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  2. Agreed, but at the time let's not forget that he had not been a head coach in a while and his overall management was hit or miss depending on the outlook you take at his previous stops. IMO he was hired because of his offense. I'd argue that it was right up there with being a manager. If that was the big purpose, I am sure there were more proven candidates at the time.
  3. From my vantage point there is a clear root cause of the downfall of the football program. It is Sark being the God King (simultaneously HC, GM, and OC). I would argue he has clearly failed in all three capacities. - As a GM he turned one of the largest NIL budgets into an exceptionally mediocre roster, particularly on offense - As an OC he has presented an offense that can't run the ball, can't consistently protect the passer, can't score in the red zone, and can barely pick up first downs against top level opponents - As a HC he has a team that is extremely penalty and mistake prone and incapable of complimentary football I don't think Sark is bad at coaching football, but he is just trying to do way too much. And this is with having some family/personal dynamics that likely prevent the level of workaholism seen in some coaches. The solution is pretty obvious: he needs to shed at least one of these responsibilities and ideally two. We need a real NFL style GM that makes NIL decisions independent of the coaching staff. We need a real offensive coordinator that calls plays and ideally even runs his own system and game planning. Sark needs to be a leader that leads and delegates, not micro manage (poorly) every aspect of the program. Is there any hope of this happening? Is the guy introspective enough to recognize these deficiencies and make changes? Will CDC force his hand? Will he go to the NFL and give us a chance to rebuild the program with a new model (and if so would we take that chance, or just hire a new God King?).
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      • Hook 'Em
  4. He isn't a journalist, he is a dumb jock posing as a talking head. When was the last time he made a point that was logical? He is a puppet and reads what someone else puts in front of him. I'm gonna quote John Kennedy, "he isn't the dumbest person in the world but he is hoping the dumbest person in the world doesn't die"
  5. If we hired Sark because of his OC pedigree, then that’s likely a poor choice. It’s that pedigree that gets his name in the hat, but his main purpose always was and should be overall program management.
  6. Bingo! I'll say, the self-scouting at Texas has been majorl6y deficient and that's coming from a guy sitting in an office typing on a computer lol. If memory serves, Baxter was the starter of the Bama 2023, averaged 2.8 YPC. Brooks on the other hand, 4.1 YPC. That always seemed odd to me even going into that game why he was ahead, and I know Saban said he was the best back they played (pass pro, etc.) but on field production at your position matter too.
  7. I don’t doubt he’s “a bright cat,” but sometimes we all are blind to our own deficiencies. I hope he sees them and is more aware of changes than we assume. He probably is; it’s not like I’m anything more than a dumb fan whose job has nothing to do with football or sports. I do think he’s likely headed to the NFL at some point. I just didn’t figure it’d be until Arch was gone. Now…I don’t know.
  8. The fans are being emotional not logical. Yes there are issues on the team and coaches performance. Nothing will happen until after the season when Sark and CDC have their after season evaluation. Until then we must continue to support the team and staff.
  9. If that's the case, we're all having the wrong conversation unfortunately. Still think he's a bright cat and wouldn't torpedo his career. He wants to end up in the NFL regardless of if it's this year or down the road.
  10. I see your point, but I disagree. Smart, Day, etc. don’t hold a candle to the perceived wunderkind status Sark has. He’s made it clear in his press conference that he’s not bringing in someone else to call plays. At this point, his identity is tied to it, so it is what it is. I agree with almost everything else you said. He’s taken us to back-to-back CFP semifinals, but that’s a double-edged sword. From his perspective, that success—fair or not—came because he was the play caller. That’s the lens he’s operating from.
  11. TL: DR 🤘🏻🤘🏼🤘🤘🏽🤘🏾🤘🏿
  12. Keep sark, it’s been a tough year where we didn’t gel the way we all expected it to as soon as we hoped and some areas have drastically underperformed (OL and secondary). I think part of that is the turnover we had last spring in the secondary. Losing Gideon was tough because it forced a change in philosophy. I think the coaches are working to gel too and we’re seeing that. OL is just disappointing at the left guard and all starts there and rolls down. I’m confident it will get fixed and we’ll be better for it. Patience is key especially during tough times. Don’t blow it up, lean in and push through to the other side and trust these guys hate losing way more than we do!
  13. Today
  14. I don’t completely disagree, but my biggest highlight of what you’re saying is I don’t see Sark seeing the shortcomings. I don’t see him changing scheme. I don’t see him altering course. I honestly think that’s the foundation to be disenchanted with the whole thing. Sark believes in his system and has shown no signs it’s going to change. Where’s the hope that the “see it and solve it” we all want is even going to transpire?
  15. I think your post is a strong read on the mood of the fanbase, nothing too shocking, but I am not ready to assume Sark is burned out or halfway out the door. He has always worn losses on his sleeve, and he still recruits and coaches like someone fully committed. Where I disagree a little is on the idea that asking Sark to give up play calling somehow negates the reason he was hired. Yes, he has a strong offensive pedigree. So did Ryan Day. So did Nick Saban and Kirby Smart on the defensive side. They eventually delegated some of their identity work because the program reached a stage where doing everything was no longer efficient. Sark was hired to resurrect and redirect the program, rebuild the roster, and prepare Texas for the SEC. He accomplished that. Now we are in Phase Two. The expectation shifts from building the foundation to winning at a high level and sustaining it. If delegating play calling helps us make that jump, then that is not a betrayal of his identity. It is a natural evolution that elite coaches make when the demands of the job change. I still agree with your bigger point. A full reset would be the worst possible outcome. The best path forward is likely for Sark to stay, adapt his approach, evaluate his staff honestly, and adjust the offense to the weekly reality of SEC competition. I don't think yesterday was any special day or inflection point. This season is what it is. How he responds during this offseason will tell us exactly what the next few years of Texas football will look like.
  16. Morning everybody, It’s been a while since I’ve seen Texas media—both adjacent and direct—this fired up. Winning does that. Between unrest, anger, disappointment, and just general exhaustion, @Bobby Burton made a solid point on Coffee and Football this morning: a lot of Texas fans sound like they’re moving through the seven stages of grief. What bothers me is what the grief is actually about. Is it grieving the death of playoff hopes? Because, while unlikely, ESPN still gives Texas roughly a 1-in-5 shot. To me, this “grief” feels deeper. I liken it to watching your facorite show start to lose it's luster/quality and then end (i.e. the Sopranos or insert yours). Fans, alumni, and boosters have watched two years of high-level football get undercut by issues that were visible early in Sark’s tenure. Year one (of the good stretch) he had matchups fall in his favor—we got second-start Jalen Milroe in Tuscaloosa, we played in a “down” Big 12 and still managed to play one-score games despite massive talent edges, including a loss to OU. Last year followed a similar pattern, just against a better schedule. That’s the rub. As the competition level has gone up, the performance has gone the other way, with this year being a clear indicator. Pair that with a recruiting class that feels top-heavy, and it points in a few different directions: Status quo: this is just a down year. Coaches are mentally checked out and waiting for the axe. Or worse: Sark himself has one foot out the door. I know the mods are preaching “pump the brakes,” and I respect that. But I can’t shake the feeling that Sark might pull a Chip Kelly—NFL, not Ohio State. And with Desmond Howard living in South Florida plus the Dolphins’ rumored frustration with McDaniel… who knows. The bigger issue is this: people saying “just hire an OC” are missing the point. If that were an easy fix, then why hire Sark in the first place? He wasn’t brought here to be a detached CEO-type. He was hired because of his offense. If we suddenly don’t like that, then the real problem is much deeper. A leopard doesn’t change its spots, and asking a coach you hired for his offensive identity to abandon it is unrealistic. The second major issue: fans calling for Sark to leave either weren’t around or forgot the last decade wandering through the desert. Knee-jerk reactions to losses are always worse than the loss itself, but Saturday’s felt justified. Still, wanting a coach gone without thinking through the consequences is ridiculous. If Sark left, who exactly is the replacement? – Marcus Freeman? An Ohio State alum who would bolt the second Day leaves for the NFL (and that’s very plausible if they lose to Michigan). – Saban? No. – Urban? Not reliable. – Kiffin? Maybe, but doubtful, will probably be coaching in Baton Rouge, Gainesville, or Oxford; not Austin. – Under the Radar Guy? Really want to go down that route right now? None of these are realistic. It’s all hypothetical anyway, but Sark’s body language, tone, and comments after the game genuinely felt like someone who’s exhausted with this whole thing. Hard to blame him based on everything above. So where does that leave us? Road One (My Preferred): Sark Stays No “real OC” hire. It’s not happening. Sark’s postseason audit focuses on fixing his own system and identifying why it isn’t translating to SEC-level games. Position coaches get evaluated honestly—upgrade or retain, no sentimentality. Attack the portal proactively, not reactively. Development matters, but never again should we rely on it in rooms short on production or experience. Biggest hope: some shifts in scheme/philosophy. For a guy who gameplans weekly like it’s the NFL, he sure clings to a system that stalls. Road Two (Handbags and Hand Grenades) Sark leaves for the NFL. New coach, new staff. Player retention becomes unpredictable. Portal use skyrockets. Recruiting turns into pure guesswork. The entire program goes into flux. Whatever actually happens, I think we’ll look back on yesterday as the moment the wheels started rolling down one of these two paths. Would love for other OTF members to contribute their thoughts. Sometimes the board feels so reliant on our great MODs to foster any dialogue amongst us.
  17. Bo Ogden on OTF: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UA3Mvxp-C5s&t=1s
  18. Joe Sterling on OTF: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3XWEyNSg40A
  19. Sean Miller Talks 2026 Class *** Texas MBB head coach Sean Miller spoke with the media on Monday, where he was able to share thoughts on his signing day class for the first time. 6–6 CG Bo Ogden – Austin (TX) Westlake High "Bo, I talked about him the other day. Super excited to have Bo. He is going to blaze his own trail at The University of Texas. He had plenty of other great opportunities and choices that he could have taken advantage of. We are thrilled that he decided to stay at home. But Bo's size at 6-foot-6 and his skill level, there aren't a lot of guys who know how to play the game and stand 6-foot-6, who can shoot the ball, pass the ball and do the things that he can do. And I do believe this, I think he has a healthy chip on his shoulder and a toughness about him that will be every bit as important as his jump shot once he is in college." 6–4 CG Joe Sterling – Studio City (Calif.) Harvard Westlake "Joe comes from a winning pedigree. I think the thing that Joe wanted the opportunity to do is to play at the very highest level of college basketball and compete in the SEC. He is somebody that loves the game – he comes from winning pedigree and a winning background, especially at his high school program. He is an excellent shooter and is somebody who could play both guard positions – the one and two." 6–9, C Coleman Elkins – Austin (TX), Blair Academy "Coleman, he really came onto our radar in the summer. Just watching him at Blair Academy, I know that he is an Austin native. There are a lot of ways to build a program – build a championship level program and I think one of the things that we present to him is development. To take the early time here at The University of Texas and to get bigger and stronger, to work every day and get better playing at a very high level in practice. So that you pave the way for one day your time will come. That was more of the conversation with him. But his skill level at 6–8, or 6-foot-9 and where he is today, in a couple of short years, if he is a key contributor to a lot of things here." *** Miller: "We are excited about that group and potentially excited about adding more to it." Obviously, Texas added a commitment and signature from Melissa 6–5 CG Austin Goosby Monday afternoon, improving the class number to four.
  20. Don’t forget to start the other games thread for the peak MAC games tonight
  21. If Sark stays, changes need to be made and we need to win. What Kirby did was trash/cheap BUT I wish our coach had some of that in him . Sark doesn’t have that “grit, grind, and punish” and doesn’t go for the jugular against anybody. I think you have to have some of that to survive in the SEC. If Sark leaves, we need to make the right decision and not go backwards.
  22. Negotiations outside of a College Station cemetery?
  23. I am a fan of his. Definitely think he has a future in the SEC.
  24. Don't even think about it for a second
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