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    Jeff Howe
    Protecting the football is something Arch Manning did at an elite level in 2025.
    While logging 840 snaps (per Pro Football Focus) and serving as arguably the identity of the Texas offense, Manning accounted for just seven turnovers, all of which were interceptions. With that said, five of those interceptions came in the team’s first five games (one each against Ohio State, San Jose State and UTEP and two against Florida).
    In the team’s four wins over opponents that ended the season ranked in the Associated Press Top 25 (No. 8 Texas A&M, No. 13 Oklahoma, No. 15 Vanderbilt and No. 21 Michigan), Manning accounted for 10 touchdowns (seven passing and three rushing) and no turnovers.
    To better frame what Manning accomplished, it's worth noting that the year-over-year improvement in ball security from the quarterback position was staggering.
    After Quinn Ewers accounted for 17 turnovers (12 interceptions and five missed fumbles) in 14 games in 2024 (an average of 1.2 turnovers per game and a turnover every 53 snaps played), Manning’s turnover averages per game (0.54) and per snaps played (one every 120 snaps). With Manning keeping the football away from opponents in the second half of the season, the Longhorns committed the fifth-fewest turnovers in FBS (nine total) in 2025 while tying for fifth nationally in turnover margin (plus-14 overall and 1.08 per game).
    Manning became the first Longhorn quarterback since Sam Ehlinger in 2020 to lead the position in snaps played while going through an entire season without losing a fumble. However, Manning, who recovered his own fumble against San Jose State and got an assist from Quintrevion Wisner, who recovered a Manning fumble in the Georgia game, played 155 more snaps than Ehlinger did in a season shortened to 10 games (including the Alamo Bowl against Colorado, of which Ehlinger didn’t play in the second half) by the pandemic.
    Furthermore, Manning (2025), Ehlinger (2019 and 2020) and Shane Buechele (2017) are the only three Texas quarterbacks in the PFF era (since 2014) to log at least 500 snaps at quarterback without losing a fumble. Among the quarterbacks who've played at least 500 snaps in a season for the Longhorns over the last 12 seasons, only Ehlinger and Buechele had seasons with fewer turnovers accounted for than Manning’s seven giveaways in his first full season as the program’s starter.
     
    Turnovers by Texas QBs since 2014 (minimum 500 snaps, per PFF)
    Shane Buechele (2017) — 4 (all interceptions)
    Sam Ehlinger (2020) — 5 (all interceptions)
    Sam Ehlinger (2018) — 6 (five interceptions and one lost fumble)
    Arch Manning (2025) — 7 (all interceptions)
    Quinn Ewers (2023) — 7 (six interceptions and one lost fumble)
    Quinn Ewers (2022) — 7 (six interceptions and one lost fumble)
    Jerrod Heard (2015) — 7 (five interceptions and two lost fumbles)
    Sam Ehlinger (2017) — 9 (seven interceptions and five lost fumbles)
    Casey Thompson (2021) — 10 (nine interceptions and one lost fumble)
    Sam Ehlinger (2019) — 10 (all interceptions)
    Shane Buechele (2016) — 12 (11 interceptions and one lost fumble)
    Tyrone Swoopes (2014) — 14 (11 interceptions and three lost fumbles)
    Quinn Ewers (2024) — 17 (12 interceptions and five lost fumbles)
     
    Of those 13 seasons, Manning’s 0.54 turnovers per game rank fourth behind Ehlinger in 2018 (0.43), Buechele in 2017 (0.44) and Ehlinger in 2020 (0.50). Ehlinger’s 2018 and 2020 seasons are the only two of the 13 in which a Texas quarterback had a better turnover-to-snap ratio than Manning’s 120-to-1 ratio (Ehlinger averaged one turnover every 163.2 snaps in 2018 and one turnover every 137 snaps in 2020).
    How Manning protected the football is even more impressive when considering that he was one of the most pressured quarterbacks in the country.
    No SEC quarterback felt heat from opposing defenses more than Manning in 2025, with foes pressuring him a league-high 165 times. All told, Manning was pressured on 35.6 percent of his dropbacks, which ranked sixth among SEC quarterbacks who were pressured on at least 15 dropbacks last season.
    Along with displaying top-notch ball security, Manning’s 13.3-percent pressure-to-sack rate tied him with Vanderbilt’s Diego Pavia for the sixth-best percentage in the SEC. Texas A&M’s Marcel Reed (11.5 percent) and Trinidad Chambliss of Ole Miss (12.6) were the only SEC quarterbacks with better pressure-to-sack rates on 200 or more dropbacks.
    Manning’s scrambling ability makes the conditions ripe for him to keep his turnovers down in 2026. He established himself as one of the top scrambling quarterbacks in the country last season, ranking 14th in FBS with 349 scramble yards.
    When you combine Manning's gradually improved decision-making throughout the season with his elite scrambling ability and the instincts to prevent pressure from turning into sacks, he has a chance to continue being one of the best quarterbacks in the country at taking care of the football.

    Jeff Howe
    HOUSTON — A seven-run third inning highlighted No. 3 Texas wrapping up the BRUCE BOLT College Classic with a 10-3 win over Ohio State at Daikin Park on Sunday.
    After cruising to an 8-1 victory over No. 9 Coastal Carolina on Friday and holding off Baylor for a 5-2 win on Saturday, the Longhorns pounded out 12 hits on Sunday, including a two-run home run from Temo Becerra in the top of the third. Multi-hit games by Casey Borba (3-for-3 with a double, two walks and a run scored), Ethan Mendoza (2-for-5 with an RBI and a run scored) and Jonah Williams (2-for-4 with an RBI, a double and a run scored) helped Texas (11-0) continue an unbeaten start to the 2026 season.
    Here’s how the Longhorns ended a perfect weekend on the diamond in Houston:
     
    BOTTOM 2: Texas 0, Ohio State 0
    A walk and a hard-hit single back up the middle of the diamond put two Buckeyes on base with no outs against Dylan Volantis. Thankfully, the sophomore southpaw buckled down and struck out three consecutive Ohio State batters to get out of the jam.
    Volantis rallied back by using his slider and the changeup he added to his arsenal of pitches in the offseason. The three strikeouts he recorded came on hitters swinging aimlessly at two-strike pitches, getting the game to the third inning with the Longhorns looking for a spark at the plate.
     
    TOP 3: Texas 1, Ohio State 0
    Casey Borba’s leadoff walk set the table for Jonah Williams to kickstart a big inning for the Longhorns. Williams went the other way for a double, ripping a 2-1 offering from Pierce Herrenbruck into the corner in left field.
    After Josh Livingston drew a walk, Ethan Mendoza lined a single to center, scoring Borba for the first run of the game.
     
    TOP 3: Texas 2, Ohio State 0
    Carson Tinney got jammed and sent a slow-rolling grounder to first base, but it allowed Williams to score from third. That put runners in scoring position for Aiden Robbins with one out.
     
    TOP 3: Texas 3, Ohio State 0
    A sky-high pop-up off Robbins’ bat kept drifting toward shallow center field. With the roof open at Daikin Park, second baseman Henry Kaczmar lost the ball in the sun, causing it to drop into the outfield between three Buckeyes.
    It was scored as a single for Robbins, with Livingston scoring and Mendoza advancing to third base.
     
    TOP 3: Texas 4, Ohio State 0
    Facing Adrian Rodriguez with runners on first and third and one out, Herrenbruck’s wild pitch brought Mendoza home for the fourth Longhorn run of the inning.
     
    TOP 3: Texas 5, Ohio State
    Herrenbruck’s once promising afternoon ended in disaster, with Rodriguez’s RBI double serving as the final blow that knocked the Buckeyes’ starting pitcher out of the game.
    Rodriguez sent a 2-2 pitch from Herrenbruck screaming down the left-field line, over the head of third baseman Maddix Simpson. Herrenbruck left the game responsible for the runner on second (Rodriguez), while righty Owen Graff was called upon to stop the bleeding.
     
    TOP 3: Texas 7, Ohio State 0
    Temo Becerra poured salt into the open wound with a two-run home run into the Crawford Boxes in left field. Becerra’s 354-foot bomb was his third of the weekend, all of which went up and over the wall in left field.
    When the dust settled on the top of the third inning, the Longhorns torched the Buckeyes for seven runs on five hits and left two runners on base.
     
    TOP 4: Texas 7, Ohio State 0
    Graf was ejected after sounding off toward Rodriguez following an inning-ending strikeout. Rodriguez then changed words with Simpson, which led to a brief verbal confrontation near home plate, but nothing came of it after cooler heads prevailed.
     
    BOTTOM 5: Texas 7, Ohio State 1
    Righty Ryan Zamora kept the Longhorns off the scoreboard in the top of the inning, striking out Livingston after Borba and Williams attempted to start a two-out rally with back-to-back singles.
    Volantis, who retired 10 in a row before hitting catcher Grant Mangrum, got into trouble with one out. CJ Reid’s double to right field put runners on first and third and Volantis’ 3-2 pitch to Simpson was wild, allowing Mangrum to score the first run of the game for the Buckeyes.
    After striking out center fielder Miles Vandenheuvel and walking shortstop Lee Ellis to load the bases, Jim Schlossnagle gave Volantis the hook. With 91 pitches under his belt, Volantis departed with the bases loaded and two outs in favor of Brett Crossland.
     
    BOTTOM 5: Texas 7, Ohio State 1
    Crossland induced a ground ball to first base off the bat of designated hitter Mason Eckelman to get out of the inning. Borba flipped the ball to Crossland, who stepped on the bag to end the threat by the Buckeyes.
     
    BOTTOM 6: Texas 7, Ohio State 2
    Right fielder Noah Furcht took Crossland deep to left field, putting one in the Crawford Boxes to lead off the inning. Thankfully, Crossland minimized the damage and got through the sixth with three consecutive outs.
     
    TOP 7: Texas 7, Ohio State 2
    With one out, a walk drawn by Becerra and a single through the right side of the infield by Anthony Pack Jr. chased Zamora. Andrew Edrington got Borba to pop one down the line in right, but the ball dropped for a single to load the bases.
     
    TOP 7: Texas 8, Ohio State 2
    Williams’ ground ball up the middle was scored as a fielder’s choice, with Borba getting rung up via a force at second base. Still, Becerra scored from third, adding to the Longhorn lead.
     
    TOP 7: Texas 9, Ohio State 2
    Pack scored easily on Ashton Larson’s pinch-hit single to center field. Even with Williams back in the lineup as an everyday position player, the Longhorns are developing multiple options with the designated hitter spot and for pinch-hitters late in games between Larson, Livingston and Presley Courville.
     
    BOTTOM 7: Texas 9, Ohio State 3
    Brody Walls hit Vandenheuvel with one out, which led to the third run of the game for the Buckeyes, when Ellis ripped a triple to right-center field. Pack had a hard time playing the ball off the mesh wall, something Major League outfielders who lack experience with the unique wall configuration in the left-field power alley at Daikin Park deal with.
    Regardless, Walls battled back and held the runner at third by getting Eckelman to pop one up in foul territory down the first-base side of the infield, where he was retired by Borba.
     
    TOP 8: Texas 9, Ohio State 3
    The fifth Buckeye pitcher of the game, Jake Michalak, got himself into a bind upon toeing the rubber. A throwing error allowed Tinney to reach base and consecutive walks issued to Robbins and Rodriguez loaded the bases with no outs.
     
    TOP 8: Texas 10, Ohio State 3
    Becerra’s third RBI of the game was a sacrifice fly to center field. The ball was hit deep enough to get Tinney home, pushing the Longhorn lead back to a seven-run advantage.
    Unfortunately, that was the only run Texas pushed across after loading the bases with nobody out. Pack struck out and Robbins was tagged out trying to score on a ball in the dirt, ending the inning with runners stranded in scoring position.
     
    BOTTOM 9: Texas 10, Ohio State 3
    Cal Higgins sandwiched two singles between his second strikeout of the inning before hitting Eckelman to load the bases with two outs. Hudson Hamilton was among the pitchers who got up and started getting loose in the Longhorn bullpen with the Buckeyes threatening.
     
    BOTTOM 9: Texas 10, Ohio State 3
    Higgins got Furcht to hit one on the ground to short. Rodriguez flipped the ball to Mendoza for the out at second to end the game.

    Jeff Howe
    COLLEGE STATION, Texas — With Tramon Mark (a game-high 23 points) and Jordan Pope (17 points) combining for 40 points, and Sean Miller's team coming through with arguably its best defensive performance of the season, Texas took a huge step toward securing an at-large berth in the NCAA Tournament with a 76-70 road win over Texas A&M at Reed Arena on Saturday.
    The Longhorns held the Aggies 18 points under their season scoring average (88.7 points per game) on their second-worst shooting performance (38.6) in an SEC game this season, including a 5-for-19 effort from 3-point range (tying a season low for 3-pointers made by Bucky McMillan's squad). Texas (18-11, 9-7 SEC) dominated Texas A&M (19-10, 9-7) on the glass to the tune of a 41-32 edge (the third-most rebounds by a Texas A&M opponent this season) en route to a victory that guarantees the Longhorns of finishing at least .500 in conference play.
    While both clubs remained among the last four teams safely in the field of 68 just after tipping off, according to ESPN's Joe Lunardi, Texas now has a chance to finish in the top eight of the conference standings and get a bye in the SEC Tournament with a win over Oklahoma in next Saturday's regular-season finale at Moody Center.
    Here's how the Longhorns avoided a third straight loss and gave themselves some breathing room with regular-season games left on the schedule:
     
    FIRST HALF
     
    Texas 7, Texas A&M 3 (15:55)
    The Longhorns led the Aggies by four at the first media timeout, a position in which they were highly fortunate to find themselves.
    Daylin Swain and Matas Vokietaitis both picked up two fouls by the 16:35 mark, with Vokietaitis needing to be lifted for Nic Codie 63 seconds into the game. With five team fouls at the game’s first stoppage, the Longhorns’ tough challenge of dealing with the size of the Aggies' front court, due to Lassina Traore missing a sixth straight game with a knee issue, became even more daunting.
     
    Texas 16, Texas A&M 10 (11:21)
    Avoiding another team foul after Swain picked up his second, the Longhorns got huge three-point plays from Tramon Mark and Chendall Weaver to go into the second media timeout of the half up by six.
    With Traore out and Vokietaitis on the bench, the Aggies went after Codie and Cam Heide while hunting paint points. Credit Codie, however, for making two tremendous defensive plays to deny Rashaun Agee points, including a swipe of the ball to send it out of bounds when Agee had his eyes on a dunk down the right side of the lane.
    Texas A&M opened the game just 3-for-13 from the field. That was due in part to how well Texas defended, especially without Swain and Vokietaitis on the court.
    Mark’s block of an Ali Dibba 3-pointer to force a shot-clock violation highlighted a good stretch of play on the defensive end of the floor by the Longhorns.
     
    Texas 20, Texas A&M 15 (7:42)
    The Aggies entered the third media timeout of the half in a 1-for-8 shooting slump, including five consecutive missed shots, which led to a 3:13 drought without a field goal. Accounting for three of the Longhorns’ six blocked shots, Codie did his part to help Texas own a 10-4 edge in points in the paint.
     
    Texas 29, Texas A&M 28 (3:13)
    A 3:31 scoreless stretch and an 11-0 run by the Aggies ended with a driving bucket by Swain at the 5:09 mark of the half. Even though Jordan Pope had a 3-pointer changed to a 2-point field goal after a video review, Texas outscored the Aggies 9-4 heading into the third media timeout, regaining a one-point lead in the process.
     
    Texas A&M 30, Texas 29 (HALFTIME)
    While the Longhorns missed their last six shots of the half, the Aggies weren’t much better, going 1-for-7 from the field. Nevertheless, Agee’s bucket inside the final minute of the half put Texas A&M on top heading into the locker room.
    Agee (14 points on 5-for-9 shooting) carried the Aggies offensively, with the rest of the team shooting the ball at a 5-for-24 clip. Texas got 11 points in 11 minutes from Swain (4-for-7 shooting), but the rest of the squad combined to go 7-for-23.
    Texas A&M only turned eight Longhorn turnovers into three points at the other end of the floor. That, along with the Aggies owning just a 5-3 edge in bench scoring, helped Texas survive the early foul woes, with Swain and Vokietaitis starting the second half with two fouls apiece.
     
    SECOND HALF
     
    Texas 37, Texas A&M 34 (15:57)
    The offensive struggles continued for both sides to start the second half. Nevertheless, Mark’s elbow jumper before the first media timeout, his second bucket since coming out of the locker room, put the Longhorns up by three.
    Texas was doing what it needed to in a slow, grind-it-out kind of game, owning a plus-four edge in rebounding (28-24) and keeping pace with Texas A&M in paint scoring (20 points for both sides).
     
    Texas 42, Texas A&M 36 (14:15)
    A 3-pointer by Pope and Mark finding Vokietaitis for a transition dunk after Swain rebounded a missed 3-point attempt by Agee extended the Texas lead to six, prompting Bucky McMillan to burn a timeout to talk things over with his Aggies. A 6-for-13 effort from the field helped the Longhorns stay in front of a Texas A&M squad that was 3-for-7 (0-for-2 from 3-point range) shooting the ball to start the second half.
     
    Texas 46, Texas A&M 42 (11:22)
    Marcus Hill’s stretch of six consecutive points for the Aggies gave him 17 points heading into the under-12 media timeout, which was triggered when the Longhorns committed a shot-clock violation. With a combined 33 points on 13-for-21 shooting, Hill (7-for-9) and Agee (16 points on 6-for-12 shooting) were carrying Texas A&M offensively.
     
    Texas 55, Texas A&M 51 (6:42)
    A friendly bounce helped Simeon Wilcher convert a 3-pointer in transition to put the Longhorns up by seven. But his block of Hill's shot attempt in the lane led to Mark finishing in traffic, which made just as big a difference in Texas maintaining a lead over the Aggies.
     
    Texas 63, Texas A&M 56 (3:52)
    With Swain and Vokietaitis in foul trouble (four each), Heide and Mark made critical shots on consecutive possessions to help the Longhorns stem the tide.
     
    After the Aggies cut their deficit to three, Heide’s 3-pointer from the wing made it a six-point game again, 60-54. Mark answered two made free throws by Rylan Griffen with a 3-pointer in front of the Texas bench with the shot clock winding down at the 4:14 mark.
     
    That’s where things stood coming out of the last media timeout of regulation. Swain and Vokietaitis checked back in for the closing minutes, with the Longhorns looking to secure their ninth SEC victory.
     
    Texas 67, Texas A&M 58 (2:47)
    A baseline drive for two by Weaver and a steal by Pope that led to a pair of free throws for Mark at the other end put the Longhorns up by nine, their largest lead of the game.
     
    Texas 71, Texas A&M 62 (53.3 seconds)
    Griffen’s missed 3-pointer with 1:41 to go after Dibba picked Swain’s pocket prevented what would’ve been a huge momentum swing going the Aggies’ way. After Swain rebounded the miss (Texas A&M was 3-for-16 from 3-point range at this point), Miller called a timeout with 1:25 remaining in regulation, setting up Pope’s short-corner jumper with 1:14 to go and the shot clock winding down.
     
    Texas 75, Texas A&M 65 (21.5 seconds)
    After a 3-pointer by Griffen, the Longhorns successfully inbounded the ball, which eventually led to a foul and two free throws for Mark. He converted the two-shot situation with Texas in the double bonus, and a bucket by Isaacs and a subsequent timeout by McMillan proved to be too little, too late.
     
    Texas 76, Texas A&M 70 (FINAL)
    The late surge by the Aggies was all for naught. Mark’s game-high 23 points, Pope’s 17-point afternoon, Swain’s 11-point, 10-rebound effort, a 15-for-16 performance from the foul line and a defensive effort that saw Texas A&M go 23-for-60 (38.3 percent, including 5-for-19 from beyond the arc) carried the Longhorns to a résumé-boosting win in Aggieland.

    Jeff Howe
    After having its five-game winning streak snapped, Texas returns to Moody Center to face arguably its toughest test of the 2025-26 season when it hosts No. 7 Florida on Wednesday (6 p.m., ESPN2). While the Longhorns remain on the right side of the NCAA Tournament bubble, a win over the Gators would likely lock Texas (17-10, 8-6 SEC) into the field of 68.
    Getting by Florida (21-6, 12-2), which sits atop the SEC standings and enters Wednesday’s game on a seven-game winning streak, will take nothing short of an exceptional performance by the Longhorns.
    “Obviously, any time you host the national champion from a year ago, it has amazing meaning,” Sean Miller said on Tuesday. “Really, credit Todd Golden and his program.
    “I think it's very impressive to see him and his staff how they've built Florida, especially in the NIL/transfer portal era,” he added. “I think there's a lot you can learn from just watching how they've added and developed their roster. I also think they're playing their very best basketball of this season right now, on a win streak in dominant fashion the last several road games in our league — not easy to do. They've gone on the road and they've won by big, big margins. We know we have our hands full.”
    TEXAS vs. No. 7 FLORIDA
    When: 6 p.m. CT
    Where: Moody Center (Austin, Texas)
    TV: ESPN2
    Betting line
    Florida -6.5
    O/U: 157.5
    Texas 2025-26 roster
    Starters:
    Jordan Pope, CG, 6-0, Sr. (13.0 points, 2.0 rebounds, 2.0 assists)
    Tramon Mark, CG, 6-6, Gr. (13.0 points, 3.5 rebounds, 2.0 assists, 0.9 steals)
    Camden Heide, F, 6-7, Jr. (6.7 points, 2.8 rebounds, 49.4% 3PT) 
    Dailyn Swain, F/G, 6-8, Jr. (17.9 points, 7.3 rebounds, 3.3 assists, 1.8 steals)
    Matas Vokietaitas, C, 7-0, Soph.(15.7 points, 6.9 rebounds, 0.9 blocks)

    Reserves:
    Simeon Wilcher, CG, 6-4, Jr. (6.9 points, 2.0 rebounds, 2.1 assists) 
    Chendall Weaver, G, 6-3, Sr. (6.1 points, 4.2 rebounds, 1.3 assists)
    Lassina Traore, C, 6-10, Sr. (3.4 points, 5.1 rebounds) 
    Nic Codie, PF,  6-9, Soph. (4.0 points, 2.0 rebounds)
    Declan Duru, F, 6-8, Fr. (1.4 points, 1.3 rebounds)
    Redshirts:
    John Clark, PF, 6-8.5, Fr.
    Lewis Obiorah, C, 7-1, Fr.
    Texas splits:
    49.7% FG/ 74.9% FT/ 35.4% 3PT
    Sean Miller file
    Career record: 504-206 (71%)
    NCAA Tournament record: 22-13
    NCAA Tournament: 4 Elite Eights and 8 Sweet 16s
    Conference Championships: 8. Five in the Pac-10/Pac-12, and three in the Atlantic 10
    Conference Coach of the Year awards: 4. Three in the Pac 10/Pac 12, and one in the Atlantic 10. Also the 2015 USA Basketball National COY in 2015
    Texas in the rankings
    — Texas is currently No. 37 in the NCAA NET rankings with five Quad 1 wins.
    https://www.ncaa.com/rankings/basketball-men/d1/ncaa-mens-basketball-net-rankings
    — KenPom ranks Texas 32 (down from No. 28 last week)
    https://kenpom.com/
    — Bart Torvik T-Rank checks in at No. 43
    https://barttorvik.com/#
    — Texas strength of schedule is currently around No. 23, and will likely finish in the top 25
    https://www.teamrankings.com/ncaa-basketball/ranking/schedule-strength-by-other
    Remaining schedule
    *- projected NCAA Tournament team
    *Feb. 28 - at Texas A&M (No. 42 in NCAA NET) - Quad 1 game 
    *Mar. 3 - at Arkansas (No. 18 in NCAA NET) - Quad 1 game 
    Mar. 7 - vs. Oklahoma (No. 68 in NCAA NET) - Quad 2 game

    Jeff Howe
    Coming off a 91-80 road loss to Georgia on Saturday, Texas returns to action against No. 7 Florida at Moody Center on Wednesday (6 p.m., ESPN2).
    Sean Miller is holding a media availability today to discuss the loss to the Bulldogs, tomorrow’s game against the Gators and the state of affairs as the Longhorns look to improve their standing for an at-large bid in the NCAA Tournament. As of Monday, Texas (17-10, 8-6 SEC) remained on the right side of the bubble, with the Longhorns one of 11 SEC clubs projected to be in the field of 68, according to ESPN's Joe Lunardi.
    While the loss to Georgia snapped a five-game winning streak, Texas will attempt to get back on track against arguably its toughest stretch of games this season. After facing Florida (21-6, 12-2), the Longhorns travel to Texas A&M (19-8, 9-5) on Saturday (3 p.m., ESPN2), looking to avoid a season sweep at the hands of the Aggies, who won a 74-70 decision in Austin on Jan. 17.
    The Longhorns will then take on No. 20 Arkansas (20-7, 10-4) in Fayetteville on Wednesday, March 4, before wrapping up the regular season schedule at home against Oklahoma (13-14, 3-11) on Saturday, March 7.

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