Texas Football Recruiting: Four-star wide receiver puts Longhorns in top eight

Four-star wide receiver J.J. Henry has released his top eight, with UT making the cut. TCU is the only other Big 12 school to make the cut.

One thing Texas has been trying to add to its 2021 class has been another receiver. Specifically an in-state one. Three-stars Jaden Alexis and Casey Cain are the two wideouts in the class, but they are from Florida and Louisiana, respectively.

Four-star J.J. Henry out of McKinney, Texas, could be the answer for the Longhorns. During his junior season, Henry recorded 71 receptions for 1,419 yards and 16 touchdowns.

Texas has made the DFW area standout’s top eight list. TCU is the only other Big 12 school to make the cut, and in-state schools SMU and Texas A&M are still in contention.

Rating

Stars Overall State Position
247 3 111 118
Rivals 3 77 91
ESPN 4 254 44 48
247 Composite 3 446 65 69

Vitals

Hometown McKinney, Texas
Projected Position Wide receiver
Height 5-10
Weight 165

Recruitment

  • Offered on May 25, 2020
  • No visit yet

Offers

  • Arkansas
  • Florida State
  • Louisville
  • Ole Miss
  • SMU
  • TCU
  • Texas
  • Texas A&M

Crystal Ball

Film

Twitter

TCU quarterback Max Duggan could miss game against Texas

TCU opens its football season on Sept. 12 and could be without their starting QB, Max Duggan. Gary Patterson confirmed the rumors on Zoom.

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TCU opens its football season against SMU on Sept. 12 and could be without their starting quarterback Max Duggan. The sophomore out of Iowa started the final 10 games of the 2019 season for the Horned Frogs.

Head coach Gary Patterson was on a Zoom call with reporters, confirming the starting quarterback will miss some games this season. Patterson did not specify if it was due to COVID-19 reasons or not.

“Max has a condition that he’s had his whole life and we caught it,” Patterson said. Right now he’s in a good place and hopefully he’ll be getting back sometime during the season. Right now we’ll be going forward with the rest of the quarterbacks. It’s a thing he was born with and I’m just glad we found it; I can say that.”

Texas is scheduled to host TCU on Oct. 3, the week before the Red River Shootout against Oklahoma. Duggan had a career day against the Longhorns last season, going 19 of 27, 273 yards, two touchdowns, and an interception.

Redshirt sophomore Matthew Downing is now expected to take over, starting against the Mustangs to open the season. A transfer quarterback from Georgia, Downing has yet to take a snap for TCU. However, he did play in four games in Athens during the 2018 season.

“Downing has been the guy that’s taking all the one reps. He just keeps getting better and better,” [Patterson] said. “The biggest thing is he’s a competitor just like his brother that played here. He’s smart, understands the offense and he’s a competitor.”

The Longhorns will be looking to get revenge against the Horned Frogs after last season’s embarrassing loss in Fort Worth. Quarterback Sam Ehlinger played his worst game of the season, going 22 of 48 for 321 yards, two touchdowns, and four interceptions.

Garry Patterson has Texas’ number, going 6-3 against them in his career. The Longhorns have only beaten TCU twice since their introduction to the Big 12 in 2012.

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TCU moves ahead with schedule replacements, 12-game slate

TCU is charging ahead.

It might not mean anything, but it could mean something: The TCU Horned Frogs intend to play 12 games this college football season.

They don’t have the final say over whether they will get to play 12 games. The Big 12 will soon (one would assume) announce its planned schedule for the 2020 season. Yet, TCU is going about its business with an eye on playing a full schedule, as reported by Drew Davison of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram:

One would be inclined to think that if a Big 12 member school is trying to play 12 games, the Big 12 would be trying to play 12 games as well.

This inclination is justified by other reports from the college sports world:

It is fascinating to see the various Power Five conferences operate on such different wavelengths.

A lot of the reportage from ACC and SEC markets has pointed to the adoption of a conference schedule plus one or two nonconference games.

The Pac-12 and Big Ten, of course, have committed to conference-only schedules.

The Big 12 is acting aggressively, trying to play 12 games. Alabama of the SEC has also tried to replace early-season opponents, including USC, which suggests that the Crimson Tide — like TCU — are making robust efforts to play a 12-game slate as well.

Teams and conferences are going in all sorts of directions, with little uniform direction or sense of purpose. This is the reality we inhabit in college football.

Which teams is TCU trying to replace? Davison’s story notes that UNLV — originally scheduled to play California on Aug. 29 in Las Vegas at the new Allegiant Stadium — could be TCU’s new opponent. The Horned Frogs have already started their walk-throughs and other activities which would normally precede the beginning of training camp, so TCU is not behind schedule in that regard.

TCU’s September 12 date — vacated by Prairie View when the SWAC shut things down for the fall — will reportedly be filled by a team within driving distance of the TCU campus.

Again, none of these efforts by TCU might ultimately matter, but the story here is that schools and conferences are hardly on the same page. Will there be lasting effects of this particular lack of cohesion in the college sports community, or is all of this a one-off which — when the pandemic lifts — will fade away?

We won’t know the answer to that question for some time.

TCU is exploring replacement nonconference games — that’s big news

This is important to follow.

At first glance, a report that a college football program is trying to find replacement games after two Power Five conferences backed out of nonconference games doesn’t seem like a huge story.

TCU was scheduled to play California on September 5 of this year, but when the Pac-12 moved to a conference-only game schedule, that game was canceled. Of course TCU would want to replace that game…

Well, in a normal situation, it would, but as we keep reminding ourselves, this is NOT a normal situation.

It’s a big deal that TCU, according to reports on Wednesday, is talking to Alabama (whose game against USC was canceled) and a few other schools about replacing the California game.

Why is it such an important story that TCU is at least entertaining the possibility of replacing this one game on its schedule, and talking to Texas A&M, BYU, and Liberty in addition to Bama?

Let’s realize that the Big 12 — whose schedule plans haven’t been revealed yet, and whose future we explored on Wednesday — shares a nine-game conference schedule with the Pac-12. If TCU is even CONSIDERING a replacement nonconference opponent for Sept. 5, that means, at the very least, the Horned Frogs are hoping to play at least 10 games this season.

TCU has a home date against Prairie View of the FCS plus its annual “Iron Skillet” rivalry game against SMU.

The mere EXISTENCE of rumors about TCU discussing a game with other nonconference opponents allows for the possibility that Big 12 teams are thinking about playing a full 12-game season. The mere existence of rumors of Alabama and Texas A&M being involved in talks with TCU similarly suggests that the SEC is thinking of going beyond a conference-only format and playing 10 or more games this season.

If you look at the bigger picture, it becomes apparent that a seemingly dry — and maybe, to some, utterly predictable — report about TCU exploring a replacement game with Alabama or Texas A&M is a really big story.

If the SEC and Big 12 aren’t just intent on playing nonconference games, but are intent on playing a FULL SEASON, while the Big Ten and Pac-12 have committed to conference-only schedules with reduced-length seasons, that has huge implications for many different issues:

  1. The College Football Playoff
  2. The way Group of Five schools view the different Power Five conferences as future scheduling partners
  3. The ways the different Power Five conferences relate (the ACC being removed from this discussion since it is the one conference which hasn’t been mentioned in this article).

No one knows if the Big 12 and SEC can in fact play a full season, but if TCU is talking to Bama and A&M, it certainly leaves that as a possibility, which creates a gulf between the Big 12 and SEC on one hand, and the Big Ten and Pac-12 on the other.

That could certainly shake up college football in the future, in ways we can’t even appreciate now.

College Football News Preview 2020: TCU Horned Frogs

College Football News Preview 2020: Previewing, predicting, and looking ahead to the TCU Horned Frogs season with what you need to know.

College Football News Preview 2020: Previewing, predicting, and looking ahead to the TCU Horned Frogs season with what you need to know.


Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

– What You Need To Know: Offense | Defense
Top Players | Key Players, Games, Stats
What Will Happen, Win Total Prediction
Schedule Analysis
– TCU Previews 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015

2019 Record: 5-7 overall, 3-6 in Big 12
Head Coach: Gary Patterson, 20th year, 172-70
2019 CFN Final Opinion Ranking: 47
2019 CFN Final Season Formula Ranking: 82
2019 CFN Preview Ranking: 21

No one knows what’s going to happen to the 2020 college football season. We’ll take a general look at where each team stands – doing it without spring ball to go by – while crossing our fingers that we’ll all have some well-deserved fun this fall. Hoping you and yours are safe and healthy.

5. College Football News Preview 2020: TCU Horned Frogs Offense 3 Things To Know

It was a better year for the offense than 2018, but it wasn’t good enough. Time and time and time again, the Horned Frogs just needed a little extra something and big drive, and it didn’t happen with six of the seven losses by a touchdown or less.

Former co-offensive coordinator Doug Meacham returns to help out with the receivers, and there are plenty of cooks in the offensive kitchen, but this is still OC Sonny Cumbie’s plane to fly. Any improvement starts with a far more efficient passing attack.


CFN in 60 Video: TCU Horned Frogs Preview
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Sophomore Max Duggan was allowed to battle through his mistakes in an interesting freshman campaign. The 6-2, 190-pounder ran for 555 yards and six scores, and he threw for over 2,000 yards with 15 scores, but he also gave away ten picks and was way too inconsistent – again, he was a freshman.

With Justin Rogers transferring to UNLV, and Mike Collins going off to Rice, 6-4, 218-pound recruit Eli Williams and JUCO transfer Stephon Brown will get long looks for the backup role.

And then there’s the question mark about the receivers with star playmaker Jalen Reagor off being a Philadelphia Eagle. No. 2 target Taye Barber has good wheels, and five top receivers – including five-touchdown TE Pro Wells – after Reagor are back. They should all be stronger if Duggan improves.

The offensive line not only needs replacements, but it has to be stronger. Three starters are gone including both tackles, but there’s decent bulk in the interior and a little bit of versatility depending on where 6-3, 317-pound Quazzel White ends up woking.

The running backs are also a bit of a question mark with leading rusher Darius Anderson gone along with thumping No. 2 man Sewo Olonilua. However, landing superstar recruit Zachary Evans should be an upgrade. Former JUCO transfer Emari Demercado and quick redshirt freshmen Daimarqua Foster and Darwin Barlow will get more work after getting their feet wet.

NEXT: College Football News Preview 2020: TCU Horned Frogs Defense 3 Things To Know