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.”
Find more high school sports coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
Sign up for our FREE HS newsletter
Dallas, TX
Here's why the city of Dallas wasn't held liable in the Botham Jean shooting
DALLAS – A Dallas appellate attorney says he is not surprised at the award handed down in the wrongful death civil trial of former Dallas Police Officer Amber Guyger.
It was a record number for a case where a police officer — off duty, but in uniform — killed an innocent man, Botham Jean.
Appellate attorney Thad Spalding says he’s not surprised at Wednesday’s $98.6 million judgment for the Jean family in the wrongful death lawsuit against Guyger.
“I think it’s a very natural reaction to what the facts they were presented with,” he said.
The family was awarded $38.6 million in compensatory damages and $60 million in punitive damages.
“It’s hard to quantify the loss of a loved one,” Spalding said. “And so the way this law works is we put this in the hands of the jurors who get to hear the witnesses, get to hear the family members and decide based on that testimony.”
Family attorney Daryl K. Washington said the city should share in liability with Guyger, but the city filed a motion to be removed from the lawsuit, which was granted.
“The city of Dallas hired Amber Guyger. The city of Dallas was responsible for training Amber Guyger on the night that Botham was killed,” Washington said. “The city of Dallas, the police officers protected Amber Guyger. And yet when you have a situation like this, they kick police officers under the bus, and they run away from the liability.”
A U.S. Supreme Court case decided in 1978 called Monell Liability keeps municipalities, in many instances, from exposure in these kinds of excessive force civil rights violation cases.
“What the U.S. Supreme Court said under the civil rights statute that this case was brought under is that a city is not responsible in that same way for its officers’ conduct,” Spalding said.
So while Guyger was considered acting as a police officer, although off duty when she fatally shot Jean in his own apartment, the city has no financial responsibility for her actions.
“In any other scenario, if you’re driving a truck for a company, and you crash into somebody, and you’re negligent when you do that, you’re acting within the scope of your employment,” said Spalding. “And so your employer is responsible.”
Spalding has appeared before the Fifth Circuit and Supreme Court in Monell Liability cases. He says in order to win against Monell Liability, you have to prove one thing.
“It essentially requires that incidents like this have happened multiple times in the past, that the city was aware of these incidents having happened, and that they didn’t do anything about it,” he explained. “It’s what’s called ‘deliberate indifference.’”
For Jean’s family and others, it’s a high bar to cross, which is why, more times than not, cities are dismissed from these types of lawsuits.
Dallas, TX
Ken Paxton sues Dallas over voter-approved amendment to decriminalize marijuana
DALLAS – Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has sued the City of Dallas after it adopted a voter-approved charter amendment that decriminalizes possessing less than 4 ounces of marijuana.
About 67 percent of Dallas voters approved Proposition R in the November election.
The amendment prohibits Dallas Police from making arrests or issuing citations for possession of up to 4 ounces marijuana. It also blocks the smell of marijuana from being used as probable cause for search or seizure and prohibits the use of city resources for THC tests, except as a part of a violent felony or felony narcotics investigation.
The City of Dallas directed the city to comply with the amendment earlier this week.
Recreational marijuana is still illegal in Texas.
Paxton’s lawsuit says that municipalities cannot refuse to enforce Texas drug laws.
“Cities cannot pick and choose which State laws they follow. The City of Dallas has no authority to override Texas drug laws or prohibit the police from enforcing them. This is a backdoor attempt to violate the Texas Constitution, and any city that tries to constrain police in this fashion will be met swiftly with a lawsuit by my office.” wrote Paxton in a statement.
The lawsuit is far from a surprise.
In January 2024, Paxton sued cities who passed similar measures, including Denton, Austin, San Marcos, Killeen and Elgin.
Judges overturned Paxton’s lawsuits against Austin and San Marcos.
The lawsuit against the city names Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson, city council members, interim city manager Kimberly Tolbert and interim police chief Michael Igo.
On Tuesday, Dallas City Council member Cara Mendelsohn proposed adding a clause to the amendment stating that Proposition R would not be enforced unless the state legalized marijuana. Council members voted against it.
“This is such a waste of your tax dollars. 4oz of marijuana is illegal in TX & USA. Now [Ken Paxton] will have to waste his time suing [The City of Dallas] and the city will waste tax dollars defending a losing case. We’ve put ourselves & the [Dallas Police Department] in a terrible position to violate our oath of office to uphold the law,” Mendelsohn wrote in a social media post.
Paxton’s office is requesting a trial to issue a permanent injunction to stop the city from implementing Proposition R.
Dallas, TX
Letters to the Editor — Educated students, power source subsidies, Dallas Wings, Cowboys
Schools need driver’s ed
Re: “Dallas County Grads Likely Won’t Earn Enough — Study finds that students aren’t leaving school with skills, education sufficient to support themselves,” Monday editorial.
All of us who live in Dallas have a vested interest in the future success of our kids. There have been some disconnects between local schools and the needs of local businesses.
In my industry, auto sales, we’ve had a shortage of quality technicians and sales people. Many local schools have outstanding auto tech programs, and graduate students who could become very successful sales people. Both of these jobs have the potential to pay six figures within a relatively short period of time. Often a technician is making more money than his classmate who pursued a four-year degree.
The disconnect comes with graduating students who can be hired and covered by insurance. An applicant without a driver’s license is not employable in our industry as they are uninsurable. Driver’s education has been removed from most high schools, leaving the task of getting a driver’s license up to the student on their own time.
A student who lives in a family that can afford a car for them to practice in and the expense of the class has no issues getting a driver’s license. Unfortunately many students don’t have the available car, time nor money to do this.
Don Herring, Dallas
Students lack stability
You state fairly that students aren’t pursuing skills, education sufficient to support themselves.
It’s hard when the economically insecure are consumed with problems such as hunger, lack of shelter, poor living conditions, health issues and sleep deprivation.
Children need some stability to perform at all in school. Texas ranks last in most measurements supporting families. A struggling entrance almost guarantees a struggling exit and nonperforming results.
James Roberts, Dallas
Stop subsidizing power
Re: “Abbott supports more nuclear power — Office calls for supply chain upgrades, research network to turn vision into reality,” Tuesday news story.
I support no tax subsidies for nuclear plants (or for fossil plants or solar and wind farms or electric vehicles).
Are we now talking about equal opportunity power source subsidies? What ever happened to the idea that the government should not be picking electric power source winners and losers by providing subsidies?
Since when should the government be subsidizing private industry? Shouldn’t power sources be chosen based on the economic benefits those sources bring to the market place rather than government subsidies?
Government subsidies distort the real price of electricity hidden by the taxes we pay. There must be compelling evidence such subsidies are in the public interest, and the real cost of the subsidies must be disclosed.
Thomas L. Darte, Greenville
Learn from voucher failures
Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick have already declared their intention to have the Texas Legislature vote on school vouchers. Why can’t Texas politicians learn from other states that have tried school vouchers and eliminated them due to the high cost of the program?
Arizona enacted school vouchers in 2022 and this year faced a $1.4 billion budget shortfall, much of which was a result of voucher spending.
Texas public schools need adequate funding, and that is where the governor’s focus should be. Rural school districts are to be congratulated for opposing the governor’s support of school vouchers.
Jack Noteware, McKinney
People have spoken
Re: “School voucher crusade is anything but conservative,” by Glenn Rogers, Nov. 13 Opinion.
Thank you, Glenn Rogers, for your thoughts on the continued push for school vouchers. Once again, Gov. Greg Abbot and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick seem willing to go to any extremes to promote their own agendas and that of their billionaire donors.
It doesn’t seem to matter to them that the people have spoken through their representatives against vouchers. As Rogers points out, it ‘s our public schools and teachers who are paying the price for their unyielding crusade. Quit holding them hostage!
Adele Younkin, Grapevine
Wings need seats
Re: “Can Bueckers have Clark-like impact?” by Kevin Sherrington, Sports Quick Take.
I’m delighted that the Wings got the first pick in the WNBA draft. Paige Bueckers is an excellent possible first choice, although there are other strong candidates.
Bueckers’ college coach Geno Auriemma hurt his credibility with his persistence that Bueckers was better than Caitlin Clark. He’s had to eat his words in many interviews since.
There has never been a player like Clark. Bueckers’ stats don’t compare; in fact, she’s not even in second place. Kelsey Plum is.
Wait till end of WNBA season next year and compare Bueckers’ rookie stats to Clark’s. Let’s see if it’s close. And you can’t ever overlook how Clark makes all the other players around her better and her enormous fan appeal.
A real disaster is that the Wings stadium only holds 6,000 seats. Can’t compare fan appeal if you don’t have seats to sell.
Larry Huddleston, Cedar Hill
Cowboys’ sky already fell
Re: “Is sky falling? Cowboys make some progress, but can’t catch Texans after metal falls,” by David Moore, Tuesday SportsDay column.
Is the sky falling? Nope, the sky fell several weeks ago. It fell when Jerry Jones decided to make the second worst decision in his career. Namely paying Dak Prescott millions, and now Prescott is smiling all the way to the bank.
Don Skaggs, Garland
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
-
Business1 week ago
Column: OpenAI just scored a huge victory in a copyright case … or did it?
-
Health1 week ago
Bird flu leaves teen in critical condition after country's first reported case
-
Business5 days ago
Column: Molly White's message for journalists going freelance — be ready for the pitfalls
-
World1 week ago
Sarah Palin, NY Times Have Explored Settlement, as Judge Sets Defamation Retrial
-
Politics4 days ago
Trump taps FCC member Brendan Carr to lead agency: 'Warrior for Free Speech'
-
Science2 days ago
Trump nominates Dr. Oz to head Medicare and Medicaid and help take on 'illness industrial complex'
-
Technology4 days ago
Inside Elon Musk’s messy breakup with OpenAI
-
Lifestyle4 days ago
Some in the U.S. farm industry are alarmed by Trump's embrace of RFK Jr. and tariffs