Former Cowboy to Aggie legend: Choate goes down in history after being named 12th Man

By Meer Mahfuz, Coppell High School

When you think of the star players of a football team, you think quarterbacks, running backs, receivers and probably a handful of defensive players. It would be a rarity for your mind to turn to a long snapper as a star of a football team.

While long snapping is crucial to the success of any special teams play, the long snapper rarely gets the recognition that they deserve.

To most, he is just another long snapper in collegiate football but for the Texas A&M football program, Coppell High School 2017 graduate Connor Choate is one of a handful of players to go down in footballing history after being designated as the 12th Man by Aggies coach Jimbo Fisher on the morning of Aug. 28 in a team meeting.

This year, Texas A&M is celebrating 100 years of the 12th Man.

“What an honor to be chosen for the 12th man,” Choate said on Twitter. “For the first time in my life I am at a lost for words. I will give everything!”

A tradition that dates back to 1922, the 12th Man at Texas A&M is one of the most iconic and historically significant pieces of its athletic history, so much so that the original 12th Man, E. King Gill has a statue outside of Kyle Field.

The tradition was born during the Dixie Classic on Jan. 2, 1922, when an underdog A&M team was playing Centre College, the nation’s top team at the time. As the game wore on, the Aggies found their numbers dwindling due to a plague of injuries when coach Dana X. Bible remembered Gill, a squad player, who was in the stands, helping reporters identify the players on the field.

Bible called Gill from the stands and Gill suited up and stood ready throughout the rest of the game. A&M ended up pulling off the upset, 22-14, and Gill was the last player remaining on the bench.

Gill’s readiness for service, desire to support his team and drive helped ignite a flame of devotion that resounded through the Texas A&M students and community. The devotion passed down generations and saw the entirety of the A&M student body become the 12th Man because the 12th Man is always in the stands, ready to be called upon.

And while Choate might not have started his collegiate career with the Aggies (transferring from Memphis), his drive and team-first mentality glowed from his personality as soon as he stepped out of that locker room and onto the field.

The passion he’s shown the Aggies, though, started in him when he took the field as a long snapper for the Cowboys under Coppell coach Michael DeWitt.

Despite having experience snapping while playing center in his early years of football, Choate decided to move to playing as a tight end and outside linebacker. It wouldn’t be until the end of his sophomore year where Choate’s snapping sense called back to him.

During that spring of his sophomore year is when Choate really made the switch and embraced the position as his own after winning over the starting varsity job. Through the last two years of his high school career, Choate worked in the depths and in countless hours by himself to perfect his craft and became nationally recognized as one of the best snappers nationwide.

“The thing that sticks out most to me is his work ethic,” DeWitt said. “We have this thing called the 10,000 ball club where receivers and defensive backs come in on their own and, by the end of spring, they’ve caught 10,000 balls and he decided on his own that he wanted to come in and snap 10,000 balls one spring and that was a testament to his work ethic.”

Though his snapping ability impressed the coaches on the field during his time at Coppell, his infectious personality and work ethic leaves a lasting impression for all those going through the Coppell football program.

“His teammates trusted him, he had passion about the game, the way he played the game [and] passion about the sport and his position,” Coppell assistant Karl Pointer said. “As for discipline, to be as good as he was and to excel at practice and do those things, no one wants to go wake up in the mornings and snap a medicine ball between your legs against a wall over and over again but that’s something he did everyday.”

Even in the classroom, Choate exuded the sociable personality that propelled him into the role of 12th Man. During his sports entertainment marketing class at CHS, taught by Richard Chamberlain, Choate’s charismatic and leadership qualities made younger athletes gravitate towards him and allowed Conner the ability to jostle and motivate the people in class.

“It’s pretty incredible [to have taught the 12th Man], my family members are pretty blown away by it, because it is such a unique position,” said Chamberlain, a graduate of Texas A&M. “To think that there’s such a unique, lone position that could’ve been someone that I taught here is pretty incredible and amazing. It just goes to show it’s such a privilege to teach here, it’s such a privilege to have such amazing students, it’s a privilege to have students that have been able to achieve so much.”

And even though Choate will go down in A&M history as the 2021 12th Man, he began to shine on Buddy Echols Field and in the classrooms of Coppell High School. Choate’s legacy serves as a true inspiration for the Coppell football program, where he is, forever, a Cowboy.

This story was originally published on Coppell Student Media on September 15, 2021.