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Posted

With their season on the line, the Texas Longhorns stood tall and delivered in Dallas.

Behind an efficient, methodical offense and a defense that feasted on No. 5 Oklahoma’s one-dimensional offense, Texas claimed the Golden Hat for the third time in four years by winning a slugfest with the Sooners, 23-6.

The conditions weren’t ripe for an aesthetically pleasing performance. Nevertheless, the Longhorns won the Red River Shootout by winning the battles they needed to win.

Quintrevion Wisner churned out a game-high 94 yards on 22 carries, helping Texas (4-2, 1-1 SEC) finish with 136 yards (3.9 yards per carry) on the ground. Pete Kwiatkowski’s defense held Oklahoma (5-1, 1-1) to 48 net yards (1.6 yards per attempt); in the last 29 series meetings, the team that wins the rushing yardage battle is 26-2 (the 2006 game ended with both teams rushing for 124 yards).

The Longhorns intercepted three John Mateer passes, part of a rocky return from thumb surgery in his first Red River Shootout. Mateer went 20-for-38 through the air for 202 yards, and after completing seven of his first 11 attempts, only 13 of Mateer’s last 28 passes found the hands of one of his teammates.

While the Longhorns failed to score on their three takeaways (although Michael Taaffe came painfully close to a scoop-and-score touchdown on a botched lateral in the fourth quarter), Ryan Niblett’s 75-yard punt return is the kind of non-offensive score a team needs when it’s looking for a spark.

Saturday’s win wasn’t a fluke. With its back against the wall, Texas played with a necessary sense of urgency and dominated the Sooners in every phase of the game.

***

Brent Venables has nobody to blame but himself for Oklahoma leaving points on the field at the end of the first half.

There were 32 seconds on the clock when Jelani McDonald and Zina Umeozulu tackled Isaiah Sategna at the end of a catch-and-run completion for eight yards. The Sooners let 12 seconds tick off the clock before calling a timeout, facing third-and-2 at the Texas 38 with 10 seconds on the clock.

Coming out of the timeout, instead of kicking the field goal, Mateer rolled to his right before throwing against the grain. Malik Muhammad’s second interception of the half ensured Mason Shipley’s 22-yard field goal at the end of a 12-play, 75-yard drive would be the last score for either side before halftime.

For the first time all season, the Longhorns executed better than their opponent at the end of the half.

***

Capitalizing on the momentum, Arch Manning (21-for-27, 166 yards and one touchdown; 34 yards rushing on four carries) and the offense opened the third quarter with their best drive of the season.

The 14-play, 75-yard march took 7:11 off the clock and ended when Manning converted on third down for the fourth time on the scoring march, finding DeAndre Moore Jr. (50 yards on three receptions) in the back of the end zone for a 12-yard touchdown.

How clutch was Manning on Saturday? He was 11-for-12 for 117 yards with a passing touchdown on third down, also sprinting for a 29-yard run in the fourth quarter to help seal the win.

Behind Manning, Texas finished the game 10-for-17 on third down, a tremendous finish after going 2-for-6 on third down with an average to-go distance of 13.2 yards in the first half.

***

Wisner was a warrior on Saturday.

Along with what he did on the ground, he tallied 34 yards on five receptions, including third-down catches of 13 and 19 yards in the second half. The junior running back put his body on the line in his third Red River Shootout, maximizing runs and making critical plays when the offense needed someone to come through.

***

Even on a day when Oklahoma recorded 12 tackles for loss, the Texas offensive line rebounded nicely from last week’s debacle against Florida. The Longhorns ran for 94 yards on 21 carries in the second half, with Nick Brooks and D.J. Campbell getting a push between the tackles at a level the line hasn’t generated against a defense with a pulse.

The Sooner defensive line might be the best in the SEC, possibly the country. Still, there was a point in the second half when Texas started leaning on Oklahoma, keeping the offense ahead of the chains; 68 percent of the offense’s snaps occurred on non-passing downs.

***

After being docked 25 yards on three penalties in the first quarter, the offense went without an accepted penalty the rest of the way.

***

In winning back-to-back games in the series for the first time since 2008 and 2009, Texas has held Oklahoma to 137 net rushing yards (1.98 yards per attempt) in a span of eight quarters.

***

You have to earn the right to rush the quarterback. The Longhorns did on Saturday, sacking Mateer five times with Colin Simmons (2.5) and Brad Spence (two) leading the way.

With the Sooners unable to run the ball, Texas got to tee off on Mateer. When the Longhorns could utilize their pass rushers, Kwiatkowski let the dogs off the leash and let them attack.

***

Texas held the Sooners to a 1-for-7 effort on third down in the second half on a 6-for-17 day. Other than a few early big plays by Oklahoma (3-for-5 on third down in the first quarter), the Longhorns got off the field on schedule en route to the win.

***

Before worrying about next week’s trip to Kentucky or how the second half of the season might unfold, the Texas faithful needs to savor this one.

It’s been tough to find silver linings in a largely uninspiring five-game stretch to open the season. In the wake of the Florida loss, the outlook was bleak.

Saturday’s win is a reminder that a victory over the Sooners can give everyone with skin in the game an emphatic shot in the arm. It can be a tremendous springboard into the remainder of the schedule, providing hope for the rest of the way.

In the big picture, Venables has a 1-3 record against Texas, with Sarkisian winning those three games by an average of 32 points. Additionally, in Sarkisian’s three wins over the Sooners (3-2 record), Oklahoma hasn’t scored an offensive touchdown.

It was a huge win for Sarkisian, who picked up his fourth victory over a top-10 opponent while leading the Longhorns. Winning Saturday’s game means everything the Longhorns hoped to accomplish in 2025 is still on the table.

The bottom line is that Texas responded in a must-win game. As a result, the Longhorns are alive to fight another Saturday in the SEC with a chance to have their goals in front of them when they get back to Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium at the end of the month.


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Posted

So good!! Great write up Jeff!! It’s great to see the potential of this team when they play complimentary football. The punt return was so fun and it was even sweeter watching us get AFTER Mateer!! Hook’em baby!!

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Posted
24 minutes ago, Jeff Howe said:

There was more I wanted to write, but I'll save it for later.

This one felt good.

The stats on this game do the offense justice.  They fought their butts off.  

It always feels amazing to send the trailer park back to oklahoma crying.   I cant imagi e losing a game like this and then realizing i still have to go live in oklahoma.

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Posted (edited)

After first quarter, offensive line looked pretty decent (Hutson is still really bad). Sark’s play calling is still infuriating. Defense was unreal. 
 

Love to win Red River.

Edited by JMarquette
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Posted
18 minutes ago, alrightalrightalright said:

Great write up, Jeff. Zero TDs allowed in Sark’s 3 wins can’t be taken for granted. When’s the last time a Texas head coach even went 3-1 over 4 years against the Sooners (rhetorical)

Venables is a Dillon Gabriel late-game drive away from being 0-for-Texas as OU coach.

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Posted

Great win for the Horns well deserved!

Seemed like Texas ditched the motion for the most part and lined up and kicked out"s ass;

Scary when they put it together 

Posted
4 minutes ago, Jim said:

Great win for the Horns well deserved!

Seemed like Texas ditched the motion for the most part and lined up and kicked out"s ass;

Scary when they put it together 

Texas had motion and shifts throughout the game.  Perhaps you are thinking of the NoU offense??

Posted
32 minutes ago, alrightalrightalright said:

Great write up, Jeff. Zero TDs allowed in Sark’s 3 wins can’t be taken for granted. When’s the last time a Texas head coach even went 3-1 over 4 years against the Sooners (rhetorical)

Jeff's knowledge and writing is second to none. Phenomenal 🤘

Had a feeling PK would answer the bell after last weeks aberration.

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Posted

Sweat my ass off at the game and it was so worth it. 
 

Thank you defense. Thank you Tre Wisner. Thank you Arch. It wasn’t perfect but it was a helluva lot of fun.

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