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A dual-engine propeller aircraft crashed and broke into two pieces on a Texas motorway on Wednesday afternoon, striking vehicles and resulting in four people being hospitalised, officials confirmed.
The Federal Aviation Administration reported that the Piper PA-31, carrying only the pilot, crashed at approximately 3 pm (local time) near a motorway bridge in Victoria, situated about 150 miles (240 kilometres) southwest of Houston.
According to a police statement on Facebook, three vehicles sustained damage, and visuals revealed the aircraft had split at its midsection, with debris resting on top of a car.
Victoria Police Deputy Chief Eline Moya confirmed that three individuals sustained non-life-threatening injuries, while one person required transfer to a distant hospital for specialised care. The pilot was undergoing medical assessment.
“This is not something we see every day, but we are glad that people seem to be OK and they’re getting checked out,” Moya said.
The pilot’s identity remained undisclosed. Also, the FAA announced its intention to investigate the incident.
Tony Poynor recounted that whilst approaching an intersection, he heard the sound of a small aircraft engine extremely close by.
“To the left of me you start seeing on the wall a shadow of this plane,” he said as quoted by AP. “Then it passed over the top of my truck. And it’s still horizontal at this point, then about a quarter of a mile in front of me it starts to wobble.”
Poynor added that after the crash, he approached the aircraft and found the pilot conscious but was unable to extract him from the wreckage.
Todd Kirkland/Getty Images
Perhaps the best part of the new 12-team College Football Playoff for fans is the environments it will create with the first-round games being played on campus.
“It’s going to be awesome,” Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers told Bleacher Report. “We’ve never experienced this and DKR has never experienced this. It’s going to be rocking for a playoff game with a lot at stake. I’m just excited to get on that field again.”
While Ewers and the Longhorns surely wanted the SEC championship and first-round bye that would have come with a victory over Georgia in the conference title game, landing the No. 5 seed and a first-round game at Darrell K Royal Texas Memorial Stadium is quite the consolation prize.
It’s not a stretch to suggest Texas has one of the clearest paths to the semifinals of anyone in the field, as it will face 12th-seeded Clemson at home in the first round before a potential showdown against fourth-seeded Arizona State at the Peach Bowl in the quarterfinals.
The Peach Bowl is in Atlanta, which is far from Arizona State’s campus and right in the middle of SEC territory. That could give the Longhorns yet another advantage when it comes to the crowd.
But the focus is on Dabo Swinney’s Clemson program first.
“They’ve also been in a ton of big games, and they play really hard for their coach,” Ewers said. “They’re really well coached and disciplined players. It’s also cool I get to play against one of my really good friends from high school who went to Southlake with me. R.J. Mickens, who plays safety for them. It’s going to be a cool moment and experience with him for sure.”
Mickens is a talented playmaker at the back end of the Tigers’ defense, but Ewers joked he might have to “rub it in a little bit” if he beats his friend over the top with a deep ball during the playoff game.
Texas is the better seed and the favorite in the game, but it is Clemson coming in with momentum.
The Tigers wouldn’t have even made the CFP without shocking SMU in the ACC Championship Game with a 56-yard field goal from Nolan Hauser as time expired. That stood in stark contrast to the Longhorns, who lost in overtime to Georgia with the SEC title on the line on the same day.
Fortunately for Texas fans, head coach Steve Sarkisian’s program has been defined by its ability to bounce back this year.
“We’ve been through a lot of adversity, and I think the culture that Coach Sark has built thrives on overcoming it,” Ewers said. “It’s 10 percent what happens and 90 percent how you react to what happened. We truly live by that. Sure, we’ll get hit in the mouth a couple times, but we’re never going to go away.”
Nobody has demonstrated that resiliency inside the program better than Ewers this season.
The signal-caller missed time with an oblique injury, was temporarily benched for Arch Manning during the regular-season loss to Georgia and even had to deal with a false report suggesting he was going to sit out for the season’s stretch run to focus on the NFL draft.
What’s more, there is constant noise about the quarterback room given Manning’s status as the nephew of NFL legends Peyton and Eli Manning and as the No. 1 overall recruit of the 2023 class, per 247Sports’ composite rankings.
While the Longhorns occasionally use Manning as a change-of-pace option for running plays, this is Ewers’ team going into the playoff after he responded to the Georgia loss by spearheading a five-game winning streak with 13 touchdown passes to just three interceptions during that span.
He led his team to wins over dangerous Vanderbilt, Florida, Arkansas and Kentucky squads, as well as an important road win over rival Texas A&M in the first game between the two schools since 2011.
“I always say that the sign of the true character of a man is in the face of adversity, and that was a lot of adversity for him, a lot of adversity for us as a team coming off last week’s game,” Sarkisian said of Ewers after the Vanderbilt win following the Georgia loss in October. “I think the way he responded was kind of indicative of how we responded as a team.”
As Ewers was responding as a leader on the field, he also partnered with C4 Energy off it and even got to meet and greet with fans who entered the company’s sweepstakes in September.
“It’s been great,” he said of the partnership. “What made me want to work with them is all the sponsorships they’ve done for athletes around me. Obviously they did one with Bijan [Robinson]. Our core values also align, and their headquarters are also in Austin. It’s been awesome working with them.”
C4 Energy
Ewers said his favorite flavor is strawberry guava while highlighting that “whether I’m going to class or going to the gym to get a workout in, it gives me a boost.”
Texas needed that boost for the 2024 season, as it moved from the Big 12 to the SEC as part of a larger conference realignment shift that also included the rival Sooners joining the league.
While the Longhorns didn’t have the most challenging schedule by SEC terms since it avoided Alabama, Tennessee, Ole Miss, LSU and Missouri, they still sent a message with a 34-3 blowout win over Oklahoma and defeated Texas A&M.
Those are the types of rivalry games Texas quarterbacks are remembered for, and Ewers made sure it was his team with regional bragging rights in the first year in the new conference.
That’s not to say there weren’t welcome to the SEC moments considering the Longhorns lost to Georgia twice. But they showed improvement from the 30-15 regular-season loss to the overtime defeat in the SEC Championship Game and surely hope being battle-tested in the SEC will pay dividends against teams from other conferences in the playoff.
“I always wanted to play in the SEC and be a part of it,” Ewers said. “We got a taste of that when we went to Bama last year. It was cool to play a full SEC schedule. Man, if you don’t show up in the SEC, you’re going to get beat. And I think this year was a year that showed that. The Big 12 was fun for sure, but it’s not the same as the SEC. In the SEC, it’s all about football.”
Now he will look to deliver his new conference a national championship in the first year of the 12-team CFP field.
Longtime Southeastern Conference fans seem to be coping correctly now that the Texas Longhorns and Oklahoma Sooners have wrapped up their first regular season in the league.
That includes Georgia Congressman Mike Collins, who used took the floor of the U.S House of Representatives to congratulate his Bulldogs on defeating Texas in the SEC Championship game. Collins didn’t stop there. He also demanded that Texas “be sent back to the Big 12.”
Mr. Speaker, I rise today to demand that Texas be sent back to the Big 12. pic.twitter.com/J1p6oqFr9K
— Rep. Mike Collins (@RepMikeCollins) December 10, 2024
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247Sports: Texas Football: Most notable Longhorns snubbed on 2024 All-SEC Football Team
247Sports: Four Downs: Steve Sarkisian’s path to greatness, Tre Wisner’s opportunity, Texas hoops and more
Inside Texas: Kelvin Banks wins the SEC’s Jacobs Blocking Trophy
Seven Texas players recognized on All-SEC teams
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Austin American-Statesman: Why this portal loss for Texas football could really hurt in 2025
Austin American-Statesman: Why didn’t Cade Klubnik go to Texas? How Clemson landed its QB
247Sports: 2025 Texas Football Roster: Transfer portal activity, talent acquision entering Steve Sarkisian’s fifth season
247Sports: College football transfer portal: Top 10 edge rushers available as 2025 window opens
247Sports: Day 1 footage from the Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Game of Texas QB signee KJ Lacey
247Sports: Portal players that check boxes for what Texas usually looks for, scholarship breakdown: Offensive edition
Inside Texas: How power programs like Texas have to navigate the transfer portal and NIL
Dallas Morning News: The CFP is a fun, hot mess, but its imperfections should be corrected in short order
Good Bull Hunting: UAB QB Jacob Zeno to transfer to Texas A&M
Rock M Nation: What Mizzou’s early portal activity tells about the QB situation
Red Cup Rebellion: Nine Ole Miss players named to All-SEC Coaches team
Rocky Top Talk: Six Volunteers receive All-SEC honors
Roll ‘Bama Roll: Alabama Football 2025: Transfer portal watch and roster building
A Sea Of Blue: USC’s Sam Greene among a host of transfers set to visit Kentucky
SB Nation: The NFL’s 7 most disappointing players this season
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SB Nation: How LeBron James inspired one line from Gracie Abrams’ biggest hit song
finally back at home #HookEm pic.twitter.com/S9MO3ZVQPU
— Texas Women’s Basketball (@TexasWBB) December 11, 2024
MLB
DALLAS — The Rangers have accomplished one of their primary offseason goals with a deal to re-sign Nate Eovaldi, the winning pitcher in their 2023 World Series clincher.
Texas has agreed on a $75 million, three-year contract with the righthander, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press on Tuesday night. The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the deal was subject to a successful physical.
Eovaldi became a free agent Nov. 4 after declining a vested $20 million player option for the 2025 season. The Rangers had expected that move, but said one of their priorities was to re-sign the Texas native who will turn 35 in February.
The two-time All-Star got a $2 million buyout from that option, which was earned by throwing more than 300 innings over his two years with the Rangers after joining them in free agency following 4½ seasons with the Red Sox.
His new deal came at the winter meetings on the same day Max Fried agreed with the Yankees on a $218 million, eight-year contract, the largest ever for a lefthander. Those moves leave 2021 National League Cy Young Award winner and four-time All-Star Corbin Burnes as the top pitcher still available on the free agent market. The righthander went 15-9 with a 2.92 ERA in 32 starts for the Orioles this year, his only season in Baltimore.
Eovaldi will stay in the Texas rotation with two-time NL Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom, who made three starts at the end of last season after missing nearly 17 months following right elbow surgery. The Rangers won all six of deGrom’s starts at the beginning of the 2023 season before he got hurt that April.
Texas acquired Eovaldi and deGrom in free agency before the 2023 season. Eovaldi’s two-year deal then was for $34 million, with $16 million salaries each season, plus the buyout. That was after deGrom, now 36, signed for $185 million over five years.
When the Rangers made the run to their first World Series title in 2023, Eovaldi was 5-0 with a 2.95 ERA in six postseason starts. He was the winning pitcher in their World Series-clinching Game 5 at Arizona.
Eovaldi went 24-13 with a 3.72 ERA in 54 starts over the past two seasons, and had 298 strikeouts in 314⅔ innings. He was 12-8 with a 3.80 ERA in 29 starts this year. He threw seven scoreless innings at the Angels to win the season finale for the Rangers, who finished 78-84 and missed the playoffs.
Texas is the sixth big league team for Eovaldi, who is 91-81 with a 4.07 ERA in 294 career games (275 starts) since his debut in 2011 with the Dodgers. Besides the Red Sox, he also has pitched for Miami, the Yankees, and Tampa Bay.
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