Texas Longhorns: Nick Jordan
Each week during the season, HornsNation will rank Texas' top 10 performers of the season up to this point. Here's a ranking of the top contributors from the Orange-White spring game on Saturday.
1. QB David Ash: The junior quarterback didn’t exactly unfurl a cape and fly to new heights in the spring game. But, aside from two huge miscues, Ash proved he is capable of running the up-tempo offense and appears to understand what play-caller Major Applewhite wants.
1. QB David Ash: The junior quarterback didn’t exactly unfurl a cape and fly to new heights in the spring game. But, aside from two huge miscues, Ash proved he is capable of running the up-tempo offense and appears to understand what play-caller Major Applewhite wants.
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Turnover is an annual tradition in college football, but with that, teams' strengths and weaknesses constantly shift, too. Today, we'll continue our look at the biggest strengths and weaknesses for each Big 12 team.
Next up: Texas.
Strongest position: Running backs
You simply could not ask for anything more from one position, and I might make the case that this is the strongest unit in the Big 12 in terms of pure skill. The Longhorns lost D.J. Monroe from this unit last year, but they run four deep and each brings something special to the table. Johnathan Gray has the best balance of the quartet, and the rising sophomore looks like a favorite to win the starting job on the back of his strong first step. The starting position is a bit pointless ultimately, considering all four will get touches, especially Malcolm Brown, a balanced back with a great feel for space between the tackles who leans a bit more toward being a power runner.
The other two backs are pure specialty, but every backfield can use those. Joe Bergeron is a 240-pound bowling ball who rolled his way to 16 touchdowns a year ago, more than anyone else in the Big 12 except Collin Klein, who finished third in the Heisman voting. On the other end of the spectrum is Daje Johnson, a sophomore speedster who averaged 11.5 yards a touch last season. He had touchdown runs of 45 yards (New Mexico) and 84 yards (Baylor) that showcased his speed. This is a solid group with elite talent and tons of depth and versatility. Texas has recruited running backs so well lately, and it's showing up on the field. What more could you ask for?
Weakest position: Specialists
Texas has solid talent in the return game with Quandre Diggs and Jaxon Shipley, but the kicking game was a disaster last season and the Longhorns are trying to find an answer at punter to fill in for Alex King, who graduated after averaging better than 45 yards a kick on his 43 punts last year. The big problem that carried over from last season is at place-kicker. Texas finished last season just 11-of-19 on field goals, tied for the worst mark in the Big 12 and 107th nationally.
Penn State transfer Anthony Fera was the biggest hope at the position, but he was nagged with a persistent groin injury and has been working mostly at punter this spring after making 2-of-4 field goals last year. Freshman Nick Jordan made 9-of-15 kicks last season and has to be better to hold onto his spot.
Texas has recruited well all over the field and doesn't lose much from last year's team, but when I survey the depth chart, kicker and punter are clearly the biggest weaknesses for the Longhorns. The players currently on the roster are long on potential but short on real accomplishments.
More Weak and Strong.
Next up: Texas.
Strongest position: Running backs
You simply could not ask for anything more from one position, and I might make the case that this is the strongest unit in the Big 12 in terms of pure skill. The Longhorns lost D.J. Monroe from this unit last year, but they run four deep and each brings something special to the table. Johnathan Gray has the best balance of the quartet, and the rising sophomore looks like a favorite to win the starting job on the back of his strong first step. The starting position is a bit pointless ultimately, considering all four will get touches, especially Malcolm Brown, a balanced back with a great feel for space between the tackles who leans a bit more toward being a power runner.
The other two backs are pure specialty, but every backfield can use those. Joe Bergeron is a 240-pound bowling ball who rolled his way to 16 touchdowns a year ago, more than anyone else in the Big 12 except Collin Klein, who finished third in the Heisman voting. On the other end of the spectrum is Daje Johnson, a sophomore speedster who averaged 11.5 yards a touch last season. He had touchdown runs of 45 yards (New Mexico) and 84 yards (Baylor) that showcased his speed. This is a solid group with elite talent and tons of depth and versatility. Texas has recruited running backs so well lately, and it's showing up on the field. What more could you ask for?
Weakest position: Specialists
Texas has solid talent in the return game with Quandre Diggs and Jaxon Shipley, but the kicking game was a disaster last season and the Longhorns are trying to find an answer at punter to fill in for Alex King, who graduated after averaging better than 45 yards a kick on his 43 punts last year. The big problem that carried over from last season is at place-kicker. Texas finished last season just 11-of-19 on field goals, tied for the worst mark in the Big 12 and 107th nationally.
Penn State transfer Anthony Fera was the biggest hope at the position, but he was nagged with a persistent groin injury and has been working mostly at punter this spring after making 2-of-4 field goals last year. Freshman Nick Jordan made 9-of-15 kicks last season and has to be better to hold onto his spot.
Texas has recruited well all over the field and doesn't lose much from last year's team, but when I survey the depth chart, kicker and punter are clearly the biggest weaknesses for the Longhorns. The players currently on the roster are long on potential but short on real accomplishments.
More Weak and Strong.
As spring camps begin, we'll offer up a preview and let you know what to watch for in each team's 15 practices over the next couple of months. Texas will start spring practice first, so today we start with the Longhorns.
Schedule: The Longhorns begin spring practice on Thursday and will host a spring game on March 30.
What's new: Offensive playcalling duties have fallen to co-coordinator Major Applewhite now, who was promoted when partner Bryan Harsin left to become Arkansas State's head coach. Defensive coordinator Manny Diaz mulled a move after the season, but ultimately stuck around to help revive a defense that struggled in 2012.
On the mend: Defensive end Jackson Jeffcoat will likely be limited after undergoing surgery on a torn pectoral, but linebacker Jordan Hicks should return following a hip injury that cost him his 2012 season and a sexual assault charge that was eventually dropped stemming from an incident during the Longhorns' bowl trip.
Stepping up: Kenny Vaccaro's versatility will be tough to replace, but figuring out who will try and fill his role at safety will be huge for Texas' defense during the spring. My money is on Mykkele Thompson, but don't rule out junior Josh Turner or even a position move for physical junior cornerback Quandre Diggs.
New faces: Texas is welcoming a handful of early enrollees this spring, headlined by quarterback Tyrone Swoopes. Offensive lineman Jake Raulerson, the 2013 class' first commit, is also enrolled along with linebacker Deoundrei Davis and tight end Geoff Swaim, the nation's No. 4 junior college player at the position.
Breaking out: Linebacker Peter Jinkens already made an impact as a true freshman, but don't be surprised if he leaves spring practice with a starting gig, beating out a few older players like Steve Edmond and Kendall Thompson. Jinkens earned a start against Iowa State and snagged an interception in Texas' Alamo Bowl win over Oregon State, but the 6-foot-1, 213-pounder from Dallas could be a budding star in a linebacking corps that needs help after a disappointing 2012.
Under the radar: Texas struggled in the kicking game throughout 2012, making just 11 of 19 attempts, the lowest percentage of any Big 12 team. Nick Jordan had to carry the load as a freshman while Penn State transfer Anthony Fera battled a groin injury. They'll be back to battle this spring, and though it won't get much attention in a camp loaded with intrigue, its importance can't be overstated for a team that doesn't hang points by the buckets and played in six games decided by one possession a year ago.
All eyes on: Quarterback David Ash. Being just OK is no longer acceptable. He was reasonably efficient last season with a passer rating of over 153, but faltered late in the season and struggled with inconsistency. If Texas is going to be great, he has to be great, and most importantly, consistent. No more well-deserved benchings in favor of Case McCoy. Ash limited his interceptions and was fifth in the league in passer rating, but he's got to be even better as a junior.
Schedule: The Longhorns begin spring practice on Thursday and will host a spring game on March 30.
What's new: Offensive playcalling duties have fallen to co-coordinator Major Applewhite now, who was promoted when partner Bryan Harsin left to become Arkansas State's head coach. Defensive coordinator Manny Diaz mulled a move after the season, but ultimately stuck around to help revive a defense that struggled in 2012.
On the mend: Defensive end Jackson Jeffcoat will likely be limited after undergoing surgery on a torn pectoral, but linebacker Jordan Hicks should return following a hip injury that cost him his 2012 season and a sexual assault charge that was eventually dropped stemming from an incident during the Longhorns' bowl trip.
Stepping up: Kenny Vaccaro's versatility will be tough to replace, but figuring out who will try and fill his role at safety will be huge for Texas' defense during the spring. My money is on Mykkele Thompson, but don't rule out junior Josh Turner or even a position move for physical junior cornerback Quandre Diggs.
New faces: Texas is welcoming a handful of early enrollees this spring, headlined by quarterback Tyrone Swoopes. Offensive lineman Jake Raulerson, the 2013 class' first commit, is also enrolled along with linebacker Deoundrei Davis and tight end Geoff Swaim, the nation's No. 4 junior college player at the position.
Breaking out: Linebacker Peter Jinkens already made an impact as a true freshman, but don't be surprised if he leaves spring practice with a starting gig, beating out a few older players like Steve Edmond and Kendall Thompson. Jinkens earned a start against Iowa State and snagged an interception in Texas' Alamo Bowl win over Oregon State, but the 6-foot-1, 213-pounder from Dallas could be a budding star in a linebacking corps that needs help after a disappointing 2012.
Under the radar: Texas struggled in the kicking game throughout 2012, making just 11 of 19 attempts, the lowest percentage of any Big 12 team. Nick Jordan had to carry the load as a freshman while Penn State transfer Anthony Fera battled a groin injury. They'll be back to battle this spring, and though it won't get much attention in a camp loaded with intrigue, its importance can't be overstated for a team that doesn't hang points by the buckets and played in six games decided by one possession a year ago.
All eyes on: Quarterback David Ash. Being just OK is no longer acceptable. He was reasonably efficient last season with a passer rating of over 153, but faltered late in the season and struggled with inconsistency. If Texas is going to be great, he has to be great, and most importantly, consistent. No more well-deserved benchings in favor of Case McCoy. Ash limited his interceptions and was fifth in the league in passer rating, but he's got to be even better as a junior.
Three spring storylines: Special teams 
February, 19, 2013
Feb 19
8:00
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By
Carter Strickland | ESPN.com
AUSTIN, Texas -- Texas heavily invested itself in special teams in 2012.
The Longhorns, however, saw few returns.
It was 81st in kickoff return defense. It was 37th in kickoff return yards, despite having an Olympian and another player, D.J. Monroe, with top-end speed.
The Longhorns, however, saw few returns.
It was 81st in kickoff return defense. It was 37th in kickoff return yards, despite having an Olympian and another player, D.J. Monroe, with top-end speed.
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AUSTIN, Texas -- Texas A&M was the talk of the state in 2013 with its 32-man recruiting class. Don’t be shocked if Texas comes close to those numbers with its 2014 class.
As always, it’s a matter of math. Texas, by rule, can sign no more than 50 recruits in any two-year period. The Longhorns inked 15 this year, so 35 is the absolute maximum for 2014.
Texas isn’t going for 35 this year. Its 2013 team will feature 15 seniors if Jordan Hicks is granted his medical redshirt. A full class of 25 signees is likely. But don’t rule out the possibility of 30.
As always, it’s a matter of math. Texas, by rule, can sign no more than 50 recruits in any two-year period. The Longhorns inked 15 this year, so 35 is the absolute maximum for 2014.
Texas isn’t going for 35 this year. Its 2013 team will feature 15 seniors if Jordan Hicks is granted his medical redshirt. A full class of 25 signees is likely. But don’t rule out the possibility of 30.
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Decisions that defined Texas in 2012: No. 4 
January, 15, 2013
Jan 15
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By
Carter Strickland | ESPN.com
Ah, decisions. Coaches make them and then everyone criticizes them. Of course, not all of them are bad. Many are celebrated. For Texas this year it a little bit of both. This week HornsNation will take a look at the top five critical decisions made by Texas and the result of each of those decisions. Today, at No. 4, is a look at Texas' kicking woes.
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Texas special teams underwhelming
December, 13, 2012
12/13/12
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By
Carter Strickland | ESPN.com
Texas continues to produce seasons that warrant backward glances, if only to make sure the past stays put. No one wants to relive that again. But the time has come to look over the shoulder and the damage that 2012 hath wrought, where it all went wrong and why it might get better in 2013.
This week, HornsNation takes a look at the 2012 program. Up today is the defense and how it will leave its mark as the worst in Texas history.
On Thursday, room will be saved for punter Alex King, arguably the most consistent and reliable of the 2012 Longhorns, and the special teams unit.
AUSTIN, Texas -- Goal setting can often be a slightly trick proposition around Texas, with the road maps previously used from 2000-09 apparently gone missing.
But, nonetheless, Longhorns coach Mack Brown, in a bold proclamation, had one goal seemingly above all others -- yes, that included picking a quarterback -- as he entered the 2012 season.
"What we do is No. 1 would be to try to have the best kicking game in America," he said on Aug. 4.
Oh boy. Where to begin?
To start let’s give some credit where it is due. Alex King was the most consistent performer on the Texas football team this year. Sure he is a punter. But he was one of the best in America. So, in that sliver of special teams play, Brown got the best in America.
Texas also blocked seven kick attempts, a mean feat by any measure. And the Longhorns finished a successful 25th in the nation in kick return yards (They were 68th in punt returns).
Everywhere else -- meaning those spots where Texas has some of the best athletes and top speed in the country -- well, in a style that pretty much sums up the 2012 program, in as nice as terms as possible, they underperformed. And just like everywhere else in the Texas program, it is hard to fathom why.
This week, HornsNation takes a look at the 2012 program. Up today is the defense and how it will leave its mark as the worst in Texas history.
On Thursday, room will be saved for punter Alex King, arguably the most consistent and reliable of the 2012 Longhorns, and the special teams unit.
AUSTIN, Texas -- Goal setting can often be a slightly trick proposition around Texas, with the road maps previously used from 2000-09 apparently gone missing.
But, nonetheless, Longhorns coach Mack Brown, in a bold proclamation, had one goal seemingly above all others -- yes, that included picking a quarterback -- as he entered the 2012 season.
"What we do is No. 1 would be to try to have the best kicking game in America," he said on Aug. 4.
Oh boy. Where to begin?
To start let’s give some credit where it is due. Alex King was the most consistent performer on the Texas football team this year. Sure he is a punter. But he was one of the best in America. So, in that sliver of special teams play, Brown got the best in America.
Texas also blocked seven kick attempts, a mean feat by any measure. And the Longhorns finished a successful 25th in the nation in kick return yards (They were 68th in punt returns).
Everywhere else -- meaning those spots where Texas has some of the best athletes and top speed in the country -- well, in a style that pretty much sums up the 2012 program, in as nice as terms as possible, they underperformed. And just like everywhere else in the Texas program, it is hard to fathom why.
3 Up, 3 Down: Texas 33, Iowa State 7 
November, 11, 2012
11/11/12
8:00
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By
Carter Strickland | ESPN.com
With a balanced offense and a defense that appears to now at least in position to make plays, Texas has become closer to the team coach Mack Brown thought it would have back in September.
"It is the team we wanted to get to," he said.
THREE UP
"It is the team we wanted to get to," he said.
THREE UP
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Texas excels on third and fourth down
October, 1, 2012
10/01/12
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By
Carter Strickland | ESPN.com
AUSTIN, Texas -- The Longhorns have an offense that is still in its infancy, and, as such, it wobbled on its first and second steps all night against Oklahoma State.
Through the first three quarters Saturday, with the OSU defense still relatively fresh, Texas made more than five yards on first down only four times in 17 tries.
By third down, however, Texas had found is footing and its stride. The Longhorns converted 9 of 17 third downs. That's not quite the 60 percent clip the offense had boasted coming into the game. But add to that a 3-for-3 effort on fourth down and the numbers are there.
Of course it was the last of those conversions -- a fourth-and-6 -- that proved to be the biggest. But it might have been the 11 previous conversions that allowed the final fourth-down conversion to work.
First, Texas had confidence because it had been there and done that.
"You have got to see it and see it happen out there on the field," said co-offensive coordinator Bryan Harsin. "When the entire offense came out there [on the final drive], I thought those guys had poise. They seemed to operate really flawlessly in what we were giving them play-wise."
Second, Oklahoma State, because of what had happened on previous conversion attempts, did not have confidence.
"It really does grind on you, particularly the fourth-down play," said OSU defensive coordinator Bill Young. "The offense played well enough to keep us in the game, and if we make that stop, we win."
The Cowboys didn't make that play or plenty of others. On four of Texas' five scoring drives it was 5-of-7 in converting third downs. After the two misses on third down, Texas went for it on fourth down and kept the drive alive.
Through the first three quarters Saturday, with the OSU defense still relatively fresh, Texas made more than five yards on first down only four times in 17 tries.
By third down, however, Texas had found is footing and its stride. The Longhorns converted 9 of 17 third downs. That's not quite the 60 percent clip the offense had boasted coming into the game. But add to that a 3-for-3 effort on fourth down and the numbers are there.
[+] Enlarge
Brett Deering/Getty ImagesDavid Ash and the Texas offense held the ball for 36:36 against the Cowboys.
Brett Deering/Getty ImagesDavid Ash and the Texas offense held the ball for 36:36 against the Cowboys.First, Texas had confidence because it had been there and done that.
"You have got to see it and see it happen out there on the field," said co-offensive coordinator Bryan Harsin. "When the entire offense came out there [on the final drive], I thought those guys had poise. They seemed to operate really flawlessly in what we were giving them play-wise."
Second, Oklahoma State, because of what had happened on previous conversion attempts, did not have confidence.
"It really does grind on you, particularly the fourth-down play," said OSU defensive coordinator Bill Young. "The offense played well enough to keep us in the game, and if we make that stop, we win."
The Cowboys didn't make that play or plenty of others. On four of Texas' five scoring drives it was 5-of-7 in converting third downs. After the two misses on third down, Texas went for it on fourth down and kept the drive alive.
Due to injury, UT might reshuffle 'backers
September, 24, 2012
9/24/12
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By
Carter Strickland | ESPN.com
AUSTIN, Texas -- While Texas has not counted out Jordan Hicks this week, it might not be prudent to count on him, either.
The junior linebacker suffered a hip injury against Ole Miss a week ago and is still not 100 percent. Texas will check his health at Tuesday's practice. But the team's leading tackler is probably a longshot to make it on the field for Oklahoma State.
"Without Jordan, that's a leader on defense there," said Quandre Diggs.
Added safety Kenny Vaccaro: "It will hurt us. But we also have depth and a lot of young linebacker who can play."
The issue for Texas is it is not sure which of those young linebackers is ready to step up and play against the nation's top-scoring offense.
"We have the first three linebackers," said coach Mack Brown of Hicks, Demarco Cobbs and Steve Edmond. "Then we have a group. If the injury were on offensive line [offensive line coach] Stacy [Searels] would know to put Luke Poehlmann in. In the secondary, [secondary coach] Duane [Akina] would put in either Josh Turner or Mykkele Thompson. At linebacker there is a group of players."
Brown and defensive coordinator Manny Diaz sat down Sunday night to try and figure out contingency plans. The one thing they struck upon was that they did not want to have to be handcuffed by putting a certain player in at a certain position. Instead, Texas is going to play the next best linebacker no matter if his speciality is middle, strong side or weak side.
So that could force some shifting among the linebackers. When Hicks went out against Ole Miss, Cobbs slid from the strong side to the weak side and Kendall Thompson came in at the strong side. Edmond stayed in the middle.
But with an off week to prepare, Texas was able to shift guys around and experiment with sets that allowed for Dalton Santos, a natural middle linebacker, to be on the field with Edmond.
The junior linebacker suffered a hip injury against Ole Miss a week ago and is still not 100 percent. Texas will check his health at Tuesday's practice. But the team's leading tackler is probably a longshot to make it on the field for Oklahoma State.
"Without Jordan, that's a leader on defense there," said Quandre Diggs.
[+] Enlarge
Kevin Jairaj/US PresswireLinebacker Jordan Hicks injured his hip in Texas' win over Ole Miss.
Kevin Jairaj/US PresswireLinebacker Jordan Hicks injured his hip in Texas' win over Ole Miss.The issue for Texas is it is not sure which of those young linebackers is ready to step up and play against the nation's top-scoring offense.
"We have the first three linebackers," said coach Mack Brown of Hicks, Demarco Cobbs and Steve Edmond. "Then we have a group. If the injury were on offensive line [offensive line coach] Stacy [Searels] would know to put Luke Poehlmann in. In the secondary, [secondary coach] Duane [Akina] would put in either Josh Turner or Mykkele Thompson. At linebacker there is a group of players."
Brown and defensive coordinator Manny Diaz sat down Sunday night to try and figure out contingency plans. The one thing they struck upon was that they did not want to have to be handcuffed by putting a certain player in at a certain position. Instead, Texas is going to play the next best linebacker no matter if his speciality is middle, strong side or weak side.
So that could force some shifting among the linebackers. When Hicks went out against Ole Miss, Cobbs slid from the strong side to the weak side and Kendall Thompson came in at the strong side. Edmond stayed in the middle.
But with an off week to prepare, Texas was able to shift guys around and experiment with sets that allowed for Dalton Santos, a natural middle linebacker, to be on the field with Edmond.
Redshirt report: UT has played 14 frosh 
September, 20, 2012
9/20/12
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By
William Wilkerson | ESPN.com
AUSTIN, Texas -- Head coach Mack Brown and the rest of the Longhorns coaching staff will continue to evaluate their freshmen class as they try to determine which players to redshirt as the season wears on.
Texas has played 14 freshmen through three games.
“That will probably continue to occur until the seventh week of the season,” Brown said. “You won’t travel with all of them but you still look at them.”
Texas has played 14 freshmen through three games.
“That will probably continue to occur until the seventh week of the season,” Brown said. “You won’t travel with all of them but you still look at them.”
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Bye week will help injured Longhorns
September, 19, 2012
9/19/12
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By
William Wilkerson | ESPN.com
The bye week comes at a relatively good time for the Longhorns from an injury standpoint. After a fall camp of little to no injuries, Texas will use this week to rest and re-evaluate three key players in linebacker Jordan Hicks, running back Joe Bergeron and kicker Anthony Fera.
Hicks was knocked from the Ole Miss game in the second quarter with what was called a hip injury. Bergeron was banged up and had to come out in the second half. Fera, a transfer from Penn State, pulled his hamstring prior to arriving in Austin.
“The health of Anthony Fera, Jordan Hicks and Joe Bergeron will be limited this week and we will know more on Sunday. They will be limited this week,” head coach Mack Brown said.
All three players are vastly important to Texas’ success. Hicks, for one, is the foremost-experienced linebacker and one of the leaders of the defense. When he went out against Ole Miss the defense admittedly “panicked.”
If he is limited or unable to go against Oklahoma State next week the Longhorns will have to rely on the relative inexperience of backups Kendall Thompson, Tevin Jackson and freshman Dalton Santos.
“That’s what the next three days will be for,” Brown said. “We will look at some different guys there this week and see who has improved the most. Santos has a banged up calf too so he will be limited a little bit even though he will be out there some. We have to find some guys there.”
Brown did say that Texas would be in more nickel coverage over the next few weeks because of the pass-heavy Big 12, so the Longhorns could mask his absence with another defensive back.
Fera is a player that Texas would really like to have back in time to play in the type of hostile environment that Stillwater will be. The Longhorns have been woefully inconsistent in field goals this season, having to rely on freshman Nick Jordan.
“We haven’t done anything with Anthony since he pulled his groin three or four weeks ago,” Brown said. “We haven’t even seen him kick. So we will reevaluate those guys on Monday.”
Hicks was knocked from the Ole Miss game in the second quarter with what was called a hip injury. Bergeron was banged up and had to come out in the second half. Fera, a transfer from Penn State, pulled his hamstring prior to arriving in Austin.
“The health of Anthony Fera, Jordan Hicks and Joe Bergeron will be limited this week and we will know more on Sunday. They will be limited this week,” head coach Mack Brown said.
All three players are vastly important to Texas’ success. Hicks, for one, is the foremost-experienced linebacker and one of the leaders of the defense. When he went out against Ole Miss the defense admittedly “panicked.”
If he is limited or unable to go against Oklahoma State next week the Longhorns will have to rely on the relative inexperience of backups Kendall Thompson, Tevin Jackson and freshman Dalton Santos.
“That’s what the next three days will be for,” Brown said. “We will look at some different guys there this week and see who has improved the most. Santos has a banged up calf too so he will be limited a little bit even though he will be out there some. We have to find some guys there.”
Brown did say that Texas would be in more nickel coverage over the next few weeks because of the pass-heavy Big 12, so the Longhorns could mask his absence with another defensive back.
Fera is a player that Texas would really like to have back in time to play in the type of hostile environment that Stillwater will be. The Longhorns have been woefully inconsistent in field goals this season, having to rely on freshman Nick Jordan.
“We haven’t done anything with Anthony since he pulled his groin three or four weeks ago,” Brown said. “We haven’t even seen him kick. So we will reevaluate those guys on Monday.”
Marquise Goodwin takes whirlwind trip
September, 16, 2012
9/16/12
2:00
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By
Carter Strickland | ESPN.com
Marquise Goodwin took flight this week.
Oh sure, on the field, he had a 69-yard run for a touchdown and another 55-yard touchdown catch. But he really took flight. Goodwin, an Olympian, went to the White House this week to meet President Barack Obama.
Yes, he tried to show him how to throw the Hook ‘em sign. No, it didn't work.
"He did it like this," Goodwin said displaying a flying thumb instead of one folded over the two middle fingers. "Like he was saying 'I love you (in sign language).'"
Well, he wasn't the only one flashing the "I love you" sign to Goodwin this week. After arriving from Washington D.C., late Friday, Goodwin took flight again against Ole Miss. His 69-yard run that ignited a long-dormant offense no doubt elicited quite a few heart-shaped well wishes from fans, teammates and, here's guessing, an offensive coach or two.
As for the heart shown on the field, that was no problem, he said.
"I think of myself as a machine. I just need a few hours rest and I'm ready to go."
Rest might be just the thing for Goodwin.
"That was perfectly planned to freshen him up," said Texas coach Mack Brown about Goodwin missing practice to go to the White House. "He came back with fresh legs."
And possibly a new fan too.
Oh sure, on the field, he had a 69-yard run for a touchdown and another 55-yard touchdown catch. But he really took flight. Goodwin, an Olympian, went to the White House this week to meet President Barack Obama.
Yes, he tried to show him how to throw the Hook ‘em sign. No, it didn't work.
"He did it like this," Goodwin said displaying a flying thumb instead of one folded over the two middle fingers. "Like he was saying 'I love you (in sign language).'"
Well, he wasn't the only one flashing the "I love you" sign to Goodwin this week. After arriving from Washington D.C., late Friday, Goodwin took flight again against Ole Miss. His 69-yard run that ignited a long-dormant offense no doubt elicited quite a few heart-shaped well wishes from fans, teammates and, here's guessing, an offensive coach or two.
As for the heart shown on the field, that was no problem, he said.
"I think of myself as a machine. I just need a few hours rest and I'm ready to go."
Rest might be just the thing for Goodwin.
"That was perfectly planned to freshen him up," said Texas coach Mack Brown about Goodwin missing practice to go to the White House. "He came back with fresh legs."
And possibly a new fan too.
Five storylines: Texas vs. Ole Miss 
September, 13, 2012
9/13/12
10:30
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By
Carter Strickland | ESPN.com
Storylines for the Longhorns as they face Ole Miss on Saturday:
1. Sharing the wealth
Thirteen players have caught a pass for Texas so far. The number of players and variety of positions that they play is a testament to the versatility of the offense. With the downfield passing game still struggling to take hold, Texas will once again look to go underneath against Ole Miss and will once against use a variety of receivers to do just that. Hybrid backs Daje Johnson and D.J. Monroe could see a lot of work in the passing game if Texas is able to successfully spread Ole Miss’ defense.
1. Sharing the wealth
Thirteen players have caught a pass for Texas so far. The number of players and variety of positions that they play is a testament to the versatility of the offense. With the downfield passing game still struggling to take hold, Texas will once again look to go underneath against Ole Miss and will once against use a variety of receivers to do just that. Hybrid backs Daje Johnson and D.J. Monroe could see a lot of work in the passing game if Texas is able to successfully spread Ole Miss’ defense.
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Stats that matter: Texas at Ole Miss 
September, 12, 2012
9/12/12
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By
Carter Strickland | ESPN.com
Numbers are said to rarely lie. It’s with that thought in mind that each week HornsNation, with a healthy assist from the ESPN Stats and Info crew, will dig into the numbers and pull three stats that could play a significant role in the outcome in Texas’ game. On game No. 3 at Ole Miss:
No. 1: 0-14
While Ole Miss resides in the SEC and everyone trembles at the feet of that conference, the Rebels are not exactly a team that sends opponents running for cover. In fact, Ole Miss is an opponent on which teams usually do cover; at least BCS automatic qualifying teams.
No. 1: 0-14
While Ole Miss resides in the SEC and everyone trembles at the feet of that conference, the Rebels are not exactly a team that sends opponents running for cover. In fact, Ole Miss is an opponent on which teams usually do cover; at least BCS automatic qualifying teams.
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