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After winning the SEC Tournament on Saturday evening, Texas softball (42-10, 16-8 SEC) has earned a No. 1 seed (No. 2 overall) in the 2026 NCAA Tournament. The Longhorns will host the Austin Regional from May 15-17, which will feature Wagner, Baylor, and Wisconsin coming to Red & Charline McCombs Field. Texas is the defending national champion and looks to be hitting its stride heading into postseason play after an impressive run in Lexington, Ky. "Obviously, I'd like to thank Kentucky for putting on a first-class tournament," UT head coach Mike White said on Saturday night. "The weather turned out great. The temperatures felt awesome after being in Austin where it could be a lot hotter. Of course,e congratulations to Alabama. The season they are having right now. They were picked ninth in the SEC and they've really showed everybody what kind of team they are. They are a great force, and they are going to have probably a great postseason as well. To my team, the resilience and the fight that they showed coming back against some teams that we've played before, never easy. And played some really good softball throughout the week. We had some hiccups here and there, but we bounced back and made the plays when he had to and of course had great pitching from Teagan Kavan." The Longhorns leaned on their ace pitcher last postseason, and will do so once again in the coming weeks. "I won't lie. For little girls that might be watching this out there. I think last night I kind of told myself, 'I'm kind of tired, I've kind of thrown a lot', and then I thought that's the fear of failure that's talking in my head," Kavan said after Saturday night's win. "I have to not listen to that. If I fear failure and I can't reach success, so just telling that voice to be quiet. I trust myself, no matter what it was going to be I was just going to compete. I just wanted to compete today for my team no matter if it was pretty or it was ugly." This story will be updated.
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OTF Premium CSC wins arbitration case vs. Nebraska
Hank South posted a topic in On Texas Football Forum
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Two message board topics — one on P.J. Tucker’s recent retirement and a discussion about Longhorn football players who could fly — got me thinking about an unlikely long-tenured pro athlete from the Forty Acres who could scoot. The 2016 NFL Draft cycle wasn’t one to write home about for the Texas program. Hassan Ridgeway was the only Longhorn invited to the NFL Scouting Combine and the only lone draft pick Texas produced. Ridgeway was a fourth-round pick by the Indianapolis Colts, one of four teams Marcus Johnson played for during a six-season NFL career. A late addition to the 2012 recruiting class, Johnson, who was committed to Texas Tech and Texas A&M before flipping to the Longhorns shortly after Texas went to College Station and left Kyle Field with a 27-25 win over the Aggies in 2011, didn’t record a catch as a true freshman. Johnson’s time with the Longhorns was plagued by inconsistent quarterback play, which contributed to his 42-game career (18 starts) concluding with 61 receptions for 473 yards and four touchdowns. Still, Johnson had enough flashes in a Texas uniform (12 catches for 187 yards and two touchdowns while helping the Longhorns to two improbable wins over Oklahoma in three Red River Shootouts) and performed well enough at his pro day (ran a 4.37 40-yard dash with a 37-inch vertical jump, an 11-3 broad jump and 22 reps on the bench press) while checking in at 6 feet 1 inches and 204 pounds for the Philadelphia Eagles to take a chance on him as an undrafted free agent. Johnson won a Super Bowl as a member of the Eagles, ending his NFL career in 2022 with the New York Giants with numbers as good or better than his production at Texas (60 receptions for 938 yards and three touchdowns while starting 19 of 55 career games for the Eagles, Colts, Giants and the Tennessee Titans). Thankfully, Steve Sarkisian has guided the Longhorn offense into a much more prosperous era of the forward pass. Under Sarkisian, four Texas wide receivers have been drafted, with Xavier Worthy and Matthew Golden going in the first round in 2024 and 2025, respectively. That’s the same number of Longhorn wideouts drafted over the course of 11 drafts (2010-20), none of whom went higher than Marquise Goodwin, the No. 78 overall pick (third round) by the Buffalo Bills in 2013. Cam Coleman should make it three first-round wide receivers produced by Sarkisian in four drafts. To put that into perspective (and not including Eric Metcalf, who was selected in the first round of the 1989 draft as an ahead-of-his-time all-purpose back), Johnny “Lam” Jones (1980) and Roy Williams (2004) were the only first-round wideouts to come out of Texas since the first draft after the AFL/NFL merger in 1967 before the Kansas City Chiefs made Worthy the 28th overall pick in the 2024 draft. With that said, during a largely forgettable period of offensive football for the program, Marcus Johnson was a bright spot who arguably had a more notable NFL career than what he accomplished at Texas. *** Jake Langi, a former member of the Texas recruiting staff under Sarkisian and Tom Herman who’s now a senior personnel analyst for Rhett Lashlee at SMU, had a social media post on Monday that should reinforce Kyle Flood’s ability to develop offensive line talent. Langi said he was once on a staff that signed five offensive linemen in a recruiting cycle. Only one of the five, who had “zero offers” and was “unranked” when Langi found him, played professional football. Langi didn’t mention the recruit or the college program. But the Longhorns did sign five offensive linemen in 2018, which was Herman’s first full cycle on the job. Junior Angilau was a multiple-year starter whose career was derailed by an injury. Reese Moore and Rafiti Ghirmai transferred out of the program after making little to no impact. Junior college signee Mikey Grandy never played a snap for Texas after concussion-related issues forced him to retire. The fifth signee in that class was Christian Jones, a soccer player who found football late and was committed to the Mustangs before the Longhorns flipped him ahead of National Signing Day. A reserve for his first two seasons at Texas before emerging as the team’s starting right tackle in 2020, Jones had a rough transition to left tackle under Flood in 2021. Nevertheless, the arrival of Kelvin Banks Jr. allowed Jones to move back to right tackle, where he flourished, evolving from a player who struggled mightily and noticeably in 2021 to a two-time All-Big 12 selection and a fifth-round pick of the Arizona Cardinals in the 2024 draft. From the previous staff, Flood inherited Jones and Hayden Conner. The two Herman signees departed the Forty Acres as NFL draft picks (the Cardinals took Conner in the sixth round of the 2025 draft) who played key roles in the program's long-overdue return to the national championship discussion. After neglecting the offensive line in the transfer portal ahead of the 2025 season, the Longhorns added a likely future NFL offensive tackle (Melvin Siani), a probable starter at left guard (Laurence Seymore) and two developmental pieces (Jonte Newman and Dylan Sikorski) who showed varying degrees of promise during spring practice. Still, if Texas can develop more homegrown talent in the trenches like Jones and Conner and not be overly reliant on the transfer portal (which has its drawbacks because top-tier linemen aren’t cheap, especially if there’s a need for an NFL-caliber tackle), the Longhorns can allocate their roster-building resources to fill other needs. *** Texas salvaged a baseball road series loss in Knoxville over the weekend, taking a 12-6 decision over Tennessee on Sunday. Losing two of three games to the Volunteers aside, a lingering issue facing Jim Schlossnagle’s club is what the Longhorns can expect the rest of the way from starting pitchers Luke Harrison and Ruger Riojas. Harrison’s struggles against SEC competition have primarily come on the road. After going 5.2 innings in wins over Auburn (7-6 on March 21) and South Carolina (5-3 on April 3), Harrison lasted a combined 4.1 innings in losses to Texas A&M (0.2 innings in an 11-4 loss on April 11) and Tennessee (3.2 innings in Saturday’s 14-9 loss), which matched the length of his outing in a 4-3 win over Vanderbilt on April 26. Five of the six hits Harrison allowed in the loss to the Volunteers were for extra bases, including four home runs. Harrison has given up 27 hits and 20 earned runs in his last five starts, only one of which he’s gone more than 5.0 innings (seven innings in a 2-1 loss to Alabama at home on April 19). Riojas, whose start was moved from Saturday to Sunday due to what Schlossnagle said was a combination of soreness and his continued bullpen work with Max Weiner, hasn’t had an outing exceed 5.0 innings since his seven-inning gem in a 14-0 run-rule win over Oklahoma on March 26. His pitch count has exceeded 74 in just two of those six starts (83 in a 9-8 road loss to the Aggies on April 10 and 99 in a 3-1 loss to the Crimson Tide on April 18). Riojas has allowed at least four earned runs in four of his last six starts, including four via a grand slam on Sunday at Lindsey Nelson Stadium. He’s allowed 25 hits over his last 30 innings, 20 of which have been of the extra-base variety (11 doubles, five triples and four home runs). The life of an SEC pitcher is dealing with one top-notch offense after another. Still, a welcome sight for Longhorn baseball observers would be Harrison and Riojas entering the postseason off of strong outings when they pitch for No. 6 Texas (36-12, 16-10 SEC) in the last series of the regular season against Missouri, which starts on Thursday at UFCU Disch-Falk Field.
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Portaltails & Dreams This is the new portal thread for the OTF community. Every time a portal thread goes over 75k views, I'll start a new one.
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Behind a complete game in the circle from Teagan Kavan, No. 6 Texas thumped No. 3 Alabama, 7-1, to win the championship game of the SEC Tournament at John Cropp Stadium in Lexington, Ky., on Saturday. The Longhorns, who entered the tournament as the No. 4 seed, defeated Ole Miss and No. 12 Georgia to reach the title game. Mike White’s club avenged a road series loss to the Crimson Tide in early April thanks in large part to Kavan, who scattered three hits, walked one and struck out 12 en route to the program’s first SEC Tournament crown. Texas (42-10) was led offensively by Katie Stewart. The SEC Player of the Year went 3-for-5 with two RBI, two runs scored and a solo home run, which capped the scoring in the top of the sixth. Alabama (49-7) took a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first on an Alexis Pupillo solo home run. Kavan, however, buckled down and allowed only two hits the rest of the way, while the Longhorns scored seven consecutive runs, including a three-run fourth inning. Texas, which stayed at McCombs Field in the first two rounds of the postseason in 2025 on its way to winning the national championship. White’s Longhorns will learn their national seed and path back to Oklahoma City for what would be a third consecutive trip to the Women’s College World Series on Sunday, when the NCAA Tournament field is revealed. View full news story
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The third game of the series is live on ESPN2 as the Longhorns look to avoid getting swept in Knoxville. Ruger Riojas, who missed his start yesterday with a combination of working on some things in the bullpen and soreness, is on the mound on Mother's Day. Also, Ethan Mendoza is in the lineup today as the designated hitter. Jayden Duplantier is at second base for the second game in a row as Mendoza recovers from a shoulder injury he suffered in Friday's loss.
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Beyond suffering a 5-1 road loss to Tennessee in Friday’s series opener at Lindsay Nelson Stadium in Knoxville, No. 4 Texas faces an immediate future with Ethan Mendoza’s status up in the air. The junior second baseman left the game after an awkward landing while diving for a ball hit in his direction off the bat of Volunteers second baseman Blake Grimmer. Mendoza tried to shake off what Jim Schlossnagle confirmed after the game is a shoulder injury, but he left the field and was replaced in the lineup by Callum Early. Schlossnagle didn’t have anything else concrete on Mendoza’s injury, telling Roger Wallace during his postgame radio interview that the injury is to Mendoza’s throwing shoulder (a team source told On Texas Football late Friday that there was no definitive word on the extent of the injury). “He’s in a fair amount of discomfort. We’ll just have to take it day by day and see if he’s able to — I can’t imagine he’ll be able to throw anytime soon. Maybe, he’ll be able to hit.” While Early stayed in the game for the second and third innings, he was lifted in the top of the fourth for Josh Livingston. Livingston stayed in the game after beating Tennessee’s shift with a bunt single down the third-base side of the infield, occupying first base, with Casey Borba moving to third base and Temo Becerra sliding over to second. It’s a similar configuration to the one Texas (36-11, 15-9 SEC) utilized when Adrian Rodriguez was sidelined after getting the staple in his surgically-repaired hand removed. That’s likely the mix the Longhorns will go with as long as Mendoza is out of the lineup. Mendoza, who struck out swinging in his only at-bat of the game, entered the series hitting .278 (50-for-180) with 12 doubles, eight home runs, one triple, 40 RBI and an .844 OPS. Texas and Tennessee will continue their three-game series in Knoxville on Saturday at 5 p.m. (SEC Network+). View full news story
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Behind a complete game in the circle from Teagan Kavan, No. 6 Texas thumped No. 3 Alabama, 7-1, to win the championship game of the SEC Tournament at John Cropp Stadium in Lexington, Ky., on Saturday. The Longhorns, who entered the tournament as the No. 4 seed, defeated Ole Miss and No. 12 Georgia to reach the title game. Mike White’s club avenged a road series loss to the Crimson Tide in early April thanks in large part to Kavan, who scattered three hits, walked one and struck out 12 en route to the program’s first SEC Tournament crown. Texas (42-10) was led offensively by Katie Stewart. The SEC Player of the Year went 3-for-5 with two RBI, two runs scored and a solo home run, which capped the scoring in the top of the sixth. Alabama (49-7) took a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first on an Alexis Pupillo solo home run. Kavan, however, buckled down and allowed only two hits the rest of the way, while the Longhorns scored seven consecutive runs, including a three-run fourth inning. Texas, which stayed at McCombs Field in the first two rounds of the postseason in 2025 on its way to winning the national championship. White’s Longhorns will learn their national seed and path back to Oklahoma City for what would be a third consecutive trip to the Women’s College World Series on Sunday, when the NCAA Tournament field is revealed.
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As expected, Argyle WR Julian Caldwell has committed to Texas Tech. He called the Longhorns staff earlier this week to thank them for recruiting him. We don't expect him to OV Austin at this point. North Forney WR Briceson Thrower remains the top in-state WR target.
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Beyond suffering a 5-1 road loss to Tennessee in Friday’s series opener at Lindsay Nelson Stadium in Knoxville, No. 4 Texas faces an immediate future with Ethan Mendoza’s status up in the air. The junior second baseman left the game after an awkward landing while diving for a ball hit in his direction off the bat of Volunteers second baseman Blake Grimmer. Mendoza tried to shake off what Jim Schlossnagle confirmed after the game is a shoulder injury, but he left the field and was replaced in the lineup by Callum Early. Schlossnagle didn’t have anything else concrete on Mendoza’s injury, telling Roger Wallace during his postgame radio interview that the injury is to Mendoza’s throwing shoulder (a team source told On Texas Football late Friday that there was no definitive word on the extent of the injury). “He’s in a fair amount of discomfort. We’ll just have to take it day by day and see if he’s able to — I can’t imagine he’ll be able to throw anytime soon. Maybe, he’ll be able to hit.” While Early stayed in the game for the second and third innings, he was lifted in the top of the fourth for Josh Livingston. Livingston stayed in the game after beating Tennessee’s shift with a bunt single down the third-base side of the infield, occupying first base, with Casey Borba moving to third base and Temo Becerra sliding over to second. It’s a similar configuration to the one Texas (36-11, 15-9 SEC) utilized when Adrian Rodriguez was sidelined after getting the staple in his surgically-repaired hand removed. That’s likely the mix the Longhorns will go with as long as Mendoza is out of the lineup. Mendoza, who struck out swinging in his only at-bat of the game, entered the series hitting .278 (50-for-180) with 12 doubles, eight home runs, one triple, 40 RBI and an .844 OPS. Texas and Tennessee will continue their three-game series in Knoxville on Saturday at 5 p.m. (SEC Network+).
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WR Recruiting Note: Tre Moore OnTexasFootball has learned that Pflugerville Weiss 4-star WR Tre Moore and Texas will not be a match. OTF doesn’t expect the 6-4, 211-pounder to make an OV to Texas June 5-7. Texas is hyper focused on 5-star Easton Royal, 5-star Monshun Sales and 4-star+ Briceson Thrower. OTF expects the June OV list at WR to keep shrinking.
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Texas is very active on the road this week handing out new offers. We've posted a number of them already. Here, we'll keep them all in one place for the week.
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If anyone has lingering concerns about Arch Manning’s postseason foot surgery impacting his availability or effectiveness as QB1 for the Texas Longhorns in 2026, Steve Sarkisian set the record straight on Tuesday. “People are overreacting way too much to this,” Sarkisian said during a live radio interview with Craig Way on Austin’s AM 1300 The Zone. “The guy had a foot issue that we had to get fixed that we didn’t want to do last year, obviously, right before the season and/or during the season. So we waited until after the season. He could’ve been back in spring practice, probably, in week three. But, again, he’s in year four in our system. So him throwing 7-on-7, him throwing routes on air, and that getting KJ (Lacey) and Dia (Bell) and MJ (Morris) more opportunities to get accustomed to playing systematically for us… “Rest assured, Arch Manning is fine,” he added. “He looks great.” While Manning’s status heading into the summer doesn’t seem to be in doubt, there are three lingering concerns about Texas with spring practice in the rearview mirror. 1. The running game Between Manning’s running ability (specifically, the advantage he gives the offense with a run threat the defense has to account for), the elite weapons the Longhorns have on the perimeter spreading opponents out and a deeper, overhauled running back room capable of maximizing runs (picking up yards when the play isn’t blocked perfectly), the conditions are ripe for the Texas running game to leave last season’s lackluster performance in the dust. Still, until we see the offensive line take the field with all of its top hands in the lineup, including Trevor Goosby making a full return from shoulder surgery and Laurence Seymore arriving in the summer as a possible answer at left guard, there should be a shred of doubt regarding the running game’s ceiling in 2026. Even if Derrek Cooper, Michael Terry III and James Simon had their way with Will Muschamp’s defense in the end-of-spring open practice, the fact that it wasn’t done in a game against an opponent in a different colored uniform would’ve required taking it with a grain of salt. The effectiveness of the offensive line and the ability to establish and play with a physical, hard-nosed mentality on offense (one that allows the Longhorns to move the football on the ground when opponents know it’s coming) will remain a question mark until proven otherwise on the field. 2. Safety depth If Manning is the player Texas can least afford to lose, a case can be made for Jelani McDonald over Colin Simmons as the next most valuable Longhorn in 2026. At least the edge room has capable players behind Simmons. McDonald headlines a safety group that exited spring practice with more questions than answers when looking at the big picture. With Xavier Filsaime, Zelus Hicks and Jonah Williams working their way back from surgery, Blake Gideon’s room will look and feel different whenever Texas is back on the field. Although Jonathan Cunningham and Toray Davis flashed throughout spring practice, and Derek Williams Jr. finally looks back to his pre-injury form, the Longhorns need a lot more competition within a position group that didn’t have enough of it during the spring. 3. Special teams unknowns Ryan Niblett’s presence and prowess in the return game are the only proven commodities to speak of on special teams. Texas went into the transfer portal for help at placekicker, punter and long snapper, but we know as much about those acquisitions at the beginning of May as we did in January. Gianni Spetic and Mac Chiumento didn’t make an impactful first impression during the open practice on April 18. They’ve both got a decently high bar to clear to give the Longhorns what they had in the steady, reliable legs of Mason Shipley and Jack Bouwmeester. Special teams can’t be considered a strength or a weakness right now. Like the running game, Jeff Banks’ unit will be under the microscope in the season opener, which is probably the next best glance the public will get of the new-look kicking game. View full news story
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The Texas contingent making its way along the West Coast (Muschamp, Nansen, Clark, Baker, etc.) stopped in to see 5-star ATH and USC commit Honor Fa'alave-Johnson on Wednesday, a source tells OTF. Fa'alave-Johnson is ranked the No. 1 athlete in the county (recruited at safety by Texas). He committed to the Trojans in March ahead of originally planning to visit Texas on March 27. The source tells OTF there is no plans to visit Austin "at this time." However, this marks the second time the Longhorns staff has travelled to San Diego to see the five-star prospect. We're seeing the Longhorns dot all their i's and cross all their t's in pursuit of the safety position. This is part of that.
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OTF has learned that Texas WR coach Chris Jackson is expected to visit 5-star WR Monshun Sales today.
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OTF has confirmed that the 4-star TE will announce his decision on May 15th Texas Georgia Ohio State OTF prediction: Texas
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Post Spring Heat Check: Do I think you can win the SEC? Alabama – if everything goes perfectly Arkansas – strong no Auburn – no Florida – not a 100% no Georgia – definitely yes Kentucky – no LSU – yes Missouri – no Miss State – no Oklahoma – i lean yes Ole Miss – i think so South Carolina – not buying in again, no. Tennessee – no Texas – yes Texas A&M – only if QB takes a jump Vanderbilt – nope.