Steve Sarkisian addresses the depth chart questions

Steve Sarkisian is keeping practice as competitive as possible leading up to the opener.

Steve Sarkisian’s decision to not release a depth chart ahead of Texas’ season opener against UL Monore on Saturday sparked lots of conversation on social media.

Many were critical of Sarkisian’s move to keep the depth chart out of the public eye. The Texas head coach addressed the media about the depth chart situation on Thursday.

“You guys made way too big of a deal about this whole depth chart thing. I was shocked that it got so much attention.”

Sarkisian’s strategy is to keep a competitive environment for his players in practice leading up to the game. He stated he feels good about where things stand from a roster perspective and expects many different guys to see the field.

People will have to wait until Texas takes the field to see who cracked the starting lineup to start the 2022 season.

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Texas Football: Updated depth chart for West Virginia game

Texas updates depth chart ahead of West Virginia matchup.

Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian made a few changes to the depth chart ahead of the West Virginia game.

The quarterback position no longer has an “or” next to it. Sarkisian gave both quarterbacks playing time before Hudson Card threw a costly pick-six near the end of the first half giving the Jayhawks all the momentum. Casey Thompson led a second half comeback to force the game into overtime, prompting Sarkisian to give him the start this week.

Roschon Johnson will start at running back in place of Bijan Robinson, who will miss the rest of the season due to an elbow injury. Keilan Robinson is listed as Johnson’s backup after missing a week in COVID-19 protocol.

With Josh Thompson injured, Darrion Dunn is listed as the starting cornerback opposite of D’Shawn Jamison. Expect to see a mix of Dunn, Jahdae Barron and Kitan Crawford during the course of the game.

Here is a look at the entire depth chart:

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Texas Football: Where the safeties sit as season approaches

If there is one word to describe the safety position for Texas this season, it would be loaded. Caden Sterns and Chris Brown lead the way.

If there is one word to describe the safety position for Texas this season, it would be loaded. Based on high school rankings alone, the Longhorns have four blue-chip players in 247Sports’ latest two-deep depth chart.

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Here is how the safeties line up going into the season opener against UTEP on Sept. 12.

Free safety Strong Safety
Caden Sterns Chris Brown
Montrell Estell/Tyler Owens B.J. Foster

Sterns and Brown have run first-team all camp. It seems at this point that they’re a lock. Sterns, when healthy, is an All-American-type player. He showed that as a freshman. Brown, in addition to being one of the most physical players on the team, is also one of the best leaders on defense.

Pretty incredible that we’re talking about Foster as a backup. Talk about quality depth. Estell has had a better camp than Owens, who is still thinking too much, according to sources.

“The game has slowed down for Estell,” one team source. “The game needs to slow down for Owens.”

Safety Jerrin Thompson was the first freshman to have his rookie stripe taken off. I’m told the kid has just done everything right in terms of work ethic and attitude.

There is no doubt that Caden Sterns is going to be the best safety for Chris Ash’s defense. As 247Sports says, when he healthy, Sterns is an All-American type player. His struggles last season came down to injuries and missed important games such as Oklahoma and TCU.

Chris Brown at strong safety is a real surprise, considering B.J. Foster started in eight of the nine games he participated in. Listed at 5-11 and 187 pounds, Brown is going into his fifth year in Austin and is a redshirt senior.

To play strong safety, you have to be a physical presence, especially down in the box. 247Sports is reporting that Brown has been exactly that.

Foster is more than capable of starting for Texas at strong safety. If Brown is emerging as the partner to Sterns, it shows how strong of competition and how good of a roster the Longhorns have complied.

Moving to the backups and it seems as Montrell Estell and Tyler Owens are still fighting it out for the backup free safety spot. Whoever wins, it will take a lot to get Sterns off the field.

Both Estell and Owens played in all 13 games last season.

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