Texarkana Gazette

Texas looking for more in Year 2 of rebuild

- By Jim Vertuno

AUSTIN—The frustratio­n at Texas is visible in—of all places—the flowing golden curls of senior defensive end Breckyn Hager.

Hager was a freshman when he vowed he wouldn’t cut his hair until Texas won the Big 12 Conference. His hair now stretches down to his sternum.

Yep, it’s been that long—much longer, really—since Texas mattered in the Big 12.

“I wanted something tangible that could always remind me to go after such a simple goal,” Hager said. “And now I’m realizing, wait, it’s not that simple.”

Coach Tom Herman is facing higher expectatio­ns in his second year at Texas. His first season got the Longhorns back on the winning side of the ledger as Texas went 7-6 and got its first bowl win since 2012.

“It was a promising feeling,” said senior wide receiver Jerrod Heard. “Winning the Texas Bowl was a huge step … Winning, finishing the season out with a win, what a good feeling that was.”

Now it’s time to see if Texas can be a Big 12 contender again. The Longhorns have been full of promise before, with big-time recruiting classes and recommitte­d and refocused veterans full of “buy in” for the storied program. Yet Texas has been the Big 12’s biggest disappoint­ment for a decade now.

Herman must navigate those expectatio­ns with a team that lost a ton of NFL-caliber defensive talent, is still shaky on offense and faces a front-loaded schedule. Four of the first six opponents beat the Longhorns last season. Texas opens the 2018 season at Maryland on Sept. 2.

“We had a tremendous amount of growth last season,” Herman said. ” I think that anybody that has watched us play, anybody that’s been around our program, understand­s that we’re playing harder, we’re playing more physical, we’re playing more cohesive than our program has in quite some time.”

Hager, meanwhile, would like to end all the upkeep it takes for his epic curls.

“I hate it,” he said. “Do you know how many tears have soaked into this after losses? … I’m ready to get this off.”

TEXAS QUARTERBAC­KS

Another season means yet another quarterbac­k question. Sophomore Sam Ehlinger was raw as a freshman, erratic as a thrower and prone to costly late turnovers that figured big in three losses. He’s also a bruising runner who led the Longhorns in rushing, but also missed a game with a concussion. Junior Shane Buechele, the starter in 2016, would probably benefit the most if Texas improves a poor running game because the offense would rely less on Ehlinger to run for first downs. Buechele’s toughest job is convincing Herman he’s the “alpha male” the coach craves at the p

SCHEDULE

Texas has no time to ease into its schedule. The first month includes the opener at Maryland and a Sept. 15 home matchup with Southern California. Then comes TCU, which has won five of the last six games against Texas before a trip to Kansas State, where the Longhorns haven’t won since 2002. And up next? Big 12 favorite Oklahoma. A 3-3 start and another 7-6 finish are a real possibilit­y.

DEFENSE

The Longhorns defense was among the Big 12’s best last season and kept Texas in every game. It also surrendere­d fourth-quarter leads in four losses. The Longhorns must replace a bunch of departed talent at nearly every position. Pass rush should be a strength with Hager and Charles Omenihu on the edges. Nose tackle Chris Nelson should be a disruptive force in the middle.

 ?? AP Photo/Eric Christian Smith ?? ■ Texas linebacker Breckyn Hager gestures to the crowd during the second half of the Texas Bowl against Missouri on Dec. 27, 2017, in Houston. The frustratio­n at Texas is visible in Hager’s flowing golden curls. He was a freshman when he vowed he wouldn’t cut his hair until Texas won the Big 12.
AP Photo/Eric Christian Smith ■ Texas linebacker Breckyn Hager gestures to the crowd during the second half of the Texas Bowl against Missouri on Dec. 27, 2017, in Houston. The frustratio­n at Texas is visible in Hager’s flowing golden curls. He was a freshman when he vowed he wouldn’t cut his hair until Texas won the Big 12.

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