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  2. He's said it multiple times but the first time someone asks him about it he walks it back? Interesting.
  3. Sark is building a team that resembles a Saban led Alabama team on offense with classic Pete K Washington defense full of SEC athletes. There are more studs you left off imo. A healthy Vasek is one. Lefau is WAY underrated and will play in the NFL for many year if he stays healthy. Christian Clark has star ability if he can fully recover. Derrick Williams is a stud when healthy. He has scratched the surface of his potential yet. Cojoe, Kibble, Chatman, and Cruz might end up surprising people too. They all should get drafted (but a couple really good OL might ends up transferring...this team is crazily deep). Sark has this team loaded with future Sunday guys. *Forgot January.
  4. “With the way those two programs are operating right now”
  5. I got some very bad news for him. He’ll be 0-3 against Texas in his career after this season.
  6. Elko on the Lonestar Showdown: "I think it's great that game is back. With the way those two programs are operating right now, that game is going to matter at the end of the year... We certainly look forward to the challenge."
  7. Today
  8. Ryan wingo should pat him on the helmet after he gets one on him.
  9. Lmao congrats will you get to lose to Texas twice with 2 different teams
  10. Arch is going to turn him into a hand towel
  11. @John Burrows The Elk was kind of dismissive to your question 😁
  12. Texas A&M CB Will Lee was asked which opposing field he is most looking forward to playing at: "I can't wait to play at Texas. Me being at K-State, losing there in overtime and just getting back there and just beating them at their home was going to be the best thing to me. That's real exciting for me."
  13. It keeps everybody in the building hungry to keep going. Sark and the players talked a lot Tuesday on how Texas hasn’t arrived yet.
  14. In a weird way, I think the "we haven't reached the mountaintop, yet" is the best thing for Texas. It's allowing this tsunami of momentum to keep growing over years instead of an overnight success, which we don't need to look too far back to see how it worked out for TCU. The build-up is the way to go...like Alabama and Georgia.
  15. Give the man respect! He won as many conference championships as Dennis Franchione, Mike Sherman, Kevin Sumlin, Jimbo and Tickle Me Elmo
  16. It's one thing to aim for the king. It's another to know you've got the tools to get the job done.
  17. On Texas Football coverage of SEC Media Days is brought to you by Vonlane, Flat Creek Estate Winery, Advanced Pain Care and South Point Dodge. *** ATLANTA — The palpable buzz Texas created at SEC Media Days on Tuesday doesn’t guarantee anything regarding the outcome of the 2025 season. Still, coach Steve Sarkisian, quarterback Arch Manning and the Longhorns dominated the conversation before, during and after they made their way through the College Football Hall of Fame. The Texas hype reached a fever pitch before OTF 5-star linebacker Tyler Atkinson (Loganville, Ga./Grayson) went live on ESPN and committed to Texas on the “Pat McAfee Show." James Johnson’s (Cape Coral, Fla./Miami Northwestern) flip from Georgia to the Longhorns a few hours later punctuated a day when Sarkisian’s program went into Kirby Smart’s backyard, planted a flag with authority and headed home with two elite future defensive pieces — the No. 1 recruit in Georgia and a blue-chip defensive lineman previously bound for Smart’s Bulldogs — in the fold. The rivalry between Texas and Georgia is currently a one-sided affair on the field. The Longhorns didn’t find their footing in time to make a 30-15 regular-season loss to the Bulldogs more competitive, and Georgia emerged victorious from a slugfest at Mercedes-Benz Stadium for the SEC title. “To be honest, they out-physicalled us in that first game,” All-American safety Michael Taaffe said Tuesday. “We’ve got to come with a physical nature and a sense of pride knowing that if we want to get to where we want to go in December, we’ve got to beat those guys.” Smart once girded his loins and aimed at supplanting Nick Saban’s Alabama dynasty as college football's new gold standard. With 105 wins, three conference championships and two national titles through nine seasons at his alma mater, Smart’s program is the top dog in the SEC. Sarkisian’s 38 wins are tied with Mack Brown for the most of any Longhorn coach through their first four seasons. Consecutive trips to the College Football Playoff prove Sarkisian has Texas on the verge of entering another golden era on the Forty Acres. Smart and the Bulldogs are the biggest obstacles to Sarkisian and the Longhorns getting over the hump. The schools combined to produce 25 picks in the 2025 NFL Draft, including six first-rounders. With Sarkisian and Smart leading the way, Texas and Georgia are positioned to duke it out head-to-head in a climb for the summit for the foreseeable future. “I think those are the two premier programs and premier coaches in college football,” Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin said Monday. Between his time with Sarkisian under Pete Carroll at USC (2001-03; 2005-06) and on Saban's Crimson Tide staff (2016), Kiffin’s offense went against Smart's defense on the practice field in Tuscaloosa during the 2014 and 2015 seasons. Touting Sarkisian and Smart as “really good friends and really good people,” Kiffin isn’t surprised to see two "phenomenal coaches” guiding organizations that are thriving against the sport's chaotic, uncertain backdrop. “I feel like both these guys really run their program truly as a CEO and know everything that's going on,” Kiffin said. “They're very creative in their ideas and how to navigate through this world we're in now.” Saban once transitioned from the hunter to the hunted when Alabama ended Urban Meyer’s phenomenal Florida run; a 32-13 triumph in the 2009 SEC Championship Game opened the door for Saban to win his first national championship with the Crimson Tide. The target every SEC coach currently has in their crosshairs is the one on Smart’s back, a reality from which the Longhorns aren’t shying away. “We want to play against the best teams in the world,” All-American linebacker Anthony Hill Jr. said Tuesday. “Going against them is a great test for us throughout the season.” After squaring off in Austin and Atlanta, the third meeting between Texas and Georgia in a 392-day window will be the Longhorns’ first-ever game between Sanford Stadium’s hedges. The Bulldogs own college football’s longest active home winning streak, which could reach 37 games by the time the Longhorns make their way to Athens on Nov. 15. “Playing them in the regular season is going to be a really good game,” Hill said. “We know we have to play them at their house, so we're looking forward to that test. I know it's going to be a really tough game for us, but we're ready.” Sarkisian's red-and-black tinted roadblock isn’t unprecedented. He's not the first Texas coach who had to slay a dragon while pursuing championship glory. While an early-season road win over Ohio State established the Longhorns as bona fide title contenders in 2005, Brown had to wait until an October trip to Dallas for the Red River Shootout for a chance to get the monkey off his back. He shed it, snapping a five-game losing streak against Bob Stoops emphatically, with a 45-12 thrashing of Oklahoma, which fast-tracked Texas to the Rose Bowl and a date with destiny against USC. The Longhorns are locked in on their Cotton Bowl rematch with the Buckeyes in Columbus, a chance to make a statement out of the gate in the season opener on Aug. 30. Nevertheless, game No. 10 on the schedule will judge whether Texas is ready for the next step in its journey under Sarkisian or not. For his part, Smart downplayed his budding rivalry with Sarkisian while tipping his cap, ever so slightly, to the Longhorns when he addressed Georgia’s recent success against Texas. “Tremendous respect for him and his program, the job they do,” he said. “To beat good teams, you've got to be a good team. We had a good football team last year. So did they. It's not about us as coaches. It's really about the players and what you believe in.” Hours later, Sarkisian departed the Peach State with two players coveted by Smart, who started the day by mentioning that the Bulldogs value “relationships over transactions” in recruiting. Texas isn’t going away, with Sarkisian running down a laundry list of everything the Longhorns have to offer before declaring Texas to be “an attractive school for players to want to come take a look at.” Whether it’s in recruiting, the NFL draft or between the chalked lines, the newest rivalry in the fight for SEC supremacy is afoot. View full news story
  18. On Texas Football coverage of SEC Media Days is brought to you by Vonlane, Flat Creek Estate Winery, Advanced Pain Care and South Point Dodge. *** ATLANTA — The palpable buzz Texas created at SEC Media Days on Tuesday doesn’t guarantee anything regarding the outcome of the 2025 season. Still, coach Steve Sarkisian, quarterback Arch Manning and the Longhorns dominated the conversation before, during and after they made their way through the College Football Hall of Fame. The Texas hype reached a fever pitch before OTF 5-star linebacker Tyler Atkinson (Loganville, Ga./Grayson) went live on ESPN and committed to Texas on the “Pat McAfee Show." James Johnson’s (Cape Coral, Fla./Miami Northwestern) flip from Georgia to the Longhorns a few hours later punctuated a day when Sarkisian’s program went into Kirby Smart’s backyard, planted a flag with authority and headed home with two elite future defensive pieces — the No. 1 recruit in Georgia and a blue-chip defensive lineman previously bound for Smart’s Bulldogs — in the fold. The rivalry between Texas and Georgia is currently a one-sided affair on the field. The Longhorns didn’t find their footing in time to make a 30-15 regular-season loss to the Bulldogs more competitive, and Georgia emerged victorious from a slugfest at Mercedes-Benz Stadium for the SEC title. “To be honest, they out-physicalled us in that first game,” All-American safety Michael Taaffe said Tuesday. “We’ve got to come with a physical nature and a sense of pride knowing that if we want to get to where we want to go in December, we’ve got to beat those guys.” Smart once girded his loins and aimed at supplanting Nick Saban’s Alabama dynasty as college football's new gold standard. With 105 wins, three conference championships and two national titles through nine seasons at his alma mater, Smart’s program is the top dog in the SEC. Sarkisian’s 38 wins are tied with Mack Brown for the most of any Longhorn coach through their first four seasons. Consecutive trips to the College Football Playoff prove Sarkisian has Texas on the verge of entering another golden era on the Forty Acres. Smart and the Bulldogs are the biggest obstacles to Sarkisian and the Longhorns getting over the hump. The schools combined to produce 25 picks in the 2025 NFL Draft, including six first-rounders. With Sarkisian and Smart leading the way, Texas and Georgia are positioned to duke it out head-to-head in a climb for the summit for the foreseeable future. “I think those are the two premier programs and premier coaches in college football,” Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin said Monday. Between his time with Sarkisian under Pete Carroll at USC (2001-03; 2005-06) and on Saban's Crimson Tide staff (2016), Kiffin’s offense went against Smart's defense on the practice field in Tuscaloosa during the 2014 and 2015 seasons. Touting Sarkisian and Smart as “really good friends and really good people,” Kiffin isn’t surprised to see two "phenomenal coaches” guiding organizations that are thriving against the sport's chaotic, uncertain backdrop. “I feel like both these guys really run their program truly as a CEO and know everything that's going on,” Kiffin said. “They're very creative in their ideas and how to navigate through this world we're in now.” Saban once transitioned from the hunter to the hunted when Alabama ended Urban Meyer’s phenomenal Florida run; a 32-13 triumph in the 2009 SEC Championship Game opened the door for Saban to win his first national championship with the Crimson Tide. The target every SEC coach currently has in their crosshairs is the one on Smart’s back, a reality from which the Longhorns aren’t shying away. “We want to play against the best teams in the world,” All-American linebacker Anthony Hill Jr. said Tuesday. “Going against them is a great test for us throughout the season.” After squaring off in Austin and Atlanta, the third meeting between Texas and Georgia in a 392-day window will be the Longhorns’ first-ever game between Sanford Stadium’s hedges. The Bulldogs own college football’s longest active home winning streak, which could reach 37 games by the time the Longhorns make their way to Athens on Nov. 15. “Playing them in the regular season is going to be a really good game,” Hill said. “We know we have to play them at their house, so we're looking forward to that test. I know it's going to be a really tough game for us, but we're ready.” Sarkisian's red-and-black tinted roadblock isn’t unprecedented. He's not the first Texas coach who had to slay a dragon while pursuing championship glory. While an early-season road win over Ohio State established the Longhorns as bona fide title contenders in 2005, Brown had to wait until an October trip to Dallas for the Red River Shootout for a chance to get the monkey off his back. He shed it, snapping a five-game losing streak against Bob Stoops emphatically, with a 45-12 thrashing of Oklahoma, which fast-tracked Texas to the Rose Bowl and a date with destiny against USC. The Longhorns are locked in on their Cotton Bowl rematch with the Buckeyes in Columbus, a chance to make a statement out of the gate in the season opener on Aug. 30. Nevertheless, game No. 10 on the schedule will judge whether Texas is ready for the next step in its journey under Sarkisian or not. For his part, Smart downplayed his budding rivalry with Sarkisian while tipping his cap, ever so slightly, to the Longhorns when he addressed Georgia’s recent success against Texas. “Tremendous respect for him and his program, the job they do,” he said. “To beat good teams, you've got to be a good team. We had a good football team last year. So did they. It's not about us as coaches. It's really about the players and what you believe in.” Hours later, Sarkisian departed the Peach State with two players coveted by Smart, who started the day by mentioning that the Bulldogs value “relationships over transactions” in recruiting. Texas isn’t going away, with Sarkisian running down a laundry list of everything the Longhorns have to offer before declaring Texas to be “an attractive school for players to want to come take a look at.” Whether it’s in recruiting, the NFL draft or between the chalked lines, the newest rivalry in the fight for SEC supremacy is afoot.
  19. Last year in Fayateville, I was sitting behind this young lady and her son (Arkansas fans). The little boy kept turning around and I ended up chatting with him and his Mom. At HT, I gave him a dollar to do the Hook'em and he did. He was about 6-7 years old. He got a kick out of his Mom not liking him doing it, so of course he kept doing it all game long. After about 10-15 minutes, she could help but laugh. She turned around and told me that the little boy's dad used to play for Arky. She face timed him and you could tell he didn't like it, but he conceded and laughed too. Best dollar I ever spent!
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