Texas
At first conference after Uvalde shooting, Texas school police chiefs discuss how their profession is changing
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SAN ANTONIO — Inside a convention room on the Marriott Riverwalk resort, the regulation enforcement vendor present appeared about commonplace. There have been the $700 bullet-detection programs and showcases of high-tech cameras that sense when a gun is in a room and particular adhesive movie that may maintain a shattered window from crashing down in items. For $20, attendees might purchase an opportunity to win certainly one of three handguns.
However the regulation enforcement group assembly in San Antonio this week is among the smallest within the state, and its jurisdiction is one the place you’d discover extra crayons than felons. Within the resort’s assembly rooms, 120 members of the Texas College District Police Chiefs’ Affiliation got here to study the newest methods to evaluate and cope with active-shooter threats and deal with psychological well being issues.
They usually got here right here to San Antonio, about 95 miles east of Uvalde, barely two weeks after the lethal faculty taking pictures at Robb Elementary College left 19 kids and two lecturers useless. It’s a uncooked time for college district officers as police in Texas and nationwide have criticized certainly one of their very own. In Pete Arredondo’s first in depth interview for the reason that Could 24 taking pictures, the police chief of the Uvalde Consolidated Unbiased College District insisted he took the steps he thought would greatest defend lives.
Most officers attending the convention waved off questions on their reactions to the Uvalde taking pictures and as a substitute needed to speak about why they have been in San Antonio this week. Most poured right into a presentation by the FBI on active-shooter coaching that was closed to non-police officers.
However outdoors the assembly rooms, chiefs like Invoice Avera have been prepared to speak in regards to the evolution of faculty policing or about their very own districts.
“The largest good thing about coming to this convention is we meet different individuals which might be in related conditions to us,” mentioned Avera, 67, the police chief at Jacksonville ISD and a vp for the college police chiefs’ group. “The time to alternate enterprise playing cards is just not throughout a disaster. I must know who my companions are, and I must know you earlier than stuff hits the fan.”
Like a variety of faculty police chiefs, Avera has been in regulation enforcement for years — for him, 46 years. He’s performed nearly all the pieces, from working dispatch to changing into a detective on the Jacksonville Police Division in East Texas.
However for the final six years, Avera’s been police chief on the faculty district in Jacksonville, which is about 20 miles south of Tyler. The college district and the city are about the identical measurement as Uvalde, a reality not misplaced on Avera and different chiefs right here this week.
“Whenever you stand up within the morning, you perceive that … you won’t come house,” he mentioned.
In Texas, solely 309 of its 1,200 faculty districts have police forces separate from their cities’ departments.
Avera mentioned he was working for the Jacksonville police when the college district there employed its first police officer through the early Eighties. And since then, he’s seen how faculty district policing has modified.
“It grew to become evident that the way forward for regulation enforcement in colleges wanted to be school-based, educated, specialised officers that understood psychological well being and human improvement,” he mentioned.
After Columbine, issues modified. College district cops have been requested to be in widespread areas inside colleges slightly than remaining of their vehicles or workplaces, ready to be referred to as. They have been additionally getting used too typically as disciplinarians and have been issuing citations, mentioned David Kimberly, the outgoing Klein ISD police chief. Over the previous 14 or so years, there was an emphasis on discovering some kind of joyful medium between officers constructing relationships with college students and having to implement faculty guidelines and native legal guidelines.
“The pendulum swung too far,” Kimberly mentioned of the time when officers have been first used too typically to self-discipline college students. “Quick-forward to the mid 2000s, it began actually swinging again, and [we’re] looking for that very delicate stability.”
In Avera’s division, there are solely 4 cops, together with himself, for eight campuses.
His funds? About $500,000. It’s sufficient to do what he must do, he mentioned. But when he had an countless amount of money, he’d rent sufficient officers to station them at every campus.
“‘What I’d strengthen instantly?’ he requested aloud. “It will be extra our bodies, manpower.”
Avera mentioned he has the weapons wanted to have interaction with a gunman attacking with an assault rifle. He simply doesn’t have the officers. If he had a much bigger funds, he would rent armed safety, reinforce campus buildings and enhance communication know-how. One factor Avera famous was that not like in Uvalde, the place police struggled to discover a key to open a classroom door, each he and his officers carry two keys that open just about any door in any Jacksonville ISD constructing.
If the Texas Legislature does something, Avera hopes it supplies extra money for these small faculty police departments.
In Klein ISD the place Kimberly works, there are greater than 52,700 college students and 52 buildings. The police division has 60 officers on employees and sufficient firepower to cope with nearly any risk, he mentioned. His division trains different police departments as effectively, and he mentioned it’s seen as a task mannequin police pressure.
Kimberly mentioned his division is lucky to have a neighborhood and faculty board that again the officers and permit them to attempt new security procedures. They arrive to the convention not solely to study from others, but in addition to assist others of their security plans.
“I imagine it to be a worthwhile coaching alternative,” he mentioned. “Not solely the coaching however the alternative to see a number of the distributors, have a look at the know-how that’s on the market in a single place.”
Extra coaching doesn’t appear to be a problem; officers have been instructed for the reason that 1999 Columbine taking pictures that they need to interact a shooter instantly. However every state of affairs is totally different and nuanced, Avera mentioned.
Kimberly had related ideas, saying that there shouldn’t be any finger-pointing or attempting to vary issues when investigations into what occurred in Uvalde are nonetheless ongoing.
“Let’s discover some good out of this,” he mentioned. “If there have been some issues they did rather well, let’s emulate it. If there’s some issues that wanted to be checked out or improved on, let’s flesh that out.”
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Texas
Texas vs South Dakota State: Longhorns head into holiday break with a 46-point win
Texas women’s basketball nonconference schedule
Texas women’s basketball nonconference schedule
After a 103-57 win over South Dakota State on Sunday, the Texas Longhorns will head into their holiday break on a high note.
Sunday’s lopsided win at Moody Center came five days after Texas beat La Salle by a 111-49 score. Texas hadn’t scored 100 points in consecutive games since it did so against McNeese State and UTSA in November 2017.
Texas never trailed on Sunday, and freshmen Jordan Lee and Justice Carlton served as first-half catalysts for the No. 6 team in the USA Today Sports Coaches Poll. Lee started and scored 10 first-quarter points while Carlton came off the bench to score 17 first-half points on 7-of-9 shooting. Combined, Lee and Carlton had 29 points in the first half. South Dakota State’s entire team had 26.
While Texas built its 53-26 lead in the first half, eight of the nine Longhorns who played scored. The surprising exception was All-American Madison Booker, who distributed three assists and grabbed three rebounds but missed her three shots.
A perennial NCAA tournament qualifier that had split its prior games against ranked Creighton and Duke teams, South Dakota State (10-3) never cut into its 27-point halftime deficit in the second half.
Here are three observations from Sunday’s 46-point rout:
Mwenentanda remains patient with her process
Carlton finished with 19 points and nine rebounds while senior forward Taylor Jones had 15 points, 11 rebounds and four blocks. Lee and senior guard Rori Harmon respectively added 14 and 13 points for a Texas team that shot 53.9% from the field. Booker was limited to nine points, but Harmon pointed out after the game that Booker’s +/- of 41 was the best among the Longhorns.
Ndjakalenga Mwenentanda was the fifth Longhorn to record a double-digit scoring total. Over 11 minutes, Mwenentanda scored 10 points on 5-of-6 shooting.
Mwenentanda grew up in South Dakota and was that state’s Gatorade Player of the Year in 2022. The school in Sioux Falls where she won a state championship is about an hour drive from South Dakota State’s campus. Mwenentanda was recruited by the Jackrabbits but she said that she was attracted to what Texas could offer her athletically and academically.
Since arriving on campus, Mwenentanda has shown glimpses of her potential since arriving at Texas, but she has mainly been a role player for the Longhorns. Sunday was the 11th time that she scored at least 10 points in a game. Just twice in her career has she played more than 25 minutes.
Mwenentanda sees herself as a Swiss Army Knife on the Texas roster. She’s listed as a 6-foot-2 guard on the team’s roster, but Vic Schaefer has mainly used her as a “4” player this season. Mwenentanda played some in the paint last season, but she got more playing time as a guard. Training more with the post players this offseason has helped her adjust to that role this season.
“I physically prepared for it, I mentally prepared for it. I’m enjoying it,” Mwenentanda said.
Schaefer praised the play of Mwenentanda in his postgame press conference on Sunday. Earlier in the week, Mwenentanda said that she was staying patient with her process.
“Everybody’s process is different. I feel like comparing myself to other people’s process would be one reason to give up,” Mwenentanda said. “Everybody on this team are great players, are great women so even though this process is a little bit different for me, it’s not something I look at negatively because I know everybody’s working hard and everybody’s pitching in.”
Status for sidelined Laila Phelia remains unclear
Texas senior Laila Phelia missed her third straight game on Sunday. Phelia suffered a detached retina during the offseason. Texas has not announced a timeline for her return, but Schaefer has said the program will soon release an update.
The leading scorer at Michigan last season, Phelia has played in just eight of the Longhorns’ 13 games. She is averaging 6.1 points and 19.4 minutes per game while shooting 40.5% from the field.
What’s next for Texas? Rest and one final tune-up
Next on the schedule for Texas is a home game against UTRGV (6-6) on Dec. 29. That will be the Longhorns’ final game until their Southeastern Conference debut at Oklahoma on Jan. 2, 2025.
But first, the Longhorns will get some rest. Mwenentanda won’t be able to fly back to South Dakota until Monday morning, but the rest of the Longhorns headed home after Sunday’s win. The Longhorns will return to practice on Dec. 27.
How will the Longhorns spend their break? The three players who attended Sunday’s postgame press conference – Carlton, Harmon and Mwenentanda – said they’d take some time off, but they added that they’ll get some workouts in with family and hometown trainers.
As for Schaefer? He’ll do some work over the break, but he won’t be in his office.
“I’m going to be standing in about knee-deep water in the morning calling a duck and having my son (Logan) with me and my dog, my hunting dog, not my show dog. We’ll enjoy some time together in the morning and then we’ll wet a line and fish in the afternoon,” Schaefer said. “I’ll probably sit in my bow stand a couple of nights with my computer in my lap and watch film. I don’t really care if I see anything or not, but I usually see a lot. I get more work done sitting in a bow stand in a bow blind than I do a lot of times sitting at my desk.
“I’ll just enjoy time with family. I’m really blessed with Holly and Logan and Blair here and we’re all together at Christmas, and it’s just a special time for us. We really embrace the Christmas season.”
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Texas
Former Colorado defensive end Dayon Hayes transfers to Texas A&M
Former Colorado Buffaloes defensive end Dayon Hayes is set to continue his collegiate career at Texas A&M after transferring following a season-ending injury. Hayes, a 6-foot-3, 265-pound defender, began his journey at Pitt, where he played from 2020 to 2023, accumulating 13 sacks and 80 tackles over four seasons.
At Pitt, Hayes showcased his potential in his sophomore and junior years, logging around 500 combined snaps and producing 30 pressures. His breakout came in 2023 when he amassed 44 pressures and a 13% pass rush win rate, ranking 12th in the ACC. Hayes also demonstrated solid run defense, posting an average tackle depth of 1.6 yards and recording 10.5 stops for loss. His ability to set the edge and prevent runners from escaping outside made him a critical piece of Pitt’s defense.
Following his success at Pitt, Hayes transferred to Colorado as a highly sought-after addition to Deion Sanders’ revamped Buffaloes roster. He made an immediate impact, registering two sacks and 3.5 tackles for loss in Colorado’s first three games. However, his promising start was cut short by a knee injury in the fourth game, sidelining him for the rest of the season.
Deion Sanders says he won’t attend the 2025 NFL Draft in Green Bay
Despite the setback, Hayes’ strong early performance likely earned him a medical redshirt, granting him another year of eligibility. With his final collegiate season on the horizon, Hayes opted to join Texas A&M, bringing his pass-rushing skills to the SEC. The Aggies, coming off an eight-win season, are set to face USC in the Las Vegas Bowl. Hayes’ ability to pressure quarterbacks and defend the run should bolster Texas A&M’s defensive front, adding experience and depth to their edge rotation for the 2024 season.
Texas
D-FW can claim Texas’ best high school football team in an otherwise down year for Dallas
ARLINGTON — North Crowley showed out on Saturday in its dazzling 50-21 victory over Austin Westlake in the 6A Division I state title game, winning the program’s second state championship and putting Fort Worth high school football on the map in front of 36,120 fans at AT&T Stadium.
Until North Crowley took the field at 7:30 p.m., there was a possibility the Dallas-Fort Worth area might boast only one state champion in 2024. Celina routed Kilgore 55-21 in the 4A Division I state championship to capture the program’s ninth state title and its first under coach Bill Elliott.
But North Texas teams came up short in the next three title games, the region’s worst showing at state since 2021, when South Oak Cliff became the first Dallas ISD school to win a recognized state championship since 1958, but Denton Guyer and Duncanville fell in the 6A state championship games.
Two-time state champion South Oak Cliff missed a last-second field goal, falling 38-35 to third-year program Richmond Randle in the 5A Division II state title game Friday night. It was SOC’s second straight loss in the state championship game.
“The future is still bright,” South Oak Cliff coach Jason Todd said. “We just gotta find out what’s going to get us over this hump.”
Smithson Valley, from the San Antonio area, topped Highland Park 32-20 as the six-time state champion faded in the second half of the 5A Division I state title game Saturday afternoon.
In the second game of the day, eight-time state champion Southlake Carroll extended its title drought to 13 years with a 24-17 loss to Austin Vandegrift in the 6A Division II game.
“It’ll happen one day. I’m excited about what the future holds,” said Carroll coach Riley Dodge, who fell to 0-2 in state title games as a coach.
The Dallas area claimed three football state champions in 2023 with Anna winning the 4A Division I state title and Duncanville and DeSoto sweeping the 6A Division I and II state championships, respectively. The southern Dallas County schools also swept the 6A state championships in 2022, when South Oak Cliff won its second straight 5A Division II state title.
But this year, the rest of Texas didn’t let the Dallas area, a high school football mecca, run the table. Teams from each of the state’s major metros — Austin, Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston and San Antonio —- won a title in each division of the UIL’s two highest classifications.
Even before this week’s state championship games, 2024 seemed to mark a changing of the guard. Neither Duncanville, DeSoto nor Houston-area power Galena Park North Shore made it to AT&T Stadium this year. Nor did 12-time UIL state champion Aledo, the juggernaut west of Fort Worth that had won the last two 5A Division I state championships.
But North Crowley did, after knocking off both DeSoto and Duncanville this season. North Texas might not have dominated the competition as it has in recent years, but for a third straight season, the king of 6A reigns in Dallas-Fort Worth.
“When you get to this point, there’s only one team that’s standing that’s hoisting the trophy. And fortunately for us, this year it’s us and we just happen to be from 817,” North Crowley coach Ray Gates said. “We’re elated to be able to bring that type of recognition back to our community, just to let people know that when you talk about this area, when you talk about Metroplex football, you can’t forget about us.”
On Twitter/X: @t_myah
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