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He tried throwing the ball in the locker room, but had no control. The once-wispy kid who proved durable enough to start 52 straight games, and won an NCAA-record 45, finally had an injury he couldn't shake off.
"I don't have lots of pain, that was never the issue," McCoy said. "My arm went numb. There's no telling where the ball would have gone if I would try to throw. ... It feels like I slept on my arm, woke up and it's dead."
Coach Mack Brown has long figured his program would be in good shape when McCoy gives way to Gilbert, who is bigger and has a stronger arm. However, he was counting on the transition coming one game and eight months later.
In the first half, Gilbert basically played like an 18-year-old whose best days are ahead of him. He had some good throws dropped, then forced a shovel pass into traffic in the closing seconds of the first half and saw it get intercepted and returned for a touchdown, sending the Longhorns into the locker room trailing 24-6.
"Just keep playing," Brown told Gilbert at halftime. "You're a good player. It's a hard learning curve; learn fast."
Indeed, Gilbert started showing some of the poise and precision that made him a high school superstar. Coincidence or not, the turnaround came after McCoy returned to the sideline, offering advice and encouragement.
When it was over and confetti was flying and Alabama players were celebrating, Gilbert stood about 35 yards away, watching with moist eyes. Shipley walked over, clapped him on the chest and said, "You did the best you could do. Be proud of that."
[Associated Press;
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