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Ketch's 10 Thoughts From the Weekend (The reality of the moment for Herman's Longhorns...)

(Buy) Half a decade is enough time to draw some conclusions, but we're still two seasons away from that particular standard.

Life comes at you fast. If things don't break right on the conference championship front, we could be halfway through the Tom Herman era.
 
unless you want to suggest that Texas allowing Oklahoma to consistently dominate the Big 12 is even more consistent, at which point I'd probably allow it.

And THAT is unacceptable to any true TEXAS football fan (IMO).

I don't watch Texas football to watch Texas lose, especially to blow-you. I damn sure don't expect Texas to lead the nation in missed tackles, for any reason, including asteroid strike.

It did not look reasonable expecting a 3 DL front to stop 5 OL and a TE running an effectively blocked counter-trey play. That counter trey was as effectively blocked as Coach Joe Gibbs' use in his three Super Bowl winning seasons at Washington. IMO.
 
Baylor playing OU in the big 12 title game would represent such a colossal failure and speak volumes about this staff verses Baylor's staff. Forget comparing Texas to OU. That's what regression looks like for Texas and that's what a great hire looks like in Waco. That would be a gut punch to the folks in Austin but maybe more than that it means one of the highest paid staffs in college football with much better recruiting isnt as good as a program that cant attract much talent and was an embarrassment just a few years ago.

I cannot comprehend just how bad that would be on so many fronts. That simply cannot happen.
 
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ee0e3a40b744e2eebc3b4d949eaa9055x.jpg


I suppose I've got a bit of good and bad news for the 2019 Texas Longhorns.

In a message that Tom Herman will surely support, the Texas Longhorns still have a season with their biggest goal in front of them and obtainable. The most important task that needed to be executed this season was winning the Big 12 Championship. With one conference loss, a win over Oklahoma State and the Oklahoma game out of the way, a rematch with the Sooners would open the door for this season to still represent a very successful season.

In a message that Herman will almost certainly not support, this year's Longhorns have potentially used all of their "get out of jail" cards for the rest of the season if they want to call this season a success at the turn of the year.

Save me all the "1-0" remarks because when you're 4-2 at the midway point of the season and have lost the two most important games on the entire schedule, a little big picture reality is almost certainly needed. After winning the Sugar Bowl and appearing in the Big 12 title game last season, ready or not, the expectations have increased and the demands for more are higher.

That's the job. When you get into year three as the head coach at a school like Texas, excuses or reasons (whichever way you want to label it) for not achieving the outlined definition of the words "successful season" don't really fly.

It was that way for John Mackovic. It was that way for Mack Brown. It was that way for Charlie Strong.

Hell, it might just be the most consistent thing about the Texas football program, unless you want to suggest that allowing Oklahoma to consistently dominate the Big 12 is even more consistent, at which point I'd probably allow it.

Anyways, the Longhorns now have two steps that must be taken to save this season.

a. Do what it takes to get to Dallas in December for a rematch for the Big 12 Championship Game.
b. Beat Oklahoma for the Big 12 Championship.

Anything less than both represents a disappointing season. Anything less than making it back to Dallas would represent regression. Period.

As it relates to making it back to the Big 12 Championship Game, the Longhorns are in pretty good shape, but it's going to need the kind of consistent quality that existed in September and not the below-standards production of the last two games in all three phases of the game to get it done. More than anything, beating Baylor in Waco on November 23 probably becomes the most important game remaining on the schedule because a loss would mean Texas would need at least three Baylor losses in its other final five games because of the head-to-head tie-breaker the Bears would have over the Longhorns in the event of a tie.

Given the shape of the current standings and the fact that the Longhorns are the only Big 12 "contender" that has faced Oklahoma so far this season, that game in Waco is paramount. The game in Ames is right behind it in terms of importance.

For the sake of continuing to outline what needs to happen to save this season, let's assume the Longhorns navigate the final six games successfully and make it back to Dallas for the Oklahoma rematch.

They have to win that game. For countless reasons.

It was would give Oklahoma its 147th Big 12 title, at least I think that's the number (it certainly feels that way) and it would leave Herman with a 1-4 record against the Sooners, which would include an 0-2 mark in Big 12 Championship games.

What would the stakes be should the Longhorns come up short?

That's a great question. Outside of losing the sky high spirits that have existed around the program for the last nine months and wasting one of the upper-class years of arguably the third-best quarterback in school history in the making, Herman would likely enter the most important season of his career. A high-level Texas official told me when Herman was hired that if he hadn't win a Big 12 title by year four, it would mean they hired the wrong coach.

While that might sound harsh, we're talking about a school that fired Mackovic one year after he won a Big 12 title and Strong three years into a deal. This place doesn't really do the whole failing to meet expectations thing very well. It would make the 2020 season, which would be Ehlinger's senior season, extremely critical.

We're not at any sort of a crisis moment, but we are at a reality check moment.

It's year three. The time to become the program that you project the program to be is now. Not being able to do will lead to some unrest because that's the reality of the world we live in.

No. 2 - Let's talk about Sam ...

It was three weeks ago on Monday that Orangebloods first reported the rib injury that Texas starting quarterback Sam Ehlinger has been dealing with since the early part of the season.

It's not something Ehlinger or Tom Herman has made any kind of public issue with, likely because a rib injury isn't exactly the kind of thing you want to make a public announcement on when you take the shots to the body that Ehlinger already takes.

My own sources indicated that the injury occurred during the LSU game and remained an issue over the course of the next couple of weeks going into the bye week in September, even though he played very well, which is one of the reasons why there wasn't much of a fuss about the whole situation.

Yet, going into the bye week the injury remained enough of a problem that Ehlinger was given some rest during the off-week, which is when we first reported the ongoing issue. On Thursday, I reported in the TicketCity Podcast and and in a discussion on the Orangebloods message boards that Ehlinger reportedly had been bothered by the injury in the second half of the West Virginia game. Meanwhile, Anwar Richardson reported in Thursday's War Room that Ehlinger was also dealing with some sort of shoulder injury.

Again, Ehlinger hasn't complained about any of this, but it's important to note because his numbers from the last two weeks have declined considerably from the first four games of the season.

A week after posting a season-worst 122.2 efficiency number against West Virginia (by 43.5 points), Ehlinger's posted a new season-worst efficiency number (114.8) against the Sooners.

Of course, drops had a lot to do with that number, but the naked eye could see that Ehlinger wasn't 100-percent right in that game. So much of Ehlinger's success as a player is the escapability in the pocket that makes him sometimes impossible to corral for opposing defenses. Against the Sooners, Ehlinger looked a little stiff and seemed to lack some of his natural mobility, which absolutely contributed to the nine sacks that the Longhorns gave up against the Sooners.

What's the point of all of this?

I suppose it's to point out an elephant in the room. In order to be great, Texas needs Ehlinger to be great and in the last two weeks he hasn't been great while dealing with multiple physical ailments. It's not the biggest thing in the world, but is a thing and a thing we're all going to need to keep an eye on in the coming weeks.

No. 3 - Call me crazy ...

The next time the Longhorns play the Sooners, it might be a good eye to do as well of a self-scouting job as it will be to re-scout the Sooners, as least as it relates to the Texas offense.

I'm not automatically saying that the Sooners knew what the Longhorns were doing pre-snap, but it sure seemed that way, especially when the Longhorns tried to create anything with the east-west passing game. Every time the Longhorns threw the ball into the flat, Oklahoma linebacker Kenneth Murray seemed to have a head start on the play.

As someone that has watched the Texas back alignment on almost every play for the last two years to get an idea of whether Texas is going to run or pass on each play (if the running back is lined up within a yard of Ehlinger in the backfield, it's almost always a pass play), I'd suggest the Longhorn coaching staff make every effort to make it harder for opposing defenses to know with certainty what's coming at them.

No. 4 - All Big-12 Longhorns ...


If we were to do an all-Big 12 team at the midway point in the season, these are the Longhorns that would earn first-team all-Big 12 mention:

Devin Duvernay and Sam Cosmi.

I'd ask if I'm missing anyone else, but I already know the answer to that question ... no. The fact that the Longhorns have only two true first-team all-Big 12 players at this point in the season in all three phases of the game is one of the reasons why the Longhorns haven't quite hit an elite stride this season.

No. 5 - Five Players I'm Still Thinking About 24 Hours Later ...

Anthony Cook - The only player on the Texas defense that I absolutely want to give an "attaboy" to on the defensive side of the ball is the sophomore from Houston Lamar. Playing in what would normally be Jalen Green's spot on the field, Cook not only made the biggest defensive play of the game with his forced fumble in the first quarter, but he played a winning brand of football throughout the game when he was on the field.

B.J. Foster - I thought he looked like a shell of the player I know exists inside that No. 25 jersey. Just how banged up is he right now?

Roschon Johnson - The true freshman has 216 yards rushing on 29 carries in the last two weeks, while sophomore Keaontay Ingram has rushed for 27 yards on 13 carries over the same timeframe. The Longhorn coaching staff can't wait until the third quarter this week to get him involved in the offense.

Derek Kerstetter - This makes two weeks in a row that Kerstetter has struggled in handling the players and tactics that opposing teams are throwing his way. Considering teams aren't even really bothering to attack the left side of the Texas line, Kerstetter is simply going to need to improve because the blue-print for going after this line is well-known at this point.

Zach Shackelford - For a senior captain that came into the season as a first-team all-Big 12 player, I just didn't think Shackelford played well enough on Saturday. Whether it was being unable to handle Neville Gallimore in one-on-one situations or recognizing the stunts that Oklahoma was running directly at him, Shackelford's fingerprints were all over the things that went down in the Texas backfield.

No. 6 - If I had a vote that mattered ...

1. LSU
2. Ohio State
3. Alabama
4. Oklahoma
5. Clemson
6. Wisconsin
7. Florida
8. Penn State
9. Georgia
10. Notre Dame

No. 7 – BUY or SELL …
BUY-SELL.gif


(Sell) Coming into this season, one of the things I've liked about Herman as a CEO is his ability to make changes quickly in areas that he needed to make changes. If this season goes sideways, he won't stand pat.


(Buy) You read my mind.


(Buy) I have no evidence to give you to support this belief, but surely the insanity will end.


(Buy) I know a lot of Texas fans believe that Texas can play much better in a rematch, but I kind of feel like Oklahoma played a C+ game on offense yesterday, especially with the mistakes it made in the red zone. I was confident of a Texas win in a rematch before yesterday, but now my belief has been shaken.


(Sell) Nah ... Typically, recruitments don't change on a dime because of the outcome of a single game. What happens the rest of the season greatly matters though ...


(Sell) Nah ...


(Sell) It's more than merely scheme. It's talented-related as well.


(Sell) I don't believe that at all.


(Sell) The guys that are missing haven't exactly been tearing it up when healthy.


(Sell) No, I don't see him doing that.


(Buy) Only DeShon Elliott has been a consensus all-American since 2009, so ... yeah ...


(Sell) That's always been my mindset, though, so nothing has changed.


(Buy) Half a decade is enough time to draw some conclusions, but we're still two seasons away from that particular standard.

No. 8 – Eternal Randomness of the Spotty Sports Mind …

... Texas Tech was absolutely robbed in Waco. The Big 12 confirmed this on Sunday.


... I really thought that Ed Orgeron was going to fall on his face as the head coach for LSU and I have been 100-percent wrong in not giving him enough respect.

... Will Muschamp picked up the biggest win of his career on Saturday and it changes nothing about where that program is going as far as I can see. Consider that a one-off.

... I'm not sure what I'm supposed to say about the Dallas Cowboys other than I feel slightly stupid for drinking just a bit of the Kool-aid. I was never thinking Super Bowl, but my goodness, I thought the team was better than what we watched on Sunday.

... DeShaun Watson didn't even have his A-game on Sunday and the Texans beat the Chiefs at Arrowhead. I don't know what it means, but the Texans have regained my attention, even though I know BOB will mess it all up at some point.

... The 49ers dominated the Rams. Dominated them.

... The Browns are 2-4 and that makes me smile.

... The Eagles still haven't covered Stefan Diggs.

... What must Bryce Harper be thinking right now with the Nationals on a potential World Series run? I'm sure he's happy for his former teammates, but man ...

... When I grow up, I want to be Sadio Mane.
EGs07LJXYAEgE69


... Gini with the Goal of the Weekend!


No. 9 - The List: Top 10 Willie Joints ...

Taking into account all of the work over the span of decades and decades, here's a look at look at my Top 10 Willie songs, as performed by Willie.

Note: Before anyone asks, Crazy is one of my all-time favorite songs, but his version of the song isn't my favorite. Don't get me wrong, it's perfectly fine, but it doesn't make my PERSONAL top 10 list.

The key word is PERSONAL.

10. Hello Walls
9. Night Life
8. Always on my Mind
7. Whiskey River
6. Goodhearted Woman
5. Pancho and Lefty
4. Angel Flying Too Close to The Ground
3. A Song For You
2. Blue Eyes Crying in the rain
1. Seven Spanish Angels

No. 10 – And Finally ...

My favorite Texas/OU photo from this weekend came via a friend's Facebook photo. Part of me sees the world's biggest Longhorns fan and the other part of me can't stop thinking about the dog from Little Nicky.

EGsG4eVXkAATDav


I don’t know about anyone else, but why we didn’t run the ball with Sam (and Roshon) many more times when we had OU outnumbered up front totally mystified and frustrated me. With their two safeties back most of the game, it was there for the taking. Sam is not Tom Brady - he is much more Tebow than anything else.
 
Since the LSU game, Texas appears flat emotionally and physically. Of course there are those moments when they get worked up, but from Sam to Foster, they all look flat like the bravado and swagger they normally come with is gone. It was obvious against OU. Its almost like they are waiting for the other shoe to drop or some thing...
The team is f*cking injured at so many critical positions it isn’t funny. That and our best DL getting ejected makes a big difference my man. Offense sucked for a variety of reasons. But I’m still hopeful we turn this around. Geez, the sky isn’t falling just yet. I’m usually a glass half-empty guy but I’m not yet.
 
Ridiculous article and tired of the over the top negativity after this game on staff, outlook, expectations etc.

Let’s be real. This program and athletic department was in complete disarray over the past five years. Patterson and Strong were disasters. Period. Complete wipeout losses (remember BYU disasters, monster losses to TCU and Iowa State, I have never seen such an inept team that loss at ND and of course Kansas), the recruiting was a joke despite some decent rankings because a lot of players never even seemed to show up and the player development was non existent.

Bring in Herman and staff and three years we are already in the second level of top teams like Penn State, Michigan, Auburn etc.

We are doing this with a third string QB as our main RB, our best WR out for most of the season, to many injuries to count and most players sophomores or younger.

It’s hard to play a real 4-3 when we have very few real D lineman. We could not recruit these type of players due in large part to the fact that Texas has been terrible at putting players into the NFL this entire decade. That is also slowly starting to change. We are now recruiting top lineman this year and top offensive lineman this year and next.

This year has been a success so far when we realize this is a major rebuild project and we are building a solid foundation for the next 15 years. This year, We are finally beating down the teams we should, we beat the two teams that beat us last year and lost by 7 points to two top five teams. And yes, we haven’t even played that well. That shows a lot to me.

We go 9-3 or 10-2 and make the CCG that is very good success. BTW, I am pretty sure this team will be just as good as the past three coaches teams in year 3 (look at records) and this staff has had to bring a team from way further back than those coaches did.

Trying to compare Herman to a Lincoln Riley or Orgeron or someone like that at this point is completely in reasonable. Those guys followed Stoops and Miles who had their programs on pretty solid footing and real talent.

No disrespect to last couple of years to Mack Brown and Charlie Strong, but the program during those times was a real embarrassment to the University.

Anyone who thinks it’s easy to bring back a program from falling into the abyss like Texas did just take a look at USC, Nebraska, Florida State or Tennessee or someone like that. We are very lucky to finally have a program being built with a real foundation and towards a spot in that first level of teams. Hopefully we don’t help derail it by knee jerk reactions and unrealistic expectations at this point in the process.
 
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I suppose I've got a bit of good and bad news for the 2019 Texas Longhorns.

In a message that Tom Herman will surely support, the Texas Longhorns still have a season with their biggest goal in front of them and obtainable. The most important task that needed to be executed this season was winning the Big 12 Championship. With one conference loss, a win over Oklahoma State and the Oklahoma game out of the way, a rematch with the Sooners would open the door for this season to still represent a very successful season.

In a message that Herman will almost certainly not support, this year's Longhorns have potentially used all of their "get out of jail" cards for the rest of the season if they want to call this season a success at the turn of the year.

Save me all the "1-0" remarks because when you're 4-2 at the midway point of the season and have lost the two most important games on the entire schedule, a little big picture reality is almost certainly needed. After winning the Sugar Bowl and appearing in the Big 12 title game last season, ready or not, the expectations have increased and the demands for more are higher.

That's the job. When you get into year three as the head coach at a school like Texas, excuses or reasons (whichever way you want to label it) for not achieving the outlined definition of the words "successful season" don't really fly.

It was that way for John Mackovic. It was that way for Mack Brown. It was that way for Charlie Strong.

Hell, it might just be the most consistent thing about the Texas football program, unless you want to suggest that allowing Oklahoma to consistently dominate the Big 12 is even more consistent, at which point I'd probably allow it.

Anyways, the Longhorns now have two steps that must be taken to save this season.

a. Do what it takes to get to Dallas in December for a rematch for the Big 12 Championship Game.
b. Beat Oklahoma for the Big 12 Championship.

Anything less than both represents a disappointing season. Anything less than making it back to Dallas would represent regression. Period.

As it relates to making it back to the Big 12 Championship Game, the Longhorns are in pretty good shape, but it's going to need the kind of consistent quality that existed in September and not the below-standards production of the last two games in all three phases of the game to get it done. More than anything, beating Baylor in Waco on November 23 probably becomes the most important game remaining on the schedule because a loss would mean Texas would need at least three Baylor losses in its other final five games because of the head-to-head tie-breaker the Bears would have over the Longhorns in the event of a tie.

Given the shape of the current standings and the fact that the Longhorns are the only Big 12 "contender" that has faced Oklahoma so far this season, that game in Waco is paramount. The game in Ames is right behind it in terms of importance.

For the sake of continuing to outline what needs to happen to save this season, let's assume the Longhorns navigate the final six games successfully and make it back to Dallas for the Oklahoma rematch.

They have to win that game. For countless reasons.

It was would give Oklahoma its 147th Big 12 title, at least I think that's the number (it certainly feels that way) and it would leave Herman with a 1-4 record against the Sooners, which would include an 0-2 mark in Big 12 Championship games.

What would the stakes be should the Longhorns come up short?

That's a great question. Outside of losing the sky high spirits that have existed around the program for the last nine months and wasting one of the upper-class years of arguably the third-best quarterback in school history in the making, Herman would likely enter the most important season of his career. A high-level Texas official told me when Herman was hired that if he hadn't win a Big 12 title by year four, it would mean they hired the wrong coach.

While that might sound harsh, we're talking about a school that fired Mackovic one year after he won a Big 12 title and Strong three years into a deal. This place doesn't really do the whole failing to meet expectations thing very well. It would make the 2020 season, which would be Ehlinger's senior season, extremely critical.

We're not at any sort of a crisis moment, but we are at a reality check moment.

It's year three. The time to become the program that you project the program to be is now. Not being able to do will lead to some unrest because that's the reality of the world we live in.

No. 2 - Let's talk about Sam ...

It was three weeks ago on Monday that Orangebloods first reported the rib injury that Texas starting quarterback Sam Ehlinger has been dealing with since the early part of the season.

It's not something Ehlinger or Tom Herman has made any kind of public issue with, likely because a rib injury isn't exactly the kind of thing you want to make a public announcement on when you take the shots to the body that Ehlinger already takes.

My own sources indicated that the injury occurred during the LSU game and remained an issue over the course of the next couple of weeks going into the bye week in September, even though he played very well, which is one of the reasons why there wasn't much of a fuss about the whole situation.

Yet, going into the bye week the injury remained enough of a problem that Ehlinger was given some rest during the off-week, which is when we first reported the ongoing issue. On Thursday, I reported in the TicketCity Podcast and and in a discussion on the Orangebloods message boards that Ehlinger reportedly had been bothered by the injury in the second half of the West Virginia game. Meanwhile, Anwar Richardson reported in Thursday's War Room that Ehlinger was also dealing with some sort of shoulder injury.

Again, Ehlinger hasn't complained about any of this, but it's important to note because his numbers from the last two weeks have declined considerably from the first four games of the season.

A week after posting a season-worst 122.2 efficiency number against West Virginia (by 43.5 points), Ehlinger's posted a new season-worst efficiency number (114.8) against the Sooners.

Of course, drops had a lot to do with that number, but the naked eye could see that Ehlinger wasn't 100-percent right in that game. So much of Ehlinger's success as a player is the escapability in the pocket that makes him sometimes impossible to corral for opposing defenses. Against the Sooners, Ehlinger looked a little stiff and seemed to lack some of his natural mobility, which absolutely contributed to the nine sacks that the Longhorns gave up against the Sooners.

What's the point of all of this?

I suppose it's to point out an elephant in the room. In order to be great, Texas needs Ehlinger to be great and in the last two weeks he hasn't been great while dealing with multiple physical ailments. It's not the biggest thing in the world, but is a thing and a thing we're all going to need to keep an eye on in the coming weeks.

No. 3 - Call me crazy ...

The next time the Longhorns play the Sooners, it might be a good eye to do as well of a self-scouting job as it will be to re-scout the Sooners, as least as it relates to the Texas offense.

I'm not automatically saying that the Sooners knew what the Longhorns were doing pre-snap, but it sure seemed that way, especially when the Longhorns tried to create anything with the east-west passing game. Every time the Longhorns threw the ball into the flat, Oklahoma linebacker Kenneth Murray seemed to have a head start on the play.

As someone that has watched the Texas back alignment on almost every play for the last two years to get an idea of whether Texas is going to run or pass on each play (if the running back is lined up within a yard of Ehlinger in the backfield, it's almost always a pass play), I'd suggest the Longhorn coaching staff make every effort to make it harder for opposing defenses to know with certainty what's coming at them.

No. 4 - All Big-12 Longhorns ...


If we were to do an all-Big 12 team at the midway point in the season, these are the Longhorns that would earn first-team all-Big 12 mention:

Devin Duvernay and Sam Cosmi.

I'd ask if I'm missing anyone else, but I already know the answer to that question ... no. The fact that the Longhorns have only two true first-team all-Big 12 players at this point in the season in all three phases of the game is one of the reasons why the Longhorns haven't quite hit an elite stride this season.

No. 5 - Five Players I'm Still Thinking About 24 Hours Later ...

Anthony Cook - The only player on the Texas defense that I absolutely want to give an "attaboy" to on the defensive side of the ball is the sophomore from Houston Lamar. Playing in what would normally be Jalen Green's spot on the field, Cook not only made the biggest defensive play of the game with his forced fumble in the first quarter, but he played a winning brand of football throughout the game when he was on the field.

B.J. Foster - I thought he looked like a shell of the player I know exists inside that No. 25 jersey. Just how banged up is he right now?

Roschon Johnson - The true freshman has 216 yards rushing on 29 carries in the last two weeks, while sophomore Keaontay Ingram has rushed for 27 yards on 13 carries over the same timeframe. The Longhorn coaching staff can't wait until the third quarter this week to get him involved in the offense.

Derek Kerstetter - This makes two weeks in a row that Kerstetter has struggled in handling the players and tactics that opposing teams are throwing his way. Considering teams aren't even really bothering to attack the left side of the Texas line, Kerstetter is simply going to need to improve because the blue-print for going after this line is well-known at this point.

Zach Shackelford - For a senior captain that came into the season as a first-team all-Big 12 player, I just didn't think Shackelford played well enough on Saturday. Whether it was being unable to handle Neville Gallimore in one-on-one situations or recognizing the stunts that Oklahoma was running directly at him, Shackelford's fingerprints were all over the things that went down in the Texas backfield.

No. 6 - If I had a vote that mattered ...

1. LSU
2. Ohio State
3. Alabama
4. Oklahoma
5. Clemson
6. Wisconsin
7. Florida
8. Penn State
9. Georgia
10. Notre Dame

No. 7 – BUY or SELL …
BUY-SELL.gif


(Sell) Coming into this season, one of the things I've liked about Herman as a CEO is his ability to make changes quickly in areas that he needed to make changes. If this season goes sideways, he won't stand pat.


(Buy) You read my mind.


(Buy) I have no evidence to give you to support this belief, but surely the insanity will end.


(Buy) I know a lot of Texas fans believe that Texas can play much better in a rematch, but I kind of feel like Oklahoma played a C+ game on offense yesterday, especially with the mistakes it made in the red zone. I was confident of a Texas win in a rematch before yesterday, but now my belief has been shaken.


(Sell) Nah ... Typically, recruitments don't change on a dime because of the outcome of a single game. What happens the rest of the season greatly matters though ...


(Sell) Nah ...


(Sell) It's more than merely scheme. It's talented-related as well.


(Sell) I don't believe that at all.


(Sell) The guys that are missing haven't exactly been tearing it up when healthy.


(Sell) No, I don't see him doing that.


(Buy) Only DeShon Elliott has been a consensus all-American since 2009, so ... yeah ...


(Sell) That's always been my mindset, though, so nothing has changed.


(Buy) Half a decade is enough time to draw some conclusions, but we're still two seasons away from that particular standard.

No. 8 – Eternal Randomness of the Spotty Sports Mind …

... Texas Tech was absolutely robbed in Waco. The Big 12 confirmed this on Sunday.


... I really thought that Ed Orgeron was going to fall on his face as the head coach for LSU and I have been 100-percent wrong in not giving him enough respect.

... Will Muschamp picked up the biggest win of his career on Saturday and it changes nothing about where that program is going as far as I can see. Consider that a one-off.

... I'm not sure what I'm supposed to say about the Dallas Cowboys other than I feel slightly stupid for drinking just a bit of the Kool-aid. I was never thinking Super Bowl, but my goodness, I thought the team was better than what we watched on Sunday.

... DeShaun Watson didn't even have his A-game on Sunday and the Texans beat the Chiefs at Arrowhead. I don't know what it means, but the Texans have regained my attention, even though I know BOB will mess it all up at some point.

... The 49ers dominated the Rams. Dominated them.

... The Browns are 2-4 and that makes me smile.

... The Eagles still haven't covered Stefan Diggs.

... What must Bryce Harper be thinking right now with the Nationals on a potential World Series run? I'm sure he's happy for his former teammates, but man ...

... When I grow up, I want to be Sadio Mane.
EGs07LJXYAEgE69


... Gini with the Goal of the Weekend!


No. 9 - The List: Top 10 Willie Joints ...

Taking into account all of the work over the span of decades and decades, here's a look at look at my Top 10 Willie songs, as performed by Willie.

Note: Before anyone asks, Crazy is one of my all-time favorite songs, but his version of the song isn't my favorite. Don't get me wrong, it's perfectly fine, but it doesn't make my PERSONAL top 10 list.

The key word is PERSONAL.

10. Hello Walls
9. Night Life
8. Always on my Mind
7. Whiskey River
6. Goodhearted Woman
5. Pancho and Lefty
4. Angel Flying Too Close to The Ground
3. A Song For You
2. Blue Eyes Crying in the rain
1. Seven Spanish Angels

No. 10 – And Finally ...

My favorite Texas/OU photo from this weekend came via a friend's Facebook photo. Part of me sees the world's biggest Longhorns fan and the other part of me can't stop thinking about the dog from Little Nicky.

EGsG4eVXkAATDav
 
Failure? Maybe disappointing/underachieving is more accurate. Making the Big 12 game even if we lost it wouldn't really be a failure. A failure to me would be watching this team continue to stagnate or decline and finish with less with 8-4 9-3 record. We have better talent than anyone left on our schedule but if we play like we did against ousux we could easily drop 2 more games.

Total agreement but I think 10-2 is still an improvement.

Yeah Sooners grabbed a heisman caliber QB off the portal and beat us by 1 TD but the trend is still In our favor.
 
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Great article.

I always felt like from a players perspective this group was one offseason with McKnight and one more recruiting class away BUT with the Defensive schemes and offense play calling I’m not sure now.

if I’m Herman I’m trap dooring any dead weight on the roster and taking 25-26 kids this yr instead of the reported 22.

Take another O lineman, DT and secondary player and go find one of those WR’s that OU always has that can’t be touched in a phone booth .
This regarding the wr. Although we did have a couple of tough losses with Purdue kid and Mookie Cooper.
 
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Thanks for reading. Feel free to specifically quote the part that was unreasonable.

The comment that a successful season is not only making the CCG but beating OU as well. If not, you suggest that would cause some sort of unrest and than try and apply it to Mackovic, Brown and Strong.

We go 9-3 or 10-2 and make the CCG that would be a success taking into account all the points I mention. The progress continues. To act like it it’s a failure you don’t beat a team that has been to several playoffs in recent years and is a top five team doesn’t accept where this program was just three years ago.

I was at the UCLA game that basically led to Mackovic’s firing. Strong had a losing record for three straight years. When that happens to Herman than I will understand.

Loved Brown but he didn’t really pile up the conference trophies. I don’t think it makes sense to set over the top expectations st this point and when don’t make it suggest there is some controversy. I for one never want to go back to the Texas program of the last ten years so I am happy letting these staff get the time to develop a real foundation for a coming decade.
 
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I suppose I've got a bit of good and bad news for the 2019 Texas Longhorns.

In a message that Tom Herman will surely support, the Texas Longhorns still have a season with their biggest goal in front of them and obtainable. The most important task that needed to be executed this season was winning the Big 12 Championship. With one conference loss, a win over Oklahoma State and the Oklahoma game out of the way, a rematch with the Sooners would open the door for this season to still represent a very successful season.

In a message that Herman will almost certainly not support, this year's Longhorns have potentially used all of their "get out of jail" cards for the rest of the season if they want to call this season a success at the turn of the year.

Save me all the "1-0" remarks because when you're 4-2 at the midway point of the season and have lost the two most important games on the entire schedule, a little big picture reality is almost certainly needed. After winning the Sugar Bowl and appearing in the Big 12 title game last season, ready or not, the expectations have increased and the demands for more are higher.

That's the job. When you get into year three as the head coach at a school like Texas, excuses or reasons (whichever way you want to label it) for not achieving the outlined definition of the words "successful season" don't really fly.

It was that way for John Mackovic. It was that way for Mack Brown. It was that way for Charlie Strong.

Hell, it might just be the most consistent thing about the Texas football program, unless you want to suggest that allowing Oklahoma to consistently dominate the Big 12 is even more consistent, at which point I'd probably allow it.

Anyways, the Longhorns now have two steps that must be taken to save this season.

a. Do what it takes to get to Dallas in December for a rematch for the Big 12 Championship Game.
b. Beat Oklahoma for the Big 12 Championship.

Anything less than both represents a disappointing season. Anything less than making it back to Dallas would represent regression. Period.

As it relates to making it back to the Big 12 Championship Game, the Longhorns are in pretty good shape, but it's going to need the kind of consistent quality that existed in September and not the below-standards production of the last two games in all three phases of the game to get it done. More than anything, beating Baylor in Waco on November 23 probably becomes the most important game remaining on the schedule because a loss would mean Texas would need at least three Baylor losses in its other final five games because of the head-to-head tie-breaker the Bears would have over the Longhorns in the event of a tie.

Given the shape of the current standings and the fact that the Longhorns are the only Big 12 "contender" that has faced Oklahoma so far this season, that game in Waco is paramount. The game in Ames is right behind it in terms of importance.

For the sake of continuing to outline what needs to happen to save this season, let's assume the Longhorns navigate the final six games successfully and make it back to Dallas for the Oklahoma rematch.

They have to win that game. For countless reasons.

It was would give Oklahoma its 147th Big 12 title, at least I think that's the number (it certainly feels that way) and it would leave Herman with a 1-4 record against the Sooners, which would include an 0-2 mark in Big 12 Championship games.

What would the stakes be should the Longhorns come up short?

That's a great question. Outside of losing the sky high spirits that have existed around the program for the last nine months and wasting one of the upper-class years of arguably the third-best quarterback in school history in the making, Herman would likely enter the most important season of his career. A high-level Texas official told me when Herman was hired that if he hadn't win a Big 12 title by year four, it would mean they hired the wrong coach.

While that might sound harsh, we're talking about a school that fired Mackovic one year after he won a Big 12 title and Strong three years into a deal. This place doesn't really do the whole failing to meet expectations thing very well. It would make the 2020 season, which would be Ehlinger's senior season, extremely critical.

We're not at any sort of a crisis moment, but we are at a reality check moment.

It's year three. The time to become the program that you project the program to be is now. Not being able to do will lead to some unrest because that's the reality of the world we live in.

No. 2 - Let's talk about Sam ...

It was three weeks ago on Monday that Orangebloods first reported the rib injury that Texas starting quarterback Sam Ehlinger has been dealing with since the early part of the season.

It's not something Ehlinger or Tom Herman has made any kind of public issue with, likely because a rib injury isn't exactly the kind of thing you want to make a public announcement on when you take the shots to the body that Ehlinger already takes.

My own sources indicated that the injury occurred during the LSU game and remained an issue over the course of the next couple of weeks going into the bye week in September, even though he played very well, which is one of the reasons why there wasn't much of a fuss about the whole situation.

Yet, going into the bye week the injury remained enough of a problem that Ehlinger was given some rest during the off-week, which is when we first reported the ongoing issue. On Thursday, I reported in the TicketCity Podcast and and in a discussion on the Orangebloods message boards that Ehlinger reportedly had been bothered by the injury in the second half of the West Virginia game. Meanwhile, Anwar Richardson reported in Thursday's War Room that Ehlinger was also dealing with some sort of shoulder injury.

Again, Ehlinger hasn't complained about any of this, but it's important to note because his numbers from the last two weeks have declined considerably from the first four games of the season.

A week after posting a season-worst 122.2 efficiency number against West Virginia (by 43.5 points), Ehlinger's posted a new season-worst efficiency number (114.8) against the Sooners.

Of course, drops had a lot to do with that number, but the naked eye could see that Ehlinger wasn't 100-percent right in that game. So much of Ehlinger's success as a player is the escapability in the pocket that makes him sometimes impossible to corral for opposing defenses. Against the Sooners, Ehlinger looked a little stiff and seemed to lack some of his natural mobility, which absolutely contributed to the nine sacks that the Longhorns gave up against the Sooners.

What's the point of all of this?

I suppose it's to point out an elephant in the room. In order to be great, Texas needs Ehlinger to be great and in the last two weeks he hasn't been great while dealing with multiple physical ailments. It's not the biggest thing in the world, but is a thing and a thing we're all going to need to keep an eye on in the coming weeks.

No. 3 - Call me crazy ...

The next time the Longhorns play the Sooners, it might be a good eye to do as well of a self-scouting job as it will be to re-scout the Sooners, as least as it relates to the Texas offense.

I'm not automatically saying that the Sooners knew what the Longhorns were doing pre-snap, but it sure seemed that way, especially when the Longhorns tried to create anything with the east-west passing game. Every time the Longhorns threw the ball into the flat, Oklahoma linebacker Kenneth Murray seemed to have a head start on the play.

As someone that has watched the Texas back alignment on almost every play for the last two years to get an idea of whether Texas is going to run or pass on each play (if the running back is lined up within a yard of Ehlinger in the backfield, it's almost always a pass play), I'd suggest the Longhorn coaching staff make every effort to make it harder for opposing defenses to know with certainty what's coming at them.

No. 4 - All Big-12 Longhorns ...


If we were to do an all-Big 12 team at the midway point in the season, these are the Longhorns that would earn first-team all-Big 12 mention:

Devin Duvernay and Sam Cosmi.

I'd ask if I'm missing anyone else, but I already know the answer to that question ... no. The fact that the Longhorns have only two true first-team all-Big 12 players at this point in the season in all three phases of the game is one of the reasons why the Longhorns haven't quite hit an elite stride this season.

No. 5 - Five Players I'm Still Thinking About 24 Hours Later ...

Anthony Cook - The only player on the Texas defense that I absolutely want to give an "attaboy" to on the defensive side of the ball is the sophomore from Houston Lamar. Playing in what would normally be Jalen Green's spot on the field, Cook not only made the biggest defensive play of the game with his forced fumble in the first quarter, but he played a winning brand of football throughout the game when he was on the field.

B.J. Foster - I thought he looked like a shell of the player I know exists inside that No. 25 jersey. Just how banged up is he right now?

Roschon Johnson - The true freshman has 216 yards rushing on 29 carries in the last two weeks, while sophomore Keaontay Ingram has rushed for 27 yards on 13 carries over the same timeframe. The Longhorn coaching staff can't wait until the third quarter this week to get him involved in the offense.

Derek Kerstetter - This makes two weeks in a row that Kerstetter has struggled in handling the players and tactics that opposing teams are throwing his way. Considering teams aren't even really bothering to attack the left side of the Texas line, Kerstetter is simply going to need to improve because the blue-print for going after this line is well-known at this point.

Zach Shackelford - For a senior captain that came into the season as a first-team all-Big 12 player, I just didn't think Shackelford played well enough on Saturday. Whether it was being unable to handle Neville Gallimore in one-on-one situations or recognizing the stunts that Oklahoma was running directly at him, Shackelford's fingerprints were all over the things that went down in the Texas backfield.

No. 6 - If I had a vote that mattered ...

1. LSU
2. Ohio State
3. Alabama
4. Oklahoma
5. Clemson
6. Wisconsin
7. Florida
8. Penn State
9. Georgia
10. Notre Dame

No. 7 – BUY or SELL …
BUY-SELL.gif


(Sell) Coming into this season, one of the things I've liked about Herman as a CEO is his ability to make changes quickly in areas that he needed to make changes. If this season goes sideways, he won't stand pat.


(Buy) You read my mind.


(Buy) I have no evidence to give you to support this belief, but surely the insanity will end.


(Buy) I know a lot of Texas fans believe that Texas can play much better in a rematch, but I kind of feel like Oklahoma played a C+ game on offense yesterday, especially with the mistakes it made in the red zone. I was confident of a Texas win in a rematch before yesterday, but now my belief has been shaken.


(Sell) Nah ... Typically, recruitments don't change on a dime because of the outcome of a single game. What happens the rest of the season greatly matters though ...


(Sell) Nah ...


(Sell) It's more than merely scheme. It's talented-related as well.


(Sell) I don't believe that at all.


(Sell) The guys that are missing haven't exactly been tearing it up when healthy.


(Sell) No, I don't see him doing that.


(Buy) Only DeShon Elliott has been a consensus all-American since 2009, so ... yeah ...


(Sell) That's always been my mindset, though, so nothing has changed.


(Buy) Half a decade is enough time to draw some conclusions, but we're still two seasons away from that particular standard.

No. 8 – Eternal Randomness of the Spotty Sports Mind …

... Texas Tech was absolutely robbed in Waco. The Big 12 confirmed this on Sunday.


... I really thought that Ed Orgeron was going to fall on his face as the head coach for LSU and I have been 100-percent wrong in not giving him enough respect.

... Will Muschamp picked up the biggest win of his career on Saturday and it changes nothing about where that program is going as far as I can see. Consider that a one-off.

... I'm not sure what I'm supposed to say about the Dallas Cowboys other than I feel slightly stupid for drinking just a bit of the Kool-aid. I was never thinking Super Bowl, but my goodness, I thought the team was better than what we watched on Sunday.

... DeShaun Watson didn't even have his A-game on Sunday and the Texans beat the Chiefs at Arrowhead. I don't know what it means, but the Texans have regained my attention, even though I know BOB will mess it all up at some point.

... The 49ers dominated the Rams. Dominated them.

... The Browns are 2-4 and that makes me smile.

... The Eagles still haven't covered Stefan Diggs.

... What must Bryce Harper be thinking right now with the Nationals on a potential World Series run? I'm sure he's happy for his former teammates, but man ...

... When I grow up, I want to be Sadio Mane.
EGs07LJXYAEgE69


... Gini with the Goal of the Weekend!


No. 9 - The List: Top 10 Willie Joints ...

Taking into account all of the work over the span of decades and decades, here's a look at look at my Top 10 Willie songs, as performed by Willie.

Note: Before anyone asks, Crazy is one of my all-time favorite songs, but his version of the song isn't my favorite. Don't get me wrong, it's perfectly fine, but it doesn't make my PERSONAL top 10 list.

The key word is PERSONAL.

10. Hello Walls
9. Night Life
8. Always on my Mind
7. Whiskey River
6. Goodhearted Woman
5. Pancho and Lefty
4. Angel Flying Too Close to The Ground
3. A Song For You
2. Blue Eyes Crying in the rain
1. Seven Spanish Angels

No. 10 – And Finally ...

My favorite Texas/OU photo from this weekend came via a friend's Facebook photo. Part of me sees the world's biggest Longhorns fan and the other part of me can't stop thinking about the dog from Little Nicky.

EGsG4eVXkAATDav


Yow said Willie songs performed by Willie, so assume you meant songs he wrote. He didn’t write, A Song For You, Leon Russell did.
 
Baylor playing OU in the big 12 title game would represent such a colossal failure and speak volumes about this staff verses Baylor's staff. Forget comparing Texas to OU. That's what regression looks like for Texas and that's what a great hire looks like in Waco. That would be a gut punch to the folks in Austin but maybe more than that it means one of the highest paid staffs in college football with a year head start and much better recruiting isnt as good as a program that cant attract much talent and was an embarrassment just a few years ago.

I cannot comprehend just how bad that would be on so many fronts. That simply cannot happen.

That could happen but doesn’t make Baylor and Ruhle in a better position than Texas. Briles, while a total miscreant, deviant POS left the cupboard full. Plus playing a crappy schedule makes winning easier. Tom and staff have their issues to address. And he’s here for several more years, which he should be. If not CTH, then who???
 
That could happen but doesn’t make Baylor and Ruhle in a better position than Texas. Briles, while a total miscreant, deviant POS left the cupboard full. Plus playing a crappy schedule makes winning easier. Tom and staff have their issues to address. And he’s here for several more years, which he should be. If not CTH, then who???

I dont think you're understanding the significance of a second tier coach having more success in year three at baylor than herman in year three at Texas. In no way shape or form did Briles leave the cupboard full and baylor playing a crappy OOC schedule is meaningless in conference play.

That would represent a complete disaster of epic proportions for Texas
 
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I dont think you're understanding the significance of a second year coach having more success in year two at baylor than herman in year three at Texas. In no way shape or form did Briles leave Baylor in Briles leave the cupboard full at Baylor and baylor playing a crapoy OOC schedule is meaningless in conference play.

That would represent a complete disaster of epic proportions for Texas

Isn’t Ruhle in year 3???
 
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... I really thought that Ed Orgeron was going to fall on his face as the head coach for LSU and I have been 100-percent wrong in not giving him enough respect.

Does anyone actually think Orgeron is a better coach than Herman? Or did he just pay top dollar for great coordinators and is reaping the benefits? I think it's the latter. We are paying top dollar for coordinators, but they aren't yielding the kind of results we should demand this season. Herman has some tough decisions to make.
 
Coach o and Herman will defend their bs scheme to the end. Hey coach, 3 down lineman ain’t working.

Signed. ( every longhorns fan).
4 down linemen didn't help Mack's defenses against the spread either in many games and that's all we ran. The 3 down linemen is not the problem because most of the time they are rushing 4 or 5 depending on what down it is . The problem is what's happening behind them. With 8 people in coverage, no way people should be running open like they did Saturday, and no way should a QB be able to run 10-15 yards before the DB's know he's running and a 240 pound lumbering back be able to run around the end for 20+ yards before anyone reacts. Something is going on with our LB's and DB's that has them completely out of position. Maybe it was the motion and counter action that was getting their eyes off the ball, but we were late to the party all day long.

Hook'em
 
Unlike Charlie, I think CTH understands what a fantastic opportunity he has at UT. He will fix this, hubris and arrogance notwithstanding.

His hubris will be his downfall. Instead of firing Warehime for giving us a pathetic o line, he moved him to tight ends and special teams so he could destroy those units, too.

I won’t trust CTH until he fires someone. That’s the best indicator that he gets it, and that he can admit a mistake.
 
... I really thought that Ed Orgeron was going to fall on his face as the head coach for LSU and I have been 100-percent wrong in not giving him enough respect.

Does anyone actually think Orgeron is a better coach than Herman? Or did he just pay top dollar for great coordinators and is reaping the benefits? I think it's the latter. We are paying top dollar for coordinators, but they aren't yielding the kind of results we should demand this season. Herman has some tough decisions to make.


I think LSU has 15 Jr/Sr on its two deep defense and we have I think 6. Again, Orgeron didn’t take over a complete disaster like Texas was. I hate to say but the Strong era was much worse than anyone seems to really accept. I really need to think we need to evaluate year 5.
 
I dont think you're understanding the significance of a second tier coach having more success in year three at baylor than herman in year three at Texas. In no way shape or form did Briles leave the cupboard full and baylor playing a crappy OOC schedule is meaningless in conference play.

That would represent a complete disaster of epic proportions for Texas

Respectfully, you need to change your perspective about Rhule. He may be at a small school but he’s not a second tier coach. Dude has had a lot of wins as a HC and gets mentioned for NFL gigs frequently.

My cousin is his QB coach and has been with him since Temple. Before that, Glenn was with the Ravens.

Rhule knows what’s up.

I get your point about Baylor taking a major step ahead of Texas though.
 
4 down linemen didn't help Mack's defenses against the spread either in many games and that's all we ran. The 3 down linemen is not the problem because most of the time they are rushing 4 or 5 depending on what down it is . The problem is what's happening behind them. With 8 people in coverage, no way people should be running open like they did Saturday, and no way should a QB be able to run 10-15 yards before the DB's know he's running and a 240 pound lumbering back be able to run around the end for 20+ yards before anyone reacts. Something is going on with our LB's and DB's that has them completely out of position. Maybe it was the motion and counter action that was getting their eyes off the ball, but we were late to the party all day long.

Hook'em

There’s more than that. Our outside linemen were playing inside their tackles which makes easy seals. Then, they have backside pullers and that gives them numbers against the 2 DBs we have on the running side. It’s a numbers game and we lost those running plays before the ball was ever snapped.

That’s just one illustration.

Orlando needs to get it together and simplify his defense. He needs to get back to fundamentals because until they master that, the rest of it is pointless.
 
@Ketchum

1) What was your loss prediction at the beginning of the year? 3 or 4 wasn’t it? You think losing to two consensus top 5s by 14 total is curtains for us? Interesting.

2) Injuries could be important context for Sam. I’d buy that if I didn’t see the 5 guys in front of him and the 1 beside him in the last 2 games have their worst games of the season. I don’t care how good Sam is. It takes a village. He threw 4 really good balls at OU that 3 receivers dropped. Guy needs help.

There’s underlying context here that no one is talking about.

If you watched LSU play Florida, you saw the same team that played Texas. What you don’t see with Texas, however, is the same team that played LSU. Why is that? Are we physically spent and broken from injuries as a team? Was this just an anomaly? Why is there a negative trend developing?
 
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