What makes Texas’ returning experience at offensive line advantageous

It’s hard to pick up blitzes with a unit that has never worked together. Texas doesn’t have to worry about that.

College football teams across the country are losing plenty of experience along the offensive line. Texas is one of the few that is retaining the core of its line. It’s a huge advantage.

Kelvin Banks Jr., Devon Campbell Jr., Hayden Conner and Cole Hutson enter their third year of consistent playing time in Austin. They’re joined by fourth year starting center Jake Majors, key contributors Cam Williams and Malik Agbo and another lineman primed to break out in Neto Umeozulu.

The list above includes seven or eight starter quality offensive lineman. That’s not the norm in college football and certainly not on Texas’ 2024 schedule.

There is some confusion as to why Texas is expected to win 10 games and return to a College Football Playoff. Much of that revolves around what it lost on the defensive line.

In fairness, losing two All-American caliber defensive tackles is a huge deal. Albeit, given the offensive line turnover among teams on the Longhorns’ schedule it’s uncertain how many teams can capitalize.

Of the four most difficult matchups on the Texas schedule, three face significant upheaval on the offensive line. Michigan, whose offensive dominance was predicated on bullying opponents in the trenches, loses all five offensive linemen. Oklahoma, who seemed to do better than Michigan in the portal, will have five new starters on the offensive line.

Texas A&M wasn’t the most shining example of great offensive line play in 2023. It loses multi-year starter in five-star center Bryce Foster.

So who is going to make Texas’ defensive interior pay for what it lost? Outside of Georgia, there’s question about several teams’ ability to attack the Longhorns’ perceived weakness.

More than being able to impose its will in the running game, which should happen for Texas in 2024 with former freshmen starters becoming juniors and seniors becoming super-seniors, the Longhorns are more set up to succeed in handling stunts, twists and blitzes that teams dish out.

Like it or not, first year offensive lines are almost certain to struggle against various pressures that defenses throw at them. It’s much easier for defensive tackles to maintain gap integrity than for five new offensive linemen to read several variables at one time and act in cohesion. It’s simply an unrealistic expectation regardless of how those players have performed elsewhere.

While Texas won’t be immune to giving up pressure, it doesn’t have the same level of concern many of its top opponents should have in their offensive line. For the Longhorns and head coach Steve Sarkisian it’s a huge advantage, and one that could vault the team to another College Football Playoff in 2024.

Texas’ Trey Moore more prolific than Buffalo’s Khalil Mack in sacks

Texas edge Trey Moore was more dominant in the Group of Five than former Top 5 pick Khalil Mack. Still unsure it translates to the SEC?

Some believe Group of Five production doesn’t translate to major college football. Sometimes it doesn’t, but sometimes it does.

One lower level player’s college stardom spelled success at the NFL level. Former University of Buffalo star Khalil Mack followed dominance in college football to the NFL and a Top 5 pick in the 2014 NFL draft.

Mack put up impressive stats in his time at Buffalo. Here’s a look at his college career.

Year Total tackles Tackles for loss Sacks
2010 68 14.5 4.5
2011 65 20.5 5.5
2012 94 21.0 8.0
2013 100 18.5 10.5

Objectively, Mack was a force at Buffalo and a better overall player than Texas edge Trey Moore has been in two seasons at UTSA. When it comes to sacking opposing quarterbacks, Moore has been better.

Khalil Mack’s best sack total for a season at the college level was 10.5 sacks in his fourth year. Trey Moore averaged more sacks (11.0) than Mack’s career best year in two seasons as a starter at UTSA. The former Roadrunner totaled eight sacks in his first season of extended playing time in San Antonio. He put up 14 sacks in 2023. That’s 22 sacks in two seasons.

Some think Moore’s production won’t translate for the Longhorns next season. Where they get their certainty in that belief is unsure, but the confidence is certainly unfounded.

Sacks are sacks. It would be surprising if Moore amassed 14 sacks again in 2024, but all signs point to him being a force for the Longhorns. Group of Five production translated for Khalil Mack at the professional level. The upcoming season will reveal whether or not Moore can make an impact for the Texas defense in the SEC.

Opinion: If Oklahoma game wasn’t top priority, it should be now

Red River Rivalry game in 2024 should be the top priority after Sarkisian & Co. watched Williams choose OU over Texas.

The Red River Rivalry between the Texas Longhorns and Oklahoma Sooners is the one game Texas can ill afford to lose in the 2024 season. If you weren’t sold on that premise, perhaps the Damonic Williams recruitment made it sink in.

Williams chose the Sooners over the Longhorns on Thursday. In the grand scheme of Texas’ playoff hopes it has as little bearing as last season’s 34-30 loss to Oklahoma did. Nevertheless, both losses should heighten the urgency of the upcoming matchup with the Sooners.

The Longhorns need to want to beat Oklahoma as much as their rival wants to beat Texas.

Head coach Steve Sarkisian understood the magnitude of an Alabama win last offseason. Thursday’s head-to-head portal loss might be the gentle reminder Sarkisian needs to prioritize Oklahoma over Georgia as he prepares his team over the summer.

Like it or not, Oklahoma head coach Brent Venables built recruiting momentum off defeating the Texas Longhorns in the Cotton Bowl. It is perhaps the only accomplishment of note for Venables in his time in Oklahoma though some would tout its 10-win season over a lesser than usual schedule. The upset win is noteworthy because of the season Texas had in 2023.

Texas’ win over Alabama had national ramifications, but the Red River Rivalry carries plenty of weight in its own right. The state of Texas, the Longhorns most fertile recruiting ground, will be watching when the team takes on Oklahoma in October.

The Red River game matters in recruiting. Former Oklahoma commit Colton Vasek flipped to Texas after the 2022 game. This offseason, Venables and company are riding the wave of an exhilarating win in the Cotton Bowl. The Longhorns need to flip the narrative in 2024.

The lowlight of Texas’ season was the highlight of Oklahoma’s in 2023. The Longhorns went on to win a conference title and make a playoff berth. The Sooners fumbled a 7-0 start before missing the Big 12 title on losses to Kansas and Oklahoma State. Still, the lowlight is carrying some weight with players in state.

Certainly, nobody credible thinks the Kansas Jayhawks or Oklahoma State Cowboys are better than the Sooners. Upsets happen. An upset happened in the Cotton Bowl. It can’t happen again in Sarkisian’s fourth season in Austin.

Oklahoma is a must-win game for Sarkisian and Texas. They will look to get the upper hand in the third meeting between Sarkisian and Venables as head coaches of the two rivals.

SEC Unfiltered analyst predicts Texas’ ceiling, floor for 2024

One SEC analyst thinks Texas could be a force in 2024.

The Texas Longhorns enter the SEC with confidence they can compete from Day 1. One SEC analyst appears to share that confidence about Texas. Continue reading “SEC Unfiltered analyst predicts Texas’ ceiling, floor for 2024”

Is Texas HC Steve Sarkisian the best developer in program history?

Sarkisian is doing what hasn’t been done in player development on the Forty Acres in a long time.

Steve Sarkisian’s staff might be the best developing group of coaches in the history of Texas football. In just three years in Austin, the Longhorns head coach sent 11 players to a single NFL draft class.

Legendary head coach Mack Brown coached at Texas from 1998 to 2013, won a national championship and compiled nine straight 10-win seasons. His best draft class sent seven players to the NFL in 2007.

Sarkisian’s 2024 class got to five selections in the second round when wide receiver Adonai Mitchell became the No. 52 overall pick.

There are ways in which Sarkisian can improve as head coach. Growth in game management could win him a first national title. Albeit, Sarkisian doesn’t appear to lack in producing NFL caliber players or knowing which coaches to hire in developing them.

Several success stories headline the 2024 draft class the Texas head coach just sent to the league. Offensive tackle Christian Jones and defensive tackle T’Vondre Sweat were once talented players who just couldn’t put it all together. Wide receiver Jordan Whittington was once an injury prone player. Linebacker Jaylan Ford and Byron Murphy were unheralded three-stars. All were developed and drafted under the same head coach, special teams coach, offensive coordinator and defensive coordinator.

Sarkisian still has work to do for Texas to realize the success he hopes to achieve in Austin. Nevertheless, he’s doing what hasn’t been done in development in Austin since the early 1980s and the Longhorns are in position for sustained success because of it.

Sarkisian’s coaching staff has seen coaches come and go, but with one constant: Sarkisian’s staff has developed players perhaps better than any Longhorns coaching staff that came before. It will look to continue that trend moving forward.

CFB analyst Gerry Hamilton says Texas has five starting receivers

Steve Sarkisian might need a receiver rotation to get all the best players on the field.

In what will likely come as a surprise to those expecting a falloff at wide receiver, Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian might have more starter quality receivers than starting spots.

On Texas Football’s Gerry Hamilton discussed the depth of the Texas wide receiver room.

“Here’s the biggest compliment I can give the wide receivers this year. (Offensive line coach) Kyle Flood says he’s got seven starters, essentially seven players who are good enough to start for him. I think Texas has five guys that are good enough to be starting receivers. … Everybody better put in work this summer because Ryan Wingo’s a special talent. And he’s still young, and it’s a hard scheme to pick up for a wide receiver, but watch out.”

Hamilton also discussed the emergence of wide receiver DeAndre Moore who has gone from darkhorse starter candidate to a potential favorite to start at receiver. Moore and freshman five-star Ryan Wingo have impressed in the spring. They proved to be standout players in the Orange-White game.

Fellow receivers Isaiah Bond, Johntay Cook and Matthew Golden looked like starter caliber players in the game as well while Silas Bolden is set to join the group this offseason.

Exiting the spring, the Texas receiver room inspires perhaps as much offseason confidence as any past Longhorns receiver corps in recent memory. The performance by this group was more impressive than the 2023 receiving corps’ spring showing. The 2023 unit could send two receivers to the first two rounds of the upcoming NFL draft.

Texas loses three elite talents in Xavier Worthy, Adonai Mitchell and tight end Ja’Tavion Sanders. Somehow the receiver room doesn’t seem to be hurting from the high volume of talent it lost.

Many viewed the wide receiver room as a question mark for Texas this offseason. The question now is how Texas will get all its starter quality players on the field.

WATCH: Texas DT Alfred Collins scores on an Ethan Burke tipped pass

The Texas defense looked much sharper than the offense in the first two drives.

The Texas defense line played like they heard the offseason doubters in the early going of the spring game. They dominated the first two drives.

The early highlight of the spring game came on a tipped pass from Texas edge Ethan Burke. Defensive tackle Alfred Collins caught the pass and took it to the end zone for six points.

Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers had a poor showing. The plan heading into the day was for Ewers not to play very long. He played like it with a lackadaisical performance. The defense had a hand in his tough day.

The Texas interior defensive line surprisingly had its way in the early part of matchup. What wasn’t a surprise was Burke and Collins stepping up to make plays.

The Texas defense is an underrated part of what the Longhorns bring back for 2024. The highlight play from Collins and Burke is one of many reasons to be excited about the product the team will put on display in the upcoming season.

ESPN ranks Texas’ Quinn Ewers among college quarterbacks

Ewers is given a fair ranking from ESPN among the top quarterbacks in college football.

The key to success for the Texas football program is no secret. The Longhorns’ 2024 season, like the one before it, hinges on how well starting quarterback Quinn Ewers plays.

Last season’s playoff run proved Ewers capable of high caliber football over the course of a season, but the Longhorns’ title chances come down to whether or not he can improve to the same degree.

ESPN views the third year starter as one of its top quarterbacks in college football. It ranks Ewers No. 3 in the country. Here’s a look at the site’s Top 10.

  1. Carson Beck, Georgia
  2. Dillon Gabriel, Oregon
  3. Quinn Ewers, Texas
  4. Jalen Milroe, Alabama
  5. Noah Fifita, Arizona
  6. Jaxson Dart, Ole Miss
  7. Jalon Daniels, Kansas
  8. Shedeur Sanders, Colorado
  9. Cameron Rising, Utah
  10. Cameron Ward, Miami

The above list includes 10 proven quarterbacks. That Ewers is ranked so highly among them speaks to the respect he garnered in his 2023 campaign.

Ewers will look to grow from an impressive season the last time he took the field in which he completed 69% of his passes and put up just under nine yards per attempt.

CBS Sports ranks Texas No. 8 among teams most likely to make CFP

CBS Sports gives Texas a good shot to reach the College Football Playoff again next season.

It’s no surprise Texas is a College Football Playoff contender after reaching the four-team playoff a season ago. Where they stand with national college football writers could come as a surprise.

CBS Sports’ Will Backus ranked the 16 teams most likely to make the 12-team playoff in 2024. He ranked Texas No. 8 on his list with the following explanation.

“Quarterback Quinn Ewers is back to lead an offense that will look almost entirely different. Texas has to replace its leading rusher and over 80% of its receiving production. In-house talent will step up at running back, while coach Steve Sarkisian hit the transfer portal hard to net three expected starting receivers (Isaiah Bond, Silas Bolden and Matthew Golden) and a potential starting tight end (Amari Niblack). The defense has some holes to fill as well, particularly along the line of scrimmage, but Sarkisian has recruited so well and Texas is carrying a lot of momentum into the SEC.”

Backus’ rankings from No. 1 to No. 10 go as follows: Georgia, Ohio State, Utah, Clemson, Liberty, Oregon, Notre Dame, Texas, Ole Miss and Penn State.

The ranking appears to be based more off each program’s path to the playoff more than which squad is the best team. Even so, Backus’ inclusion of Liberty in the Top 5 seems to indicate he views them as head and shoulders above the Group of Five field.

Texas’ standing in the playoff race will likely see several changes over the course of the upcoming season. They should start the year with a great chance to make it for a second consecutive season.

247Sports ranks the Top 25 quarterbacks in college football

Brad Crawford shared who he views as college football’s top quarterbacks.

Texas’ Quinn Ewers is one of the top three quarterbacks in college football. That is, if one college football analyst is to be believed.

247Sports’ Brad Crawford shared his ranking of the top 25 quarterbacks in college football with Ewers ranking No. 3. He has the ability to become the best.

The Longhorns’ five-star talent is finally starting to live up to his five-star billing averaging 8.8 yards per attempt and completing 69% of his passes a season ago. Ewers could be even better next season. While he loses his best receiving targets from last year, Texas reloaded with rising talent and four new portal additions between receiver and tight end.

Only Carson Beck (Georgia) and Shedeur Sanders (Colorado) rank higher than Ewers in the ranking. Beck and Sanders put up better numbers than Ewers a season ago.

A handful of other SEC quarterbacks were ranked by Crawford. The list goes in the following order: Carson Beck (No. 1, Georgia), Shedeur Sanders (No. 2, Colorado), Quinn Ewers (No. 3, Texas), Jaxson Dart (No. 4, Ole Miss).