynie Schultz — tried to wrest control from the committee and hold an emergency meeting of the full council. That flopped when only two other council members showed up at the Dec. 16 meeting, not enough for a quorum.
Blackmon told us she expected a quorum, but “it became clear to me that some phone calls were made to pressure people not to show up, and that is their decision.” Another bad look for the city.
A meeting the same day of the ad hoc committee weirdly ended up in executive session for nearly three hours. Members emerged with a plan to virtually interview the semifinalists Monday, the day before Christmas Eve. That seems like a big ask of the candidates and a crummy process. Candidates deserve an in-person interview.
It’s been hard to keep track of who’s on whose team in this mayhem. There are clearly two sides on the council: those who want Tolbert to get the job, and those who aren’t yet sold on her and want a more extensive search.
Council member Cara Mendelsohn, a member of the ad hoc committee, told us any grievances with the search should have been handled privately and that council members not on the committee have wrongly injected themselves in what is a serious effort.
“This unprofessional behavior risks scaring off strong candidates and reflects poorly on our city,” she said.
That may well happen even more than it has and, at this point, who could blame them? From the start to now, the city has hardly put its best foot forward. We urge the City Council to embrace the quiet of the season, take a moment and begin again in earnest in the New Year.
Rushing this process serves no one and least of all the residents of Dallas.
We welcome your thoughts in a letter to the editor. See the guidelines and submit your letter here. If you have problems with the form, you can submit via email at letters@dallasnews.com
Dallas, TX
Cowboys hot topic: Osa Odighizuwa's good play could price him out of Dallas
The Dallas Cowboys are trying to close the 2024 season on a positive note and have successfully done so at the moment with three wins in their last four games. Although they won’t make the postseason, it is good to see them showing heart and resolve with all the injuries and misfortune they’ve had. However, once these season ends in January, the page will turn to offseason activities, which includes free agency.
Cowboys executive vice president Stephen Jones has already mentioned that the team will have a tight offseason when it comes to spending. While that’s not surprising in the slightest with how things go in Dallas, it also puts the future of some of the top guys on the roster in question. One in particular, defensive tackle Osa Odighizuwa, is a big one to monitor.
Back during the summer, Odighizuwa made it clear what he wanted to do was sign an extension with Dallas while having his best NFL season to date. The former third-round pick has certainly done the best season-to-date thing.
So far this season, Odighizuwa has already tied a career-high with four sacks and set a career mark with 22 quarterback hits (nine more than any other season). He’s also equaled his best year with 31 hurries and has set a new career-high in pressures with 51. His 79.0 pass-rush grade ranks ninth for all defensive lineman in 2024 per Pro Football Focus.
This is great for Odighizuwa because he has certainly upped his value. With what he’s done this season, and the steady progression in his play, Odighizuwa is possibly looking at commanding a deal around $5 to $7 million annually. If he finishes strong in the last three games, he could be looking at double-digit numbers per year. As good as it is for him, it may be the opposite for Dallas.
The Cowboys do like to keep the players that they draft and develop into star or contributing players. Unfortunately, especially when it comes to Stephen Jones specifically, it always comes back to the salary cap, or at least it’s used a reason not to pay guys big dollars. The Cowboys put themselves in these positions by waiting to pay players, much like they did with Dak Prescott and CeeDee Lamb. Those deals could have and should have been done earlier to put the Cowboys in a better position as far as the cap. There are plenty of ways to manipulate the cap, but Dallas tends to stand firm on being frugal.
If Odighizuwa is to hit the market, teams will come calling. Although he’s a bit undersized at 280 pounds, Odighizuwa uses his wrestling background to get tremendous leverage and drive much bigger offensive linemen into the backfield. He’s solid against the run, and he helps keep linebackers clean, and teams that see themselves as contenders will be willing to pay him for those services and pay him well.
It would behoove the Cowboys to value defensive tackles as a high priority for once during the offseason and bring Odighizuwa back. However, with the way Dallas handles contracts, don’t be surprised if the 2024 campaign is his last with the Cowboys.
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