Texas Longhorns’ head football coaching history since 1957
The Texas Longhorns have a long and stories football history
Sports blog information from USA TODAY.
The Texas Longhorns have a long and stories football history
See which legends of defense made the cut in our all-time Oklahoma Sooners football roster.
The Oklahoma Sooners have put together some of the more vaunted defenses in college football history. In addition to having some of the best units in the nation, the Sooners had some of the more iconic players in the sport run roughshod over their opponents.
From Lee Roy Selmon to Roy Williams, Oklahoma’s been a terror on the gridiron throughout the years.
As it was choosing the Oklahoma Sooners’ all-time offense, narrowing down defensive linemen and linebackers was a challenge as the Sooners have produced some incredibly talented players in the front seven.
For more coverage on the Oklahoma Sooners, check out SoonersWire.com. Many of the historical stats can be found at SoonerSports.com.
Check out our other College Wire all-time defenses: Alabama / Auburn / Clemson / Colorado / Florida / Georgia / Iowa / LSU / Michigan / Michigan State / Nebraska / North Carolina / Ohio State / Oregon / Penn State / Rutgers / Tennessee / Texas / Texas A&M / USC
“Royal accused Switzer of spying on the Longhorns’ practice.” Here’s a look at Paul Myerberg’s top 10 college football coaching rivalries.
What makes college football rivalries so exciting isn’t just the banter between opposing fan bases. Continue reading “Darrell Royal, Barry Switzer among top college football coaching rivalries”
A new Locked on Longhorns Podcast discussing a return to sports being imminent and the top five series. Plus a look at the 2020 predictions.
The shows opens up with Patrick and Cami discussing a return to college football being imminent? While California schools will remain closed. all of the Big 12 are planning for a return to campus in 2020. Is that the first big step for a return of college football?
The top five players that the Longhorns will play from the wide receivers and quarterbacks. Who is the top quarterback? Who is the surprise pick? Is Ja’Marr Chase the top wide receiver?
2020 game-by-game predictions. How far off are Patrick’s prediction? What has been the responses? Also they discuss who is the best opposing coach the Longhorns will face?
Latest Locked on Longhorns Podcast discussing if the Texas Longhorns should create a Last Dance style documentary on the team?
Cami and Patrick kick off the latest podcast discussing the The Last Dance. Should the Texas Longhorns do a documentary on their 2006 National Championship run? Stories and interviews surrounding that magical run that culminated in a BCS National Championship? Or one that showed the timeline that led to the Big 12 losing four teams to other conferences?
In the world of recruiting there are the blue chip ratios. This calculates the number of four and five star recruits in a single class. Where do the Longhorns rank? Pro Football Focus tweeted out what is the biggest college football rivalry? A couple funny responses to that tweet with a Texas Longhorns angle.
The duo discuss the 44 teams that the Longhorns have yet to play and the seven that they haven’t beaten but played. Any surprises on this list? A couple big time programs that have yet to play Texas. With talk surrounding Alabama discussing playing TCU week one with USC likely out due to the coronavirus mandates in California. Should Texas look into cancel USF and play the Crimson Tide?
On Flashback Friday, Locked on Longhorns takes a look at the top 10 wins in school history and Eric Metcalf.
The duo open up Flashback Friday discussing the top wins in Texas Longhorns history including a couple games that featured Roger Staubach and Tom Landry. Cami gives the games that she would have included in the list.
As they continue Flashback Friday they discuss one of the best all-purpose players in former Longhorn Eric Metcalf. Should he be in the NFL Hall of Fame? Who are some of their favorite 2-sport athletes at Texas? Plus which Texas Longhorn from the past would they love to watch live?
CBS released their win projections for the Big 12, where is Texas projected? Which losses do they disagree with?
What were some of the best wins in Texas football history?
Texas has a long and storied football history. A look at 10 of the games that have left an indelible mark on the school and its legion of fans.
Going into the 1970 Cotton Bowl, the No. 1 Texas Longhorns carried with them a 19-game winning streak and 499 all-time victories. The Horns would not be denied their 500th win or their second national championship, as Texas overcame a late 17-14 deficit against ninth-ranked Notre Dame. James Street marched the Longhorns 76 yards on 17 plays, capped by a Billy Dale 1-yard touchdown, to grab a 21-17 advantage with just over a minute to play.
Texas had beaten Arkansas on Dec. 6, 1969, in the “Game of the Century” and had the national championship presented to it by President Richard Nixon. Yet, the Longhorns still faced an encore: They had to defeat Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl on Jan. …
Texas had beaten Arkansas on Dec. 6, 1969, in the “Game of the Century” and had the national championship presented to it by President Richard Nixon. Yet, the Longhorns still faced an encore: They had to defeat Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl on Jan. 1, 1970, to complete the perfect season.
The stakes were raised in Dallas that New Year’s Day because it was the first time Notre Dame was to play in a bowl game since 1925. The school would not consider postseason play for decades until changing its course with the 1969 season.
Interestingly, the 8-1-1 Irish only were the opponent because Penn State had turned down a bid to play the Longhorns before their win over Arkansas. By a vote of its players in mid-November, second-ranked Penn State (10–0) opted to return to the Orange Bowl, and faced sixth-ranked Missouri (9–1).
Penn State had several black players and wished to avoid Dallas due to segregation issues. At the time, the top-ranked team was defending champion Ohio State, who lost the next week at Michigan. team.
The Irish were ready to pull an upset, scoring the game’s first 10 points. Scott Hempel kicked a field goal in the first quarter and Joe Theismann found Tom Gatewood for a 54-yard touchdown pass in the second quarter.
Down double digits, Texas rallied. It took the ND kickoff and drove 74 yards with Jim Bertelsen capping the march with a 1-yard run.
Neither team scored in the third quarter, setting the stage for another rally by the Longhorns in the fourth quarter. First, Ted Koy culminated a 77-yard drive with a touchdown run with 10 minutes remaining to give Texas a 14–10 advantage.
Theismann then led the Irish on an 80-yard drive and threw a 24-yard pass to Jim Yoder for a 17–14 lead with 6:52 left.
The great Dan Jenkins wrote for Sports Illustrated about what went into some gutsy calls by Darrell Royal.
There was a great big time out at the Notre Dame 20-yard line when Texas faced fourth down and two to go with only 4:26 remaining. Street went to the sideline to see Royal, and Bob Olson went to his sideline to confer with Parseghian. Meanwhile 73,000 hearts asked for a transplant. Texas was in field-goal range, but what would a tie do? Make Penn State, which would beat Missouri, or USC, which would beat Michigan, the No. 1 team?
Royal stayed with his triple-option offense, an attack that had made Texas the second alltime rushing team in college football during the regular season. Street faked Worster into the midsection, wiggled down the line and pitched to Ted Koy, who got the two yards by an eyelash just as Bob Olson arrived.
The Longhorns found themselves back in a fourth-and-two situation with 2:26 to play. Jenkins eloquently wrote:
The whole stadium was on its feet, and the bands were blaring out a couple of fairly familiar fight songs, while Street and Olson talked to their brains.
Street said, “How ’bout the counter option fake to the short side?”
Royal mulled it over.
Across the way, Parseghian was certain Texas would either run wide or pass. Olson was told to play the run first. It was percentages.
Out on the field now Cotton Speyrer, his back turned to the Notre Dame defense, was signaling the bench. He was dragging his thumb across his chest in the manner of a hitchhiker. The signal to Royal meant that Speyrer’s defender, Clarence Ellis, was playing him tight and to the inside. It meant that Speyrer thought he could get outside on him for a quick pass.
“Left 89 Out,” said Royal.
Street blinked. It was the Arkansas thing all over again, Royal calling a pass in a moment of supreme stress and James wondering, “Coach, are you sure?”
“Watch for the keep first,” said Darrell. “You might be able to fall for two yards. But if you can’t, drill it to Cotton. He says he’s open on the out.”
Street went to the Texas huddle and said, “Awright, suck it up. This might be our last play of the season, so let’s make it a good one…. Everybody get tough….” Then he looked right at Cotton Speyrer and called the play.
Street took the snap, looked at the end coming up fast, stopped and threw. It was low, but Speyrer did his thing and made the catch. And three plays later, with exactly 1:08 on the clock, another urchin, Billy Dale, a 5’10”, 190-pound junior who had replaced Ted Koy, hugged a hand-off from Street and followed a couple of blocks by Worster and Tight End Randy Peschel into the end zone.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n99HKbAtNpk
The final was 21-17 and Texas had its 20th win in a row and 500th overall. T
Steve Worster (pictured above against Arkanas) led the rushing attack with 155 of the Longhorns’ 331 yards. Speyrer had 70 receiving yards on 4 catches.
“If you really want to start defining my career, one of the things that really sticks out in my mind is when I was the Offensive MVP of the Cotton Bowl in my junior year,” Worster told Texassports.com long ago. “It was a real punishing football game where we just grinded it out. My performance was because of the linemen and the rest of my teammates.
“When I watch film of the game, I just am tickled to death because that was my type of football. It was north and south, not east and west, and three or four yards play after play. It was like Coach Royal said and that’s you line up your best 11 and we’ll line up our best 11. That game really exemplified Texas football at that time.”
A year later, the Irish got even. Legendary coach Ara Parseghian had been priming Notre Dame for a rematch and he got his shot in the 1971 Cotton Bowl.
Led by Heisman Trophy runner-up Theismann at quarterback and a defense spearheaded by end Walt Patulski, who would be the first player selected in the NFL Draft two years later, the Irish began the season 9-0 and accepted a bid to play No. 1 Texas again in the Cotton Bowl. However, it would not be an unbeaten Notre Dame team the Longhorns would face because the Irish lost to USC, 38-28, in a rain-soaked season finale.
That did not dampen the rematch. Texas took a 3-0 lead but Notre Dame erupted for three scores to make it 21-3. The rest of the scoring came before halftime and Notre Dame wound up winning, 24-11. The Longhorns fumbled nine times, five being were recovered by the Irish.
Texas 15, Arkansas 14. Fifty years ago on Dec. 6, 1969, the schools played in a No. 1 vs. No. 2 contest.
Imagine if the President of the United States decided to present the national championship to a school after a game in December, long before bowls were played. In 2019, it could never happen. However, 50 years ago it occurred. One of the greatest games in college football history turns 50 on Dec. 6. Arkansas and Texas met in a game that pitted the top two teams in the country at Razorback Stadium in Fayetteville, AR., on that Saturday.
How big was the game? President Richard M. Nixon helicoptered in for the contest. This was long before it became fashionable for the Commander-in-Chief to attend any sports event other than the opening game of the baseball season. With President Nixon was another person who would become a President, himself, George H.W. Bush. While there are ties to Arkansas by President Bill Clinton, and there is a tale he was around the stadium, that has proven to be a falsehood. He did, however, listen on shortwave radio with some friends while a Rhodes Scholar at the University of Oxford in England.
The game was not scheduled to be played on Dec. 6. Thanks to the ingenuity of ABC TV exec Beano Cook, the usual October meeting between the schools was pushed to the end of the regular season, which allowed the Southwest Conference title and Cotton Bowl berth to be determined. The game took on gigantic magnitude the week before when Michigan upset Ohio State, sending Arkansas and Texas to the top of the rankings.
The game itself delivered on every level. Texas was inspired by the courageous story of its DB, Freddie Steinmark, who was battling cancer. Frank Broyles of Arkansas and Darrell Royal of Texas were two legendary college coaches, while they were working at each school, respectively.
This marked the 100th year of college football and it fittingly wears the title “Game of the Century.”
Arkansas grabbed a 14-0 lead on a one-yard leap into the end zone by Bill Burnett in the first quarter and a 29-yard touchdown reception by Chuck Dicus in the third quarter. The Hogs led by that margin as the teams headed into the final 15 minutes. Remember, there was no thought of overtime in 1969.
Texas closed within 14-6 when quarterback James Street scrambled for a touchdown on the first play of the last quarter. Then came a decision from Coach Royal that changed the course of the game. He knew he would have to go for a two-point conversion on one touchdown if Texas were to win. Rather than wait for a second opportunity, Royal went for two and Texas converted. Royal knew while he was risking not converting a simple PAT, if Texas scored again a two-point conversion would give the Longhorns a chance to tie the Razorbacks.
Texas did convert as Street ran the ball into the end zone, making it 14-8. Arkansas had chances to close out the game but Arkansas quarterback Bill Montgomery was intercepted in the end zone by Danny Lester on third-down play from the Texas 7. A field goal would have likely put the game out of reach for Texas.
Given life, the Longhorns rallied. Royal played the roll of gambler again and on fourth-and-3 with less than five minutes left he called a pass play for tight end Randy Peschel. Quarterback Street focused on split end Cotton Speyer while calling the play, noticing Arkansas players eyeballing the huddle. He found Peschel for 44 yards.
Two plays later Jim Bertelsen ran in for the game-tying touchdown. Donnie Wigginton, the third-string quarterback who was the holder, made a big save on a high snap and Happy Feller booted the extra point for the winning score with 3:58 left.
The great Dan Jenkins wrote about Arkansas’ last chance in Sports Illustrated:
There was still plenty of time for Arkansas, of course, and Bill Montgomery proceeded to hit four more thrilling passes and move the Razorbacks to the Texas 39. But there, with 1:13 to play, he floated one out in the right flat, and Tom Campbell, the son of Texas’ defensive Coach Mike Campbell, outgrabbed John Rees for it and the Longhorns were ready to meet the President.
The post-game was bedlam was President Nixon presented the national championship to Texas … before bowl games were played! The controversy erupted because Penn State was also undefeated. However, the Nittany Lions had turned down an invite to the Cotton Bowl to play the Texas-Arkansas winner before Michigan had upended Ohio State drastically changing the rankings picture.
Texas went on to defeat Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl to seal its national title. The game lives in history on many levels. One of which is the title it has also received as “Dixie’s Last Stand.” The game was the last major sporting event between all-white teams.