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Dat Nguyen Documentary

Article from Zwerneman in the Houston Chronicle summarizing this to be released on July 4th - can't wait to see it as Dat is one of my all time favorites.

Nguyen’s power, perseverance on full display in documentary​


Brent Zwerneman ON THE AGGIES

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Stephen Dunn/Getty Images
Former Texas A&M linebacker Dat Nguyen is the Aggies’ all-time leading tackler with 517.
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COLLEGE STATION — One of Texas A&M’s top timeless tales has hit the quarter century mark, and along those memorable lines, the Aggies have done a solid job of filling a football void for fans in July.
Call ’em the Dat days of summer, thanks to A&M’s release of “All American — the Dat Nguyen Story” on, appropriately, July Fourth.

“It’s truly a unique story in the history of Texas A&M athletics,” said Andy Richardson, the Aggies’ associate athletic director for 12th Man Productions, which is responsible for the documentary.
The background of Nguyen, an All-American linebacker in the late 1990s, is so incomparable that it’s a unique story in the history of America, as well.
“A living personification of the ‘American Dream,’ ” the documentary’s epitaph reads as the swift moving, nearly hour-long film reaches a conclusion. “In the history of college football, Dat is the only unanimous All-American of Vietnamese descent. He also is the only Vietnamese-American to be selected in the NFL draft.”
A handful of media members were treated to an early showing of “The Dat Nguyen Story” on Tuesday at Kyle Field, where Nguyen developed into a legend and led the Aggies to their last league title — 25 years ago, when A&M competed in the Big 12 prior to moving to the Southeastern Conference in 2012.
“Dat was surprised that we would want to bring a spotlight to this,” Chris Sabo, the documentary’s writer and director, said of Nguyen’s humility that he’s retained from the time he was growing up on the Gulf Coast in Rockport as the son of a shrimper. “(But) when you have a good story, tell it and get out of the way.”
Nguyen, 47, is A&M’s all-time leading tackler with 517, 62 more than Johnny Holland’s 455 from 1983-86, a record that stands a good chance of never being broken in College Station. That’s not his most impressive feat, however, by a long shot.
“The athletics stuff is just cherry on the top,” Sabo said of the Nguyen family’s harrowing exit of South Vietnam just in front of the invading Viet Cong in 1975, when Tammy Nguyen was four months pregnant with Dat. “It was a chance to really go into and explain why his family was in danger. It wasn’t just, ‘We’re going to leave town.’ It was, ‘If we don’t leave, we’re going to die.’
“It had that type of urgency.”
The documentary is extraordinary early in two aspects: showing in vivid detail the dire nature of the Nguyen family’s escape from Vietnam, and the challenges faced by Vietnamese people who wound up settling along the Texas Gulf Coast in continuing their work in the fishing and shrimping business. Dat was born in a refugee camp in Arkansas prior to the family moving to Rockport.
Nguyen, in happily discovering a rugged game Vietnamese people did not play, excelled as a playmaking tackler at Rockport-Fulton High.
“Football took up my time and kept me out of trouble,” Nguyen said. “I couldn’t do anything else but football and school, and that kept me out of trouble. That was really a turning point in my life.”
Nguyen’s starring role for the Pirates of Rockport-Fulton in the early 1990s also served as a salve between Vietnamese people, who were still relatively new to the Gulf Coast, and the locals, whose families had spent decades fishing the region, as the documentary dives into.
“If this helps a single person, it’s more than worth the work that went into it,” Sabo said of Nguyen fighting through obstacles to first star at Rockport-Fulton, then A&M and finally with the Dallas Cowboys as a third-round NFL draft selection in 1999. “It drips America and everything it’s about. That’s what you live for, to tell the stories that really, really matter.”
This story matters not only to A&M, but the country, and the timing of its release could not be better.
“That seemed very apropos,” Richardson said with a smile of the Independence Day debut.
Richardson, a 1987 A&M graduate, covered Nguyen as a videographer for Aggies athletics in the mid- to late-1990s.
“You may not realize in the moment how special it is,” Richardson said of witnessing more than 500 tackles and Nguyen’s exceptional approach to the game and life, “but as time passes you truly appreciate it.”
Nguyen and his wife, Becky, have five children, and Sabo gets a kick out of the idea that one of A&M’s all-time icons is still young and vibrant enough to appear to have a few more tackles in him if needed.
“Here’s a guy who’s still a young cat, he’s got kids in grade school,” Sabo said.
Nguyen, who lives in the Dallas-Fort Worth area where he was an All-Pro linebacker for the Cowboys in 2003, owns a Chick-fil-A restaurant in Fort Worth’s Montgomery Plaza. The documentary, which features some funny scenes from Nguyen’s interaction in the restaurant, will be available at 12thman.com/dat and on the 12th Man TV OTT via Apple TV, Roku and Amazon Fire Stick on Tuesday.
“We’ve had a long history of great linebackers at Texas A&M,” former A&M coach R.C. Slocum once said of Nguyen, his tackling prowess and the attention to detail that’s led to a successful career after football. “Dat really outperformed all of them.”

Coach Price Foundation Thread

I just received a note written by Coach Terry Price's wife ( I received it from a mutual friend of mine and Mrs. Price):

From Terry's wife Kenya:

"Hey! I am asking friends and family to make a donation in lieu of flowers to 12thmanfoundation.com as a memorial gift in Terry’ s name. In the comment section type "to establish the Terry Price Memorial General Scholarship Fund."


I am willing to match the first $5.00 of any AY member's donation to this fund, up to $1,000. Please denote Aggie Yell on your donation so that I can make the appropriate matching donation. Let's support this site with a donation to the legacy of this truly great Ag. Thank you.

Also, since I haven't seen it posted on this site, I am providing the schedule for the Celebration of Life for Coach Price:

Celebration of Life for Coach Terry Price:

Saturday, July 8, 2023

Central Baptist Church

1991 FM-158 E

College Station, TX 77845

Visitation: 9am-11am

Funeral Service:11am

Ranger’s fans, 50 years ago today:

On June 27, 1973, 18-year-old David Clyde made his major league debut for the Texas Rangers at Arlington Stadium before the largest crowd in Rangers' history.

As a Houston area kid and Astros fan, I found and still find this story to be one of the most incredible in sports history (I’ve since lived in College Station, Dallas, Austin and Plano).

David Eugene Clyde (born April 22, 1955) is a former left-handed Major League Baseball pitcher who played for five seasons with the Texas Rangers (1973–1975) and Cleveland Indians (1978–1979). He is noted for his once promising baseball career, which ended at age 26 because of arm and shoulder injuries.

After living for a time in New Jersey, his family moved to Houston, Texas in 1969.[1] He played football and baseball at Westchester High School in Houston where he became known as a perfectionist and was an excellent student.[2] During his senior year at Westchester, Clyde had a stellar record of 18–0, giving up only three earned runs in 148 innings pitched, while pitching five no-hitters and setting 14 national high school records.[2] His dominance at the high school level attracted the attention of many MLB team scouts, many of whom billed Clyde as the "next Sandy Koufax" and others called him the "best pitching prospect they had ever seen".[2]

Clyde's career made him the "poster-boy" for bringing up young players prematurely and dealing with arm injuries. He was named by journalist Randy Gallowayas among the worst cases of "mishandling" a young player in baseball history. He is considered by many as a savior of the Texas Rangers franchise because of the significant attendance boost that Clyde's hype brought to the team, preventing it from a possible bankruptcy or American League takeover.

In 1973, an average of 18,000 fans paid to see the Rangers when Clyde pitched. When he didn't, the Rangers averaged 7,500 in paid attendance. The Rangers finally sent Clyde to the minors in 1975 and 1976. He hurt his arm and had shoulder surgery, and was traded to the Indians early in 1978.

Fvcked up family members

Who's your most fvcked-up relative?

I've got some doosies, but I know I can't compare to some of you, especially the more Louisianan and Oklahoman amongst you.

My paternal grandfather (Aggie professor emeritus) described his siblings and cousins to me as "cutthroats and pickpockets, and the worst bunch of scoundrels you'd ever want to run across". They all grew up in Youngstown, Ohio, so that checks out. My maternal grandfather once sold the family furniture to buy booze. I have a great uncle on each side who killed someone. My uncle had financial warrants hanging over his head when he died. I've got a couple of cousins who are criminals, and one who is likely protecting a child molester.

Still, in today's America, I feel like that's kind of normal. My half-sister has talked to me about some of the weird stuff from her mom's side of the family in Canada. She also has a great uncle who was a killer, and she has some cousins with serious mental illnesses.

Who's your worst? Anyone on here got a serial killer in that family tree?
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