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  • Texas was positioned to get the ball back with under four minutes to go in the third quarter of Saturday’s 35-10 loss to Georgia.

    The Bulldogs lined up for a fourth-and-1 from their own 36. With the Longhorns poised to seize momentum, the championship pedigree of Kirby Smart’s program took it back and held onto it en route to a third win over Steve Sarkisian’s club in 13 months.

    Texas (7-3, 4-2 SEC) cut the Georgia (9-1, 7-1) lead to four points when Arch Manning found Ryan Wingo in the end zone for a 7-yard touchdown with 5:27 left in the third quarter. After Gunner Stockton and Chauncey Bowens connected for a 10-yard gain for the first of two fourth-down conversions on a 10-play, 73-yard touchdown drive, a surprise onside kick recovery and a 9-play, 53-yard march to another Bulldog touchdown, Manning and the offense faced a 28-10 deficit when it got back on the field at the 8:49 mark of the fourth quarter.

    Whether it was losing the line of scrimmage battle, a failure to execute in critical situations, dealing with one self-inflicted wound after another or Smart’s staff winning the chess match against Sarkisian and his assistant coaches, Georgia was better than Texas, across the board, for the third time in as many meetings as SEC foes.

    For the Longhorns to ascend to the next level as a program, they’ve got to get through the Bulldogs. With Georgia off the regular-season schedule until 2028, the only way Texas will get another crack at the Bulldogs over the next two years is if it reaches the SEC Championship Game.

    As the fourth quarter unfolded, one in which Texas was outscored (21-0), outgained (119-64) and outclassed, the preseason promise of the Longhorns competing for the SEC title and a national championship faded with every body blow the Bulldogs landed. As things stand, Texas won’t be back in Atlanta and, unless it benefits from a lot of unforeseen good fortune down the stretch, it won’t make a third consecutive trip to the College Football Playoff.

    ***

    One of the reasons why Georgia is a bad matchup for Texas is the athleticism and length the Bulldogs possess up front. Once again, the Bulldogs won the battle at the point of attack in a landslide.

    Georgia sacked Manning three times, recorded seven tackles for loss and held the Longhorns to just 23 net rushing yards on 17 carries. Even when adjusting rushing yards to exclude sack yardage, 39 yards (2.8 yards per carry) wasn’t close to what Texas needed to achieve much-needed balance on offense.

    In their three losses to the Bulldogs over the last two seasons, the Longhorns have given up 16 sacks and 32 tackles for loss while mustering just 83 net rushing yards on 72 official attempts (1.15 yards per attempt). Georgia rushed for 128 yards (3.7 yards per attempt), 67 of which came in the fourth quarter, as the Bulldogs once again owned the line of scrimmage.

    ***

    The chatter regarding Sarkisian’s struggles against Smart won’t die down. In fact, after Smart pushed all of the right buttons in the second half while Sarkisian’s offense sputtered and the Texas defense wore down, it’ll be louder than ever.

    Sarkisian has done a lot of good in his five seasons on the Forty Acres. Nevertheless, his head-to-head win over Nick Saban in 2023 is starting to be overshadowed by Sarkisian’s combined 0-7 record against Smart (0-3), Kalen DeBoer (0-2) and Ryan Day (0-2), which account for his seven losses against top-five opponents while leading the Longhorns (1-7 record).

    Sarkisian’s success over the last two seasons has raised the bar to a championship standard. With that as the backdrop, Saturday’s loss adds even more importance to the regular-season finale against a Texas A&M team expected to roll into DKR with an unblemished 11-0 record.

    If Sarkisian’s Texas squad goes 0-3 against top-five opponents in 2025 while the Aggies and Oklahoma advance to the CFP (a realistic outcome after the Sooners’ 23-21 road win over Alabama on Saturday), it’ll be a long offseason with a lot of tough questions to answer throughout 2026.

    ***

    For the third consecutive meeting between the Longhorns and Georgia, the Bulldogs’ best players outpaced Texas’ top dogs.

    Manning wasn’t bad (27-for-43, 251 yards, one touchdown and one interception), but Stockton was better (24-for-29, 229 yards, four touchdowns, one interception and a rushing touchdown). Although Anthony Hill (six tackles, 0.5 tackles for loss and an interception) and Colin Simmons (three tackles, 1.5 tackles for loss and a sack) made plays, they didn’t dominate the game the way they needed to for the Longhorns to win.

    ***

    The final score isn’t a direct reflection of how far Texas is from reaching Georgia’s level as a program. Still, until the Longhorns can hold up better in the trenches, avoid shooting themselves in the foot (nine penalties for 58 yards) and play better situational football (a combined 4-for-15 on third and fourth down; the Bulldogs also went 4-for-4 in the red zone with four touchdowns), they’ll likely continue to suffer the same fate in games of this magnitude.

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    • Moderators
    9 hours ago, PaulieD said:

    @Jeff Howe, it just seems that the coaching staff at times is going through the motions.  I'm probably wrong - I hope I am - but the cohesiveness isn't there.  No fire in the belly.  This will always boil down to coaching, and I am not dwelling on the HC other than managing assistant coaches and coordinators in whatever way necessary to make Texas get over the hump. Something is broken, and quite frankly Sark needs to get his head out of the playbook and head coach.

    I don’t think it’s a case of going through the motions. To me, it’s bad body language whenever things go wrong and you’re searching for answers.

    That’s probably too simple of an explanation, but I agree that something is amiss.

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    • Moderators
    10 minutes ago, ThatHornsGuy87 said:

    @Jeff Howe tell if im crazy, I didn't have an issue with Sarks game plan last night. He schemed alot of things open and Arch was hitting the guys in the hands, and they dropped it. If I had one gripe it would be you could say he got away from the run. My biggest gripe were the drops, the penalties and the soft ass coverage from the corners thats been discussed over and over again. Catch the damn ball! I watched Colin get held all night long. Trey Moore was held multiple. DeAndre was held on the pick. Call the game equal. And for the love of God, if you’re going to recruit man corners. Put them in position to play man. If you get beat over the top, you get beat. 

    I agree with just about everything you said. Sark’s script was fine, but sloppy, undisciplined teams that don’t pay attention to details make the kind of mistakes Texas made from start to finish last night.

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    4 minutes ago, Jeff Howe said:

    I agree with just about everything you said. Sark’s script was fine, but sloppy, undisciplined teams that don’t pay attention to details make the kind of mistakes Texas made from start to finish last night.

    Listening to 3rd and longhorn, Aaron Williams said its ultimately on the players. And Little Hills said back in their day you got pulled because the team was so stacked it was next man up. This team doesnt have that kind of depth. And I also dont think you can coach like that anymore or you'd lose everyone to the portal. So how does it get corrected. The way college football is constructed in today's game its not as cut and dry as it used to be

    1 hour ago, ThatHornsGuy87 said:

    Listening to 3rd and longhorn, Aaron Williams said its ultimately on the players. And Little Hills said back in their day you got pulled because the team was so stacked it was next man up. This team doesnt have that kind of depth. And I also dont think you can coach like that anymore or you'd lose everyone to the portal. So how does it get corrected. The way college football is constructed in today's game its not as cut and dry as it used to be

    Little Hills teams never had that kind of depth so that comment is pretty funny. 

    1 hour ago, ThatHornsGuy87 said:

    Listening to 3rd and longhorn, Aaron Williams said its ultimately on the players. And Little Hills said back in their day you got pulled because the team was so stacked it was next man up. This team doesnt have that kind of depth. And I also dont think you can coach like that anymore or you'd lose everyone to the portal. So how does it get corrected. The way college football is constructed in today's game its not as cut and dry as it used to be

    Plenty blame to go around from top to bottom. We got out coached and out played. On the onside kick, the players looked completely confused. Thats on the staff. The drops, off sides, missed tackles, etc.. is on the players. Will need to be a off season of change.

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    50 minutes ago, Quinncent McManning, Jr. said:

    I was chuckling when sark pulled out the same wr screen 3 weeks in a row but if wingo doesn’t slip how would the game have gone 

     

    Slipped on the painted area. Kirby thinks of everything lol

    We got out physical-ed no question in the first game in Austin, but last night was less physicality in my mind than it was personnel, discipline, and focus. Georgia just has bigger and better players on the line right now. That's not our players not wanting to get in there and fight but it's just they are bigger and stronger than our OL and tack on the fact we hold on to jerseys too long, it exacerbates the situation. Our defensive line and LBs did fine against the run until they wore out in the 2nd half. 

    The narrative would be so much different if Auburn would have just made the FG in the SEC championship. People are forgetting we didn't get outplayed in that game even though it was ugly, We should have won that game in regulation.

    Edited by ChanmanV
    10 hours ago, TTown said:

    3rd and 11 a qb draw? Sums it all up while Kirby goes for the kill. Whatever is going on with Sark needs to be addressed soon for the sake of the program I'll stop there. Truly embarrassing and no excuses needed anymore.

    Yeah some of the play calls make no sense and if even an amateur like ourselves can see it, what the hell is Sark or Milwee looking at lol. 

    For all the clamoring that Bobo gets from Georgia fans, he seems to put his guys in positions to make plays and adjust to what they are good at. 

    Our offensive guru once again out coached. 

    • Moderators
    7 hours ago, ThatHornsGuy87 said:

    Listening to 3rd and longhorn, Aaron Williams said its ultimately on the players. And Little Hills said back in their day you got pulled because the team was so stacked it was next man up. This team doesnt have that kind of depth. And I also dont think you can coach like that anymore or you'd lose everyone to the portal. So how does it get corrected. The way college football is constructed in today's game its not as cut and dry as it used to be

    I don't always agree with what former players say, but I'll always respect their opinions because they've got a frame of reference I don't have and never will.

    With that said, you can't absolve one party regarding the discipline issues.

    From a coaching standpoint, if a firm believer that you're either coaching it or you're allowing it to happen. If you're worried about guys heading to the portal when they need to be corrected for making mistakes that hurt the team, then either they're the wrong type of guy for your program or your culture isn't that good.

    This team doesn't pay attention to details. That starts at the top, but it's also on the players to hold each other accountable. Texas isn't as talented or experienced as the last two seasons, where it can overcome those mistakes, especially against an opponent like Georgia.

    Personally, I don't buy that the portal and NIL mean you can't coach a disciplined team. Furthermore, 8.2 penalties per game is the worst in the Power Four — that's flat out unacceptable.

    Curt Cignetti, for example, has built a roster with a heavy reliance on the portal. Indiana is in the top six in the country in fewest penalties per game and fewest penalty yards per game.

    This is an ongoing issue for Sark that must be resolved. They can be if he's willing to put the screws to guys and change the program's mindset regarding self-inflicted wounds.

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    9 hours ago, Jeff Howe said:

    I don’t think it’s a case of going through the motions. To me, it’s bad body language whenever things go wrong and you’re searching for answers.

    That’s probably too simple of an explanation, but I agree that something is amiss.

    You are probably correct, and the buck stops at the coaching staff.

    11 hours ago, Walter Jenkins said:

    After his initial script of plays is exhausted, Sark's offense had about as much thought and continuity as you'd find at your average intramural game. There is too much going on during the game for Sark the head coach to focus on what to do offensively. We ran the ball quite well in the first quarter, but then abandoned it. Why??? Because Sark the Head Coach wasn't able to step back and see the big picture. Instead Sark the Offensive Coordinator panicked and it was "bombs away" as usual

    Furthermore, I am so tired of this "bend, but don't break" bull s*"t defense I may burn all of my burnt orange gear. (Believe me that would rival the Aggie bonfire!!!) Our secondary was useless for the first two series they played 10 yards off the LOS and then backed up. An easy 5-8 yard completion every time. After those series we pressed them at the line and amazingly it was 14-10 going into the 4th quarter. Then after we close the game our "bend, but don't break" b.s. allows Georgia to control the ball for probably 12 straight minutes (thanks to the onside kick that, amazingly, Sark said they practiced for) and put the game away. We're leading the nation in sacks so you know the QB won't have time to accurately  throw intermediate to deep routes.  Use that to your advantage. Wouldn't you call that a form of "complementary football?" 

    Isn't it amazing that you can watch other teams go an entire half, if not a game without a false start penalty? And didn't we all know when the flag was thrown on Niblett's long return in the 2nd quarter that Warren Roberson had been flagged for either holding or a block in the back? It was game changing as the return had  breathed new life into us. But instead it cost us 50 yards  and backed us up to the 11 yard line. The fact that Warren Roberson is still playing Special Teams and why the OL has so many false start penalties are proof that there is no discipline/accountability on the team. I guess that is part of the "culture" Sark is fostering.

    Yeah once Sark's script gets used up, it's like he has no idea what to do. I'm starting to come around to this bend but don't break D that everyone's talking about. I like PK but he rarely ever wants to attack teams. The first couple of TD's from Georgia felt like lay ups and after that they finally woke up and started playing and then once they scored again to go up 21-10, it felt like the air just left their lungs. 

    I think PK's problem is there are too many cooks in the kitchen, if that makes sense. Also think he puts too much trust in his passing game coordinators to handle the secondary. 

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    13 hours ago, Jordan91 said:

    If Sark can’t fix this, he will probably be excited WATCHING, the next game Texas and Georgia play. 

    I still can't believe Tom "Mensa" Herman beat Georgia in a meaningless bowl game and Sark has 3 cracks at it, been blown out twice and screwed the pooch on the other one. 

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    7 hours ago, AusMOJO said:

    Yeah once Sark's script gets used up, it's like he has no idea what to do. I'm starting to come around to this bend but don't break D that everyone's talking about. I like PK but he rarely ever wants to attack teams. The first couple of TD's from Georgia felt like lay ups and after that they finally woke up and started playing and then once they scored again to go up 21-10, it felt like the air just left their lungs. 

    I think PK's problem is there are too many cooks in the kitchen, if that makes sense. Also think he puts too much trust in his passing game coordinators to handle the secondary. 

    I agree, the lack of communication between PK and the secondary has been a problem from Day 1. At UW it was supposedly not an issue because PK meshed well with Jimmy Lake. Garry Patterson helped a little bit, but coordination was still lacking. I had hoped the return of Duane Akina and the departure of Joseph and Gideon would cure the problem, but if anything we have regressed. 

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    55 minutes ago, Walter Jenkins said:

    I agree, the lack of communication between PK and the secondary has been a problem from Day 1. At UW it was supposedly not an issue because PK meshed well with Jimmy Lake. Garry Patterson helped a little bit, but coordination was still lacking. I had hoped the return of Duane Akina and the departure of Joseph and Gideon would cure the problem, but if anything we have regressed. 

    Why would you think a guy who is terrible at teaching zone concepts would mesh well with PK?

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    1 hour ago, Walter Jenkins said:

    I agree, the lack of communication between PK and the secondary has been a problem from Day 1. At UW it was supposedly not an issue because PK meshed well with Jimmy Lake. Garry Patterson helped a little bit, but coordination was still lacking. I had hoped the return of Duane Akina and the departure of Joseph and Gideon would cure the problem, but if anything we have regressed. 

    Akina doesn't really mesh with what PK wants to do. PK wants to run more zone and Akina is more of a man specialist. 

    I just think there's too much trust in his passing game coordinator. First with Terry and now Akina. You need to tell them this is what you want and get it done. 

    Edited by AusMOJO
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    Georgia is a tough match up  for most teams .  Texas has had one bad game this year in my opinion.  They didn't really show up for the Florida game and I think that is because it was early in the year and they were young as a team.  Georgia made a 4th and 1 that turned the the game around, but it was the the onside kick that has caused all the damage.  Up until the onside kick Texas had some momentum and were making a come back.  

    I'm not sure this team was ever going to be able to live up to the hype.  The reality is the line was inexperienced and the  receivers drop too many balls.  That doesn't make them a bad team or make the program a bust.  Losses to Ohio State and Georgia aren't the same as Maryland.  

    Finish the season with two wins, absolutely doable, and its the Florida game that will haunt us.

    On another note, lost all respect for Kirby Smartass for his post game comments.  He's getting his ass kicked in recruiting by Texas and attacks our NIL program.  How many bags did Georgia drop before NIL arrived to get where they are?  Cheering for the rambling wrecks from Georgia Tech since Charlotte won't be much of a bump on their schedule.




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