Tuesday, November 25, 2025

#25 Houston 14, TCU 17

For the second time in as many home games, the Cougars play bad, boring football and lose to a team they probably should have beaten.

The Good: The Houston defense forced four TCU turnovers, three of which (two interceptions and a forced fumble) were caused by defensive back Will James. Late in the fourth quarter, the Horned Frogs had an opportunity to put the game away but were stopped cold by UH linebacker Latreveon McCutchin on 4th-and-1. If you had told me before the game that the Cougars would hold TCU to 17 points and end up +3 in turnover margin, I would have expected a win. However...

The Bad: ...the UH offense sputtered the entire game and only managed to put 14 points of their own the board. QB Connor Weigman was a mediocre 15 of 29 for 161 yards, two touchdowns and an interception, and the offense only converted four third downs in 17 tries (five UH drives ended in three-and-outs). The playcalling was unimaginative and at times baffling. TE Tanner Koziol, who has been one of Houston's most effective offensive weapons this season, was absent for much of the game.

The Ugly: Kicker Ethan Sanchez has been pretty reliable this season, but he was 0 for 2 on field goal attempts last Saturday, including a 38-yarder late in the fourth quarter that would have likely sent the game into overtime.

What It Means: Any remote hopes the Cougars had of making the Big XII Conference Championship Game ended with this loss. I still have faith in Willie Fritz and I want him to succeed, but I'm beginning to have some questions. Why does his team come out so flat after bye weeks? Why is his offense so conservative? Why has Connor Weigman appeared to have taken a step backwards over the last several weeks?

This game was such a disappointment that afterwards I had to go over to Rice Stadium to watch North Texas beat the Owls just to get the shit taste out of my mouth.

The Cougars end the regular season with a trip to Waco to play Baylor this Saturday. 

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

The Cougars: two steps forward, one step back

Between a convention in Portland, Oregon, a visit from my brother, the Veteran's Day holiday (I took some time off to make a long weekend out of it) and other obligations, I haven't gotten around to writing about UH football for the last few weeks. Hence, another three-in-one update:

Houston 24, #24 Arizona State 16: A rather delightful upset of a ranked team on the road! UH quarterback Connor Weigman rushed for 111 yards and two touchdowns, and passed for 201 yards and another score. The Houston defense, meanwhile, recovered the game's only turnover and kept Arizona State out of the endzone for three quarters. The end of the game got kind of sloppy, as the Sun Devils rallied from a 0-24 deficit to score 16 unanswered points and were threatening to tie the game, but the Houston defense stepped up to stop the late threat.

The Sun Devils didn't look like they were mentally prepared for this game. They were playing without star receiver Jordyn Tyson, but that doesn't excuse them having a player ejected for targeting, missing two field goal attempts, or being flagged for 12 penalties.

Sadly, after the game, it was announced that Houston Strength and Conditioning Coach Kurt Hester had lost his battle with cancer. 

#22 Houston 35, West Virginia 45: Speaking of teams not being mentally prepared for games, Houston came out flat against a 2-6 West Virginia squad and suffered an embarrassing loss. Fortunately, not a lot of people were on hand to see it. (I knew attendance for this game was going to be lousy because it was an 11 am kick - the second one in a row - on the morning after Halloween. There's also the gameday experience at TDECU Stadium, which Ryan (correctly) says is "not good.")

Connor Weigman had his worst game in a UH uniform. He was responsible for four turnovers, including a pick-six everybody in the stadium (except him, apparently) could see coming. Houston's defense, meanwhile, simply could not stop the Mountaineers' ground game, surrendering 15 first downs on rushes and 246 total yards rushing. The most pathetic moment came when WVU QB Scotty Fox, Jr scored on a 34-yard scramble on 4th and 4 because the Houston defense was clearly confused but didn't think to call timeout.

All in all, a game that was supposed to be dedicated to Coach Hester's memory turned out to be a dud that ended Houston's weeklong stint in the top 25. 

Houston 30, Central Florida 27: This was only the Cougars' second win at Central Florida all-time, and they certainly made it more difficult than it needed to be. Weigman's struggles continued, as he threw three interceptions including another pick-six. However, he also threw two touchdowns, including a 64-yard bomb to Amare Thomas. The Cougar rushing attack rolled up 210 yards against UCF's defense, and Ethan Sanchez was a perfect 3-for-3 on field goal tries. 

Houston's defense did their part with some interceptions of their own: linebacker Latreveon McCutchin had a pick-six, and the Golden Knights' late attempt to win the game ended when defensive back Kentrell Webb intercepted their desperation pass in the endzone with 11 seconds left to play.

What it Means: The Cougars are now 8-2 and again ranked in the top 25. I'm not sure they're really worthy of a top 25 ranking at this point, but this season has otherwise exceeded all expectations. 

The Coogs were off last week; they host TCU at TDECU Stadium on Saturday for their final home game of the season. Luckily, it will not be another 11 am kickoff.

The end of the penny

Last Friday, the one-cent coin, better known as the penny, met its end. After 232 years of production, the final penny coins were struck at the US Mint in Philadelphia.

In its prime, the penny wielded outsize influence: Tossed into fountains, it could answer unrealized wishes. A penny saved was a penny earned; it was pinched, pressed into loafers and placed on graves as a way of honoring the dead. Offered for one’s thoughts, it could elicit two cents, doubling its return.

Caroline Turco, assistant curator of the American Numismatic Association’s Money Museum in Colorado Springs, Colorado, said that whenever she spies a penny on the street, she still thinks of the rhyme, “Find a penny, pick it up, all day long you’ll have good luck.”

So mighty was the penny’s sway that legions of sales pitches would rely on marketing psychology built upon its mere absence. Why shell out 10 dollars when you can pay $9.99?

The penny had remade itself multiple times over the years, succeeding a one-cent predecessor authorized by the Continental Congress in 1787 and designed by Benjamin Franklin until the mint's creation in 1792. Made of pure copper, it featured a woman with flowing hair, symbolizing liberty.

Its name reflected the country’s colonial roots, a derivation of the British word “pence,” which the American founding fathers disposed of along with the English monarchy. 

The one-cent coin is the oldest coin minted in the United States, having been in circulation since 1793.  But they've increasingly become worthless over time. Nowadays, you can't buy anything with less than a heavy sackful of them, and if you show up at McDonalds with said sackful to pay for your Big Mac you're likely to be kicked out of the restaurant. Given that fact, as well as it cost almost four cents to mint each one-cent coin, it was well past time for its demise.

This isn't to say I don't understand the nostalgia involved; I'm old enough to remember penny gumball machines, which is to say I'm pretty old. But I can't say I've had any use for the coin since my childhood. For as long as I can remember, any pennies I've come across during the course of the day - received as change, or found lying about - would end up in a big jar that would later be dumped into the Coinstar machine at the local grocery store. These days, I hardly come across pennies at all, simply because I rarely engage in cash transactions anymore. A friend of mine said on Facebook better than I could: "bye bye, coin I have not used in decades."

The penny is not going to disappear - there are still something like 300 billion of them currently in circulation. The problem is, most of them are in coin jars, under couch cushions, or in your car's cupholder - not in your local retailer's cash register, which is where they need to be. One-cent coins, in fact, continued to be manufactured for as long as they did because of what The Atlantic's Caity Weaver calls the "Perpetual Penny Paradox:"

Most pennies produced by the U.S. Mint are given out as change but never spent; this creates an incessant demand for new pennies to replace them, so that cash transactions that necessitate pennies (i.e., any concluding with a sum whose final digit is 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8 or 9) can be settled. Because these replacement pennies will themselves not be spent, they will need to be replaced with new pennies that will also not be spent, and so will have to be replaced with new pennies that will not be spent, which will have to be replaced by new pennies (that will not be spent, and so will have to be replaced). In other words, we keep minting pennies because no one uses the pennies we mint.

It wouldn't surprise me if, over the course of a given year, millions of dollars worth of pennies are cumulatively thrown in the trash by people who simply don't want to deal with them. Which, if true, is just another reason to stop producing them. 

Kuff has more, as does the NPR's L. Carol Ritchie