I've posted this before:
In 1963, I was a Junior.
We built Bonfire, almost to completion, but it didn't burn and was dismantled after JFK was assassinated.
I later read that John Kimborough and members of the 1939 Aggie National Championship team came back to campus to fire up the 1963 Aggie team.
Many students left campus after school was let out early because of the national tragedy, but most of us came back for the game and Kyle Field was full.
During the fourth quarter, when Aggie DB Jim Willenborg was ruled out of bounds at the back of Kyle Field's north end zone, his spectacular and likely game-saving interception of an errant tu pass thrown by a pressured Tommy Wade (their 2nd team QB & passing specialist) was disallowed.
At the time and later on filmed replays and in sequenced photographs I thought it clearly showed that this interception was made in bounds and that the ball was in Willenborg's control as he then slid across the muddy endline.
Another Aggie DB, Edd Hargett's older brother George, saw the interception and leapt into the air, celebrating and pumping his fist.
It was a great play and Kyle Field erupted in joy and relief, we would get the ball out on the twenty and could probably run out the clock.
Then an official ran toward Jim Willenborg, first signaling the end of the play, then that the ball was juggled and then that it was out of bounds.
I've read an account where Willenborg said he was too busy catching the ball to be looking at the field's boundary, but he had always thought he fielded and controlled the ball cleanly.
The Aggie faithful, especially those standing near the horseshoe end zone including my Sergebutt self, responded with loud yelling at the official's call, but not with any booing.
This official behind the play near the goal line, who made the call, couldn't have even seen the ball after our interceptor, who caught it in both hands, brought it firmly to his chest while his outstretched body rotated to face due north, his feet and knees hitting the turf still well in bounds.
No other official overruled his unsighted call when he indicated the ball was juggled and not controlled.
Our dead dogs had a better view of the play through the tunnel than any of the zebras did!!!
After the game you could still see where Jim's knee and lower legs had first marked the sloppy turf and then drug almost a full yard inside the chalk at an acute angle to the end line
That one official mistakenly called it without really seeing it (I hope) and none of the others overruled him or questioned him enough to change the call.
You heard the 12TH MAN screaming, "You're blind!!!." "Pull your head out!!!" and "No! No! No!" but there was no booing.
The yell leaders, who had been squeezing down near the north goal line, were quick to signal for the Horse Laugh and we did it at least five times in quick succession, as the guys in stripes with whistles returned the ball to the field of play and gave it back to the 'sips.
It is indeed correct that the Horse Laugh was always done instead of booing, a sound I never heard from Aggies during my years as a student.
The play over and the call made, the Aggie players and fans immediately focused their attention back to the game situation.
We still had the lead and would win this one by ourselves, even with blind officials.
Our team gave great effort and we in the stands yelled in support as loudly as I've ever heard, but the 'sips did manage to finally score several plays later on a short dive with 1:19 left on the clock.
We were outscored 13-15.
We even had an earlier interception, when John Brotherton picked off a longhorn screen pass.
He didn't get tackled immediately and tried to lateral the ball to a team mate, but he was hit and the ball hit the ground and the 'sips recovered.
So we had our chances.
Those longhorns also barely beat Baylor that year, when Duke Carlisle (tu's starting QB, who was in at DB just for that play) intercepted a Don Trull pass in the end zone that Bear receiver Lawrence Elkins was about to catch to win the game.
Carlisle's pick was right at the end line too, he made a leaping catch and was ruled to have had possession before he left the field of play.
So, his interception being allowed to stand saved the 'sips in that game and I thought the refs were correct this time.
Carlisle's body came down on Elkins and the Baylor receiver's momentum carried them both out of bounds.
The ruling was that the 'sip's body would have come down on the field of play had it not been forced out by the Baylor player.
So, texas u won the SWC Championship and went on to face Navy and Roger Staubach in the Cotton Bowl, #2 against #1.
The 'sips won that New Year's Day game fairly easily, greatly aided because they were visually intercepting the Midshipmen's hand signals according to statements of admission made much later by Coach Royal and others.
So we were robbed, Baylor was thwarted, Navy was duped and the 'horns recorded a perfect season, with various interceptions or the lack thereof being huge factors.
They had a great team that year and they made plenty of big plays, but we certainly played well enough to derail their season's MNC run in that 1963 Turkey Day game.
The officials just flat missed that call and if they didn't know it at the time, they've since seen the film and the photos too.
It's over and done with, an opportunity lost and gone.
We didn't boo then and I won't b*tch or whine now.
It's just muddy water under the bridge and a "rest of the story" footnote in Aggie lore that deserves to be remembered just as it actually happened.
BTHO tu!!!!
Gig 'em, FAST FRED '65.
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