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2016 Season Running Thread

Jeff Howe - UTL

-- Before getting into some observations on the current players I want to mention that there's a big difference between the players Strong has recruited and the guys Mack Brown was bringing in toward the end of his tenure. Strong's recruits look, for the most part, like guys who will be in the NFL in a few years. You couldn't say that about all of Brown's recruits. Not to say that Brown didn't recruit NFL talent late in his time at Texas, but Strong's second full-cycle class (much like his first) doesn't have many catches (if any) that you'd want to throw back if you could.

-- The current running backs who were there were an impressive group. Porter has transformed his body already and look fantastic on the hoof. I was blown away by Porter, then I saw him standing next to Warren. Warren should drop around five or so pounds in August and be a thick 250-pound with home-run speed. There’s a reason why the staff thinks he can be special and the addition of a guy like Porter is why nobody in the building has been shy about talking up the running backs as the top offensive position group.

-- As physically impressive as Collin Johnson is, Lil’Jordan Humphrey is right there with him. He looks to be every bit the 222 pounds at which he’s listed.

-- Patrick Hudson looks like a grown man. Our sources weren’t lying when they said he came to campus in tremendous shape. Hudson (6-5, 325) looked much closer to being able to help the Longhorns from a physical standpoint than he was expected to look.

-- The defensive line attendees were highlighted by Jordan Elliott, who is listed listed at 318 pounds and it’s a lean 318. Elliott headlined an impressive-looking group of true freshmen defensive linemen. Chris Daniels is thick young man and Andrew Fitzgerald looks like he’s ready to put on pads and put a hand in the dirt.

-- You don’t realize how physically impressive Brandon Jones is until you see him standing next to someone like Elliott. Jones (5-11, 192) is an incredible specimen who happens to hit hard, run fast, possesses ball skill to go along with instincts and is said to have an incredible work ethic. He could wind up to be as fun to watch from the first snap of the season onward as Jefferson was as a true freshman.
 
Something scary just occurred to me and I should have picked up on it sooner...........Shane Buschele is a gym rat....he is ALWAYS at the work out facility....The kid is 18 years old! I saw pics of his smoking hot girl friend, and that just doesnt add up. All I can say is when I was 18 if I had a girl friend that hot I would have never left the house (whatever house she was in)

I tell you, nobody is that dedicated.
 
Something scary just occurred to me and I should have picked up on it sooner...........Shane Buschele is a gym rat....he is ALWAYS at the work out facility....The kid is 18 years old! I saw pics of his smoking hot girl friend, and that just doesnt add up. All I can say is when I was 18 if I had a girl friend that hot I would have never left the house (whatever house she was in)

I tell you, nobody is that dedicated.
It's crazy how dedicated tO the game of golf Tiger Woods was and he still had a little black book...
 
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So lets actually break down these freshmen instead of just painting with broad strokes. Johnson...he's a WR who has taken more reps with the presumptive QB than anyone, from what I have read. He's already a physical freak. Not sure that the fact that he is a freshman plays into his effectiveness at all. Shack...well, this one is tough. Since Espinoza went down we have been hurting at center. This guy looks to be the answer, but lets be honest, he has zero starts with this line. With that said, Williams was one of our best linemen (freshman) last year, and I don't know that Shack can be any worse than what we had...which leads me to Buchele. He looks to be an upgrade, and if he is not, we still have the last two starters sitting in the wings. I think you have to call this a possible upgrade with not much downside.
Looking at it that way, these freshmen represent a chance to be better, without much risk of getting worse, at their respective positions.
 
Shack...well, this one is tough. Since Espinoza went down we have been hurting at center. This guy looks to be the answer, but lets be honest, he has zero starts with this line. With that said, Williams was one of our best linemen (freshman) last year, and I don't know that Shack can be any worse than what we had

If I have a freshman O-lineman, I would want him at the center position. From a physical standpoint, it is the easiest spot on the line to hide deficiencies. Unlike the tackle position, you always have two guys flanking you. In pass-protection you primarily have to be able to stand firm against a bull rush, not much room in the interior for other moves and if so there are guards to help out. In run blocking, there are a lot of down blocks and 2 on 1 rubs with guards.

The most important aspect for a center is being the quarterback of the O-line. All Texas linemen are learning a new system so that fact that he is a freshman is negated. If he has the smarts, he should be able to pick up the system in a way that allows him to make the right calls for the big eaters.
 
So lets actually break down these freshmen instead of just painting with broad strokes. Johnson...he's a WR who has taken more reps with the presumptive QB than anyone, from what I have read. He's already a physical freak. Not sure that the fact that he is a freshman plays into his effectiveness at all. Shack...well, this one is tough. Since Espinoza went down we have been hurting at center. This guy looks to be the answer, but lets be honest, he has zero starts with this line. With that said, Williams was one of our best linemen (freshman) last year, and I don't know that Shack can be any worse than what we had...which leads me to Buchele. He looks to be an upgrade, and if he is not, we still have the last two starters sitting in the wings. I think you have to call this a possible upgrade with not much downside.
Looking at it that way, these freshmen represent a chance to be better, without much risk of getting worse, at their respective positions.


Class/age means very little with skill position players, specifically WR's. If they can make plays and understand the scheme, it's on! Shane is an upgrade in every sense of the position.
 
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NFL.com has announced their "Top 15 true sophomores in college football."

[Cue drum roll]

#12....
Malik Jefferson

#7....
Connor Williams

Jefferson has an athletic, muscular frame and has the speed to cover giant swaths of grass on any given play. The league loves size, but truly covets playmaking speed, and Jefferson has that along with a physical nature. If Jefferson plays a more instinctive brand of football, we might start to compare his game to Jaylon Smith's.

Williams wasn't a high-end blue-chipper coming out of high school, but he played his freshman season with outstanding body control, consistency and an advanced understanding of technique. Williams' ultimate position fit could be tied directly to his weight and arm length by the time he comes out.
 
Ketch's Thoughts From the Weekend (Notre Dame game is everything)

Game 1

We’re 41 days from the biggest opening game in the last quarter-century for the Texas Longhorns.

That’s not a hyperbole, it’s fact.

Not since the Longhorns took on child abuse enabler Joe Paterno and his Nittany Lions in State College back in 1990 in what would turn out to be the “Shock The Nation” campaign has the Texas program played in a season-opening game of this magnitude and with this much on the line. Just like Charlie Strong, former Texas head coach David McWilliams entered the season with his job hanging in the balance after posting a 16-18 record in his first three seasons as coach and the result of that season-opener against Paterno and Co. would either serve as a springboard or a hangman’s noose.

Of course, the Longhorns won that game, had a historically memorable season and then watched McWilliams give all of the goodwill away in his final season a year later when the Longhorns went 5-6. Who knows? Maybe history will show that the importance of this game was overplayed, but there’s no questioning the optics of this game entering the season.

Only once in the last two decades has Texas even played a ranked team to open the season and that was last season’s disaster in South Bend, so it’s not like there’s a crowded competition in this discussion. Yet, more than the ranked opponent are the stakes involved in this one.

Everyone knows that Strong has failed in his first two seasons. F-A-I-L-E-D.

“There is no reason for us to go 6-7 and 5-7,” Strong said this week in Dallas on Tuesday of the Big 12 Media Days.

Strong knows. This isn’t rocket science.

While Strong might not be coaching for his job this season, he is coaching for the right to control the narrative moving forward. If he skates by with another .500ish record this season, he’ll return for another year because of the $10 million left on his contract as much as any other reason and every recruit in the nation will know that he’s walking on thin ice.

All of the recruiting momentum Strong and his staff have cultivated in the last 18 months has a chance to turn sideways if real progress on the field isn’t made this season and that starts with the game against the Irish. With games in Stillwater against Oklahoma State and in Dallas against Oklahoma lurking in the next four games, it’s critically important that Texas gets off to a good start this season so the negative narratives stay grounded in the dungeons from which they come.

With the Marvin Wilsons of the world watching intently, Strong’s program has a chance to shoot itself into the stratosphere with a win. Win that game, win one of two against the Oklahoma schools and a 4-1 record in the first five games of the season would likely see Strong’s rear end removed from the hot seat.

In a 12-game season, some games matter more than others and I can make the case that the Notre Dame game ranks as the most important game of Strong's coaching career to date. On paper, he’ll have a team that should be able to stand toe to toe with the Irish in a way that it never could a season ago.

With less than six weeks to go until kickoff, the size of the stakes involved seem to get bigger with every passing day. The program might be stocked with some of the best young talent that it has seen in its history and Strong deserves an immense amount of credit for that truth, but at some point the apologies have to stop and the program-lifting wins into the stratosphere have to begin.

Go ahead and buckle your seat belts now because one way or another, what happens in 41 days is going to send us on a ride.

As far as season-openers go, it’s kind of a big deal.

A kicker falls from the sky to answer UT’s prayers ...

Who cares how it happened?

Who cares if Les Miles airballed a free-throw with his own place-kicking situation?

The only thing that matters is that hours ago, the place-kicking situation at Texas was a major question mark heading into the 2016 season and after Sunday, the Longhorns have a 2015 Lou Groza Award Semifinalist handling the duties. In the blink of an eye, a profound weakness is now a strength for Charlie Strong’s football team.

In addition to being near automatic last season between 30-49 yards as a place-kicker, Trent Domingue can also handle kickoffs and fake field goals if needed.

Honestly, for Charlie Strong, this is a dream come true. When he puts his head on his pillow on the eve of the Notre Dame game, the ability to call on someone to convert a 40-yard field goal in front of 100,000 people will be among the least of his concerns. He’s got a guy who has made one from that distance at Alabama. He also suddenly has someone who prevented a run-back on more than half of his kickoffs in the 2014 season.

Oh, and about those fake field goals … enjoy.

Things little birdies tell me ...

Here’s a smattering things I’ve heard in the last week regarding the Texas program ...

1. Former Baylor signee Patrick Hudson continues to be the most talked-about freshman in the program. “I wish all of our linemen looked like him,” one source said this week.

2. A former NFL/Longhorns player told me this week that Collin Johnson has been the most impressive receiver he’s seen in offseason workouts this summer.

3. The same former NFL/Longhorns player told me that Davante Davis is a three-year college player. “He’s a little different than the rest of the guys they have. Tell Orangebloods to enjoy him now.”

4. Another former player told me this week that expectations for the incoming freshmen defensive tackles should be tempered quite a bit for this season. “I don’t really see anyone like Patrick Hudson (in the group),” the source said.

5. Don’t expect any movement on the school hiring a new athletic director until 2017. It’s not anything specific that anyone told me, it’s just a vibe I’m picking up. I don’t expect to see progress towards a full-time hire until after the football season.

Scattershooting on the Longhorns ...…

… The most under-the-radar important player to the 2016 season is sophomore defensive end Charles Omenihu. His play in the spring and work in the weight room give hope that he has a chance to be an impact player at end this season and if he doesn’t emerge, I’m not sure the Longhorns have an impact player at a position in which they so desperately need one.

… If Shane Buechele doesn’t take off this season as the starter, I don’t think Charlie Strong will have any reservations about throwing Sam Ehlinger into the mix next season. Strong loves him some Ehlinger.

My nit-pickest nit-pick of the week …

I thought Charlie Strong missed a chance to fully promote his program this week by not having Malik Jefferson at Big 12 Media days. The program has no better ambassador, no better leader, no better player and no more interesting figure than Jefferson and it took three guys who aren’t in his ballpark in any capacity.

I know … I know … I know … stop nit-picking!

Buy or sell …

(As always, all of these questions were submitted by actual Orangebloods subscribers.)

BUY or SELL: Texas wins at least one extra game with the addition of LSU grad transfer kicker?

(Sell) I’m not sure I look at the schedule quite like that, but the good news is that Texas might not lose a game it would have otherwise won because of the kicking position.

BUY or SELL: The Big 12 expands, new members only get a fraction of the money, the others rake in the rest and a few teams (UT included) bolt at the end of the GOR?

(Buy) That’s exactly how I see it going down.

BUY or SELL: Texas will sneak into the top 25 some time during the season?

(Buy) I spent about five minutes thinking about this question and I’m very much on the fence. A win over the Irish gets Texas there pretty quickly.

BUY or SELL: UH gets into the Big 12?

(Sell) It’s going to take eight of 10 schools to vote yes and I believe there are enough schools in the conference that believe the league is already too saturated with Texas schools and doesn’t need a roadblock into Houston high schools in recruiting.

BUY or SELL: Colin Cowherd is wrong about Texas not being in "Tier 1" of the Top 6 college programs?

(Buy) Texas is first all-time in money, third in all-time wins, has played in two national title games in the last 11 seasons, has its own network and plays in one of the top three talent-beds in the nation.

BUY or SELL: With only two weeks to go, Erick Fowler is in a Texas Longhorn practice uniform on the first day of Fall camp.

(Buy) I’m all-in at this point.

BUY or SELL: While not ideal personally, the fact that you are not doing radio for the time being will be a plus for OB?

(Buy) The middle part of every day of the week for the last eight years has been hijacked by radio and suddenly that time belongs to Orangebloods, exclusively. That’s a major win for OB.

BUY or SELL: You stick strictly to OB and don't do anymore radio ....... for-ev-er?

(Sell) Forever is a long time.

Jerrod Heard “in WR meetings”

I’d mentioned previously that Heard had been getting a little bit of work with the receivers in 7-on-7 drills, but was told by a good source over the weekend that Heard is now also going to WR meetings.

This doesn’t necessarily mean that Heard is moving to WR immediately or even that one is imminent, but it’s sure starting to sound like he has a foot or so out the door.

Charlie Strong said at his availability during Big 12 media days that he doesn’t make players change positions, and that he leaves it up to them to change positions if that is what they want to do.

With this understood, it would be hard to believe that Strong would be as welcoming of a move from QB to WR from Heard as he would be one from … say … Kai Locksley. Strong would have Tyrone Swoopes and a freshman as the only somewhat-reasonable QB options next season in the absence of Heard.

My guess is that Strong will tell him to get back in the QB room for at least one more year.

. . .

“Kyle vs. Kirk” will determine Porter’s redshirt outlook

There’s been a lot of talk about redshirt freshman RB Kyle Porter, and it’s understandable after seeing him again at Under the Lights camp. He’s an impressive-looking athlete and always has been.

However, Kirk Johnson is a player who people close to the program say the players call a “beast” and a “freak.” Some people with inside knowledge feel like the Texas Tech/Chris Warren monster in the absence of D’Onta Foreman and Johnathan Gray was all set up to be the Kirk Johnson monster had Johnson not gotten injured early on.

The indication I’ve gotten in a conversation this week is that it’s going to be tough to come in and slice into much if any real playing time on offense when you have to account for the touches of Foreman, Warren and a healthy Johnson. If you have a potentially special future runner in Porter, why burn a year of his eligibility to play in garbage time?

. . .

“If Shane is starting versus Notre Dame, it’ll be because he beat out Ty”

Some of the things sources say about this football team might be called epic trolling by the board’s standards, but this is a real quote. Whether the world of Orangebloods can understand it or not, there are people very close to the program who still believe that there truly is a competition at quarterback between Shane Buechele and Tyrone Swoopes.

. . .

“Watch out for Jeffery McCulloch”

We hadn’t heard a ton of news about freshman LB Jeffery McCulloch over the course of the summer, but in speaking to one person this week, he’s the number one player to watch out for. “If anyone can take (Anthony Wheeler’s) job it’s McCulloch,” the person said. Apparently, the team will look at McCulloch at the weak-side linebacker to start if his competition for immediate snaps is indeed Wheeler.

. . .

Donovan Duvernay wasn't prepared for Moorer

One person said that recent Baylor transfer and true-freshman DB Donovan Dunvernay was “struggling bad” in his first few workouts at Texas. “He wasn’t ready for (strength coach Pat) Moorer.”

I don’t know if he fell out or puked or what, but it seems clear he wasn’t very comfortable at first with the intensity of the workouts versus what he likely expected might come at Baylor.

It’s more of an illustration of how tough Moorer’s workouts are than an indictment on Duvernay. The source acted like this was certainly not a new phenomenon for some guys to have a little trouble adjusting to a Moorer workout routine at first.

. . .

Patrick Hudson momentum picking up

He’s one guy who, by all accounts, has had no problem keeping up. Hudson’s hype around the program and in the fanbase is picking up at a rate that may lead to disappointment, but what a pleasant surprise it would be if it didn’t.

We’d been told how strong the freshman OL was — and about his being so impressive in the weight room — but then to see the player in person at Under the Lights camp was just extremely eye-opening.

He’ll have every chance to earn a spot on the starting offensive line, most likely at left guard.

. . .

“Closest Team” in a long time

I asked one person if anything felt different coming into this fall camp versus the last few years. “It’s the closest team in a long time,” the source said.

I know it sounds like every offseason for every team about the ‘newfound energy’ and the ‘multiple’ nature of the offense and coachspeak-this and coachspeak-that because we’re all undefeated. However, it’s not hard to see how this team should truly be the “closest” in recent memory for a lot of reasons.

They’ve had to spend summers in dorms together with the coaches going on three years. They’ve gone through the hellish experience that is a Moorer workout together near-daily through that time and they generally continue to coexist in what is a fairly strict and disciplined Charlie Strong world. In short, the “culture change” is over. The team is devoid of senior leaders for the most part, but the new, uniting heartbeat of the group through the freshman, sophomore and junior classes makes up for it.

This is the kind of intangible that is hard to account for, but somehow generally ends up leading to a few random bounces going the right way for the good guys.

Lord knows the Horns would love to have a bounce or two actually go their way this season.

They’re certainly due.

 
Bobby Burton:

Yesterday and earlier this week, much of the team underwent its final strength testing before fall practice is set to begin next Saturday.

While Texas likes to keep a lid on a lot of the info of these workouts, I'm told that there were a couple of standout performers.

Kent Perkins had the team high in number of bench press reps at 225-pounds. Perkins' number was higher than the number of the top performer at the NFL Draft this past season.

However, before anyone gets overly excited about that fact, the NFL Draft combine is notoriously stingy in how it accounts for and what determines a full rep compared to most college strength coaches.

In many instances, you can shave off 30-40% of the reps off of a player's number for the draft combine when compared to his previous team-based reporting.

I'm told just as impressive was the performance of Brandon Jones. I'm told Jones actually set a DB record of some sort, whether it was a freshman record or what have you, I'm uncertain.
 
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Just read the story on 247, what's interesting is it opens up 2 spots on the 85 man roster. 1 for the new kicker and 1 for Eric Fowler? Please baby Jesus say it is so
 
Just read the story on 247, what's interesting is it opens up 2 spots on the 85 man roster. 1 for the new kicker and 1 for Eric Fowler? Please baby Jesus say it is so

Higdon says more attrition is still to come. No word on Fowler until he finishes his summer classes (after our practices start).
 
Just read the story on 247, what's interesting is it opens up 2 spots on the 85 man roster. 1 for the new kicker and 1 for Eric Fowler? Please baby Jesus say it is so

I think Templin is a Sr., if so it won't make any difference for next year.

I thought we were ok for this year.
 
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I think Templin is a Sr., if so it won't make any difference for next year.

I thought we were ok for this year.

I believe we're at 84 scholarships now -- as far as the public knows, anyway. Looks like still more room will open up.
 
Just read the story on 247, what's interesting is it opens up 2 spots on the 85 man roster. 1 for the new kicker and 1 for Eric Fowler? Please baby Jesus say it is so

Yes, please.

IMG_0911-1.jpg
 
I'm waiting until his grades are in to get excited about anything this time. He said that he had achieved a qualifying test score earlier this summer as well, which was not the case.
 
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Ketch's Thoughts From the Weekend (Notre Dame game is everything)

Game 1

We’re 41 days from the biggest opening game in the last quarter-century for the Texas Longhorns.

That’s not a hyperbole, it’s fact.

Not since the Longhorns took on child abuse enabler Joe Paterno and his Nittany Lions in State College back in 1990 in what would turn out to be the “Shock The Nation” campaign has the Texas program played in a season-opening game of this magnitude and with this much on the line. Just like Charlie Strong, former Texas head coach David McWilliams entered the season with his job hanging in the balance after posting a 16-18 record in his first three seasons as coach and the result of that season-opener against Paterno and Co. would either serve as a springboard or a hangman’s noose.

Of course, the Longhorns won that game, had a historically memorable season and then watched McWilliams give all of the goodwill away in his final season a year later when the Longhorns went 5-6. Who knows? Maybe history will show that the importance of this game was overplayed, but there’s no questioning the optics of this game entering the season.

Only once in the last two decades has Texas even played a ranked team to open the season and that was last season’s disaster in South Bend, so it’s not like there’s a crowded competition in this discussion. Yet, more than the ranked opponent are the stakes involved in this one.

Everyone knows that Strong has failed in his first two seasons. F-A-I-L-E-D.

“There is no reason for us to go 6-7 and 5-7,” Strong said this week in Dallas on Tuesday of the Big 12 Media Days.

Strong knows. This isn’t rocket science.

While Strong might not be coaching for his job this season, he is coaching for the right to control the narrative moving forward. If he skates by with another .500ish record this season, he’ll return for another year because of the $10 million left on his contract as much as any other reason and every recruit in the nation will know that he’s walking on thin ice.

All of the recruiting momentum Strong and his staff have cultivated in the last 18 months has a chance to turn sideways if real progress on the field isn’t made this season and that starts with the game against the Irish. With games in Stillwater against Oklahoma State and in Dallas against Oklahoma lurking in the next four games, it’s critically important that Texas gets off to a good start this season so the negative narratives stay grounded in the dungeons from which they come.

With the Marvin Wilsons of the world watching intently, Strong’s program has a chance to shoot itself into the stratosphere with a win. Win that game, win one of two against the Oklahoma schools and a 4-1 record in the first five games of the season would likely see Strong’s rear end removed from the hot seat.

In a 12-game season, some games matter more than others and I can make the case that the Notre Dame game ranks as the most important game of Strong's coaching career to date. On paper, he’ll have a team that should be able to stand toe to toe with the Irish in a way that it never could a season ago.

With less than six weeks to go until kickoff, the size of the stakes involved seem to get bigger with every passing day. The program might be stocked with some of the best young talent that it has seen in its history and Strong deserves an immense amount of credit for that truth, but at some point the apologies have to stop and the program-lifting wins into the stratosphere have to begin.

Go ahead and buckle your seat belts now because one way or another, what happens in 41 days is going to send us on a ride.

As far as season-openers go, it’s kind of a big deal.

A kicker falls from the sky to answer UT’s prayers ...

Who cares how it happened?

Who cares if Les Miles airballed a free-throw with his own place-kicking situation?

The only thing that matters is that hours ago, the place-kicking situation at Texas was a major question mark heading into the 2016 season and after Sunday, the Longhorns have a 2015 Lou Groza Award Semifinalist handling the duties. In the blink of an eye, a profound weakness is now a strength for Charlie Strong’s football team.

In addition to being near automatic last season between 30-49 yards as a place-kicker, Trent Domingue can also handle kickoffs and fake field goals if needed.

Honestly, for Charlie Strong, this is a dream come true. When he puts his head on his pillow on the eve of the Notre Dame game, the ability to call on someone to convert a 40-yard field goal in front of 100,000 people will be among the least of his concerns. He’s got a guy who has made one from that distance at Alabama. He also suddenly has someone who prevented a run-back on more than half of his kickoffs in the 2014 season.

Oh, and about those fake field goals … enjoy.

Things little birdies tell me ...

Here’s a smattering things I’ve heard in the last week regarding the Texas program ...

1. Former Baylor signee Patrick Hudson continues to be the most talked-about freshman in the program. “I wish all of our linemen looked like him,” one source said this week.

2. A former NFL/Longhorns player told me this week that Collin Johnson has been the most impressive receiver he’s seen in offseason workouts this summer.

3. The same former NFL/Longhorns player told me that Davante Davis is a three-year college player. “He’s a little different than the rest of the guys they have. Tell Orangebloods to enjoy him now.”

4. Another former player told me this week that expectations for the incoming freshmen defensive tackles should be tempered quite a bit for this season. “I don’t really see anyone like Patrick Hudson (in the group),” the source said.

5. Don’t expect any movement on the school hiring a new athletic director until 2017. It’s not anything specific that anyone told me, it’s just a vibe I’m picking up. I don’t expect to see progress towards a full-time hire until after the football season.

Scattershooting on the Longhorns ...…

… The most under-the-radar important player to the 2016 season is sophomore defensive end Charles Omenihu. His play in the spring and work in the weight room give hope that he has a chance to be an impact player at end this season and if he doesn’t emerge, I’m not sure the Longhorns have an impact player at a position in which they so desperately need one.

… If Shane Buechele doesn’t take off this season as the starter, I don’t think Charlie Strong will have any reservations about throwing Sam Ehlinger into the mix next season. Strong loves him some Ehlinger.

My nit-pickest nit-pick of the week …

I thought Charlie Strong missed a chance to fully promote his program this week by not having Malik Jefferson at Big 12 Media days. The program has no better ambassador, no better leader, no better player and no more interesting figure than Jefferson and it took three guys who aren’t in his ballpark in any capacity.

I know … I know … I know … stop nit-picking!

Buy or sell …

(As always, all of these questions were submitted by actual Orangebloods subscribers.)

BUY or SELL: Texas wins at least one extra game with the addition of LSU grad transfer kicker?

(Sell) I’m not sure I look at the schedule quite like that, but the good news is that Texas might not lose a game it would have otherwise won because of the kicking position.

BUY or SELL: The Big 12 expands, new members only get a fraction of the money, the others rake in the rest and a few teams (UT included) bolt at the end of the GOR?

(Buy) That’s exactly how I see it going down.

BUY or SELL: Texas will sneak into the top 25 some time during the season?

(Buy) I spent about five minutes thinking about this question and I’m very much on the fence. A win over the Irish gets Texas there pretty quickly.

BUY or SELL: UH gets into the Big 12?

(Sell) It’s going to take eight of 10 schools to vote yes and I believe there are enough schools in the conference that believe the league is already too saturated with Texas schools and doesn’t need a roadblock into Houston high schools in recruiting.

BUY or SELL: Colin Cowherd is wrong about Texas not being in "Tier 1" of the Top 6 college programs?

(Buy) Texas is first all-time in money, third in all-time wins, has played in two national title games in the last 11 seasons, has its own network and plays in one of the top three talent-beds in the nation.

BUY or SELL: With only two weeks to go, Erick Fowler is in a Texas Longhorn practice uniform on the first day of Fall camp.

(Buy) I’m all-in at this point.

BUY or SELL: While not ideal personally, the fact that you are not doing radio for the time being will be a plus for OB?

(Buy) The middle part of every day of the week for the last eight years has been hijacked by radio and suddenly that time belongs to Orangebloods, exclusively. That’s a major win for OB.

BUY or SELL: You stick strictly to OB and don't do anymore radio ....... for-ev-er?

(Sell) Forever is a long time.

Jerrod Heard “in WR meetings”

I’d mentioned previously that Heard had been getting a little bit of work with the receivers in 7-on-7 drills, but was told by a good source over the weekend that Heard is now also going to WR meetings.

This doesn’t necessarily mean that Heard is moving to WR immediately or even that one is imminent, but it’s sure starting to sound like he has a foot or so out the door.

Charlie Strong said at his availability during Big 12 media days that he doesn’t make players change positions, and that he leaves it up to them to change positions if that is what they want to do.

With this understood, it would be hard to believe that Strong would be as welcoming of a move from QB to WR from Heard as he would be one from … say … Kai Locksley. Strong would have Tyrone Swoopes and a freshman as the only somewhat-reasonable QB options next season in the absence of Heard.

My guess is that Strong will tell him to get back in the QB room for at least one more year.

. . .

“Kyle vs. Kirk” will determine Porter’s redshirt outlook

There’s been a lot of talk about redshirt freshman RB Kyle Porter, and it’s understandable after seeing him again at Under the Lights camp. He’s an impressive-looking athlete and always has been.

However, Kirk Johnson is a player who people close to the program say the players call a “beast” and a “freak.” Some people with inside knowledge feel like the Texas Tech/Chris Warren monster in the absence of D’Onta Foreman and Johnathan Gray was all set up to be the Kirk Johnson monster had Johnson not gotten injured early on.

The indication I’ve gotten in a conversation this week is that it’s going to be tough to come in and slice into much if any real playing time on offense when you have to account for the touches of Foreman, Warren and a healthy Johnson. If you have a potentially special future runner in Porter, why burn a year of his eligibility to play in garbage time?

. . .

“If Shane is starting versus Notre Dame, it’ll be because he beat out Ty”

Some of the things sources say about this football team might be called epic trolling by the board’s standards, but this is a real quote. Whether the world of Orangebloods can understand it or not, there are people very close to the program who still believe that there truly is a competition at quarterback between Shane Buechele and Tyrone Swoopes.

. . .

“Watch out for Jeffery McCulloch”

We hadn’t heard a ton of news about freshman LB Jeffery McCulloch over the course of the summer, but in speaking to one person this week, he’s the number one player to watch out for. “If anyone can take (Anthony Wheeler’s) job it’s McCulloch,” the person said. Apparently, the team will look at McCulloch at the weak-side linebacker to start if his competition for immediate snaps is indeed Wheeler.

. . .

Donovan Duvernay wasn't prepared for Moorer

One person said that recent Baylor transfer and true-freshman DB Donovan Dunvernay was “struggling bad” in his first few workouts at Texas. “He wasn’t ready for (strength coach Pat) Moorer.”

I don’t know if he fell out or puked or what, but it seems clear he wasn’t very comfortable at first with the intensity of the workouts versus what he likely expected might come at Baylor.

It’s more of an illustration of how tough Moorer’s workouts are than an indictment on Duvernay. The source acted like this was certainly not a new phenomenon for some guys to have a little trouble adjusting to a Moorer workout routine at first.

. . .

Patrick Hudson momentum picking up

He’s one guy who, by all accounts, has had no problem keeping up. Hudson’s hype around the program and in the fanbase is picking up at a rate that may lead to disappointment, but what a pleasant surprise it would be if it didn’t.

We’d been told how strong the freshman OL was — and about his being so impressive in the weight room — but then to see the player in person at Under the Lights camp was just extremely eye-opening.

He’ll have every chance to earn a spot on the starting offensive line, most likely at left guard.

. . .

“Closest Team” in a long time

I asked one person if anything felt different coming into this fall camp versus the last few years. “It’s the closest team in a long time,” the source said.

I know it sounds like every offseason for every team about the ‘newfound energy’ and the ‘multiple’ nature of the offense and coachspeak-this and coachspeak-that because we’re all undefeated. However, it’s not hard to see how this team should truly be the “closest” in recent memory for a lot of reasons.

They’ve had to spend summers in dorms together with the coaches going on three years. They’ve gone through the hellish experience that is a Moorer workout together near-daily through that time and they generally continue to coexist in what is a fairly strict and disciplined Charlie Strong world. In short, the “culture change” is over. The team is devoid of senior leaders for the most part, but the new, uniting heartbeat of the group through the freshman, sophomore and junior classes makes up for it.

This is the kind of intangible that is hard to account for, but somehow generally ends up leading to a few random bounces going the right way for the good guys.

Lord knows the Horns would love to have a bounce or two actually go their way this season.

They’re certainly due.

Hey Scholz,
How do you think the team is handling the pressure? I know they will say all the right things, but it seems a lot of people are putting pressure on them to beat ND.
I didn't think it was possible, (because ND fans always expect too much) but it looks like Texas fans are putting more pressure on Texas than ND fans are on ND?
I've never been a fan of this because I think it hurts a team. Shouldn't they downplay the game a little more?
 
pressure?....what pressure?....playing at home....first game for many of them....huge atmosphere....they might be nervous...but I doubt they feel one bit of pressure to win....hell....everyone expects them to lose....they have no pressure at all.....now how about the favorites to win?....National title asperations....opponent they destroyed last year....Hell Farley....you have that question backwards....how much pressure are your guys under?...lots worse than ours....

You need to get a copy of the Texas fight song so you dont mess the words up singing to your neighborhood after the game and quit worrying about our guys feeling pressure....just sayin'
 
pressure?....what pressure?....playing at home....first game for many of them....huge atmosphere....they might be nervous...but I doubt they feel one bit of pressure to win....hell....everyone expects them to lose....they have no pressure at all.....now how about the favorites to win?....National title asperations....opponent they destroyed last year....Hell Farley....you have that question backwards....how much pressure are your guys under?...lots worse than ours....

You need to get a copy of the Texas fight song so you dont mess the words up singing to your neighborhood after the game and quit worrying about our guys feeling pressure....just sayin'

I'm referring to the actual article attached at the top talking about the upcoming season.

And I've stated it before, I will state it again, ND loses for a lot of reasons, but not because of pressure. They play in a lot, a lot, of nationally televised games against big opponents. If they lose it will be because Texas is better, not the environment.
 
fair enough Farley....what is your point?....No offense, but Texas is no stranger to big games....from a pressure standpoint we are just fine.
 
fair enough Farley....what is your point?....No offense, but Texas is no stranger to big games....from a pressure standpoint we are just fine.

My point was the article above seemed like the author was putting a lot of pressure on Texas, especially the first game.
 
Starting TE Jones (#1 TE in the 2015 Class) ruled academically ineligible today.
At least they aren't kicking him out of school like the four players two years ago.
 
FWIW poster over on HS said McNeal may have "Hit is gf"

Just pull a Stoops and suspend him for a practice or maybe go hard and RS him for a season.

Seriously, if that was the case....his time with the team is over. Good luck rehabilitating things. Hope you learn from that huge mistake and grow from it. Just not in our uni.
 
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In terms of "pressure", this game feels a lot like the OU game last year. Its a big game in the sense that the other team is coming in ranked and is expected to win convincingly. The pressure on Texas is more in the global sense than the need to win this particular game. The lasts few years have not gone well and this could be a signature victory.
Buchele, if he starts, all indications being that he will start, will no doubt be feeling the weight of high expectations. The veer and shoot offense though, should give him plenty of opportunity to ease into the roll without an expectation that he carry the team with his arm.
 
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