ADVERTISEMENT

Ketch's 10 Thoughts From the Weekend (Permission to dream big?)

Let the record show we have 5 this year as well and they are all on the FIRST team
pre-season lists haven't mattered in a decade. That you just mentioned them is funny to me.

Caden Sterns is first-team all-Big 12 in the pre-season and he touched a football in a game last season one more time than you did.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Topcat79
A few of @Ketchum 's predictions:

2010: He was touting Garret Gilbert so much I placed a Heisman bet on him. GG was the worst QB I've ever seen that year. 5-7

2016: As he stated in the article, We had permission to dream big. 5-7

2020: Quinn Ewers 12th best recruit in the state. (National guy Speigelmen told Suchomel he is the best QB in the nation for all of 2020, 2021 and 2022 classes)

7-3? I'm totally fine with this prediction.
It warms my heart with the flood of possible mistakes I make on a daily basis, you have three fairly whack ones to define me by.

* The GG grip is legit. It's 10 years old, by the way and he's still earning NFL paychecks.

* Permission to dream big should forever serve as a warning and yet the important parts are apparently forgotten.

* lol at suggesting that Ewers is a prediction.

Technically, only one of those re predictions...
 
The growing pains with a team basically loaded with Sophs. Granted they were highly recruited Sophs. Hell, most of them got hurt.

Plus players

Sam
Sam
all three RBs
Jake S
Eagles is the wildcard

I believe the rest is our line will be serviceable enough to win the Big12.

best QB in Big12, best WR core, best RB core and the best LT.

D

Coburb
Ossai
Every DB we have can be the man
Overshown is the wildcard
Our dline will be the best in the Big12 as will our secondary.

now can the coaches actually win their confidence, get them to believe, and win at a high level? I think Ash and Yurcich certainly can. They have before. At a very high level.

9-1 Big12 champs and a valiant first round loss to either Bama or Clemson.
wow, you have them in the playoffs and they haven't so much as proven anything to you in front of your very eyes?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Texas Diesel
Thanks Ketch. You saved me a lot of time trying to gather the data myself, and I’ve always been curious how the state stacks up on a national level.

I think it’s the spread offense all the Texas teams run in high school and college that’s hurting their pro potential, but I’d love your take.

Also Ohio State’s 2015 NC game against Oregon was on tv tonight so I watched to see Ash’s defense—and it got me a little excited.
Saving you time is what I'm here for! :)
 
  • Like
Reactions: cagrafft
I have a gut feeling that we are going to regret moving Kerstetter to center.
That's a conversation that hasn't received a lot of attention, but it's one of the big things I'll be watching for in the first month.
 
  • Like
Reactions: MATF
Didn’t you spend about 30 posts arguing that Eagles was a proven player when half the board was arguing against you? ;)
He is one of the most proven players on the team. That truth should be an alarm. It is for me.
 
Eagles underperformed last season. Not sure why anyone expected something different this year. He doesn’t have IT.
Eagles had one of the best sophomore seasons any receiver has ever had at the school.
 
Teams that suck - WVU, Tech, Kansas, K-State, Baylor, UTEP

Teams that COULD be good and reasons why they're not:
- TCU - lost their QB
- Iowa St - Have beaten Texas once in Austin. Ever.
- OU - Lost their starting QB, both RBs, 80% of their offensive line, and their best WR.
- OSU I'll give you.

Can you provide any specific info on their OL losses ?
I thought they were returning 4/5 starters.
 
If this was the NFL, it seems like, based on reports he would not make the roster cut. Practice squad maybe. Classic disgruntled underachiever. So very disappointing.
I hear you and agree. Herman spoke of him in the Spring as the next big thing but reports of him either ready to move on or quit were out there and it seemed like they were courting him to stay. Big time players play. They should not need to be "talked up".
Hope he comes around but, we shouldn't beg him.
 
Hey as far as predictions go, I picked Texas to win the Big 12 title a year ago!
 
I been playing the Yacht rock channel for a while and it's great. Unfortunately I agree on the 7-3 prediction but only because it's 2020 and some stupid sh#t is going to happen. We could go 9-1 but this team still needs luck to win and some of that is bad luck that we seem to have more of so ..
I'll go 8-2....
 
Hey as far as predictions go, I picked Texas to win the Big 12 title a year ago!
Thank you for posting the info and breakdown on the O-Line. A lot of data to comb through; had to read again this morning. Interesting on the percentages pointing out West.
 
(Sell) It's not impossible, but I'll say they get two in as of right now.
Statistically, the SEC is going to have the hardest time getting a 2nd team into the playoffs, because they are the only conference that will have as many combined losses as wins. A 10-game conference schedule and no OOC games means teams like A&M and Miss State won't be able to go 4-4 in conference, add 4 cupcake OOC victories, and give the top teams another "win" over a Top 25 program. If you look at Alabama, LSU, Florida, Auburn, and Georgia, they all play 3 Top 12 teams (4 if you count the SEC CCG). That means the #2 team is going to be a 2-loss team at best, but likely a 3-loss team. To get 2 in, they are going to need 2 teams to be head & shoulders better than the rest. I don't see that. I see 8-2 being the 2nd best record in the SEC, and 8-3 after the CCG.

All that said, statistics are moot if the Big 12 or ACC don't have an elite 2nd team that produces a 1-loss record heading into the CCG.
 
BTW, nothing is more perfect than spending endless hours researching for a column, only to have that work ignored because I dared to suggest Texas might go 7-3.

What was I thinking?

The OL stuff is interesting, but we all knew Texas has sucked there. The numbers you produced are probably a lot of the reason some brothers from Fort Worth are going East. Honestly the project is probably some useful tangible opposition research for a lot of programs we don't like. It is what it is.
 
ee0e3a40b744e2eebc3b4d949eaa9055x.jpg



Knock on wood, we're a mere five days and change until the 2020 Texas football team kicks off its season and I'm going to make a confession...

I don't know what to tell you.

As the sand has passed through the hour glass in recent weeks, I'm intrigued by the reality that I find myself so unsure about the 2020 Texas Longhorns, while so many others seem to certain about the upcoming season.

"7-3 would be disaster!"

"8-2 is the minimum bar!"

"We should win every game."

I see the constant stream of confidence and I wonder if we're all watching the same football program.

From my vantage point, there are two things that I'm confident that I know about this year's Longhorns:

a. The program has been stuck in manure for the last decade and is literally coming off a 7-5 season that led to the removal of 70-percent of Tom Herman's coaching staff.

b. I don't have a great feeling for what to expect.

That's it. That's my list.

I suppose I know a few more things. I know Teras lost four Big 12 games in 2019, TCU drop-kicked the Longhorns upside the head for the fifth time in six years and Baylor won by two touchdowns and led 21-3 going into the fourth quarter. Oh, and Kansas nearly beat Texas at DKR.

Yeah yeah, yeah... Texas hung with LSU and Oklahoma for four quarters if you're into moral victories defining your hope. The Longhorns also beat the hell out of Utah so bad in the bowl game that it became impossible to not wonder if Herman should fire a coach every week.

The reason I'm beyond the point of exasperation is that we've seen Texas flash over the course of the last decade, and I have no doubt they'll flash again at various points in 2020.

Yet, this has been a program that has taken two steps forward and 2.5 steps back for pretty much an entire decade and while everyone makes grand predictions about the upcoming season, all I want to know is this...

What the hell have you guys seen that makes you believe this season is the moment when Texas football draws a line in the sand and declares, "I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take it any more!"

Believe me, I want to believe. I'm like a 10-year old kid wanting to believe in Santa, that's how bad I want to believe. In case you haven't noticed, we're in a pandemic and a bad-ass Texas football team would be one hell of a good thing for business, so when I tell you that I want to believe, know that with every piece of my soul I'd wish Texas to a 10-0 season and into the playoff if I could.

But, I'm the guy that gave you permission to dream big in 2016. Remember that? How'd that go?

No, the truth of the matter is that we've seen one okey-doke after another starting with the 2010 season and I've jumped on that hook, line and sinker enough times that I'm going to wait until I see that worm talking to a family member before I go for a bite again without caution.

What I worry about with this team is that it's been sucked down into being average for so long that it truly doesn't know how to get out of it. It's a cycle that plagued the Longhorns from the mid-80s through the early portion of Mack Brown's tenure. Mediocrity has become muscle-memory around this program. Does it have the steel that a guy like Vince Young gave it to pull itself out of the Oklahoma domination 15 years ago? Is that who Sam is?

Until I see a weekly level of anger and unbreakable resolution from the boys in burnt orange, you'll forgive me if I don't see 7-3 as unrealistic when it represents more than this program has regularly accomplished since Charlie Sheen was the highest-paid actor on television.

Yeah, man. It's been that long.

No. 2 - Falling off the deep end ...

If you missed it on Friday, I took the first step towards the deep end of the pool when I released the first stream of data related to the historical output of the state's top-ranked offensive linemen in the Rivals.com rankings from 2002-2015.

Basically, the data confirmed what you already likely knew, which is the Lone Star State and (specifically) the Texas program perform well-below the national norms.

But, how much under the national norms?

That question steered me into some deep waters this weekend, as I set out to provide context to the UT offensive line development problem by being able to directly inspect it with the proper amount of context.

So, I not only researched the state of Texas, but I also specifically broke down the numbers in California and Florida. When that felt like it wasn't enough, I charted the success rates of each area of the country. Finally, I narrowed my focus to schools like Alabama, Ohio State and Oklahoma.

By the time I was done with the research this weekend, I had reviewed the careers of more than 600 of the highest ranked offensive linemen in the country among the high school ranks, including every four- or five-star line prospect from 2002-2015.

Before I take you head-first into the data, I want to explain why I'm using the NFL drafted data points for emphasis.

1. None of this is subjective. In terms of compiling data, it's either a yes or no. There's no debate. The system is the purest means of evaluating the development of talent at the end of each player's cycle.

2. While there are occasional exceptions to the rule, this method of measurement leaves out very few top-level college players, which means that it ends up providing data for us that is generally strong enough to not be impacted drastically with a smattering anomalies.

3. This is not the end-all of useful data, but what it does allow for us to do to is stick an actual numerical value on recruiting rankings and their individual worth.

I'm all ears if anyone has any better ideas.

No. 3 - The Longhorns vs. the national numbers ...

From 2002-15, here's a look at the performance breakdown of each of the top four rankings tiers in the Rivals.com rankings system with regards to players being drafted in the NFL.

* 46.3% (25 of 54) of five-star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams:
* 34.2% (28 of 82) of high-four star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams
* 23.0% (26 of 113) of mid-four star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams
* 14.7% (50 of 341) of low four-star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams.

From 2002-15, here's a look at the performance breakdown of each of the top four rankings tiers in the Rivals.com rankings system with regards to players from the state of Texas being drafted in the NFL.

* 22.2% (2 of 9) of five-star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams:
* 35.7% (5 of 14) of high-four star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams
* 6.7% (1 of 15) of mid-four star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams
* 21.1% (8 of 38) of low four-star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams.

From 2002-15, here's a look at the performance breakdown of each of the top four rankings tiers in the Rivals.com rankings system with regards to Longhorns from the state of Texas being drafted in the NFL.

* 33.3% (1 of 3) of five-star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams:
* 14.3% (1 of 7) of high-four star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams
* 0.0% (0 of 6) of mid-four star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams
* 8.3% (1 of 12) of low four-star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams.

What's interesting about the data as it relates to the state of Texas is how much the numbers in prove in a couple of areas when you pull the Longhorns out of the development equation.

* 57.1% (4 of 7) of high-four star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams
* 11.1% (1 of 9) of mid-four star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams
* 26.9% (7 of 26) of low four-star offensive line prospects were drafted by NFL teams.

No. 4 - Comparing Texas vs. other programs ...

Here's the percentages of drafted players including all five- and four-star prospects from 2002-2015:

Florida 42.1% (8 of 19)
Alabama 37.5% (9 of 24)
Miami 33.3% (6 of 18)
Georgia 31.3% (5 of 16)
Ohio State 30.4% (7 of 23)
USC 29.6% (8 of 27)
Oklahoma 26.3% (5 of 19)
Auburn 25% (6 of 24)
Michigan 19.2% (5 of 26)
LSU 15.4% (4 of 26)
Texas 10.7% (3 of 28)

Here's the percentages of drafted players including all five- and high four-star prospects from 2002-2015:

Auburn 83.3% (5 of 6)
Alabama 60.0% (6 of 10)
Miami 50.0% (2 of 4)
USC 40.0% (6 of 15)
Georgia 40.0% (2 of 5)
Florida 37.5% (3 of 8)
Ohio State 33.3% (3 of 9)
LSU 25.0% (1 of 4)
Texas 20.0% (2 of 10)
Michigan 14.3% (1 of 7)
Oklahoma 0.0% (0 of 2)

Here's the percentages of drafted players including all mid- and low four-star prospects from 2002-2015:

Florida 45.5% (5 of 11)
Oklahoma 29.4% (5 of 17)
Miami 28.9% (4 of 14)
Ohio State 28.6% (4 of 14)
Georgia 25.0% (3 of 12)
Alabama 21.4% (3 of 14)
Michigan 21.1% (4 of 19)
USC 16.7% (2 of 12)
LSU 13.6% (3 of 22)
Auburn 5.6% (1 of 18)
Texas 5.6% (1 of 18)

A couple of notes worth mentioning...

* Five of the 6 five-stars Alabama has recruited from 2002-2015 have been drafted. Four of the six have been first round picks and the other was selected in the second round.

* Not to be completely outdone, Auburn has had 5 of the 6 highest-rated prospects in program history from 2002-2015 drafted by NFL teams.

* Oklahoma is 0 for 4 with the four-highest rated linemen in program history from 2002-2015, but have made some money in that low four-star tier. In fact, Oklahoma developed more low-four-star linemen in its 2015 recruiting class into drafted players than Texas had in all of those years.

* No program in the country has signed more five and four star high school offensive line prospects between 2002-2015 than Texas (28).

No. 5 - The regions with the most talent ...

This might be the most interesting section of data for my money.

In hopes of determining which areas of the country are developing the best talent, I did breakdowns on the following states/regions of the country.

* Mid-Atlantic (Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Connecticut, Vermont, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Washington DC and West Virgnia

* Midwest (Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota

* Southeast (Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee)

* West (California, Oregon,. Washington, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Arizona, Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, Nevada and Alaska)

Here's the percentages of drafted players including all five-star prospects from 2002-2015:

West 66.7% (8 of 12)
Southeast 50.0% (7 of 14)
Mid-Atlantic 50% (6 of 12)
Midwest 28.6% (2 of 7)
Texas 22.2 (2 of 9)

Here's the percentages of drafted players including all high four-star prospects from 2002-2015:

West 45.5% (5 of 11)
Texas 35.7% (5 of 14)
Mid-Atlantic 35% (7 of 20)
Southeast 25.0% (4 of 16)
Midwest 21.4% (3 of 14)

Here's the percentages of drafted players including all mid four-star prospects from 2002-2015:

Mid-Atlantic 38.9% (7 of 18)
Southeast 33.3% (13 of 39)
Midwest 20.0% (3 of 15)
'West 8.3% (2 of 24)
Texas 6.7% (1 of 15)

Here's the percentages of drafted players including all low four-star prospects from 2002-2015:

Midwest 17.3% (9 of 52)
Texas 16.2% (6 of 37)
'West 13.9% (10 of 72)
Southeast 13.6% (14 of 103)
Mid-Atlantic 13.4% (9 of 67)

So, what would be my 3-step plan to rebuilding the planning along the offensive line recruiting if I was basing it on this data.

1. Heavily target the elite offensive line talent out West.
2. Emphasize building some in-roads into a very talented and insanely underrated Mid-Atlantic region.
3. Once you get beyond, the elite of the elite prospects in the West and Mid-Atlantic, there's not much reason to leave the state of Texas for low-four star talent and below. There's no real regional advantage to be found the deeper you go into the talent pool.

No. 6 - Scattershooting on Longhorns football ...

... Does the entire season come down to how well Denzel Okafor and Christian Jones come together on the right side of the offensive line? That might be a little much, but there's no question that one of the subplots to this season is just how well that side of the line can play.

... The closer the season gets, the more I'm starting to think Roschon Johnson has been marginalized because of the looming Bijan Robinson shadow, but don't be shocked if he ends up building off of last season's start at running back with a year that takes a back seat to few on this roster.

... Brennan Eagles showing up needing to be pushed into game shape is beyond disappointment. Come on, Brennan!

... I sure would like to have heard Jordan Whittington's name a little more in camp.

... I'm not sure Whittington really pushed Jake Smith in camp. Buy all the Jake Smith stock you can.

... Where's the pass rush coming from outside of Joseph Ossai? I don't know.

... I think Alfred Collins might be starting by the Oklahoma game.

No. 7 – BUY or SELL …
penny-stocks-to-buy-or-sell-august.jpg



(Sell) I need to see it to believe it.


(Sell) It's the first game. I wouldn't be surprised if Texas is in the 30s and UTEP scores a couple of touchdowns. Texas just needs to get the game played, win and show some improvement.


(Sell)


(Sell) I'm just not sure Texas is going to have a chance to break in Card this year unless there's an injury.


(Buy) If you set it at 3.5, I might take the under, though.


(Sell) I think there's a zero-percent chance Sam accounts for 45+ touchdowns in 10 games.


(Buy) I bet it's better than people think. Gonna be a lot of people dying to scream after the job 2020 has done on us.


(Sell) I need to see it to believe it. It just feels like hype right now.


(Sell) At least one game gets cancelled or postponed. Just a guess.


(Sell) Not being last might as well be the same as being first for Bob.


(Sell) I've watched a lot of hoops this week.


(Sell) I have to believe Rattler finishes as a Top 2 quarterback.


(Sell) It's not impossible, but I'll say they get two in as of right now.

No. 8 - Scattershooting on the world of sports ...

... I weirdly enjoyed the SMU/Texas State game. I can't explain why other than to say... FOOTBALL!

... Bring on mighty undefeated UTEP! Seriously, having played a game is a nice little advantage for UTEP going into this game.

... BYU/Navy has a chance to be a fun little college football game on Monday.

... My fantasy draft is tomorrow and I don't have any idea what I plan to do with the 8th pick.

... Isn't Brandon Carr a little old to be on the Dallas practice squad? I guess not.

... DeShaun Watson's contract was just a not nail in the coffin in the idea that Dallas won't eventually pay Dak prescott every dime he wants.

... Mitch Trubisky is the starting quarterback in Chicago. Have fun, Bears fans.

... Of course, that happened to Novak Djokovic. Good grief.

... I might be the only person who believes this, but Leo Messi's problems are all Leo Messi's fault. When you're worth over 100 million per year as a brand and you don't have elite lawyers advising you, any contract issue is one person and one person's fault only.

... If Gini Wijnaldum has played his last game for Liverpool, he'll leave as a legend of the club and a key piece of everything the club has accomplished over the last few seasons. Consider me sad, as he'll be the first true critical piece of the last few seasons to move on if he heads to Barcelona. Excuse me while I tear up.

No. 9 - The List: Best Yacht Rock Songs ...

40 years ago this week, Christopher Cross topped the Billboard rankings with the iconic "Sailing".

With that in. mind, I give you my Top 10 Yacht Rock songs of all-time.

10. Baby Come Back (Player)
9. How Much I Feel (Ambrosia)
8. Arthur's Theme (Christopher Cross)
7. What a Fool Believes (Doobie Brothers)
6. This Is It (Kenny Loggins)
5. Rosanna (Toto)
4. Hey Nineteen (Steely Dan)
3. Africa (Toto)
2. Waiting for a Girl Like You (Foreigner)
1. Saling (Christopher Cross)

No.10 - And finally...

7-3.

That's my season prediction.
I say 9-1, and the loss will come to a mid conference finisher
 
I’ll add that Joe Burrow was the heisman trophy winner and set records yet was 3rd team qb on the All-Sec team preseason. Last year really doesn’t matter this year as far as who improves and plays well. I believe in this staff. Yurcich is awesome and Ash is awesome. The position coaches are huge upgrades with the exception of maybe unproven Valai but frankly corners were a disaster last year and it’s hard to imagine them not getting better in this scheme with pressure hopefully actually being applied to the qb and people not blitzing from outer space making us play essentially down players (they weren’t getting to qb and weren’t covering so just a waste of a player)
I agree with you 100% but I’m going to play Ketchum for a second .

What makes Yurcich awesome? He was fired from Ok State and wasn’t the one calling plays at Ohio State. Also, Coleman wasn’t retained by the new staff at KSU or hired by anyone when he was fired before he became a GA here.

What makes them upgrades as Herman had a top 15 offense.
 
  • Like
Reactions: DrewH14
Hopes (10-0) & expectations (7-3) are two entirely different things. I'm not drinking the Kool Aid yet. Too many maryland & kansas nightmares.
utep having a game under their belt is a big advantage.

Hook 'Em
 
  • Like
Reactions: Texas Diesel
I been playing the Yacht rock channel for a while and it's great. Unfortunately I agree on the 7-3 prediction but only because it's 2020 and some stupid sh#t is going to happen. We could go 9-1 but this team still needs luck to win and some of that is bad luck that we seem to have more of so ..
I'll go 8-2....
I factored in at least one crazy result in my prediction.
 
  • Like
Reactions: KoolMoD
Thank you for posting the info and breakdown on the O-Line. A lot of data to comb through; had to read again this morning. Interesting on the percentages pointing out West.
The numbers outside of Cali are actually stronger than when including Cali.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Hunter67
The OL stuff is interesting, but we all knew Texas has sucked there. The numbers you produced are probably a lot of the reason some brothers from Fort Worth are going East. Honestly the project is probably some useful tangible opposition research for a lot of programs we don't like. It is what it is.
Alabama's almost perfect when it comes to elite of elite line prospects.

I'm talking twice the national average.

Hard to ignore.
 
7-3 sucks, but I don't blame you for it.

I grew into a Texas fan as a kid in the mid-late 80s, and attended UT 1991-1995. Texas was a pretty average program the entire same save for 1990 (before the Cotton Bowl) and that was my normal for the program. Anything better than 7-4 felt great.

Then Mack came, 2004-2009 happened, and the expectations changed forever. Yet a lot more of my life than not, we have been an average program.

I kind of wish I could reset my mindset to the pre-Mack mindset.
We can easily, Just get Vinny and his offensive line
 
I agree with you 100% but I’m going to play Ketchum for a second .

What makes Yurcich awesome? He was fired from Ok State and wasn’t the one calling plays at Ohio State. Also, Coleman wasn’t retained by the new staff at KSU or hired by anyone when he was fired before he became a GA here.

What makes them upgrades as Herman had a top 15 offense.
It's also been half a decade since Ash flexed any muscle as a defensive mind.
 
  • Like
Reactions: OkayCoolFU
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT