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  2. This is absolutely insane
  3. Not sure this guy would be a good fit for us TBH. Stuff like this strikes me as someone who is chasing notoriety versus wins. Just my opinion, could be dead wrong.
  4. Harold Perkins in the portal? Injury did a number on him man. But he was fun his freshman year
  5. Spectrum is good for at least two outages a year
  6. major outage
  7. what am i missing?
  8. JUST CMON MAN!!!
  9. Great topic. Does J.T. Sanders start and breakout in 2023? I bet the answer is likely not.
  10. Nic Anderson WR from LSU is in the portal.
  11. They just took Kaden Scherer. Who is very similarly in body type and on-field projections.
  12. Wingo posted “run it back” so it looks like he’s signed🤘
  13. This is an AI generated pic I had Copilot make putting her in a Texas bandana at a night game at DKR.
  14. Gunner, our GSP, who crossed the rainbow bridge this past summer. Hell of a dog! RIP
  15. is that why they have the looks of terror?
  16. Aspen, living her best life!
  17. @Bobby Burton @Gerry Hamilton @CJ Vogel @Jeff Howe This is a horrible stat for the NCAA and a lot of players are going to be left out of college this year.
  18. Stupid dog doesn't bark
  19. There has never been parity in college football. The current situation has actually allowed the college football with the most losses all time in D1 to compete for a national championship Monday night.
  20. Why Scarcity, Not Panic, Is Driving the Strategy The transfer portal right now is chaotic, loud, and unforgiving. Even programs with money and brand power are scrambling. Texas has taken a few hits this window, but nothing that suggests panic or loss of direction. What looks like instability from the outside is really controlled risk management. This is not a staff reacting emotionally. It is a staff allocating resources with a clear timeline and a clear objective. Losing young offensive linemen always feels bad in the short term. Depth matters in the trenches, and nobody likes seeing bodies walk out the door. But the real question Texas is answering is simple. Can you afford to carry a lineman who is not ready to play and cannot be paid like a backup. That question does not disappear when a player transfers. Wherever he lands will face the same math. Can he sit without costing too much. Can he play without hurting the unit. Those are not value judgments. They are roster economics. Texas is clearly prioritizing the next season as the focal point. Once that decision is made, everything else follows. You do not allocate major resources to developmental players when the immediate goal is protecting an elite quarterback and stabilizing the offense. Where the Offensive Line Actually Stands Post departures, the offensive line room looks like this. One veteran interior player who provides stability and flexibility Two legitimate starting tackles A few players with upside but uncertainty due to readiness or health One or two usable depth options right now The rest are developmental pieces or longer-term projects If Texas had to line up tomorrow, it would work… as long as nobody sneezes, twists an ankle, or gets called for holding. Add one legit tackle or guard and you can reshuffle the deck chairs into something that actually floats. Even then, the margin for error is still thin enough to read a playbook through. This isn’t being ignored by the staff; it’s exactly why they’re shopping carefully instead of panic-buying the first lineman with a pulse.
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