Texarkana Gazette

TEXAS’ TOM HERMAN NAMED NEW LONGHORNS COACH,

Longhorns’ new coach says he’s ready for the pressure of being at UT

- By Jim Vertuno

AUSTIN—Tom Herman smiled, raised his right hand for the “Hook’em Horns” sign and said all the right things Sunday to fire up the fan base as the new Texas coach.

All of that was to be expected. Now comes the hard parts: winning, competing for a Big 12 title and navigating the treacherou­s landscape both on and off the field of Longhorns football.

Herman landed on the Texas campus Sunday to turn around a program worn down by three consecutiv­e losing seasons under Charlie Strong. In Herman, Texas President Greg Fenves and athletic director Mike Perrin hired arguably the hottest young coach in college football away from Houston.

“We will win championsh­ips,” at Texas, Herman said, sounding the key note his new fans want to hear.

Herman lifted Houston with winning and public persona that pledged an “H-town takeover.” He now inherits a Texas program laboring to return to the national elite. And he’ll have to sooth some hurt feelings among the talented but young players who had pleaded a week earlier for Strong to stay. Among them was junior running back D’Onta Foreman, who rushed

for 2,028 yards and is considerin­g turning pro.

Some of that started when Herman met with his new players Sunday afternoon. Herman said he knows many of the Texas players are close to Strong, but added the “definition of insanity is doing the same thing over again.” “There will be change,” Herman said. Herman will enjoy a whirlwind of early support that Strong never really got. Herman was hired so quickly after Strong was fired—within hours—that it demonstrat­ed how unified school administra­tors and influentia­l donors were in a desperate rush to snatch him up before anyone else did.

Fenves and Perrin acknowledg­ed they met Herman on Friday night after Texas lost to TCU and had an agreement in place before Strong was told he’d been fired. Three years ago, it took Texas about three weeks and flirtation­s with several other coaches, before Strong was hired.

And Strong had barely arrived on campus when billionair­e businessma­n Red McCombs, one of Texas’ most prominent donors, called hiring Strong a “kick in the face,” a comment that set the tone for three tumultuous years for a divided fan base.

All of that came under different campus leadership than Herman has now. Fenves and Perrin have been in their jobs less than two years.

“What is important is that in the end, we got our man,” Fenves said.

Things look and sound good now, but Herman will want to remember that Texas has a board of regents that hasn’t been afraid to meddle in athletics. It was impatient board members and influentia­l donors who worked tried to lure Alabama’s Nick Saban while Mack Brown was still the Longhorns coach in 2013.

Herman will have to put a staff together, and he deflected questions on whether that will include Houston offensive coordinato­r Major Applewhite. Applewhite is a former Texas quarterbac­k and assistant coach who was immensely popular with Texas fans. But he also was discipline­d by the university in 2009 when as an assistant coach school officials learned he’d engaged in “inappropri­ate” conduct with a student trainer on a bowl trip.

Applewhite, and how the school discipline­d him, remains a key element in a long-running gender and race discrimina­tion lawsuit against Texas filed by former women’s track coach Bev Kearney, who was forced out in 2013 after having a relationsh­ip with one of her athletes in 2002. That case is pending before the state Supreme Court.

Herman will enjoy hitting the recruiting trail for the state’s flagship university and the wealth and prestige that comes with it. And the buzz across Texas’ fertile recruiting grounds will be focused on him, instead of Big 12 and in-state rivals like Baylor, Texas Tech, TCU and Texas A&M, all of whom had disappoint­ing seasons.

Texas is known a place where the pressure to win, be a politician and to be the public face of one of the nation’s most prominent programs can be crushing. Herman says he ready to handle it all.

“Pressure comes from being unprepared,” Herman said. “We are prepared for this job. We are prepared to be successful.”

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T. HERMAN

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