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    A place for any Longhorn Fan to get the latest news from the On Texas Football team.
    Gerry Hamilton
    Cody Campbell and Texas Tech coaching staff
    The events of yesterday were great! Steve Sarkisian got the fan base fired up and laughing at event full of Texas fans. Fans of Texas and Texas Tech had a terrific X fight to follow. Peak off-season, especially following Lane Kiffin stirring up Ole Miss a week'ish prior. 
    When Cody Campbell sent out his tweet to Sark and CDC he presented the opportunity to ask a question that I believe needs to be addressed by Campbell and the entire Texas Tech football staff. 
    I simply asked Campbell on X this ... "Question ... as a former college athlete at Texas Tech, are you okay with a player that bet on a team he was a part of continuing to retain eligibility ever or period? Would you have been okay with this scenario as a starting Texas Tech player?" 
    I believe this is a very important question Campbell needs to answer. And look, I'm not expecting him to answer because he can hide behind the legal process and Sorsby's agent. But it's very important for Campbell to answer this at some point. He's literally a former very good DI athlete that now wants to have one of the most important voices in the future of college athletics. If he would be okay with Sorsby retaining his eligibility and suiting up again in college athletics, every fan in the country should hear it from him. If not, the same. If he wants to be a powerful voice in college athletics, he needs to declare on the issue of a college athlete betting on a team he's a part of. And this isn't a Texas Tech vs Texas issue for me, at all. This is all about the fabric of team sports. One guarantee I can make is Cody Campbell was never on a team or never heard a speech from a coach that included it's okay for a player to bet on a team he is a part of. Whether it's the third team long snapper, fifth team running back, number seven receiver or starting quarterback. So he 100% needs to declare on this issue in my opinion.
    And I also believe the entire Texas Tech coaching staff needs to declare their position as well. And they likely won't for the same reason, but I really hope I'm wrong. And I think that is bad for team sports. Can you imagine how many speeches the entire Texas Tech staff has given to a team or players over their careers? Can you also imagine how many conversations and in-home visits the staff has conducted with prospects and parents? It's in the thousands. How many times do you believe any coach on the staff has told prospects or parents it's okay if you bet on the team you play on? The obvious answer is NONE. And the reason is simple, betting on your own team is the one aspect of team sports that is an unquestioned no-no. Period. 
    I grew up in coaches offices and have spent my 20+ year career going to high schools and colleges. I've heard hundreds, if not more, speeches from coaches and been around coaching offices and part of conversations for pretty much my entire life. And to the surprise of absolutely nobody, I have never heard one coach say they are okay with a player betting on his own team. As you can imagine, it's the opposite. 
    For me, Cody Campbell and the Texas Tech staff need to declare where they are at. They likely all have kids growing up (or grew up) in team athletics as well. Do we think any of their conversations with their own kids involved the phrase, "It's okay if you bet on your own team". I think we all know the answer. 
    Cody Campbell needs to declare as a former DI athlete with a huge voice in the future of college athletics. Does he really want to help college athletics in the future? This is a golden opportunity for him to declare strongly. And the entire Texas Tech staff needs to do the same to remain truthful and real to their profession. Otherwise, not a single person should ever listen to a word they say again. If they can't declare where they stand on an issue they have always known is a non-starter in team sports, then why should anyone listen to them in the future?

    Jeff Howe
    If someone is objectively looking for something to separate Arch Manning, John Mateer and Marcel Reed in the pecking order for SEC quarterbacks ahead of pivotal seasons in the careers of the signal-callers for Texas, Oklahoma and Texas A&M, respectively, it’s how they performed against the best competition they faced in 2025.
    Manning faced more ranked opponents last season than Mateer or Reed, with the Longhorns battling six opponents (Ohio State, the Sooners, Vanderbilt, Georgia, Texas A&M and Michigan) that ended the season inside the Associated Press Top 25. Mateer faced five such foes (the Wolverines, the Longhorns, Ole Miss and Alabama twice) while Reed squared off against three (Notre Dame, Texas and Miami).
    Manning, who led the Longhorns to a 4-2 record in those games, has the edge over Mateer (2-3) and Reed (1-2) in his performance against ranked opponents.
    And it’s not as close as the Sooner or Aggie faithful might think.
    Manning: 125-for-196 (63.8 percent completion rate), 1,315 yards (219.2 yards per game), 9 touchdowns, 2 interceptions and a passer rating of 133.25
    Mateer: 99-for-167 (59.3 percent completion rate, 1,140 yards (228 yards per game), 4 touchdowns, 5 interceptions and a passer rating of 118.53
    Reed: 62-for-108 (57.4 percent completion rate), 777 yards (259 yards per game), 2 touchdowns, 5 interceptions and a 114.69 passer rating
    According to CFBStats.com, of the 13 qualifying SEC quarterbacks who played against at least three ranked opponents last season, Mateer and Reed ranked 12th and 13th in passer rating, respectively. They tied Tennessee’s Joey Aguilar and South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers for the most interceptions against ranked opponents. Only the 13 touchdown passes by Georgia’s Gunnar Stockton topped Manning’s number of scoring tosses (tied with Aguilar for the second-most touchdown passes against ranked opponents among SEC quarterbacks).
    Manning, Mateer and Reed are capable runners with differing styles. Their numbers on the ground against ranked opponents were, however, in the same neighborhood; Manning (44.5 yards per game and three rushing touchdowns) had the edge in yards per carry (7.42), Mateer (26.8 yards per game and 1.79 yards per attempt) had the most rushing touchdowns (four) among the three and Reed (3.97 yards per attempt and no touchdowns) led the way in rushing yards per game (45).
    Still, what’s going to make the difference in where the ceiling resides for Texas, Oklahoma and Texas A&M in 2026 is the success their respective quarterbacks have when they're asked to make critical plays from the pocket, along with protecting the football. Without question, based on last season’s results, the highest level of trust in one of the three getting the job done when it matters should be in Manning.
    ***
    When identifying members of the 2026 recruiting class best positioned to contribute early as true freshmen, linebacker is a fascinating position to examine.
    Will Muschamp cited depth, or lack thereof, at the position as one of the biggest questions his defense faced in spring practice. While the Longhorns might not need Tyler Atkinson, Rocky Cummings or Kosi Okpala to log significant snaps, the perceived gap between the duo of Cummings and Okpala and Atkinson is much tighter than anticipated.
    That's a good sign for the position’s future.
    Atkinson was the blue-chip signee among the group. Although he had a quiet spring, relative to expectations, the 6-foot-1, 216-pound Atkinson has plenty of time to get his feet underneath him and figure things out as he develops behind Rasheem Biles, Justin Cryer, Ty’Anthony Smith and Brad Spence.
    Cummings looked more and more like a tremendous evaluation by the Texas staff as spring practice progressed. It says a lot that he was committed to Cal when Justin Wilcox, long recognized as one of the top defensive minds in college football, with a track record for producing quality linebackers, was the head coach of the Golden Bears and signed off on the 6-foot-4-inch, 226-pound Carlsbad (Calif.) product's offer.
    The same can be said of Okpala, who had Penn State among his final choices, along with Miami. Hall of Fame defensive end Jason Taylor was Okpala’s lead recruiter for the Hurricanes, further validating the 6-foot-3-inch, 239-pound Katy Mayde Creek product’s potential as a disruptor off the edge.
    While Muschamp didn’t recruit any of the three to Texas, the trio has a chance to be special in their specific roles under his tutelage.
    ***
    The news that D’Onta Foreman is reportedly going into coaching will keep the Longhorns’ 2016 Doak Walker Award winner close to the game after putting together one of the more remarkable NFL careers a product of the Forty Acres has enjoyed.
    It would’ve been fair to write Foreman off after tearing his Achilles tendon toward the end of his rookie season with the Houston Texans in 2017. It made even more sense to think Foreman had a short NFL shelf life when, in the span of less than three weeks, he was waived by the Texans (poor work habits were cited as the primary reason, including reportedly showing up late for meetings), picked up by the Indianapolis Colts, suffered a torn bicep in training camp and was waived by general manager Chris Ballard, who, like Foreman, played high school football at Texas City.
    After spending time with the Tennessee Titans in 2020 and the Atlanta Falcons in 2021, it was Foreman’s second stint with the Titans when he started to show the form he had when he rushed for 2,028 yards and 15 touchdowns for the Longhorns, breaking Ricky Williams’ single-season school record for rushing yards by a junior (1,893 in 1997) and joining Williams as the only Texas running backs to record a 2,000-yard season (Williams ran for 2,124 yards en route to winning the Heisman Trophy in 1998).
    Foreman ran for 132 yards and a touchdown in a Week 17 win over the Miami Dolphins on Jan. 2, 2022, helping the Titans clinch the AFC South title with one of his three 100-yard games on the season. Forman’s best NFL season came in 2022 with the Carolina Panthers, when he rushed for 914 yards and five touchdowns.
    Over seven NFL seasons, Foreman played in 63 games (24 starts) and rushed for 2,558 yards and 14 touchdowns. Incredibly, 53 of those games (23 starts) and all but 326 of his career rushing yards and one of his rushing touchdowns came after two significant injuries, both of which threatened to derail Foreman’s career.
    As someone who was in the room in Galveston with Foreman and his family on the night the Texans took him in the third round (No. 89 overall) of the 2018 draft, it was satisfying to see Foreman extend his playing career and prove himself as a capable NFL running back, when it would’ve been easy to throw in the towel. All told, the lowest-rated recruit in the Longhorns’ 2014 recruiting class, who had to climb a hill academically to get to campus, turned out to be a much better player than anyone could’ve expected.

    Jeff Howe
    Texas associate head coach/recruiting coordinator Nolan Cain interviewed for the vacant head coaching job at the University of Houston, On Texas Football has learned. Both parties decided to go in different directions; Cain was one of 10-plus targets on the Cougars’ radar to replace long-time head coach Todd Whitting, who parted ways with the school after 16 seasons.
    OTF has also learned that other schools are interested in Cain as a head coaching candidate. Houston isn’t expected to be the last program to try and poach Cain from Jim Schlossnagle’s staff, a group of coaches currently preparing for Friday’s SEC Tournament quarterfinal against a to-be-determined opponent.
    Cain, who also serves as the team’s third base coach on game day and works with the program’s catchers, followed Schlossnagle to the Forty Acres after three seasons at Texas A&M (2022-24). Cain helped assemble a 2025 recruiting class that brought 2026 SEC Freshman of the Year Anthony Pack Jr. and first-team All-SEC relief pitcher Sam Cozart to Austin.
    Pack and Cozart were instrumental in helping Texas (40-12, 19-10) finish the regular season in second place in the conference standings. The Longhorns also concluded a 52-game campaign with a No. 5 national ranking in the D1Baseball.com Top 25.
    Thanks to Cain’s efforts on the recruiting trail, Texas became the first SEC program since Florida in 2009 and 2010 to produce the SEC Freshman of the Year in consecutive seasons, with Dylan Volantis claiming the honor in 2025.

    Jeff Howe
    Published Monday morning, Jordan Scruggs’ first contribution to OTF listed the 10 most wanted recruits left on the board for Texas in the 2027 cycle.
    In the transfer portal/NIL era of college football, four of the 10 prospects jumped out as arguably the most important remaining targets for the Longhorns:
    — Ismael Camara, OL, Gilmer
    — Marcus Fakatou, DL, Chatsworth (Calif.) Sierra Canyon
    — Jabaarrius Garror, EDGE, Mobile (Ala.) Vigor
    — Bryan Swanson, OL, Dallas South Oak Cliff
    Understanding how championship-caliber rosters are built in college football today highlights the importance of these four prospects, especially when looking at how Steve Sarkisian’s organization constructed the 2026 squad.
    While the Longhorns had the resources to get virtually everything they needed during the transfer portal window, high school recruiting taking care of three premium positions (quarterback, offensive tackle and edge rusher), with Arch Manning, Trevor Goosby and Colin Simmons occupying those roles, allowed the staff to focus on other areas of need.
    Including defensive linemen, players at four of the five most lucrative positions in the NFL come with a steep price tag in the transfer portal. Texas has the wherewithal that few other programs have to acquire talent. Still, if the Longhorns’ must-have list included a top-tier, premium-position talent other than Cam Coleman, they might not have had the luxury of souping up the running back room with Raleek Brown and Hollywood Smothers. If Goosby had left for the NFL, it would’ve driven up the price for Melvin Siani (or another tackle on the open market) or, potentially, caused the pool at another position of need to shrink until the tackle need was fulfilled.
    There’s no guarantee that the high school pipeline will always be the answer to filling premium positions. Nevertheless, if Texas uses high school recruiting to prioritize quarterbacks and players on both sides of the line of scrimmage who disrupt and protect the most important position on the field at an elite level, Sarkisian’s program has a good chance to remain a step ahead of the pack when future portal windows open.
    ***
    DeShon Elliott's name probably wouldn't jump to the top of the list of all-time great Longhorns worthy of induction into the College Football Hall of Fame when his time comes to enter the pool of candidates, even though he meets the criteria (an NCAA-recognized first-team All-American honor).
    With that said, Elliott’s 2017 season is in the record books as arguably the best season by a Longhorn defensive back routinely omitted from the discussion for such an honor.
    Only six Texas defenders have intercepted more passes in a single season than the six Elliott snagged in 12 games (he was one of several players who opted out of the Texas Bowl against Missouri, which was a win at the end of Tom Herman’s first season as coach). A Jim Thorpe Award finalist, Elliott is in an exclusive group of Texas defensive backs to be named a unanimous All-American, joining Johnnie Johnson (1978 and 1979), Jerry Gray (1984), Quentin Jammer (2001) and Michael Huff (2005).
    Whether Elliott joins what's likely three-fourths of DBU's Mount Rushmore in the Hall of Fame down the road or not (Johnson was inducted in 2007, Gray in 2013 and Huff in 2025), the fact that he has a chance to be an active NFL player when he’s 10 seasons removed from the end of his collegiate career (the other requirement for a player to be considered for induction) is an accomplishment in and of itself.
    Elliott was offered early by Charlie Strong’s staff, one of two tremendous early evaluations on defense in the 2015 cycle (the other was Charles Omenihu, who, like Elliott, is still an active NFL player). At the time, it wasn't certain if Elliott would stay at safety or eventually spin down from safety to linebacker, but he made plays on the back end when he was healthy enough to see the field.
    After battling through injuries in two seasons under Strong, Elliott blossomed in his lone season as a safety in Todd Orlando’s defense. I’ve enjoyed Elliott’s career arc immensely after getting myself into hot water at 247Sports for circumventing the chain of command to ensure he finished the 2015 cycle as a four-star recruit. I believed in Elliott as a prospect enough to stick my neck out (which, in hindsight, was a reckless move) and, after departing the Forty Acres with a bang, he’s become a quality NFL player as he enters the last season of a $12.5 million extension he signed with the Pittsburgh Steelers last summer.
    ***
    Anthony Pack Jr. was named SEC Freshman of the Year on Monday, a well-deserved honor for what’s on pace to go down in the record books as one of the best freshman seasons for a position player in the history of the Longhorn baseball program.
    Texas has had four players named Baseball America’s National Freshman of the Year (Greg Swindell in 1984, Kirk Dressendorfer in 1988, Brooks Kieschnick in 1991 and Dylan Volantis in 2025), all of whom were full-time or part-time pitchers. The only thing Pack has done on the mound is torment whoever has toed the rubber for the opposition, entering the SEC Tournament leading the Longhorns in batting average (.360), doubles (16) and stolen bases (20).
    He’s on pace to be the first freshman to lead the Longhorns in batting average since Erich Weiss hit .348 in 2011. Pack is also in the running to be the first Texas freshman to hit .360 or better (minimum two plate appearances per game) in a season since Omar Quintanilla hit .367 in 2001.
    He’s six doubles shy of Quintanilla’s freshman school record (22). Eight stolen bases ahead of Adrian Rodriguez for the team lead, Pack is likely to be the first freshman to lead the Longhorns in stolen bases with 20 or more since Drew Stubbs swiped 28 bags in 2004.
    “Fearless” is the word Jim Schlossnagle has most used to describe how Pack has approached his first season of college baseball. It’s appropriate, considering Pack’s steady ascent throughout the season, which saw him be consistent enough to lead all SEC hitters in batting average (.400) and on-base percentage (.511) during conference play.

    Bobby Burton
    On Texas Football is excited to welcome Jordan Scruggs to our team. Jordan joins us from Horns247, where he was the lead recruiting and portal reporter.
    Jordan will expand our recruiting and portal coverage with more in-person footage, interviews, and insider knowledge from across the state and the country.
    He has a deep passion for the Texas Longhorns (he grew up going to games with his dad, who still has season tickets) and for Texas high school football.
    Please join us in welcoming Jordan to the team!
    **
    With Jordan’s addition, I want to make something very clear: Nobody in the Texas market comes close to our recruiting coverage or our commitment to it. No one.
    Some outlets will break a story or two here or there. OTF won’t be first on everything—there’s simply too much information out there. Some will continue to lean on “national” resources within a larger network, or even rely on Twitter and pass that off as their own information.
    But when it comes to Texas football recruiting and the portal, there is no better source than On Texas Football.
    As someone who helped start this industry, I can say that with unequivocal authority. With Gerry Hamilton, Hank South, CJ Vogel, and now Jordan, no other group even comes close. Split our group in half and we’d still be Nos. 1 and 2 (and possibly 3 with one of them alone, in my book).
    Others can (and will) still posture. But we’re the only ones committed to actually doing the work AND devoting the resources to prove it.
    **
    When we started On Texas Football as a stand-alone company, I said we wanted OTF to be best in class: to be the product that serious Texas fans wanted and deserved.
    I promised that my goal would be to produce the very best video, podcast, and website content, and to build a welcoming, respectful, and insightful gathering place for all Texas fans.
    While we're not all the way there yet, just two years in, I think we’re well on our way.
    **
    With the addition of Jordan, don’t think we’re stopping either. People thought we were done after adding Hank. Or maybe after adding Jeff, CJ, or Marcus before that.
    We’ll have more announcements in the coming weeks and months. I think you’re going to want to be along for the ride.
    We will never stop in our quest to build the best digital media company for Longhorn fans to enjoy. That's our pledge to you. We're not trying to squeeze blood from a turnip, we're building something special here.
    **
    As part of our ongoing community-building effort, I’d like to invite those of you who have not subscribed to OnTexasFootball.com to become OTF OG members. We’re making a special offer to new members.
    Beginning later today, new subscribers can join for 3 months for just $3 total for a limited time. That’s a heavy discount from our normal pricing, but it reflects how much we want you to join us—and the faith we have in our product.
    Over those three months, you’ll get wall-to-wall recruiting coverage in June and July, plus our best-in-class preseason camp coverage from late July into August.
    If you’re already an OTF OG, please tell a friend. We’re committed to being the best gathering place for true Texas fans the world over. We need your help to keep building it.
    Here is the link:
    https://ontexasfootball.com/store/product/4-3-months-for-3/
    **
    Welcome to the team, Jordan!
    Hook ’Em!!!

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