Legendary coach Gary Patterson could be “mulling return” to Texas

Gary Patterson may not be done at Texas after all.

Gary Patterson might not be done working with the Texas Longhorns. According to Bobby Burton of Inside Texas, the legendary former TCU head coach could return to the Texas coaching staff in 2023.

It’s important to note that Burton is not saying Patterson to Texas is a done deal or that it is likely. He simply suggests it is a possibility. If head coach Steve Sarkisian is able to convince the defensive genius to return, our confidence in the team will only continue to grow.

The Texas defense was solid last season. We believe it can be very good and perhaps even dominant this year. Albeit, while we think highly of defensive coordinator Pete Kwiatkowski it would be foolish to dismiss Patterson’s fingerprints on last year’s defense.

Forgotten in a huge offseason for Texas is it added former Wisconsin head coach Paul Chryst to help with the offense in advisory role along with two other advisors to the coaching staff. Add Gary Patterson back, and the Longhorns’ brain trust is about as dangerous as its loaded roster.

I have been pushing back against any playoff hype for the Longhorns this offseason. Should Patterson return to the Texas staff, you have to start entertaining that hype. We’ll keep an eye on it as the season approaches.

2023 Season Preview: Sooners wrap up with the national runner-up

It was a magical 2022 season for the TCU Horned Frogs but can they build upon that in 2023?

It was a magical 2022 season for the TCU Horned Frogs.

Legendary coach Gary Patterson steps down, and in comes Sonny Dykes. TCU goes 12-0 in the regular season, becoming the first Big 12 team since the 2016 Oklahoma Sooners to go 9-0 in conference play.

The Horned Frogs then went on to win the conference’s first College Football Playoff game, beating blue-blood Michigan in the process.

This year they are replacing a lot of talent. They rank 118th in returning production per ESPN (ESPN+).

The offense that finished 27th a year ago is only returning 33% of its production, which ranks next to last in the country.

They have to replace Heisman finalist Max Duggan, their top two running backs Kendre Miller and Emari Demercado, and their top three receivers Quentin Johnston, Taye Barber, and Derius Davis. Additionally, former four-star wide receiver transferred to SMU.

In comes Chandler Morris, who won the starting job last year before being injured in the first game of the season.

Morris brings dual-threat potential and was really thought of as the better passer between him and Duggan. Can he replicate the work Magic Max did a year ago?

At running back, the Horned Frogs add Alabama Crimson Tide transfer Trey Sanders. Sanders only carried the ball 116 times for 528 yards and four touchdowns over three seasons with the Tide. A product of IMG Academy, Sanders was once the No. 1 running back in the 247Sports composite, the No. 6 player overall, and a five-star prospect in the nation. The talent is there to be a dynamic player for the Horned Frogs.

At wide receiver they bring in Oklahoma State Cowboys transfer John Paul Richardson and Alabama transfer Jojo Earle. Richardson caught 49 balls for 503 yards and four touchdowns for the Cowboys in 2022 and moves into a better passing attack than what he had with Oklahoma State. Last year with Alabama, Earle had 12 receptions for 155 yards and two scores.

The Horned Frogs will be replacing offensive coordinator Garrett Riley with Kendal Briles. A different system, but still expected to put up big numbers offensively.

Defensively they return 71% of their production from a season ago. On a defense that ranked 95th last year. Like the Oklahoma Sooners, they’re hoping their experience will help them grow as a defense.

The Horned Frogs return five of their top six players in tackles last season, including starting linebackers Johnny Hodges and Jamoi Hodge. They return three of their top five in sacks. However, they lost Dylan Horton and Dee Winters, who combined for 18 sacks a year ago.

It will be interesting to see how the Horned Frogs retool from a year ago. Dykes said he felt their skilled position players are better this year than last year. That could just be coach speak. It’s hard to lose a player like Quentin Johnston and be better. He was a dynamic player that could make plays at ever level of the passing game.

The thing that will be difficult to replicate is the success they had in close games. They went 4-1 in games decided by a touchdown or less, including wins over Michigan, Baylor, Texas, and Kansas.

Only time will tell. Ultimately, this could be a weird game for Oklahoma. Coming off what should be a hard-fought battle in Provo, Utah. Now, you come home on a short week and play at 11:00 am CT on Black Friday.

Still, I like the Sooners until I see how TCU responds from last season.

Score Prediction: 41-30 Oklahoma

Predicted Record: 10-2

[lawrence-auto-related count=5 category=1366]

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Jaron on Twitter @JaronSpor.

Report: Texas football hires Joe DeCamillis as special assistant to head coach

Texas has found their replacement for Gary Patterson.

Steve Sarkisian went to the NFL ranks to hire a new member of his coaching staff.

247Sports reports Texas is bringing in longtime NFL special teams coach Joe DeCamillis in a special assistant to head coach role. The position was previously held by former TCU head coach Gary Patterson.

DeCamillis has won two super bowls as a special teams coordinator in the NFL. One with the Denver Broncos in 2016 and another with the LA Rams in 2022. His special teams units are consistently among the upper echelon of the NFL.

He is a well-respected coach with 31 years of NFL experience under his belt. DeCamillis will now bring his ideas to the college game for the first time with this Texas staff. The Longhorns coaching staff is locked and loaded for the 2023 season.

Contact/Follow us @LonghornsWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas news, notes and opinions.

TCU paid Gary Patterson an obscene amount to not coach the Horned Frogs

There’s no better job in America than a fired college head football coach.

There’s no better job in America than a fired college head football coach. Don’t believe me, just look at the buyout numbers.

From the 2022 season, schools dished out a combined $56.7 million for five Power Five head coaches that were fired during and after the football season.

  • Scott Frost, Nebraska Cornhuskers ($15 million buyout)
  • Karl Dorell, Colorado Buffaloes ($11.4 million buyout)
  • Geoff Collins, Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets ($11.3 million buyout)
  • Paul Chryst, Wisconsin Badgers ($11 million buyout)
  • Herm Edwards, Arizona State Sun Devils ($8 million buyout)

It was even worse when you look at the head coaches that were bought out prior to the 2022 season, including 2019 national champion Ed Oregon. One other coach that was fired and ultimately settled on a severance package was TCU head coach Gary Patterson.

According to Steve Berkowitz of USA TODAY Sports, Patterson received almost $11.5 million in a separation payment.

The new tax record states that Patterson received a “lump sum (separation) payment of $11,449,656” in 2021. The document did not address whether he was to receive additional payments in 2022 or beyond. On Wednesday, a university spokesperson confirmed that it was a one-time payment that was not recurring.

Patterson’s total pay for the 2021 season exceeded $17 million.

The document – provided by the school on Tuesday in response to a request from USA TODAY Sports – showed that Patterson’s total compensation for the 2021 calendar year was just over $17.2 million.

Patterson coached at TCU from 1998 to 2021. He was promoted from defensive coordinator and safeties coach prior to the 2000 season. Patterson was largely responsible for putting the Horned Frogs on the national scene and getting them an invitation to the Big 12 when TCU and West Virginia joined in 2012.

Patterson was 181-79 with TCU and won five total conference titles with Conference USA, the Mountain West, and the Big 12. TCU won the 2010 Rose Bowl and finished No. 2 overall with a spotless 13-0 record.

The school ultimately hired Sonny Dykes to take over the program for the 2022 season. He took Patterson’s players and made a run to the College Football Playoff’s national championship game.

Getting paid over $17 million to coach part of a season would be an opportunity that a lot of people would sign up for.

[mm-video type=video id=01gp3tqjjb2cx786zts8 playlist_id=01gq2fszf7mxxc88k4 player_id=01eqbvp13nn1gy6hd4 image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gp3tqjjb2cx786zts8/01gp3tqjjb2cx786zts8-2b0d9851261554639678bd4c1966c35c.jpg]

Lincoln Riley needs to give Gary Patterson a phone call

.@LonghornsWire notes that Gary Patterson is stepping down from his role on Sark’s Texas staff. #USC needs to call him.

Gary Patterson, the architect of an immensely successful TCU football program who sustained the Horned Frogs as a major player in college football for nearly 20 years, spent last year as an assistant to Steve Sarkisian at the University of Texas. It is clear that Patterson wanted to stay connected to football and coaching, but without the level of work and responsibility a head coach must sustain on a daily basis.

Longhorns Wire picked up on a 247Sports report that Patterson is stepping down from his role at Texas.

Patterson wants to spend time with his family, including his grandchildren. He is 63 and wants to be sure to stop and smell the roses. He doesn’t want a job which will consume him.

He also doesn’t seem like a man who wants to be done with football and coaching, either.

Hmmmm…

It’s as though USC football — which did not engage in an overhaul of its defensive coaching staff, and did not bring aboard a special teams coordinator because of limitations on on-field staff — could use a defensive analyst, someone in a “support staff” position who doesn’t have to be on the field, who doesn’t have to fly with the team on road games.

A consultant, maybe.

Hmmm…

Lincoln Riley went up against Gary Patterson all the time in the Big 12 when he was at Oklahoma and Patterson coached TCU.

Hmmm…

This seems all too obvious, doesn’t it? Pay Gary Patterson a few extra dollars and bring him on as a defensive analyst/consultant to share ideas with Alex Grinch and get a wise voice in the room.

Patterson would stay in coaching but would not have to be on the field, on a plane, or on standby all the time.

Hmmm…

The Trojans could stand pat, or they could try to do everything possible to get that little extra edge and squeeze every last ounce of potential out of their operation in Heritage Hall.

Your move, Lincoln.

[mm-video type=video id=01gtkyr3c6r7xay4vmvy playlist_id=none player_id=01f5k5y2jb3twsvdg4 image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gtkyr3c6r7xay4vmvy/01gtkyr3c6r7xay4vmvy-c952906256f4f2251439d344282299db.jpg]

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=696091895]

Report: Gary Patterson stepping away from his role with Texas

Gary Patterson is leaving the Texas football program after one season.

Gary Patterson is stepping away from his role as special assistant to the head coach with Texas football after one season with the team. Continue reading “Report: Gary Patterson stepping away from his role with Texas”

Who is TCU football’s head coach?

Sonny Dykes has had one of the most impressive first seasons at the Power Five level in recent memory.

Entering the 2022 season, TCU opted for a seismic change within the football program. It replaced longtime head coach Gary Patterson with Sonny Dykes, beginning a new era for the program.

The Horned Frogs forced out Patterson — the architect of the modern program who had been the head man since 2000 — in 2021 following four consecutive disappointing seasons. Moving on from the 62-year-old Patterson made sense, but it didn’t come without some risks.

He inherited a program that had been left out of the conference merger that created the Big 12 and had spent decades adrift. Under Patterson’s watch, TCU won double-digit games 10 times.

Hiring Dykes — a Texas native who is well-connected in the state — seemed like a natural fit. A former head coach at California, Dykes was fired in 2016 after going 19-30 in four years. He eventually landed back in the Lone Star State at SMU, where he returned the Mustangs program to consistent status.

No one expected TCU’s turnaround in Dykes’ first season. A team that went 5-7 in 2021 sits at 13-1 in 2022 after upsetting Michigan in the College Football Playoff semifinals. The Horned Frogs will play for their first national title since 1938 against Georgia.

[mm-video type=video id=01gp1nzhzehhwwja5yn1 playlist_id=01f09p3bf720d8rg02 player_id=01gp1x90emjt3n6txc image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gp1nzhzehhwwja5yn1/01gp1nzhzehhwwja5yn1-381f7cadee381aa1714868f0715bfbe4.jpg]

[listicle id=2000042]

[vertical-gallery id=1996965]

Texas football should thrive in second year of lifting heavier weight

Texas should make strides in the weight room again in 2023.

When Gary Patterson came to Texas, things changed in Austin. One of the first steps involved fixing strength and conditioning.

Texas struggled in the trenches in 2021. As early as the second game, Arkansas exposed the Longhorns’ lack of strength, explosion and size.

After Patterson joined the coaching staff in an advisory role, Steve Sarkisian’s team switched from lifting light weight for speed to lifting heavy weight. It was the difference between five wins in 2021 and eight in 2022.

It’s no coincidence that TCU has the explosion and strength to play for a national championship in Sonny Dykes’ first season. Strength and conditioning is a huge part of their success.

The Horned Frogs didn’t just start building NFL players in the weight room this season. They’ve been doing so since Gary Patterson walked the sidelines. Now Steve Sarkisian will aim to duplicate Patterson’s development with five-star talent.

Credit whoever you will with the changes that have occurred on the football field, but the former TCU head coach has made a huge impact on the Texas football team.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbz52bnpekkafqb player_id=01eqbvp13nn1gy6hd4 image=]

Contact/Follow us @LonghornsWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas news, notes and opinions.

What Texas DC Pete Kwiatkowski said to the media this week

Pete Kwiatkowski meeting with the media is a rare occurrence.

Texas defensive coordinator Pete Kwiatkowski spoke with the media this week ahead of the Longhorns’ Alamo Bowl matchup with Washington on Thursday. Continue reading “What Texas DC Pete Kwiatkowski said to the media this week”

Texas assistant Gary Patterson shuts down rumors about the Nebraska job

Gary Patterson is not going anywhere at the moment.

Rumors have been swirling about Texas assistant coach Gary Patterson being a candidate for the Nebraska head coaching position.

The former TCU head coach quickly shut down any speculation tying him to the Nebraska job. Patterson took to Twitter on Tuesday night to reaffirm his commitment to Steve Sarkisian and this Texas team.

Patterson is one of the more accomplished coaches in college football. He took TCU to new heights and changed the expectations of the program for the better during his time in Fort Worth. Patterson is TCU’s all-time wins leader and even has a statue built of him outside their stadium.

Expect Patterson to receive some interest from new opportunities this offseason as the coaching carousel begins to heat up. Still, he remains focused on helping Texas finish the season on a high note.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01eqbz52bnpekkafqb player_id=none image=https://longhornswire.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Contact/Follow us @LonghornsWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas news, notes and opinions.