Will Muschamp’s return to Texas coincides with a 2026 schedule chock-full of top-tier quarterbacks.
Before SEC play begins with a trip to Tennessee on Sept. 26, the Longhorns will sandwich a pair of accomplished, decorated FBS quarterbacks (Texas State’s Brad Jackson and UTSA’s Owen McCown with their second meeting in nearly 380 days against Ohio State’s Julian Sayin.
John Mateer (Oklahoma), Trinidad Chambliss (Ole Miss), Sam Leavitt (LSU) and Marcel Reed (Texas A&M) join Arch Manning, South Carolina's LaNorris Sellers and Georgia's Gunnar Stockton as the most experienced, productive and proven quarterbacks in the SEC. With talented-yet-unproven signal-callers like Kamario Taylor (Mississippi State) and KJ Jackson (Arkansas) on the schedule, along with potential impact transfers like Aaron Philo (Florida) and Austin Simmons (Missouri), this could be the best collection of quarterbacks Texas has faced in the regular season since Muschamp’s first go-round on the Forty Acres.
In 2008, Muschamp’s inaugural Longhorn defense faced seven quarterbacks in the regular season who were either drafted, were on an active NFL roster at some point in their career or made an NCAA-recognized All-America team in college.
Sam Bradford (Oklahoma) and Robert Griffin III (Baylor) were the only eventual first-round draft picks Texas faced en route to a 12-1 record, a win over Ohio State in the Fiesta Bowl and spending three weeks ranked No. 1 in the Associated Press Top 25. Still, Rusty Smith (Florida Atlantic), Zac Robinson (Oklahoma State) and Stephen McGee (Texas A&M) were drafted; Chase Daniel was in the NFL for 14 seasons (won a Super Bowl as a member of the New Orleans Saints); and Graham Harrell was a part of a championship in Green Bay in 2010.
Seven future NFL quarterbacks are the most the Longhorns have faced in the regular season in the program’s previous 20 seasons. It’s not, however, the only season in which Texas had to navigate a schedule with multiple elite quarterbacks on the opposing sideline throughout 12 regular-season games.
In 2007, the year before Muschamp joined the Longhorns, the program faced six quarterbacks in the club: Bradford, Robinson, Harrell, McGee, Andy Dalton (TCU) and Josh Freeman (Kansas State).
Texas faced four future NFL quarterbacks in 2011 (Griffin, Oklahoma’s Landry Jones, Oklahoma State’s Brandon Weeden and Texas A&M’s Ryan Tannehill) and a fifth (Kansas State’s Collin Klein) who left college as a second-team All-American and a third-place finisher in the Heisman Trophy voting (behind Johnny Manziel and Manti Te’o in 2012).
The Longhorns’ 2014 schedule featured five quarterbacks with the aforementioned qualifications: BYU’s Taysom Hill, UCLA’s Brett Hundley, Baylor’s Bryce Petty, Texas Tech’s Patrick Mahomes II and TCU’s Trevone Boykin. The same is true of the regular-season slates in 2015 (Mahomes, Boykin, Cal’s Jared Goff, Oklahoma State’s Mason Rudolph and Oklahoma’s Baker Mayfield); 2016 (Rudolph, Mayfield, Mahomes, Notre Dame’s DeShone Kizer and Cal’s Davis Webb); 2019 (LSU's Joe Burrow, Oklahoma's Jalen Hurts, TCU's Max Duggan, Kansas State's Skylar Thompson and Iowa State's Brock Purdy); 2021 (Duggan, Purdy, Texas Tech’s Tyler Shough, Oklahoma’s Caleb Williams replaced Spencer Rattler in the first half of the Red River Shootout and Kansas State’s Will Howard); and 2023 (Howard, Alabama’s Jalen Milroe, Oklahoma’s Dillon Gabriel, BYU’s Kedon Slovis and Texas Tech’s Behren Morton).
Whether Texas has faced a better group of starting quarterbacks in the regular season over the last two decades is up for debate. What can't be disputed, however, is the nature of the challenge ahead of Muschamp and the Longhorn defensive staff, who must put their best foot forward amid a minefield of playmaking quarterbacks and top-notch offensive play-callers to help Texas return to the College Football Playoff.
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