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Texas Longhorns: TCU Horned Frogs

HornsNation is breaking down Texas' 2013 football schedule every Monday this summer. This week: The Longhorns' seventh game of the season vs. the TCU Horned Frogs on Oct. 26 at TCU..

TCU 2012 record: 7-6 overall, 4-5 in the Big 12

Last time against Texas: TCU won 20-13 Nov. 22, 2012 in Austin.

Record against Texas: Texas leads 61-21-1


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Recruiting is the lifeblood of every program in the country, and every conference has its strengths and weaknesses when it comes to landing top prospects. In the start of a weeklong series, we'll examine the BCS conferences plus Notre Dame to find each's strength, the biggest obstacle each faces and the overall view of the conference. The Big 12 is up Thursday.

Biggest obstacle: Texas is one of the top states in the country for producing recruits, which is great considering it's in the heart of the Big 12. The problem is that Big 12 teams not only have to fight one another for those prospects, but programs from around the country recruit Texas hard as well. For the 2013 recruiting cycle, the conference signed roughly 170 high school prospects, and 102 were out of Texas. Think about that: One state supplied 60 percent of the prospects signed within the entire Big 12. If you take newest member West Virginia -- which is not only new to the conference but also not a part of that region -- out of the mix, then a staggering 66 percent of the prospects signed among nine of the teams in the conference came out of just one state. Four of the teams in the conference are based in Texas, and while the states that the other six programs in the conference call home produce some good prospects as well, none can rely heavily on just in-state talent to build their classes from year to year. As a result, almost the entire conference often depends heavily on the talent from one state.

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Many accomplished Texas high school quarterbacks have come through Stephenville (Texas) High School. Current head coach Joseph Gillespie has been working at Stephenville High long enough to see most of them.

Some went on to the NFL, some went on to college careers, others found themselves doing something outside of football. But to those associated with or who follow Stephenville football, they're easily recalled, whether simply for their terrific careers or for leading the Yellowjackets to state titles.

Jarrett Stidham could be the next great Stephenville quarterback -- even colleges are betting on it with scholarship offers to the 2015 prospect -- and he hasn't even started as a varsity quarterback yet.

"Oh he has the potential, certainly," Gillespie said.


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Emanuel Porter (Dallas/Lincoln) wants to take a few steps back before taking gigantic leap forward.

The 6-foot-3, 189-pound 2014 receiver backtracked on his commitment to TCU on Monday, one day after competing at Texas’ mini camp.


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AUSTIN, Texas – Johnny Shaw won’t soon forget the moment when he received his scholarship offer from Texas on Sunday, or the feelings that offer elicited. It was all just too surreal.

“I’ve been dreaming for this day,” Shaw said. “I haven’t been looking for it -- I’ve been dreaming it. When I got the offer, my heart just dropped. I felt like the moment stopped, like the hands of time just stopped.”

[+] EnlargeJohnny Shaw
Max Olson/ESPNClass of 2015 safety Johnny Shaw flipped from TCU to Texas on Sunday at the Longhorns' minicamp.
From there, the Center (Texas) safety’s choice was an easy one. Right after Texas camp wrapped up on Sunday afternoon, Shaw announced that he was officially flipping from TCU to the Longhorns.

He was the second of three pledges during UT’s minicamp, followed quickly by the commitment of Buda (Texas) Hayes offensive tackle Connor Lanfear. That puts Texas at seven early commits for its 2015 class.

Shaw had originally committed to TCU on May 18 during a visit. Back then, he thought it was a no-brainer. The Horned Frogs coaching staff rolled out the red carpet for him and made Shaw their one and only visitor that Saturday.

But no matter what, Shaw was always going to wait for Texas.

“I’m picking Texas because they’re the first team on my list,” Shaw said. “I’ve been liking them ever since I was little. I just like the Longhorns.”

Center coach Kevin Goodwin attended the UT camp with Shaw and wasn’t the least bit surprised that Shaw flipped. Ever since Shaw attended Texas sophomore day, he’d been fired up about the possibility of playing his college ball in Austin.

According to Goodwin, Texas is getting an unusual physical talent in the 6-foot-2, 188-pound defensive back.

"The special thing about Johnny is, in a day of finesse ball, he's a hitter," Goodwin said. He's one of those guys who comes [up] and strikes you. That's what makes him special. He's big, he likes to strike and he has the ability to get back there and intercept the ball at 50 yards as well."

Shaw is Texas' second defensive back pledge for 2015 along with Jalen Campbell (Corpus Christi, Texas/Flour Bluff). Lufkin (Texas) athlete Keke Coutee also committed to Texas on Sunday and could end up in the secondary, though he played receiver during the camp.

Goodwin had warned Shaw prior to their sophomore day visit that he might not get an offer that day. He knew more touted sophomore safeties Deionte Thompson (Orange, Texas/West Orange-Stark) and Larry Pryor Jr. (Sulphur Springs, Texas/Sulphur Springs) might be in attendance and be higher on Texas’ board. He preached patience.

And there’s no denying Shaw set out to make a statement at camp. He wanted an offer, and he wanted to earn it.

“I proved that I’m faster and more physical than most of the DBs here,” Shaw said.

As he made his way out of the Texas indoor practice facility on Sunday, Shaw couldn’t stop smiling.

He still couldn’t believe he’d just committed to Texas. This was his plan going into the day, yes, but going home a future Longhorn was still just a tad hard to handle.

“Especially for a sophomore, man ... it feels like a dream,” he said. “A real good dream.”

McKINNEY, Texas -- The 2013 Nike Football Festival made a stop in north Texas, and 24 teams from the Dallas metroplex and east Texas showed their skills in 7-on-7 competition and individual skills challenges at Craig Ranch and the Michael Johnson Performance Center. Roughly 400 athletes were in attendance, some considered major FBS recruits.

Here is what we learned after the event:

2015 QB Murray wins ... twice

That sigh of relief you heard in McKinney? It’s still to be determined if it was from the Allen faithful or the Texas A&M faithful.

Saturday afternoon, Allen won the event's 7-on-7 tournament, and 2015 quarterback Kyler Murray looked phenomenal in competition. He made the same kind of plays in the air that allowed him to lead Allen to the Texas Class 5A Division-I state championship in December. In short, Murray was outstanding.

Shortly after, the 5-foot-11, 166-pound quarterback picked up the much-anticipated offer that made Aggies fans gush. Murray, the son of former Aggies quarterback Kevin Murray, finally got an offer from Texas A&M to join offers from Ohio State, Clemson, Texas Tech, Arkansas and Arizona State.

Life after Texas commit looks promising


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AUSTIN, Texas -- Each week Sean Adams looks at a few topics around the Texas Longhorns and college football.

First down: Brown is here to stay

For a few years now, some people have had Texas coach Mack Brown with one foot out the door and the other foot on a banana peel. Some think he is going to go and some folks think he should go. But all should prepare for the fact that Brown could be around for a while.


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HOUSTON -- Earlier this spring, it appeared Katy (Texas) Seven Lakes 2014 defensive end Jarrett Johnson was ready to end his recruitment and make a pledge.

Instead, he waited. Allowing for input from members of his inner circle, Johnson decided to utilize a little bit more time.

With summer approaching, Seven Lakes' spring football complete and college camp season approaching, Johnson again is feeling like the time to commit might be drawing near. Time has given him a chance to think, but one thing hasn't changed.


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Four Downs: BYU a litmus test 

May, 28, 2013
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AUSTIN, Texas -- Each week Sean Adams looks at a few topics around the Texas Longhorns and college football.

First down: Why you don’t have to wait for Oklahoma to learn about Texas

Texas playing BYU on Sept. 7 in Provo, Utah, will be a game that will tell the Texas fanbase and coaching staff just what they have in the 2013 Longhorns.


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TEXAS CITY, Texas -- These days, it's all smiles for ESPN 150 receiver Armanti Foreman.

Life is good for the Texas City (Texas) High School star. Offers are coming left and right. He's preparing for a banner senior season with his twin brother, 2014 running back D'Onta Foreman. He's enjoying the final weeks of his junior year of high school. On Tuesday, Armanti was sprinting past defensive backs and juking defenders out of their shorts, showing the playmaking ability that has so many colleges at his doorstep.


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Recruiting pitches: Big 12

May, 10, 2013
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Inspired by Florida's "#ComePlayWRFortheJoker" campaign, our recruiting writers looked at other ways schools can sell themselves on the trail. Here's a look at recruiting pitches for the Big 12:

Baylor Bears
What they’re selling: The new 45,000-seat, $250-million on-campus stadium that will open in 2014. Recruiting is an arms race, and players like fancy stadiums and locker rooms, and Baylor’s upgrade puts them finally on the same level playing field as everybody else in the Big 12.
What they're missing: Help on defense -- specifically at defensive line and defensive back.

Iowa State Cyclones
What they’re selling: Paul Rhoads. He grew up miles from the campus and has helped turn around Iowa State with a physical and fundamentally sound style of football.
What they're missing: A true home-run threat at receiver.

Kansas Jayhawks
What they’re selling: Charlie Weis. He’s taken risks (juco infusion), repaired relationships with area high school coaches and widened KU’s recruiting pool.
What they're missing: Wins. When you’ve won only one conference game in three years, a little bit of everything is missing.

Kansas State Wildcats
What they’re selling: Bill Synder. The plan has worked for years in Manhattan. K-State doesn’t care how many stars a player has attached to his name, a player only earns an offer from K-State unless Snyder personally signs off on it after a lengthy review. It’s a plan that produced a No. 1 BCS ranking and a Big 12 championship in 2012.
What’s missing: I’ve been told by coaches for years that the most difficult position to recruit is defensive tackle. That’s why you often see even average defensive tackles rack up double-digit offers, and finding good depth at defensive tackle has been very difficult to do at K-State.

Oklahoma Sooners
What they’re selling: Oklahoma is proud of its football tradition, and few schools can match the Sooners’ track record for success, facilities and ability to prepare you for the next level.
What they're missing: A renewed focus on evaluating players. It’s what differentiated Bob Stoops’ staff when they started, and it’s how they found players like Sam Bradford, Josh Heupel, Juaquin Iglesias and Donald Stephenson. All at the time were considered to be three-star recruits but wound up being impact players for the Sooners.

Oklahoma State Cowboys
What they’re selling: Their ability to evaluate and develop offensive talent.
What they're missing: Elite players in the Lone Star State. With the best facilities in the conference, it might be just enough to get kids to visit.

Texas Longhorns
What they’re selling: Few in the nation can offer up the type of atmosphere, fan base, tradition and total student-athlete package like Texas can.
What they're missing: A true a difference-maker at quarterback. The last two Heisman Trophy winners have come from Texas high schools, and the Longhorns didn’t recruit one heavily and recruited the other as an athlete.

TCU Horned Frogs
What they’re selling: The Horned Frogs recruit to their style of smash-mouth play on both sides of the ball and don’t care how many stars a recruit has. It hurts them some in the recruiting rankings, but it helps them win a lot of ball games.
What they're missing: BCS conference depth. Heading into their second season in the Big 12 after a 7-6 season, the biggest thing the Horned Frogs need to do is to build the roster to be able to compete year in and year out in the BCS conference.

Texas Tech Red Raiders
What they’re selling: The Red Raiders went through a transition that brought Kliff Kingsbury to Lubbock, and the early reception has been nothing short of positive.
What they're missing: The Red Raiders have never had issues putting up points on people, but under Tommy Tuberville and Mike Leach there was little defense being played.

West Virginia Mountaineers
What they’re selling: WVU is a force in the Atlantic region, can recruit well in Pennsylvania and is arguably one of the best schools at identifying offensive talent in the JC ranks.
What they're missing: The 2014 class will have to be all about rebuilding in Morgantown, as the needs are mounting while several impact players have moved on.

Question of the Week: Let's talk trades 

May, 9, 2013
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Free agency might be a long way off from never in college football -- at least as far as players are concerned. Coaches, they come and go. Players stick.

But now the time has come to change all that, if only for a day and if only for the purposes of this week’s question of the week. With that in mind and those rules set, here then is the aforementioned question: If you, as Texas’ general manager, could trade for one player within the Big 12, who would it be? And who would you give up for that player?


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Texas might not be done landing members of the famed Shipley family.

No, Bob Shipley – the Longhorns’ newly hired football analyst – doesn’t have any more sons after Jordan Shipley and Jaxon Shipley. But he does have a nephew, one who could end up being an intriguing prospect in the class of 2015.


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The NFL draft is done, and you can find some raw data at the bottom of this post, but here are a few thoughts:
  • You can see our thoughts on the first round here, so today, we'll focus on the rest of the draft.
  • What a nighmare spot for Geno Smith to land after a rough drop out of the first round. Sure, he might be able to earn some early playing time for the Jets, and it's not hard to see him beating out a couple of first-round picks in Mark Sanchez and Tim Tebow, but the Jets are a complete zoo with six quarterbacks on the roster, and Chaz Schilens (what??) and former TCU receiver Jeremy Kerley as their top targets in the passing game. Good grief. Smith won't be pressured to play early, but it's hard to imagine him walking into a worse situation as a rookie quarterback, with no one to really learn from, tons of distractions and a zoo-like atmosphere on a Jets team that isn't expected to come anywhere close to the playoffs next season.
  • On the flip side, how happy is Sam Bradford after this weekend? And how awesome is Tavon Austin and Stedman Bailey getting to continue playing together? The Rams just gained an entire state as a fan base. You'll be able to see plenty of St. Louis games in West Virginia, I'm betting. Don't be surprised if both of those guys are starters in Week 1 for a team badly in need of receivers after losing Danny Amendola to the Patriots. Austin is obviously more physically gifted, but Bailey has great hands and knows how to play the position. You don't catch 25 touchdown passes on accident.
  • Meanwhile, great landing spot for Landry Jones, who stuck around Oklahoma an extra year, passing up a first-round grade from the advisory committee. He appeared to regress this year, falling back to the fourth round. Walking into a place where he had to start early with few weapons would be a tough spot for any quarterback, even though Jones, with four years of starting experience, would be as ready as anyone. Instead, he'll sit behind Ben Roethlisberger, and considering how much Roethlisberger gets hit, don't be surprised if Jones is forced into starting duty once or twice next season. On a random note: Jones' landing spot is a little funny considering his wife played with Roethlisberger's little sister, Carlee, on the women's basketball team at Oklahoma.
  • How perfect is Arthur Brown going to the Ravens? It's too bad he won't get to learn from Ray Lewis firsthand, but you can bet Lewis will have a hand in Brown's development. Brown is mean, fast and smart. That fits the Ravens perfectly.
  • Jerry Jones loves him some Big 12 offensive skill talent. Dez Bryant blossomed this season, but the Dallas Cowboys went out and grabbed running back Joseph Randle and receiver Terrance Williams, the league's top rusher and receiver. I don't see Randle as a star in the NFL, but a solid contributor. Williams, though, will be fascinating to see in an offense thin at receiver behind Bryant. Miles Austin has had health issues, and Bryant has, too. Keep an eye out for Williams to make a splash in an offense that loves to throw it around. Randle will be backing up a familiar face in ex-Oklahoma running back DeMarco Murray.
  • Great fit for Kenny Stills in New Orleans. The Saints have several aging receivers there to teach Stills a thing or two, but enough passes to get him some early experience. I'm betting on Stills as a 1,000-yard receiver in Year 3.
  • Very cool reunion out in Arizona with Alex Okafor joining his old teammate, Sam Acho, on the Cardinals. It will be fun to see those guys on the field.
  • Texas Tech was the only Big 12 team without a player drafted.
  • Very shocked to see Oklahoma's Tony Jefferson and Iowa State's Jake Knott go undrafted. More so with Jefferson, who left school early and had great physical gifts. ESPN had him as the No. 5 safety in the draft at one point, but he wasn't among the more than 20 safeties drafted. Very odd. I have to wonder what's going on there. Has to be something other than his physical skills. He didn't necessarily show a lot of improvement throughout his career, but he was an All-Big 12 talent who made 100+ tackles this season. More on the Big 12's notable undrafted players later this morning.
  • Not a good year for the Big 12 in the draft, with an all-time low 22 players drafted, but you also have to consider that it's just the second year that the league had just 10 teams. Texas A&M and Missouri had a combined eight draft picks, helping the 14-team SEC set an all-time record for draft picks by conference. By eight selections, of course. Generally, not a good trend for the Big 12. Most alarming: The SEC East and SEC West both had more draft picks than any other conference in college football. Good grief.

 

Here's the ranking of players drafted, by Big 12 team.

1. Oklahoma -- six players
2. West Virginia -- three players
2. Texas -- three players
2. Kansas State -- three players
5. Iowa State -- two players
5. TCU -- two players
7. Baylor -- one player
7. Kansas -- one player
7. Oklahoma State -- one player
10. Texas Tech -- zero players

Here are the conference rankings:


1. SEC -- 63 players
2. ACC -- 31 players
3. Pac-12 -- 28 players
4. Big 12 -- 22 players
4. Big Ten -- 22 players
6. Big East -- 18 players

Here is the full list of the 22 players from the Big 12 who were drafted:
FIRST ROUND

SECOND ROUND
THIRD ROUND
FOURTH ROUND
FIFTH ROUND
SIXTH ROUND
SEVENTH ROUND
When it comes to how he approaches athletics and everything that comes with it, Arlington (Texas) James Martin defensive end Myles Garrett is methodical.

The five-star defensive end does things his way -- and not in a bad way.


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