Posted April 6th, 2009 by Mike
Filed under: Feature, Football, Spring Football

Aaron Williams was great on defense and electric with the ball in his hands. (Photo: MB-TF)

Aaron Williams was great on defense and electric with the ball in his hands. (Photo: MB-TF)

The Texas Longhorns gave us the first real look at what next year’s team is going to look like on Sunday for the Spring Game. Of course these games need to be taken with a grain of salt because both sides bring vanilla game plans. Sergio Kindle didn’t play very much, but the defense dominated for most of the scrimmage. Here are five things we learned from the game.

1. The secondary has grown up.

A few months removed from being the perceived weak link of the defense the Longhorn secondary dominated the offense the whole game. The defense played predominately out of the 4-2-5 and showed very little blitzes but they made plays. Last year the group had troubles creating turnovers but the safeties intercepted two passes, the first by Nolan Brewster against the second team offense. The second interception was the play of day, a pick six by Earl Thomas off of Colt McCoy. Thomas was far and away the best player on the field on Sunday. The sophomore was everywhere, he showed off his coverage ability, he was a sure tackler, and show off his speed by running down a kick returner. Texas has four safeties that could start and all of them have at least three years of eligibility left. The corners looked good too. Aaron Williams and Chykie Brown have an opportunity to leave campus as the best duo Texas has had at cornerback. Add Curtis Brown and Deon Beasley and this group is deep and athletic. Will Muschamp couldn’t blitz as much as he might have liked last year because of the inexperience in the secondary, but the training wheels will come off this season. And it may just be scary good.

2. The tight end position is on life support.

It is true that this program has been spoiled at the tight end position in recent memory. It didn’t look like that was going to change with the emergence of Blaine Irby. A horrific injury to Irby, a few injuries to the back ups, and a few misses in recruiting later and we’re left with the current situation. Ian Harris bobbled a ball to cause the first interception of the game and Greg Smith almost did the same later on. Right now it looks like Texas may have to use the four or five receiver set as their base offense this year when they really want to move the ball. Mack Brown is hesitant to abandon the run, but having a tight end on the field is becoming a liability. Irby is nowhere close to be being back, and there is no guarantee he will ever be the same if or when does get back. Maybe if DJ Grant gets healthy or one of the two incoming freshman come in ready to contribute the position has a chance. But as we stand right now Greg Davis really needs to think about using the offense he used in the second half against Oklahoma for the majority of the snaps. Luckily Texas has the receivers to play that set with no problem. In fact keeping one of them on the sideline in favor of the current tight end on the roster is a form of football dyslexia.

3. Cody Johnson needs to be in shape

Both Vondrell McGee and Foswhitt Whittaker found the endzone on Sunday, and each showed a few flashes of their potential with the ball in their hands. But Texas averaged less than 3.0 yards per carry. Before his hamstring injury in the second half of the spring coaches and insiders had been raving about Johnson’s progress both running the ball and dedicating himself to being in shape. The knock on Johnson has always been his weight, but right now the coaching staff has decided to worry more about his body fat. Johnson is going to be counted on as the every down back if he can prove he can handle it. Right now Whittaker offers the team the skills needed in a third down back as long as he can prove he’ll block blitzing linebackers. Where that leads McGee is anybody’s guess, but with a good summer and fall practice it couldn’t be a total shock to see him get the opening day start. The variable in the whole situation is incoming freshman Chris Whaley. The big back from Madisonville just participated in the 100M at the Texas Relays and by all accounts the young man is an athletic specimen. The staff was so high on him as a running back, many experts project him to outgrow the position that they chose not to recruit another one. If he reports in shape and ready to take the punishment he will be given every opportunity to win the job. If all else fails the Texas offense may look like something from Lubbock. Is that a bad thing? I can’t decide.

4. Colt McCoy will have plenty of targets.

Texas’ leading returning receiver, and Colt McCoy’s roommate and fishing buddy if you haven’t heard, Jordan Shipley didn’t participate in spring practices to recover from injury the Longhorns fielded maybe the best trio of receivers ever at Texas. None of the wide outs are on the level of Roy Williams, but collectively this group may be better than the BJ Johnson and Sloan Thomas group. They weren’t as highly recruited but Malcolm Williams, Brandon Collins, and James Kirkendoll all bring something different to the field and they work great in this offense. The quarterbacks struggled with the wind, and the secondary had seen all the patterns every day in practice, but it was obvious how much big play potential will be on the field at all times. Kirkendoll showed off his speed on a reverse, Collins works the middle beautifully and led the team in yards, and Williams can get deep whenever he wants. McCoy’s bugaboo has been the deep ball and twice he nearly missed huge plays on the outside deep down the field with Williams. One was completed but the ball was too far outside to be kept in bounds and the other was thrown a little too far in front of the streaking Williams. The sophomore just looks the part out there in his number 9 uniform. Williams, fellow receiver Dan Buckner, and Aaron Williams just jump out at you from a pure athletic stand point when you look at their physique. Watching this group work has to put a smile on the Longhorn nation’s faces because they will be on campus for a few more years. That’s not even taking into account Buckner, John Chiles, and the red-shirt freshman on campus. With the questions at tight end and in the running game the receiver becomes the most important position besides quarterback for this offense.

5. Texas football is in good hands.

Mack Brown has been the best thing that has happened to this program, and maybe to the University as a whole from an athletic standpoint, than anybody since Darrell K. Royal. With as good as Brown has been, head coach to be Will Muschamp has injected an energy into this program that needed a little jumpstart following the departure of Vince Young and the rest of the 2002 recruiting class. With one hire, and Brown deserves credit for making it and then realizing he couldn’t lose his personal energizer bunny on Red Bull, the stigma of Texas being soft or unmotivated was erased for the present future. Just a few years ago these Spring Jamborees were offensive exhibitions. Remember when the opening kickoff was returned for a touchdown every year? That won’t happen anymore. Muschamp has made everything competitive. He has given the defense pride, and more importantly, thanks to Brown he has given them stability. A stability that the offense has had the luxury of since Brown and Greg Davis arrived on campus. For the first time in a decade the defense is going to have a steady hand leading the way. With Muschamp the hand might not be steady, it may be pumping up and down, but I’ll take it.

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Posted June 25th, 2008 by Brian
Filed under: Football

Update: Bevo Sports is giving away NCAA Football 09, enter to win!

NCAA Football 09 is less than a month away, the demo is up on Xbox Live and the Playstation Network, and player ratings are starting to make their way on to the Internet. EA Sports released the team top 25 and player ratings for all those teams.

I went through the list and put the players’ real names in where possible. I had trouble with a lot of the true freshmen in the game so if you know who any of the blank names are or if I made any mistakes please let me know in the comments. It really looks like EA did a poor job this year on the roster and depth chart. Hopefully it’s a little more accurate when the game is released.

You can download Excel files of the player ratings at the bottom of this post or check out the overall ratings for the Texas team below:

Real Name Name Year Position Rating
Buck Burnette C #66 Soph(RS) C 78
C #60 Fresh C 72
 
Deon Beasley CB #7 Junior CB 85
Ryan Palmer CB #13 Senior(RS) CB 84
Curtis Brown CB #3 Soph CB 83
Aaron Williams CB #26 Fresh CB 80
Chykie Brown CB #8 Soph(RS) CB 80
Earl Thomas CB #12 Fresh(RS) CB 78
DJ Monroe CB #27 Fresh CB 76
 
Roy Miller DT #99 Senior DT 90
Jarvis Humphrey DT #96 Fresh DT 80
Brian Ellis DT #90 Soph(RS) DT 78
Ben Alexander DT #92 Junior DT 76
Kheeston Randall DT #88 Fresh DT 76
 
Chris Ogbonnayya FB #3 Senior(RS) FB 93
Cody Johnson FB #31 Fresh(RS) FB 72
 
Ben Wells FS #5 Fresh(RS) FS 84
Christian Scott FS #6 Fresh(RS) FS 77
Blake Gideon FS #21 Fresh FS 77
 
Vondrell McGee HB #2 Soph(RS) HB 85
DeSean Hales HB #30 Fresh HB 80
Antwan Cobb HB #24 Soph(RS) HB 79
Fozzy Whittaker HB #22 Fresh(RS) HB 78
Jeremy Hills HB #32 Fresh HB 76
Tre Newton HB #23 Fresh HB 73
 
Hunter Lawrence K #15 Junior K 82
Justin Tucker K #9 Fresh K 69
 
Lamarr Houston LE #33 Junior LE 91
Aaron Lewis LE #95 Senior LE 85
Henry Melton LE #37 Senior LE 80
 
Charlie Tanner LG #52 Junior(RS) LG 86
Tray Allen LG #70 Soph LG 82
Chris Hall LG #71 Junior(RS) LG 81
Aundre McGaskey LG #76 Fresh(RS) LG 74
 
Sergio Kindle LOLB #2 Junior LOLB 85
LOLB #16 Fresh LOLB 80
LOLB #57 Fresh LOLB 76
 
David Snow LT #78 Fresh LT 78
Britt Mitchell LT #72 Soph(RS) LT 78
 
Rashad Bobino MLB #44 Senior(RS) MLB 90
Jared Norton MLB #11 Junior MLB 85
 
Trevor Gerland P #17 Junior(RS) P 83
 
Colt McCoy QB #12 Junior(RS) QB 89
Sherrod Harris QB #17 Soph(RS) QB 81
John Chiles QB #7 Soph QB 79
 
Eddie Jones RE #32 Soph(RS) RE 92
Brian Orakpo RE #98 Senior(RS) RE 90
Russell Carter RE #97 Fresh(RS) RE 77
 
Cedric Dockery RG #55 Senior(RS) RG 89
Michael Huey RG #63 Soph RG 81
 
Roddrick Muckelroy ROLB #38 Junior(RS) ROLB 87
Keenan Robinson ROLB #53 Fresh(RS) ROLB 82
ROLB #4 Fresh ROLB 75
 
Adam Ulatoski RT #74 Junior(RS) RT 85
Mark Buchanan RT #54 Fresh RT 74
 
Ishie Oduegwu SS #19 Junior(RS) SS 88
Nolan Brewster SS #36 Fresh SS 79
 
Peter Ullman TE #86 Senior(RS) TE 81
Ahmard Howard TE #13 Fresh(RS) TE 74
Blaine Irby TE #19 Soph TE 73
 
Quan Cosby WR #6 Senior WR 89
Jordan Shipley WR #8 Senior(RS) WR 84
Montre Webber WR #14 Soph(RS) WR 83
Dan Buckner WR #4 Fresh WR 79
Malcolm Williams WR #9 Fresh(RS) WR 78
DJ Grant WR #80 Fresh WR 75
Antoine Hicks WR #81 Fresh WR 75
James Kirkendoll WR #87 Soph WR 74
Win NCAA Football 09 from Bevo Sports
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Posted February 7th, 2008 by Brian
Filed under: Football, Recruiting

The big one got away today (under suspicious circumstances) but the 2008 Texas recruiting class is still a good one. Mack Brown and the Horns signed 20 young athletes to letters of intent, nine of which are already on campus for the spring semester.

The class is headlined by defensive backs Aaron Williams and DJ Monroe, who along with safety Nolan Brewster, should anchor the Texas defensive backfield for the next four or five years. On the offensive side WR/RB DeSean Hales is electric with the football in his hands and wide receiver Dan Buckner is huge and will catch anything thrown in his general direction.

Here’s the full list of signees:

Name Position Rating Hometown
Emmanuel Acho LB 1 star1 star1 star Dallas
Nolan Brewster DB 1 star1 star1 star1 star Denver, CO
Mark Buchanan OL 1 star1 star1 star1 star Austin
Dan Buckner WR 1 star1 star1 star1 star Allen
Brock Fitzhenry RB 1 star1 star1 star Giddings
Blake Gideon DB 1 star1 star Leander
DJ Grant WR 1 star1 star1 star1 star Austin
DeSean Hales RB 1 star1 star1 star1 star Klein
Antoine Hicks ATH 1 star1 star1 star Mansfield
Jeremy Hills RB 1 star1 star1 star1 star Alief
Jarvis Humphrey DT 1 star1 star1 star1 star Cedar Hill
Dravannti Johnson LB 1 star1 star1 star1 star Nederland
DJ Monroe DB 1 star1 star1 star1 star Angleton
Tre Newton RB 1 star1 star1 star Southlake
Luke Poehlmann OL 1 star1 star1 star Brenham
Kheeston Randall DT 1 star1 star1 star1 star Beaumont
Ryan Roberson RB 1 star1 star1 star Brenham
David Snow OL 1 star1 star1 star1 star Gilmer
Justin Tucker K 1 star1 star1 star Austin
Aaron Williams DB 1 star1 star1 star1 star Round Rock

Congratulations to the newest Texas Longhorns!

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Posted January 5th, 2008 by Brian
Filed under: Football, Recruiting

For some reason the inaugural Under Armour All-America High School Football Game is going up head to head with the US Army game on ABC. I know there’s a limited window when these kids are out of school, but this game should have been last night when there were other college or NFL games to compete with. Definitely looks lower rent than the other game but there’s still some very good talent in the game including several future Longhorns. The game started at 1 pm but since I’ll have to save any comments till later when I watch the game off the DVR.

Not sure how the teams were determined, there’s Longhorns on both the Silver and Red team. ESPN doesn’t provide jersey numbers, but here’s the guys to watch in this one:

Team SILVER
Name Position Commit? Ranking
Mark Buchanan Offensive tackle Yes 1 star1 star1 star1 star
Rodrick Davis Defensive tackle No 1 star1 star1 star1 star
DJ Grant Wide receiver Yes 1 star1 star1 star1 star
Antoine Hicks Wide receiver Yes 1 star1 star1 star
Team RED
Name Position Commit? Ranking
DeSean Hales Wide receiver Yes 1 star1 star1 star1 star
Jarvis Humphrey Defensive tackle Yes 1 star1 star1 star1 star
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