First hand experience, no I haven't. I have ran a similar program before going on AAS and that was the Bill Starr/Madcow 5x5. It has intensity, volume, and recovery days just like Texas Method does but while Texas Method used 5x5 straight sets (or other rep schemes depending on progression) the Bill Starr model used ramping 5x5 sets. Yes recovery and programming should still be a factor while on. For my first cycle I decided to go back down to linear progression and do starting strength figuring the AAS would help keep linear progression going but when the weights started getting heavy and my sleep issues came up recovery was a huge factor. For a newbie, almost anything will provide enough stimulus for growth and strength. An intermediate lifter isn't so lucky but the fact that one is on AAS would make it easier to get stronger and bigger. Very few ppl on here have what you and I would call true progression plans yet they still make progress, even on bodypart splits. At work so rushed in typing this, if it doesn't make sense let me know ill try and reword it.