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Everything posted by Jeff Howe
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Figured I’d bump this thread instead of starting a new one. Former Texas EDGE Billy Walton III just had a sack for SMU in the Holiday Bowl.
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Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Texas State destroys Rice in the Armed Forces Bowl, 41-10. The Longhorns’ three 2026 non-conference opponents (TXST, Ohio State and UTSA) all finished 2025 with winning records. Arkansas and Florida are the only non-bowl teams on the ‘26 schedule and Mississppi State is the only other team that will finish 2025 with a losing record. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
They didn't want that smoke from San Marcos! They knew it was coming! Lanning fears Kinne! -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
They did that for a few summers. It was 2010 or 2011 when it stopped because it started to get chippy to the point that they weren't productive sessions. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
This game has turned into a laugher. Brad Jackson broke Barrick Nealy's 20-year school record for total offense on a drive that ended with his third touchdown pass of the game. He also has a rushing touchdown. Texas State has a 41-7 lead over Rice with 9:10 left in the game. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Barrick has told me that they pretty much ran the same offense Texas did. Herman took a lot of what Greg Davis was doing and did it in San Marcos. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Knowing what I know now, I'll blame Herman's binder! -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
The best thing that happened this year is that GJ is still in San Marcos after the coaching carousel stopped spinning. I hope that he leads Texas State to a successful year, secures a P4 job, and then the Bobcats can hire a good coach who will inherit a much better situation than GJ walked into a few years ago. And, yes, 2005 is the apex of post-Jim Wacker Texas State. I love Coach Bailiff, but I still wonder if he thinks about whether he should've played for overtime or let Barrick try to win the semifinal with what time was left. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Funny enough, if Texas State had turned down Pac-12 membership, the league was probably going to go after New Mexico State. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Texas State CB Khmari Terrell, who attended Killeen Shoemaker, just left the field with an injury. Lowell Galindo, who I'm sure has looked at a map of the state of Texas, said, "Killeen, just south of the Metroplex." Yeah. I'd say it's pretty freakin south of the Metroplex. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
When Kinne took the job, he inherited years of incompetence in the athletic department. Texas State didn't get serious about football until the new president came in a few years ago. They're not where they want to be, but thank goodness they're not where they used to be. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
It's a fun game to play, trying to remember which G6 schools are in which conference. Conference USA is the most wheels-off league in terms of membership. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
FWIW, the Texas game will be Texas State's first as a member of the Pac-12. The Pac-12 football members in 2026 will be: Boise State, Fresno State, Colorado State, San Diego State, Utah State, Texas State, Oregon State and Washington State. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
Texas State leads Rice in the third quarter, 24-7, after Brad Jackson's second touchdown pass of the game. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
As a long-suffering Cowboys fan, Patrick Crayton Jr. quarterbacking Rice in this game doesn’t make me feel any younger. -
Get an early look at the 2026 season opener
Jeff Howe replied to Jeff Howe's topic in On Texas Football Forum
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Texas State is taking on Rice in the Armed Forces Bowl right now. it looks like Texas State is going to keep its quarterback, Brad Jackson, out of the portal, which is good for the Bobcats.
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Of all of the things I least expected to happen to Texas during the 2025 season, there’s no way I would’ve called Arch Manning and Christian Clark to be the two Longhorns who’d go over 100 yards rushing in the same game. Nevertheless, Manning led Texas with 155 yards and two touchdowns in Wednesday’s 41-27 win over Michigan in the Citrus Bowl. But it was Clark’s 105-yard effort on 20 carries that paced the Longhorn rushing attack, which churned out 235 yards, one yard shy of a season high (236 yards against Sam Houston). Clark’s 22-yard burst over the right side of the line on his first carry set the tone for the biggest day of the redshirt freshman’s young career. He gained some much-needed confidence right out of the gate. His ability to be patient and then to stick a foot in the ground to get vertical (with a gear he didn’t show earlier in the season) made Clark the right man to get the baton from Quintrevion Wisner as the lead dog in the Texas running game. It’s fair to wonder if Clark should’ve gotten more carries throughout the season. Regardless, he rose to the occasion in such a manner that the Longhorns might consider allocating resources elsewhere in the transfer portal if they view Clark as someone who can handle a more significant role. (Running back will still be a top priority, but could Clark be a key rotational piece around a true No. 1 runner?) *** The Texas (10-3) offensive line didn’t dominate the Wolverines at the point of attack. Seven of the Longhorns’ 33 official rushing attempts were stopped at or behind the line of scrimmage, and Manning’s 60-yard game-clinching touchdown run elevated the rushing yardage total. Still, even with Michigan (9-4) recording five tackles for loss on Wednesday, Kyle Flood’s group ended the season by allowing seven total sacks against seven ranked opponents. The Wolverines became the Longhorns' second ranked foe this season to come up empty trying to sack Manning (Vanderbilt was also shut out in the sack department). Whether Trevor Goosby comes back or not, Wednesday’s game made for a solid sendoff for a group that’s going to lose D.J. Campbell, Cole Huston and possibly Connor Robertson. *** It’s a shame Emmett Mosley V (five catches for 51 yards) was injured late in the first half and couldn’t return. He displayed impressively strong hands and the kind of decisiveness in the quick game that could make him a more versatile weapon than he got a chance to show he could be in his first season with the program. *** If the Citrus Bowl is the last game for Jack Endries as a Longhorn, it was one in which he made a difference. His five receptions for 35 yards included a touchdown catch that saw him impressively hang onto the ball after getting popped in the end zone. *** It wasn’t always pretty on defense, especially throughout the third and into the fourth quarter when Michigan started to control the game. A big part of that was Bryce Underwood (199 yards passing, 77 yards rushing, three total touchdowns and two interceptions) taking advantage of available, open throws underneath, eating into a 9.3 to-go distance on third down (a 4-for-15 night on third down) to set the Wolverines up for a 5-for-6 night on fourth down. But when the dust settled, Texas finished plus-2 in the turnover margin (3-1) thanks to a pair of big second-half interceptions by Ty’Anthony Smith (a game-high nine tackles, a tackle for loss and a quarterback hurry) and a red-zone pick by Wardell Mack. *** Colin Simmons (one sack and two tackles for loss) impacted the game, especially when he could pin his ears back and attack the Wolverines' tackles. His season-long total of 12 sacks as a sophomore ties him with Tony Degrate (1984), Kiki De Ayala (1981) and Steve McMichael (1977) for eighth on the school’s single-season list (with 21 career sacks, Simmons’ next one will move him into a tie for 12th place on the program’s career charts). *** While I’m thrilled that the Longhorns got the win and developed a lot of guys during bowl season who will be expected to take on more significant roles in 2026, three things must change before the start of next season: — Even though the officiating left a lot to be desired on Wednesday (including two controversial Michigan touchdowns confirmed by the ACC crew after going under the hood for a review), a season-high-tying 12 penalties for 104 yards isn’t how I wanted this team to end the season. I don’t know what Steve Sarkisian needs to do to fix the penalty problem, but Texas must find a way to play cleaner, more disciplined football next season. — Outside of Mason Shipley’s 2-for-2 night on field goals (43 and 51 yards, respectively), the kicking game was a disaster. It took the Longhorns entirely too long to stop kicking the ball to Andrew Marsh (163 all-purpose yards, only 10 of which came on offense) and Ryan Niblett’s fumble on a kickoff return, which set up Michigan’s first touchdown, was the only turnover of the game. The offense and defense did enough to overcome the net negative contributions from the special teams, a phase of the game in which entirely too many penalties were committed through 13 games. — I appreciated the effort of guys like Smith, Mack, Graceson Littleton (six tackles and a pass breakup), Warren Roberson (five tackles and a pass breakup), Kade Phillips (eight tackles, two tackles for loss and a pass breakup), Bo Barnes (three tackles, a tackle for loss and a sack) and Jelani McDonald (seven tackles), who threw their bodies around in the name of making plays (Roberson came painfully close to forcing a touchback on Underwood's fourth-quarter touchdown run and Mack's interception was preceeded by a sudden move to cornerback with Roberson and Kobe Black unavailable at the time). Still, the challenge for Will Muschamp will be to maximize a dynamic pass rush while tightening up coverage and eliminating the easy throws, of which there were too many available for Underwood on Wednesday. *** The unsavory aspects of Wednesday’s game aside, Texas rides into the offseason with a 10th win on the strength of a monster game from Manning, with changes afoot to help the Longhorns get back into the College Football Playoff. With that as the backdrop, I’ll worry about the transfer portal and how Muschamp will fill out the defensive staff after savoring this one for a bit. The 2025 season didn’t play out the way Longhorn fans wanted it to or hoped it would. Thankfully, an undermanned squad of fewer than 70 scholarship players gave everyone something to feel good about heading into 2026.
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