Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Texas says 10-win season not enough to be ‘back’ in Big 12

- By Stephen Hawkins AP Sports Writer

Tom Herman knows that Texas is probably a bit ahead of schedule after 10 wins in his second season that included making the Big 12 championsh­ip game and a Sugar Bowl victory.

That doesn’t necessaril­y mean the Longhorns are back just yet.

“We weren’t here to just have a really good season in Year 2,” Herman said Tuesday. “We were here to rebuild a program that’s capable of sustaining success, and we feel like we’re on the way there.”

With junior quarterbac­k Sam Ehlinger, the preseason Big 12 offensive player of the year, the Longhorns are picked to again finish second in the league behind four-time defending champion Oklahoma.

The Longhorns won the Red River rivalry game at the State Fair of Texas last October. But the Sooners won the conference title game at the home stadium of the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys, where the two-day Big 12 media days wrapped up Tuesday and where the championsh­ip game will be played again in December.

“When you take over a program that hadn’t won 10 or more games in a decade, and had gone through three straight losing seasons, there’s some work to be done, in terms of being able to sustain a level of success that everybody associated with Texas football expects,” Herman said. “I was really proud of our players for their buy-in level last season, and the results on the field showed that. It’s still a work in progress.”

With four new coaches in the Big 12 this season, the biggest turnover in league history, only Oklahoma State’s Mike Gundy, TCU’s Gary Patterson and Iowa State’s Matt Campbell (going into his fourth season) have been in the league longer than Herman.

After success outside the Power Five, two of the coaches featured on the final day are just getting started — Kansas State’s Chris Klieman and West Virginia’s Neal Brown.

Brown, who took over the Mountainee­rs after Dana Holgorsen left for Houston, is coming off three consecutiv­e 10-win seasons with bowl victories at Troy. He is returning to the Big 12, where he was Texas Tech’s offensive coordinato­r from 2010-12.

Klieman was part of seven FCS championsh­ips the past eight seasons, including four in his five years as head coach. He replaced the retired Bill Snyder, who won 215 games in his 27 seasons.

“What coach did at Kansas State was nothing short of remarkable and I’m going to feed off that,” Klieman said. “We have a great culture because of what coach did. I know I’m not going to fill his shoes. I’m just trying to continue in his legacy, but doing it our own way.”

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