Texas coach Steve Sarkisian tempted Kirk Herbstreit with a custom jersey for his dog Ben on College GameDay

Steve Sarkisian knows he needs college football’s most well-traveled dog on Texas’ side.

Wherever ESPN’s College GameDay pulls up each week, there’s always a rush to curry as much favor as possible with panelists Lee Corso, Nick Saban, Pat McAfee, Desmond Howard, Kirk Herbstreit and Rece Davis.

Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian took a different route on Saturday.

While jumping on the broadcast ahead of Week 8’s marquee matchup in Austin between No. 1 Texas and No. 5 Georgia, Sarkisian made a play for easily the most beloved member of the Herbstreit family — Kirk’s dog Ben.

Now, this is a high-stakes move. Ben Herbstreit has already given a solid verbal (bark) commitment to his family’s alma mater of Ohio State, but the jersey Sarkisian brought him may just have him reconsider.

Well played, Sark. Way to remember the No. 1 rule of college football: Always Be Recruiting.

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How much does Texas A&M HC Mike Elko make per year?

Here’s what Texas A&M HC Mike Elko nets per year compared to the rest of Power 5 head coaches

Being a College Football head coach at the Power 5 conference level comes with a ton of daily stress similar to that of a CEO at a Fortune 100 company.

However, both jobs come with significant financial perks, which usually include enormous salaries with hefty buyouts, a subject that recently bit Texas A&M in the you know what after firing former head coach Jimbo Fisher, who will receive $70-plus million in compensation over the next decade.

After his dismissal last November, former Texas A&M defensive coordinator and former Duke head coach Mike Elko returned to College Station with complete backing from the University and fan base. He received a salary that fits his experience and prowess despite only two years as a Power 5 head coach.

According to USA TODAY’s updated College Football Head Coach Salary rankings, Elko is the 24th highest-earning head coach, with a total yearly compensation of $7 million, a 3.8 million total bonus earning potential, and a $27 million buyout as of the start of the 2024 calendar year.

Compared to the rest of the SEC head coaches, Elko is the 11th-highest-paid coach in the conference. Here are some of the notable SEC salaries this season, led by Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian:

  • Kirby Smart — Georgia: $13,282,580 per season; Buyout: 118,083,333
  • Steve Sarkisian — Texas: $10,600,000; Buyout: $55,044,583
  • Kalen DeBoer — Alabama: $10 million; Buyout: $70,050,000
  • Brian Kelly — LSU: $9,975,000; Buyout: $61,738,333
  • Mark Stoops — Kentucky: $9,013,600; Buyout: $44,437,500
  • Lane Kiffin — Ole Miss: $9 million; Buyout: $36,590,000

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Cameron on X: @CameronOhnysty.

How Brent Venables, Steve Sarkisian last coordinator stops brought them to OU-Texas

Mirror Reflections: Steve Sarkisian and Brent Venables are very different, but also quite similar.

The 120th edition of the iconic [autotag]Red River Rivalry[/autotag] is days away from coming to fruition. The Texas Longhorns and the Oklahoma Sooners will face off yet again in Dallas at a neutral site in the Cotton Bowl at the State Fair of Texas in one of the greatest rivalry games sports has to offer. There’s simply nothing like it. The atmosphere and the stakes are simply unbeatable in college football.

On the surface, the two head coaches in this game couldn’t be more different.

Texas’ [autotag]Steve Sarkisian[/autotag] enters his fourth Red River with a 1-2 record in the game. He’s one of the best offensive minded coaches in all of college football, renowned for directing some of the greatest units in recent memory. He’s a quarterback whisperer who played the position at BYU in the mid-1990s for LaVell Edwards. His teams put points on the scoreboard in an entertaining fashion.

Oklahoma’s [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag], on the other hand, enters his third Red River at 1-1. He’s regarded as one of college football’s greatest defensive minds, and has also been in charge of some of the best units of the 21st century. His specialty is linebackers, as he played the position at Kansas State in 1991 and 1992. His teams suffocate opposing offenses and create chaos defensively.

But as different as these two men are, we can look at their most recent gigs before becoming the head coaches at Texas and Oklahoma to see how they’re building things very similarly.

Sarkisian had multiple stints coaching quarterbacks for Pete Carroll at USC from 2001 to 2008, though he spent the 2004 season doing the same in the NFL for the then Oakland Raiders. In 2007 and 2008, he was the offensive coordinator for the Trojans, in addition to his role as the quarterbacks coach.

From 2009 to 2013, Sarkisian served as the head coach at Washington before returning to USC after Lane Kiffin’s firing. For two seasons, he coached Southern California, but was fired midway through the 2015 season due to personal issues.

But it’s what happened next that got him where he is today. Sarkisian was hired as an offensive analyst by Nick Saban at Alabama for the 2016 season. He then spent two years as the Atlanta Falcons’ OC before returning to Tuscaloosa to be the offensive coordinator for the Crimson Tide.

In 2019 and 2020, Alabama and Sarkisian had some of the best offenses college football had ever seen. The Tide were particularly dominant in 2020, winning the national championship with an undefeated record and an incredible offense. All of that happened with Sarkisian calling plays on offense for a defensive-minded head coach in Saban.

Sarkisian was hired to be Texas’s head coach following his success in Tuscaloosa in 2020, replacing Tom Herman. It took a couple of years, but he has brought Texas “back” after nearly 15 years of dormancy. He learned from his time at Washington and USC, but his most crucial steps were the three years he spent learning how to build a program under Saban. He’s taken those lessons to Austin, building the team the way it has to be done in college football, something his two predecessors failed to do.

His philosophy is a combination of Edwards, Carroll, and Saban, but he certainly draws from his time in Tuscoloosa on how the process needs to look in the modern era of college football.

Venables coached at Kansas State under Bill Snyder for six seasons, serving as the linebackers coach from 1996 to 1998. [autotag]Bob Stoops[/autotag] hired him to be the co-defensive coordinator and coach linebackers at Oklahoma, where the Sooners won the national championship in 2000. Venables eventually became OU’s solo defensive coordinator a few years later, coaching some of the best units in college football.

He decided to leave Norman to go to Clemson, serving as the defensive coordinator under Dabo Swinney from 2012 to 2021. The Tigers won the ACC and made the College Football Playoff six times in a row, winning the national championship in 2016 and 2018. Clemson was often led by stingy defenses in their run atop the sport. All of that happened with Venables calling the defense for an offensive-minded head coach in Swinney.

Venables was hired to replace Lincoln Riley after the 2021 season and has taken on the task of rebuilding the program and leading it into the [autotag]SEC[/autotag]. Though the job isn’t finished, there are certainly things to like about the way Venables is steering the ship.

His philosophy is a combination of Snyder, Stoops, and Swinney, but what he learned in Clemson mirrors how the Tigers were always the biggest foil to the Crimson Tide. Swinney’s squads were often the only team capable of matching up across the board with Saban’s teams. The two programs were often “shadowy reflections” of each other, as René Belloq once said to Indiana Jones.

Swinney built the Tigers from an also-ran to a powerhouse, and Venables was there for a lot of it, watching how it was done. He’s taken those lessons to Norman, building the program in a way his predecessor could not.

Alabama and Clemson were the titans of college football for over half a decade, dominating the four-team era of the CFP. Both teams are still very good and positioned nicely in the twelve-team era and beyond as well. Saban and Swinney will go down as the two greatest coaches of that era. Bama and Clemson faced off in the title game three times and once in the semis. The Tigers went 2-1 in the national championship, but the Crimson Tide had the edge in the 2017 semifinal.

As a change in leadership has taken place for the Tide, and the Tigers have seen their death grip on the ACC weaken, two former top assistants have made their way to the Red River Rivalry, applying what they’ve learned to their programs.

All of that said, both teams are on their way up entering the SEC. It may not take long for Texas under Sarkisian to look similar to Alabama under Saban. And it may not take long for Oklahoma under Venables to look a lot like Clemson at their best under Swinney. The chess match between the two every October will no doubt be intense.

Even though one head coach has a gifted mind for offense and the other has a brilliant mind for defense, and even though they come from completely different backgrounds, Steve Sarkisian and Brent Venables may be far more alike than you think.

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

Why Steve Sarkisian is waiting to announce Texas’ starting QB vs. Mississippi State in SEC opener

It’s unclear who will start for Texas at quarterback in Week 5.

Quinn Ewers or Arch Manning? Well, for Texas football coach Steve Sarkisian, it remains undecided who will start at quarterback for the Longhorns when they make their official SEC debut against Mississippi State.

Ewers was Texas’ starting quarterback to open the season, but the Heisman Trophy contender has been dealing with an oblique strain the last couple weeks. So in Week 4 against UL Monroe, Manning was named the starter, and he didn’t disappoint, leading the Lonhorns to a 51-3 victory. His Heisman odds also skyrocketed when he replaced injured Ewers against UTSA in Week 3.

But when it comes to the Texas-Mississippi State game Saturday, Sarkisian is holding off on announcing a starter, although he previously noted that Ewers has looked good in practice, ESPN reported.

Thursday, Sarkisian explained the situation. More via ESPN:

“We’re going to decide on the quarterback thing tomorrow,” Sarkisian said. “It won’t be a secret. We’re not trying to pull the wool over anybody’s eyes. Just want to give Quinn every opportunity to see if he’s ready to play and what he looks like.”

Against UL Monroe, Manning completed 15-of-29 passes for 258 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions. On the season before Ewers suffered an injury, he rocking a 73.4 completion percentage, throwing for 691 total yards, eight touchdowns and two interceptions.

Both quarterbacks are clearly talented, but there’s a chance that with Ewers’ injury, they both may be out of Heisman Trophy contention.

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Joel Klatt says ‘No QB controversy’ at Texas, Ewers and Manning a ‘win-win’

Fox Sports Joel Klatt said the Texas depth makes the Longhorns elite. Part of of that depth is at QB. Quinn Ewers and Arch Manning a win-win

Fox lead college football analyst Joel Klatt discussed the Texas Longhorns QB situation at the beginning of his weekend recap on the Joel Klatt Show Monday.

Klatt said one of the reasons he thinks Texas is such an elite team is the Longhorns depth. Part of of that depth is at QB.

“Some of that was an assumption. We think that Arch Manning is going to be good, and a lot of that has to do with his last name. But this was really the first time we got to see it. See him have the entire offense at his disposal. See him run the offense with Sark being Uber aggressive calling plays. See him being able to run on the edge. I tell you what, all that did for me was solidify the fact that Texas is one of the best teams in the country.” — Joel Klatt

In his weekly Top 10, Klatt ranked Texas No. 1. It’s the same ranking Texas has in the latest AP Poll. Texas is No. 2 in the US LBM Coaches Poll.

https://twitter.com/joelklatt/status/1835198812660679011

Klatt went more in depth in his thoughts about Texas’ wealth at the quarterback position.

“Oh yeah, they’re going to be just fine. In fact, you could probably make an argument that Manning might be even more talented than Ewers, even though Ewers clearly has the experience edge over Manning. So you could make an argument that they’re not going to miss a beat. Even if their starting quarterback goes down. And that’s a quarterback that I still believe is going to wind up in New York for the Heisman Trophy ceremony.” — Joel Klatt

One that that really impressed Klatt was Manning’s speed, which we’ve seen glimpses of, but not to the level we did against UTSA.

“What we saw from Manning, particularly running the football, was something I didn’t think he had in him. That was something pretty special. That long run was the longest touchdown run by a quarterback since Vince Young. That’s saying something, because Colt McCoy was damn good. … If you’re running over 20.5 miles per hour, hitting 21 miles per hour, some guys that are really fast can hit 22, 22.5 maybe even close to 23. Arch basically hit 21 miles per hour on his touchdown run. That blows my mind. Blows my mind! That’s like fast, fast. Not just regular ‘oh yeah, he can run.’ That’s fast, fast.” — Joel Klatt

The Fox analyst things this is a great situation for Texas coach Steve Sarkisian.

“Sark has to think, ‘I’m good.’ … Sark doesn’t have to rush Ewers back. He can make sure he’s completely healthy. … They’ve got all this time to get him back for Red River then they’ve got Georgia the following week.” — Joel Klatt

So is there a QB controversy? Klatt doesn’t think there is any controversy.

“I don’t believe this is a quarterback controversy, but I do believe this is where people are going to go. Particularly, from a narrative standpoint. And in particular there. Because, let’s face it, a lot of people around Texas love to have an opinion. I’m glad, in this case, that Sark is unwavered by people’s opinion about him or his program. … If Quinn isn’t effective, he’s got a legitimate option. This is a win-win situation for Steve Sarkisian.” — Joel Klatt

 

 

Texas coach Steve Sarkisian provides Quinn Ewers injury update

Status of Texas Longhorns quarterback Quinn Ewers oblique injury updated by head coach Steve Sarkisian.

Texas Longhorns coach Steve Sarkisian gave an update on injured Junior QB Quinn Ewers today in his weekly press conference.

Sarkisian meets the press each Monday and typically looks back at the game just played and forward to the game coming up.

Ewers left Saturday night’s game against the UTSA Roadrunners with an apparent abdominal injury, later clarified as an oblique strain.

On Texas’ fourth offensive drive, after a 49-yard pass to TE Gunnar Helm, the Longhorns QB seemed to be in a lot of pain and was holding his lower rib cage/abdomen.

Ewers left the game and headed to the medical tent for about 15 minutes before leaving for the locker room with a towel over his head. He emerged a few minutes later in street clothes to join his teammates on the sideline.

Before leaving, Sark says Ewers was playing well.

“I thought Quinn, prior to the injury, was having a really good football game. I think he was 14 of 16, which is very efficient. He was playing at a high level.” — Steve Sarkisian

Going forward, the Southlake Carroll product is listed as ‘questionale.’

“It was a non-contact deal, which we touched on. The oblique strain there. Next week when you guys get your injury report, on next Wednesday, that officially begins, he would be listed as questionable. We’re going to monitor him day to day and see what this looks like. But he would be questionable for Saturday on the report.” — Steve Sarkisian

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The good news is the Longhorns have what appears to be a very capable backup in Arch Manning and a favorable schedule heading into the Texas-OU game.

 

 

Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian uses Notre Dame’s loss as motivation

A learning moment across the country is what the Irish did on Saturday

It was bound to happen after Notre Dame football’s performance this past weekend, they’re being used as an example of what not to do.

The Irish may be the laughing stock of all college football after two weeks of the season, and Texas Longhorns head coach [autotag]Steve Sarkisian[/autotag] showed clips to his team of the upset.

He using it as a coaching point, as Inside Texas reported that Sark said it’s a “good reminder that we’re entitled to nothing. We’re capable of nothing. We’ve got a really good team, but we’re entitled to nothing and we’re going to earn everything we get.” Unfortunately, the Irish didn’t have this mentality this weekend.

Social media reacts to Michigan getting blown out by Texas
Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers (3) and teammates celebrate 31-12 win over Michigan at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor on Saturday, September 7, 2024.

The Longhorns are coming off one of the most impressive wins of the year, as they throughly defeated Michigan in their home. While you never want to be part of a precautionary tale, Notre Dame is going to have to wear this loss for a long time.

Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes and opinions.

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Texas A&M vs. Texas will reportedly have a title sponsor starting this football season

Expect a new title sponsor once the Lone Star Showdown continues this season and beyond

On Thursday, it was announced that Texas A&M AD Trev Alberts will join Texas AD Chris Del Conte for a joint press conference next Thursday regarding the return of the Lone Star Showdown between both programs, as the rivalry will resume since its pause after the 2011 season.

Both programs are poised to compete for a playoff spot this season as the field has expanded to 12 teams. The Longhorns are coming off their first playoff appearance after falling to Washington in the semifinal round.

Texas A&M will enter the 2024 campaign with new head coach Mike Elko returning to the program after serving as Jimbo Fisher’s defensive coordinator from 2018-2021, bringing in high expectations after serving as Duke’s head coach for the last two seasons.

Concerning next week’s press conference, rumors regarding a potential venue change are unfounded and highly unlikely, and to shed more light on the discussion, it has been reported by Houston Chronicle reporter Kirk Bohls that the part of the presser will surround the introduction of a title sponsor for the game, which will start next season.

Who the sponsor could be is up in the air, but if I had to venture a guess, it might be a Texas-based alcohol company or maybe even a well-known furniture company in the greater Houston area. We shall see!

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Cameron on X: @CameronOhnysty.

A press conference regarding the Lone Star Showdown has been announced

A press conference regarding the return of the Lone Star Showdown has been announced for next week

The 2024 college football season will feature a long list of changes, starting with the expanded 12-team CFP Playoff structure and ending with conference realignment, which includes Oklahoma and the Texas Longhorns entering the SEC after several decades in the Big 12.

With Texas now in the conference, the Lone Star Showdown between the Longhorns and Texas A&M will finally resume for the first time since the end of the 2011 season, as new Aggies’ head coach Mike Elko is excited to bring the rivalry back to the main stage.

“That’s what you want, right? That’s what makes college football so special. I glad they’re coming back into our league and I’m glad we get to play them on Thankgiving weekend, and I’m glad we get to settle it on the field. You shouldn’t have two brands like that so close not competing with each other.”

On Thursday, KBTX Sports reporter Travis Brown revealed that a future press conference regarding the rivalry has been announced for Thursday, August 22, as Texas A&M AD Trev Alberts will join Texas AD Chris Del Conte to speak on the matter, and, of course, some fans are skeptical of what this could mean.

Any rumors relating to a future venue change are purely skeptical and highly unlikely, as the Eagles’ Alex Miller noted on X that this could easily be a publicized reintroduction after a long wait for both schools:

“The return of the game is a big deal around these parts. A&M had a special committee that worked this spring to come up with ways to commemorate the return of the game. I’m sure there’s likely plenty to share.”

Texas A&M will open the 2024 season vs. Notre Dame on Saturday, August 31. The game will air on ABC at 6:30 p.m. CT.

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Cameron on X: @CameronOhnysty.