I haven't seen many guys who have managed to play both tours successfully, so I've decided to play in stretches of months rather than weeks. I'm back here and I'd love to win on home soil.

We have been receiving phone calls from employers all over the area asking what can they do to help and specifically requesting the disaster victims.

It is the convenience store that has the RF wireless access and it paints the entire retail footprint at the gas station including the pumps.

There's just so many more people out there.

I've been wearing shorts for the last six weeks, so it was a bit of a shock. But I love playing these courses and it's good fun.

We took nineteen of the highest-resolution structures available -- the best data we could get our hands on. We then went through each of those structures one residue at a time, looking for evidence of some sort of motion that extended beyond just a side chain spinning.

I was proud of our effort to make it this far. This was a very difficult golf course.

It just wasn't there today. I felt more nervous today. Today, it finally hit me that this was my last meet.

The time can be better spent doing our jobs and getting on with life.

We're improving, although the score today isn't reflective of that because of the difficult conditions. But the attitude and effort is there. We're optimistic it's going to keep getting better and better for us.

This is UT's year, or so we think. OU has just enough talent to turn this into a nail-biter.

They finally all played well. It was 20-25 mph winds and it was 48 degrees when it started. But the team played well and persevered.