UNITED STATES
               SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                    Washington, D.C.  20549

                           FORM 10-K

        ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF
              THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

 For the fiscal year ended June 28, 2000        Commission File No. 1-10275

                  BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC.

     (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

              Delaware                                 75-1914582
      (State or other jurisdiction of               (I.R.S. employer
     incorporation or organization)                identification no.)

       6820 LBJ Freeway, Dallas, Texas                  75240
    (Address of principal executive offices)         (Zip Code)

                 Registrant's telephone number,
               including area code (972) 980-9917

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

                      Title of Each Class
                 Common Stock, $0.10 par value
                     Stock Purchase Rights

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:  None


      Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed
all  reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d)  of  the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding  12  months
(or  for such shorter period that the registrant was required  to
file  such  reports),  and (2) has been subject  to  such  filing
requirements for the past 90 days. Yes  X   No

      Indicate  by check mark if disclosure of delinquent  filers
pursuant  to Item 405 of Regulation S-K is not contained  herein,
and  will  not  be  contained, to the best  of  the  registrant's
knowledge,   in   definitive  proxy  or  information   statements
incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form  10-K  or  any
amendment to this Form 10-K.  ___

      The  aggregate  market value of the voting  stock  held  by
persons  other  than  directors and officers of  registrant  (who
might be deemed to be affiliates of registrant) at September  11,
2000 was $2,065,032,129.

      Indicate  the number of shares outstanding of each  of  the
registrant's   classes  of  common  stock,  as  of   the   latest
practicable date.

                                         Outstanding at
     Class                              September 11, 2000

Common Stock, $0.10 par value           66,056,817 shares


              DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

      Portions  of the registrant's Annual Report to Shareholders
for  the  fiscal  year  ended June 28, 2000 are  incorporated  by
reference into Parts I, II and IV hereof, to the extent indicated
herein.   Portions  of  the registrant's  Proxy  Statement  dated
September  22,  2000, for its annual meeting of  shareholders  on
November  9,  2000, are incorporated by reference into  Part  III
hereof, to the extent indicated herein.

                             PART I

Item 1.   BUSINESS.

      General

          Brinker  International, Inc. ("Company") is principally
      engaged  in  the  ownership,  operation,  development   and
      franchising   of  the  Chili's  Grill  &  Bar  ("Chili's"),
      Romano's  Macaroni Grill ("Macaroni Grill"), On The  Border
      Mexican  Grill  &  Cantina  ("On  The  Border"),  Cozymel's
      Coastal  Mexican  Grill  ("Cozymel's"),  Maggiano's  Little
      Italy  ("Maggiano's"),  and  Corner  Bakery  Cafe  ("Corner
      Bakery") restaurant concepts.  In addition, the Company  is
      involved  in the ownership, and is or has been involved  in
      the  development,  of the Big Bowl ("Big  Bowl"),  Wildfire
      ("Wildfire"),  and  Eatzi's Market and  Bakery  ("Eatzi's")
      concepts.  The Company was organized under the laws of  the
      State  of  Delaware  in September 1983 to  succeed  to  the
      business  operated  by Chili's, Inc., a Texas  corporation,
      organized  in  August  1977.   The  Company  completed  the
      acquisitions  of Macaroni Grill, On The Border,  Cozymel's,
      Maggiano's, and Corner Bakery in November 1989,  May  1994,
      July  1995, August 1995, and August 1995, respectively.

      Core Restaurant Concepts

      Chili's Grill & Bar

            Chili's   is   a   full-service   Southwestern-themed
      restaurant,  featuring  a casual atmosphere  and  a  varied
      menu   of   chicken,  beef  and  seafood  entrees,  steaks,
      hamburgers,  ribs, fajitas, sandwiches, salads,  appetizers
      and  desserts,  all  of  which  are  prepared  fresh  daily
      according to special Chili's recipes.

           Chili's  restaurants  feature  quick,  efficient   and
      friendly   table  service  designed  to  minimize  customer
      waiting  time  and  facilitate  table  turnover,  with   an
      average  turnover  time  per  table  of  approximately   45
      minutes.  Service personnel are dressed casually in  jeans,
      knit  shirts  and aprons to reinforce the casual,  informal
      environment. The decor of a Chili's restaurant consists  of
      booth  seating,  tile-top tables, hanging plants  and  wood
      and brick walls covered with interesting memorabilia.

          Emphasis  is placed on serving substantial portions  of
      fresh,   high  quality  food  at  modest  prices.    Entree
      selections  range in menu price from $5.29 to $13.99,  with
      the   average   revenue   per  meal,  including   alcoholic
      beverages,  approximating  $10.38  per  person.   A   full-
      service  bar is available at each Chili's restaurant,  with
      frozen   margaritas  offered  as  the  concept's  specialty
      drink.   During  the  year ended June 28,  2000,  food  and
      non-alcoholic   beverage  sales  constituted  approximately
      86.3%  of  the  concept's total restaurant  revenues,  with
      alcoholic  beverage  sales  accounting  for  the  remaining
      13.7%.

      Romano's Macaroni Grill

          Macaroni  Grill  is  a  casual,  country-style  Italian
      restaurant  which specializes in family-style  recipes  and
      features  seafood,  meat, chicken,  pasta,  salads,  pizza,
      appetizers  and desserts with a full-service  bar  in  most
      restaurants.    Exhibition   cooking,   pizza   ovens   and
      rotisseries   provide   an   enthusiastic   and    exciting
      environment    in   the   restaurants.    Macaroni    Grill
      restaurants   also  feature  white  linen-clothed   tables,
      fireplaces, sous stations and prominent displays of  wines.
      Service  personnel  are dressed in white,  starched  shirts
      and aprons, dark slacks, and bright ties.

          Entree  selections range in menu price  from  $5.29  to
      $16.99  with  certain specialty items  priced  on  a  daily
      basis.   The average revenue per meal, including  alcoholic
      beverages,  is approximately $13.73 per person. During  the
      year  ended June 28, 2000, food and non-alcoholic  beverage
      sales  constituted  approximately 86.1%  of  the  concept's
      total  restaurant revenues, with alcoholic  beverage  sales
      accounting for the remaining 13.9%.

      On The Border Mexican Grill & Cantina

          On  The  Border  restaurants are  full-service,  casual
      Mexican  restaurants featuring mesquite-grilled specialties
      and  traditional Tex-Mex entrees and appetizers  served  in
      generous   portions  at  modest  prices.   On  The   Border
      restaurants  feature an outdoor patio, a full-service  bar,
      booth  and  table seating and brick and wood walls  with  a
      Southwest  decor.   On  The Border restaurants  also  offer
      enthusiastic  table service intended to  minimize  customer
      waiting   time   and   facilitate  table   turnover   while
      simultaneously  providing  customers  with   a   satisfying
      casual dining experience.

          Entree  selections range in menu price  from  $4.99  to
      $12.99,  with  the  average  revenue  per  meal,  including
      alcoholic  beverages,  approximating  $12.40  per   person.
      During  the  year  ended  June  28,  2000,  food  and  non-
      alcoholic  beverage  sales constituted approximately  78.2%
      of  the concept's total restaurant revenues, with alcoholic
      beverage sales accounting for the remaining 21.8%.

      Cozymel's Coastal Mexican Grill

           Cozymel's  restaurants  are  casual,  upscale  coastal
      Mexican  restaurants featuring daily fresh  fish  features,
      grilled  chicken and beef, and slow-roasted  pork  entrees,
      appetizers,  desserts and a full-service  bar  featuring  a
      wide  variety of signature margaritas and specialty  frozen
      beverages.   Cozymel's restaurants offer a  "tropical,  not
      typical"  Mexican  atmosphere, which  includes  an  outdoor
      patio,  intended  to  evoke the  atmosphere  of  a  coastal
      Mexican seaside resort.

          Entree  selections range in menu price  from  $5.99  to
      $19.99   with  the  average  revenue  per  meal,  including
      alcoholic  beverages,  approximating  $14.59  per   person.
      During  the  year  ended  June  28,  2000,  food  and  non-
      alcoholic  beverage  sales constituted approximately  74.9%
      of  the concept's total restaurant revenues, with alcoholic
      beverages accounting for the remaining 25.1%.

      Maggiano's Little Italy

          Maggiano's  restaurants are classic re-creations  of  a
      New  York  City pre-war "Little Italy" dinner house.   Each
      of  the  Maggiano's  restaurants is a casual,  full-service
      Italian  restaurant with a family-style menu as well  as  a
      full  lunch  and  dinner  menu  offering  southern  Italian
      appetizers,  homemade bread, bountiful portions  of  pasta,
      chicken, seafood, veal and prime steaks, as well as a  full
      range  of alcoholic beverages.  Most Maggiano's restaurants
      also   feature   extensive  banquet   facilities.    Entree
      selections  range in menu price from $7.95 to $29.95,  with
      the   average   revenue   per  meal,  including   alcoholic
      beverages,  approximating $25.29 per  person.   During  the
      year  ended June 28, 2000, food and non-alcoholic  beverage
      sales  constituted  approximately 78.3%  of  the  concept's
      total  restaurant revenues, with alcoholic  beverage  sales
      accounting for the remaining 21.7%.

      Corner Bakery Cafe

           Corner   Bakery  is  a  retail  bakery  cafe   serving
      breakfast,  lunch  and  dinner in the emerging  fast-casual
      dining   segment.   Corner  Bakery  offers  fresh  muffins,
      brownies,  cookies and specialty items, as well as  hearth-
      baked  breads,  rolls  and  baguettes,  all  of  which  are
      created  daily  by  artisan bakers. The breads  offered  by
      Corner  Bakery include crusty country boules, and specialty
      breads  such  as  raisin-pecan,  Kalamata  olive  ciabatta,
      cranberry-orange, multi-grain harvest, and ryes.

          While  retaining  a relaxed atmosphere,  Corner  Bakery
      exemplifies  casual  elegance, with  most  bakeries  having
      both  indoor and outdoor seating.  In addition  to  breads,
      breakfast  and  dessert sweets, featured in the  cafes  are
      specialty  sandwiches, fresh salads, warm  soups,  paninis,
      pasta and pizzas.  New savory foods, breads and sweets  are
      created   seasonally  to  take  advantage  of  the  highest
      quality  ingredients available.  Corner  Bakery's  catering
      group  offers  a wide range of gift baskets, breakfast  and
      sandwich  trays  and lunch boxes for any  size  meeting  or
      social  event.  Prices for menu items range from  $1.00  to
      $7.99   with  the  average  revenue  per  meal,   including
      alcoholic   beverages,  approximating  $8.27  per   person.
      During  the  year  ended  June  28,  2000,  food  and  non-
      alcoholic  beverage  sales  constituted  over  99%  of  the
      concept's   total  restaurant  revenues.   Catering   sales
      constituted  approximately 14.5%  of  such  food  and  non-
      alcoholic beverage sales.

      Jointly-Developed Restaurant Concepts

         Big Bowl

          Big  Bowl features contemporary Asian cuisine  prepared
      with  fresh  ingredients in a casual,  vibrant  atmosphere.
      Big  Bowl  is distinguished by its authentic, full-flavored
      menu  that  features five kinds of fresh  noodles,  chicken
      pot  stickers  and  dumplings,  hand-rolled  summer  rolls,
      seasonal  stir-fry  dishes featuring  local  produce,  wok-
      seared  fish,  and signature beverages, such as  "homemade"
      fresh  ginger ale and tropical cocktails.  Big Bowl's focus
      on  quality  means  garlic,  ginger  and  lemon  grass  are
      chopped  daily,  lemon juice is hand squeezed,  and  peanut
      sauce  is  prepared with home-roasted peanuts.  Big  Bowl's
      flavorful  broths, curry pastes, dip sauces and  condiments
      are  made  from  scratch.  Big Bowl's interactive  stir-fry
      bar  allows  the guests to help themselves to  a  "Farmers'
      Market"  array  of vegetables to be wok-cooked  with  their
      own choice of sauces and meats with noodles or rice.

          While  honoring its Asian culinary tradition, Big  Bowl
      strives  to  deliver fine quality at great value,  assisted
      by  a  service  team  carefully  trained  to  guide  guests
      through  this  new  culinary experience. Entree  selections
      range  in menu price from $6.95 to $12.95, with the average
      revenue    per   meal,   including   alcoholic   beverages,
      approximating  $13.68 per person.  During  the  year  ended
      June  28,  2000,  food  and  non-alcoholic  beverage  sales
      constituted  approximately 87.2%  of  the  concept's  total
      restaurant   revenues,   with  alcoholic   beverage   sales
      accounting for the remaining 12.8%.

         Wildfire

          Wildfire  restaurants are authentic 1940's style  steak
      houses  featuring an open kitchen consisting of a  hardwood
      burning   oven   and  rotisserie.  Each  of  the   Wildfire
      restaurants  is a casual, full-service restaurant  offering
      broiled  steaks,  chops,  fresh  seafood,  barbecued  ribs,
      pizza,  spit-roasted chicken, salads to share, and  a  full
      line  of  cocktails with a complete wine list to complement
      the  menu.  Entree selections range from $12.95 to  $26.95,
      with  the  average  revenue per meal,  including  alcoholic
      beverages,  approximating $22.18 per  person.   During  the
      year  ended June 28, 2000, food and non-alcoholic  beverage
      sales  constituted  approximately 78.0%  of  the  concept's
      total   restaurant   revenues,  with  alcoholic   beverages
      accounting for the remaining 22.0%.

      Eatzi's Market and Bakery

          Eatzi's is a home meal replacement retail market, which
      offers   customers  just  about  everything  in  the   meal
      spectrum,  from fresh produce and raw meats and seafood  to
      restaurant-quality,  chef-prepared  meals-to-go.    Eatzi's
      also  provides a tremendous variety of "made from  scratch"
      breads  and  pastries along with dry groceries, deli  meats
      and  cheeses, made-to-order salads and sandwiches, a coffee
      bar,  and  fresh  cut  flowers.  Large selections  of  non-
      alcoholic  beverages,  wine,  and  beer  are  available  to
      complete  the meal.  Specialty packaged items, specifically
      selected   to  complement  the  fresh  choices,  are   also
      available.

          Eatzi's  features  an abundance of fresh,  high-quality
      meals,  openly presented in distinctive areas,  replicating
      an   energetic  European  marketplace  with  an  exhibition
      kitchen  and bakery.  The circular chef's display  case  is
      the  focal point of the store designed to channel  customer
      traffic  around  to other departments.   There  is  limited
      indoor  and outdoor seating since the emphasis is on  take-
      out purchases.

           Emphasis  is  placed  on  restaurant-quality  cuisine,
      prepared  fresh  daily  by  highly  skilled  and  culinary-
      trained   chefs  using  Eatzi's  unique  recipes.   Certain
      designated  menu  items  are  rotated  weekly  to   provide
      variety and to augment the core menu.  Corporate chefs  are
      constantly  developing and testing new  recipes  to  ensure
      high-quality  and  ample  variety in  addition  to  keeping
      ahead   of   the   customer's  changing   taste   profiles.
      Individual  meal selections range in price  from  $4.99  to
      $10.99  with  the  average revenue per purchase,  including
      alcoholic  beverages,  approximating  $17.49.   During  the
      year  ended June 28, 2000, food and non-alcoholic  beverage
      sales  constituted 95.0% of the concept's  total  revenues,
      with  alcoholic  beverages  accounting  for  the  remaining
      5.0%.  Catering  sales constituted approximately  18.6%  of
      such food and non-alcoholic beverage sales.

         Business Development

           The  Company's  long-term  objective  is  to  continue
      expansion   of   its   restaurant   concepts   by   opening
      Company-operated units in strategically desirable  markets.
      The  Company  intends  to  concentrate  on  development  of
      certain  identified  markets to achieve penetration  levels
      deemed  desirable by the Company in order  to  improve  the
      Company's  competitive  position, marketing  potential  and
      profitability.  Expansion efforts will be focused not  only
      on  major metropolitan areas in the United States but  also
      on  smaller market areas and nontraditional locations (such
      as  airports, kiosks and food courts) which can  adequately
      support any of the Company's restaurant concepts.

          The  Company  considers the restaurant  site  selection
      process  critical  to  its long-term  success  and  devotes
      significant  effort to the investigation of  new  locations
      utilizing    a   variety   of   sophisticated    analytical
      techniques.   The  site  selection  process  focuses  on  a
      variety  of  factors including:  trading-area demographics,
      such  as  target  population density and  household  income
      levels;  an  evaluation  of site  characteristics  such  as
      visibility, accessibility and traffic volume; proximity  to
      activity   centers  such  as  shopping  malls,  hotel/motel
      complexes  and  offices; and an analysis of  the  potential
      competition.  Members  of management  inspect  and  approve
      each restaurant site prior to its acquisition.

          The  Company periodically reevaluates restaurant  sites
      to   ensure  that  site  selection  attributes   have   not
      deteriorated  below minimum standards. In  the  event  site
      deterioration were to occur, the Company makes a  concerted
      effort   to   improve  the  restaurant's   performance   by
      providing  physical,  operating and marketing  enhancements
      unique  to  each  restaurant's situation.   If  efforts  to
      restore  the restaurant's performance to acceptable minimum
      standards   are   unsuccessful,   the   Company   considers
      relocation  to  a  proximate,  more  desirable   site,   or
      evaluates   closing  the  restaurant   if   the   Company's
      criteria,   such   as   return  on  investment   and   area
      demographic  data,  do  not support  a  relocation.   Since
      inception,  the Company has closed thirty-five restaurants,
      including  eleven  in  fiscal 2000, which  were  performing
      below  the  Company's standards primarily due to  declining
      trading-area  demographics.  The Company operates  pursuant
      to a strategic plan targeted to support the Company's long-
      term   growth   objectives,  with  a  focus  on   continued
      development  of  those restaurant concepts  that  have  the
      greatest   return  potential  for  the  Company   and   its
      shareholders.

           The   following  table  illustrates  the   system-wide
      restaurants opened in fiscal 2000 and the planned  openings
      in fiscal 2001:

                            Fiscal 2000          Fiscal 2001
                              Openings       Projected Openings

      Chili's:
        Company-Operated       35                    37-40
        Franchise              33                    42-45

      Macaroni Grill:
        Company-Operated       17                    17-20
        Franchise               1                     1-3

      On The Border:
        Company-Operated       15                     8-11
        Franchise               7                     4-6

      Cozymel's                 0                     1-2

      Maggiano's                2                     2-3

      Corner Bakery:
        Company-Operated        7                     7-10
        Franchise               1                     0

      Big Bowl                  2                     2-3


                   TOTAL      120                   121-143


          The  Company anticipates that some of the  fiscal  2001
      projected restaurant openings will be constructed  pursuant
      to   "build-to-suit"  agreements,  in  which   the   lessor
      contributes  the  land cost and all, or substantially  all,
      of  the  building construction costs.  In other cases,  the
      Company  may either lease or own the land (paying  for  any
      owned land from its own funds) and either lease or own  the
      building,  furniture,  fixtures and equipment  (paying  for
      any owned items from its own funds).

          The following table illustrates the approximate average
      capital  investment  for a typical unit  in  the  Company's
      primary restaurant concepts:


              Chili's    Macaroni Grill   On The Border   Cozymel's   Maggiano's    Corner Bakery
                                                                  
Land        $  600,000     $1,000,000      $   750,000    $1,000,000   $3,000,000   $  800,000
Building     1,080,000      1,400,000        1,300,000     1,500,000    3,300,000      570,000
Furniture &
   Equipment   450,000        565,000          615,000       700,000    1,200,000      300,000
Other           60,000        100,000           65,000       100,000      130,000       25,000

     TOTAL  $2,190,000     $3,065,000       $2,730,000    $3,300,000   $7,630,000   $1,695,000


          The  specific rate at which the Company is able to open
      new  restaurants is determined by its success  in  locating
      satisfactory   sites,  negotiating  acceptable   lease   or
      purchase  terms,  securing appropriate  local  governmental
      permits  and  approvals, and by its capacity  to  supervise
      construction and recruit and train management personnel.

         Franchise Operations

          The  Company intends to continue its expansion  through
      joint  venture and franchise development, both domestically
      and  internationally.   At June 28, 2000,  forty-one  total
      joint  venture or franchise development agreements existed.
      During  the year ended June 28, 2000, thirty-three Chili's,
      one  Macaroni  Grill, seven On The Border, and  one  Corner
      Bakery franchised restaurants were opened.

          The  Company  has entered into international  franchise
      agreements, which will bring Chili's to Qatar and  Macaroni
      Grill  to  Puerto Rico in the 2001 fiscal year.  In  fiscal
      2000,  the  first Chili's restaurants opened  in  Guatemala
      (November 1999) and Saudi Arabia (November 1999),  and  the
      first  Macaroni Grill restaurant opened in Mexico  (January
      2000).

          The Company intends to selectively pursue international
      expansion  and  is currently contemplating  development  in
      other  countries. A typical franchise development agreement
      provides  for  payment  of  area  development  and  initial
      franchise  fees  in  addition  to  subsequent  royalty  and
      advertising  fees  based  on  the  gross  sales   of   each
      restaurant.   Future franchise development  agreements  are
      expected   to   remain   limited  to   enterprises   having
      significant experience as restaurant operators  and  proven
      financial ability to develop multi-unit operations.

         Jointly-Developed Operations

          The Company has previously entered into agreements  for
      research and development activities related to the  testing
      of  new  restaurant  concepts and has a significant  equity
      interest  in  such  ventures.   The  Company  holds  a  50%
      interest  in  the legal entities owning the  six  Big  Bowl
      restaurants  located  in  Chicago  (3),  Lincolnshire,  and
      Schaumburg,  Illinois and Edina, Minnesota  and  the  three
      Wildfire   restaurants   located   in   Chicago   (2)   and
      Lincolnshire, Illinois.

      Restaurant Management

          The  Company's philosophy to maintain and operate  each
      concept as a distinct and separate entity ensures that  the
      culture,  recruitment  and  training  programs  and  unique
      operating  environments are preserved.  These  factors  are
      critical to the viability of each concept. Each concept  is
      directed  by  a  president and one  or  more  concept  vice
      presidents and senior vice presidents.

          The Company's restaurant management structure varies by
      concept.  The individual restaurants themselves are led  by
      a  management team including a general manager and  between
      two  to  five additional managers.  The level of restaurant
      supervision  depends  upon  the  operating  complexity  and
      sales  volume of each concept.  An area director/supervisor
      is  responsible  for the supervision of, on average,  three
      to   seven   restaurants.   For  those  concepts   with   a
      significant  number of units within a geographical  region,
      additional levels of management may be provided.

          The  Company believes that there is a high  correlation
      between the quality of restaurant management and the  long-
      term  success  of a concept.  In that regard,  the  Company
      encourages  increased  tenure at all  management  positions
      through  various  short and long-term  incentive  programs,
      including  equity ownership.  These programs, coupled  with
      a  general  management  philosophy emphasizing  quality  of
      life,  have  enabled  the Company  to  attract  and  retain
      management employees at levels above the industry norm.

          The Company ensures consistent quality standards in all
      concepts   through  the  issuance  of  operations   manuals
      covering  all elements of operations and food and  beverage
      manuals, which provide guidance for preparation of Company-
      formulated  recipes.  Routine visitation to the restaurants
      by  all  levels of supervision enforce strict adherence  to
      Company standards.

           The   director  of  training  for  each   concept   is
      responsible  for  maintaining  each  concept's  operational
      training program.  The training program includes a four  to
      five   month  training  period  for  restaurant  management
      trainees,  a  continuing management  training  process  for
      managers and supervisors, and training teams consisting  of
      groups   of   employees  experienced  in  all   facets   of
      restaurant  operations  that train employees  to  open  new
      restaurants.   The training teams typically  begin  on-site
      training  at  a new restaurant seven to ten days  prior  to
      opening   and  remain  on  location  two  to  three   weeks
      following  the  opening to ensure the smooth transition  to
      operating personnel.

         Purchasing

          The Company's ability to maintain consistent quality of
      products   throughout  each  of  its  restaurant   concepts
      depends  upon  acquiring food products  and  related  items
      from  reliable sources.  Suppliers are pre-approved by  the
      Company  and  are required, along with the restaurants,  to
      adhere   to   strict  product  specifications   established
      through  the Company's quality assurance program to  ensure
      that  high  quality, wholesome food and  beverage  products
      are  served  in  the  restaurants. The  Company  negotiates
      directly  with  the  major suppliers to obtain  competitive
      prices  and uses purchase commitment contracts to stabilize
      the  potentially volatile pricing associated  with  certain
      commodity items.  All essential food and beverage  products
      are  available, or upon short notice can be made available,
      from  alternative  qualified suppliers  in  all  cities  in
      which  the  Company's restaurants are located.  Because  of
      the  relatively rapid turnover of perishable food products,
      inventories  in  the restaurants, consisting  primarily  of
      food,  beverages  and  supplies, have  a  modest  aggregate
      dollar value in relation to revenues.

         Advertising and Marketing

          The  Company's concepts generally focus on the eighteen
      to   fifty-four  year  old  age  group,  which  constitutes
      approximately   half  of  the  United  States   population.
      Members  of  this population segment grew up on fast  food,
      but  the  Company believes that, with increasing  maturity,
      they  prefer  a  more adult, upscale dining experience.  To
      attract this target group, the Company relies primarily  on
      television,    radio,   direct   mail    advertising    and
      word-of-mouth information communicated by customers.

          The  Company's franchise agreements require advertising
      contributions  to  the Company to be used  exclusively  for
      the  purpose  of  maintaining, directly  administering  and
      preparing    standardized   advertising   and   promotional
      activities.  Franchisees spend additional amounts on  local
      advertising when approved by the Company.

         Employees

          At  June  28,  2000, the Company employed approximately
      68,000  persons, of whom approximately 900  were  corporate
      personnel,  4,100 were restaurant area directors,  managers
      or  trainees  and  63,000 were employed  in  non-management
      restaurant  positions.   The  executive  officers  of   the
      Company  have an average of approximately twenty-two  years
      of experience in the restaurant industry.

          The Company considers its employee relations to be good
      and   believes   that  its  employee   turnover   rate   is
      commensurate  with the industry average.   Most  employees,
      other  than  restaurant management and corporate personnel,
      are paid on an hourly basis.  The Company believes that  it
      provides   working  conditions  and  wages   that   compare
      favorably  with  those of its competition.   The  Company's
      employees  are  not  covered by any  collective  bargaining
      agreements.

         Trademarks

          The  Company  has registered, among other  marks,  "Big
      Bowl",  "Brinker International", "Chili's", "Chili's  Grill
      &  Bar",  "Chili's  Too", "Chili's Bar &  Bites",  "Chili's
      Southwest  Grill  &  Bar",  "Corner  Bakery",  "Cozymel's",
      "Cozymel's  Coastal  Mexican  Grill",  "Eatzi's",  "Eatzi's
      Market  &  Bakery",  "Romano's Macaroni  Grill",  "Macaroni
      Grill",  "Maggiano's Little Italy", "On  The  Border",  "On
      The  Border Mexican Cafe", "Pizzaahhh!", and "Wildfire"  as
      trademarks  with  the  United States Patent  and  Trademark
      Office.

      Risk Factors/Forward-Looking Statements

           The  Company  wishes  to  caution  readers  that   the
      following important factors, among others, could cause  the
      actual  results  of the Company to differ  materially  from
      those indicated by forward-looking statements made in  this
      report  and  from  time to time in news releases,  reports,
      proxy   statements,  registration  statements   and   other
      written  communications,  as well as  oral  forward-looking
      statements  made  from time to time by  representatives  of
      the   Company.   Such  forward-looking  statements  involve
      risks  and  uncertainties, include matters such  as  future
      economic   performance,  restaurant   openings,   operating
      margins,   the  availability  of  acceptable  real   estate
      locations  for  new  restaurants, the  sufficiency  of  the
      Company's  cash balances and cash generated from  operating
      and   financing   activities  for  the   Company's   future
      liquidity  and  capital resource needs, and other  matters,
      and  are generally accompanied by words such as "believes,"
      "anticipates,"  "estimates,"  "predicts,"   "expects"   and
      similar  expressions that convey the uncertainty of  future
      events or outcomes.

      Competition.    The   restaurant   business    is    highly
      competitive  with  respect  to price,  service,  restaurant
      location  and  food  quality,  and  is  often  affected  by
      changes    in   consumer   tastes,   economic   conditions,
      population  and  traffic patterns.   The  Company  competes
      within  each market with locally-owned restaurants as  well
      as  national and regional restaurant chains, some of  which
      operate   more  restaurants  and  have  greater   financial
      resources and longer operating histories than the  Company.
      There  is  active competition for management personnel  and
      for  attractive commercial real estate sites  suitable  for
      restaurants.   In  addition,  factors  such  as  inflation,
      increased  food, labor and benefits costs,  and  difficulty
      in  attracting  hourly employees may adversely  affect  the
      restaurant   industry   in  general   and   the   Company's
      restaurants in particular.

          Seasonality.   The  Company's sales  volumes  fluctuate
      seasonally,  and are generally higher in the summer  months
      and lower in the winter months.

           Governmental  Regulations.   Each  of  the   Company's
      restaurants  is  subject  to licensing  and  regulation  by
      alcoholic beverage control, health, sanitation, safety  and
      fire  agencies  in the state and/or municipality  in  which
      the   restaurant   is  located.   The   Company   has   not
      encountered  any difficulties or failures in obtaining  the
      required licenses or approvals that could delay or  prevent
      the  opening  of  a new restaurant and does  not,  at  this
      time, anticipate any occurring in the future.

           The   Company   is  subject  to  federal   and   state
      environmental  regulations,  but  these  have  not  had   a
      material  negative  effect  on  the  Company's  operations.
      More  stringent and varied requirements of local and  state
      governmental  bodies with respect to zoning, land  use  and
      environmental  factors could delay or  prevent  development
      of  new  restaurants in particular locations.  The  Company
      is  subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act, which  governs
      such  matters as minimum wages, overtime and other  working
      conditions,  along with the American With Disabilities  Act
      and  various  family leave mandates. Although  the  Company
      expects  increases  in  payroll expenses  as  a  result  of
      federal  and state mandated increases in the minimum  wage,
      such  increases are not expected to be material.   However,
      the  Company is uncertain of the repercussion, if  any,  on
      other  expenses  as vendors are impacted by higher  minimum
      wage standards.

           Inflation.    The  Company  has  not   experienced   a
      significant  overall impact from inflation.   As  operating
      expenses increase, the Company, to the extent permitted  by
      competition,  recovers increased costs by  increasing  menu
      prices  or  by  reviewing,  then implementing,  alternative
      products or processes.

          Other  Risk  Factors.  Other risk  factors  that  could
      cause  the  Company's actual results to  differ  materially
      from  those  indicated  in  the forward-looking  statements
      include,    without   limitation,   changes   in   economic
      conditions,  consumer perceptions of food  safety,  changes
      in   consumer   tastes,  governmental  monetary   policies,
      changes  in  demographic trends, availability of employees,
      and weather and other acts of God.


Item 2.   PROPERTIES.

         Restaurant Locations

          At  June  28,  2000, the Company's system  of  company-
      operated,  jointly-developed and franchised units  included
      1,038    restaurants   located   in   forty-seven   states,
      Washington,  D.C.,  Australia,  Austria,  Bahrain,  Canada,
      Egypt,   Great   Britain,  Guatemala,  Indonesia,   Kuwait,
      Lebanon, Malaysia, Mexico, Peru, Philippines, Puerto  Rico,
      Saudi  Arabia,  South  Korea,  United  Arab  Emirates,  and
      Venezuela.   The  Company's  portfolio  of  restaurants  is
      illustrated below:


      Chili's:
        Company-Operated                      466
        Franchise                             219

      Macaroni Grill:
        Company-Operated                      145
        Franchise                               4

      On The Border:
        Company-Operated                       82
        Franchise                              27

      Cozymel's                                13

      Maggiano's                               12

      Corner Bakery:
        Company-Operated                       56
        Franchise                               1

      Big Bowl                                  6

      Wildfire                                  3

      Eatzi's                                   4

                                TOTAL       1,038

          The  685 Chili's restaurants include domestic locations
      in  forty-seven  states and the District  of  Columbia  and
      foreign  locations in nineteen countries.  The 149 Macaroni
      Grill  restaurants include domestic locations in thirty-six
      states  and foreign locations in Canada, Great Britain  and
      Mexico.   The On The Border, Cozymel's, Maggiano's,  Corner
      Bakery,  Big  Bowl  and Wildfire restaurants,  and  Eatzi's
      markets,  are located exclusively within the United  States
      in  thirty,  eight, seven (and the District  of  Columbia),
      seven  (and the District of Columbia), two, one, and  three
      states, respectively.

         Restaurant Property Information

          The following table illustrates the approximate average
      dining  capacity  for  each current  prototypical  unit  in
      primary restaurant concepts:


                  Chili's        Macaroni Grill    On The Border    Cozymel's    Maggiano's
                                                                
Square Feet    4,500 - 5,500     6,800 - 7,600      6,500 - 7,200    9,400     14,000 - 18,000
Dining Seats     145 - 215         250 - 275          220 - 240        380        500 - 725
Dining Tables     35 - 50           55 - 70            55 - 60          85        100 - 150



          Corner  Bakery's size and dining capacity varies  based
      upon  whether  it is an in-line or kiosk location.   For  a
      Corner Bakery located in a kiosk, the square footage is 170
      square  feet, the number of dining seats is forty, and  the
      number  of  dining tables is fifteen.  For  in-line  Corner
      Bakery  locations, the square footage ranges from 1,971  to
      5,347,  the number of dining seats ranges from 88  to  143,
      and  the  number  of dining tables ranges  from  thirty  to
      fifty.

          Certain of the Company's restaurants are leased for  an
      initial term of five to thirty years, with renewal terms of
      one  to  thirty years. The leases typically provide  for  a
      fixed rental plus percentage rentals based on sales volume.
      At  June  28,  2000,  the  Company owned  the  land  and/or
      building  for  529 of the 776 Company-operated restaurants.
      The  Company  considers that its properties  are  suitable,
      adequate, well-maintained and sufficient for the operations
      contemplated.

         Other Properties

           The   Company   leases   warehouse   space   totalling
      approximately  39,150  square feet  in  Carrollton,  Texas,
      which  it  uses for storage of equipment and supplies.  The
      Company    purchased   an   office   building    containing
      approximately   105,000  square  feet  for  its   corporate
      headquarters  in  July  1989.   This  office  building  was
      expanded in May 1997 by the addition of a 2,470 square foot
      facility used for menu development activities.  In  January
      1996,  the  Company purchased an additional office  complex
      containing three buildings and approximately 198,000 square
      feet  for  the  expansion  of its  corporate  headquarters.
      Approximately  119,000  square  feet  of  this  complex  is
      currently  utilized  by  the Company,  with  the  remaining
      79,000  square feet under lease, listed for lease to  third
      party  tenants,  or reserved for future  expansion  of  the
      Company  headquarters.  In November 1997, the Company  sold
      the  office complex and is leasing it back under  a  twenty
      year operating lease.  The Company also leases office space
      in  California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, New Jersey  and
      Texas    for   use   as   regional   operation   or    real
      estate/construction  offices.  The  size  of  these  office
      leases  range from 1,000 square feet to 3,600 square  feet.
      The  Company  owns or leases warehouse space in California,
      Georgia,   Illinois,  Texas  and  Virginia   for   use   as
      commissaries  for the preparation of bread and  other  food
      products  for its Corner Bakery stores.  The size of  these
      commissaries range from 11,383 square feet to 20,000 square
      feet.

Item 3.   LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.

          The Company is engaged in various legal proceedings and
      has   certain  unresolved  claims  pending.   The  ultimate
      liability, if any, for the aggregate amounts claimed cannot
      be  determined  at this time.  However, management  of  the
      Company, based upon consultation with legal counsel, is  of
      the opinion that there are no matters pending or threatened
      which  are  expected  to  have a material  adverse  effect,
      individually   or  in  the  aggregate,  on  the   Company's
      consolidated financial condition or results of operations.

Item 4.   SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS.

         None.

                            PART II

Item 5.   MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED
               SHAREHOLDER MATTERS.

          The  Company's Common Stock is traded on the  New  York
      Stock Exchange ("NYSE") under the symbol "EAT".  Bid prices
      quoted represent interdealer prices without adjustment  for
      retail  markup, markdown and/or commissions,  and  may  not
      necessarily  represent actual transactions.  The  following
      table  sets forth the quarterly high and low closing  sales
      prices of the Common Stock, as reported by the NYSE.

         Fiscal year ended June 28, 2000:

         First Quarter        28.75          23.00
         Second Quarter       27.06          20.19
         Third Quarter        27.81          20.81
         Fourth Quarter       35.06          26.25

         Fiscal year ended June 30, 1999:

         First Quarter        20.44          17.50
         Second Quarter       26.63          16.00
         Third Quarter        30.31          24.38
         Fourth Quarter       29.63          23.56

          As  of September 11, 2000, there were 1,254 holders  of
      record of the Company's Common Stock.

          The Company has never paid cash dividends on its Common
      Stock and does not currently intend to do so as profits are
      reinvested  into  the  Company to  fund  expansion  of  its
      restaurant  business.  Payment of dividends in  the  future
      will  depend  upon  the  Company's  growth,  profitability,
      financial condition and other factors, which the  Board  of
      Directors may deem relevant.

          During  the  three-year period ended on  September  11,
      2000,  the  Company  issued no securities  which  were  not
      registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.


Item 6.   SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA.

          "Selected Financial Data" on page F-2 of the  Company's
      2000  Annual Report to Shareholders is incorporated  herein
      by reference.


Item 7.   MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL
          CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS.

          "Management's  Discussion  and  Analysis  of  Financial
      Condition and Results of Operations" on pages F-3 through F-
      7  of  the Company's 2000 Annual Report to Shareholders  is
      incorporated herein by reference.


Item 7A.  QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES  ABOUT  MARKET
          RISK.

          "Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About  Market
      Risk"   contained  within  "Management's   Discussion   and
      Analysis  of Financial Condition and Results of Operations"
      on  pages  F-6  through  F-7 of the Company's  2000  Annual
      Report to Shareholders is incorporated herein by reference.


Item 8.   FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA.

         See Item 14(a)(1).


Item 9.   CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON
          ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE.

         None.



                            PART III

Item 10.  DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT.

          "Directors and Executive Officers" on pages 4 through 8
      and   "Section   16(a)   Beneficial   Ownership   Reporting
      Compliance"  on  page 14 of the Company's  Proxy  Statement
      dated  September  22,  2000  for  the  annual  meeting   of
      shareholders  on November 9, 2000, are incorporated  herein
      by reference.

Item 11.  EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION INFORMATION.

          "Executive  Compensation" on pages  9  through  10  and
      "Report  of the Compensation Committee" on pages 10 through
      13  of  the  Company's Proxy Statement dated September  22,
      2000,  for  the annual meeting of shareholders on  November
      9, 2000, are incorporated herein by reference.


Item 12.  SECURITY  OWNERSHIP  OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL  OWNERS  AND
          MANAGEMENT.

           "Principal  Shareholders"  on  page  2  and  "Security
      Ownership  of  Management  and Election  of  Directors"  on
      pages  3  through 4 of the Company's Proxy Statement  dated
      September  22, 2000, for the annual meeting of shareholders
      on November 9, 2000, are incorporated herein by reference.


Item 13.  CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS.

             "Compensation  Committee  Interlocks   and   Insider
      Participation"  on  pages 14 through 15  of  the  Company's
      Proxy  Statement dated September 22, 2000, for  the  annual
      meeting   of   shareholders  on  November   9,   2000,   is
      incorporated herein by reference.


                            PART IV

Item 14.  EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K.

         (a)  (1) Financial Statements.

          Reference  is made to the Index to Financial Statements
      attached  hereto on page 18 for a listing of all  financial
      statements  incorporated  herein from  the  Company's  2000
      Annual Report to Shareholders.

      (a)  (2) Financial Statement Schedules.

      None.

         (a)  (3)  Exhibits.

          Reference  is  made to the Exhibit Index preceding  the
      exhibits  attached hereto on page E-1 for  a  list  of  all
      exhibits filed as a part of this Report.

         (b)  Reports on Form 8-K

          The  Company was not required to file a current  report
      on Form 8-K during the fiscal quarter ended June 28, 2000.




                           SIGNATURES


Pursuant  to  the  requirements of Section 13  or  15(d)  of  the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly  caused
this  report  to  be  signed on its behalf  by  the  undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized.

                              BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC.,
                              a Delaware corporation




                              By:___/s/_____________________________
                                 Russell G. Owens, Executive Vice
                                  President  and Chief  Financial
                                  and Strategic Officer


Dated: September 22, 2000




Pursuant  to the requirements of the Securities Exchange  Act  of
1934,  this report has been signed below by the following persons
of   the   registrant   and  in  the  capacities   indicated   on
September 22, 2000.


        Name                               Title



____/s/________________            Vice Chairman of the Board and Chief
Ronald A. McDougall                Executive Officer
                                   (Principal Executive Officer)



___/s/________________              Executive Vice President and Chief
Russell  G. Owens                   Financial and Strategic Officer
                                    (Principal Financial and Accounting
                                     Officer)



___/s/________________              Chairman of the Board
Norman E. Brinker



____/s/_______________               President, Chief Operating Officer
Douglas H. Brooks                    and Director



___/s/_______________                Director
Donald J. Carty



____________________                 Director
Dan W. Cook, III




____/s/______________                Director
Marvin J. Girouard



___/s/________________                Director
J.M. Haggar, Jr.



___/s/________________               Director
Frederick S. Humphries



___/s/________________               Director
Ronald Kirk



___/s/________________               Director
Jeffrey A. Marcus



___/s/________________               Director
James E. Oesterreicher



___/s/________________               Director
Roger T. Staubach




                 INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The  following is a listing of the financial statements which are
incorporated  herein by reference.  The financial  statements  of
the  Company  included  in the Company's 2000  Annual  Report  to
Shareholders are incorporated herein by reference in Item 8.


                                                         2000 Annual
                                                         Report Pages

Consolidated Balance Sheets -                                 F-8
     June 28, 2000 and June 30, 1999

Consolidated Statements of Income -                          F-10
     Fiscal Years Ended June 28, 2000, June 30, 1999
     and June 24, 1998

Consolidated Statements of Shareholders'                     F-11
     Equity - Fiscal Years Ended June 28, 2000,
     June 30, 1999 and June 24, 1998

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows -                      F-12
     Fiscal Years Ended June 28, 2000, June 30, 1999
     and June 24, 1998

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements                   F-13

Independent Auditors' Report                                 F-25

Management's Responsibility for Consolidated                 F-26
     Financial Statements


     All  schedules  are omitted as the required  information  is
     inapplicable  or  the  information  is  presented   in   the
     financial statements or related notes.




                       INDEX TO EXHIBITS

Exhibit

 3(a)    Certificate of Incorporation of the registrant, as amended. (1)

 3(b)    Bylaws of the registrant. (1)

10(a)    Registrant's 1983 Incentive Stock Option Plan. (2)

10(b)    Registrant's 1991 Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors and
         Consultants. (3)

10(c)    Registrant's 1992 Incentive Stock Option Plan. (3)

10(d)    Registrant's Stock Option and Incentive Plan. (4)

10(e)    Registrant's 1999 Stock Option and Incentive Plan for Non-Employee
         Directors and Consultants. (5)

13       2000 Annual Report to Shareholders. (6)

21       Subsidiaries of the registrant. (5)

23       Independent Auditors' Consent. (5)

27       Financial Data Schedule. (7)

99       Proxy Statement of registrant dated September 22, 2000. (6)



(1)    Filed  as an exhibit to annual report on Form 10-K  for
       year  ended  June  28,  1995  and  incorporated  herein  by
       reference.

(2)    Filed  as an exhibit to annual report on Form 10-K  for
       year  ended  June  26,  1996  and  incorporated  herein  by
       reference.

(3)    Filed  as an exhibit to annual report on Form 10-K  for
       year  ended  June  25,  1997  and  incorporated  herein  by
       reference.

(4)    Filed  as an exhibit to annual report on Form 10-K for  year
       ended June 30, 1999 and incorporated herein by reference.

(5)    Filed herewith.

(6)    Portions filed herewith, to the extent indicated herein.

(7)    Filed with EDGAR version.











                              E-1




                          EXHIBIT 10(e)



                   BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC.
              1999 STOCK OPTION AND INCENTIVE PLAN
           FOR NON-EMPLOYEE DIRECTORS AND CONSULTANTS


                           SECTION 1

                            GENERAL

     1.1   Purpose.  The Brinker International, Inc.  1999  Stock
Option   and  Incentive  Plan  For  Non-Employee  Directors   and
Consultants  (the  "Plan")  has  been  established   by   Brinker
International,  Inc. (the "Company") to provide a  means  through
which  the Company may attract able persons to serve on its Board
and  to  act  as  consultants or advisors  and  to  provide  such
individuals  with  an interest in the Company's  welfare  and  to
furnish  them  an  incentive to continue their services  for  the
Company.

     1.2  Participation.  Subject to the terms and conditions  of
the  Plan, the directors of the Company who are not employees  of
the  Company  or  its subsidiaries, and certain consultants,  are
eligible  to become "Participants" in the Plan. In the discretion
of  the  Committee,  a  Participant  may  be  granted  any  Award
permitted  under the provisions of the Plan, and  more  than  one
Award  may be granted to a Participant. Awards may be granted  as
alternatives  to or replacement of awards outstanding  under  the
Plan,  or  any  other plan or arrangement of  the  Company  or  a
Related Company (including a plan or arrangement of a business or
entity, all or a portion of which is acquired by the Company or a
Related Company).

     1.3    Operation,   Administration  and  Definitions.    The
operation  and administration of the Plan, including  the  Awards
made  under  the  Plan,  shall be subject to  the  provisions  of
Section 4 (relating to operation and administration). Capitalized
terms  in  the  Plan shall be defined as set forth  in  the  Plan
(including the definition provisions of Section 8 of the Plan).

                           SECTION 2

                        OPTIONS AND SARS

     2.1  Definitions.

          (a)  The  grant of an "Option" entitles the Participant
               to  purchase shares of Stock at an Exercise  Price
               established  by  the  Committee.  Options  granted
               under  this Section 2 will be Non-Qualified  Stock
               Options.  A  "Non-Qualified Stock  Option"  is  an
               Option  that  is not intended to be an  "incentive
               stock option" as that term is described in section
               422(b) of the Code.

          (b)  A stock appreciation right (an "SAR") entitles the
               Participant  to  receive, in  cash  or  Stock  (as
               determined  in  accordance with  subsection  2.5),
               value equal to all or a portion of the excess  of:
               (a) the Fair Market Value of a specified number of
               shares of Stock at the time of exercise; over  (b)
               an Exercise Price established by the Committee.

     2.2   Exercise Price.  The "Exercise Price" of  each  Option
and  SAR granted under this Section 2 shall be established by the
Committee or shall be determined by a method established  by  the
Committee  at the time the Option or SAR is granted, except  that
the Exercise Price shall not be less than 100% of the Fair Market
Value of a share of Stock as of the Pricing Date. For purposes of
the  preceding sentence, the "Pricing Date" shall be the date  on
which the Option or SAR is granted, except that the Committee may
provide that if an Option or SAR is granted in tandem with, or in
substitution for, an outstanding Award, the Pricing Date  is  the
date of grant of such outstanding Award.

     2.3  Exercise.  An Option and an SAR shall be exercisable in
accordance with such terms and conditions and during such periods
as may be established by the Committee.

     2.4   Payment of Option Exercise Price.  The payment of  the
Exercise Price of an Option granted under this Section 2 shall be
subject to the following:

          (a)  Subject  to  the  following  provisions  of   this
               subsection 2.4, the full Exercise Price for shares
               of Stock purchased upon the exercise of any Option
               shall be paid at the time of such exercise (except
               that,  in  the  case  of  an exercise  arrangement
               approved   by  the  Committee  and  described   in
               paragraph 2.4(c), payment may be made as  soon  as
               practicable after the exercise).

          (b)  The Exercise Price shall be payable in cash or  by
               tendering  shares  of  Stock  (by  either   actual
               delivery  of shares or by attestation,  with  such
               shares  valued at Fair Market Value as of the  day
               of  exercise), or in any combination  thereof,  as
               determined by the Committee.

          (c)  The Committee may permit a Participant to elect to
               pay  the  Exercise Price upon the exercise  of  an
               Option by authorizing a third party to sell shares
               of  Stock (or a sufficient portion of the  shares)
               acquired upon exercise of the Option and remit  to
               the  Company  a  sufficient portion  of  the  sale
               proceeds to pay the entire Exercise Price and  any
               tax withholding resulting from such exercise.

     2.5   Settlement of Award.  Distribution following  exercise
of  an Option or SAR, and shares of Stock distributed pursuant to
such  exercise, shall be subject to such conditions, restrictions
and  contingencies as the Committee may establish. Settlement  of
SARs  may be made in shares of Stock (valued at their Fair Market
Value  at  the  time of exercise), in cash, or in  a  combination
thereof,  as  determined in the discretion of the Committee.  The
Committee,   in  its  discretion,  may  impose  such  conditions,
restrictions  and contingencies with respect to shares  of  Stock
acquired pursuant to the exercise of an Option or an SAR  as  the
Committee determines to be desirable.

                           SECTION 3

                       OTHER STOCK AWARDS

     3.1   Definition.   A Stock Award is a grant  of  shares  of
Stock  or  of a right to receive shares of Stock (or  their  cash
equivalent or a combination of both) in the future.

     3.2   Restrictions on Stock Awards.  Each Stock Award  shall
be  subject to such conditions, restrictions and contingencies as
the Committee shall determine. If the right to become vested in a
Stock  Award granted under this Section 3 is conditioned  on  the
completion of a specified period of service with the Company  and
the  Related  Companies, then the required period of service  for
vesting  shall be not less than one year (subject to acceleration
of  vesting,  to  the extent permitted by the Committee,  in  the
event  of  the  Participant's death,  disability,  or  change  in
control).

                           SECTION 4

                  OPERATION AND ADMINISTRATION

     4.1   Effective  Date.   Subject  to  the  approval  of  the
shareholders of the Company at the Company's 1999 annual  meeting
of  its shareholders, the Plan shall be effective as of September
2,  1999  (the "Effective Date"). The Plan shall be unlimited  in
duration  and, in the event of Plan termination, shall remain  in
effect as long as any Awards under it are outstanding.

     4.2  Shares Subject to Plan.

          (a)       (i)   Subject to the following provisions  of
                    this   subsection  4.2,  the  maximum  number
                    shares  of  Stock  that may be  delivered  to
                    Participants  and  their beneficiaries  under
                    the Plan shall be 300,000.

               (ii) Any  shares of Stock granted under  the  Plan
                    that are forfeited because of the failure  to
                    meet  an Award contingency or condition shall
                    again  be available for delivery pursuant  to
                    new  Awards  granted under the Plan.  To  the
                    extent  any  shares of Stock  covered  by  an
                    Award  are not delivered to a Participant  or
                    beneficiary because the Award is forfeited or
                    canceled,  or  the shares of  Stock  are  not
                    delivered  because the Award  is  settled  in
                    cash, such shares shall not be deemed to have
                    been  delivered  for purposes of  determining
                    the   maximum  number  of  shares  of   Stock
                    available for delivery under the Plan.

               (iii)      If  the  Exercise Price  of  any  stock
                    option  granted under the Plan or  any  Prior
                    Plan  is  satisfied  by tendering  shares  of
                    Stock   to  the  Company  (by  either  actual
                    delivery or by attestation), only the  number
                    of  shares of Stock issued net of the  shares
                    of  Stock  tendered shall be deemed delivered
                    for   purposes  of  determining  the  maximum
                    number  of  shares  of  Stock  available  for
                    delivery under the Plan.

               (iv) Shares  of Stock delivered under the Plan  in
                    settlement,  assumption  or  substitution  of
                    outstanding awards (or obligations  to  grant
                    future    awards)   under   the   plans    or
                    arrangements  of  another  entity  shall  not
                    reduce the maximum number of shares of  Stock
                    available for delivery under the Plan, to the
                    extent  that  such settlement, assumption  or
                    substitution is a result of the Company or  a
                    Related Company acquiring another entity  (or
                    an interest in another entity).

           (b) Subject to the provisions of Section 6 hereof,  in
               the event of a corporate transaction involving the
               Company (including, without limitation, any  stock
               dividend,   stock   split,   extraordinary    cash
               dividend,     recapitalization,    reorganization,
               merger,    consolidation,   split-up,    spin-off,
               combination or exchange of shares), the  Committee
               may  adjust  Awards to preserve  the  benefits  or
               potential  benefits of the Awards. Action  by  the
               Committee  may  include  adjustment  of:  (i)  the
               number  and kind of shares which may be  delivered
               under the Plan; (ii) the number and kind of shares
               subject  to  outstanding  Awards;  and  (iii)  the
               Exercise Price of outstanding Options and SARs  as
               well  as  any other adjustments that the Committee
               determines to be equitable.

     4.3  Limit on Distribution.  Distribution of shares of Stock
or  other  amounts  under  the  Plan  shall  be  subject  to  the
following:

          (a)  Notwithstanding any other provision of  the  Plan,
               the Company shall have no liability to deliver any
               shares  of Stock under the Plan or make any  other
               distribution  of  benefits under the  Plan  unless
               such  delivery or distribution would  comply  with
               all    applicable    laws   (including,    without
               limitation, the requirements of the Securities Act
               of  1933), and the applicable requirements of  any
               securities exchange or similar entity.

          (b)  To  the extent that the Plan provides for issuance
               of  stock certificates to reflect the issuance  of
               shares of Stock, the issuance may be effected on a
               noncertificated   basis,   to   the   extent   not
               prohibited  by  applicable law or  the  applicable
               rules of any stock exchange.

     4.4   Tax Withholding.  Whenever the Company proposes or  is
required  to  distribute Stock under the Plan,  the  Company  may
require  the  recipient  to  remit  to  the  Company  an   amount
sufficient   to  satisfy  any  Federal,  state  and   local   tax
withholding requirements prior to the delivery of any certificate
for  such  shares  or, in the discretion of  the  Committee,  the
Company  may  withhold  from the shares to  be  delivered  shares
sufficient  to  satisfy all or a portion of such tax  withholding
requirements. Whenever under the Plan payments are to be made  in
cash, such payments may be net of an amount sufficient to satisfy
any Federal, state and local tax withholding requirements.

     4.5   Payment Shares.  Subject to the overall limitation  on
the  number  of shares of Stock that may be delivered  under  the
Plan, the Committee may use available shares of Stock as the form
of payment for compensation, grants or rights earned or due under
any other compensation plans or arrangements of the Company or  a
Related  Company,  including the plans and  arrangements  of  the
Company  or  a  Related Company acquiring another entity  (or  an
interest in another entity).

     4.6   Dividends  and  Dividend Equivalents.   An  Award  may
provide  the  Participant with the right to receive dividends  or
dividend equivalent payments with respect to Stock which  may  be
either  paid  currently  or  credited  to  an  account  for   the
Participant, and may be settled in cash or Stock as determined by
the  Committee. Any such settlements, and any such  crediting  of
dividends  or dividend equivalents or reinvestment in  shares  of
Stock,  may  be  subject  to  such conditions,  restrictions  and
contingencies  as  the Committee shall establish,  including  the
reinvestment of such credited amounts in Stock equivalents.

     4.7  Payments.  Awards may be settled through cash payments,
the  delivery  of  shares of Stock, the granting  of  replacement
Awards,  or combination thereof as the Committee shall determine.
Any Award settlement, including payment deferrals, may be subject
to   such  conditions,  restrictions  and  contingencies  as  the
Committee  shall determine. The Committee may permit  or  require
the  deferral  of any Award payment, subject to  such  rules  and
procedures as it may establish, which may include provisions  for
the  payment  or crediting of interest, or dividend  equivalents,
including   converting   such   credits   into   deferred   Stock
equivalents.

     4.8   Transferability.  Except as otherwise provided by  the
Committee, Awards under the Plan are not transferable  except  as
designated  by the Participant by will or by the laws of  descent
and distribution.

     4.9  Form and Time of Elections.  Unless otherwise specified
herein,  each election required or permitted to be  made  by  any
Participant or other person entitled to benefits under the  Plan,
and  any permitted modification, or revocation thereof, shall  be
in  writing filed with the Committee at such times, in such form,
and   subject   to   such  restrictions  and   limitations,   not
inconsistent  with the terms of the Plan, as the Committee  shall
require.

     4.10  Agreement With Company. At the time of an Award  to  a
Participant  under  the  Plan,  the  Committee  may   require   a
Participant  to  enter into an agreement with  the  Company  (the
"Agreement")  in a form specified by the Committee,  agreeing  to
the terms and conditions of the Plan and to such additional terms
and  conditions, not inconsistent with the Plan, as the Committee
may, in its sole discretion, prescribe.

     4.11 Limitation of Implied Rights.

          (a)  Neither a Participant nor any other person  shall,
               by  reason  of the Plan, acquire any right  in  or
               title  to  any  assets, funds or property  of  the
               Company   or   any  Related  Company   whatsoever,
               including, without limitation, any specific funds,
               assets, or other property which the Company or any
               Related Company, in their sole discretion, may set
               aside  in  anticipation of a liability  under  the
               Plan.  A Participant shall have only a contractual
               right  to  the  stock or amounts, if any,  payable
               under  the  Plan, unsecured by any assets  of  the
               Company  or any Related Company. Nothing contained
               in  the Plan shall constitute a guarantee that the
               assets  of  such companies shall be sufficient  to
               pay any benefits to any person.

          (b)  The  Plan does not give any Participant any  right
               or  claim  to  any benefit under the Plan,  unless
               such right or claim has specifically accrued under
               the   terms  of  the  Plan.  Except  as  otherwise
               provided  in  the Plan, no Award  under  the  Plan
               shall confer upon the holder thereof any right  as
               a  shareholder of the Company prior to the date on
               which  the individual fulfills all conditions  for
               receipt of such rights.

     4.12  Evidence.  Evidence required of anyone under the  Plan
may  be  by certificate, affidavit, document or other information
which  the  person acting on it considers pertinent and reliable,
and signed, made or presented by the proper party or parties.

     4.13  Action  by  Company or Related  Company.   Any  action
required  or permitted to be taken by the Company or any  Related
Company shall be by resolution of its board of directors,  or  by
action of one or more members of the board (including a committee
of  the  board) who are duly authorized to act for the board,  or
(except  to the extent prohibited by applicable law or applicable
rules of any stock exchange) by a duly authorized officer of  the
company.

     4.14 Gender and Number.  Where the context admits, words  in
any  gender shall include any other gender, words in the singular
shall  include  the  plural  and the  plural  shall  include  the
singular.

                           SECTION 5

                           COMMITTEE

     5.1   Administration.  The authority to control  and  manage
the  operation and administration of the Plan shall be vested  in
the  Nominating  Committee (the "Committee") in  accordance  with
this Section 5.  The Committee shall be selected by the Board and
shall consist of two or more members of the Board.

     5.2   Powers  of  Committee.  The authority  to  manage  and
control  the  operation and administration of the Plan  shall  be
vested in the Committee, subject to the following:

          (a)  Subject  to  the  provisions  of  the  Plan,   the
               Committee  will have the authority and  discretion
               to  select those persons who shall receive Awards,
               to  determine  the time or times  of  receipt,  to
               determine  the types of Awards and the  number  of
               shares  covered  by the Awards, to  establish  the
               terms,     conditions,    performance    criteria,
               restrictions, and other provisions of such Awards,
               and  (subject  to  the  restrictions  imposed   by
               Section 6) to cancel or suspend Awards. In  making
               such  Award determinations, the Committee may take
               into  account the nature of services  rendered  by
               the   individual,  the  individual's  present  and
               potential  contribution to the  Company's  success
               and  such  other  factors as the  Committee  deems
               relevant.

           (b) Subject  to  the  provisions  of  the  Plan,   the
               Committee  will have the authority and  discretion
               to establish terms and conditions of awards as the
               Committee   determines   to   be   necessary    or
               appropriate  to conform to applicable requirements
               or  practices  of  jurisdictions  outside  of  the
               United States.

          (c)  The   Committee   will  have  the  authority   and
               discretion  to  interpret the Plan, to  establish,
               amend,  and  rescind  any  rules  and  regulations
               relating  to the Plan, to determine the terms  and
               provisions of any agreements made pursuant to  the
               Plan,  and  to make all other determinations  that
               may    be   necessary   or   advisable   for   the
               administration of the Plan.

          (d)  Any  interpretation of the Plan by  the  Committee
               and  any  decision made by it under  the  Plan  is
               final and binding.

          (e)  Except  as  otherwise expressly  provided  in  the
               Plan, where the Committee is authorized to make  a
               determination  with  respect to  any  Award,  such
               determination shall be made at the time the  Award
               is made, except that the Committee may reserve the
               authority to have such determination made  by  the
               Committee  in  the  future  (but  only   if   such
               reservation  is  made at the  time  the  Award  is
               granted  and is expressly stated in the  Agreement
               reflecting the Award).

          (f)  In  controlling  and managing  the  operation  and
               administration  of the Plan, the  Committee  shall
               act  by a majority of its then members, by meeting
               or   by  writing  filed  without  a  meeting.  The
               Committee shall maintain and keep adequate records
               concerning the Plan and concerning its proceedings
               and  acts in such form and detail as the Committee
               may decide.

     5.3    Delegation  by  Committee.   Except  to  the   extent
prohibited by applicable law or the applicable rules of  a  stock
exchange  and  subject to the prior approval of  the  Board,  the
Committee may allocate all or any portion of its responsibilities
and powers to any one or more of its members and may delegate all
or  any part of its responsibilities and powers to any person  or
persons selected by it. Any such allocation or delegation may  be
revoked by the Committee at any time.

     5.4   Information to be Furnished to Committee.  The Company
and  Related Companies shall furnish the Committee with such data
and  information  as  may be required for  it  to  discharge  its
duties. Participants and other persons entitled to benefits under
the  Plan  must  furnish  the Committee such  evidence,  data  or
information as the Committee considers desirable to carry out the
terms of the Plan.

                           SECTION 6

                 ACCELERATION OF EXERCISABILITY
            AND VESTING UNDER CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES

     Notwithstanding any provision in this Plan to the  contrary,
with regard to any Award of Options, SARs and Stock Awards to any
Participant,  unless  the  particular  grant  agreement  provides
otherwise,  all  Awards will become immediately  exercisable  and
vested  in  full  upon the occurrence, before the  expiration  or
termination  of such Option, SARs and Stock Awards or  forfeiture
of such Awards, of any of the events listed below:

          (a)  a  sale,  transfer or other conveyance of  all  or
               substantially all of the assets of the Company  on
               a consolidated basis; or

          (b)  the  acquisition of beneficial ownership (as  such
               term  is  defined in Rule 13d-3 promulgated  under
               the Exchange Act) by any "person" (as such term is
               used  in  Sections 13(d) and 14(d) of the Exchange
               Act),   other   than  the  Company,  directly   or
               indirectly, of securities representing 50% or more
               of  the total number of votes that may be cast for
               the election of directors of the Company; or

          (c)  the commencement (within the meaning of Rule 14d-2
               promulgated under the Exchange Act) of  a  "tender
               offer" for stock of the Company subject to Section
               14(d)(2) of the Exchange Act; or

          (d)  the  failure at any annual or special  meeting  of
               the  Company's stockholders following an "election
               contest" subject to Rule 14a-11 promulgated  under
               the  Exchange Act, of any of the persons nominated
               by  the  Company in the proxy material  mailed  to
               stockholders by the management of the  Company  to
               win election to seats on the Board, excluding only
               those who die, retire voluntarily, are disabled or
               are  otherwise disqualified in the interim between
               their nomination and the date of the meeting.

                           SECTION 7

                   AMENDMENT AND TERMINATION

     The Committee may, at any time, amend or terminate the Plan,
provided  that,  subject to subsection 4.2 (relating  to  certain
adjustments  to  shares)  and  Section  6  hereof  (relating   to
immediate   vesting  upon  certain  events),  no   amendment   or
termination may, in the absence of written consent to the  change
by  the affected Participant (or, if the Participant is not  then
living, the affected beneficiary), adversely affect the rights of
any  Participant or beneficiary under any Award granted under the
Plan prior to the date such amendment is adopted by the Board.

                           SECTION 8

                         DEFINED TERMS

     For  purposes of the Plan, the terms listed below  shall  be
defined as follows:

          (a)  Award.   The term "Award" shall mean any award  or
               benefit granted to any Participant under the Plan,
               including,  without  limitation,  the   grant   of
               Options, SARs, and Stock Awards.

          (b)  Board.   The term "Board" shall mean the Board  of
               Directors of the Company.

          (c)  Code.   The term "Code" means the Internal Revenue
               Code  of  1986,  as  amended. A reference  to  any
               provision  of the Code shall include reference  to
               any successor provision of the Code.

           (d) Fair  Market  Value.  For purposes of  determining
               the  "Fair Market Value" of a share of Stock,  the
               following rules shall apply:

               (i)  If  the  Stock  is  at  the  time  listed  or
                    admitted  to  trading on any stock  exchange,
                    then  the  "Fair Market Value" shall  be  the
                    mean  between the lowest and highest reported
                    sale  prices  of  the Stock on  the  date  in
                    question  on the principal exchange on  which
                    the  Stock  is  then listed  or  admitted  to
                    trading.  If no reported sale of Stock  takes
                    place   on  the  date  in  question  on   the
                    principal exchange, then the reported closing
                    asked price of the Stock on such date on  the
                    principal exchange shall be determinative  of
                    "Fair Market Value."

               (ii) If  the  Stock is not at the time  listed  or
                    admitted to trading on a stock exchange,  the
                    "Fair Market Value" shall be the mean between
                    the  lowest  reported bid price  and  highest
                    reported asked price of the Stock on the date
                    in  question in the over-the-counter  market,
                    as  such prices are reported in a publication
                    of   general  circulation  selected  by   the
                    Committee and regularly reporting the  market
                    price of Stock in such market.

               (iii)      If  the Stock is not listed or admitted
                    to trading on any stock exchange or traded in
                    the over-the-counter market, the "Fair Market
                    Value"  shall be as determined in good  faith
                    by the Committee.

          (f)  Exchange  Act.  The term "Exchange Act" means  the
               Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.

          (g)  Related  Companies.   The term  "Related  Company"
               means any company during any period in which it is
               a  "parent  company" (as that term is  defined  in
               Code  section 424(e)) with respect to the Company,
               or  a  "subsidiary corporation" (as that  term  is
               defined  in  Code section 424(f)) with respect  to
               the Company.

          (h)  Stock.   The  term "Stock" shall  mean  shares  of
               Common Stock of the Company.





                               EXHIBIT 13


                          SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
       (In thousands, except per share amounts and number of restaurants)


                                                         Fiscal Years

                                   2000               1999(a)             1998          1997           1996
                                                                                     
Income Statement Data:
Revenues                       $2,159,837          $1,870,554          $1,574,414    $1,335,337     $1,162,951

Operating Costs and Expenses:
 Cost of Sales                    575,570             507,103             426,558       374,525        330,375
 Restaurant Expenses            1,197,828           1,036,573             866,143       720,769        620,441
 Depreciation and Amortization     90,647              82,385              86,376        78,754         64,611
 General and Administrative       100,123              90,311              77,407        64,404         54,271
 Restructuring Charge                  -                   -                   -             -          50,000

   Total Operating Costs and
     Expenses                   1,964,168           1,716,372           1,456,484     1,238,452      1,119,698

Operating Income                  195,669             154,182             117,930        96,885         43,253

Interest Expense                   10,746               9,241              11,025         9,453          4,579
Gain on Sales of Concepts              -                   -                  -              -          (9,262)
Other, Net                          3,381              14,402               1,447        (3,553)        (4,201)

Income Before Provision for
 Income Taxes and Cumulative
 Effect of Accounting Change      181,542             130,539             105,458        90,985         52,137
Provision for Income Taxes         63,702              45,297              36,383        30,480         17,756

Income Before Cumulative Effect
 of Accounting Change             117,840              85,242              69,075        60,505         34,381

Cumulative Effect of
 Accounting Change                     -                6,407                  -             -              -

  Net Income                   $  117,840          $   78,835          $   69,075    $   60,505     $   34,381

Basic Earnings Per Share:

 Income Before Cumulative
 Effect of Accounting Change   $     1.80          $     1.30          $     1.05    $     0.82     $     0.45
 Cumulative Effect of
  Accounting Change                    -                 0.10                  -             -              -

 Basic Net Income Per Share    $     1.80          $     1.20          $     1.05    $     0.82     $     0.45

Diluted Earnings Per Share:

 Income Before Cumulative
 Effect of Accounting Change   $     1.75          $     1.25          $     1.02    $     0.81     $     0.44
 Cumulative Effect of
  Accounting Change                    -                 0.09                  -             -              -

 Diluted Net Income Per Share  $     1.75          $     1.16          $     1.02    $     0.81     $     0.44

Basic Weighted Average
 Shares Outstanding                65,631              65,926              65,766        73,682         76,015

Diluted Weighted Average
 Shares Outstanding                67,410              68,123              67,450        74,800         77,905

Balance Sheet Data
(End of Period):
Working Capital Deficit        $ (127,377)         $  (86,969)         $  (92,898)                  $  (36,699)         $  (35,035)
Total Assets                    1,162,328           1,085,644             968,848       996,943        888,834
Long-term Obligations             169,120             234,086             197,577       324,066        157,274
Shareholders' Equity              762,208             661,439             593,739       523,744        608,170

Number of Restaurants
Open (End of Period):
Company-Operated                      774                 707                 624           556            468
Franchised/Joint Venture              264                 226                 182           157            147
  Total                             1,038                 933                 806           713            615



(a) Fiscal year 1999 consisted of 53 weeks while all other periods
presented consisted of 52 weeks.



                       MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF
                    FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

GENERAL

For  an  understanding  of  the  significant factors  that  influenced  the
Company's  performance during the past three fiscal  years,  the  following
discussion  should  be read in conjunction with the consolidated  financial
statements and related notes found elsewhere in this Annual Report.

The  Company  has a 52/53 week fiscal year ending on the last Wednesday  in
June. Fiscal years 2000 and 1998, which ended on June 28, 2000 and June 24,
1998,  respectively, each contained 52 weeks, while fiscal year 1999, which
ended on June 30, 1999, contained 53 weeks.

The  Company  elected  early adoption of the American  Institute  of  CPA's
("AICPA") Statement of Position 98-5 ("SOP 98-5"), "Reporting on the  Costs
of  Start-Up  Activities,"  during fiscal 1999.  This  accounting  standard
requires  most  entities to expense all start-up and  preopening  costs  as
incurred.   The  Company previously deferred such costs and amortized  them
over  the  twelve-month period following the opening  of  each  restaurant.
Prior  to  fiscal  1999,  amortization of  deferred  preopening  costs  was
included  within depreciation and amortization expense on the  consolidated
statements  of  income. Effective with fiscal 1999,  preopening  costs  are
included in restaurant expenses on the consolidated statements of income.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS FOR FISCAL YEARS 2000, 1999, AND 1998

The  following table sets forth expenses as a percentage of total  revenues
for  the  periods indicated for revenue and expense items included  in  the
consolidated statements of income:


                                       Percentage of Total Revenues
                                                Fiscal Years
                                       2000      1999      1998
Revenues                              100.0%    100.0%    100.0%

Operating Costs and Expenses:
 Cost of Sales                         26.6%     27.1%     27.1%
 Restaurant Expenses                   55.5%     55.4%     55.0%
 Depreciation and Amortization          4.2%      4.4%      5.5%
 General and Administrative             4.6%      4.8%      4.9%

   Total Operating Costs and Expenses  90.9%     91.7%     92.5%

Operating Income                        9.1%      8.3%      7.5%

Interest Expense                        0.5%      0.5%      0.7%
Other, Net                              0.2%      0.8%      0.1%

Income Before Provision for Income
 Taxes and Cumulative Effect of
 Accounting Change                      8.4%      7.0%      6.7%
Provision for Income Taxes              2.9%      2.4%      2.3%

Income Before Cumulative Effect
  of Accounting Change                  5.5%      4.6%      4.4%

Cumulative Effect of Accounting Change    -       0.4%        -

     Net Income                         5.5%      4.2%      4.4%



REVENUES

Revenue growth of 15.5% and 18.8% in fiscal 2000 and 1999, respectively, is
attributable primarily to the increases in sales weeks driven by  new  unit
expansion and in comparable store sales. Revenues for fiscal 2000 increased
due to a 9.5% increase in sales weeks (a 12.2% increase in sales weeks on a
comparable 52-week basis) and a 6.3% increase in comparable store sales  on
a 52-week basis. Revenues for fiscal 1999 increased due to a 14.9% increase
in  sales  weeks  (2.3% of such increase is attributable to the  additional
sales  week  during  fiscal 1999) and a 4.2% increase in  comparable  store
sales.  Menu  price increases were less than 1.5% in both fiscal  2000  and
1999.

COSTS AND EXPENSES (as a Percent of Revenues)

Cost  of  sales  decreased for fiscal 2000 due to menu price increases  and
favorable  commodity  price variances for poultry, dairy  and  cheese,  and
produce,  which  were  partially  offset  by  unfavorable  commodity  price
variances  for  beef  and  product mix changes to menu  items  with  higher
percentage food costs. Cost of sales remained flat in fiscal 1999  compared
to  fiscal 1998 due to menu price increases and product mix changes to menu
items  with  lower percentage food costs, which were offset by  unfavorable
commodity price variances.

Restaurant expenses increased in fiscal 2000 due primarily to increases  in
labor.  Restaurant  labor wage rates and monthly performance  bonuses  were
higher than in the prior year, but were partially offset by increased sales
leverage, improvements in labor productivity, menu price increases,  and  a
decrease in preopening costs.  Restaurant expenses increased in fiscal 1999
due  to  the adoption of SOP 98-5 and the resulting expensing of preopening
costs  as  incurred. During fiscal 1998 and prior years,  preopening  costs
were  deferred  and  amortized over the twelve-month period  following  the
opening  of  each  restaurant.   Also  contributing  to  the  increase   in
restaurant expenses was additional rent expense incurred due to  the  sale-
leaseback  transactions  which occurred in fiscal 1998  and  the  continued
utilization  of  the  equipment  leasing  facility.  These  increases  were
partially offset by leverage related to increased sales in fiscal 1999.

Depreciation  and  amortization decreased in both fiscal  2000  and  fiscal
1999.   The  fiscal  2000  decrease  is due  primarily  to  utilization  of
equipment  leasing  facilities, increased sales leverage  and  a  declining
depreciable asset base for older units.  In addition, fiscal 1999  included
an  impairment charge for reacquired franchise rights due to  a  change  in
development plans in the related franchise area. Partially offsetting these
decreases  were increases in depreciation and amortization related  to  new
unit  construction and ongoing remodel costs. The fiscal 1999  decrease  is
due  primarily to the elimination of preopening cost amortization resulting
from  the  adoption of SOP 98-5 and a declining depreciable asset base  for
older  units.  Partially  offsetting  these  decreases  are  increases   in
depreciation and amortization related to new unit construction and  ongoing
remodel costs.

General and administrative expenses decreased in fiscal 2000 as compared to
the  prior  fiscal  year as a result of the Company's  continued  focus  on
controlling corporate expenditures relative to increasing revenues and  the
number of restaurants.

Interest  expense remained flat for fiscal 2000 compared  to  fiscal  1999.
Interest  expense  increased  as a result of increased  borrowings  on  the
Company's credit facilities primarily used to fund the Company's continuing
stock  repurchase plan.  This increase was fully offset by increased  sales
leverage as well as a decrease in interest expense on senior notes  due  to
the  scheduled  repayments made in April 1999 and 2000.   Interest  expense
decreased  in  fiscal 1999 as compared to fiscal 1998 due  to  a  favorable
interest rate environment compared with fiscal 1998 and an increase in  the
construction-in-progress balances subject to interest capitalization.

Other,  net decreased in fiscal 2000 as compared to fiscal 1999 as a result
of  reduced  equity losses related to the Company's share in equity  method
investees.

The  Company's share of net losses in its equity method investees in fiscal
1999  includes  a  charge  of approximately $5.1  million  related  to  the
decisions made by Eatzi's Corporation ("Eatzi's") to abandon development of
two  restaurant sites and to dispose of a restaurant that did not meet  the
financial  return  expectations of Eatzi's. These decisions  were  made  in
conjunction  with  a  strategic  plan which included  slowing  development,
refining the prototype, and defining profitable growth opportunities.   The
types of costs recorded primarily included site specific costs and costs to
exit lease obligations. Effective June 30, 1999, the Company sold a portion
of  its  equity  interest  in  Eatzi's to its partner.   In  addition,  the
Company's share of net losses in its equity method investees in fiscal 1999
included  a  charge of approximately $2.5 million related to the impairment
of long-lived assets recorded by one of its investees.

INCOME TAXES

The  Company's  effective income tax rate was 35.1%, 34.7%, and  34.5%,  in
fiscal 2000, 1999, and 1998, respectively. The increases in fiscal 2000 and
1999  are  primarily a result of an increase in the rate  effect  of  state
income taxes due to increased profitability.

CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF ACCOUNTING CHANGE

The  cumulative effect of accounting change is the result of the  Company's
early adoption of SOP 98-5 retroactive to the first quarter of fiscal  1999
as  discussed previously in the "General" section. The cumulative effect of
this  accounting  change, net of income tax benefit, was  $6.4  million  or
$0.09  per  diluted  share  in fiscal 1999.  This new  accounting  standard
accelerated  the  Company's  recognition  of  preopening  costs,  but   has
benefited the post-opening results of new restaurants.

NET INCOME AND NET INCOME PER SHARE

Fiscal 2000 net income and diluted net income per share increased 49.5% and
50.9%, respectively, compared to fiscal 1999. Excluding the effects of  the
adoption of SOP 98-5 in fiscal 1999, fiscal 2000 net income increased 38.2%
from  $85.2  million  to $117.8 million and diluted net  income  per  share
increased  40.0% from $1.25 to $1.75. The increase in both net  income  and
diluted net income per share, before consideration of the adoption  of  SOP
98-5,  was mainly due to an increase in comparable store sales, sales weeks
(partially  offset by an additional week in fiscal 1999) and  menu  prices,
and decreases in cost of sales and other, net.

Excluding  the effects of the adoption of SOP 98-5, fiscal 1999 net  income
and  diluted  net income per share increased 23.4% and 22.5%, respectively,
compared  to fiscal 1998.  The increase in both net income and diluted  net
income  per  share  was due to an increase in average weekly  sales,  sales
weeks (including an additional week in fiscal 1999) and menu prices, and  a
decrease   in   depreciation  and  amortization   expenses.   The   factors
contributing to the increase in net income and diluted net income per share
were  partially  offset by increases in the Company's share  of  losses  in
equity method investees.

IMPACT OF INFLATION

The   Company  has  not  experienced  a  significant  overall  impact  from
inflation.   As  operating expenses increase, the Company,  to  the  extent
permitted  by  competition, recovers increased costs by  either  increasing
menu  prices  or  reviewing,  then implementing,  alternative  products  or
processes.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

The  working capital deficit increased from $87.0 million at June 30,  1999
to  $127.4  million  at June 28, 2000, and net cash provided  by  operating
activities increased to $269.0 million for fiscal 2000 from $193.2  million
for  fiscal  1999  due  to  increased  profitability  and  the  timing   of
operational receipts and payments.

Long-term  debt outstanding at June 28, 2000 consisted of $57.1 million  of
unsecured  senior  notes, $51.8 million of borrowings on credit  facilities
and  obligations  under capital leases. The Company has  credit  facilities
totaling  $335.0 million. At June 28, 2000, the Company had $281.3  million
in available funds from credit facilities.

During  fiscal  2000,  the Company entered into a $25.0  million  equipment
leasing  facility.  As of June 28, 2000, $16.2 million of the facility  had
been  utilized.  The remaining equipment leasing facility can  be  used  to
lease  equipment  through  the  first quarter  of  fiscal  year  2001.   In
addition,  the  Company entered into a $50.0 million  real  estate  leasing
facility  in fiscal 2000. As of June 28, 2000, $9.4 million of the facility
had  been utilized. The remaining real estate leasing facility will be used
to lease real estate through fiscal year 2002.

Capital  expenditures  consist of purchases of land for  future  restaurant
sites, new restaurants under construction, purchases of new and replacement
restaurant  furniture  and  equipment,  and  ongoing  remodeling  programs.
Capital  expenditures, net of amounts funded under the respective equipment
and  real  estate leasing facilities, were $165.4 million for  fiscal  2000
compared  to $181.1 million for fiscal 1999. The decrease is due  primarily
to  a  decrease  in  the number of store openings, partially  offset  by  a
reduction  in the amount of new restaurant expenditures funded  by  leasing
facilities.    The   Company  estimates  that  its  fiscal   2001   capital
expenditures,   net  of  amounts  expected  to  be  funded  under   leasing
facilities, will approximate $200 million. These capital expenditures  will
be funded entirely from existing operations.

During fiscal 2000, the Company's Board of Directors authorized an increase
in  the  stock  repurchase plan initially adopted  in  fiscal  1998  by  an
additional  $125.0 million to a total of $210.0 million.  Pursuant  to  the
plan,  the Company repurchased approximately 2,445,000 shares of its common
stock for approximately $60.7 million during fiscal 2000 in accordance with
applicable  securities  regulations.   Currently,  approximately  5,425,000
shares  have  been repurchased for approximately $125.9 million  under  the
plan.   The repurchased common stock was or will be used by the Company  to
increase  shareholder  value, offset the dilutive effect  of  stock  option
exercises,  satisfy  obligations under its savings  plans,  and  for  other
corporate  purposes.  The  repurchased  common  stock  is  reflected  as  a
reduction  of  shareholders' equity. The Company  financed  the  repurchase
program  through a combination of cash provided by operations and drawdowns
on its available credit facilities.

The  Company  is  not  aware  of  any other  event  or  trend  which  would
potentially  affect its liquidity. In the event such a trend develops,  the
Company believes that there are sufficient funds available from its  credit
facilities  and  from  strong  internal  cash  generating  capabilities  to
adequately manage the expansion of the business.


QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

The  Company  is exposed to market risk from changes in interest  rates  on
debt  and certain leasing facilities and from changes in commodity  prices.
A   discussion   of  the  Company's  accounting  policies  for   derivative
instruments  is included in the Summary of Significant Accounting  Policies
in the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

The  Company's net exposure to interest rate risk consists of floating rate
instruments  that are benchmarked to U.S. and European short-term  interest
rates.  The Company may from time to time utilize interest rate  swaps  and
forwards  to manage overall borrowing costs and reduce exposure to  adverse
fluctuations  in  interest  rates.  The Company  does  not  use  derivative
instruments for trading purposes, and the Company has procedures  in  place
to monitor and control derivative use.

The  Company  is exposed to interest rate risk on short-term and  long-term
financial  instruments  carrying variable interest  rates.   The  Company's
variable  rate  financial  instruments, including  the  outstanding  credit
facilities and interest rate swap, totaled $73.2 million at June 28,  2000.
The  impact on the Company's results of operations of a one-point  interest
rate  change  on  the  outstanding balance of the variable  rate  financial
instruments as of June 28, 2000 would be immaterial.

The  Company purchases certain commodities such as beef, chicken, flour and
cooking  oil. These commodities are generally purchased based  upon  market
prices  established with vendors. These purchase arrangements  may  contain
contractual  features  that limit the price paid  by  establishing  certain
price  floors  or caps.  The Company does not use financial instruments  to
hedge commodity prices because these purchase arrangements help control the
ultimate cost paid and any commodity price aberrations are generally  short
term in nature.

This  market  risk discussion contains forward-looking statements.   Actual
results  may  differ  materially from this discussion  based  upon  general
market conditions and changes in domestic and global financial markets.

RECENT ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

In  June  1998,  the Financial Accounting Standards Board  ("FASB")  issued
Statement  of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") No. 133,  "Accounting
for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities," subsequently amended in
June  1999  by  SFAS  No. 137, "Accounting for Derivative  Instruments  and
Hedging  Activities - Deferral of the Effective Date of FASB Statement  No.
133,"  which delays the effective date of SFAS No. 133 until the  Company's
first  quarter  financial statements in fiscal 2001.   SFAS  No.  133  will
require  the Company to recognize all derivatives on the balance  sheet  at
fair  value.  If the derivative is a hedge, depending on the nature of  the
hedge,  changes  in  the fair value of derivatives will  either  be  offset
against  the  change in fair value of the hedged item through earnings,  or
recognized  in  other  comprehensive  income  until  the  hedged  item   is
recognized  in  earnings.   In June 2000, the FASB  issued  SFAS  No.  138,
"Accounting for Certain Hedging Activities (an amendment of SFAS No. 133),"
which  amends the accounting and reporting standards of SFAS  No.  133  for
certain derivative instruments and certain hedging activities.  The Company
adopted  SFAS  No. 133 and SFAS No. 138 effective June 29,  2000,  and  the
adoption  did  not  have  a  material effect on the  Company's  results  of
operations or financial position.

In  March  2000,  the  FASB issued Interpretation No. 44  ("FIN  No.  44"),
"Accounting  for  Certain Transactions involving  Stock  Compensation:   An
Interpretation  of  APB Opinion No. 25."  Among other issues,  FIN  No.  44
clarifies  the  application of Accounting Principles Board Opinion  No.  25
("APB No. 25") regarding (a) the definition of an employee for purposes  of
applying  APB  No.  25,  (b) the criteria for determining  whether  a  plan
qualifies  as  a  noncompensatory plan, (c) the accounting consequences  of
various  modifications to the terms of a previously fixed stock  option  or
award,  and (d) the accounting for an exchange of stock compensation awards
in  a  business  combination.  The provisions of FIN No. 44  affecting  the
Company  are to be applied on a prospective basis effective July  1,  2000.
The  adoption  did not have a material effect on the Company's  results  of
operations or financial position.

MANAGEMENT OUTLOOK

During  fiscal  2000,  the  Company experienced a record-breaking  year  by
successfully  executing well-defined strategies in a very  favorable  macro
environment  for  the industry.  The results were achieved  by  disciplined
capacity   growth,   diligent  fiscal  responsibility,   unwavering   guest
satisfaction  and  a passionate culinary culture that keeps  the  Company's
concept menus on the leading edge.

During  fiscal  2001, the Company will continue to emphasize  many  of  the
initiatives  that  propelled it to new heights in  fiscal  2000.   Positive
lifestyle,  demographic, and demand trends in a strong economic environment
coupled  with ongoing efforts across all brands to enhance guest experience
reaffirm  the  Company's belief in its ability to continue to  deliver  the
best   combination  of  operating  and  financial  performance  to  enhance
shareholder value.

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

Certain  statements contained herein are forward-looking  regarding  future
economic   performance,   restaurant  openings,  operating   margins,   the
availability  of acceptable real estate locations for new restaurants,  the
sufficiency  of  cash  balances  and  cash  generated  from  operating  and
financing  activities for future liquidity and capital resource needs,  and
other   matters.   These  forward-looking  statements  involve  risks   and
uncertainties  and,  consequently, could be affected  by  general  business
conditions,  the  impact of competition, the seasonality of  the  Company's
business,   governmental  regulations,  inflation,  changes   in   economic
conditions,  consumer  perceptions  of food  safety,  changes  in  consumer
tastes,  governmental  monetary policies, changes  in  demographic  trends,
identification  and  availability  of  suitable  and  economically   viable
locations  for  new  restaurants, food and  labor  costs,  availability  of
materials and employees, or weather and other acts of God.




                      BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC.
                      Consolidated Balance Sheets
                            (In thousands)


                                                  2000       1999
ASSETS

Current Assets:
 Cash and Cash Equivalents                     $   12,343 $   12,597
 Accounts Receivable                               20,378     21,390
 Inventories                                       16,448     15,050
 Prepaid Expenses                                  50,327     46,431
 Deferred Income Taxes (Note 3)                     2,127      5,585
 Other                                              2,000      2,097
  Total Current Assets                            103,623    103,150

Property and Equipment, at Cost (Note 5):
 Land                                             178,025    169,368
 Buildings and Leasehold Improvements             739,795    650,000
 Furniture and Equipment                          396,089    351,729
 Construction-in-Progress                          57,167     46,186
                                                1,371,076  1,217,283
 Less Accumulated Depreciation and Amortization   482,944    403,907
  Net Property and Equipment                      888,132    813,376

Other Assets:
 Goodwill, Net                                     71,561     74,190
 Other (Note 9)                                    99,012     94,928
  Total Other Assets                              170,573    169,118
  Total Assets                                 $1,162,328 $1,085,644


                                                          (continued)
                      BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC.
                      Consolidated Balance Sheets
           (In thousands, except share and per share amounts)


LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY                  2000       1999

Current Liabilities:
 Current Installments of Long-term Debt
 (Notes 4 and 5)                                  $   14,635   $   14,635
 Accounts Payable                                    104,461       74,100
 Accrued Liabilities (Note 2)                        111,904      101,384
   Total Current Liabilities                         231,000      190,119

Long-term Debt, Less Current Installments
 (Notes 4 and 5)                                     110,323      183,158
Deferred Income Taxes (Note 3)                         7,667        9,140
Other Liabilities                                     51,130       41,788
Commitments and Contingencies (Notes 5 and 10)

Shareholders' Equity (Notes 6 and 7):
 Preferred Stock - 1,000,000 Authorized Shares;
  $1.00 Par Value; No Shares Issued                       -            -
 Common Stock - 250,000,000 Authorized Shares;
  $.10 Par Value; 78,362,441 Shares Issued
  and 65,866,529 Shares Outstanding at
  June 28, 2000, and 78,150,054 Shares Issued
  and 65,899,445 Shares Outstanding at
  June 30, 1999                                       7,836        7,815
 Additional Paid-In Capital                         298,172       285,448
 Retained Earnings                                  660,758       542,918
                                                    966,766       836,181
 Less:
 Treasury Stock, at Cost (12,495,912 shares at
  June 28, 2000 and 12,250,609 shares at
  June 30, 1999)                                    201,531       174,742
 Unearned Compensation                                3,027            -
  Total Shareholders' Equity                        762,208       661,439
  Total Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity     $1,162,328    $1,085,644


See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.



                      BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC.
                    Consolidated Statements of Income
                (In thousands, except per share amounts)


                                                   Fiscal Years
                                         2000        1999         1998

Revenues                              $2,159,837  $1,870,554   $1,574,414

Operating Costs and Expenses:
 Cost of Sales                           575,570     507,103      426,558
 Restaurant Expenses (Note 5)          1,197,828   1,036,573      866,143
 Depreciation and Amortization            90,647      82,385       86,376
 General and Administrative              100,123      90,311       77,407

  Total Operating Costs and Expenses   1,964,168   1,716,372    1,456,484

Operating Income                         195,669     154,182      117,930

Interest Expense                          10,746       9,241       11,025
Other, Net                                 3,381      14,402        1,447

Income Before Provision for
 Income Taxes and Cumulative Effect
 of Accounting Change                    181,542     130,539      105,458

Provision for Income Taxes (Note 3)       63,702      45,297       36,383

Income Before Cumulative
 Effect of Accounting Change             117,840      85,242       69,075

Cumulative Effect of
 Accounting Change (net of Income
  Tax Benefit of $3,404)                      -        6,407           -

   Net Income                         $  117,840  $   78,835   $   69,075

Basic Earnings Per Share:

 Income Before Cumulative Effect
  of Accounting Change                $     1.80  $     1.30   $     1.05
 Cumulative Effect of
  Accounting Change                           -         0.10           -

  Basic Net Income Per Share          $     1.80  $     1.20   $     1.05

Diluted Earnings Per Share:

 Income Before Cumulative Effect
  of Accounting Change                $     1.75  $     1.25   $     1.02
 Cumulative Effect of
  Accounting Change                           -         0.09           -

  Diluted Net Income Per Share        $     1.75  $     1.16   $     1.02

Basic Weighted Average
 Shares Outstanding                       65,631      65,926       65,766

Diluted Weighted Average
 Shares Outstanding                       67,410      68,123       67,450

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.



                       BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC.
             Consolidated Statements of Shareholders' Equity
                             (In thousands)


                                 Additional
                               Common Stock     Paid-In      Retained   Treasury     Unearned
                            Shares    Amount    Capital      Earnings    Stock      Compensation    Total
                                                                              
Balances at June 25, 1997   65,234    $7,771   $ 271,196     $395,008    $(150,231)  $        -    $523,744

Net Income                      -         -           -        69,075           -             -      69,075

Purchases of Treasury
 Stock                        (809)       -           -            -       (17,077)           -     (17,077)

Issuances of Common Stock    1,501        44         614           -        12,769            -      13,427

Tax Benefit from Stock
 Options Exercised              -         -        4,570           -            -             -       4,570

Balances at June 24, 1998   65,926     7,815     276,380      464,083     (154,539)           -     593,739

Net Income                      -         -           -        78,835           -             -      78,835

Purchases of Treasury Stock (2,171)       -           -            -       (48,125)           -     (48,125)

Issuances of Common Stock    2,144        -         (811)          -        27,922            -      27,111

Tax Benefit from Stock
 Options Exercised              -         -        9,879           -            -             -       9,879

Balances at June 30, 1999   65,899     7,815     285,448      542,918     (174,742)           -     661,439

Net Income                      -         -           -       117,840           -             -     117,840

Purchases of Treasury
 Stock                      (2,445)       -           -            -       (60,707)           -     (60,707)

Issuances of Common Stock    2,194        -       (3,187)          -        33,832            -      30,645

Tax Benefit from Stock
 Options Exercised              -         -       10,837           -            -             -      10,837

Long-term Incentive Plan      219         21       5,074           -            86        (3,027)     2,154

Balances at June 28, 2000  65,867     $7,836   $ 298,172     $660,758     $(201,531)   $  (3,027)  $762,208



See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.




                          BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC.
                    Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
                                 (In thousands)



                                                             Fiscal Years
                                                   2000             1999          1998
                                                                      
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
Net Income                                      $ 117,840         $ 78,835     $ 69,075
Adjustments to Reconcile Net Income to Net Cash
 Provided by Operating Activities:
  Depreciation and Amortization                    90,647           82,385       86,376
   Amortization of Unearned Compensation            2,124              -            -
  Deferred Income Taxes                             1,985            1,955       (1,220)
  Cumulative Effect of Accounting Change              -              6,407          -
  Changes in Assets and Liabilities:
     Receivables                                    1,109           (1,886)        (829)
     Inventories                                   (1,398)          (1,276)        (743)
     Prepaid Expenses                                (371)          (9,855)      (6,212)
     Other Assets                                  (4,032)          14,458       (9,649)
     Accounts Payable                              41,198            8,102        3,808
     Accrued Liabilities                           10,520           14,348       14,377
     Other Liabilities                              9,372             (247)      12,352
     Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities    268,994          193,226      167,335

CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
Payments for Property and Equipment              (165,397)        (181,088)    (155,246)
Payment for Purchases of Restaurants, Net             -                -         (2,700)
Net Proceeds from Sale-Leasebacks                     -                -        125,961
Proceeds from Sales of Marketable Securities          -                 51       23,962
Investments in Equity Method Investees               (954)          (4,484)     (35,500)
Net (Advances to) Repayments from Affiliates          -            (19,363)       5,942
Additions to Other Assets                             -                -         (6,850)
    Net Cash Used in Investing Activities        (166,351)        (204,884)     (44,431)

CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
Net (Payments) Borrowings on Credit Facilities    (58,200)          50,505     (132,980)
Payments of Long-term Debt                        (14,635)         (14,618)        (390)
Proceeds from Issuances of Common Stock            30,645           27,111       13,731
Purchases of Treasury Stock                       (60,707)         (48,125)     (17,077)
   Net Cash (Used in) Provided by Financing
      Activities                                 (102,897)          14,873     (136,716)

Net (Decrease) Increase in Cash and Cash
   Equivalents                                       (254)           3,215      (13,812)
Cash and Cash Equivalents at Beginning of Year     12,597            9,382       23,194
Cash and Cash Equivalents at End of Year        $  12,343         $ 12,597     $  9,382

CASH PAID DURING THE YEAR:
Interest, Net of Amounts Capitalized            $  10,192         $  9,531     $ 11,479
Income Taxes, Net of Refunds                    $  36,646         $ 39,618     $ 31,807

NON-CASH TRANSACTIONS DURING THE YEAR:
Tax Benefit from Stock Options Exercised        $  10,837         $  9,879     $  4,570
Restricted Common Stock Issued                  $   5,181         $    -       $    -


See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.






                            BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC.
                    Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements



1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

(a) Basis of Presentation

The  consolidated  financial statements include  the  accounts  of  Brinker
International,  Inc.  and  its wholly-owned subsidiaries  ("Company").  All
intercompany   accounts   and  transactions   have   been   eliminated   in
consolidation.  The  Company  owns  and operates,  or  franchises,  various
restaurant  concepts principally located in the United States.  Investments
in  unconsolidated  affiliates in which the Company  exercises  significant
influence,  but  does not control, are accounted for by the equity  method,
and the Company's share of the net income or loss is included in other, net
in the consolidated statements of income.

The  Company  has a 52/53 week fiscal year ending on the last Wednesday  in
June. Fiscal years 2000 and 1998, which ended on June 28, 2000 and June 24,
1998,  respectively, each contained 52 weeks, while fiscal year 1999, which
ended on June 30, 1999, contained 53 weeks.

Certain  prior  year  amounts  in the accompanying  consolidated  financial
statements   have   been   reclassified  to  conform   with   fiscal   2000
classifications.

(b) Financial Instruments

The  Company's policy is to invest cash in excess of operating requirements
in   income-producing  investments.  Income  producing   investments   with
maturities of three months or less at the time of investment are  reflected
as  cash equivalents. Cash equivalents of $114,000 and $2.6 million at June
28, 2000 and June 30, 1999, respectively, consist primarily of money market
funds and commercial paper.

The  Company's  financial instruments at June 28, 2000 and  June  30,  1999
consist  of  cash  equivalents, accounts receivable, notes receivable,  and
long-term  debt. The fair value of these financial instruments approximates
the  carrying  amounts  reported in the consolidated  balance  sheets.  The
following methods were used in estimating the fair value of each  class  of
financial  instrument: cash equivalents and accounts receivable approximate
their  carrying  amounts due to the short duration of  those  items;  notes
receivable  are  based on the present value of expected future  cash  flows
discounted  at  the  interest rate currently offered by the  Company  which
approximates  rates  currently being offered by local lending  institutions
for  loans  of similar terms to companies with comparable credit risk;  and
long-term debt is based on the amount of future cash flows discounted using
the  Company's  expected  borrowing rate for debt of  comparable  risk  and
maturity.

The  Company's  policy  prohibits the use  of  derivative  instruments  for
trading  purposes and the Company has procedures in place  to  monitor  and
control their use. The Company's use of derivative instruments is currently
limited  to interest rate hedges which are entered into with the intent  of
managing  overall  borrowing costs.  Amounts receivable  or  payable  under
interest  swap agreements are recorded as adjustments to interest  expense.
Cash  flows  related to derivative transactions are included  in  operating
activities.   See  Note  4  for  additional  discussion  of  debt   related
agreements.

(c) Inventories

Inventories, which consist of food, beverages, and supplies, are stated  at
the lower of cost (weighted average cost method) or market.

(d) Property and Equipment

Buildings  and leasehold improvements are amortized using the straight-line
method over the lesser of the life of the lease, including renewal options,
or  the  estimated useful lives of the assets, which range  from  5  to  20
years.  Furniture  and  equipment are depreciated using  the  straight-line
method over the estimated useful lives of the assets, which range from 3 to
8 years.

(e) Capitalized Interest

Interest  costs  capitalized during the construction period of  restaurants
were  approximately  $3.2 million, $4.0 million, and  $3.6  million  during
fiscal 2000, 1999, and 1998, respectively.

(f) Advertising

Advertising costs are expensed as incurred.  Advertising costs  were  $80.7
million,  $73.6 million, and $60.6 million in fiscal 2000, 1999, and  1998,
respectively,  and are included in restaurant expenses in the  consolidated
statements of income.

(g) Preopening Costs

The  Company elected early adoption of Statement of Position 98-5 ("SOP 98-
5"),  "Reporting on the Costs of Start-Up Activities," retroactive  to  the
first quarter of fiscal 1999. This accounting standard requires the Company
to  expense  all start-up and preopening costs as they are  incurred.   The
Company  previously deferred such costs and amortized them over the twelve-
month  period  following  the opening of each restaurant.   The  cumulative
effect  of  this  accounting change, net of income tax  benefit,  was  $6.4
million  ($0.09  per  diluted share) in fiscal 1999.  This  new  accounting
standard accelerated the Company's recognition of preopening costs, but has
benefited the post-opening results of new restaurants.  Excluding the  one-
time cumulative effect, the adoption of the new accounting standard reduced
the  Company's  reported  results for fiscal  1999  by  approximately  $1.7
million ($0.03 per diluted share).

(h) Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets

Intangible  assets  include  both  goodwill  and  identifiable  intangibles
arising  from  the  allocation of the purchase prices of  assets  acquired.
Goodwill  represents the residual purchase price after  allocation  to  all
other identifiable net assets of the businesses acquired. Other intangibles
consist mainly of reacquired franchise rights, trademarks, and intellectual
property.   All  intangible  assets are  stated  at  historical  cost  less
accumulated  amortization. Intangible assets are amortized on  a  straight-
line  basis over 30 to 40 years for goodwill and 15 to 25 years  for  other
intangibles.  The Company assesses the recoverability of intangible assets,
including  goodwill,  by  determining whether  the  asset  balance  can  be
recovered  over  its remaining life through undiscounted  future  operating
cash  flows  of the acquired asset.  The amount of impairment, if  any,  is
measured based on projected discounted future operating cash flows.

During   fiscal  1999,  the  Company  recorded  an  impairment  charge   of
approximately  $3 million for reacquired franchise rights.  The  impairment
charge,  which  is included in amortization expense, is  the  result  of  a
change  in  development  plans in the related  franchise  area.  Management
believes  that  no  reduction of the estimated useful  life  is  warranted.
Accumulated amortization for goodwill was $10.9 million and $8.7 million as
of June 28, 2000 and June 30, 1999, respectively.  Accumulated amortization
for  other intangible assets was $5.9 million and $4.8 million as  of  June
28, 2000 and June 30, 1999, respectively.

(i)  Recoverability of Long-Lived Assets

The   Company   evaluates  long-lived  assets  and   certain   identifiable
intangibles held and used in the business for impairment whenever events or
changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of an asset  may
not  be  recoverable.  An impairment is determined by  comparing  estimated
undiscounted future operating cash flows to the carrying amounts of assets.
If an impairment exists, the amount of impairment is measured as the sum of
the  estimated discounted future operating cash flows of the asset and  the
expected proceeds upon sale of the asset less its carrying amount.   Assets
held  for  sale are reported at the lower of carrying amount or fair  value
less  costs to sell.  During fiscal 1999, the Company's share of net losses
in  equity method investees included charges of approximately $6.5  million
related to impairment.

(j) Income Taxes

Deferred  tax  assets and liabilities are recognized  for  the  future  tax
consequences  attributable to differences between the  financial  statement
carrying  amounts  of existing assets and liabilities and their  respective
tax  bases. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using  enacted
tax  rates expected to apply to taxable income in the years in which  those
temporary  differences are expected to be recovered or settled. The  effect
on  deferred  tax  assets  and liabilities of a  change  in  tax  rates  is
recognized in income in the period that includes the enactment date.

(k) Treasury Stock

During  fiscal 1998, the Company's Board of Directors approved  a  plan  to
repurchase  up  to  $50.0 million of the Company's  common  stock.   During
fiscal  1999  and fiscal 2000, the Company's Board of Directors  authorized
increases  in  the plan by an additional $35.0 million and $125.0  million,
respectively.  Pursuant to the plan, the Company repurchased  approximately
2,445,000 shares of its common stock for approximately $60.7 million during
fiscal  2000,  approximately  2,171,000 shares  of  its  common  stock  for
approximately  $48.1 million during fiscal 1999, and approximately  809,000
shares  of  its common stock for approximately $17.1 million during  fiscal
1998 in accordance with applicable securities regulations.  The repurchased
common  stock  was  or will be used by the Company to increase  shareholder
value,  offset  the  dilutive  effect of stock  option  exercises,  satisfy
obligations under its savings plans, and for other corporate purposes.  The
repurchased  common  stock  is reflected as a  reduction  of  shareholders'
equity.

(l) Stock-Based Compensation

The  Company uses the intrinsic value method for measuring employee  stock-
based compensation cost which measures compensation cost as the excess,  if
any,  of the quoted market price of the Company's common stock at the grant
date  over  the  amount the employee must pay for the stock. The  Company's
policy  is  to  grant stock options at the market value of  the  underlying
stock  at  the  date of grant. Proceeds from the exercise of  common  stock
options  issued  to  officers,  directors,  and  key  employees  under  the
Company's stock option plans are credited to common stock to the extent  of
par  value  and to additional paid-in capital for the excess. Required  pro
forma  disclosures of compensation expense determined under the fair  value
method  of  Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS")  No.  123,
"Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation," are presented in Note 6.

Pursuant  to shareholder approval in November 1999, the Company implemented
the  Executive  Long-Term  Incentive Plan for certain  key  employees,  one
component of which is the award of restricted common stock.  During  fiscal
2000, approximately 219,000 shares of restricted common stock were awarded,
the majority of which vests over a three-year period. Unearned compensation
was recorded as a separate component of shareholders' equity at the date of
the award based on the market value of the shares and is being amortized to
compensation expense over the vesting period.

(m) Comprehensive Income

Comprehensive  income  is defined as the change in  equity  of  a  business
enterprise  during  a  period  from  transactions  and  other  events   and
circumstances from non-owner sources. Comprehensive income for fiscal 2000,
1999, and 1998 is equal to net income as reported.

(n) Net Income Per Share

Basic earnings per share is computed by dividing income available to common
shareholders  by  the weighted average number of common shares  outstanding
for  the  reporting  period.   Diluted  earnings  per  share  reflects  the
potential  dilution  that could occur if securities or other  contracts  to
issue common stock were exercised or converted into common stock.  For  the
calculation  of  diluted net income per share, the basic  weighted  average
number  of  shares  is increased by the dilutive effect  of  stock  options
determined  using  the  treasury stock method.  The Company  has  no  other
potentially dilutive securities.

(o) Segment Reporting

Operating  segments  are components of an enterprise about  which  separate
financial information is available that is evaluated regularly by the chief
operating  decision  maker  in deciding how to allocate  resources  and  in
assessing performance.  The Company identifies operating segments based  on
management   responsibility  and  believes  it  meets  the   criteria   for
aggregating its operating segments into a single reporting segment.

(p) Use of Estimates

The preparation of the consolidated financial statements in conformity with
generally  accepted  accounting  principles  requires  management  to  make
estimates  and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of  assets  and
liabilities and the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at  the
date  of the consolidated financial statements and the reported amounts  of
revenues and costs and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results
could differ from those estimates.

2.  ACCRUED LIABILITIES

Accrued liabilities consist of the following (in thousands):
                                                    2000      1999
Payroll                                           $ 58,498  $ 46,648
Insurance                                            7,645    10,185
Property tax                                        11,775    10,783
Sales tax                                           11,841    13,015
Other                                               22,145    20,753
                                                  $111,904  $101,384

3.  INCOME TAXES

The provision for income taxes consists of the following (in thousands):

                                           2000     1999      1998
Current income tax expense:
 Federal                                 $ 53,551 $ 38,373  $ 34,347
 State                                      8,166    4,969     3,408
   Total current income tax expense        61,717   43,342    37,755

Deferred income tax expense (benefit):
 Federal                                    1,835    2,124    (1,212)
 State                                        150     (169)     (160)
   Total deferred income tax expense
    (benefit)                               1,985    1,955    (1,372)
                                         $ 63,702 $ 45,297  $ 36,383

A  reconciliation  between the reported provision for income  taxes  before
cumulative effect of accounting change and the amount computed by  applying
the statutory Federal income tax rate of 35% to income before provision for
income taxes follows (in thousands):

                                           2000     1999      1998

Income tax expense at statutory rate     $ 63,540 $ 45,659  $ 36,910
FICA tax credit                            (5,993)  (4,495)   (3,575)
State income taxes, net of Federal
  benefit                                   5,405    3,120     2,111
Other                                         750    1,013       937
                                         $ 63,702 $ 45,297  $ 36,383

The  income  tax  effects  of  temporary  differences  that  give  rise  to
significant  portions of deferred income tax assets and liabilities  as  of
June 28, 2000 and June 30, 1999 are as follows (in thousands):

                                                    2000      1999
Deferred income tax assets:
 Insurance reserves                               $  5,678  $ 10,451
 Employee benefit plans                              7,761     4,349
 Leasing transactions                                7,137     5,510
 Other, net                                         12,792    12,277
   Total deferred income tax assets                 33,368    32,587


Deferred income tax liabilities:
 Depreciation and capitalized interest
   on property and equipment                        24,119    19,375
   Prepaid expenses                                  4,554     8,060
 Goodwill and other amortization                     2,346     1,936
 Other, net                                          7,889     6,771
   Total deferred income tax liabilities            38,908    36,142
   Net deferred income tax liability              $  5,540  $  3,555

At June 28, 2000, current taxes payable totaled $6.4 million, while at June
30, 1999, the current tax refund receivable was $7.8 million.

4.  DEBT

The  Company has credit facilities aggregating $335.0 million at  June  28,
2000. A credit facility of $260.0 million bears interest at LIBOR (6.68% at
June  28, 2000) plus a maximum of 0.50% and expires in fiscal 2002. At June
28,  2000, $45.0 million was outstanding under this facility. The remaining
credit  facilities bear interest based upon the lower of the banks'  "Base"
rate,  certificate  of deposit rate, negotiated rate, or  LIBOR  rate  plus
0.375%,  and expire at various times beginning in fiscal year 2001.  Unused
credit  facilities  available  to  the Company  were  approximately  $281.3
million   at  June  28,  2000.  Obligations  under  the  Company's   credit
facilities,  which require short-term repayments, have been  classified  as
long-term  debt, reflecting the Company's intent and ability  to  refinance
these borrowings through the existing credit facilities.

Long-term debt consists of the following (in thousands):

                                                    2000      1999
7.8% senior notes                                 $ 71,400  $ 85,700
Credit facilities                                   51,800   110,000
Capital lease obligations (see Note 5)               1,758     2,093
                                                   124,958   197,793
Less current installments                           14,635    14,635
                                                  $110,323  $183,158

The $71.4 million of unsecured senior notes bear interest at an annual rate
of  7.8%. Interest is payable semi-annually and principal of $14.3  million
is  due annually through fiscal 2004 with the remaining unpaid balance  due
in fiscal 2005.

In  April  2000, the Company entered into interest rate swap agreements  to
manage interest rate risks relating to the senior notes.  The Company  pays
semi-annually  a variable interest rate based on LIBOR plus  a  spread,  in
arrears,  compounded at three month intervals. The Company  receives  semi-
annually the fixed interest rate of 7.8% on the senior notes.  The notional
amount  of  the swap agreements aggregated $71.4 million at June 28,  2000,
with  interest rates ranging from LIBOR plus 0.530% to LIBOR  plus  0.535%.
The term of the agreements expires April 2005.  The estimated fair value of
these agreements is not material at June 28, 2000.


The  Company  is the guarantor of approximately $9.5 million  in  lines  of
credit, of which $9.2 million is outstanding for certain franchisees and an
equity method investee.

5.  LEASES

(a) Capital Leases

The Company leases certain buildings under capital leases. The asset values
of  $6.5  million  at  June 28, 2000 and June 30,  1999,  and  the  related
accumulated amortization of $5.9 million and $5.8 million at June 28,  2000
and June 30, 1999, respectively, are included in property and equipment.

(b) Operating Leases

The  Company  leases  restaurant  facilities,  office  space,  and  certain
equipment  under  operating leases having terms expiring at  various  dates
through fiscal 2022. The restaurant leases have renewal clauses of 1 to  30
years at the option of the Company and have provisions for contingent  rent
based  upon  a  percentage of gross sales, as defined in the leases.   Rent
expense  for fiscal 2000, 1999, and 1998 was $81.8 million, $70.0  million,
and  $54.8 million, respectively.  Contingent rent included in rent expense
for  fiscal 2000, 1999, and 1998 was $7.2 million, $5.5 million,  and  $4.9
million, respectively.

In  July  1993,  the Company entered into operating lease  agreements  with
unaffiliated groups to lease certain restaurant sites. During  fiscal  1995
and  1994, the Company utilized the entire commitment of approximately  $30
million  for  the development of restaurants leased by the Company.   Since
inception of the commitment, the Company has retired several properties  in
the  commitment,  which  thereby reduced the outstanding  balance.  At  the
expiration of the lease in fiscal 2001, the Company has, at its option, the
ability  to  purchase  all of the properties or to guarantee  the  residual
value related to the remaining properties, which is currently approximately
$20.6  million. Based on an analysis of the operations of these properties,
the Company believes the properties support the guaranteed residual value.

In  fiscal 1998, the Company entered into a $55.0 million equipment leasing
facility, of which $47.5 million had been utilized through fiscal 1999. The
Company does not intend to further utilize this facility.  In fiscal  2000,
the Company entered into a $25.0 million equipment leasing facility.  As of
June  28,  2000,  $16.2 million of the facility had  been  utilized.   Each
facility is accounted for as an operating lease, expires in fiscal 2004 and
2006,  respectively,  and  does  not  provide  for  renewal.   The  Company
guarantees  a residual value related to the equipment of approximately  87%
of  the  total amount funded under the facility.  At the end of each  lease
term,  the  Company has the option to purchase all of the leased  equipment
for an amount equal to the unamortized lease balance, which amount will not
exceed  75%  of the total amount funded through the facility.  The  Company
believes  the  future  cash  flows related to  the  equipment  support  the
unamortized lease balance.

In  fiscal  2000,  the  Company entered into a $50.0  million  real  estate
leasing  facility. As of June 28, 2000, $9.4 million of  the  facility  had
been  utilized.   The real estate facility, which is accounted  for  as  an
operating  lease, expires in fiscal 2007 and does not provide for  renewal.
The  Company guarantees the residual value related to the properties, which
will be approximately 87% of the total amount funded under the facility. At
the  end of the lease term, the Company has the option to purchase  all  of
the  leased  real  estate  for an amount equal  to  the  unamortized  lease
balance.  The Company believes the future cash flows related  to  the  real
estate support the unamortized lease balance.

In fiscal 1998, the Company executed a $124.0 million sale and leaseback of
certain real estate assets.  The $8.7 million gain resulting from the sale,
along  with certain transaction costs, was deferred and is being  amortized
over the remaining term of the operating lease.

(c) Commitments

At  June  28, 2000, future minimum lease payments on capital and  operating
leases were as follows (in thousands):

Fiscal                                          Capital    Operating
Year                                            Leases     Leases

2001                                            $  566    $ 72,796
2002                                               566      70,497
2003                                               566      67,398
2004                                               456      62,744
2005                                               112      58,010
Thereafter                                           -     330,521
  Total minimum lease payments                   2,266    $661,966
  Imputed interest (average rate of 11.5%)         508
  Present value of minimum lease payments        1,758
  Less current installments                        335
  Capital lease obligations - noncurrent        $1,423

At  June 28, 2000, the Company had entered into other lease agreements  for
restaurant   facilities  currently  under  construction  or   yet   to   be
constructed.  In addition to base rent, the leases also contain  provisions
for  additional contingent rent based upon gross sales, as defined  in  the
leases. Classification of these leases as capital or operating has not been
determined as construction of the leased properties has not been completed.

6.  STOCK OPTION PLANS

(a)  1983, 1992, and 1998 Employee Incentive Stock Option Plans

In  accordance  with  the Incentive Stock Option Plans adopted  in  October
1983,  November  1992, and October 1998, options to purchase  approximately
26.8  million  shares of Company common stock may be granted  to  officers,
directors, and eligible employees, as defined. Options are granted  at  the
market  value  of  the underlying common stock on the date  of  grant,  are
exercisable beginning one to two years from the date of grant, with various
vesting periods, and expire ten years from the date of grant.

In   October   1993,  the  1983  Incentive  Stock  Option   Plan   expired.
Consequently, no options were granted under that Plan subsequent to  fiscal
1993.  Options  granted  prior  to  the  expiration  of  this  Plan  remain
exercisable through April 2003.

Transactions  during  fiscal  2000, 1999, and  1998  were  as  follows  (in
thousands, except option prices):


                                 Number of         Weighted Average Share
                              Company Options          Exercise Price
                            2000    1999    1998      2000   1999    1998
Options outstanding at
 beginning of year          8,861   9,742   9,458    $17.37 $14.43  $14.13
Granted                     1,672   1,942   1,661     24.19  26.65   14.07
Exercised                  (2,153) (2,002) (1,068)    13.92  13.01   10.76
Forfeited                    (416)   (821)   (309)    20.68  16.03   16.03
Options outstanding at
 end of year                7,964   8,861   9,742    $19.56 $17.37  $14.43

Options exercisable at
  end  of year              3,668   4,232   5,556    $15.79 $15.97  $15.60


                      Options Outstanding                 Options Exercisable
                           Weighted
                            average    Weighted                   Weighted
  Range of                 remaining    average                    average
  exercise     Number of  contractual  exercise       Number of   exercise
   prices       options  life (years)    price         options      price

$10.89-$11.22       694        5.40      $11.08            694      $11.08
$12.00-$15.50     2,175        5.88       13.61          1,237       13.51
$16.00-$20.44     1,750        3.74       18.89          1,669       18.99
$23.06-$28.00     3,345        8.84       25.54             68       26.83
                  7,964        6.61      $19.56          3,668      $15.79

(b)  1991 and 1999 Non-Employee Stock Option Plans

In  accordance  with the Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee  Directors  and
Consultants  adopted  in May 1991, options to purchase  587,500  shares  of
Company  common stock were authorized for grant. In fiscal 2000,  the  1991
Stock  Option Plan for Non-Employee Directors and Consultants was  replaced
by  the 1999 Stock Option and Incentive Plan for Non-Employee Directors and
Consultants  which  authorized the issuance of  up  to  300,000  shares  of
Company  common stock.  The authority to issue the remaining 131,500  stock
options  under  the 1991 Stock Option Plan for Non-Employee  Directors  and
Consultants  has been terminated.  Options are granted at the market  value
of  the  underlying common stock on the date of grant, vest one-third  each
year  beginning two years from the date of grant, and expire ten years from
the date of grant.

Transactions  during  fiscal  2000, 1999, and  1998  were  as  follows  (in
thousands, except option prices):

                                 Number of            Weighted Average Share
                              Company Options              Exercise Price
                            2000   1999   1998         2000   1999    1998
Options outstanding at
 beginning of year           347    230    201       $17.13  $16.51  $16.10
Granted                        6    183     52        23.50   16.97   16.40
Exercised                    (41)   (46)   (23)       15.48   15.09   12.60
Forfeited                     -     (20)    -            -    13.08      -
Options outstanding at
 end of year                 312    347    230       $17.47  $17.13  $16.51

Options exercisable at
 end of year                 185    191    174       $15.35  $15.47  $16.52

At June 28, 2000, the range of exercise prices for options outstanding was
$11.22 to $25.44 with a weighted average remaining contractual life of 5.66
years.

(c)  On The Border 1989 Stock Option Plan

In  accordance  with  the Stock Option Plan for On  The  Border  employees,
options to purchase 550,000 shares of On The Border's preacquisition common
stock  were  authorized  for grant. Effective May  18,  1994,  the  376,000
unexercised  On The Border stock options became exercisable immediately  in
accordance with the provisions of the Stock Option Plan, and were converted
to  approximately 124,000 Company stock options and expire ten  years  from
the  date  of original grant.  At June 28, 2000, there were 26,000  options
exercisable  and  outstanding at exercise prices  ranging  from  $18.24  to
$19.76 with a weighted average remaining contractual life of 3.17 years.

(d)  1984 Non-Qualified Stock Option Plan

In  accordance with the Non-Qualified Stock Option Plan adopted in December
1984,  options to purchase approximately 5 million shares of Company common
stock  were authorized for grant. Options were granted at the market  value
of  the underlying common stock on the date of grant, are all fully vested,
and expire ten years from the date of grant.

In  November  1989,  the Non-Qualified Stock Option  Plan  was  terminated.
Consequently,  no options were granted subsequent to fiscal  1990  and  all
options were either exercised or forfeited in fiscal 1999.

The  Company  has adopted the disclosure-only provisions of SFAS  No.  123.
Accordingly,  no  compensation cost has been recognized for  Company  stock
option plans. Pursuant to the employee compensation provisions of SFAS  No.
123, the Company's diluted net income per common and equivalent share would
have  been  reduced to the pro forma amounts indicated below (in thousands,
except per share data):


                                               2000             1999         1998

                                                                 
Net income - as reported                     $117,840        $  78,835    $  69,075
Net income - pro forma                       $108,503        $  71,668    $  62,745
Diluted net income per share - as reported   $   1.75        $    1.16    $    1.02
Diluted net income per share - pro forma     $   1.61        $    1.05    $    0.93


The  weighted average fair value of option grants was $10.87,  $10.72,  and
$6.33 during fiscal 2000, 1999, and 1998, respectively.  The fair value  is
estimated  using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model with the  following
weighted average assumptions:


                                       2000      1999       1998

Expected volatility                    40.8%     37.2%      41.5%
Risk-free interest rate                 5.9%      4.6%       5.8%
Expected lives                       5 years   5 years    5 years
Dividend yield                          0.0%      0.0%       0.0%

The  pro forma disclosures provided are not likely to be representative  of
the effects on reported net income for future years due to future grants.

7.  STOCKHOLDER PROTECTION RIGHTS PLAN

The  Company maintains a Stockholder Protection Rights Plan ("Plan").  Upon
implementation of the Plan, the Company declared a dividend of one right on
each  outstanding  share of common stock. The rights are evidenced  by  the
common  stock certificates, automatically trade with the common stock,  and
are not exercisable until it is announced that a person or group has become
an  Acquiring  Person, as defined in the Plan. Thereafter, separate  rights
certificates  will  be  distributed  and  each  right  (other  than  rights
beneficially  owned  by  any Acquiring Person) will  entitle,  among  other
things,  its holder to purchase, for an exercise price of $60, a number  of
shares  of Company common stock having a market value of twice the exercise
price.  The rights may be redeemed by the Board of Directors for $0.01  per
right  prior  to the date of the announcement that a person  or  group  has
become an Acquiring Person.

8.  SAVINGS PLANS

The  Company  sponsors  a  qualified defined contribution  retirement  plan
("Plan  I")  covering salaried and hourly employees who have completed  one
year  of  service and have attained the age of twenty-one.  Plan  I  allows
eligible employees to defer receipt of up to 20% of their compensation  and
100% of their eligible bonuses, as defined in the plan, and contribute such
amounts to various investment funds. The Company matches in Company  common
stock 25% of the first 5% a salaried employee contributes. Hourly employees
do   not  receive  matching  contributions.   Employee  contributions  vest
immediately while Company contributions vest 25% annually beginning on  the
participant's second anniversary of employment. In fiscal 2000,  1999,  and
1998,  the  Company  contributed  approximately  $731,000,  $688,000,   and
$600,000, respectively.

The  Company sponsors a non-qualified defined contribution retirement  plan
("Plan II") covering highly compensated employees, as defined in the  plan.
Plan  II  allows eligible employees to defer receipt of up to 20% of  their
base  compensation and 100% of their eligible bonuses, as  defined  in  the
plan. The Company matches in Company common stock 25% of the first 5% a non-
officer  contributes while officers' contributions are matched at the  same
rate  with  cash.  Employee  contributions vest immediately  while  Company
contributions  vest  25%  annually beginning on  the  participant's  second
anniversary  of  employment. In fiscal 2000, 1999, and  1998,  the  Company
contributed  approximately $543,000, $381,000, and $298,000,  respectively.
At  the inception of Plan II, the Company established a Rabbi Trust to fund
Plan  II  obligations. The market value of the trust assets is included  in
other assets and the liability to Plan II participants is included in other
liabilities.

9.  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTION

The   Company   has  secured  notes  receivable  from  Eatzi's  Corporation
("Eatzi's")  with a carrying value of approximately $21.6 million  at  June
28,  2000  and  June  30,  1999. Approximately  $6  million  of  the  notes
receivable  is  convertible  into nonvoting Series  A  Preferred  Stock  of
Eatzi's at the option of the Company and matures on December 28, 2006.  The
remaining note receivable matures on September 28, 2005.

Interest on the convertible note receivable is 10.5% per year with payments
due  beginning June 28, 2000 and continuing on a quarterly basis until  the
principal  balance and all accrued and unpaid interest have  been  paid  in
full.  In accordance with the terms of the note, Eatzi's elected to pay the
interest  due on June 28, 2000 by issuing approximately 973,000  shares  of
its nonvoting Series A Preferred Stock in lieu of making a cash payment  of
$652,000.  Interest on the remaining notes receivable balance is prime rate
plus  1.5%  per  year with payments due beginning September  28,  2000  and
continuing on a quarterly basis until the principal balance and all accrued
and  unpaid  interest  have been paid in full.  The  notes  receivable  are
included  in other assets in the accompanying consolidated balance  sheets.
In  addition, the Company sold a portion of its equity interest in  Eatzi's
effective June 30, 1999.

10.  CONTINGENCIES

The  Company  is  engaged  in  various legal proceedings  and  has  certain
unresolved  claims  pending.  The  ultimate  liability,  if  any,  for  the
aggregate  amounts  claimed cannot be determined  at  this  time.  However,
management  of the Company, based upon consultation with legal counsel,  is
of  the  opinion that there are no matters pending or threatened which  are
expected  to  have  a  material  adverse effect,  individually  or  in  the
aggregate, on the Company's consolidated financial condition or results  of
operations.


11.  QUARTERLY RESULTS OF OPERATIONS (UNAUDITED)

The following table summarizes the unaudited consolidated quarterly results
of  operations  for  fiscal 2000 and 1999(in thousands,  except  per  share
amounts):

                                           Fiscal Year 2000
                                            Quarters Ended
                               Sept. 29     Dec. 29    March 29     June 28
Revenues                       $511,033    $520,900    $551,191    $576,713
Income Before Provision for
 Income Taxes                    41,510      38,931      44,275      56,826
Net Income                       27,106      25,422      28,602      36,710
Basic Net Income Per Share         0.41        0.39        0.44        0.56
Diluted Net Income Per Share       0.40        0.38        0.43        0.54
Basic Weighted Average
 Shares Outstanding              65,786      65,377      65,266      66,034
Diluted Weighted Average
 Shares Outstanding              67,772      66,977      66,814      68,003





                                           Fiscal Year 1999
                                            Quarters Ended
                                Sept. 23     Dec. 23    March 24     June 30
Revenues                        $432,101    $443,975    $459,192    $535,286
Income Before Provision for
 Income Taxes and Cumulative
   Effect of Accounting Change    30,658      26,963      31,447      41,471
Income Before Cumulative
   Effect of Accounting Change    20,020      17,607      20,535      27,080
Net Income                        13,613      17,607      20,535      27,080
Basic Net Income Per Share:
   Income Before Accounting Change  0.30        0.27        0.31        0.41
 Net Income                         0.21        0.27        0.31        0.41
Diluted Net Income Per Share:
   Income Before Accounting Change  0.30        0.26        0.30        0.40
 Net Income                         0.20        0.26        0.30        0.40
Basic Weighted Average
 Shares Outstanding               65,774      65,608      66,316      66,003
Diluted Weighted Average
 Shares Outstanding               67,596      67,781      68,852      68,267





INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT


The Board of Directors
Brinker International, Inc.:


We  have  audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets  of  Brinker
International, Inc. and subsidiaries as of June 28, 2000 and June 30, 1999,
and the related consolidated statements of income, shareholders' equity and
cash  flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended  June  28,
2000.   These  consolidated financial statements are the responsibility  of
the  Company's management.  Our responsibility is to express an opinion  on
these consolidated financial statements based on our audits.

We  conducted  our  audits in accordance with auditing standards  generally
accepted in the United States of America.  Those standards require that  we
plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statements are free of material misstatement.  An audit  includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures
in  the  financial  statements.   An  audit  also  includes  assessing  the
accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as
well  as  evaluating  the  overall financial  statement  presentation.   We
believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In  our  opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred  to  above
present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Brinker
International, Inc. and subsidiaries as of June 28, 2000 and June 30, 1999,
and  the results of their operations and their cash flows for each  of  the
years  in  the  three-year period ended June 28, 2000  in  conformity  with
accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

As  discussed  in  Note  1  to the consolidated financial  statements,  the
Company  changed  its  method  of  accounting  for  the  cost  of  start-up
activities in fiscal 1999.



                           KPMG LLP




Dallas, Texas
July 31, 2000





MANAGEMENT'S RESPONSIBILITY FOR CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS


To Our Shareholders:

Management  is  responsible  for  the  reliability  of  the  consolidated
financial  statements  and related notes, which  have  been  prepared  in
conformity  with accounting principles generally accepted in  the  United
States  of  America  and  include amounts based  upon  our  estimate  and
judgments, as required.  The consolidated financial statements have  been
audited  and reported on by our independent auditors, KPMG LLP, who  were
given  free  access to all financial records and related data,  including
minutes of the meetings of the Board of Directors and Committees  of  the
Board.   We  believe  that the representations made  to  the  independent
auditors were valid and appropriate.

Brinker  maintains a system of internal controls over financial reporting
designed  to  provide  reasonable assurance of  the  reliability  of  the
consolidated  financial  statements. Brinker's  internal  audit  function
monitors  and reports on the adequacy of the compliance with the internal
control  system and appropriate actions are taken to address  significant
control deficiencies and other opportunities for improving the system  as
they  are  identified.  The Audit Committee of the  Board  of  Directors,
which is comprised solely of outside directors, provides oversight to the
financial   reporting  process  through  periodic   meetings   with   our
independent  auditors,  internal  auditors,  and  management.   Both  our
independent auditors and internal auditors have free access to the  Audit
Committee.   Although  no  cost-effective internal  control  system  will
preclude all errors and irregularities, we believe our controls as of and
for  the  year ended June 28, 2000 provide reasonable assurance that  the
consolidated financial statements are reliable.




RONALD A. MCDOUGALL
Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer



RUSSELL G. OWENS
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial and
   Strategic Officer


                           EXHIBIT 21

      BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC., A DELAWARE CORPORATION

                          SUBSIDIARIES


REGISTRANT'S  subsidiaries  operate full-service  restaurants  in
various  locations throughout the United States under  the  names
Chili's  Grill  &  Bar, Romano's Macaroni Grill,  On  The  Border
Mexican  Grill  &  Cantina,  Cozymel's  Coastal  Mexican   Grill,
Maggiano's Little Italy, and Corner Bakery cafe.

     BRINKER RESTAURANT CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation
     MAGGIANO'S/CORNER BAKERY, INC., an Illinois corporation
          BRINKER ALABAMA, INC., a Delaware corporation
         BRINKER ARKANSAS, INC., a Delaware corporation
    BRINKER AUSTRALIA PTY LIMITED, an Australian corporation
     BRINKER CONNECTICUT CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation
         BRINKER DELAWARE, INC., a Delaware corporation
          BRINKER FLORIDA, INC., a Delaware corporation
          BRINKER GEORGIA, INC., a Delaware corporation
          BRINKER INDIANA, INC., a Delaware corporation
           BRINKER IOWA, INC., a Delaware corporation
         BRINKER KENTUCKY, INC., a Delaware corporation
         BRINKER LOUISIANA, INC., a Delaware corporation
    BRINKER MASSACHUSETTS CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation
        BRINKER MISSISSIPPI, INC., a Delaware corporation
         BRINKER MISSOURI, INC., a Delaware corporation
   BRINKER OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY, INC., a Maryland corporation
           BRINKER NEVADA, INC., a Nevada corporation
        BRINKER NEW JERSEY, INC., a Delaware corporation
      BRINKER NORTH CAROLINA, INC., a Delaware corporation
           BRINKER OHIO, INC., a Delaware corporation
         BRINKER OKLAHOMA, INC., a Delaware corporation
      BRINKER SOUTH CAROLINA, INC., a Delaware corporation
         BRINKER UK CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation
         BRINKER VIRGINIA, INC., a Delaware corporation
        BRINKER TEXAS, L.P., a Texas limited partnership
       CHILI'S BEVERAGE COMPANY, INC., a Texas corporation
             CHILI'S, INC., a Tennessee corporation
       CHILI'S OF MINNESOTA, INC., a Minnesota corporation
          CHILI'S OF KANSAS, INC., a Kansas corporation
        BRINKER PENN TRUST, a Pennsylvania business trust
   CHILI'S OF WEST VIRGINIA, INC., a West Virginia corporation
       CHILI'S OF WISCONSIN, INC., a Wisconsin corporation
        BRINKER FREEHOLD, INC., a New Jersey corporation
       MAGGIANO'S OF TYSON'S, INC., a Virginia corporation
       ROMANO'S OF ANNAPOLIS, INC., a Maryland corporation
        CHILI'S OF BEL AIR, INC., a Maryland corporation
        CHILI'S OF MARYLAND, INC., a Maryland corporation
    BRINKER OF BALTIMORE COUNTY, INC., a Maryland corporation
     BRINKER OF HOWARD COUNTY, INC., a Maryland corporation
     BRINKER RHODE ISLAND, INC., a Rhode Island corporation
          BRINKER OF D.C., INC., a Delaware corporation
              CHILI'S, INC., a Delaware corporation
 MAGGIANO'S/CORNER BAKERY BEVERAGE COMPANY, a Texas corporation
    MAGGIANO'S/CORNER BAKERY HOLDING CORPORATION, a Delaware
                           corporation
   MAGGIANO'S/CORNER BAKERY, L.P., a Texas limited partnership






                         EXHIBIT 23


                INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' CONSENT



The Board of Directors
Brinker International, Inc.:


We  consent  to  incorporation by reference in  Registration
Statement Nos. 33-61594, 33-56491, 333-02201, 333-93755, and
333-42224  on  Form S-8 and Nos. 333-00169 and 333-07481  on
Form S-3, of Brinker International, Inc. of our report dated
July  28, 2000, relating to the consolidated balance  sheets
of  Brinker International, Inc. and subsidiaries as of  June
28,  2000  and  June  30, 1999 and the related  consolidated
statements  of income, shareholders' equity and  cash  flows
for  each  of the years in the three-year period ended  June
28,  2000, which report is incorporated by reference in  the
June  28,  2000  annual  report  on  Form  10-K  of  Brinker
International, Inc.



                                   /KPMG LLP




Dallas, Texas
September 22, 2000

  

5 THIS SCHEDULE CONTAINS SUMMARY FINANCIAL INFORMATION EXTRACTED FROM THE CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET AND RELATED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF INCOME OF BRINKER INTERNATIONAL, INC. AS OF AND FOR THE 52 WEEK PERIOD ENDED JUNE 28, 2000, AND IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. 1000 12-MOS JUN-28-2000 JUN-28-2000 12,343 0 22,631 (253) 16,448 103,623 1,371,076 (482,944) 1,162,328 231,000 110,323 0 0 7,836 754,372 1,162,328 2,137,047 2,159,837 575,570 1,864,045 0 909 10,746 181,542 63,702 117,840 0 0 0 117,840 1.80 1.75



                           EXHIBIT 99

                     PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS

     The following table sets forth certain information as to all
persons  known by the Company to beneficially own more than  five
percent of the outstanding shares of Common Stock of the Company:

                                   Beneficial Ownership

                                     Number of
Name and Address                      Shares             Percent


FMR Corp.                           5,143,495 (1)          7.79%
82 Devonshire Street
Boston, Massachusetts  02109

Capital Research and Management     4,450,000 (2)          6.74%
  Company
333 South Hope Street
Los Angeles, California 90071




      (1) Based on information contained in Schedule 13G dated as
of March 31, 2000.

      (2) Based on information contained in Schedule 13G dated as
of December 31, 1999.



                SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT
                   AND ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

      Eleven  directors are to be elected at the  meeting.   Each
nominee  will  be  elected to hold office until the  next  annual
meeting  of shareholders.  To be elected a director, each nominee
must  receive a plurality of all of the votes cast at the meeting
for  the election of directors.  Should any nominee become unable
or  unwilling to accept nomination or election, the proxy holders
may vote the proxies for the election, in his stead, of any other
person  the Board of Directors may recommend.  All nominees  have
expressed  their  intention to serve the entire  term  for  which
election  is  sought.   The following table  sets  forth  certain
information  concerning  security  ownership  of  management  and
nominees for election as directors of the Company:


                         Number of Shares              Number Attributable to
                          of Common Stock               Options Exercisable      Percent
                        Beneficially Owned               Within 60 Days of          of
Name                as of September 11, 2000 (1)(2)      September 11, 2000       Class

                                                                          
Norman E. Brinker           1,346,112 (3)                      909,370             2.01%

Ronald A. McDougall           890,397                          819,400             1.33%

Douglas H. Brooks             503,454                          378,875               *

Todd E. Diener                 96,660                           66,411               *

Russell G. Owens              215,619                          171,175               *

Roger F. Thomson               43,812                           25,000               *

Donald J. Carty                18,584                            7,818               *

Dan W. Cook, III                7,997                            7,997               *

Marvin J. Girouard              1,149                                0               *

Frederick S. Humphries         25,283                           25,000               *

Ronald Kirk                     6,291                            5,525               *

Jeffrey A. Marcus              10,000                                0               *

James E. Oesterreicher         15,649                           14,000               *

Roger T. Staubach              40,031                           27,999               *

All executive officers
  and directors as a
   group (18 persons)       3,761,061 (3)                    2,769,445             5.46%



    *    Less than one percent

          (1)  Beneficial ownership has been determined in accordance with
     the  rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission.  Except  as
     noted,  and except for any community property interests owned  by
     spouses,  the listed individuals have sole investment  power  and
     sole  voting  power as to all shares of stock of which  they  are
     identified as being the beneficial owners.

          (2)  Includes shares of Common Stock which may be acquired by
     exercise  of  options  vested,  or  vesting  within  60  days  of
     September  11,  2000,  under the Company's 1983  Incentive  Stock
     Option  Plan,  1992 Incentive Stock Option Plan  and  1991  Stock
     Option  Plan  for  Non-Employee  Directors  and  Consultants,  as
     applicable.

          (3)  Includes 20,250 shares of Common Stock held of record by
     a family trust of which Mr. Brinker is trustee.



      The  Company  has established a guideline that  all  senior
officers of the Company own stock in the Company, believing  that
it  is  important to further encourage and support  an  ownership
mentality among the senior officers that will continue  to  align
their  personal financial interests with the long-term  interests
of  the  Company's shareholders.  Pursuant to the guideline,  the
minimum amount of Company Common Stock that a senior officer will
be  encouraged  to  own  will  be determined  by  such  officer's
position within the Company as well as annual compensation.   The
Company  has  established  a program with  a  third-party  lender
pursuant  to  which the senior officers will be  able  to  obtain
financing  for  purposes of attaining the stock ownership  levels
referred to above.  Any loans obtained by such senior officers to
finance  such stock acquisitions are facilitated by  the  Company
pursuant to an agreement in which the senior officer pledges  the
underlying  stock  and  future incentive payments  which  may  be
receivable from the Company as security for the loan.


                DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

Directors

      A  brief  description of each person nominated to become  a
director  of  the  Company is provided below.  All  nominees  are
currently  serving  as  directors of the Company.   Each  of  the
current directors was elected at the last annual meeting  of  the
Company's shareholders held on November 4, 1999.

      Norman E. Brinker, 69, has served as Chairman of the  Board
of  Directors since 1983. He was also Chief Executive Officer  of
the  Company from September 1983 to June 1995, with the exception
of  a  brief period during which he was incapacitated due  to  an
injury.  Mr. Brinker is a member of the Executive and  Nominating
Committees  of the Company. He was the founder of S&A  Restaurant
Corp.  in  1966,  and  served as its Chairman  of  the  Board  of
Directors  and  Chief Executive Officer from 1977  through  1983.
From  1982  through 1983, Mr. Brinker served as Chairman  of  the
Board  of  Directors and Chief Executive Officer of  Burger  King
Corporation,  while  simultaneously  occupying  the  position  of
President of The Pillsbury Company Restaurant Group. Mr.  Brinker
currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of  Haggar
Clothing Company and Petsmart, Inc.

     Ronald A. McDougall, 58, was elected Vice Chairman and Chief
Executive  Officer  in  January 1999, having  formerly  held  the
office  of  President and Chief Executive Officer of the  Company
since  June  1995 and President and Chief Operating Officer  from
1986  to  1995.   Mr. McDougall joined the Company  in  1983  and
served  as  Executive  Vice President - Marketing  and  Strategic
Development until his promotion to President.  Prior  to  joining
the  Company,  Mr. McDougall held senior management positions  at
Proctor  and  Gamble,  Sara Lee, The Pillsbury  Company  and  S&A
Restaurant  Corp.  Mr. McDougall has served as a  member  of  the
Board  of Directors of the Company since 1983 and is a member  of
the  Executive  and  Nominating Committees of  the  Company.  Mr.
McDougall  also  serves on the Board of Trustees  of  the  Cooper
Institute for Aerobics Research.

      Douglas H. Brooks, 48, became President and Chief Operating
Officer  of the Company in January 1999.  Previously, Mr.  Brooks
served  as  Chili's Grill & Bar ("Chili's") President  from  June
1994 to May 1998 and Executive Vice President and Chief Operating
Officer  from May 1998 until January 1999. Mr. Brooks joined  the
Company  as  an  Assistant Manager in 1978 and  was  promoted  to
General Manager later that year. He was named Area Supervisor  in
1979,  Regional Director in 1982, Senior Vice President - Central
Region  Operations in 1987, and Senior Vice President  -  Chili's
Operations  in  1992.   He  held  this  position  until  becoming
President of Chili's in 1994. Mr. Brooks serves on the  Board  of
Directors  of Limbs for Life and Circle Ten Council - Boy  Scouts
of America and is a member of the Professional Advisory Board for
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.

     Donald J. Carty, 54, was named Chairman, President and Chief
Executive Officer of AMR Corp. and American Airlines, Inc. in May
1998,  after serving as President from March 1995 until May 1998.
From  1989  to  1995, he served American Airlines, Inc.  and  AMR
Corp.  as  Executive Vice President - Finance and  Planning.   He
joined  American in 1978 and held numerous finance  and  planning
positions,  with the exception of a two-year hiatus as  President
and Chief Executive Officer of CP Air in Canada. He serves on the
Board  of Directors of Dell Computer Corporation and is a  member
of  the  Dallas  Citizens  Council  and  the  Southern  Methodist
University Board of Trustees.  Mr. Carty has served on the  Board
of  Directors  since June 1998 and is a member of  the  Executive
Committee of the Company.

     Dan W. Cook, III, 65, is a Senior Director of Goldman Sachs,
an  investment banking firm.  Mr. Cook joined Goldman Sachs Group
in  1961 and was a general partner when he retired in 1992.   Mr.
Cook is a member of the Executive and Compensation Committees  of
the  Company and has served as a member of the Board of Directors
since  October  1997.   Mr. Cook also  serves  on  the  Board  of
Directors for Centex Corporation and GreatLodge.com.  Mr. Cook is
a   member  of  the  Board  of  Trustees  of  Southern  Methodist
University  as well as Vice-Chair of the Edwin L. Cox  School  of
Business Executive Board.

     Marvin J. Girouard, 61, is the Chairman, President and Chief
Executive Officer of Pier 1 Imports, Inc., having been elected to
the  position of Chairman in February 1999, President  in  August
1988  and  Chief  Executive Officer in June 1998.   Mr.  Girouard
previously served as Chief Operating Officer from 1988  to  1998.
Mr.  Girouard joined Pier 1 Imports in 1975 and has served on its
Board of Directors since 1988.  He serves as a Director for Tandy
Brands  Accessories,  Inc.  and is  a  member  of  the  Executive
Committee for the United States Committee for UNICEF - The United
Nations Children's Emergency Fund.  Mr. Girouard has served as  a
member  of the Board of Directors since September 1998 and  is  a
member of the Audit, Compensation and Executive Committees of the
Company.

      Frederick S. Humphries, 64, is the President of Florida A&M
University  in  Tallahassee, Florida, having held  this  position
since   1985.    Prior   to  joining  Florida   A&M   University,
Dr.  Humphries  was  President of Tennessee State  University  in
Nashville for over 10 years.  Dr. Humphries serves as a member of
the  USDA  Task Force of 1890 Land-Grant Institutions in addition
to  being  involved  in  various civic and community  activities.
Dr. Humphries has served on the Board of Directors of the Company
since  May  1994  and is a member of the Audit Committee  of  the
Company.   He  is  also  a member of the Board  of  Directors  of
WalMart, Inc.

      Ronald  Kirk, 46, is currently Mayor of the City of  Dallas
and  a partner in the law firm of Gardere & Wynne, L.L.P.  He was
elected  Mayor  in 1995, and previously served  as  Secretary  of
State  of  the  State of Texas from 1994 to 1995.  Mr.  Kirk  was
engaged in the private practice of law from 1989 to 1994,  served
as an Assistant City Attorney for Dallas from 1983 to 1989 and as
a  legislative aide to U.S. Senator Lloyd Bentsen  from  1983  to
1989.   Mayor  Kirk is an honors graduate of Austin  College  and
earned  his law degree from The University of Texas.  Mayor  Kirk
has served on the Board of Directors since January 1997 and is  a
member of the Nominating Committee of the Company.

      Jeffrey  A. Marcus, 53, is the Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer  of  eVentures  Group, Inc., an  internet  communications
holding  company, a position he has held since  April  2000.   He
previously  served as a Partner of Marcus & Partners,  a  private
equity  investment  firm, from March 1999 until  April  2000  and
President  and  Chief Executive Officer of AMFM,  Inc.  (formerly
Chancellor  Media Corporation), from May 1998 until  March  1999.
Previously,  Mr.  Marcus  was  Chairman,  President   and   Chief
Executive Officer of Marcus Cable Company, a company he formed in
1990  after  spending more than 20 years in the cable  television
industry.   Mr. Marcus is active in several civic and  charitable
organizations.  Mr. Marcus has served on the Board  of  Directors
since  January  1997  and  is  a  member  of  the  Executive  and
Nominating Committees of the Company.

      James E. Oesterreicher, 59, is the Retired Chairman of  the
Board of J.C. Penney Company, Inc., having served as Chairman  of
the  Board  and Chief Executive Officer from January  1997  until
September 2000 and Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer from
January  1995  until January 1997.  Mr. Oesterreicher  served  as
President of JCPenney Stores and Catalog from 1992 to 1995 and as
Director of JCPenney Stores from 1988 to 1992.  Mr. Oesterreicher
has been with the J.C. Penney Company since 1964 where he started
as  a  management trainee.  He serves as a Director  for  various
entities, including The Dial Corporation, TXU Corp., Texas Health
Resources, National Retail Federation, Circle Ten Council  -  Boy
Scouts  of America, March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation,  and
The Conference Board. Mr. Oesterreicher has served as a member of
the  Board of Directors of the Company since May 1994  and  is  a
member  of  the Audit, Compensation and Nominating Committees  of
the Company.

      Roger  T. Staubach, 58, has been Chairman of the Board  and
Chief Executive Officer of The Staubach Company, a national  real
estate company specializing in tenant representation, since 1982.
Mr.  Staubach  is a 1965 graduate of the U.S. Naval  Academy  and
served  four years in the Navy as an officer.  In 1968, he joined
the  Dallas Cowboys professional football team as quarterback and
was elected to the National Football League Hall of Fame in 1985.
He  currently  serves  on  the Board  of  Directors  of  American
AAdvantage  Funds  and is active in numerous civic,  charity  and
professional  organizations. He has served as  a  member  of  the
Board  of Directors of the Company since 1993 and is a member  of
the Nominating Committee of the Company.

Executive Officers

      The following persons are executive officers of the Company
who  are  not  nominated  to  serve on  the  Company's  Board  of
Directors:

      Kenneth D. Dennis, 47, has been Mexican Concepts (Cozymel's
Coastal  Mexican  Grill ("Cozymel's") and On The  Border  Mexican
Grill  & Cantina) President since October 1999, having previously
served  as  Cozymel's President since September 1997, and  Senior
Vice  President  and Chief Operating Officer of  Cozymel's  since
February  1997.  Mr. Dennis joined the Company as  a  Manager  in
1976  and was named General Manager in 1978, Director of Internal
Systems  in 1979, and Director of Marketing in 1983.  Mr.  Dennis
was promoted to Vice President of Marketing in 1986 and to Senior
Vice  President of Marketing in 1993, a position  he  held  until
February 1997.

      Todd  E.  Diener,  43,  was elected  Chili's  Grill  &  Bar
President in May 1998, having previously served as Chili's Senior
Vice President and Chief Operating Officer since July 1996.   Mr.
Diener  joined the Company as a Chili's Manager Trainee  in  1981
and  was  promoted to General Manager in 1983, Area  Director  in
1985,  and Regional Director in 1987. Mr. Diener became  Regional
Vice President in 1989, a position he held until July 1996.

      John  C. Miller, 45, has served as Romano's Macaroni  Grill
President  since April 1997.  Mr. Miller joined  the  Company  as
Vice President-Special Concepts in 1987.  In 1988, he was elected
Vice  President  -  Joint Venture/Franchise and  served  in  this
capacity until 1993 when he was promoted to Senior Vice President
- -  New  Concept  Development.  Mr. Miller was named  Senior  Vice
President   -  Mexican  Concepts  in  September  1994   and   was
subsequently  elected Senior Vice President and Mexican  Concepts
President  in October 1995, a position he held until April  1997.
Prior  to  joining  the  Company, Mr. Miller  worked  in  various
capacities with the Taco Bueno Division of Unigate Restaurants.

     Russell G. Owens, 41, has served as Executive Vice President
and  Chief Financial and Strategic Officer since September  1997.
Mr.  Owens  joined  the Company in 1983 as  Controller.   He  was
elected Vice President of Planning in 1986 and Vice President  of
Operations  Analysis in 1991.  Mr. Owens was promoted  to  Senior
Vice  President  of  Operations Analysis in 1993  and  was  named
Senior Vice President of Strategic Development - Italian Concepts
in  1996,  a position he held until being elected Chief Strategic
Officer  in  June 1997. Prior to joining the Company,  Mr.  Owens
worked for the public accounting firm, Deloitte & Touche.

       Roger  F.  Thomson,  51,  has  served  as  Executive  Vice
President,  Chief  Administrative Officer,  General  Counsel  and
Secretary  since June 1996.  Mr. Thomson joined  the  Company  as
Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary in 1993  and
was  promoted  to Executive Vice President, General  Counsel  and
Secretary  in  1994.  Mr. Thomson served as  a  Director  of  the
Company  from 1993 until 1995.  From 1988 until 1993, Mr. Thomson
served  as  Senior Vice President, General Counsel and  Secretary
for  Burger  King Corporation.  Prior to 1988, Mr. Thomson  spent
ten  years at S & A Restaurant Corp. where he was Executive  Vice
President, General Counsel and Secretary.

      Mark  F. Tormey, 47, has served as Maggiano's Little  Italy
President  since  November 1997, having  joined  the  Company  as
Senior  Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of  Maggiano's
Little  Italy in 1995. Prior to joining the Company,  Mr.  Tormey
worked for Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises, Inc. since 1979. In
1991,  Mr.  Tormey  opened  the  first  Maggiano's  Little  Italy
restaurant and worked with the Maggiano's Little Italy  group  at
Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises, Inc. until its acquisition  by
the Company in 1995.

      David  Wolfgram,  42,  has served  as  Corner  Bakery  Cafe
("Corner  Bakery") President since November 1997,  having  joined
the  Company as Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
of  Corner  Bakery in August 1995.  Mr. Wolfgram  joined  Lettuce
Entertain  You  Enterprises, Inc. in  1980  and  served  as  Vice
President  and  Managing  Partner  with  Lettuce  Entertain   You
Enterprises, Inc. from 1989 until Corner Bakery was  acquired  by
the Company in August 1995.

Classes of Directors

      For  purposes of determining whether non-employee directors
will  be nominated for reelection to the Board of Directors,  the
non-employee directors have been divided into four classes.  Each
non-employee  director will continue to be subject to  reelection
by  the  shareholders of the Company each year. However, after  a
non-employee  director has served on the Board of  Directors  for
four years, such director shall be deemed to have been advised by
the  Nominating  Committee that he or  she  will  not  stand  for
reelection  at the subsequent annual meeting of shareholders  and
shall  be considered a "Retiring Director." Notwithstanding  this
policy,  the  Nominating  Committee  may  determine  that  it  is
appropriate  to  renominate any or all of the Retiring  Directors
after  first  considering the appropriateness of  nominating  new
candidates  for  election to the Board of  Directors.   Mr.  J.M.
Haggar,  Jr. is a Retiring Director and is leaving the  Board  of
Directors  after fifteen years of service.  The four  classes  of
non-employee   directors  are  as  follows:   Messrs.   Girouard,
Humphries  and  Oesterreicher  comprise  Class  1  and  will   be
considered  Retiring  Directors  as  of  the  annual  meeting  of
shareholders  following the end of the 2002 fiscal  year.   There
are  no  members  of Class 2. Messrs.  Kirk and  Marcus  comprise
Class  3  and  will be considered Retiring Directors  as  of  the
annual  meeting  of shareholders following the end  of  the  2004
fiscal  year.  Messrs. Carty, Cook and Staubach comprise Class  4
and  will  be  considered Retiring Directors  as  of  the  annual
meeting  of  shareholders following the end of  the  2001  fiscal
year.

Committees of the Board of Directors

      The  Board  of Directors of the Company has established  an
Executive Committee, Audit Committee, Compensation Committee, and
Nominating   Committee.   The  Executive   Committee   (currently
comprised  of Messrs. Brinker, McDougall, Carty, Cook,  Girouard,
and  Marcus) met one time during the fiscal year.  The  Executive
Committee  reviews material matters during the intervals  between
Board meetings, provides advice and counsel to Company management
during such intervals, and has the authority to act for the Board
on  most matters during the intervals between Board meetings.  In
addition,  the Executive Committee is also charged with  assuring
that  the  Company has a satisfactory succession management  plan
for all key management positions.

      All of the members of the Audit and Compensation Committees
are  directors  independent of management who are not  and  never
have  been  officers  or  employees of  the  Company.  The  Audit
Committee  is  currently comprised of Messrs.  Girouard,  Haggar,
Humphries,  and Oesterreicher, and it met five times  during  the
fiscal year.  Included among the functions performed by the Audit
Committee are: the review with independent auditors of the  audit
strategy,  plan  and scope and the results of  the  annual  audit
conducted   by  such  independent  auditors,  consideration   and
recommendation  to the Board of the selection of the  independent
auditors for the next fiscal year, the review with management and
the  independent auditors of the annual financial  statements  of
the Company, and the review of the scope and adequacy of internal
audit activities.

       The  Compensation  Committee  is  currently  comprised  of
Messrs.  Cook,  Girouard, Haggar and Oesterreicher,  and  it  met
three  times during the fiscal year.  Functions performed by  the
Compensation Committee include: reviewing the performance of  the
Chief  Executive  Officer,  approving key  executive  promotions,
ensuring   the  reasonableness  and  appropriateness  of   senior
management  compensation arrangements and levels,  the  adoption,
amendment  and  administration  of  stock-based  incentive  plans
(subject  to shareholder approval where required), management  of
the  various stock option plans of the Company, approval  of  the
total  number of available shares to be used each year in  stock-
based  plans,  and  approval  of the adoption  and  amendment  of
significant  compensation  plans.  The  specific  nature  of  the
Committee's responsibilities as they relate to executive officers
is set forth below under "Report of the Compensation Committee."

     The purposes of the Nominating Committee are to recommend to
the  Board of Directors potential members to be added as  new  or
replacement  members  to the Board of Directors,  to  review  the
compensation  paid  to  non-management  Board  members,  and   to
recommend  corporate governance guidelines to the full  Board  of
Directors.  The Nominating Committee will consider a shareholder-
recommended nomination for director to be voted upon at the  2001
annual  meeting  of shareholders provided that the recommendation
must  be  in  writing,  set forth the name  and  address  of  the
nominee,  contain  the consent of the nominee to  serve,  and  be
submitted on or before May 25, 2001.  The Nominating Committee is
composed   of   Messrs.   Brinker,   McDougall,   Kirk,   Marcus,
Oesterreicher,  and  Staubach and it met  two  times  during  the
fiscal year.

      During  the fiscal year ended June 28, 2000, the  Board  of
Directors held four meetings; each incumbent director attended at
least  75%  of  the aggregate total of meetings of the  Board  of
Directors and Committees on which he served.

Directors' Compensation

      Directors  who  are  not employees of the  Company  receive
$1,000  for  each meeting of the Board of Directors attended  and
$1,000  for  each  meeting  of any  committee  of  the  Board  of
Directors  attended.  The Company also reimburses  directors  for
costs incurred by them in attending meetings of the Board.

      Directors  who  are  not employees of the  Company  receive
grants  of  stock options or restricted stock under the Company's
1999  Stock Option and Incentive Plan for Non-Employee  Directors
and  Consultants.  A new director who is not an employee  of  the
Company will receive as compensation (a) 20,000 stock options  at
the  beginning of such director's term, and (b) an annual payment
of  $36,000, at least 25% of which must be taken in the  form  of
stock options or restricted stock.  If a director is appointed to
the  Board  of  Directors at any time other  than  at  an  annual
meeting  of  shareholders, the director will receive  a  prorated
portion  of the annual cash compensation for the period from  the
date  of election or appointment to the Board of Directors  until
the  meeting of the Board of Directors held contemporaneous  with
the next annual meeting of shareholders.  If a director elects to
receive  cash,  the first payment will be made at  the  Board  of
Directors'  meeting  held contemporaneous with  the  next  annual
meeting of shareholders.  The stock options and restricted  stock
will be granted as of the sixtieth day following such meeting (or
if  the sixtieth day is not a business day, on the first business
day thereafter) at the fair market value of the underlying Common
Stock on the date of grant.  One-third of the stock options  will
vest on each of the second, third and fourth anniversaries of the
date  of  grant.  All of the restricted stock will  vest  on  the
fourth  anniversary of the date of grant.  If  a  director  is  a
Retiring  Director who is being nominated for an additional  term
on  the  Board of Directors, each such renominated director  will
receive  an  additional  grant of 10,000  stock  options  at  the
beginning of such director's new term.

                     EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

      The  following  summary compensation table sets  forth  the
annual  compensation  for the Company's five highest  compensated
executive officers, including the Chief Executive Officer,  whose
salary and bonus exceeded $100,000 in fiscal 2000.

Summary Compensation Table


                                                               Long-Term Compensation
                                                               Awards           Payouts
                                                      Restricted    Securities  Long-Term
    Name and                    Annual Compensation     Stock       Underlying  Incentive       All Other
Principal Position      Year    Salary        Bonus     Awards (1)   Options     Payouts     Compensation (2)

                                                                          
Ronald A. McDougall
 Vice Chairman and      2000   $ 978,462  $1,357,616   $973,204      120,000    $174,187       $ 29,112
 Chief Executive        1999   $ 929,154  $1,080,142   $  0          200,000    $106,100       $ 20,652
 Officer                1998   $ 861,442  $1,033,731   $  0          200,000    $ 76,633       $ 30,397

Douglas H. Brooks
 President and          2000   $ 624,231  $  866,121   $605,398       75,000    $110,050       $ 19,803
 Chief Operating        1999   $ 541,154  $  555,515   $  0          125,000    $ 69,505       $ 17,491
 Officer                1998   $ 387,308  $  255,623   $  0           60,000    $ 45,980       $ 16,595

Russell G. Owens
 Executive Vice         2000   $ 398,462  $  368,578   $435,337       50,000    $ 66,504       $ 16,124
 President and Chief    1999   $ 350,000  $  271,251   $  0           75,000    $ 62,898       $ 14,220
 Financial and          1998   $ 286,577  $  229,262   $  0           50,000    $ 37,473       $ 13,319
 Strategic Officer

Roger F. Thomson
 Executive Vice         2000   $ 374,231  $  346,164   $320,804       31,000    $ 45,914       $ 33,886
 President, Chief       1999   $ 349,885  $  271,161   $  0           50,000    $ 79,575       $ 13,909
 Administrative Officer,1998   $ 334,692  $  267,754   $  0           50,000    $ 57,475       $ 16,501
 General Counsel and
 Secretary

Todd E. Diener
 Chili's Grill &        2000   $ 355,962  $  293,354   $200,731       25,000    $107,346       $ 57,531
 Bar President          1999   $ 330,673  $  259,929   $  0           60,000    $  0           $ 16,840
                        1998   $ 231,385  $  160,917   $  0           20,000    $  0           $ 11,179


(1)   Restricted stock was granted to the named officers on  August
13,  1999 and November 4, 1999 and such restricted stock is  valued
at  the  closing  price of the Company Common Stock  on  the  grant
dates.   Mr.  McDougall  was awarded 39,700  shares  of  restricted
stock  during  the last fiscal year, 6,210 shares of  which  vested
on  August 13, 2000, 3,105 shares of which will vest on August  13,
2001,  15,193  shares of which will vest on November 4,  2001,  and
15,192  shares of which will vest on November 4, 2002.  Mr.  Brooks
was  awarded  24,700  shares of restricted stock  during  the  last
fiscal  year,  3,806  shares of which vested on  August  13,  2000,
1,903  shares  of which will vest on August 13, 2001, 9,496  shares
of  which will vest on November 4, 2001, and 9,495 shares of  which
will  vest  on  November  4, 2002.  Mr. Owens  was  awarded  17,754
shares  of  restricted  stock during the last  fiscal  year,  3,105
shares  of which vested on August 13, 2000, 1,552 shares  of  which
will  vest on August 13, 2001, 6,549 shares of which will  vest  on
November  4, 2001, and 6,548 shares of which will vest on  November
4,  2002.   Mr.  Thomson  was awarded 13,013 shares  of  restricted
stock  during  the last fiscal year, 3,105 shares of  which  vested
on  August 13, 2000, 1,552 shares of which will vest on August  13,
2001,  4,178  shares of which will vest on November  4,  2001,  and
4,178  shares of which will vest on November 4, 2002.   Mr.  Diener
was  awarded  8,180  shares of restricted  stock  during  the  last
fiscal  year, 1,402 shares of which vested on August 13, 2000,  701
shares  of  which  will vest on August 13, 2001,  3,039  shares  of
which  will  vest  on November 4, 2001, and 3,038 shares  of  which
will  vest  on  November  4,  2002.  The  aggregate  value  of  the
restricted  stock owned by each of the named executive officers  at
the  end  of  the  last  fiscal year (at $29.5625  per  share)  was
$1,173,631  for  Mr. McDougall, $730,194 for Mr.  Brooks,  $524,321
for  Mr.  Owens,  $384,697 for Mr. Thomson  and  $241,821  for  Mr.
Diener.   If  dividends  are  paid by the  Company  on  its  Common
Stock,  the owners of restricted stock will be entitled to  receive
dividends  on shares of restricted stock owned by them.  For  those
named  officers  who have compensation in excess of  $1,000,000  in
any  year  in  which shares of restricted stock  are  granted,  the
vesting  of  such  restricted stock shall occur on  the  designated
vesting dates only if performance objections are allocated.

(2)     All other compensation represents Company match on deferred
compensation  and various fringe benefits including  car  allowance
and  reimbursement of tax preparation, financial  planning,  health
club  expenses  and,  in the case of Mr. Diener  for  fiscal  2000,
reimbursement of relocation expenses.



Option Grants During 2000 Fiscal Year

      The following table contains certain information concerning
the grant of stock options pursuant to the Company's Stock Option
and  Incentive Plan to the executive officers named in the  above
compensation table during the Company's last fiscal year.



                                  % of Total                                Realizable Value of
                                    Options                              Assumed Annual Rates of
                                   Granted to                            Stock Price Appreciation
                       Options    Employees in   Exercise or Expiration    for Option Term (1)
     Name              Granted     Fiscal Year   Base Price     Date         5%           10%
                                                                     
Ronald A. McDougall    120,000        7.19%      $24.1875     11/04/09    $1,825,368   $4,625,832

Douglas H. Brooks       75,000        4.49%      $24.1875     11/04/09    $1,140,855   $2,891,145

Russell G. Owens        50,000        2.99%      $24.1875     11/04/09    $ 760,570    $1,927,430

Roger F. Thomson        31,000        1.86%      $24.1875     11/04/09    $ 471,553    $1,195,007

Todd E. Diener          25,000        1.50%      $24.1875     11/04/09    $ 380,285    $  963,715



(1)     The  dollar amounts under these columns are the  result  of
calculations  at  the 5% and 10% rates set by  the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission and, therefore, are not intended  to  forecast
possible future appreciation, if any, of the Company's stock price.


Stock Option Exercises and Fiscal Year End Value Table

      The  following  table shows stock option exercises  by  the
named  officers  during  the  last  fiscal  year,  including  the
aggregate  value of gains on the date of exercise.  In  addition,
this  table  includes  the  number  of  shares  covered  by  both
exercisable and non-exercisable stock options at fiscal year end.
Also  reported  are the values for "in-the-money"  options  which
represent the position spread between the exercise price  of  any
such  existing options and the $29.5625 fiscal year end price  of
the Company's Common Stock.


                       Shares                                            Value of Unexercised
                      Acquired               Number of Unexercised     In-the-Money Options at
                         On      Value    Options at Fiscal Year End       Fiscal Year End
     Name             Exercise  Realized  Exercisable  Unexercisable   Exercisable  Unexercisable

                                                                   
Ronald A. McDougall   335,000   $6,407,263   777,500      545,000       $9,324,611   $4,834,063
Douglas H. Brooks      50,625   $1,085,957   348,875      260,000       $5,206,085   $1,718,438
Russell G. Owens       20,000   $  322,225   155,708      180,000       $2,301,523   $1,365,625
Roger F. Thomson      247,500   $2,467,829     0          136,000       $    0       $1,193,188
Todd E. Diener         18,202   $  194,988    56,411       95,000       $  841,700   $  458,750



                  REPORT OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

Compensation Philosophy

      The executive compensation program is designed as a tool to
reinforce  the Company's strategic principles - to be a  premiere
and  progressive growth company with a balanced approach  towards
people,  quality  and  profitability  and  to  enhance  long-term
shareholder  value.  To this end, the following  principles  have
guided the development of the executive compensation program:

    Provide  competitive levels of compensation  to  attract  and
     retain  the best qualified executive talent.  The  Committee
     strongly   believes  that  the  caliber  of  the   Company's
     management  group  makes  a significant  difference  in  the
     Company's sustained success over the long term.

    Embrace   a   pay-for-performance   philosophy   by   placing
     significant  amounts of compensation "at risk"  -  that  is,
     compensation  payouts to executives will vary  according  to
     the overall performance of the Company.

    Directly   link   executives'   interests   with   those   of
     shareholders   by  providing  opportunities  for   long-term
     incentive  compensation  based  on  changes  in  shareholder
     value.

       The   executive  compensation  program  is   intended   to
appropriately  balance the Company's short-term  operating  goals
with its long-term strategy through a careful mix of base salary,
annual  cash  incentives  and long-term performance  compensation
including cash incentives, stock options and shares of restricted
stock.

Base Salaries

       Executives'  base  salaries  and  total  compensation  are
targeted  to be competitive between the 75th and 90th percentiles
of  the market for positions of similar responsibility and  scope
to  reflect  the  exceptionally high level  of  executive  talent
required  to execute the growth plans of the Company. Positioning
executives'  base  salaries  at these  levels  is  necessary  for
attracting,   retaining  and  motivating  executives   with   the
essential qualifications for managing the Company's growth.   The
Company  defines  the relevant labor market  for  such  executive
talent  through  the use of third-party executive salary  surveys
that  reflect  both the chain restaurant industry as  well  as  a
broader   cross-section  of  companies  from   many   industries.
Individual  base  salary  levels are  determined  by  considering
market data for each officer's position, level of responsibility,
performance, and experience.  The overall amount of  base  salary
increases   awarded   to   executives  reflects   the   financial
performance of the Company, individual performance and potential,
and/or changes in an officer's duties and responsibilities.

Annual Incentives

      The Company's Profit Sharing Plan is a non-qualified annual
incentive arrangement in which all corporate employees, including
executives,  participate.  The program  is  designed  to  reflect
employees'  contribution to the growth of  the  Company's  Common
Stock value by increasing the earnings of the Company.  The  plan
reinforces  a  strong  teamwork ethic by  making  the  basis  for
payouts to non-restaurant concept executives the same as for  all
other  non-restaurant concept corporate employees and  by  making
the  basis  for  payouts to executives of one  of  the  Company's
restaurant  concepts the same as for all other  members  of  such
restaurant concept's corporate team.

      At  the  beginning  of  a fiscal year,  each  executive  is
assigned  an Individual Participation Percentage ("IPP")  of  the
base  salary for such executive that targets overall  total  cash
compensation for executives between the 75th and 90th percentiles
of  the  market.  The IPPs reflect the Committee's desire that  a
significant  percentage  of  executives'  total  compensation  be
derived from variable pay programs.

401(k) Savings Plan and Savings Plan II

      The  Company's 401(k) Savings Plan ("Plan I")  and  Savings
Plan  II  ("Plan  II")  are  designed to  provide  the  Company's
employees  with  a  tax-deferred long-term savings  vehicle.  The
Company  provides  a matching contribution equal  to  twenty-five
percent of a salaried participant's contribution, up to a maximum
of five percent of such participant's base compensation.

      Plan I is a qualified 401(k) plan.  Participants in Plan  I
elect  the percentage of pay they wish to contribute as  well  as
the  investment alternatives in which their contributions are  to
be invested.  The Company's matching contribution for all Plan  I
participants  is made in Company Common Stock.  All  participants
in  Plan  I  are considered non-highly compensated  employees  as
defined   by   the  Internal  Revenue  Service.  A  participant's
contributions  vest immediately while Company contributions  vest
twenty-five  percent  annually, beginning  in  the  participant's
second year of eligibility.

      Plan  II  is  a  non-qualified deferred compensation  plan.
Plan  II  participants elect the percentage of pay they  wish  to
defer into their Plan II account.  They also elect the percentage
of   their  deferral  account  to  be  allocated  among   various
investment options. The Company's matching contribution  for  all
non-officer Plan II participants is made in Company Common Stock,
with  corporate  officers  receiving a  Company  match  in  cash.
Participants  in  Plan  II  are  considered  a  select  group  of
management  and  highly compensated employees  according  to  the
Department   of   Labor.   A  participant's  contributions   vest
immediately while Company contributions vest twenty-five  percent
annually,   beginning  in  the  participant's  second   year   of
eligibility.

Long-Term Incentives

     All salaried employees of the Company, including executives,
are eligible for annual grants of tax-qualified and non-qualified
stock  options.   By tying a significant portion  of  executives'
total  opportunity for financial gain to increases in shareholder
wealth  as reflected by the market price of the Company's  Common
Stock,   executives'   interests   are   closely   aligned   with
shareholders'  long-term  interests.  In  addition,  because  the
Company  does not maintain any qualified retirement programs  for
executives,  the  stock  option  plan  is  intended  to   provide
executives  with  opportunities to accumulate  wealth  for  later
retirement.

     Stock options are rights to purchase shares of the Company's
Common  Stock  at the fair market value of the underlying  Common
Stock as of the date of grant.  Grantees do not receive a benefit
from  stock  options  unless and until the market  price  of  the
Company's Common Stock increases. Fifty percent of a stock option
grant  becomes  exercisable two years after the grant  date;  the
remaining  fifty  percent  of a grant becomes  exercisable  three
years after the grant date.

      The  number  of  stock options granted to an  executive  is
determined  by the Compensation Committee and is based  on  grant
guidelines set by the Compensation Committee that reflect  market
data  and  the officer's position within the Company.  Commencing
with  the  2000  fiscal year, annual grants of stock  options  to
officers  of the Company were reduced and such officers began  to
receive annual grants of restricted stock.  Fifty percent of  the
restricted  stock becomes vested two years after the grant  date;
the  remaining fifty percent becomes vested three years after the
grant date.

      Pursuant  to  the Executive Long-Term Incentive  Plan,  the
value   of   each   officer's  long-term  compensation   package,
previously  payable  in  cash, was reallocated  among  restricted
stock  and  cash.  At  the beginning of a three-year  performance
period,  target  payouts of both cash and  restricted  stock  are
determined  for each participant.  At the end of the  performance
period,  these  payouts will be made (in cash and  in  restricted
stock)  based  upon  performance against  the  three-year  target
earnings  per  share (for corporate officers)  or  profit  before
taxes  (for  restaurant concept officers) amounts established  by
the  Compensation  Committee  of the  Board  of  Directors.   The
restricted  stock vests one-third each year commencing  one  year
after the date of award.  The Executive Long-Term Incentive  Plan
is being phased in over a three-year period beginning in the 2000
fiscal year.  Full target payouts will become effective after the
completion  of the 2002 fiscal year when the performance  results
for the full 2000, 2001, and 2002 three-year cycle are known.

Pay/Performance Nexus

     The Company's executive compensation program has resulted in
a  direct relationship between the compensation paid to executive
officers  and  the  Company's performance.  See "Five-Year  Total
Shareholder Return Comparison" below.

CEO Compensation

      The  Compensation  Committee made decisions  regarding  Mr.
McDougall's  compensation  package according  to  the  guidelines
discussed in the preceding sections.  Mr. McDougall was awarded a
salary increase in the amount of 2.04%, effective June 29,  2000,
to  recognize his vast experience in the restaurant industry, the
Company's  performance under his leadership and  his  significant
contributions to the Company's continued success.  Mr.  McDougall
was granted 120,000 stock options and 39,700 shares of restricted
stock  under  the  Company's  Stock Option  and  Incentive  Plan.
Approximately 58% of Mr. McDougall's cash compensation for fiscal
2000  was incentive pay pursuant to the Company's Profit  Sharing
Plan.   Like all Company executives, Mr. McDougall's compensation
is  significantly affected by the Company's performance.  In  the
2000   fiscal  year,  Mr.  McDougall's  total  cash  compensation
increased 16% from its level in the 1999 fiscal year.


Federal Income Tax Considerations

     The  Compensation  Committee has considered  the  impact  of
Section  162(m)  of the Internal Revenue Code adopted  under  the
Omnibus   Budget  Reconciliation  Act  of  1993.   This   section
disallows  a tax deduction for any publicly-held corporation  for
individual compensation to certain executives of such corporation
exceeding $1,000,000 in any taxable year, unless compensation  is
performance-based.   It  is the intent of  the  Company  and  the
Compensation Committee to qualify to the maximum extent  possible
its  executives' compensation for deductibility under  applicable
tax laws.  The Compensation Committee believes that the Company's
compensation  programs  provide  the  necessary  incentives   and
flexibility    to   promote   the   Company's   performance-based
compensation  philosophy  while  being  consistent  with  Company
objectives.

     The Compensation Committee's administration of the executive
compensation  program  is  in  accordance  with  the   principles
outlined at the beginning of this report. The Company's financial
performance  supports the compensation practices employed  during
the past year.

                       Respectfully submitted,
                       COMPENSATION COMMITTEE



                       DAN W. COOK, III
                       MARVIN J. GIROUARD
                       J.M. HAGGAR, JR.
                       JAMES E. OESTERREICHER




    SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

    Under the securities laws of the United States, the Company's
directors  and executive officers, and persons who own more  than
ten percent of the Company's  Common Stock are required to report
their  initial  ownership of the Company's Common Stock  and  any
subsequent  changes  in  that ownership  to  the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission.  Specific due dates have  been  established
for these reports and the Company is required to disclose in this
proxy statement, any failure to file by these dates.  The Company
believes that all filing requirements were satisfied.  In  making
these  disclosures and filing the reports, the Company has relied
solely on written representations from certain reporting persons.

  COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

    The Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors consists
of  Messrs.  Dan W. Cook, III, Marvin J. Girouard,  J.M.  Haggar,
Jr., and James E. Oesterriecher, none of whom serve or previously
served as employees or officers of the Company.

     The policy of the Company is, to the extent practicable,  to
avoid  transactions  (except those which are employment  related)
with officers, directors, and affiliates.  In any event, any such
transactions  will be entered into on terms no less favorable  to
the  Company than could be obtained from third parties, and  such
transactions  will be approved by a majority of the disinterested
directors  of the Company.  Except for the transactions described
below, there were no transactions required to be reported in  the
last fiscal year.

     On June 28, 1995, Mr. Norman Brinker contractually agreed to
remain as Chairman of the Board (subject to annual reelection  by
the  shareholders)  through the 2001  fiscal  year.   Under  this
agreement, Mr. Brinker's compensation will not materially  differ
from  his  compensation on June 28, 1995.  However, Mr. Brinker's
total  base compensation and profit sharing distributions in  the
1998  through  2001 fiscal years will not exceed  $1,000,000  per
year.   Upon  Mr. Brinker's death, retirement or termination  for
cause,  no  further  payment  shall  be  made  pursuant  to  this
agreement.

     Upon  the  expiration  of  the  agreement  described  above,
Mr.  Brinker will remain a consultant to the Company through  the
2021  fiscal  year.  Mr. Brinker will be compensated commensurate
with his continuing contributions to the Company; however, during
this  time, he will no longer participate in any of the Company's
profit   sharing  or  bonus  plans.  Upon  Mr.  Brinker's  death,
retirement or termination for cause, no further payment shall  be
made pursuant to the consulting agreement.

     The  Company also entered into an agreement with Mr. Brinker
whereby  Mr.  Brinker  conveyed  to  the  Company  his  likeness,
biography, photo, voice and name to be used by the Company in all
media, promotions, advertising, training, and other materials  as
the  Company  deems appropriate.  He will receive as compensation
$400,000 per year until the earlier of July 1, 2021 or his death.

     Companies controlled by Roger T. Staubach, a director of the
Company, provided real estate brokerage services during the  2000
fiscal  year in connection with the lease of land by the  Company
for use as a new restaurant and the sublease by the Company of  a
closed  restaurant to an unrelated third party.  These  companies
were  paid  $45,000 by the Company's landlord  for  the  services
provided  on the new restaurant lease and $55,000 by the  Company
for   the  services  provided  on  the  sublease  of  the  closed
restaurant.