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Longhorn News/Discussion (Non-Recruiting)

They turned it around the second half.
Arch is amazing ! All the freshman, Arch, Moore, Collins, Wingo and the running backs. Future is bright !

But the fumbles by Blue are concerning. Allowing Miss State to hang around that long is dangerous. Can’t keep playing like that. (First half)

No game this weekend, time for me to go hunting !

Hook em !
 
From a knowledgable poster on another board:

I have heard from a player's dad that Filsaime has really been struggling with the team concept. Thought he was going to come in a play right away and has been a bit of a distraction since that hasn't happened.
 
From a knowledgable poster on another board:

I have heard from a player's dad that Filsaime has really been struggling with the team concept. Thought he was going to come in a play right away and has been a bit of a distraction since that hasn't happened.
Interesting. I think the word on him has been that the staff has liked him but he needs some development.
 
Using the AP rankings at this point five weeks in, the twelve teams in the playoff would be
1. Alabama
2. Ohio St
3. Miami
4. Iowa St
***************
5. Texas
6. Tennessee
7. Georgia
8. Oregon
9. Penn St
10. Mizzou
11. Michigan
12. Boise St
First round games would be
Boise @ Texas
Michigan @ Tennessee
Mizzou @ Georgia
Penn St @ Oregon
A weekend worth watching.
 
Using the AP rankings at this point five weeks in, the twelve teams in the playoff would be
1. Alabama
2. Ohio St
3. Miami
4. Iowa St
***************
5. Texas
6. Tennessee
7. Georgia
8. Oregon
9. Penn St
10. Mizzou
11. Michigan
12. Boise St
First round games would be
Boise @ Texas
Michigan @ Tennessee
Mizzou @ Georgia
Penn St @ Oregon
A weekend worth watching.
Would we be able to stop Jeanty?
 
Texas adds Louisiana Tech to 2028 schedule. The only other non conference game scheduled for 2028 is UTSA. They will need to add at least one more game, depending on if the SEC moves to a 9 game schedule. Hopefully they will be able to schedule a marquee matchup.


 
Fun fact for today . . .

Texas A&M has been in the southeast conference for 13 years now. They have played Georgia once. We get Georgia straight out of the gate.

Combined with the Sugar Bowl win over Georgia, this year's game in a couple weeks will have Texas playing Georgia more than aggy in the last 13 years.
 
Fun fact for today . . .

Texas A&M has been in the southeast conference for 13 years now. They have played Georgia once. We get Georgia straight out of the gate.

Combined with the Sugar Bowl win over Georgia, this year's game in a couple weeks will have Texas playing Georgia more than aggy in the last 13 years.

And after next year's game in Athens we will have played them 3 times vs 1 for aggy(since aggy joined the SEC).

The SEC 14 team 2 division 8 game schedule seemed idiotic. With that schedule you played non rivalry cross division teams once every 6 years. Since aggy played Georgia in 2019, Georgia presumably would have played @aggy in 2025, had the conference not expanding/changed.

I would guess that Georgia football will play at college station for the FIRST TIME EVER in 2026.
 
Does anybody have any insight regarding SEC scheduling parameters? Who are the teams that we play every year? Is it only one , two or three. How do the other teams cycle through our future schedules?
 
Does anybody have any insight regarding SEC scheduling parameters? Who are the teams that we play every year? Is it only one , two or three. How do the other teams cycle through our future schedules?

It's unclear at this point.

The first question they need to resolve is if and when they are going to move to a 9 game schedule. That depends on ESPN payout negotiations,how the expanded playoffs prioritize tougher schedules,etc.

The way that the 2024 and 2025 schedules are set where all teams play the same opponents, but swap locations makes it so they could go to a 9 game schedule in 2026,essentially starting from scratch with no home games owed.

IMHO going to 9 games makes way too much sense to not happen. The original concept going around was each team would have 3 every year match ups, then play the other 12 teams every other year. As we have seen from the B1G and the BIG12 there are plenty of other options where more matchups are more often , and others are less often.

My guess is the 9 game scheduling model will be part of the ESPN negotiations, where ESPN will want to maximize the number of marquee matchups to maximize their revenue. If this happens it won't be the original 3/6/6 scheduling model.
 
And after next year's game in Athens we will have played them 3 times vs 1 for aggy(since aggy joined the SEC).

The SEC 14 team 2 division 8 game schedule seemed idiotic. With that schedule you played non rivalry cross division teams once every 6 years. Since aggy played Georgia in 2019, Georgia presumably would have played @aggy in 2025, had the conference not expanding/changed.

I would guess that Georgia football will play at college station for the FIRST TIME EVER in 2026.
Maybe Georgia has a clause in their contract with the SEC about not playing pretenders.
 
It's unclear at this point.

The first question they need to resolve is if and when they are going to move to a 9 game schedule. That depends on ESPN payout negotiations,how the expanded playoffs prioritize tougher schedules,etc.

The way that the 2024 and 2025 schedules are set where all teams play the same opponents, but swap locations makes it so they could go to a 9 game schedule in 2026,essentially starting from scratch with no home games owed.

IMHO going to 9 games makes way too much sense to not happen. The original concept going around was each team would have 3 every year match ups, then play the other 12 teams every other year. As we have seen from the B1G and the BIG12 there are plenty of other options where more matchups are more often , and others are less often.

My guess is the 9 game scheduling model will be part of the ESPN negotiations, where ESPN will want to maximize the number of marquee matchups to maximize their revenue. If this happens it won't be the original 3/6/6 scheduling model.
9 games and a 3/6/6 would be ideal. Play OU,TAMU and Arkansas yearly.

SEC has avoided 9 conference games to boost the conference overall but this is less of a concern with the 12 team, and especially a possible 16 team playoff.
 
9 games and a 3/6/6 would be ideal. Play OU,TAMU and Arkansas yearly.

SEC has avoided 9 conference games to boost the conference overall but this is less of a concern with the 12 team, and especially a possible 16 team playoff.

No matter how many teams, there will always be teams on the bubble. If the selection process isn't thoughtful enough then some mid tear SEC teams will feel that a 9 game schedule is against their interests.

The other issue is that if the bowl eligibility remains the same then lower tear SEC team will likely be against a 9 game schedule,because it makes it harder to become bowl eligible.

I think in the end like most things in college football the decision will be driven by money, and more SEC games equals more money.

Personally I would be good with a 3/6/6 schedule, and we could end up that way,only time will tell.
 
https://apnews.com/article/texas-longhorns-sarkisian-ewers-manning-745d0247eb674534e6baa39cfa643e63

Texas swaggers into SEC and midseason break undefeated and in best shape in more than a decade​


AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — When Texas hosted a football recruiting weekend last summer, prospective players walked a burnt orange carpet flanked by nearly a dozen Lamborghinis with engines revving and growling and music blaring.

It was an homage to coach Steve Sarkisian’s motto since he arrived four years ago — “All gas, no brakes” — and what the program hopes to be able to deliver in the new era of excess in college football: substance with style.

Following a slow ramp-up that nearly ran off the road when Sarkisian started, Texas has hit full speed.

After winning last season’s Big 12 title in the program’s final season in that league and making the College Football Playoff for the first time, Texas entered this season ranked No. 3 in the AP Top 25. By Week 3, the Longhorns were No. 1 for the first time in 16 years. Their long-awaited Southeastern Conference debut was a smashing success, led by backup quarterback Arch Manning, the scion of one of America’s most famous football families.

Texas, which returned to No. 1 on Sunday, is 5-0 and heading into its Oct. 12 rivalry game with Oklahoma in Dallas. And from the Lamborghinis in June to the “TexCalibur” turnover sword that debuted on the sideline this year, these Longhorns are fully enjoying the program’s rejuvenation.

“I love that our personality is coming out of this team. I think we’ve got a pretty cool swagger about us right now,” Sarkisian said before Texas beat Mississippi State 35-13 to earn the program’s first SEC victory. “But that swagger has been earned.”

Longhorns arrive​

Texas roared into the SEC this year on the heels of winning 15 of the Big 12’s regular-season or tournament championships across all sports in the Longhorns’ final year in that league. The volleyball team is the two-time defending national champion. The rowing team has won three of the last four national titles.

Overall, Texas has won three of the last four Directors’ Cups, awarded to the nation’s most successful athletic department.

“A united Texas,” athletic director Chris Del Conte likes to say, “is a reckoning.”

“There’s a standard here that is very high, and there’s an expectation of performance, and it’s not just in football, it’s in every sport,” said Sarkisian, a previous head coach at both Washington and Southern California. “So the conference may have changed, but our standard and our expectations really haven’t ... The SEC slogan, ‘It just means more,’ matters. But I feel like at Texas, when you take this job, it just means more here, too.”

Texas has even poked at old rival Texas A&M a couple of times already. Shortly after Texas A&M lost in the College World Series, Del Conte swooped in and hired away Aggies head coach Jim Schlossnagle. Last week, a crowd of nearly 10,000 packed A&M’s Reed Arena for Texas’ SEC debut in volleyball, the largest in state history for a volleyball match, only to watch the Longhorns leave with a 3-1 victory.

But football is the Lamborghini of college sports, and after hitting some early speed bumps, Sarkisian has the program humming after more than a decade of not being in contention for national titles.

Texas went 5-7 in Sarkisian’s first year, a season that included a six-game losing skid, the program’s worst in 65 years. Texas rebounded to 8-5 a year later, then went 11-1 in the regular season in 2023, won the Big 12 crown and was one play away from the national championship game.

Cashing in​

Texas gave Sarkisian a four-year contract extension to keep him through 2030 in a contract that pays him more than $10 million per year and makes him one of the highest-paid coaches in the business.

Sarkisian has to keep winning and keep pulling in the recruits and transfers in the new era of athletes being able to cash in on the use of their name, image and likeness. Few programs, if any, are better positioned to do that.

Texas has been among the most aggressive in the country in the NIL era, from the initial launch of the Clark Field Collective (now known as Clark Field Creative) and the Pancake Factory, a nonprofit that pledged $50,000 annually to scholarship offensive linemen in late 2021, just before Sarkisian signed his first recruiting class.

Those entities, and NIL projects supporting baseball and golf, were all rolled under the umbrella of the Texas One Fund in late 2022. In August, Texas announced that donations to the Texas One Fund will be rewarded with “loyalty points” within the Longhorn Foundation, that can be used toward season tickets and other perks.

“Texas has one of the best NIL situations in college sports,” said sports law attorney Mit Winter, who tracks the evolving NIL marketplace and how schools are operating.

“Money isn’t an issue, and they have their donors and supporters all on the same page,” Winter said. “Talent wins in college sports and Texas and its collective are doing everything necessary to ensure Texas continues to have the best talent.”

The Texas brand itself helps Longhorns players cash in.

Starting quarterback quarterback Quinn Ewers’ endorsements have included deals with video game, apparel and beverage companies. Another gives him use of a private jet. According to On3.com, Ewers ranks No. 6 overall and No. 5 among college football players with a valuation of $2.1 million.

Ranked just above him: backup quarterback Arch Manning at No. 4 and $3.1 million.

With his program humming and players cashing in, Sarkisian was on the road recruiting this weekend, with swagger to spare.

“It’s always a good thing when you get to go on the road undefeated and recruit,” he said. “It’s kind of like they roll out the red carpet for you.”
 

https://apnews.com/article/ap-top-25-football-poll-90b4ce91dcd78483d3a2284956c3903d


AP Top 25: Texas returns to No. 1, Alabama drops to No. 7 after upsets force reshuffling of rankings​


It was a week of upheaval in The Associated Press college football poll, with Texas returning to No. 1 on Sunday after a one-week absence following Vanderbilt’s monumental upset of Alabama.

The Commodores’ win as more than three-touchdown underdogs caused the Crimson Tide to drop from No. 1 to No. 7. The last top-ranked team to fall so far was Ohio State, which plunged to No. 11 in 2010 following an October loss to Wisconsin.

Texas, which had an open date, received 52 out of 61 first-place votes and became the first team in two years to bounce in and out of the top spot in a span of three polls. The Longhorns also were just the third team since 2008 to be voted No. 1 after not playing the day before.

Ohio State beat Iowa for its fourth straight easy win, received nine first-place votes and moved up a spot to No. 2.

Oregon and Penn State each rose three spots, with the Ducks up to No. 3 and the Nittany Lions fourth. Georgia remained No. 5.

Miami, which came back from a 25-point second-half deficit to beat California 39-38, rose two spots to No. 6.

The mayhem wasn’t limited to Alabama.

Six of the 18 AP Top 25 teams that played lost to unranked opponents (33%), the highest mark since six of 16 (38%) lost the first week of October 2020.

The Tide were among four teams in the top 11 to lose to unranked opponents — the first time that’s happened since Nov. 12, 2016, when five teams did it, according to Sportradar.

Tennessee lost to Arkansas and went from No. 4 to No. 8. Michigan lost at Washingtonand went from No. 10 to No. 24. Southern California lost at Minnesota and went from No. 11 to out of the Top 25. The Trojans were first among teams also receiving votes.

Texas A&M soundly beat Missouri at home in the only Top 25 matchup. That earned the Aggies a promotion from a tie for No. 25 to No. 15 and the Tigers a demotion from No. 9 to No. 21.

Poll points​

The Big Ten dominates the top five, but the Southeastern Conference maintains its grip on the top 10. No. 2 Ohio State, No. 3 Oregon and No. 4 Penn State are bookended by the SEC’s Texas and Georgia. The SEC also has Alabama, Tennessee and Mississippi in the top 10.

Double-digit drops by Missouri, Michigan and USC mark the first time since Nov. 13, 2016, that three teams fell 10 or more spots in the same poll. That week it happened to Auburn (8 to 18), Texas A&M (10 to 23) and North Carolina (15 to receiving votes).

The biggest upward movers were Texas A&M (25 to 15), Clemson (15 to 10) and Iowa State (16 to 11).

In-and-out​

SMU (5-1) was rewarded for knocking off Louisville on the road and enters the rankings at No. 25. The Mustangs have appeared in the Top 25 all but one season (2022) since 2019. Louisville (3-2) has lost two of three and dropped out.

Pittsburgh won at North Carolina to start 5-0 for the first time since 1991 and enters the rankings at No. 22 for its first appearance in two years.

USC (3-2) has lost two of its first three Big Ten games and is out, as is UNLV, whose first-ever Top 25 appearance was spoiled by an overtime home loss to Syracuse.

Conference call​

SEC — 9 (Nos. 1, 5, 7, 8, 9, 13, 15, T-18, 21).

Big Ten — 6 (Nos. 2, 3, 4, T-18, 23, 24).

Big 12 — 4 (Nos. T-11, 14, 16, T-18).

ACC — 4 (Nos. 6, 10, 22, 25).

Mountain West — 1 (No. 17).

Independent — 1 (No. 11).

Ranked vs. Ranked​

— No. 1 Texas vs. No. 18 Oklahoma, at Dallas. It’s their first head-to-head SEC meeting, and it’s a Top 25 matchup for the sixth time in eight games. Sooners scored with 15 seconds left last year to hand Texas its only regular-season loss. Both teams are coming off open dates.

— No. 2 Ohio State at No. 3 Oregon. Entering the season, this was billed as a midseason preview of the Big Ten championship game. It still could be. The Buckeyes have won nine of 10 previous meetings, the only loss coming in the most recent one (2021).

— No. 9 Mississippi at No. 13 LSU. Huge College Football Playoff implications here. Rebels’ Jaxson Dart prevailed 55-49 last year in a dizzying matchup with Heisman winner Jayden Daniels.
 
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