The Capital

Longhorns looking to make grand exit

- By Stephen Hawkins |

The Big 12 was on the endangered list two summers ago when the only remaining conference members with national championsh­ips set off another round of realignmen­t when they said they were switching leagues.

With Texas and Oklahoma going into their final season in the Big 12, the conference is bigger than ever with 14 teams, including BYU, Cincinnati, Houston and UCF making their league debuts. Even more teams — four now in the Pac-12 — are coming in next year when the Red River rivals join the Southeaste­rn Conference.

Until then, the 11th-ranked Longhorns and No. 20 Sooners will try to win another Big 12 trophy as a parting gift. No. 16 Kansas State is the defending league champion even though No. 17 TCU was the national runner-up last season. Texas Tech enters coach Joey McGuire’s second season with a four-game winning streak.

“I think that we have the most exciting conference right now, because it wouldn’t be fair for any of us to say that we actually know what’s going to happen in Big 12 play this year,” said Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy, the league’s longest-tenured coach in his 19th season.

The Cowboys have had 17 consecutiv­e winning seasons, but quarterbac­k Spencer Sanders was among at least eight starters that left in the transfer portal after a 7-6 mark. They added more than a dozen players from the portal.

TCU had an undefeated regular season in coach Sonny Dykes’ first season, and still made the four-team College Football Playoff after losing in overtime to Kansas State in the Big 12 title game. The Horned Frogs beat Michigan in the national semifinal, but lost 65-7 as Georgia won its second consecutiv­e national title.

“We played well enough to win 14 of the 15 games,” Dykes said. “We just played really bad in the national championsh­ip game.”

Last go around

With receiver Xavier Worthy among 10 starters back on offense, linebacker Jaylan Ford still leading on defense after not turning pro, and key transfers adding depth on both sides, Texas is considered by most as the preseason Big 12 favorite in coach Steve Sarkisian’s third season.

The Longhorns were the Big 12’s last national champion, in the 2005 season with quarterbac­k Vince Young. But they have won only three Big 12 titles, none since 2009.

Oklahoma has won a record 17 (of the 27) Big 12 titles, but is coming off its first losing season since 1998. The Sooners had four three-point losses, and another by a touchdown, in Brent Venables’ 6-7 debut as head coach.

Venables was co-defensive coordinato­r for the Sooners’ 2000 national championsh­ip, then was part of two CFP titles as Clemson’s defensive coordinato­r before returning to Norman to replace Lincoln Riley.

Last newcomers

TCU and West Virginia, with fifth-year coach Neal Brown on the hot seat, were the newcomers in 2012 after the Big 12 survived a transforma­tive two-year period when it lost four teams to three different leagues — among them Colorado, which returns next year from the Pac-12. That is when the conference went from its original 12 schools to a 10-team configurat­ion playing round-robin schedules that are now impossible.

The Horned Frogs no longer have Heisman Trophy runner-up quarterbac­k Max Duggan, 1,399-yard rusher Kendre Miller or 1,000-yard receiver Quentin Johnston. Chandler Morris is the starting QB going into the season, just like the former Oklahoma transfer was last year before getting hurt in the opener against the Buffaloes. TCU has added six transfer receivers from Power Five schools, including local receiver JoJo Earle from Alabama, along with former Tide running back Trey Sanders.

“What we want is to be a program that’s respected. I think the way you get respect is you do something consistent­ly,” Dykes said. “Everybody can have a good year every now and then. We want our program to be consistent­ly in the Top 25 ... in the conference race in November, late November. If we do those things, then you’re going to be in the College Football Playoff conversati­on.”

West Virginia is 22-25 under Brown, the worst four-year stretch since the Mountainee­rs went 17-27 from 1976-79.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Receiver Xavier Worthy is among 10 starters back on offense for No. 11 Texas, which will move to the SEC next year.
AP FILE Receiver Xavier Worthy is among 10 starters back on offense for No. 11 Texas, which will move to the SEC next year.

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