Texarkana Gazette

Texas beats Kansas, heads to title game

- By Dave Skretta

LAWRENCE, Kan.—Tom Herman wasn’t on the Texas sideline two years ago, even if a bunch of his players were, when the Longhorns walked out of Memorial Stadium with a head-shaking loss to Kansas.

The defeat ended a string of 13 consecutiv­e wins over the Jayhawks, likely sealed the fate of embattled coach Charlie Strong and ultimately led to Herman’s hiring away from Houston.

But when asked whether there is a sense of revenge among the veteran players on the Texas roster as they prepare to return to Lawrence for the first time Friday, the plainspoke­n Herman responded with what could only be considered an audible shrug.

“I feel like that program that went there, I feel like that was 50 years ago, not two years ago,” he said. “We’re so far passed that point in our program, no, there’s no hidden significan­ce to it.”

Especially considerin­g some far more important things are at stake: The No. 11 Longhorns (8-3, 6-2 Big 12, No. 15 CFP) will clinch a spot in the Big 12 title game with a win.

The fact that the Longhorns are in the mix heading into their regular-season finale may be the best evidence of the progress Herman has made. The year they lost to the Jayhawks, they finished 5-7 for the second straight season, and played their finale knowing a bowl game was out of reach.

“We’ve come a long way but we’re far from a finished product,” Herman said. “I would argue we’re overachiev­ers at this point, when you look throughout the landscape of our conference. How many firstteam all-conference guys do we have on our starting 22? I don’t know. I think we have some pretty good players, but we have a lot of guys that know how to play team football.

“That’s the sign of progress,” Herman said, “when your culture can take over and win some games.”

The Jayhawks (3-8, 1-7) are in the midst of another culture change of their own.

David Beaty will be coaching his final game for Kansas on Friday, having been relieved of duties with two games left in the season but allowed to finish out his fourth season in charge. He only has six wins over that time period, including that monumental high of beating the Longhorns.

The school has already hired national championsh­ip-winning coach Les Miles, and he is busy assembling a coaching staff and hitting the ground recruiting.

“I haven’t spoken to him and we probably won’t speak,” Beaty said, “but that’s OK. I’m going to be the coach here through the rest of this week and then it’s going to be time for a change. Our job is to win this game, to help those (players) that are going to still be here.”

Texas is no doubt in a better place than it was two years ago, when the Longhorns lost to the Jayhawks. But the reality is Kansas is in a better place, too, with a competitiv­e roster—even if the positive results have been painfully hard to produce.

“Only the ones who have been inside know where we started and where we’re at today,” Beaty said. “At the end of the day it’s about production, and production is spelled out with W-I-N. You’ve got to win. We weren’t able to do that at a high enough level fast enough. And I get that.”

He has one more chance on

Friday.

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