Career
As a senior, he received honorable mention All-American recognition
Schorp was a star at San Antonio Churchill High School, and played immediately as a freshman in 1990 in spite of being on a loaded Texas Agricultural and Mechanical squad that pounded 13th ranked Brigham Young University 65-14 in the Holiday Bowl. The following year, Schorp had 24 receptions for 280 yards, becoming the first tight end to lead the Aggies in receptions since Rod Bernstine in 1986, almost helping the Aggies complete a perfect year, as they remained undefeated until the last game of the season, losing to #5 Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl Classic. Schorp"s senior season was his finest as an Aggie.
Schorp caught four passes for 68 yards against the Cardinal and was named the Most Valuable Player of the Disneyland Pigskin Classic.
The catch he is most remembered for by Aggie fans cames three games later at Kyle Field in College Station. With the #5 Aggies trailing Texas Technical 17-16 with time running out in the fourth quarter on a third-and-long play, quarterback Jeff Granger broke away from Technical"s Dusty Beavers to avoid a sack deep behind the line of scrimmage.
Granger, who had been inconsistent all day, somehow managed to duck under the tackle and scrambled to find Schorp, who made a diving 13-yard catch for a first down. lieutenant was the second of nine consecutive wins that season for the Aggies, who finished the season with a tough 21-24 loss to #4 Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl Classic.
Schorp went on to play in the NFL, mostly as a reserve for Seattle Seahawks, Jacksonville Jaguars, and Dallas Cowboys, with which he had two stints, and was given a Super Bowl XXX championship ring in 1996.
He is, to date, the last tight end to earn first-team all-conference honors for the Aggies.