Texas Game Notes
Transcription
Texas Game Notes
LONGHORNS TEXAS NATIONAL CHAMPIONS • 1963, ’69, ’70, 2005 BIG 12 CHAMPIONS • ‘96, ‘05, ‘09 SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS • 1920, ’28, ’30, ’42, ’43, ’45, ’50, ’52, ’53*, ’59*, ’61*, ’62, ’63, ’68*, ’69, ’70, ’71 , ’72, ’73, ’75*, ’77, ’83, ’90, ’94*, ’95 (*co-champs) Athletics Media Relations Department • P.O. Box 7399 • Austin, TX 78713-7399 • Office: 512/471-6036 • Fax: 512/471-6040 GAME 8 #RV/25 TEXAS (5-2, 2-2 Big 12) vs Texas Tech (5-3, 2-3 Big 12) Darrell K Royal - Texas Memorial Stadium/ Joe Jamail Field (100,119) Sat., Nov. 5 (Time: 11 a.m./CT/TV: FX) RANKINGS: Texas: AP - RV, Coaches - 25 Texas Tech: AP - NR, Coaches - NR THE SERIES: Texas and Texas Tech first met in 1928 with the Longhorns starting a streak of seven straight wins to start the series. Texas leads the series 45-15 and has won seven of the last eight and six straight in Austin. TELEVISION: The game will be broadcast nationally on FX. Gus Johnson (playby-play), Charles Davis (analyst) and Tim Brewster (sidelines) will have the call. RADIO: The game will be broadcast by Sports USA Radio with Rich Cellini (pxp) and Gary Barnett (color) calling the game. It will also be on the Longhorn IMG Radio Network and KVET (1300 AM/98.1 FM) on its 40-station network and is available online at TexasSports.com with Craig Way (pxp), Roger Wallace (color) and Rod Babers (sidelines). A live radio broadcast for each UT game also can be heard on XM Satellite Radio (Ch. 202) and on Sirius (Ch. 215) with the “Premier” package (Subscriber Only). Dr. Rubén Pizarro (pxp) and Felipe Romero (color) will have the call this season for the Spanish Language Radio Broadcasts. TEXAS HOSTS TEXAS TECH IN SECOND STRAIGHT BIG 12 HOME GAME: No. RV/25 Texas (5-2, 2-2 Big 12) will host its second straight Big 12 game when Texas Tech (5-3, 2-3 Big 12) visits Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium on Saturday, Nov. 5 (11 a.m./ Central/FX). It will be the 61st meeting between the in-state rivals with the Longhorns holding a 45-15 (.750) series lead, including a 28-5 (.848) mark in Austin. Texas is coming off of a 43-0 win over Kansas, while Texas Tech fell to Iowa State, 41-7, in Lubbock last Saturday. TEXAS OWNS TEXAS: Since Mack Brown took over at Texas in 1998, the Horns are 51-8 (.864) against teams from within the state’s borders with the eight losses coming by a combined 49 points (6.1 ppg). The Longhorns are 32-3 (.914) at home against other Texas schools, with the only losses coming to Texas A&M, 12-7 in 2006, 24-17 in 2010, and to Baylor, 30-22 in 2010. The Horns are 18-5 on the road with the only losses coming against Texas Tech, 39-33 in 2008, 42-38 in 2002 and 42-35 in 1998; and Texas A&M, 38-30 in 2007 and 20-16 in 1999. THE TEXAS TECH SERIES: Texas and Texas Tech are meeting for the 61st time in series history. UT has won 10 of the last 12 matchups against Texas Tech and holds a 45-15 (.750) lead in the alltime series that began in 1928. The Horns are 28-5 against the Red Raiders in Austin, 16-10 in Lubbock and 37-14 against them in all-time conference matchups (11-4 Big 12/26-10 SWC). Mack Brown is 10-3 against Tech, with all three losses coming in Lubbock (1998, 2002, ’08). BROWN ON NATIONAL SCENE: With a 138-36 (.793) record at UT, Mack Brown has led Texas to the nation’s third-most victories over the last 14 years. In addition, Brown has guided the Horns to a 111-25 (.816) mark over the last 11 seasons, which is the nation’s third-best winning percentage over that timespan, and includes six 11-win seasons (2001, ’02, ’04, ’05, ’08 and ’09). The 11-win seasons are fourthbest to UT’s 13-win campaigns in 2005 and ’09, and its 12-win season in ’08. SERIES TRENDS: The Longhorns and Red Raiders have met on a yearly basis since 1960 with the series dating back to 1928. UT holds a 15-7 lead in the last 22 meetings. Prior to that, the Longhorns had won seven of the previous 10 matchups. The winning team has scored at least 34 points in nine of the last 10 meetings. The Longhorns and Red Raiders first met in 1928 in Austin, a 12-0 UT victory … UT won the first seven games and 15 of the first 16 overall. VETERANS DAY GAME: Prior to kickoff of the Texas-Texas Tech game there will be a fly over (F-18 Hornets) and a jump team (82nd Airborne) from Fort Bragg, North Carolina arranged by the Veteran’s committee as part of Veteran’s Day. NCAA • Active Victory Leaders 1. Joe Paterno, Penn State.............409-135-3 2. Frank Beamer, Va. Tech..........248-118-4 3. Mack Brown.............................224-110-1 Texas Athletics Media Relations Asst. AD/Media Relations Director: John Bianco E-Mail: [email protected] Special Asst. to Head Coach: Bill Little E-Mail: [email protected] Assoc. Media Relations Director: Thomas Stepp E-Mail: [email protected] Asst. Media Relations Director: Joe Hernandez E-Mail: [email protected] Asst. Media Relations Director: Ben Blevins E-Mail: [email protected] Web Site: MackBrown-TexasFootball.com Twitter: twitter.com/MBTexasFootball TEXAS/TEXAS TECH ALL-TIME SERIES AT-A-GLANCE OVERALL SERIES: Texas leads, 45-15 SERIES RECORD IN AUSTIN: Texas leads, 29-5 SERIES RECORD IN LUBBOCK: Texas leads, 16-10 TEXAS TEXAS VS. TEXAS TECH (LAST 10 MEETINGS - TEXAS LEADS, 8-2) Year Score UT’s final record TTU’s final record 2010_____@ Texas 24, Texas Tech 14___________ 5-7 (2-6/6th Big 12 S)_______8-5 (3-5/6th Big 12 S) 2009_____#2 Texas 34, Texas Tech 24__________13-1 (8-0/Big 12 Champs)____9-4 (5-3/t- 3rd Big 12 S) 2008_____@ #6 Texas Tech 39, #1 Texas 33_____ 12-1 (7-1/t- 1st Big 12 S)___ 11-2 (7-1/t- 1st Big 12 S) 2007_____@ #14 Texas 59, Texas Tech 43_ ______10-3 (6-2/2nd Big 12 S)_____9-4 (4-4/t- 3rd Big 12 S) 2006_____#5 Texas 35, @ Texas Tech 31_ _______10-3 (6-2/2nd Big 12 S)______8-5 (4-4/4th Big 12 S) 2005_____@ #2 Texas 52, #10 Texas Tech 17____13-0 (8-0/Big 12 Champs)____ 9-3 (6-2/2nd Big 12 S) 2004_____#8 Texas 51, @ #24 Texas Tech 21_____11-1 (7-1/2nd Big 12 S)_____8-4 (5-3/t- 3rd Big 12 S) 2003_____@ #6 Texas 43, Texas Tech 40_ _______10-3 (7-1/2nd Big 12 S)______8-5 (5-3/3rd Big 12 S) 2002_____@ Texas Tech 42, #4 Texas 38_ ______ 11-2 (6-2/t- 1st Big 12 S)____9-5 (5-3/t- 3rd Big 12 S) 2001_____@ #5 Texas 42, Texas Tech 7_ ________ 11-2 (7-1/1st Big 12 S)_ ____7-5 (4-4/t- 3rd Big 12 S) S - Denotes Big 12 South Division 200 CAREER VICTORIES: With a victory against Texas A&M in 2008, Mack Brown became the first head coach in UT history to reach the 200-victory plateau during a career, and he currently has a career record of 224-110-1 (.670). Brown’s 224 career wins rank 13th on the NCAA all-time victories list. Brown became just the 19th coach who has spent at least 10 years at a NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) school, to win 200 games and the seventh-youngest coach to do so. He also is one of only two active coaches who have reached the 200-victory mark while coaching at an FBS school. In addition, Brown is one of only six active coaches at FBS schools who have won 100 games at their current school (13836/.793). Of the 69 coaches who have ever won 100 games at the same FBS school, Brown is the 12th-fastest to reach the century mark (124 games) and the fourthfastest among active coaches. NCAA • 200-Win Club 1. Joe Paterno........................................409 2. Bobby Bowden.................................389 3. Bear Bryant.......................................323 4. Pop Warner........................................319 5. Amos Alonzo Stagg...........................314 6. LaVell Edwards.................................257 7. Tom Osborne.....................................255 8. Lou Holtz...........................................249 9. Frank Beamer....................................248 10. Woody Hayes....................................238 11. Bo Schembechler...............................234 12. Hayden Fry........................................232 13. Mack Brown......................................224 14. Jess Neely..........................................207 15. Warren Woodson...............................203 16. Don Nehlen........................................202 17. Vince Dooley.....................................201 Eddie Anderson.................................201 19.Jim Sweeney......................................200 N - Denotes Big 12 North Division FOURTEENTH YEAR UNDER MACK BROWN: With Mack Brown in his 14th season at Texas, he is just the fourth coach in the 119 years of Texas football to coach the Longhorns for at least a decade and just the second UT coach to win 100 games while at Texas. Darrell Royal, who won 167 games, has the longest tenure at 20 years. Brown is the first coach in UT history to post 200 victories during a career. He has won 138 games at Texas to rank second on UT’s all-time list behind only Darrell Royal, who tallied 167 victories from 1957-76. Brown moved ahead of Fred Akers, who posted 86 wins from 1977-86, during the 2006 season. Texas • Most Victories at UT 1. Darrell Royal.......................................167 2. Mack Brown........................................138 3.Fred Akers..............................................86 Texas • Seasons at UT 1. Darrell Royal.........................................20 2. Mack Brown..........................................14 3.D.X. Bible...............................................10 Fred Akers..............................................10 NCAA COACHES SINCE 1990: Since the 1990 season Mack Brown has recorded more wins (205) than any other head coach in the country and also has the highest winning percentage (.767) in the nation during that span. NCAA • Victories Since 1990 1. Mack Brown, Texas/UNC...........205-62-1 2. Frank Beamer, Va. Tech.............195-76-1 3. Joe Paterno, Penn State................189-79-0 NCAA • Highest Win Pct. Since 1990 1. Mack Brown, Texas/UNC................. .767 2. Frank Beamer, Va. Tech................... .719 3. Joe Paterno, Penn State...................... .705 Record: 5-2 (2-2, Big 12) Home: 3-1 Away: 2-0 Neutral: 0-1 Sept. 3 11 17 Oct. 1 8 15 29 Nov. 5 12 19 24 Dec. 3 RICE (LHN)_______________ W, 34-9 BYU (ESPN2/3D)___________ W, 17-16 at UCLA (ABC)____________ W, 49-20 at Iowa State* (FX)_ _________ W, 37-14 vs. #3/1 Oklahoma*+ (ABC) ____ L, 17-55 #6/7 OKLA. STATE* (ABC)_____ L, 26-38 KANSAS* (LHN)_ __________ W, 43-0 TEXAS TECH* (FX)_ _______ 11 a.m. at Missouri* (TBA)_____________TBA #17/19 KANSAS STATE* (TBA)____ TBA at Texas A&M* (ESPN)__________ 7 p.m. at Baylor* (ABC)_______________TBA all times Central | * Big 12 game + Cotton Bowl (Dallas) NOTE: Rankings listed as The AP Poll/Coaches Poll MACK BROWN (Florida State ‘74): Texas’ 14th-year head coach is 138-36 (.793) (84-24 Big 12) at UT, including the 2005 National Championship, and has a 224-110-1 (.670) mark over his 27-year career. Brown is the Big 12’s winningest active coach (Division I-A games only) and has three BCS bowl wins in four appearances. TEXAS TECH Record: 5-3 (2-3 Big-12) Home: 2-3 Away: 3-0 Neutral: 0-0 Sept. 3 TEXAS STATE___________ W, 50-10 17 at New Mexico (VERSUS)____ W, 59-13 24 NEVADA (FCS)_ __________ W, 35-34 Oct. 1 8 15 22 29 Nov. 5 12 19 26 at Kansas* (FSN) __________ W, 45-34 A&M* (FX)__ L, 45-40 #17/18 KANSAS ST.* (FSN)_ L, 41-34 at #3/3 Oklahoma* (ABC) ____ W, 41-38 IOWA STATE* (FSN)________ L, 41-7 at #NR/25 Texas* (FX)_ ______ 11 a.m. #3/4 OKLAHOMA STATE* (TBA)_TBA Missouri* (TBA)______________ TBA BAYLOR* (FSN)_ _________ 2:30 p.m. #24/25 TEXAS all times Central | * Big 12 Game NOTE: Rankings listed as The AP Poll/Coaches Poll TOMMY TUBERVILLE (Southern Arkansas ‘76): Head coach Tommy Tuberville holds a 13-8 record in his second season at Texas Tech. Tuberville is 123-67 for his career as a head coach and is in his 16th season. He recorded 85 wins as the head coach at Auburn and 25 wins as the head coach at Mississippi. He also coached at Texas A&M, Miami and Arkansas State. NINE WINS Texas is the only NCAA Division I-A program with 12 nine-win seasons in the last 13 years PROGRAM 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 TEXAS 9-3 9-5 9-3 11-2 11-2 10-3 11-1 13-0 10-3 10-3 12-1 13-1 MACK BROWN SUCCESS: Under Brown, the Horns have posted Top 10 finishes seven times in the last 10 years (2001, ’02, ’04, ’05, ’07, ’08 and ’09). Prior to his arrival, the last time UT finished in the Top 10 was 1983. In addition, Texas played in a bowl game for a schoolrecord 12-consecutive seasons from 19982009, bettering the previous streak of nine straight from 1977-85. Brown’s personal strings, including time at North Carolina, go back even further. He has posted winning seasons in 20 out of the last 21 years and taken his teams to 18 bowl games in the last 19 seasons. His 20 winning seasons in the last 21 years is the best active streak in the nation and his 18 bowl games in the last 19 seasons is tied for the best active streak in the nation. 10-WIN SEASONS: Texas is the only school in the nation that has posted at least 10 wins in nine of the past 10 seasons (a UT record) and was just the second team in college football history to win at least 10 games in nine straight seasons. The Horns’ streak trails only Florida State’s streak of 14 consecutive seasons in NCAA history. In addition, Texas posted 12-win seasons in back-to-back years for the first time in school history. Prior to Brown’s arrival, the Horns had never before posted consecutive 11-win campaigns let alone consecutive 12-win seasons. Brown has led the Horns to six seasons with 11 or more wins. That compares to the four 11-win seasons (1963, ’69, ’77 and ’83) in Texas history before Brown’s arrival. NCAA • Consecutive 10-Win Seasons 1. Florida State...................... 14 (1987-2000) 2. Texas...................................... 9 (2001-09) 3. Miami..................................... 8 (1985-92) REWRITE THE RECORD BOOK: During Mack Brown’s 14-year tenure at Texas, the Horns have set 281 school records. The offense has led the way by setting 172 team, individual, game, season and career records. UT also has set 18 defensive records, 34 special teams records, 25 bowl game records and 32 freshman records. In addition, the Horns have set every major school attendance record during the Brown era. NO. 2 ALL-TIME: In 2008, Texas moved ahead of Notre Dame for second place on the NCAA all-time victory list. At 854 victories, Texas trails only Michigan in all-time wins. With the Longhorns in second place on that list, it marked the first time since 1932 that Michigan and Notre Dame did not occupy the one-two spots in all-time wins. Since Mack Brown arrived in 1998, Texas has posted a 138-36 (.793) record and moved ahead of Alabama, Notre Dame and Nebraska on the all-time victory chart. NCAA • Most Wins 1998-present 1. Boise State...................................... 147-26 2. Oklahoma....................................... 141-38 3. Texas.............................................. 138-36 4. Ohio State....................................... 136-36 BOWL SUCCESS: Texas played in a bowl game for a UT-record 12th straight season in 2009, bettering the previous mark of nine-straight from 1977-85. The Horns have won seven of their last nine bowls and have an 8-4 record under Mack Brown. In the 13 years prior to Brown’s arrival, Texas went to six bowls and was 2-4. Brown is the first UT coach since Darrell Royal, who was 8-7-1 in bowl games, to post a .500 or better bowl record. With a 24-21 victory NCAA ALL-TIME RECORDS LISTS All-Time Winning Percentage All-Time Victories YEARS RECORD PCT. YEARS WINS 1. Michigan_______ 132_ ___891-309-36_ ____.735 1. Michigan_______ 132_ ___ 891 2. TEXAS_________119_ ___ 855 2. Notre Dame_ ___ 123_ ___850-298-42_ ____.732 3. Ohio State______ 122_ ___836-312-53_ ___ .718 3. Notre Dame_____ 123_ ___ 850 Oklahoma______ 117_ ___818-305-53_ ____.718 4. Nebraska________ 122_ ___ 843 5. TEXAS_______ 119_ __855-327-33___ .717 5. Ohio State_______ 122_ ___ 836 6. Alabama_ ______ 117_ ___812-319-43_ ____.710 6. Penn State_______ 125_ ___ 826 7. USC___________ 119_ ___775-314-54_ ____.702 7. Oklahoma_______ 117_ ___ 818 over No. 10 Ohio State in the 2009 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl, Texas won bowl games in five consecutive years for the first time in school history (2004-08). The Horns did win five straight previously (1963-64, ’66, ’68-69), but the streak was interrupted by seasons that did not result in a bowl. Brown’s personal string, including time at North Carolina, goes back even further. He has directed his teams to 18 bowl games in the last 19 seasons which is tied for the longest active streak in the nation. CONFERENCE COMPETITION: Mack Brown, who has guided the Horns to the 2005 and 2009 Big 12 Championships and has won or shared the Big 12 South Division Championship six times, is 84-24 (.778) in 14 seasons of Big 12 play. That is the second-best league record over that span just behind Oklahoma (85-24/.779) and bettering Nebraska (65-39) and Texas Tech (62-47). UT has won 53 of its last 68 games (.779) against Big 12 foes. At 92-32 (.742), Texas has the top intraconference record since the Big 12 formed in 1996. Big 12 • Intraconference Records 1. TEXAS.................................... 92-32 2. Oklahoma.......................................90-35 3. Nebraska*.......................................80-40 4. Kansas State...................................73-52 5. Texas Tech.....................................70-55 6. Texas A&M....................................67-59 7. Colorado*.......................................60-60 Missouri..........................................60-65 Oklahoma State..............................60-65 10. Kansas............................................36-89 11. Iowa State.......................................35-90 12. Baylor...........................................19-105 Big 12 • League Records Since 1998 1. Oklahoma.......................................85-23 2. TEXAS.................................... 84-24 3. Nebraska*.......................................65-39 4. Texas Tech.....................................61-47 5. Kansas State...................................58-50 *Departed the conference in 2010 BIG 12 WINNING STREAKS: The Horns had tied the school record by winning 21 straight conference games from 2004-06 before the streak was snapped at Kansas State in 2006. The record of 21 straight conference victories was set from 1968-71 when Texas was competing in the Southwest Conference. The 21-straight Big 12 victories also marked the longest streak in league history. Texas also has the second-longest home winning streak in Big 12 history with 26 straight victories from 1999-2006 and the longest road winning streak in conference play with 13 straight wins from 2002-06. Big 12 • Longest Winning Streaks 1. TEXAS (2004-06).............................. 21 2. Kansas State (1997-98)....................... 15 3. Oklahoma (1999-2001)....................... 14 4. TEXAS (2008-10).............................. 13 5. Oklahoma (2004-05)........................... 10 arrival. Under Brown, the Horns have outscored their opponents by an average of 40-17 (3,312-1,409) and outgained them by an average of 451.7 yards to 268.8 (37,493-22,311) at home. 15 times in school history. The Rice game was the largest crowd to see a college sport event in the Southwest. The single-season record for home attendance is 704,580 set last season in 2010. Big 12 • Longest Home Winning Streaks 1. Oklahoma (2002-11)........................... 31 2. TEXAS (1999-06).............................. 26 3. Kansas State (1996-2000)................... 14 Nebraska (1998-2002)......................... 14 NCAA • Highest Home Win Pct. Since 2003 Texas • Crowds of 100,000+ 1. Boise State (51-1)..................... .981 Big 12 • Longest Road Winning Streaks 1. TEXAS (2002-06).............................. 13 2. Kansas State (1997-99)....................... 10 3. Nebraska (1996-97)............................... 8 Kansas State (2003-05)......................... 8 UT’S BIG 12 SUCCESS AT HOME: Texas is 40-8 (.833) at Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium/Jamail Field versus league opponents during the Mack Brown era. The 40 home victories are the second most by any team in the conference over the last 14 years. In addition, the Horns set the league record with a 26-game home winning streak over Big 12 opponents, which was snapped in 2006. Prior to 2006, the last time UT had lost a home game against a league foe was 1999 (35-17 to No. 13 Kansas State) BIG 12 ROAD SUCCESS: Texas has won 34 of its last 39 (.872) true Big 12 road games (not including neutral-site games), including a league-record 13 consecutive conference road wins from 2002-06. The Horns are 38-7 (.844) in league road contests under Mack Brown. Highlighting the Horns’ road record under Brown are victories at Nebraska (1998) to end the Huskers’ nation-best 47-game home winning streak, another win that snapped a Nebraska 26-game home winning streak (2002) and a victory to break Oklahoma State’s 10-game winning streak (2003). STRING OF SUCCESS: Texas has finished the year ranked among the nation’s Top 15 in 10 of the last 11 seasons, which includes a string of 10 consecutive, which is a Longhorn best. In addition, UT has finished in the Top 10 in seven of the last 10 seasons (2001, ’02, ’04, ’05, ’07, ’08 and ’09) and in the Top Five in four of the last seven (’04, ’05, ’08 and ’09). You have to go back to Darrell Royal’s string of success in the late 1960s, when the Horns finished among the Top Five four out of five years (1968-72), to equal that consistency in UT history. JAMAIL FIELD ADVANTAGE: During Mack Brown’s 14-year tenure, Texas has won 71 of its 83 games (.855) at Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium/Jamail Field. The Horns’ .815 home winning percentage (44-10) since 2003 ranks seventh nationally. That is a dramatic improvement from the Horns’ 45-23-1 record (.659) in the 13 seasons prior to Brown’s 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Oklahoma (50-2)............................. Ohio State (55-6)............................. LSU (57-7)...................................... USC (44-7)...................................... Auburn (56-12)................................ TEXAS (44-10).............................. .962 .902 .891 .863 .824 .815 JAMAIL FIELD STREAKS: The Horns have posted three of the six-longest home winning streaks in school history during the Mack Brown era. The Horns won 20 in a row at home from 1999-2003 (third-longest in school history). Then, from 2003-06, Texas won 16-straight home games, which is tied for the fourth-best string. UT had another 16-game string from 2007-10. The longest streak in school history is a 41-game streak from 1968-76. Texas’ 26-game home intraconference winning streak from 1999-2006 is the second-longest in Big 12 history “FAN”-TASTIC: Texas has been one of the best-attended programs in the nation over the past 10 years. The Horns, who have played in front of a sellout crowd in 67 of their last 70 home games, have attracted 49 of the top 50 crowds in UT history since Mack Brown took over in 1998. In addition, the top 25 home crowds at Texas have come since ’06. Texas’ school-record season-ticket sales of 84,071 in 2010 are more than double the 39,743 sold in 1997, the UT record when Brown arrived. Texas set the single-game attendance record against Rice earlier this season with a crowd of 101,624 and have drawn 100,000 or more 1. vs. Rice (2011)........................... 101,624 2. vs. UCLA (2010)........................ 101,437 3. vs. Kansas (2009)....................... 101,357 4. vs. Wyoming (2010).................. 101,339 5. vs. Texas Tech (2009)................ 101,297 6. vs. Colorado (2009).................... 101,152 7. vs. UTEP (2009)........................ 101,144 8. vs. Louisiana-Monroe (2009)..... 101,096 9. vs. Central Florida (2009).......... 101,003 10. vs. BYU (2011).......................... 100,995 11. vs. Texas A&M (2010).............. 100,752 12. vs. Oklahoma State (2010)......... 100,659 13. vs. Baylor (2010)........................ 100,452 14. vs. Iowa State (2010)................. 100,142 15. vs. Oklahoma State (2011)......... 100,101 DRAWING FANS ON THE ROAD: Texas has attracted record crowds in 11 of its road games over the past seven seasons, at Oklahoma State (58,516, 2009), vs. Oklahoma in the Cotton Bowl (96,009, 2009-11 and 92,182, 2008), at Texas Tech (60,454, 2010, 56,333, 2008 and 56,158, 2006), at UTEP (53,415, 2008), at Texas A&M (88,253, 2007) and at Nebraska (85,187, 2006). ROAD WARRIORS: Texas is 67-24 (.736) away from home (road and neutral sites) over the last 14 years compared to a 43-43-2 (.500) record in the 14 years prior to Mack Brown’s arrival in 1998. The Horns’ 64-21 (.753) mark in road and neutral-site games since 1999 is the nation’s best record over that span. Texas is 51-10 (.836) on the road (not including neutral- ROYAL-TEXAS MEMORIAL STADIUM/JAMAIL FIELD RENOVATIONS As Texas football proceeds through the 21st century, Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium continues to evolve as a state-of-theart facility at the forefront of college football. Following the 2008 season, Texas installed FieldTurf as its playing surface and permanent bleachers were added to the south end of the stadium. Combined with the previous year’s north end zone project, DKR-Texas Memorial Stadium now has a stadium capacity of 100,119, which is the fifth-largest college stadium in the country and the largest college stadium in the southwest. The north end zone expansion project that was completed prior to the 2008 season featured an upper deck, club seating, an academic center and a war memorial plaza. The expansion added approximately 2,108 club seats and 47 suites. The lower deck of the north end zone was completed for the 2007 season. Another major upgrade was made prior to 2007, when a new video board was installed at the south end of the stadium. At the time, the scoreboard was the nation’s largest high-definition video display board thanks to DAKtronics. The $8-million Prostar Video Board is 55 feet high by 134 feet wide. In addition, the interior of the MoncriefNeuhaus Athletics Complex, most notably the players’ lounge, is consistently being upgraded. Prior to 2009, a new academic center was constructed. It is approximately three times the size of the old one at Moncrief-Neuhaus. It features writing, math and computer labs, numerous tutoring areas, a multimedia classroom and academic staff office space. In the summer of 2011, the Longhorns locker room was renovated with completion in early August. It is all part of a $176.5 million renovation project at the stadium. site games) and 43-6 (.877) versus unranked road foes during the Mack Brown era. Prior to Brown’s arrival, UT posted just five winning road records in the 14 seasons leading up to 1998. All totalled during that time, UT was just 33-35 (.485) in true road games. The Longhorns have won 46 of their last 51 true road games (.902). In addition, UT is currently on a streak of 12 consecutive non-conference road wins, which is a school record, bettering the previous streak of seven from 1956-63. NCAA • Highest Road/Neutral Win Pct. Since 1999 1. TEXAS (64-21)............................... .753 2. Boise State (63-21).............................. .750 3. USC (61-22)........................................ .735 4. Oklahoma (61-28).............................. .685 5. Georgia (55-28)................................... .662 BCS RANKINGS: Following the loss to Iowa State in 2010, Texas had its streak of 56 consecutive weeks in the BCS rankings snapped, which had been the longest active streak in the nation. The Horns still lead the nation with 88 all-time appearances. BCS • Most All-Time Appearances 1. TEXAS................................................ 88 2. 3. 4. 5. Florida...................................................... 85 Virginia Tech.......................................... 80 Oklahoma................................................ 79 Ohio State................................................ 76 UT IN THE AP TOP 25 POLL: The Longhorns have been ranked as high as No. 11 in the Associated Press top 25 this season and have appeared in seven of the 10 weekly top 25 rankings, along with being the top vote getter outside of the poll this week. Following Rice it was the first appearance in the poll for UT since its nation-leading and UT-record streak of 162 straight weeks in the poll was snapped following the loss to Oklahoma in 2010. The streak bettered a 114-week stretch from 1968-76. It was the sixth-longest streak in the history of the poll. Prior to the poll on Sept. 12, 2010, the Horns had been ranked in the AP Top 5 for 30 consecutive weeks, which was the longest active streak in the nation and the longest streak in the Mack Brown era. AP Top 25 • Texas Weekly Rankings Preseason........................................... RV 9/4 . ........................................................... 24 9/11............................................................ 23 9/18............................................................ 19 9/25............................................................ 17 10/2............................................................ 11 10/9............................................................ 22 10/16.......................................................... 24 10/23.........................................................RV 10/30.........................................................RV UT IN THE COACHES POLL: Texas has been ranked in the USA Today Coaches Poll in eight of the 10 weeks this season, including No. 10 on Oct. 2. The top 10 ranking gave them 135 weeks total in the top 10 during the Mack Brown era. Prior to Texas’ loss to Oklahoma in 2010, UT had been ranked among the USA Today Coaches Poll for 190 straight weeks dating back to late in the 1998 season. The 190 straight weeks was the longest UT streak in any poll and the nation’s longest active streak in the coaches poll. The Horns’ previous longest streak in the coaches poll was 54 weeks from 1977-80. Coaches Poll • Texas Weekly Rankings Preseason.............................................24 9/4 . ........................................................... 21 9/11............................................................ 21 9/18............................................................ 18 9/25............................................................ 17 10/2............................................................ 10 10/9............................................................ 21 10/16.........................................................RV 10/23.........................................................RV 10/30.......................................................... 25 AP TOP 25 FINISHES: Texas has finished the year ranked among the AP Top 25 in 12 of Mack Brown’s 13 years in Austin, including a string of 12 straight. That marked the first time in school history Texas has finished in the AP Top 25 for 12 straight years, bettering the previous record of eight straight seasons from 1968-75. Dating back to his days at UNC, Brown’s teams have finished the year ranked among the AP Top 25 in 14 of the last 15 seasons, including nine Top 10 finishes. UT AND THE AP TOP 10: As a result of its loss at Kansas State in 2006, Texas had its string of 46-straight weeks in the AP Top 10 snapped. Prior to that, the last time the Horns 11-OF-12 Texas is the only team in the nation to be ranked in 11 of the last 12 BCS Final Polls. 1999 TEXAS 15th 2000 2001 2002 2003 12th 7th 10th 6th 2004 2005 4th 2nd 2006 19th 2007 2008 2009 19th 3rd 2nd NATIONAL RANKINGS The Associated Press (2011 Week Ten Rankings) Rk Team (1st) Record_ Points LW 1 LSU (47)__________ 8-0___ 1,439_____ 1 2 Alabama (10)_ _____ 8-0___ 1,401_____ 2 3 Oklahoma State_ ___ 8-0___ 1,305_____ 3 4 Stanford_ _________ 8-0___ 1,278_____ 4 5 Boise State (1)______ 8-0___ 1,241_____ 5 6 Oregon_ __________ 7-1___ 1,148_____ 7 7 Oklahoma _ _______ 7-1___ 1,096____ 11 8 Arkansas__________ 7-1___ 1,035_____ 8 9 Nebraska__________ 7-1____976_____ 13 10 South Carolina_____ 7-1____861_____ 14 11 Clemson__________ 8-1____851______ 6 12 Virginia Tech_ _____ 8-1____755_____ 15 13 Michigan__________ 7-1____718_____ 17 14 Houston_ _________ 8-0____611_____ 18 15 Michigan State_ ____ 6-2____586______ 9 16 Penn State_________ 8-1____553_____ 20 17 Kansas State_ ______ 7-1____536_____ 10 18 Georgia___________ 6-2____446_____ 21 19 Wisconsin_________ 6-2____420_____ 12 20 Arizona State_ _____ 6-2____384_____ 22 21 USC______________ 6-2____323_____ 19 22 Georgia Tech_ _____ 7-2____230____ NR 23 Cincinnati_________ 6-1____128_____ 23 24 West Virginia ______ 6-2____111_____ 24 25 Auburn___________ 6-3____107____ NR USA Today Coaches (2011 Week Ten Rankings) Rk Team (1st) Record Points LW 1 LSU (41)__________ 8-0___ 1,457_____ 1 2 Alabama (18)_ _____ 8-0___ 1,434_____ 2 3 Stanford_ _________ 8-0___ 1,323_____ 3 4 Oklahoma State_ ___ 8-0___ 1,314_____ 4 5 Boise State ________ 8-0___ 1,237_____ 5 6 Oregon_ __________ 7-1___ 1,175_____ 7 7 Oklahoma _ _______ 7-1___ 1,117_____ 9 8 Arkansas__________ 7-1___ 1,046_____ 8 9 Nebraska__________ 7-1____973_____ 13 10 South Carolina_____ 7-1____919_____ 14 11 Virginia Tech_ _____ 8-1____871_____ 15 12 Clemson__________ 8-1____779______ 6 13 Michigan__________ 7-1____734_____ 17 14 Houston_ _________ 8-0____679_____ 18 15 Penn State_________ 8-1____646_____ 19 16 Michigan State_ ____ 6-2____528_____ 10 17 Wisconsin_________ 6-2____463_____ 11 18 Arizona State_ _____ 6-2____445_____ 20 19 Kansas State_ ______ 7-1____440_____ 12 20 Georgia___________ 6-2____410_____ 21 22 West Virginia______ 6-3____270_____ 24 23 Cincinnati_________ 6-1____232_____ 23 24 Southern Miss______ 7-1____160_____ 25 25 Texas_____________ 5-2____122____ NR LW: Last week’s ranking were not among the AP Top 10 was in the final poll of the 2003 season. The 46-straight weeks was the longest for the Horns in the Mack Brown era. The longest Texas streak in the AP Top 10 is 60 weeks from 1961-65. With its loss to UCLA in 2010, Texas had a streak of 33 consecutive weeks ranked in the Top 10 broken. In addition, prior to the poll on Sept. 12, 2010, the Horns had been ranked in the AP Top 5 for 30 consecutive weeks, which was the longest active streak in the nation and is the longest streak in the Mack Brown era, bettering a 19-week streak from 2005-06. COACHES POLL FINISHES: Texas has been ranked in the first and last coaches poll in 12 of Mack Brown’s 13 completed seasons in Austin. Dating back to his days at UNC, Brown’s teams have finished the year ranked among the coaches’ Top 25 in 14 of the last 15 seasons, including nine Top 10 finishes. BROWN’S TOP 10 HORNS: Mack Brown revived the Horns as a Top 10 regular beginning with a No. 5 preseason ranking in 2001. Since then, the Horns have earned a Top 10 standing in 125 of the last 157 AP polls. All totalled, UT has spent 132 weeks ranked among the AP Top 10 and 135 weeks ranked in the coaches’ Top 10 since Brown arrived UT RECORD BOOK W/L vs. ranked opponents All-time*_____________________127-128-8 Home________________________47-35-4 Away_________________________36-43-0 Neutral_______________________44-50-4 Top 25 matchup________________105-74-5 As the higher-ranked team+_ _____71-33-2 As the lower-ranked team+_______34-42-3 Mack Brown Era____________34-24 (58.6%) 2011_ ___________________________ 0-2 2010_ ___________________________ 1-4 2009_ ___________________________ 3-1 2008_ ___________________________ 4-1 2007_ ___________________________ 2-1 2006_ ___________________________ 2-1 2005_ ___________________________ 4-0 2004_ ___________________________ 5-1 2003_ ___________________________ 3-2 2002_ ___________________________ 3-1 2001_ ___________________________ 2-2 2000_ ___________________________ 1-2 1999_ ___________________________ 1-4 1998_ ___________________________ 3-2 * as ranked by either The AP Poll or Coaches Poll + both teams ranked in Top 25 W/L vs. unranked opponents (since 1936) All-time*_____________________463-112-8 Home_______________________259-46-3 Away________________________178-60-3 Neutral________________________26-6-2 Mack Brown Era___________102-12 (89.5%) Home__________________________ 54-6 Away___________________________ 43-6 in 1998. That coaches poll streak resumed in the Oct. 2, 2011 poll when the Longhorns returned with a No. 10 ranking. In the same 13-year stretch prior to his arrival, UT spent just 16 weeks rated among the Top 10. Brown has led the Horns to a final Top 10 ranking in seven of the last 10 seasons. In 2008, Brown led Texas to its first regular-season No. 1 ranking since 1984. In 2005, he led UT to its first No. 1 ranking to end the season since 1969. Before Brown took over the program, the last time UT earned a Top 10 finish was 1983. From the start of the 1984 season to Brown’s arrival in 1998, UT was in the Top 10 just 28 times in 14 seasons. WIRE-TO-WIRE: Texas is the nation’s only school that has both started and finished the season ranked among the Top 15 in 10 of the past 11 seasons. TEN STRAIGHT TOP 15 FINISHES: Texas’ No. 2 ranking in 2009 marked the 10th straight year the Horns finished ranked among the nation’s Top 15. That is the first time UT had ever accomplished that feat. The 2009 standing followed a No. 3 ranking in 2008, a No. 10 ranking in 2007, a No. 13 ranking in 2006, a No. 1 ranking in 2005, a No. 5 ranking in 2004, a No. 12 ranking in 2003, a No. 6 ranking in 2002, a No. 5 ranking in 2001 and a No. 12 ranking in 2000. TACKLING THE TOP 25: Texas is 27-13 (.675) in its last 40 games versus Top 25 opponents, including a 21-10 mark (.677) in its last 31 match-ups. Seven of those losses have come to Top-10 ranked teams. That’s a continuation of the success the Longhorns have had against ranked foes during the Mack Brown era. In Brown’s 14 years in Austin, UT is 34-24 (.586) versus Top 25 opponents. That compares to a 16-34-2 (32.7%) mark in the 13 years before Brown arrived. In fact, the Longhorns have posted a winning record against ranked opponents in nine of the last 10 seasons as compared to just two seasons in the 13 prior to Brown’s arrival. HORNS’ FINISHING TOUCH: One of the mantras of the program under Mack brown is “finish,” and the Horns have done that since Brown arrived. Over Brown’s 14-year tenure, UT has gone 28-5 (.848) in games decided by four points or less and 20-4 (.833) in games decided by three points or less. The Longhorns’ have won 17 of their last 18 (.944) games decided by three points or less. The only loss came UT’S LAST 32 AGAINST TOP 25 OPPONENTS (Record: 21-11/.656) DATE OPPONENT RESULT 10/15/11_ __vs #6 Oklahoma State__ L, 26-38 10/8/11_ ___vs. #1 Oklahoma______ L, 17-55 11/25/10_ __vs. #17 Texas A&M____ L, 17-24 11/13/10_ __vs. #12 Oklahoma St._ _ L, 16-33 10/30/10_ __vs. #24 Baylor________ L, 22-30 10/16/10_ __at #5 Nebraska_ _____ W, 20-13 10/2/10_ ___vs. #8 Oklahoma______ L, 20-28 1/7/10_ ____vs. #1 Alabama%______ L, 21-37 12/5/09_ ___vs. #21 Nebraska_____ W, 13-12 10/31/09_ __at #13 Oklahoma St. __ W, 41-14 10/17/09_ __vs. #20 Oklahoma____ W, 16-13 1/5/09_ ____vs. #10 Ohio State!_ __ W, 24-21 11/1/08_ ___at #6 Texas Tech______ L, 33-39 10/25/08_ __#7 Oklahoma State___ W, 28-24 10/18/08_ __#11 Missouri________ W, 56-31 10/11/08_ __vs. #1 Oklahoma_____ W, 45-35 12/27/07_ __vs. #12 Arizona St.^_ _ W, 52-34 10/6/07_ ___vs. #10 Oklahoma_____ L, 21-28 9//8/07_____#19 TCU___________ W, 34-13 10/21/06_ __at #17 Nebraska_ ____ W, 22-20 10/7/06_ ___vs. #14 Oklahoma____ W, 28-10 9/9/06_ ____#1 Ohio State_ ________ L, 7-24 1/4/06_ ____vs. #1 USC*_________ W, 41-38 10/22/05_ __#10 Texas Tech______ W, 52-17 10/15/05_ __#24 Colorado_ ______ W, 42-17 9/10/05_ ___at #4 Ohio State_ ____ W, 25-22 1/1/05_ ____vs. #13 Michigan*____ W, 38-37 11/26/04_ __#22 Texas A&M_ ____ W, 26-13 11/6/04_ ___#19 Oklahoma State___ W, 56-35 10/23/04_ __at #24 Texas Tech____ W, 51-21 10/16/04_ __#24 Missouri________ W, 28-20 10/9/04_ ___#2 Oklahoma_________ L, 0-12 ^ Holiday Bowl, *Rose Bowl, ! Fiesta Bowl, % BCS Champ. in a shootout at Kansas State, 45-42, in 2006, when Colt McCoy was sidelined by injury after the opening drive. The success under Brown is an improvement from the 12 years prior to his arrival when UT went 18-15-2 (.543) in games decided by four points or less and 16-11-2 (.586) in games decided by three points or less. LONGHORN RETURNEES: Texas returns 47 lettermen (25 offense/21 defense/ one specialist) and 15 players with starting experience (seven offense/eight defense) from the 2010 squad. The 14 players with starting experience have combined to start 273 games (102 offense/171 defense). OFFENSIVE RETURNEES: Texas returns 12 players in 2011 who have starting experience at almost every offensive position. A pair of running backs return with starting experience in seniors Cody Johnson (45 games/10 starts) and Fozzy Whittaker (36 games/16 starts). In 2010, the pair recorded 943 rushing yards and eight TDs on 214 carries. Also back from 2010 is sophomore wide receiver Mike Davis (18 games/12 starts). Up front, the Horns return four offensive lineman with starting experience in senior OG/C David Snow (46 games/26 starts) and a trio of sophomores in OG Mason Walters (20 games/19 starts), OL Trey Hopkins (19 games/11 starts) and OT Paden Kelley (14 games/one start). Senior OG Tray Allen (38 games/five starts) also returns for the Horns and has started five games in 2011. Texas returns three tight ends with starting experience in junior Barrett Matthews (32 games/ seven starts), sophomore Dominique Jones (13 games/six starts) and senior Blaine Irby (21 games/four starts), who has returned from injury. Jones and Matthews combined for 26 receptions for 61 yards and two TDs in 2010. DEFENSIVE RETURNEES: The Longhorns’ defense returns seven starters that covered every level of the defense and nine players with starting experience for the 2011 season. The nine returnees with starting experience entering the season have combined for 180 career starts. Up front, the Horns are led by DT Kheeston Randall (41 games/29 starts) and DE Alex Okafor (33 games/15 starts). Okafor, who started eight games at DT in 2010, combined with Randall to record 69 tackles, 17 TFL, 3.5 sacks and 21 pressures. A pair of defensive ends also return with starting experience in junior Dravannti Johnson (18 games/five starts) and sophomore Jackson Jeffcoat (15 games/ nine starts). The pair tallied 38 tackles, eight TFL, 3.5 sacks and 13 pressures last season. Senior linebackers Keenan Robinson (45 games/33 starts) and Emmanuel Acho (42 games/20 starts) will provide veteran leadership for the defense. The duo ranked first and second on the team in tackles in 2010, combining for 200 tackles, 20 TFL, five sacks, three INTs, eight PBU, five pressures, three fumble recoveries and three forced fumbles. In the secondary, senior safeties Blake Gideon (46 games/46 starts) and Christian Scott (29 games/11 starts) return with junior safety Kenny Vaccaro (32 games/13 starts). The trio combined to start every game at the safety positions in 2010, with Gideon starting all 12 games at free safety and Scott and Vaccaro manning the strong safety position. They combined for 177 tackles, eight TFL, four INTs, 13 PBU, four forced fumbles and two blocks. In addition, sophomores DT Calvin Howell (21 games/two starts), DT Ashton Dorsey (16 games/four starts), LB Jordan Hicks (19 games/five starts), CB Carrington Byndom (19 games/seven starts), CB Adrian Phillips (18 games/five starts), DE Reggie Wilson (19 games), and DB A.J. White (12 games) returned with experience with many gaining starting nods this season. 2011 SENIORITY: A group of 15 seniors, who have played in a combined 537 games (202 starts), lead the 2011 Longhorns. TE Blaine Irby (21 games/four starts), RB Cody Johnson (45 games/10 starts), OG David Snow (46 games/26 starts) and RB Fozzy Whittaker (36 games/18 starts) have all started games on the offensive side of the ball while LB Emmanuel Acho (42 games/20 starts), S Blake Gideon (46 games/46 starts), DE Kheeston Randall (41 games/29 starts), LB Keenan Robinson (45 games/33 starts) and S Christian Scott (29 games/11 starts) return with first-team experience on defense. In addition, OG Tray Allen (38 games/five starts), FB Jamison Berryhill (28 games), OL Mark Buchanan (20 games), TE Ahmard Howard (40 games), PK/P Justin Tucker (46 games) and DS Alex Zumberge (28 games) return with game experience. COMEBACKS UNDER MACK BROWN During Mack Brown’s 14 seasons at Texas, the Horns have registered 25 secondhalf comebacks, including 14 fourth-quarter comebacks. UT has recorded the six largest comebacks in school history during the Mack Brown era. vs. BYU (2011): The Longhorns trailed 13-3 at the half and 16-10 entering the fourth quarter but two rushing TDs in the second half gave Texas a 17-16 win. The game-winning score by Cody Johnson came with 8:46 remaining in the game on a four-yard TD run that capped an eight-play, 52-yard drive. vs. NO. 21/20 NEBRASKA (2009): Texas held the lead against Nebraska for much of the second-half, but a Nebraska field goal with 1:44 left gave the Cornhuskers a 12-10 lead. The Horns quickly moved down the field on the ensuing possession, setting up a Hunter Lawrence 46-yard field goal as time expired, giving UT a 13-12 victory and the 2009 Big 12 Championship. vs. NO. 20/18 OKLAHOMA (2009): The Horns trailed 6-3 at halftime but scored 10 points on their first two drives of the second half to take a 13-6 lead. The Sooners came back with a TD to make it 13-13, but UT answered with a field goal early in the fourth quarter to take a 16-13 lead, which would end up being the final score. After giving up the TD to OU with 4:39 left in the third quarter, the Horns’ defense didn’t allow the Sooners into Texas territory for the rest of the game, allowing just 35 yards on 17 plays (2.1 ypp) and intercepting two passes. vs. NO. 10 OHIO STATE (2008): Texas trailed 6-3 at the half before taking a 17-6 lead entering the fourth quarter. But, the Buckeyes ran off 15 straight points to take a 21-17 lead with just 2:05 remaining. From there, Colt McCoy led an 11-play, 78-yard drive that culminated with a 26-yard TD pass to Quan Cosby with 16 seconds left to give UT the 24-21 victory. vs. NO. 1 OKLAHOMA (2008): The Horns erased two 11-point deficits in the first half and trailed by one, 21-20, at halftime. OU went up 28-20 before Texas scored 10 straight to take a 30-28 lead late in the third quarter. OU answered with a TD early in the fourth to make it 35-30, but UT scored the game’s final 15 points over the last 7:37 to win, 45-35. In total, Texas went on a 25-7 run to seal the victory. at OKLAHOMA STATE (2007): Texas erased two fourth-quarter deficits and a second-half deficit, including the largest fourthquarter comeback in school history against Oklahoma State. The Horns trailed 35-14 entering the final stanza before scoring 24 unanswered points to win, 38-35. NEBRASKA (2007): Texas trailed Nebraska, 17-9, entering the fourth quarter before run- ning off 19 straight points to win, 28-25. After falling behind 17-3 early in the third quarter, Texas produced 336 total yards and 25 points in the second half to help seal the victory. at TEXAS TECH (2006): After trailing Texas Tech, 21-0, in the first quarter, the Horns closed the gap to 31-21 at halftime and 31-28 entering the fourth quarter, before going on to win 35-31. at NO. 4 OHIO STATE (2005): The Horns trailed the Buckeyes, 22-16, entering the final quarter, but Vince Young connected with Limas Sweed for a 24-yard TD with 2:37 remaining to give Texas a 23-22 lead. A late safety gave the Horns a 25-22 victory. vs. NO. 1 USC (2005): The Longhorns trailed 38-26 with 6:42 remaining in the game before Vince Young led two TD drives, including his game-winning eight-yard TD run with just 19 seconds left, to secure the win and the National Championship. Prior to 2005: The Horns notched four second-half comebacks and a fourth-quarter comeback in 2004, including a 28-point comeback against Oklahoma State, the largest in school history. UT also registered a halftime comeback in ’02, a fourth-quarter comeback in ’01, two halftime comebacks in 1999 and two fourth-quarter comebacks in ’98. FRESHMEN IN ACTION Number of true freshmen that have played in the Mack Brown era 1998 1999 2000 12 of 24 12 of 28 8 of 25 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 6 of 22 9 of 28 5 of 25 7 of 22 7 of 15 9 of 24 9 of 23 IMMEDIATE IMPACT: Eighteen true freshmen of a possible 22 played in the season opener against Rice, which is the most in an opener in the Mack Brown era and the most in the nation for the 2011 season. Mack Brown has now played 133 of a possible 322 true freshmen (41.3%) in his 14 seasons at Texas. The group included QB David Ash, RB Malcolm Brown, OL Josh Cochran, CB Quandre Diggs, LB Steve Edmond, DB Sheroid Evans, OL Sedrick Flowers, DL Desmond Jackson, LB Tevin Jackson, RB Joe Bergeron, FB Chet Moss, WR Miles Onyegbule, DE Cedric Reed, DB Leroy Scott, WR Jaxon Shipley, LB Kendall Thompson, DB Mykkele Thompson and DB Josh Turner. In 2010, 12 true freshmen out of a possible 24 saw action in the season opener, which was the previous record under Brown. OFFENSIVE EXPLOSION: In 14 seasons under Mack Brown, UT’s offense has produced 11 of the top 12 passing seasons, 11 of the top 13 total yardage campaigns and the top nine scoring years in school history. The Horns have also averaged at least 200 yards both rushing and passing in four of the 13 completed seasons. During his tenure, the Longhorns have registered 172 school records, forty 50-point games and five of the top seven total offense games on school record. TRUE FRESHMEN IN 2011 Total true freshman by school who saw action in 2011 season opener 1. TEXAS______________________ 18 2. 3. 7. 8. Auburn_ ________________________13 Virginia_ ________________________12 Tennessee________________________12 Clemson_________________________12 Ohio State_ ______________________12 Wyoming________________________11 California________________________10 North Carolina_ __________________10 Kent State________________________10 Tulane_ _________________________10 Arkansas_ _______________________10 Louisville________________________10 Indiana__________________________10 MORE OFFENSE: In addition, UT has produced forty-eight 500-yard total offense performances under Brown (there are only 71 of them in the 119 years of Texas football) and has recorded 10 of the school’s twenty 600-yard total offense games. The Horns’ balanced attack has produced at least 400 yards of offense in 86 of its last 136 games (63.2%) and has registered 200 yards both passing and rushing 50 times. Texas has scored at least 25 points in 71 of its last 92 games (77.2%). That includes a streak of at least 28 points in a UT-best 19 consecutive games from 2007-08, bettering the previous mark of 12 straight (200506). Texas also posted an 11-game streak from 2000-01. Prior to Brown’s arrival, the longest streak of scoring at least 28 points was seven games. THE 2011 OFFENSE: Through seven games in 2011, Texas ranks 17th in rushing offense (218.86 ypg), 49th in total offense (414.57 ypg) and 40th in scoring offense (31.86 ppg). The Longhorns have posted two games of 500 or more total yards, four games of 200 or more rushing yards including one 400-yard contest and four games of 200 or more passing yards. UT recorded a season-high 590 total yards against Kansas for the 48th 500-yard total offense performance under head coach Mack Brown. The total included 441 rushing yards, the most in a single game since 2004. The Longhorns posted 506 total yards in the season-opening game against Rice. The Horns also recorded 229 yards rushing and 227 yards passing for the 49th 200-plus rushing and passing output in Texas history. At UCLA, Texas posted its second 200/200 game of the season with 284 yards rushing (5.7 ypc) and 204 yards passing. The offense produced seven touchdowns, including a balanced four rushing and three passing. In the Big 12 opener at Iowa State, UT recorded 400 yards of total offense. Led by Malcolm Brown’s 135 rushing yards, the Longhorns racked up 231 yards on the ground against Oklahoma State. 500 YARDS OF OFFENSE: In 2011 the Longhorns have tallied over 500 yards of total offense twice to give them 48 games 2008 2009 2010 2011 TOTAL 9 of 19 10 of 21 12 of 24 18 of 22 133 of 322 of 500 or more yards during Mack Brown’s tenure. Against Kansas UT racked up 590 total yards with 441 rushing and 149 passing. It was the highest output since the Texas A&M game in 2009 when they had 597 yards. The 590 total yards ranks as the 28th highest total in school history. In the season opener against Rice, Texas recorded 506 yards of total offense with 229 rushing and 277 passing. Texas • 2011 500-Yard Games 1. vs. Rice...............506 (229 rush, 277 pass) 2. vs. Kansas...........590 (441 rush, 149 pass) 441 RUSHING YARDS: The 441 rushing yards Texas had against Kansas were the most in a single game for the Longhorns since the 2004 season opener against North Texas when they pounded out 513 rushing yards. It was the first game with 400 or more rushing yards since 2005 when UT had 418 vs. Louisiana Lafayette. Since the 1980 season there have only been five games in which the Longhorns have rushed for 400 or more yards with four of those coming under Mack Brown. Texas • Last Five 400-Yard Rush Games 1. vs. Kansas (2011).................................. 441 2. 3. 4. 5. vs. UL-Lafayette (2005)....................... 418 vs. North Texas (2004)........................ 513 vs. Rice (1998)....................................... 434 vs. Baylor (1981)................................... 424 200 RUSHING YARDS: UT has rushed for 200 or more yards in four games this season. In the season opener against Rice, the Longhorns posted 229 yards on 48 attempts with five different players going for 25 or more yards. At UCLA, Texas racked up 284 rushing yards on 50 carries. Malcolm Brown recorded his first career 100-yard rushing game with 110 yards and one touchdown on 22 carries. The Longhorns tallied 231 yards on 49 attempts versus Oklahoma State. Brown again led the charge with a season-best 135 yards and two touchdowns on 19 rushes. UT had a season-high 441 rushing yards against Kansas with two players rushing for over 100 yards. Joe Bergeron had a team-high 136 yards on 13 attempts and Brown finished with 119 yards on OFFENSIVE EXPLOSION Texas’ 500-yard total offense games in school history 692_____vs. Rice_ _______________ 1998 676______at SMU_ _______________ 1969 673_____vs. North Texas_ ________ 2004 651______vs. TCU________________ 1969 645_____at Baylor_______________ 2005 639______vs. UTEP_______________ 2009 637_____at Kansas ______________ 2000 626______vs. Houston_____________ 1990 624______vs. Oklahoma State_______ 1996 617_____vs. Kansas _ ____________ 2005 617______vs. Rice_ _______________ 1977 614______at Houston_ ____________ 1995 611______vs. Kansas State__________ 1942 609______at SMU_ _______________ 1973 606_____at Oklahoma State_______ 2005 606_____vs. Kansas______________ 2001 603______vs. Texas A&M_ _________ 1970 601______at Houston_ ____________ 1987 600_____vs. Rice_ _______________ 2008 600_____vs. Oklahoma State_ _____ 2004 597______at Texas A&M_ _________ 2009 595______vs. Navy*_______________ 1969 594______vs. Texas A&M_ _________ 1996 592_____vs. Washington*_________ 2001 592______at Baylor_ ______________ 1994 591_____vs. Missouri_ ___________ 2008 591_____vs. La.-Lafayette_________ 2005 590_____vs. Kansas______________ 2011 589_____at Oklahoma State_______ 2007 586_____at Baylor_______________ 1999 585_____at Missouri_____________ 2005 584_____vs. Iowa State___________ 1998 581_____at Kansas______________ 2004 580_____vs. New Mexico State_____ 1998 579______at TCU_ _______________ 1980 578_____at Iowa State____________ 2003 575______at Texas Tech_ __________ 1996 569_____at North Carolina_ ______ 2002 566______at Rice_________________ 1993 562______vs. ULM________________ 2009 562______vs. Kansas_ _____________ 1997 560_____vs. Rice_ _______________ 2007 558_____vs. Stanford_ ___________ 1999 558______at SMU_ _______________ 1995 556_____vs. USC*_ ______________ 2005 553_____vs. Oklahoma___________ 1999 551_____vs. Texas Tech_ _________ 2007 549______at Texas Tech_ __________ 1992 545_____vs. Nebraska____________ 2007 544______at Wyoming_ ___________ 2009 537______vs. UCF________________ 2009 536_____vs. Texas A&M__________ 2008 534_____at Houston_____________ 2001 532______vs. Kansas______________ 2009 525_____vs. Rice_ _______________ 2004 522_____vs. Florida Atlantic_ _____ 2010 515_____vs. Tulane______________ 2003 514_____at Iowa State____________ 2007 512______vs. Baylor_______________ 1993 510_____vs. Oklahoma State_ _____ 2006 510______vs. Baylor_______________ 1996 508______at Colorado_____________ 1993 507_____vs. Baylor_ _____________ 2004 506_____vs. Rice_ _______________ 2011 504_____vs. Oklahoma State_ _____ 2008 504_____vs. Oklahoma State_ _____ 2000 504_____vs. Texas Tech_ _________ 1999 503_____vs. Florida Atlantic_ _____ 2008 503______vs. Nebraska_ ___________ 1996 502_____at Oklahoma State_______ 2003 28 carries. Fozzy Whittaker (68) and Marquise Goodwin (52) also went over 50 yards. Texas • 2011 200-Yard Rushing Games 1. vs. Rice................................................. 229 2. vs. UCLA.............................................. 284 3. vs. Oklahoma State............................. 231 4. vs. Kansas............................................. 441 TWO 100-YARD RUSHERS: Both Joe Bergeron and Malcolm Brown rushed for over 100 yards against Kansas, marking the 27th time in school history Texas has had two players rush for over 100 yards in a game. It was the first time since 2009 against Texas A&M when Colt McCoy (175) and Tre’ Newton (107) topped the 100-yard mark. It was the eighth time under coach Brown that two players have rushed for over 100 yards in the same game. This season Texas has had four individual 100-yard performances. Brown • Two Players With 100 Rush Yds 1. vs. Kansas........................................... 2011 Joe Bergeron (136) & Malcolm Brown (119) 2. at Texas A&M................................... 2009 Colt McCoy (175) & Tre’ Newton (107) 3. at Oklahoma State ........................... 2007 Jamaal Charles (180) & Colt McCoy (106) 4. at Rice................................................. 2006 Jamaal Charles (109) & Selvin Young (101) 5. at Kansas............................................ 2004 Cedric Benson (161) & Vince Young (114) 6. vs. Oklahoma State........................... 2004 Cedric Benson (141) & Vince Young (123) 7. at Texas Tech ................................... 2004 Cedric Benson (168) & Vince Young (158) 8. vs. Nebraska...................................... 2003 Cedric Benson (174) & Vince Young (163) Texas • 2011 100-Yard Rushing Games 1. Malcolm Brown vs. UCLA................ 110 2. Malcolm Brown vs. Oklahoma St.... 135 3. Malcolm Brown vs. Kansas............... 119 4. Joe Bergeron vs. Kansas..................... 136 RUNNING DOWN THE CLOCK: Texas has shown the ability to run the ball well when holding the lead entering the fourth quarter this season. The Longhorns outrushed UCLA, 84-1, and Kansas, 1401, in the fourth quarter. UT has rushed for 443 yards to their opponents 104 in the fourth quarter this season. UT also limited Oklahoma to just nine rushing yards in the final period despite trailing in the contest. TOP TIME OF POSSESSION: Texas leads the nation in time of possession, managing the clock to a tune of 35:33 per game. The Longhorns have won the time of possession battle in all seven games this season and have posted the top two season totals in the last two games with 44:07 against Kansas and 39:18 versus Oklahoma State. NCAA • 2011 Time of Possession 1. TEXAS......................................... 35:33 2. UCF................................................... 34:51 3. Temple.............................................. 34:31 4. Kansas State...................................... 34:25 5. Army.................................................. 34:23 6. Virginia Tech................................... 34:20 7. Rutgers.............................................. 34:19 8. LSU.................................................... 33:52 9. Nevada.............................................. 33:38 10. Georgia............................................. 33:23 2011 • Game-by Game Time of Possession Game__________ UT_ ______ Opp 1. vs. Rice_________ 33:01_ ______ 26:59 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. vs. BYU_________ at UCLA________ at Iowa State_____ vs. Oklahoma____ vs. Oklahoma St.__ vs. Kansas_______ 31:03_ ______ 28:57 32:47_ ______ 27:13 30:41_ ______ 29:19 37:54_ ______ 22:06 39:18_ ______ 20:42 44:07_ ______ 15:53 Texas • Over 40 Minutes Possession Since 1980 1. vs. Kansas (2011)............................. 44:07 2. vs. New Mexico State (2001).......... 40:18 3. vs. Texas Tech (1982)..................... 40:50 SCORING SPREE: This season the Longhorns are averaging 31.86 points per game and have scored at least 30 points in four of the seven games with 40 or more twice. Texas averaged 39.0 points per game in the last decade (2000-09), which ranked third nationally and second among BCS conference schools. The Horns averaged at least 35 ppg in nine of the 10 seasons, including three seasons of at least 40 ppg. In 2005, UT set a then-NCAA record with 652 total points and a school record by averaging 50.2 ppg. During the Mack Brown era, Texas has averaged at least 34 ppg in each of the 13 completed seasons. In contrast, Texas averaged at least 30 ppg only 12 times in the 45 seasons prior to Brown’s arrival. DID YOU KNOW? In 174 games under Mack Brown, Texas has won 98-of-111 (88%) when scoring first. SCORING OFFENSE LAST DECADE: Since 2000 Texas is averaging 37.4 points per game to rank third nationally during that time frame. Since the 2002 season Texas has scored 696 touchdowns to rank fourth most in the NCAA. Boise State leads the way with 811 touchdowns scored during that period. NCAA • Scoring Avg. Since 2000 1. Boise State......................................... 41.84 2. Oklahoma......................................... 37.64 3. TEXAS......................................... 37.44 4. Texas Tech........................................ 36.93 5. Oregon.............................................. 35.27 6. USC.................................................... 34.01 7. Florida............................................... 33.90 8. TCU................................................... 33.07 9. Oklahoma State................................ 32.99 10. Hawaii............................................... 32.41 NCAA • Touchdowns Scored Since 2002 1. Boise State............................................ 816 2. Oklahoma............................................ 721 3. Texas Tech........................................... 720 4. TEXAS............................................ 696 5. Florida.................................................. 653 6. Oregon................................................. 650 7. USC....................................................... 648 8. Oklahoma State................................... 611 9. Tulsa..................................................... 602 10. Fresno State........................................ 572 GETTING INVOLVED: Texas has rotated players in and out on offense all year with five different players throwing a touchdown pass, 11 players recording a rushing attempt including four with over 150 yards and 14 different players catching a pass including four with over 10 receptions. In all there have been 38 dif- ferent players who have taken an offensive snap for the Longhorns in 2011. PRODUCTIVE PERFORMERS: Since Mack Brown took over in 1998, Texas has produced some of its top offensive performers in school history. Here is a look at some of the top individual seasons put together under Brown. 2,000-Yard Rusher 1. Ricky Williams (1998).................... 2,124 1,000-Yard Receivers 1. Jordan Shipley (2009)..................... 1,292 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Kwame Cavil (1999)........................ 1,188 Roy Williams (2002)....................... 1,142 Quan Cosby (2008)......................... 1,123 Wane McGarity (1998)................... 1,087 Roy Williams (2003)....................... 1,079 Jordan Shipley (2008)..................... 1,060 3,000-Yard Passer 1. Colt McCoy (2008).......................... 3,859 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Major Applewhite (1999)............... 3,357 Colt McCoy (2009).......................... 3,328 Colt McCoy (2007).......................... 3,303 Chris Simms (2002)........................ 3,207 Vince Young (2005)........................ 3,036 1,000-Yard Rusher/Passer 1. Vince Young (2004)............. 1,079/1,849 2. Vince Young (2005)............. 1,050/3,036 NCAA Record 1. Comp %............Colt McCoy, .767, 2008 2. FR Pass TD.......... Colt McCoy, 29, 2006 UT School Records 1. Rush TD..........Ricky Williams, 28, 1998 2. Pass TD................ Colt McCoy, 32, 2008 3. Rec TD...............Roy Williams, 12, 2002 LONGHORNS OFFENSIVE PROGRESS REPORT RUSH OFFENSE PASS OFFENSE TOTAL OFFENSE SCORING OFFENSE YEAR YPG (NCAA) YPG (NCAA) YPG (NCAA) PPG (NCAA) 2011_______ 218.86 (17th)______ 195.71 (90th)_______414.57 (49th)_ ______31.86 (40th) 2010_______ 150.5 (66th)_ ______232.0 (50th)_ ______ 382.5 (58th)________ 23.8 (88th) 2009________147.6 (61st)_______ 273.6 (22nd)_______ 421.2 (29th)_________39.3 (3rd) 2008________167.5 (41st)________ 308.3 (7th)_________475.8 (9th)_ ________42.4 (5th) 2007_______ 207.5 (17th)_ ______255.4 (39th)_ ______ 462.9 (13th)________ 37.2 (14th) 2006_______ 162.6 (34th)_ ______228.9 (33rd)_ ______ 391.5 (22nd)_________35.9 (6th) 2005________ 274.9 (2nd)________237.2 (40th)_ _______512.1 (3rd)_ ________ 50.2 (1st) 2004________ 299.2 (2nd)_______ 165.3 (106th)________464.4 (7th)_ _______ 35.3 (12th) 2003________ 232.5 (8th)________206.6 (70th)_ ______ 439.2 (20th)_________41.0 (6th) 2002_______ 135.5 (74th)_ ______250.1 (34th)_ ______ 385.6 (48th)________ 33.8 (16th) 2001________162.3 (51st)________250.3 (34th)_ ______ 412.6 (38th)_________39.2 (6th) 2000_______ 145.5 (60th)_ ______293.2 (14th)_ ______ 438.6 (14th)_________38.6 (8th) 1999_______ 135.3 (73rd)_ ______274.8 (17th)_ ______ 410.1 (29th)________ 34.2 (13th) 1998________204.2 (21st)________266.5 (19th)_ ______ 470.6 (11th)________ 36.3 (11th) 1997_______ 201.5 (22nd)_ ______ 196.1 (69th)________ 397.5 (39th)________ 25.7 (55th) 1996________209.9 (24th)________250.5 (23rd)_ ______ 460.4 (11th)________ 36.0 (12th) 1995_______ 207.0 (22nd)_ ______ 226.3 (36th)________ 433.3 (17th)________ 31.7 (18th) 1994________136.9 (76th)________ 224.4 (30th)________ 361.3 (59th)________ 35.0 (58th) 1993________162.9 (50th)________231.6 (33rd)_ ______ 394.5 (41st)________ 37.7 (17th) bold italics denotes Mack Brown era 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. . ............................Limas Sweed, 12, 2006 Tot TD................. Colt McCoy, 45, 2008 Pass Yds..........Colt McCoy, 3,859, 2008 Catches.............Kwame Cavil, 100, 1999 Rec Yds....... Jordan Shipley, 1,292, 2009 Scoring..........Ricky Williams, 168, 1998 Tot Off.............Colt McCoy, 4,420, 2008 UT Freshman Records 1. Rush Yds.... Cedric Benson, 1,053, 2001 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Rush TD...........Cedric Benson, 12, 2001 . ......................... Cody Johnson, 12, 2008 Tot TD.............Cedric Benson, 13, 2001 Pass Yds..........Colt McCoy, 2,570, 2006 Pass TD................ Colt McCoy, 29, 2006 Tot Yds............Colt McCoy, 2,740, 2006 Catches.................. Mike Davis, 47, 2010 Rec Yds............ Roy Williams, 809, 2000 Rec TD.................Roy Williams, 8, 2000 OTHER BROWN NOTABLES: Here are some other notable individual performances under Brown. Colt McCoy is one of just five QBs in NCAA history to post four seasons with at least 2,500 yards passing. Cedric Benson became the fifth player in NCAA history to rush for over 1,000 yards in four straight seasons and finished his career ranked sixth on the NCAA all-time rushing list (5,540 yards). Vince Young became the first player in NCAA history to rush for 1,000 yards and pass for 3,000 yards in the same season. UT’S GAMES DECIDED BY 3 POINTS OR LESS UNDER MACK BROWN (Record: 20-4/83.3%) DATE OPPONENT RESULT 9/10/11_ ___vs. BYU____________ W, 17-16 12/5/09_ ___vs. #21 Nebraska_____ W, 13-12 10/17/09_ __vs. #20 Oklahoma____ W, 16-13 1/5/09_ ____vs. #10 Ohio State!_ __ W, 24-21 11/3/07_ ___at Oklahoma State____ W, 38-35 10/27/07_ __Nebraska___________ W, 28-25 9/15/07_ ___at UCF_____________ W, 35-32 12/30/06_ __vs. Iowa^___________ W, 26-24 11/11/06_ __at Kansas State_ ______ L, 42-45 10/21/06_ __at #17 Nebraska_ ____ W, 22-20 1/4/06_ ____vs. #1 USC*_________ W, 41-38 9/10/05_ ___at #4 Ohio State_ ____ W, 25-22 1/1/05_ ____vs. #12 Michigan*____ W, 38-37 9/11/04_ ___at Arkansas_________ W, 22-20 11/15/03_ __Texas Tech_ ________ W, 43-40 11/2/02_ ___at Nebraska_________ W, 27-24 10/19/02_ __at #17 Kansas State___ W, 17-14 10/5/02_ ___Oklahoma State______ W, 17-15 12/1/01_ ___vs. #9 Colorado@_ ____ L, 37-39 9/16/00_ ___at Stanford_ _________ L, 24-27 10/30/99_ __at Iowa State________ W, 44-41 8/28/99_ ___North Carolina State___ L, 20-23 11/27/98_ __#6 Texas A&M_ _____ W, 26-24 11/7/98_ ___Oklahoma State______ W, 37-34 @ Big 12 Championship * Rose Bowl, ^ Alamo Bowl ! Fiesta Bowl TEAM DOMINANCE VS KANSAS: Texas had complete dominance against Kansas in almost every offensive and defensive category. The Longhorns did not allow a single point which was the first time Kansas had been shut out since 2002 against Kansas State, a span of 109 games over 10 seasons. The Jayhawks only managed 46 yards of total offense on 36 plays. The 36 plays were the fewest by any team in Big 12 history. It was the first time Kansas had failed to reach 50 total yards since Kansas State held them to 48 in 1997. The Jayhawks only managed three first downs in the game, the lowest total since they had only four first downs against Nebraska in 1972. Texas held large advantages in first downs (353), rushing yards (441- (-2)), passing yards (149-48), total yards (590-46), total plays (93-36) and time of possession (44:0715:53). Kansas • UT Game-Season Comparison Category_ ____ Vs. UT_____ KU Avg. First Downs_______ 3______________ 21.9 Rush Yds_________ -2_ ___________ 188.0 Pass Yds_________ 48____________ 217.3 Total Yds_________ 46____________ 405.3 Total Plays_ ______ 36_____________ 73.4 Scoring_ _________ 0______________ 30.1 STINGY SCORING D: During the last four seasons at Texas, the Longhorn defense has held 38-of-45 opponents (84.4%) under their season scoring averages. Against Kansas the Longhorns did not allow a single point after the Jayhawks entered the game averaging 30.1 points per game. The Texas defense held Oklahoma State to over 13 points below its season average of 51.4 points per game. The Longhorns have limited 22 teams to 14 points or less in the last four years, including Rice in the 2011 season opener, Iowa State in the first Big 12 game of 2011 and Kansas this season. That matches last year’s total of three opponents scoring 14 points or less. In 2009, the Horns held 12-of-14 opponents under their scoring averages and didn’t allow an offensive TD in four of 14 games. Texas also led the Big 12 in scoring defense in 2008 allowing just 18.8 points per game. PRESSURE AT A PREMIUM: Texas is fourth in the nation in the nation in sacks with 460 since 1999, trailing only Virginia Tech (470), USC (467) and TCU (465). Since 2008, the pressure statistics have continued to go up. During that span, Texas’ 134 sacks rank first nationally and its 373 TFL also rank first nationally. This year the Longhorns have 10 sacks and 45 tackles for loss in the first seven games. Texas amassed 31 sacks and 93 TFL in 2010. In 2009, the Horns registered 46 sacks, 136 TFL, 143 pressures and 186 hits on opponents’ quarterbacks. The 46 sacks were the second-most nationally and the 136 TFL led the country. In 2008, Texas led the nation in sacks with 47, which was also the most in the Mack Brown era, bettering the 43-sack total in 2000. It marked the first time in school history that Texas led the country in sacks. In addition, the 2008 defense produced 99 TFL, 170 pressures and 129 hits on opponents’ quarterbacks. NCAA • Sacks Since 1999 1. Virginia Tech.................................. 470 2. 3. 4. 5. USC................................................. 467 TCU................................................. 465 TEXAS........................................... 460 California......................................... 442 DEFENSIVE DOMINANCE: After inheriting a program that ranked among the NCAA’s bottom half in total defense for the five seasons prior to his arrival, Mack Brown and his staff have reversed that trend. Texas has ranked among the nation’s top 25 in total defense in 10 of the last 13 seasons and was sixth in 2010. UT held Kansas to just 46 yards of total offense, including negative two rushing yards. Although Oklahoma State finished with 420 yards of total offense, it was 157 yards below its season average. OSU quarterback Brandon Weeden was held to a season-low 218 passing yards after averaging 376 passing yards per game prior to facing Texas. UT held Oklahoma to 91.2 yards below their average rushing total per game, allowing just 86 net rushing yards. At Iowa State, the Longhorns held the Cyclones to more than 15 points below its scoring average while limiting them to just 4-of-15 on third down conversions. At UCLA, Texas held the Bruins to 317 total yards, including 141 rushing yards to an offense that entered the game averaging 252.0 yards. Against BYU, the Longhorns allowed only 235 total OFFENSES BELOW AVERAGE BELOW THE AVERAGES: Texas currently ranks 13th in the nation in total defense (296.43 ypg), 30th in scoring defense (21.71 ppg), ninth in pass efficiency defense (100.70), 21st in pass defense (192.29 ypg) and 19th in rushing defense (104.14 ypg). This season the Texas defense has held six of the seven opponents below their rushing average, six of seven below their passing average, all seven below their total yards average and six of seven below the scoring average. For Rice the 2010 season averages were used for comparison totals. Opponents • Below Average Rice Category_ __ vs UT____ Avg._ ___ Diff. Rush Yds______130_ ____ 159.4_ ___ -29.4 Pass Yds______ 94______ 215.9_ __ -121.9 Total Yds______224_ ____ 375.3_ __ -151.3 Scoring_ _______9_ ______28.7_____ -19.7 Opponents • Below Average BYU Category_ __ vs UT____ Avg._ ___ Diff. Opponents • Below Average Oklahoma Category_ __ vs. UT____ Avg._ ___ Diff. Category_ __ vs. UT____ Avg._ ___ Diff. Opponents • Below Average Okla. State Category_ __ vs. UT____ Avg._ ___ Diff. Rush Yds______ 43_______91.0_____ -48.0 Pass Yds______192_ ____ 225.0_ ___ -33.0 Total Yds______235_ ____ 316.0_ ___ -81.0 Scoring_ ______ 16_______14.0_______ +2 Opponents • Below Average UCLA Rush Yds______141_ ____ 252.0_ __ -111.0 Pass Yds______176_ ____ 233.5_ ___ -57.5 Total Yds______317_ ____ 485.5_ __ -168.5 Scoring_ ______ 20_______30.5_____ -10.5 Opponents • Below Average Iowa State Category_ __ vs. UT____ Avg._ ___ Diff. Rush Yds______129_ ____ 145.3_ ___ -16.3 Pass Yds______251_ ____ 235.3_ ___ +15.7 Total Yds______380_ ____ 380.7_ ____ -0.7 Scoring_ ______ 14_______29.3_____ -15.3 Rush Yds______ 86______ 177.2_ ___ -91.2 Pass Yds______367_ ____ 377.8_ ___ -10.8 Total Yds______453_ ____ 555.0_ __ -112.0 Scoring_ ______ 55_______42.5_____ +12.5 Rush Yds______202_ ____ 146.2_ ___ +55.8 Pass Yds______218_ ____ 431.2_ __ -213.2 Total Yds______420_ ____ 577.4_ __ -157.4 Scoring_ ______ 38_______51.4_____ -13.4 Opponents • Below Average Kansas Category_ __ vs. UT____ Avg._ ___ Diff. Rush Yds______ -2______ 188.0_ __ -190.0 Pass Yds______ 48______ 217.3_ __ -169.3 Total Yds______ 46______ 405.3_ __ -359.3 Scoring_ _______0_ ______30.1_____ -30.1 yards, including only 43 on the ground. Only one player had double-figure yardage in rushing, which was 39 yards. The defense also limited Jake Heaps to 22-of-38 passing for 192 yards. In the season-opener against Rice, the Longhorns kept the Owls out of the end zone, marking the first time since the 2009 Big 12 Championship Game vs. Nebraska that Texas has held an opponent without a TD. Rice was limited to just 94 passing yards and 224 yards of total offense. FAST STARTS: Texas has only allowed one touchdown in the first quarter this season and just 22 first quarter points in the first seven games. They have not given up more than seven points in the first period in any of the seven contests. UT has outscored its opponents 47-22 in the first 15 minutes of games with zero points allowed at UCLA, at Iowa State and against Kansas. A large part of the success is due to forcing turnovers as the Longhorns have caused seven total turnovers in the first quarter this year, including three each versus UCLA and Iowa State. Texas had three interceptions in the first quarter against the Bruins and followed with two fumble recoveries and an interception against the Cyclones. OPENING POSSESSION: In four of the seven games this season, the Texas defense has held its opponent to three plays or less on the opening drive. Oklahoma State started slow with zero yards on three plays and were forced to punt. Iowa State went three-and-out with a total of negative four yards. Also this season the Longhorns stopped Rice to a three-and-out and negative nine yards on the opening drive and then at UCLA the Longhorns intercepted a pass on the third play from scrimmage. Kansas’ first possession was also just four plays for 22 yards and then a punt. Opponents • First Offensive Possessions Team______ Plays_ __ Yards___Result Rice___________3_ _______ 9_ ______ Punt BYU_ ________ 10_______ 45________ FG UCLA_________2_ _______ 8_ ______ INT Iowa State______3_ ______ -4_______ Punt Oklahoma______8_ ______ 62________ FG Oklahoma St._ __3_ _______ 0_ ______ Punt Kansas_________4_ ______ 22_______ Punt SCORELESS PERIODS: This season the Longhorns have held the opponents to zero points in 12 of the 28 quarters (43%). Last season UT held its opponents scoreless in 15 of the 48 quarters (31.3%). Texas recorded its first shutout since 2005 in a 43-0 win over Kansas. At Iowa State, UT held the Cyclones scoreless for the first three quarters of action. It marked the second straight game they did not allow a point in the first quarter. It was also the first time they had shut out an opponent in the first half since leading Baylor 40-0 at halftime in 2009. That is a streak of 21 games since the Longhorns did not allow a point in the opening 30 minutes of play. The 34-point differential for a first half at Iowa State was the most since that Baylor game. UT did not allow a point in the fourth quarter in any of the first three games and in five of the seven overall contests. SHUTDOWN QUARTERS: The Longhorns held Kansas to negative two yards in the second quarter and negative one yard in the third quarter this year to mark the seventh and eighth times the defense has held an opponent to zero or fewer yards in a quarter in the last four seasons. In the first quarters of Texas’ games against UCLA (minus-six) and Texas Tech (minus-four) last season, the defense held the opposition to a combined minus-10 yards. Texas also held Rice to zero yards in the third quarter last year. In 2009, it held UTEP to minus-seven in the first quarter and minus-one in the third. It then held Baylor to minus-20 in the second quarter. Also this season, Texas held BYU to just 17 yards in the decisive fourth quarter of its 17-16 win. The Longhorns only allowed 30 yards in the final period versus Oklahoma and 35 yards in the fourth quarter versus Oklahoma State, two of the nation’s top offensive teams. TAKEAWAYS: The Texas defense has caused 15 turnovers in the seven games this season with at least two in five contests. They have tallied seven interceptions and eight fumble recoveries. The seven interceptions are tied for 66th most while the eight fumble recoveries rank tied for 32nd in the country. UT has either scored points or ended the game after 13 of the 15 forced turnovers this season. Eleven caused turnovers have led to a combined 57 points for Texas (6 TD, 5 FG) in the seven games while UT also ran out the clock following takeaways against Rice and BYU. HAT TRICK OF PICKS: In the first quarter of this season’s game at UCLA, Texas intercepted three passes, including one each from Adrian Phillips, Carrington Byndom and Kenny Vaccaro. It marked the first time since 2007 that the Longhorns picked off three passes in a quarter when they did it at Baylor. Safety Marcus Griffin had two, including a 91-yard TD return, and CB Deon Beasley had one. ON THE DEFENSIVE Texas’ top 20 defensive efforts since 1944 Total Yards 37_______vs. Southwestern_____________1944 46______vs. Kansas________________ 2011 53_______vs. UTEP_________________ 2009 59_______vs. Colorado_ _______________1946 66_______vs. New Mexico______________1988 67______vs. Kansas _ ______________ 2001 82_______vs. Texas Tech_______________1947 82_______vs. Virginia_________________1977 85_______at Rice___________________ 1978 85_______at North Carolina_ ___________1952 86_______vs. Baylor_ _________________1979 97_______at Texas A&M_______________1955 102______vs. Baylor_ _________________1971 106______vs. Nebraska %_____________ 2009 109______vs. Rice_ _________________ 1981 112______vs. Arkansas ________________1952 119______at TCU_ ___________________1976 119______vs. LSU____________________1948 127______vs. Colorado_______________ 2009 127_____vs. Baylor_ _______________ 2002 130_____vs. North Texas_ __________ 2004 130______at Rice____________________1970 130______vs. SMU_ __________________1946 Rushing Yards (-76)_____vs. SMU_ __________________1952 (-56)_____vs. New Mexico______________1988 (-43)_____at TCU_ ___________________1980 (-37)_____vs. TCU____________________1977 (-36)_____at Rice____________________1978 (-33)_____at TCU_ ___________________1978 (-24)_ ___vs. Texas A&M____________ 2008 (-17)_____at Texas Tech______________ 2004 (-16)_ ___vs. Oklahoma_____________ 2009 (-14)_ ___at Texas Tech_____________ 2010 (-14)_____vs. Texas A&M_ _____________1968 (-14)_____vs. Navy @_ ________________1964 (-14)_____vs. Tennessee !_ _____________1951 (-13)_ ___at Texas Tech_____________ 2006 (-12)_ ___at Rice___________________ 2006 (-11)_ ___vs. Rice_ _________________ 2007 (-8)_ ____vs. Colorado_ _____________ 1946 (-7)______vs. Texas A&M_____________ 1998 (-6)_ ____vs. Texas Tech_____________ 2009 (-2)_ ____vs. Kansas________________ 2011 (-2)______vs. North Texas______________1983 (-2)______vs. SMU_ __________________1968 (-2)______at SMU____________________1967 Passing Yards 0________vs. Oklahoma_ ______________1981 3________vs. SMU_ __________________1980 5________vs. Air Force ^_______________1985 9________at Kansas State_____________ 2010 10_______at Arkansas_________________1987 10_______vs. North Carolina #__________1982 10_______vs. Oklahoma_ ______________1970 22_______vs. Rice____________________1951 23_______vs. Texas A&M_ _____________1990 25_______vs. Oklahoma_ ______________1982 25_______vs. Texas Tech_______________1979 25_______at Texas A&M_______________1975 26_______at Rice ____________________1997 27_______vs. UCLA_ ________________ 2010 27_______at Rice ___________________ 2003 27______vs. Rice_ _________________ 1999 28_______vs. Oklahoma_ ______________1972 30_______vs. Boston College__________ 1976 30_______vs. Oklahoma_ ____________ 1979 32_______vs. TCU____________________1947 Mack Brown era in BOLD @ 1964 Cotton Bowl ^ 1985 Bluebonnet Bowl % 2009 Big 12 Championship ! 1951 Cotton Bowl # 1982 Sun Bowl UT’S MACK BROWN ERA RECORDS Number of Quarters the Longhorns Have Shut Out Opponents: Year Shutouts/Total Quarters 1998 13/48 1999 20/56 2000 25/48 2001 29/48 2002 25/52 2003 22/52 2004 21/48 2005 26/52 2006 24/52 2007 15/52 2008 20/48 2009 28/56 2010 15/48 2011 12/28 Mack Brown era: 295/688; 42.9% FORCING TURNOVERS: Texas’ defense has forced 374 turnovers during the Mack Brown era (174 games/2.15 per game), while only giving up 307 turnovers for a plus-67 turnover margin. Overall, the Horns have averaged a plus-five turnover margin per season during Brown’s tenure. ers. In true road games over the last five seasons (22 games), Texas has allowed only 11 teams to reach 100 yards rushing and just four individual 100-yard rushers. Texas has held its opponent under 50 yards rushing 43 times during the Mack Brown era. GROUND PATROL: Mack Brown and his staff inherited a ground defense that had ranked no better than 64th nationally in the five seasons prior to their arrival. In 14 seasons at Texas, they have turned that around dramatically. The Horns have limited 69 of their last 133 opponents (51.9%) to fewer than 100 yards rushing and allowed just thirty-seven 100-yard rushers in the last 160 games (23.1%). The Horns have been ranked in the top six in rush defense in four of the last six seasons, including a No. 1 national ranking in 2009 (72.4 ypg). During that span (72 games), UT has held opponents to just 90.3 yards per game (6,500 yards on 2,253 carries) and just 2.89 yards per carry. In addition, at home over the last seven seasons (37 games), Texas has only allowed 13 teams to break the 100-yard plateau and has only allowed nine individual 100-yard rush- STOPPING THE RUN: The Longhorns currently rank 19th in the nation in rushing defense, giving up 104.14 ypg. The top game this season came against Kansas when the Longhorns held Kansas to negative two yards rushing on 20 carries. The Jayhawks averaged 188 rushing yards per game coming into the contest. KU had negative one rushing yard in the second quarter, minus nine rushing yards in the third quarter and just one yard in the fourth period. Texas held Oklahoma to 86 rushing yards, 91.2 below their season average. The Sooners had one run of 64 yards but the other 18 attempts went for just 22 net yards. Iowa State averaged just 3.4 yards per carry with 38 rushes for 129 yards. The top rusher for the Cyclones had 64 yards on 11 attempts. At UCLA, the Bruins rushed for 141 yards, however that was 111 yards below their season average of 252.0 LONGHORNS DEFENSIVE PROGRESS REPORT RUSH DEFENSE PASS EFFICIENCY TOTAL DEFENSE SCORING DEF. YEAR YPG (NCAA) RATING (NCAA) YPG (NCAA) PPG (NCAA) 2011_______ 104.14 (19th)________100.7 (9th)_ _______ 296.43 (13th)______21.71 (30th) 2010_______ 138.6 (44th)_ ______ 118.9 (36th)_________ 300.2 (6th)_______ 23.7 (49th) 2009_________72.4 (1st)_________ 100.5 (10th)_________ 251.9 (3rd)_______ 16.7 (12th) 2008________ 83.5 (3rd)_ _______ 124.2 (59th)_________ 342.9 (51st)_ _____ 18.7 (18th) 2007________ 93.4 (6th)_ _______ 127.5 (70th)_________371.2 (52nd)______ 25.3 (45th) 2006________ 61.2 (3rd)_ _______ 131.8 (75th)_________297.4 (22nd)______ 18.3 (26th) 2005_______ 130.9 (33rd)_ _______ 96.7 (4th)__________ 302.9 (10th)_ ______16.4 (8th) 2004_______ 107.4 (16th)_ ______ 114.3 (31st)_________320.1 (23rd)______ 17.9 (18th) 2003_______ 152.5 (58th)_ ______ 106.5 (18th)_________ 329.8 (25th)_ _____ 21.5 (32nd) 2002_______ 142.5 (47th)_ _______ 96.1 (7th)__________ 307.7 (16th)_ ______16.3 (8th) 2001________ 89.5 (6th)_ ________ 88.0 (4th)__________ 236.2 (1st)________13.7 (3rd) 2000________ 94.0 (12th)_________ 88.3 (1st)__________ 278.3 (7th)_______ 17.9 (11th) 1999_______ 105.7 (17th)_ ______ 101.6 (12th)_________ 286.7 (6th)_______ 20.6 (30th) 1998_______ 143.5 (45th)_ ______ 138.7 (92nd)_________ 364.4 (56th)_ _____ 29.6 (83rd) 1997_______ 241.5 (104th)_______ 132.7 (75th)_________ 399.2 (85th)_ _____ 33.3 (96th) 1996________203.4 (86th)________ 102.8 (27th)_________ 373.0 (65th)_ _____ 22.3 (44th) 1995________173.8 (67th)________ 108.7 (35th)_________ 366.3 (55th)_ _____ 18.9 (26th) 1994________171.4 (64th)________ 111.1 (35th)_________ 363.4 (55th)_ _____ 23.6 (52nd) 1993________194.4 (80th)________ 111.2 (27th)_________401.4 (82nd)______ 24.5 (55th) bold italics denotes Mack Brown era ypg entering the contest. RBs Johnathan Franklin and Derrick Coleman were both held well below their season averages with 58 and 47 yards, respectively. The defense held BYU to just 43 rushing yards on 23 attempts (1.9 ypc) with only one player gaining double-figure yardage, which was 39 yards by J.J. Di Luigi. The team total was minus-nine yards in the second quarter for a total of 15 yards in the first half, followed by just six yards in the decisive fourth quarter. GUARDING THE END ZONE: Texas’ defense has made it difficult for opponents to reach the end zone over the last 12 seasons. Since 2000, the Horns have allowed only 310 TDs in 148 games (2.1 TDs per game), which ranks fourth nationally. Miami has allowed the fewest TDs, giving up 280. Through seven games in 2011, the Horns’ defense has surrendered 13 TDs, including just five in the first four games with two at Iowa State, two at UCLA, and one against BYU, after holding Rice out of the end zone. UT did not give up a single point against Kansas in the first shutout since 2005. This season UT has only allowed one touchdown in the first quarter and have given up just 21 fourth quarter points. Last season the Longhorns held Texas Tech to 14 points, the fewest Texas Tech had scored in Lubbock in the series since 1984 (10) and the fewest overall in the series since 2001 (7). The defense held No. 5/4 Nebraska out of the end zone with the Huskers only score coming on a punt return. In 2009, the Horns’ defense allowed just 23 TDs on 185 possessions (12.4%). NCAA • Offensive Touchdowns Allowed Since 2000 1. Miami................................................... 281 2. Virginia Tech...................................... 288 3. Oklahoma............................................ 298 4. TEXAS............................................ 310 5. Florida State........................................ 322 SCORING DEFENSE: Texas’ defense has been a scoring machine since 1999. During that time, the defense has accounted for 286 points and scored in 41 of the 162 games (25.3%). It posted four TDs and a safety in 2009 for 30 points. The Horns’ defense has scored at least three TDs in 10 of the last 12 seasons, led by seven TDs scored in 2000. That defense tallied 46 points, which is the most over the 12-year stretch. The 2003 unit scored six TDs, while the 2006 unit scored five TDs. SHORT DRIVES: The Texas defense has prevented its opponents from moving the chains on 36.6 percent of their drives over the last nine seasons (136 games). During that time, UT forced 658 three-and-outs or better in 1,798 possessions. So far in 2011, that number stands at 42-of-95 (.442), which includes 8-of-11 against Kansas, 9-of-17 against Oklahoma State, 5-of-16 vs. Oklahoma, 4-of-14 at Iowa State, 5-of13 at UCLA and 7-of-12 against BYU, including all three possessions in the decisive fourth quarter. In 2010, Texas posted 41.2 percent (63-of-153) and was one of only five teams nationally to average at least five three-and-outs per game (5.25). In 2009, the Horns forced 77 three-andouts or better on 185 possessions (41.6%) and averaged 5.5 three-and-outs or better per game. BACK-TO-BACK SAFETIES: Texas has tallied a safety in back-to-back games against Oklahoma State and Kansas, marking the first time since 1982 that they have had two straight games with a safety. In 1982, the Longhorns did it against Texas A&M (Nov. 25) and Arkansas (Dec. 4). The last time UT posted two safeties in one season was 2004 against Arkansas and Baylor in a three-game span. This season then Longhorns had a safety against Oklahoma State when Alex Okafor caused the quarterback to step out of the back of the end zone. Keenan Robinson was awarded with the safety on the stop against Kansas. NON-OFFENSIVE SCORES: Since 1999, UT has scored 79 TDs via returns, turnovers and blocked kicks. The 79 scores during that stretch rank second nationally behind only Virginia Tech (82). Texas has three non-offensive scores this season with a blocked punt and two kickoff returns for a touchdown. The Longhorns tallied a non-offensive score in three straight games against Iowa State, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. The first of the season came at Iowa State when Mykkele Thompson blocked a punt and Josh Turner returned it 34 yards for a touchdown. It was the first blocked punt return for a touchdown since 2009 when Malcolm Williams recovered one in the end zone for a score at Missouri. The second was a 100yard kickoff return for a touchdown versus Oklahoma by Fozzy Whittaker. In his next game, Whittaker again returned a kickoff 100 yards for a score against Oklahoma State. The two kickoff returns are tied for the longest in school history, equaling the distance of Johnny “Lam” Jones’ 100-yard return against SMU in 1978. There have now been 16 kickoff returns for touchdowns in school history with nine of those coming during the Mack Brown era. SPECIAL TEAMS SUCCESS: The Texas special teams units have forced three turnovers and scored three touchdowns this season. Whittaker has two kickoff returns for touchdowns while Josh Turner returned a punt blocked by Mykkele Thompson 34 yards for a score. Tevin Jackson has recovered two fumbles on special teams. He fell on a ball that hit off an Oklahoma State player on a punt and also recovered a fumble forced by Quandre Diggs on a kickoff at Iowa State. The third special teams caused turnover came in the season opener against Rice when Adrian Phillips fell on a loose ball. The kicking game has also been a strong area for the Longhorns as Justin Tucker has made 10-of-11 field goals and all 27 of his PAT attempts. Tucker is also averaging 39.9 yards per punt and has seven touchbacks on kickoffs. QB TRIO: So far in 2011, the Longhorns have used a trio of quarterbacks in their 5-2 start. Against Rice, junior Garrett Gilbert went 13-of-23 for 239 yards and one TD with no INTs. Then against BYU, Gilbert started the game, however sophomore Case McCoy (7-of-8, 57 yards) and true freshman David Ash (2-3, 35 yards) entered the game and combined to complete 9-of-11 passes for 92 yards with Ash also rushing for 36 yards on nine carries and making one reception for 23 yards that came on the final possession to help seal the game. At UCLA, McCoy made the first start of his career and completed 12-of-15 passes for 168 yards and two TDs with no INTs. Ash also completed 3-of-3 passes for 31 yards. In the Iowa State game, both McCoy and Ash threw for over 100 yards passing, combining for 255 yards on 14-of-24 passing and two touchdowns. In Dallas against Oklahoma, McCoy and Ash combined to go 20-of-36 for 223 yards with one touchdown and two interceptions. Ash was the only QB to see playing time versus Oklahoma State and Kansas. FIRST START FOR ASH: David Ash became the first true freshman to start at quarterback for the Longhorns since 1999 when Chris Simms earned the starting nod in the regular season finale at Texas A&M NCAA LEADERS Non-offensive touchdowns since 1999 School__________1999____ 2000_____ 2001_____ 2002_____ 2003_ ____ 2004_ ____2005_ ____2006_____ 2007_____ 2008_____2009_ ___ 2010____ 2011__ Total Virginia Tech_ ____ 8________6_ _______7_ ______ 7________ 11_ ______ 6________ 7________ 5_______ 10________ 5_ ______ 4________5_ ______1_______ 82 TEXAS__________ 6________8_ _______6_ ______ 7________ 9________ 2________ 7________ 8________ 5________ 5_ ______11_ ______2_ _____ 3_______ 79 Kansas State_ _____ 9________5_ _______2_ ______ 12_______ 6________ 4________ 5________ 9________ 7________ 8_ ______ 5________3_ ______3_______ 78 Miami (FL)_______ 3_______ 13_______ 12_______ 5________ 9________ 10_ ______ 3________ 1________ 1________ 3_ ______ 4________4_ ______1_______ 69 Oklahoma________ 4________7_ _______6_ ______ 9________ 9________ 3________ 3________ 5________ 7________ 3_ ______ 4________3_ ______4_______ 67 Florida State______ 7________4_ _______5_ ______ 6________ 6________ 3________ 5________ 6________ 5________ 6_ ______ 5________2_ ______1_______ 61 Boise State________ 3________4_ _______3_ ______ 4________ 4________ 7________ 8________ 4________ 3________ 5_ ______ 6________7_ ______0_______ 58 California_ _______ 8________3_ _______1_ ______ 8________ 3________ 2________ 4________ 8________ 5________ 7_ ______ 3________4_ ______2_______ 58 Fresno State_ _____ 5________5_ _______3_ ______ 6________ 4________ 6________ 7________ 4________ 5________ 7_ ______ 1________1_ ______4_______ 58 Ohio State________ 1________8_ _______3_ ______ 3________ 5________ 6________ 6________ 5________ 4________ 4_ ______ 5________6_ ______1_______ 57 Nebraska_________ 7________7_ _______6_ ______ 7________ 4________ 2________ 4________ 0________ 3________ 4_ ______ 4________6_ ______1_______ 55 TEXAS 2011 HONORS Mack Brown s Texas Sports Hall of Fame Emmanuel Acho s AFCA Good Works Team s Lowe’s Senior CLASS Award finalist s National Scholar-Athlete Candidate s William V. Campbell Trophy semifinalist s Lott Trophy quarterfinalist s Butkus Award watch list Malcolm Brown s CFPA honorable mention Running Back of the Week (10/16) Mike Davis s Biletnikoff Award preseason watch list Quandre Diggs s CFPA Honorable Mention Defensive Back of the Week (10/30) Blake Gideon s Jim Thorpe Award preseason watch list s CFPA honorable mention for the Defensive Back of the Week (10/2) D.J. Grant s CFPA National Tight End Performer of the Week (9/19) Blaine Irby s Discover Orange Bowl/FWAA Courage Award finalist Jackson Jeffcoat s CFPA Honorable Mention Defensive Lineman of the Week (10/30) Alex Okafor s Ted Hendricks Defensive End of the Year Award watch list s CFPA Honorable Mention Defensive Lineman of the Week (10/30) Kheeston Randall s Bronko Nagurski Trophy watch list s Outland Trophy watch list s Lombardi Award watch list Keenan Robinson s Butkus Award semifinalist s Bednarik Award watch list s Bronko Nagurski Trophy watch list s Lombardi Award watch list Jaxon Shipley s CFPA Honorable Mention Wide Receiver of the Week (10/2) Justin Tucker s Lou Groza Award watch list s CFPA honorable mention Kickoff Specialist of the Week (10/16) Josh Turner s CFPA National Punt Returner of the Week (10/2) Fozzy Whittaker s CFPA Kickoff Returner of the Week (10/10, 10/16) in place of the ill Major Applewhite. In his starting debut, Ash threw for 139 yards on 22-of-40 passing with two interceptions. He also rushed for 21 yards on 15 attempts with a long of 23 yards. ASH TIES TRUE FRESHMAN RECORD: True freshman QB David Ash has thrown three touchdown passes this season to tie the record for most touchdown passes by a true freshman quarterback, matching the three by Ted Constanzo in 1975. Ash had the first two scoring tosses of his career at Iowa State with a 48-yard pass to Mike Davis and a 40-yard touchdown throw to Jaxon Shipley off a double reverse pass. Against Oklahoma he found Jaxon Shipley for a four-yard touchdown. Ash is the first true freshman quarterback at Texas to throw a touchdown pass since Garrett Gilbert threw two in the 2009 BCS National Championship game against Alabama. Ash is just the 10th true freshman quarterback in Texas history to throw a touchdown pass. Also of note, Shipley threw a touchdown pass earlier this season as a true freshman wide receiver. Texas • Season Passing TDs (True FR) 1. David Ash (2011)....................................3 Ted Constanzo (1975)..............................3 3. Sammy Ansley (1977)..............................2 Rick McIvor (1979)..................................2 Chris Simms (1999)..................................2 Jevan Snead (2006)..................................2 Garrett Gilbert (2009)...............................2 INTERCEPTION FREE: Sophomore quarterback Case McCoy has yet to throw an interception in his college career. In his first two seasons he has thrown 56 total passes without an interception. The school record for most consecutive passes without an interception is 106 held by Chance Mock from 2001-03. McCoy is 11 attempts shy of matching the 10th longest interception free streak in school history done by Chris Simms during the 2001-02 seasons. DAVIS DELIVERING: Sophomore WR Mike Davis, who is on the Biletnikoff Award Watch List, has picked up this season where his standout freshman year left off as he has recorded 27 catches for 418 yards and one touchdown. Davis recorded the third 100-yard receiving game of his career with a career-high 115 receiving yards in the 2011 opener against Rice. He scored his first touchdown of the year at Iowa State on a 48-yard grab and would finish with three receptions for 72 yards in the win. He tallied a season-high 10 receptions for 80 yards versus Oklahoma State. Against Oklahoma he posted six receptions for 70 yards. At UCLA, he made three receptions for 77 yards. As a true freshman in 2010, he set the UT freshman singleseason receptions record with 47, which was also second on the team in 2010. DOUBLE DIGIT RECEPTIONS: Davis recorded his second career game with at least 10 catches when he hauled in 10 passes for 80 yards against Oklahoma State. As a freshman last season he made 11 receptions for 109 yards at Kansas State. The 10 catches are the most by a Texas player in 2011. Shipley recorded nine catches against Oklahoma as the previous best. Davis has also shown an ability for big plays with two catches of over 50 yards this season, four of 40 or more yards and six of at least 20 yards. He is averaging 15.5 yards per reception. SHIPLEY WITH A FIRST: With his 36-yard TD reception in the third quarter against Rice, true freshman WR Jaxon Shipley became the first Longhorn rookie to catch a TD reception in a season-opener in program history. Shipley, the younger brother of UT’s all-time receptions leader Jordan Shipley (248, 2006-09), was a prep All-American, two-time first team allstate and three-time all-district performer at wide receiver for Brownwood High School. As a three-year starter, he tallied WEEKLY TEAM AWARDS Each week the Texas coaching staff honors the team’s top performers. PLAYER OF THE GAME Offense ate D Player 9/3____________________ Jaxon Shipley 9/10____________________ Jaxon Shipley 9/17_______________________D.J. Grant 10/1____________________ Jaxon Shipley 10/8__________________Fozzy Whittaker 10/15_________________ Malcolm Brown 10/29____________________Joe Bergeron Defense ate D Player 9/3_______________Carrington Byndom 9/10___________________ Ashton Dorsey 9/17___________________Kenny Vaccaro 10/1____________________ Blake Gideon 10/8_______________Carrington Byndom 10/15______________Carrington Byndom 10/29_________________ Jackson Jeffcoat Bevo Beast Most Productive Offensive Lineman ate D Player 9/3________________ Dominic Espinosa 9/10___________________Mason Walters 9/17_____________________ David Snow 10/1_____________________ David Snow 10/15____________________ David Snow 10/29____________________ David Snow 203 receptions for 3,444 yards and 43 TDs while recording eight special teams TDs. AMONG TOP FRESHMAN PERFORMANCES: Shipley has recorded two of the best receiving games in school history for a freshman at Texas. At Iowa State, he caught six passes for 141 yards and one touchdown. He recorded just the 13th 100-yard receiving game by a freshman at Texas. His 141 yards were the seventh-most and fifth-most by a true freshman. The six catches ranked tied for seventh-most by a freshman and tied for sixth-most by a true freshman. Against Oklahoma Shipley recorded nine receptions for 89 yards and one touchdown. The nine catches were tied for the secondmost by a Texas freshman matching B.J. Johnson’s nine grabs against Baylor in 2000. The record is 11 by Mike Davis last year at Kansas State. Texas • Receptions - Game (FR) 1. Mike Davis vs. KSU, 2010.................. 11 2. Jaxon Shipley, vs. OU, 2011................ 9 B.J. Johnson vs. Baylor, 2000................ 9 4. Mike Davis vs. ISU, 2010...................... 8 5. Mike Davis vs. Wyoming, 2010............ 7 Kwame Cavil vs. TT, 1997.................... 7 Jamel Thompson vs. TT, 1997............... 7 8. Jamaal Charles vs. Ohio St., 2005.......... 6 Limas Sweed vs. Kansas, 2004.............. 6 B.J. Johnson vs. TAMU, 2000............... 6 Roy Williams vs. ULL, 2000................. 6 Mike Davis vs. TT, 2010........................ 6 Jaxon Shipley vs. ISU, 2011................. 6 Texas • Receiving Yards - Game (FR) 1. B.J. Johnson vs. Texas A&M, 2000... 187 2. Malcolm Williams vs. TT, 2008........ 182 3. Roy Williams vs. Kansas, 2000......... 180 4. Roy Williams vs. OSU, 2000............. 175 5. B.J. Johnson vs. Baylor, 2000............ 162 6. Jamel Thompson vs. TT, 1997........... 143 7. Jaxon Shipley vs. ISU, 2011............. 141 SINGLE SEASON FRESHMAN LIST: Through seven games Shipley has tallied 33 receptions for 438 yards and three touchdowns. His totals have him ranked among the all-time single season Texas freshmen receiving leaders. The 33 catches are the fourth most and are seven shy of Roy Williams’ 40 receptions in 2000. The 438 yards rank fifth most, 20 shy of the 458 by Lovell Pinkney in 1992. Shipley moved into a tie for second on the school’s single season freshman receiving touchdowns chart with his third TD grab of the season against Oklahoma. The record is eight by Roy Williams in the 2000 season. Texas • Season Receptions (FR) 1. Mike Davis (2010) 2. B.J. Johnson (2000) 3. Roy Williams (2000) 4. Jaxon Shipley (2011) 5. Marquise Goodwin (2009) 47 41 40 33 30 Texas • Season Receiving Yards (FR) 1. Roy Williams (2000).......................... 809 2. B.J. Johnson (2000)............................ 698 3. Mike Davis (2010).............................. 478 4. Lovell Pinkney (1992)........................ 458 5. Jaxon Shipley (2011)........................ 438 6. Kwame Cavil (1997).......................... 316 7. Malcolm Williams (2008).................. 304 Texas • Season Rec. Touchdowns (FR) 1. Roy Williams (2000).............................. 8 2. Jaxon Shipley (2011)............................ 3 Malcolm Williams (2008)...................... 3 Artie Ellis (1992).................................... 3 B.J. Johnson (2000)................................ 3 Sloan Thomas (2000)............................. 3 Lovell Pinkney (1992)............................ 3 GOODWIN RETURNS: Junior WR Marquise Goodwin decided to return to football for the 2011 season and rejoined the team on Sept. 6. He has 10 receptions for 74 yards on the season. He has come on strong in the last two games with seven grabs for 59 yards. He had a season-high four catches for 36 yards against Kansas. He also had a career-high 52 rushing yards on five attempts versus the Jayhawks. Against Oklahoma State he caught three passes for 23 yards. He saw his first action against BYU, making two receptions for 10 yards, while also returning three kickoffs for 74 yards, including a long of 40. That performance came just days after competing in the long jump halfway around the world in Korea. At UCLA, he rushed three times for 33 yards with one reception for five yards, while returning three kickoffs for 65 yards. Goodwin had previously chosen to redshirt the 2011 campaign to focus on track and field, including competing at the 2011 World Championships (where he finished 13th) and training for the 2012 Summer Olympics. Goodwin has posted 138 catches for 1,755 yards and 17 TDs over his three-year career, but made a name for himself as a track and field standout. Over two seasons as a Longhorn in that sport, Goodwin won the 2011 U.S. Outdoor Long Jump National Title (27-4), three Big 12 Long Jump Championships and the 2010 NCAA Outdoor Long Jump Championship (26-9). He is also a twotime World Junior Champion (long jump, 4x100m). FIRST CATCH IN THREE YEARS: Senior tight end Blaine Irby hauled in his first reception in three seasons against Oklahoma and finished with two catches for 12 yards in the game. Irby had not caught a pass since 2008 when he tallied 10 receptions. He missed the 2009 and 2010 seasons with an injury. IRBY, GRANT RETURN: After almost three years away from game action, TE Blaine Irby returned to action in the seasonopener against Rice after a serious knee injury that kept him out since it occurred on Sept. 20, 2008, against the Owls in Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium. The Camarillo, Calif. native has played in 21 career games, starting four, and has recorded 14 receptions for 136 yards and two TDs. Fellow TE D.J. Grant also returned following his own serious knee injury that kept him out since it occurred in fall camp of 2009. After redshirting in 2008, Grant missed the 2009 and 2010 seasons due to the injury. Grant made his first catch of the season against BYU, converting a fourth down for five yards in the third quarter. He then erupted at UCLA with six catches for 77 yards and three TDs. Grant caught TD passes of 45 yards, two yards and five yards, including the five-yarder from WR Jaxon Shipley. For his efforts, Grant was named national tight end of the week by the College Football Performance Awards. He has nine catches for 114 yards and three touchdowns this year. RUNNING BACK ATTACK: The Texas running back corps has combined for 1,410 yards on 261 carries and 15 touchdowns in the first seven games. The group consists of Joe Bergeron, Malcolm Brown, Jeremy Hills, Cody Johnson, D.J. Monroe and Fozzy Whittaker. Brown, a true freshman, MACK BROWNUERA RECORDS 116-5____when outrushing an opponent 71-1_____when rushing for 200+ yards 102-20___when outpassing an opponent 103-24___when passing for 200+ yards 71-13____when passing for 250+ yards 106-5____when recording 400+ total yards 85-6_____when winning turnover margin 98-13____when scoring first 130-17___when scoring more than 20 points 114-8____when leading at halftime 21-24____when trailing at the half 3-4______when tied at the half 123-6____when leading after three quarters 11-28____when trailing after three quarters 4-2______when tied after three quarters ALL-PURPOSE SUCCESS Texas’ 700-yard all-purpose games in school history 834______at SMU_________________ 1973 818______at Missouri______________ 2005 812______at Houston_ _____________ 1987 810______vs. UTEP_______________ 2009 794______vs. Rice_________________ 1977 783______at Texas A&M_ _________ 2009 779______at Houston_ _____________ 1995 760______vs. Kansas_ _____________ 2005 753______vs. Rice_________________ 1993 751______vs. Oklahoma State_ _______ 1996 747______vs. TCU_________________ 1969 746_____vs. Iowa State___________ 1998 739_____vs. New Mexico State_____ 1998 736______vs. Houston______________ 1990 735______vs. La.-Lafayette__________ 2005 728______at SMU_________________ 1969 723______at Baylor_ ______________ 2005 722______vs. ULM________________ 2009 716______vs. Rice_________________ 1998 711______vs. Oklahoma____________ 1999 708______vs. Missouri_____________ 2008 707______vs. North Texas_ _________ 2004 706______at Wyoming_ ___________ 2009 701______vs. Kansas______________ 2009 Mack Brown era in bold // * bowl game leads the team with 635 yards on 131 carries. Brown also leads the team with five touchdowns. Johnson and Whittaker are tied for second on the team with four rushing touchdowns each. Whittaker, Monroe and Bergeron join Brown over the 100yard mark for the season, giving Texas four players with at least 150 rushing yards. Whittaker has 288 yards on 52 carries while Monroe leads the way with 7.8 yards per attempt, tallying 187 yards on just 24 attempts. Bergeron had a breakout game against Kansas with 136 yards on 13 carries and now has 223 yards on 31 attempts this year. Hills added six rushes for 31 yards against the Jayhawks. Last season, the trio of Tre’ Newton, Cody Johnson and Fozzy Whittaker combined for 1,099 rushing yards and 22 rushing TDs on 256 carries. Johnson, who moved to fullback this year, emerged to lead the team in rushing with 592 yards, and both he and Whittaker had at least 80 carries. GOAL LINE PRODUCER: Throughout his career at Texas, Cody Johnson has been a touchdown machine. His four rushing TDs this season give him 34 for his career and put him in seventh place on UT’s career list for rushing TDs. He scored twice in the second half against BYU, including the game winner in the fourth quarter, and finished off the UCLA game with a fourth-quarter TD. For his career, Johnson’s carried the ball 313 times for 1,311 yards (No. 30 on the UT career list) and 34 TDs, which puts him seventh on the UT career rushing TDs list. His 24 TDs through his freshman and sophomore seasons tied for second in school history with Cedric Benson, and trailed only Vince Young (25). Texas • Career Rushing Touchdowns 1. Ricky Williams (1995-98)......................72 2. Cedric Benson (2001-04).......................64 3. Earl Campbell (1974-77)........................40 4. Vince Young (2003-05)..........................37 5. Jamaal Charles (2005-07).......................36 Steve Worster (1968-70)........................36 7. Cody Johnson (2008-pres.)...................34 8. Jim Bertelsen (1969-71).........................33 JOHNSON AND GOAL: RB Cody Johnson has had five rushing attempts in four goal-to-go situations for the Longhorns this season and has produced a TD in four of the five possessions. Against Rice, Johnson got the ball with the Horns at the 4-yard line and took it to the 1 on his first attempt before putting it in on the next. He then had TD rushes of one yard and four yards against BYU before taking it in from seven yards out against UCLA. He’s been just as effective in thirddown situations, converting 6-of-7 into first downs or touchdowns. WHITTAKER’S SENIOR YEAR: In the 2011 season opener, Whittaker became the first Longhorn since 2008 to score both a rushing and receiving touchdown in the same game and the first since 2006 to do so in the same quarter. Overall, he accounted for 33 yards rushing on nine attempts and 55 yards receiving on four receptions. At UCLA, he again showed his versatility. As part of his eight carries for 64 yards and two TDs, Whittaker twice took direct snaps, including a 36-yard TD run in the fourth quarter. Whittaker tallied his fourth rushing touchdown of the season at Iowa State on a 16-yard rush and finished with 41 yards on seven carries. He is tied for the team lead with four rushing touchdowns in 2011. Whittaker was a bright spot for the Longhorns against Oklahoma with 43 rushing yards on six attempts and one reception for 15 yards to go with his 100-yard kickoff return for a touchdown. He had 158 all-purpose yards against the Sooners. Whittaker had a career-high 284 all-purpose yards against Oklahoma State with 36 rushing yards, negative four receiving yards and 252 kickoff return yards. The 284 all-purpose yards rank 10th on the school’s single game chart. He posted 112 all-purpose yards against Kansas with 68 rushing yards on nine attempts and three catches for 44 yards. Whittaker has played in 36 career games with 16 starts, rushing for 1,135 yards and 10 TDs on 249 carries (4.6 ypc), with 72 receptions for 448 yards and one TD. WILD FOZZY: There have been 17 times this season when RB Fozzy Whittaker has lined up behind center and taken direct snaps resulting in 123 rushing yards and three TDs. He had a seven-yard TD run against Rice, a 36-yarder at UCLA and a 16-yarder at Iowa State. He also took a direct snap that led to a double reverse pass that ended with a 40-yard touchdown pass from David Ash to Jaxon Shipley against the Cyclones. He had five direct snaps in the Oklahoma State game that resulted in five carries for 32 yards. He had four rushes for 16 yards against Kansas. VERSATILE FOZZY: After scoring on a kickoff return against No. 3/1 Oklahoma, Fozzy Whittaker became the fifth player in UT history to score a rushing, receiving and kickoff/punt return touchdown in the same season, joining James Saxton (1960), Johnny ‘Lam’ Jones (1978), Mike Adams (1992) and Victor Ike (2000). He also became the 10th player to do so in a career. He has seven total touchdowns this year with four rushing, one receiving and two on kickoff returns. LEADING THE NATION: Whittaker is leading the nation in kickoff return average at 46.5 yards per return. He has eight kickoff returns for 372 yards and two touchdowns this season. Each of his two touchdowns went for 100 yards. He is averaging 9.5 more yards per return than Tyler Lockett of Kansas State who ranks second with 37.0 yards per return. Whittaker, Lockett, Taveon Rogers of New Mexico State, George Atkinson III of Notre Dame and Justin Gilbert of Oklahoma State are the only five players in the country with two kickoff returns for touchdowns this season. NCAA • Kickoff Return Leaders 1. Fozzy Whittaker, Texas.....................46.50 2. Tyler Lockett, Kansas State..............37.00 3. John Evans, Western Ky...................34.91 4. Donte Harden, Ohio..........................33.90 5. Ameer Abdullah, Nebraska...............31.71 KICKOFF RETURN RECORDS: Whittaker has two 100-yard kickoff returns for touchdowns this season. He joins D.J. Monroe (2009) as the only two players in school history with two kickoff returns for scores in one season and for a career. Whittaker is the only player in school history to have kickoff return touchdowns in back-to-back games. The 100-yard returns tie for the longest in school history with Johnny “Lam” Jones’ return of 100 yards against SMU in 1978. Whittaker also set single game kickoff return records for total yards and average per return against Oklahoma State with six returns for 252 yards, an average of 42 yards per return. The 252 yards broke the previous record of 159 by Quan Cosby against Texas A&M in 2007. The 42-yard average also broke Cosby’s record from the Texas A&M game in 2007 when he averaged 39.8 yards per return. Whittaker has just eight career kickoff returns for 372 yards, an average of 46.5 yards per return. ALL-PURPOSE YARDS: Whittaker has set career highs for all-purpose yards twice this season. He recorded the 10th highest all-purpose yards total in school history against Oklahoma State with 284 total yards including 252 kickoff return yards, 36 rushing yards and negative four receiving yards. The previous week he tallied 158 total yards with 100 kickoff return yards, 43 rushing yards and 15 receiving yards. He now has 789 all-purpose yards for the season, an average of 112.7 per game. BROWN CONTRIBUTES EARLY: Freshman RB Malcolm Brown has added to Texas’ running game this season, leading the team in rushing in each of the first six games. He has tallied 635 yards on 131 carries with five touchdowns. In the 2011 season opener against Rice, he recorded a team-high 86 yards on 16 carries. It was the best performance to open a career by a UT running back since Jamaal Charles ran for 135 yards on 14 carries in 2005. He followed that by leading the Horns in rushing with 68 yards on 14 carries (4.3 ypc) against BYU. At UCLA, Brown broke the century mark for the first time in his career with 110 yards and one TD on 22 carries (5.0 ypc). His 16-yard TD run gave the Longhorns a 21-0 lead in the second quarter. At Iowa State he had a team-high 63 yards on 15 attempts. He followed that with a team-high 54 yards on 17 attempts against Oklahoma. He notched his second 100-yard game of the season against Oklahoma State with 135 yards and two touchdowns on 19 attempts. He followed that game up with 119 yards and two touchdowns on 28 rushes against Kansas. Overall, his 90.71 ypg is the most among true freshmen in the NCAA and is fourth most for any freshman in the country. Texas • Single Season FR Rushing Yards NCAA • Freshman Rushing Leaders BROWN AMONG TEXAS GREATS: With his 635 yards and five touchdowns, Brown has put himself among the names of the top Texas freshman running backs of all-time. Here is how his numbers compare to Cedric Benson, Vince Young, Ricky Williams, Earl Campbell and Jamaal Charles. 1. Giovani Bernard, N. Carolina..........107.22 2. Lyle McCombs, Connecticut...........103.63 3. Jawon Chisholm, Akron....................94.13 4. Malcolm Brown, Texas*..................90.71 5. Anthon Samuel, Bowling Green*.....88.00 6. Isaiah Crowell, Georgia*...................86.13 * True Freshman 100-YARD GAMES: Malcolm Brown has recorded three 100-yard rushing games this season to rank tied for third for most 100-yard games by a Texas freshman. Overall there have been 46 total 100-yard rushing games by freshmen in school history. He has two straight 100-yard games and is one of only six players at Texas to post back-to-back 100-yard rushing games as freshmen joining Cedric Benson (5 straight), Earl Campbell, Vince Young, Ricky Williams and Edwin Simmons. He tallied 119 yards and two touchdowns on 28 carries against Kansas after recording 135 yards and two touchdowns on 19 carries against Oklahoma State. The 135 yards are tied for the 13th most in a single game by a UT freshman. His first 100-yard game came at UCLA when he recorded 110 yards and one touchdown on 22 attempts. Texas • Freshman 100-Yard Rush Games 1. Cedric Benson (2001)...............................5 2. Earl Campbell (1974)...............................4 3. Malcolm Brown (2011)...........................3 Jamaal Charles (2005)..............................3 Vince Young (2003).................................3 Ricky Williams (1995).............................3 BROWN IN RECORD BOOKS: Malcolm Brown is off to a great start to his career at Texas with 635 rushing yards in his first seven games. He has become just the 13th freshman in school history to rush for at least 500 yards in a season and now ranks eighth on the single season freshman list after passing four players last week. He is 82 yards away from Charles Hunter in seventh place. 1. Cedric Benson (2001)........................1,053 2. Vince Young (2003).............................998 3. Ricky Williams (1995).........................990 4. Earl Campbell (1974)...........................928 5. Jamaal Charles (2005)..........................878 6. Adrian Walker (1989)...........................814 7. Charles Hunter (1985)..........................717 8. Malcolm Brown (2011).......................635 9. Johnny “Lam” Jones (1976).................624 10. Graylon Wyatt (1974).........................590 Texas • Freshman Through 7 Games - Yds 1. Malcolm Brown (2011).......................635 2. Jamaal Charles (2005)..........................610 3. Earl Campbell (1974)...........................600 4. Ricky Williams (1995).........................480 5. Vince Young (2003).............................449 6. Cedric Benson (2001)...........................417 Texas • Freshman Through 7 Games - TD 1. Vince Young (2003).................................6 Ricky Williams (1995).............................6 Jamaal Charles (2005)..............................6 4. Malcolm Brown (2011)...........................5 Cedric Benson (2001)...............................5 6. Earl Campbell (1974)...............................4 BROWN YARDS AFTER CONTACT: Freshman RB Malcolm Brown has shown the ability to earn yards after contact. Through seven games, 267 of his 635 yards (42.0%) have come after contact. His powerful running has also helped him surge into the defensive backfield. Of his 131 carries, only 15 have been for a loss or no gain and those have been for a total of only minus-22 yards. BERGERON’S BIG DAY: True freshman Joe Bergeron had just 87 yards on 18 carries in the first six games of the year but against Kansas he got his opportunity and made the most of it. The first-year player racked up a team-high 136 yards on just 13 carries and scored the first two touchdowns of his career on runs of four and 35 yards. His 136 yards rank as the 14th most in a single game by a Texas freshman. RECENT O-LINE SUCCESS: The Texas offensive line has been one of the nation’s steadiest units over the past five seasons and that has been reflected in their presence in the NFL. The pipeline over the last five years began with OT Jonathan Scott, who was taken in the fifth round of the 2006 NFL Draft by the Detroit Lions and is now playing with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Then, in the 2007 draft, the Horns had two players, OL Justin Blalock and OG Kasey Studdard, picked. Blalock was selected in the second round by the Atlanta Falcons and has started all 65 games of his professional career, while Studdard was taken in the sixth round by the Houston Texans. In addition, C Lyle Sendlein signed with the Arizona Cardinals as a free agent and has become the starter, including all 20 games of the Cardinals’ 2008 run to the Super Bowl. Then, in 2008, the Horns dealt with the departure of two seniors from 2007 in OT Tony Hills, a first-team All-America selection who was drafted in the fourth round by the Pittsburgh Steelers, and C Dallas Griffin, who won the Draddy Trophy and was an honorable mention All-Big 12 selection. OL Kyle Hix and OG Michael Huey were the latest to join the group as they signed as free agents with the New England Patriots and San Diego Chargers, respectively. EXPERIENCED FRONT: Despite losing three starters from last year’s offensive line, the 2011 line features two seniors and a pair of sophomores that all have valuable game experience. Gone from 2010 are LT Kyle Hix, LG Michael Huey and RT Britt Mitchell. The four returners have appeared in 122 games. Senior OT Tray Allen, who missed the 2010 season due to a foot injury, has seen action in 38 games working at both tackle and guard. Senior C/OG David Snow has played in all 46 games of his career including 26 starts and earned UT’s Bevo Beast Award against UCLA, Iowa State, Oklahoma State and Kansas. He started at center in all 12 games during the 2010 season. Sophomore Mason Walters has recorded 19 starts, including every game during 2010 and earned the Bevo Beast Award with 17 knockdowns against BYU. Sophomore Trey Hopkins has played in 19 career games with 11 starts, including the first seven of the season at right tackle, while redshirt freshman Dominic Espinosa has established himself at the center position and has started the first seven games of 2011. MANNING THE MIDDLE: The defensive tackles unit has been a major reason why Texas’ rush defense has ranked in the top six nationally in four of the last five seasons. The Horns led the nation in rush defense in 2009 allowing just 72.4 ypg, and finished third in 2008 (83.5 ypg), sixth in ’07 (93.4 ypg) and third in ’06 (61.2 ypg). Of the group manning the middle over the last four seasons, four have gone on to the NFL. DTs Frank Okam and Derek Lokey combined to play in 83 games, while making 60 starts during their four-year careers that included ’06 and ’07. Okam, who was a third-team All-American in ’07 before being drafted in the fifth round by the Houston Texans, finished his career with 160 tackles, 10 sacks, 28 TFL, 12 PBD, one forced fumble and five fumble recoveries. Lokey garnered firstteam All-Big 12 honors in ’07 and earned a spot on the Kansas City Chiefs’ practice squad during the 2008 season. He finished his career with 101 tackles, three sacks, 18 TFL, three PBD and a fumble recovery. Roy Miller played a major role on all three defenses prior to being drafted in the third round of the 2009 NFL Draft by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Miller finished his career with 138 tackles, 10 sacks, 25 TFL, 44 pressures, six PBD, a forced fumble and a fumble recovery. Lamarr Houston was a second-round draft pick of the Oakland Raiders in the 2010 draft. Houston played in 50 career games, starting 33, at defensive tackle (21) and defensive end (12) and notched 170 tackles, 15 sacks, 43 TFL, 65 pressures, 13 PBD, two fumble recoveries and a forced fumble during his career. CLOGGING THE INSIDE: Senior Kheeston Randall, who is on the Lombardi Award and Outland Trophy watch lists has led the defensive tackles group the past two seasons. Through seven games this season, Randall has 12 tackles, seven pressures and a PBU, while helping anchor a run defense that is allowing just 104.14 ypg, including negative two yards against Kansas and 43 yards against BYU. It also held UCLA over 100 yards below its season average entering the game and Oklahoma to 86 yards. Randall has played in 41 career games, including all 12 games in 2010 where he recorded 39 tackles, including 13 TFL, one sack, eight pressures, three PBU and two blocked kicks. END TO END: Junior Alex Okafor and sophomore Jackson Jeffcoat have started together at the end positions for the first seven games to open the 2011 season. Okafor now has 15 starts in 33 career games during which he has totaled 74 tackles (32 solo), 13 TFL, 4.5 sacks, four forced fumbles and one fumble recov- ery. Against Kansas he finished with four tackles, two tackles for loss, one sack and two forced fumbles. He recorded five tackles, two tackles for loss and one sack against Oklahoma State. In the Iowa State game he had five tackles, one TFL, one fumble recovery and one pressure. He followed with three tackles, including one for loss and one pressure against Oklahoma. Against Rice, he notched two tackles with one TFL. He followed that with two tackles, one PBU and two pressures against BYU. At UCLA, he posted one tackle, one PBU and one pressure. Jeffcoat, who was honorable mention Big 12 Defensive Freshman of the Year in 2010, made his ninth start in 15 career games against Kansas. Against the Jayhawks he tallied five tackles, three tackles for loss, two pressures and one sack. He posted a career high six tackles to go along with one pressure at UCLA. Versus OU he posted two TFL and four total tackles. He notched four tackles, one tackle for loss and one pass breakup against Oklahoma State. He has recorded 42 career tackles with 13 TFL, 3.5 sacks and one fumble recovery. SENIOR BACKERS: Seniors Emmanuel Acho and Keenan Robinson gained valuable experience during the 2010 season as the starting linebackers, following the loss of Roddrick Muckelroy to the NFL. Last season, they combined for 200 tackles with Robinson leading the team (130) and Acho ranking second (87). They also combined for 20 TFL, five sacks, three fumble recoveries, three forced fumbles, three INTs, eight PBU and five pressures. They are supported this season by sophomore Jordan Hicks. DEFENSIVE LEADER: Acho, who was a quarterfinalist for the William V. Campbell Trophy and is up for the 2011 ACADEMIC ALL-BIG 12 Total selections from 2006-10 (first team selections in parenthesis) 1. TEXAS_________________ 110 (76) 2. Nebraska_ __________________ 100 (67) 3. Texas Tech___________________ 71 (46) 4. Kansas_ _____________________ 70 (48) Baylor_______________________ 70 (42) 6. Missouri_____________________ 64 (36) 7. Oklahoma_ __________________ 57 (29) 8. Colorado_ ___________________ 53 (32) 9. Oklahoma State_______________ 52 (28) 10.Kansas State__________________ 45 (29) 11.Texas A&M__________________ 46 (28) 12.Iowa State___________________ 44 (25) Lott IMPACT Trophy, leads the team in several defensive categories including tackles (60), tackles for loss (8.0), sacks (2.0) and pressures (10). He opened the 2011 season with a team-high 10 tackles (three solo) and registered one pressure against Rice. He recorded his secondstraight double-figures tackling game and once again led the team with 13 against BYU to go along with one TFL, one PBU and one pressure, and followed that with his third by posting 10 tackles, one sack, two TFL, one PBU and three pressures at UCLA. He tied for the team lead with 10 tackles at Iowa State with two tackles for loss and one sack in the game. He also led the team with 10 tackles against Oklahoma. In the Oklahoma State game, he posted five tackles with two of them going for a loss. For his career, Acho has posted 207 tackles (120 solo), seven sacks, 29.5 TFL, 18 pressures, two INTs (one TD return), nine PBU, six forced fumbles and three fumble recoveries in 42 games (20 starts). DOUBLE DIGIT TACKLES: Acho has seven career double digit tackle performances, including five games this season. He posted a season-best 13 tackles against BYU while recording 10 stops against Rice, UCLA, Iowa State and Oklahoma. In the Oklahoma game, he reached 200 tackles for his career. Last season he had a career-high 17 tackles against Oklahoma and 10 against Baylor. CALLING THE SHOTS: Robinson, who is a semifinalist for the Butkus Award, Bednarik Award, Nagurski Trophy and Lombardi Award watch lists, now has 48 tackles, one tackle for loss, three pass breakups, seven quarterback pressures and two caused fumbles. He recorded eight tackles (two solo) in the 2011 season opener against Rice. He added five tackles (four solo), one TFL, two PBU and two pressures against BYU. At UCLA, he posted nine tackles (six solo), one PBU and three pressures. At Iowa State, Robinson forced a fumble to go along with five tackles. He carded eight stops against Oklahoma and seven versus Oklahoma State. He led the team with six tackles against Kansas while forcing a fumble and getting a safety. For his career, Robinson has posted 259 tackles (145 solo), 4.5 sacks, 16 TFL, two INTs, two fumble recoveries, three forced fumbles, eight pressures and 10 PBU in 45 games (33 starts). 19 TACKLES: With his 19-tackle game against No. 8 Oklahoma last season, LB Keenan Robinson became the third player in the Mack Brown era to reach that mark, joining S Michael Griffin (25, at Texas A&M, 2005) and S Ahmad Brooks (22, vs. Colorado, Big 12 Championship, 2001). GAINING EXPERIENCE: Second-year linebacker Jordan Hicks made his first career start against Rice and tallied five tackles (four solo) and two PBU. In his second start, Hicks recorded the second double-digit tackle game of his career with 11 against BYU to go along with one PBU and one pressure before adding five tackles at UCLA. He also had three tackles at Iowa State and five against Oklahoma State. Against Kansas he posted four tackles, including one for a loss. FAMILIAR FACES: Despite the loss of Chykie Brown, Curtis Brown and Aaron Williams to the NFL, the Longhorns returned a talented secondary this season, led by senior S Blake Gideon who has started all 46 games of his career. Gideon is joined by senior Christian Scott, junior Kenny Vaccaro and sophomores Carrington Byndom and Adrian Phillips. Overall the five returners have combined to play in 143 games with 81 starts. The group has combined for 15 career INTs. VETERAN IN SECONDARY: Blake Gideon, who is on the Thorpe Award watch list, has started all 46 games the Longhorns have played since arriving at Texas as a true freshman in 2008. He opened 2011 with two tackles against Rice and added three against BYU. At UCLA, he posted eight tackles, one fumble recovery and two PBU. He was the top defensive player for UT at Iowa State with eight tackles (seven solo), one TFL, one sack and one interception. Versus Oklahoma he was second on the team with eight tackles. He added four stops against Oklahoma State. For his career, Gideon has tallied 228 tackles (139 solo), seven TFL, eight pressures, nine INTs, 18 PBU, two sacks, two forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries and one blocked punt. VERSATILE DEFENDER: Kenny Vaccaro, who has seen action in all 32 games of his career on defense or special teams, including 12 starts, opened the 2011 season with seven tackles (five solo) against Rice. He added five tackles, one DID YOU KNOW? Since Duane Akina arrived at Texas in 2001, 11 of his 12 cornerbacks have gone on to play in the NFL. Ten are currently active, while the other, Rod Babers, played for two years with the Detroit Lions. The group includes three first-round draft picks (Quentin Jammer, 2002; Michael Huff, 2006; Aaron Ross, 2007), two Thorpe Award winners (Michael Huff, 2006; Aaron Ross, 2007), a Thorpe Award finalist (Quentin Jammer, 2001), a Super Bowl Champion (Aaron Ross, 2007) and a Pro Bowler (Nathan Vasher, 2006). Most recently, three from the 2010 season who all shared time at starter were signed by the NFL, led by Aaron Williams who was the 34th pick of the 2011 draft. Player Year Started Quentin Jammer (Chargers)_ ______ 2001 Rod Babers (Lions)____________ 2001, ’02 Michael Huff (Raiders)_ __________ 2002 Nathan Vasher (Bears)_ _______ 2002, ’03 Cedric Griffin (Vikings)____ 2003, ’04, ’05 Tarell Brown (49ers)_ _____ 2004, ’05, ’06 Aaron Ross (Giants)______________ 2006 Brandon Foster (Colts)____________ 2007 Aaron Williams (Bills)____________ 2011 Chykie Brown (Ravens)___________ 2011 Curtis Brown (Steelers)_ __________ 2011 PBU and a career-high three pressures against BYU. At UCLA, he set a career high with 13 tackles to go with an INT and a pressure. In the Iowa State game, he notched six tackles, 1.5 TFL, one sack and one pressure. In the Oklahoma game, he had two pass breakups, five tackles and one tackle for loss. He also had two pass breakups to go with five tackles versus Oklahoma State. For his career, Vaccaro has posted 119 tackles (83 solo), two interceptions, 6.5 TFL, one sack, two forced fumbles, 15 PBU and five pressures. BYNDOM UP TO CHALLENGE: Carrington Byndom has gone one-on-one with some of the top receivers in college football this season and has produced for the Longhorns with a team-high 11 pass breakups and one interception. He currently ranks tied for ninth in the country and second in the Big 12 in passes defended. His 11 pass breakups are tied for 10th most nationally. In two games against pass offenses which ranked in the top 10 of the NCAA, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, he came away with six pass breakups including two against the Sooners and four against the Cowboys. He also had two PBUs against Kansas with the Jayhawks only throwing the ball 16 times. Byndom has been named the team’s Defensive Player of the Week after three of the seven games. YOUNG DBS: The DB trio of sophomores Carrington Byndom and Adrian Phillips and freshman Quandre Diggs have combined for 81 tackles, nine tackles for loss, five interceptions, 20 pass breakups, five caused fumbles and one fumble recovery this season. Phillips tallied five tackles (two solo) and a first-quarter fumble recovery against Rice and added three tackles, one INT and one TFL against BYU before posting eight tackles (seven solo), one INT, one forced fumble and one TFL at UCLA. Phillips has seen action in 18 games on defense and on special teams over his career. Overall, he has tallied 38 tackles (26 solo), two INTs, four PBU, two TFL, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery. Byndom tied his career-high with five tackles (three solo), two TFL and one PBU in the opener. He proceeded to break that mark with eight tackles against BYU, including one TFL. He again had five tackles at UCLA with his first career interception and one PBU. At Iowa State he recorded five tackles and two PBU. He set a career high with four pass breakups against Oklahoma State. He added one tackle and two pass breakups against Kansas. Byndom has seen action in 19 games on defense and special teams and recorded a total of 51 tackles (40 solo), four TFL, 12 PBU, one INT, one forced fumble and one blocked punt. In his first game as a Longhorn, true freshman Diggs collected three tackles (one solo). Against BYU, he matched those three tackles, but collected his first career INT and forced fumble, to go along with two PBU before adding two tackles and a PBU at UCLA. He recorded his second forced fumble of the year on a kickoff coverage at Iowa State to go with four tackles and 0.5 tackles for loss. In the Kansas game he intercepted his second pass of the season, had one PBU, one tackle for loss and three tackles. The younger brother of Texas’ All-American DB Quentin Jammer (1997-98; 2000-01), Diggs was a prep All-American, two-time all-state and four-time all-district selection at multiple positions at Angleton High School. He was a four-year starter who finished his career with 237 tackles, 19 TFL, six sacks, 10 INTs, 52 PBUs, 11 forced fumbles, four fumble recoveries, seven blocked kicks and returned four INTs and three blocked kicks for TDs. In addi- tion, freshmen Josh Turner, Sheroid Evans, Mykkele Thompson and Leroy Scott have all seen action. Thompson blocked a punt at Iowa State that Turner returned 34 yards for a touchdown. BREWSTER FORCED TO GIVE UP FOOTBALL: Junior S Nolan Brewster has been forced to give up football due to a history of post-traumatic migraines and concussions over his college and high school careers, he announced on Sept. 26. A 2009 second-team Academic All-Big 12 selection, Brewster played in 30 career games, posting 35 tackles, an INT, two TFL, two PBU and a pressure. He redshirted in 2010 due to a shoulder injury, but played in 14 games and recorded 24 tackles, two TFL, an INT, a pressure and a PBU for the Longhorns squad that played for the National Championship in 2009. Brewster played in all 13 games as a true freshman for UT’s 2008 Fiesta Bowl Championship squad. BLOCK THAT KICK: The Texas special teams have been just that since Mack Brown took over in 1998. Since then, Texas has blocked 75 kicks (45 punts/17 FGs/13 PATs), an average of 5.4 per season. That is 50 more than the 25 recorded in the 13-year span prior to Brown’s arrival. UT has blocked the second-most kicks in the nation since 2002 with 53 behind Fresno St. (61). At Iowa State, Texas got its first blocked kick of 2011 when Mykkele Thompson blocked a punt in the second quarter. The ball was picked up by Josh Turner, who took it 34 yards for a touchdown, marking the first punt block return for a touchdown since 2009 when Malcolm Williams fell on a blocked punt in the end zone for a score at Missouri. Last year, the Horns blocked five punts with two of them being returned for TDs. Since Brown arrived, the Horns have had players set or equal UT records for career blocked kicks, single-season blocked kicks, career blocked punts and single-season blocked punts. NCAA • Blocked Kicks Since 2002 1. Fresno State............................................62 2. Texas......................................................53 3. Louisiana-Lafayette................................46 4. Florida.....................................................45 5. Kentucky.................................................38 RETURN GAME: Texas has improved its kick returning and defending on kickoffs and punts since Mack Brown arrived. Since 1998, the Horns have produced 11 of UT’s 28 all-time punt returns for TDs and nine of the 16 kickoff returns for TDs. In contrast, UT has only given up four punt return TDs during the Mack Brown era. It had been 101 games (Kansas State, 1999) since Texas had given up a punt return for a TD before Kansas State returned one in 2007. That is a major difference from the 12 years prior to Brown’s arrival. During that time, Texas scored on four punt returns, while its opponents scored on seven returns. When Brown arrived in 1998, Texas hadn’t returned a kickoff for a score since 1978. Then, in the 2000 Holiday Bowl, Victor Ike returned a kickoff 93 yards for a TD, snapping the 265-game streak. Selvin Young added a 97-yard kickoff return TD against New Mexico State in 2003, Quan Cosby posted a 91-yard kickoff return TD at Texas A&M in 2007 and Jordan Shipley notched a 96-yard kickoff return TD versus Oklahoma in 2008. D.J. Monroe returned two kickoffs for TDs in 2009, an 89-yarder against ULM and a 91-yarder versus UTEP. He is the first player in Texas history to notch two kickoff return TDs in a career. Marquise Goodwin added a 95-yard kickoff return for a TD at Texas A&M. This season Fozzy Whittaker matched a school record with a 100-yard kickoff return for a touchdown against Oklahoma and then in the next game had another 100-yard return for a touchdown versus Oklahoma State. With a punt return for a TD against Colorado, Jordan Shipley tied UT’s all-time mark for career punt returns with three. When you add in his 96-yard kickoff return for a TD against Oklahoma in 2008, Shipley set the UT career record for return TDs with four. Texas’ five return TDs (two punt/three kickoff) in 2009 are a school record. The Longhorns had two apiece in 1973, 2002, ’05, ’06 and ’08. PLACE-KICKS: Since 1998, five of Texas’ most accurate field goal kickers (Kris Stockton, 1996, ‘98-2000; Dusty Mangum, 2001-04; Ryan Bailey, 200609; Hunter Lawrence, 2006-09; and Justin Tucker, 2008-current) have come during Brown’s time at Texas. Lawrence (34-of-39/.872), Tucker (33-of-38/.868), Bailey (25-of-30/.833) and Stockton (58of-77/.753) rank first, second, third and fourth, respectively, on UT’s field-goal accuracy chart (min. 25 attempts). Senior PK Justin Tucker, who is on the Lou Groza watch list, joined the group after qualifying with his 25th attempt against Florida Atlantic in 2010. His 23 made FGs were sixth nationally in 2010 and were second on the UT single-season list, trailing only Hunter Lawrence (24, 2009), while his .852 percentage ranked third on the singleseason list. Mangum (121), Lawrence (76), Bailey (60) and Stockton (57) also are at the top of UT’s consecutive made extra points list. In 2011 Tucker has made 10-of11 (.909) field goal attempts, including his first five of the season. He had three made field goals at Iowa State, marking the third time in his career he has made three or more in a game. LONG FIELD GOAL: Tucker booted a career-long 52-yard field goal to end the first half against Kansas. It ties for the 22nd longest field goal in school history as he is now 2-of-3 in his career at a distance of 50 or more yards. He also made a 51-yard attempt on his first career try last year against Rice. On the season he has made 10-of-11 (.909) field goals and is currently on a streak of five straight makes. FIRST KICK: Senior PK Justin Tucker’s 51-yard field goal attempt at the beginning of the second quarter against Rice in 2010 was the third-longest initial field goal attempt ever by a UT player (Mark Schultis - 55, at Texas Tech (1994); Kris Stockton - 52, vs. New Mexico State (1998)). All three field goal attempts were made. Tucker joined Schultis (55, at Texas Tech - 1994); Stockton (52, vs. New Mexico State - 1998) and Phil Dawson (50, at Pittsburgh - 1994) to become the fourth UT player to make a field goal of 50 or more yards on his first collegiate attempt. Tucker also became the first UT player to start his career with two field goal attempts of 50 or more yards. For the season, Tucker went 23-of-27 on FG and 27-of-27 on PAT. He earned Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Week honors against No. 5/4 Nebraska when he punted four times for an average of 47.2 yards, including kicks of 67 and 55 yards with two stopping inside the Huskers’ 5-yard line. He also made FGs of 27 and 28 yards and two extra points for a total of eight points. He matched the UT single-game high for made FGs with five against No. 25/24 Baylor, including one from 49 yards out. LONGHORNS IN THE NFL: Texas is not only one of the best at the collegiate level, but since Mack Brown’s arrival, it has become one of the premier sources of talent for the NFL as well. Currently, Texas has 47 players on NFL rosters, which is the most nationally. Of the 47 Longhorns, 36 have started games during their NFL careers, including 29 who started as rookies. Among that group of 47, nine have earned a spot in a Pro Bowl and eight have participated in a Super Bowl with five coming away as Super Bowl Champions. The group also represents a wide array of positions with at least three NFL Longhorns in each position group except for special teams positions. The defensive backs (10), defensive line (9) and offensive line (7) lead the way and are all in the Top Five in the nation. In addition, Texas leads the Big 12 in Top 10 picks, Top 30 picks, Top 100 picks and Top 150 picks in the NFL Draft over the last 10 years. UT also has the most Top Five and second-most Top 10 picks in the NFL Draft since 1999. The Horns’ eight Top 10 picks are one behind USC and their six Top Five picks lead LSU, which has four. LONGHORNS IN THE NFL Most active players in the NFL nationally 1. TEXAS_________________________ 47 2. Miami, Fla.______________________ 45 3. USC___________________________ 42 4. LSU_ __________________________ 39 5. Georgia_ _______________________ 35 Most active players in the NFL among Big 12 schools 1. TEXAS_________________________ 47 2. Oklahoma_ _____________________ 24 3. Texas A&M_____________________ 16 4. Kansas State_____________________ 15 5. Missouri________________________ 14 NFL Longhorns by Position Position_ ______ Number_______ Ranking* Defensive Line______ 9___________ 1st (1st) Offensive Line______ 7_______ T-3rd (T-1st) Defensive Backs_ ___10_________T-2nd (1st) Running Backs_ ____ 4_________ T-3rd (1st) Wide Receivers_____ 3______ T-10th (T-1st) Linebackers________ 5______ T-10th (T-1st) Quarterbacks_______ 2______ T-4th (T-2nd) Tight Ends_________ 3_________ T-6th (1st) * Big 12 rank in () Top 10 NFL Draft Picks (last 13 years) SCHOOL_ ________________ Draft Picks 1. USC__________________________ 9 2. TEXAS________________________ 8 3. Miami (Fla.)____________________ 6 Top Five NFL Draft Picks (last 13 years) SCHOOL_ ________________ Draft Picks 1. TEXAS________________________ 6 2. LSU_ _________________________ 4 3. Four tied_ _____________________ 3 Over the last 10 years, Texas has had more NFL draft picks by round than any other school in the Big 12 6 Top 10 Draft Picks 12 Top 30 Draft Picks 29 Top 100 Draft Picks 37 Top 150 Draft Picks TEXAS BY THE NUMBERS -2: The Longhorns held Kansas to negative two yards rushing for the 51: game, 190 yards below their season average. Of Mack Brown’s 65 NFL draft picks over the last 14 years, 51 have been drafted in the first four rounds. played this season. is the most in the nation. the Mack Brown era. 8: Eight Longhorns have been drafted in the Top 10 of the NFL Draft another kickoff 100-yards for a touchdown the following week against Oklahoma State. They were the 15th and 16th kickoff returns for a touchdown in school history. 9: Texas has produced the top nine scoring seasons in UT history 104, including 11 days over 105. 0: Texas has allowed zero points in 12 of the 28 quarters they have 65: Texas has won 65 road and neutral site games since 1999, which 3: Texas intercepted three passes during the first quarter at UCLA, 71: Texas has won 71-of-83 home games (85.5%) under Mack Brown the first time it’s done so in one quarter since Baylor in 2007. 75: Texas has blocked 75 kicks in 14 seasons under Mack Brown, an 3: The Longhorns have had three defensive backs chosen in the same average of about six per season. draft twice in the last five years. 79: UT has scored 79 non-offensive TDs since 1999, which is second 3: The Longhorns have three BCS Bowl victories in four appearances, nationally. Its 11 in 2009 ranked first nationally. including winning the 2005 National Championship. 88: Texas’ 88 appearances in the BCS standings are the most of any 4: Texas has had at least four players drafted for six straight years and team in the country. eight of the last nine. 93: Texas’ 93 wins in Big 12 play are the most of any team in the 5: Five different Texas players have thrown a touchdown pass this conference. Oklahoma is second with 90. season. 99: Texas has won 99 season openers in 119 years of football. 6: Texas leads the nation with six Top Five NFL Draft picks over the last nine years. 100: Texas has won 100-of-111 games when scoring first during the Mack Brown era. 8: The Longhorns have eight players on national awards watch lists. 100: Fozzy Whittaker matched a school record with a 100-yard 8: Texas has only lost back-to-back games nine times in 14 years in kickoff return for a touchdown against Oklahoma. He then returned in the last nine years, the second-most of any school in the nation. during the Mack Brown era, including a school record 652 points in 2005. 10: Texas is the only school in the nation to both start and finish the season ranked in the Top 15 in 10 of the last 11 seasons. 10: Texas is the only team in the nation to win at least 10 games in nine of the last 10 seasons. That includes a streak of nine straight, making it just the second team in college football history to accomplish the feat. 104: The average temperature during Texas’ 2011 fall camp was 110: Over the last five years, Texas has the most Academic All-Big 12 selections of any team in the conference with 110. 118: Texas is 118-5 in the Mack Brown era when outrushing an opponent. 129: backs have gone on to play in the NFL. The Longhorns have spent 129 weeks in The AP Top 10 and have finished the year ranked in the Top 10 seven times during the Mack Brown era. Texas, which had not finished a year ranked among the Top 10 since 1983 prior to Brown’s arrival, spent just 16 weeks rated among the nation’s Top 10 in the 12 years before Brown took over. three points or less. Texas. the most of the Mack Brown era and the most in the nation in 2011. history, trailing only Darrell Royal’s 167. The 138 wins are also the most in the nation since 1998. 11: Since Duane Akina arrived in 2001, 11 of his 12 starting corner- 17: Texas has won 17 of its last 18 games (.944) that were decided by 135: Mack Brown has played 135 true freshmen in his 14 years at 18: Texas played 18 true freshmen in its season opener against Rice, 138: Mack Brown’s 138 wins at Texas are the second-most in school 21: 21 different offensive players took snaps on the opening possession of the Kansas game. 141: Jaxon Shipley’s 141 receiving yards against Iowa State are the which was the second-most in the nation behind Boise State. 162: Texas was ranked in The AP Top 25 for a Longhorn record 162 39: Texas averaged 39 points per game in the last decade (2000-09), 46: Fozzy Whittaker leads the nation with an average of 46.5 yards per kickoff return this season. 47: There are currently 47 Longhorns active in the NFL, the most nationally. 49: In 13 seasons under Mack Brown, Texas’ offense has produced 49 games with 500 or more total yards of offense. UT had accomplished that only 23 times in the 105 years prior to his arrival. fifth most by a true freshman in Texas history. straight weeks until the streak was snapped Oct. 3, 2010. It had been the longest active streak in the nation. 190: Until Oct. 3, 2010, the Longhorns were ranked among the USA Today Coaches Poll Top 25 for 190 straight weeks dating back to late in the 1998 season. The 190 consecutive weeks led the nation and was the longest UT streak in any poll. 200: Mack Brown is just the 19th coach, who has spent at least 10 years at an FBS program, to win 200 games. He has 225 career victories. 51: The Longhorns have won 51-of-59 games against teams from the 281: During Mack Brown’s 14 years at Texas, the Horns have set state of Texas under Mack Brown. 281 school records. Texas has produced 51 All-Americans, including eight unanimous selections, during Mack Brown’s tenure. for at least 500 yards in one season. 51: 500: Malcolm Brown is one of 13 freshmen in Texas history to rush TEXAS’ NATIONAL RANKINGS SINCE 1998 2011 AP USA Today Preseason________________ NR_________________ 24th 9/5______________________ 24th_________________ 21st 9/11_____________________23rd_________________ 21st 9/18_____________________ 19th_________________ 18th 9/25_____________________ 17th_________________ 17th 10/2_____________________ 11th_________________ 10th 10/9____________________ 22nd_ _______________ 21st 10/16____________________ NR_________________ NR 10/23____________________ NR_________________ NR 10/30____________________ NR__________________25 2010 AP USA Today Preseason________________ 5th_ ________________ 4th 9/7______________________ 5th_ ________________ 4th 9/12_____________________ 6th_ ________________ 4th 9/19_____________________ 7th_ ________________ 4th 9/26_____________________ 21st_________________ 16th 10/3_____________________ NR_________________ NR 10/10____________________ NR_________________ NR 10/17_____________________22___________________22 10/24____________________ NR_________________ NR 10/31____________________ NR_________________ NR 11/7_____________________ NR_________________ NR 11/14____________________ NR_________________ NR 11/23____________________ NR_________________ NR 11/28____________________ NR_________________ NR 12/5_____________________ NR_________________ NR 1/11_____________________ NR_________________ NR 2009 AP USA Today Preseason________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 9/8______________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 9/13_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 9/20_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 9/27_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 10/4_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 10/11____________________ 3rd_________________ 2nd 10/18____________________ 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5th_ ________________ 7th 11/9_____________________ 4th_ ________________ 5th 11/16____________________ 4th_ ________________ 4th 11/23____________________ 4th_ ________________ 4th 11/30____________________ 3rd_________________ 3rd 12/7_____________________ 3rd_________________ 3rd 1/9______________________ 4th_ ________________ 3rd 2007 AP USA Today Preseason________________ 4th_ ________________ 4th 9/4______________________ 7th_ ________________ 7th 9/9______________________ 6th_ ________________ 6th 9/16_____________________ 7th_ ________________ 6th 9/23_____________________ 7th_ ________________ 7th 9/30_____________________ 19th_________________ 16th 10/7_____________________23rd________________ 22nd 10/14____________________ 19th_________________ 18th 10/21____________________ 17th_________________ 16th 10/28____________________ 14th_________________ 12th 11/4_____________________ 15th_________________ 14th 11/11____________________ 12th_________________ 11th 11/18____________________ 13th_________________ 11th 11/25____________________ 17th_________________ 18th 12/2_____________________ 17th_________________ 17th 1/8______________________ 10th_________________ 10th 2006 AP USA Today Preseason________________ 3rd_________________ 2nd 9/5______________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 9/10_____________________ 8th_ ________________ 8th 9/17_____________________ 7th_ ________________ 8th 9/24_____________________ 7th_ ________________ 7th 10/1_____________________ 7th_ ________________ 7th 10/8_____________________ 6th_ ________________ 6th 10/15____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 10/22____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 10/29____________________ 4th_ ________________ 4th 11/5_____________________ 4th_ ________________ 3rd 11/12____________________ 11th_________________ 11th 11/19____________________ 11th_________________ 10th 11/26____________________ 17th_________________ 17th 12/3_____________________ 18th_________________ 16th 1/9______________________ 13th_________________ 13th 2005 AP USA Today Preseason________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 9/4______________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 9/11_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 9/18_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 9/25_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 10/2_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 10/9_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 10/16____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 10/23____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 10/30____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 11/6_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 11/13____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 11/20____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 11/27____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 12/4_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 1/5______________________ 1st_ ________________ 1st 2004 AP USA Today/ESPN Preseason________________ 7th_ ________________ 8th 8/30_____________________ N/A_________________ N/A 9/5-9/7___________________ 7th_ ________________ 8th 9/12_____________________ 6th_ ________________ 6th 9/19_____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 9/26_____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 10/3_____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 10/10____________________ 9th_ ________________ 11th 10/17____________________ 8th_ ________________ 9th 10/24____________________ 8th_ ________________ 9th 10/31____________________ 6th_ ________________ 7th 11/7_____________________ 6th_ ________________ 7th 11/14____________________ 6th_ ________________ 5th 11/21____________________ 6th_ ________________ 5th 11/28____________________ 6th_ ________________ 5th 12/5_____________________ 6th_ ________________ 5th 1/5______________________ 5th_ ________________ 4th 2003 AP USA Today/ESPN Preseason________________ 5th_ ________________ 4th 8/31_____________________ 6th_ ________________ 4th 9/7______________________ 6th_ ________________ 5th 9/14_____________________ 13th_________________ 13th 9/21_____________________ 14th_________________ 13th 9/28_____________________ 13th_________________ 13th 10/5_____________________ 11th_________________ 11th 10/12____________________ 20th_________________ 20th 10/19____________________ 19th_________________ 18th 10/26____________________ 16th_________________ 16th 11/2_____________________ 11th_________________ 11th 11/9_____________________ 6th_ ________________ 7th 11/16____________________ 7th_ ________________ 7th 11/23____________________ 6th_ ________________ 6th 12/1_____________________ 6th_ ________________ 6th 12/8_____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 1/4______________________ 12th_________________ 11th 2002 AP USA Today/ESPN Preseason________________ 4th_ ________________ 2nd 8/26_____________________ 3rd_________________ 2nd 9/2______________________ 3rd_________________ 2nd 9/8______________________ 3rd_________________ 2nd 9/15_____________________ 3rd_________________ 2nd 9/22_____________________ 3rd_________________ 2nd 9/29_____________________ 2nd_________________ 2nd 10/6_____________________ 3rd_________________ 2nd 10/13____________________ 8th_ ________________ 8th 10/20____________________ 7th_ ________________ 7th 10/27____________________ 7th_ ________________ 7th 11/3_____________________ 4th_ ________________ 4th 11/10____________________ 4th_ ________________ 3rd 11/17____________________ 11th_________________ 11th 11/24____________________ 10th_________________ 10th 12/1_____________________ 9th_ ________________ 8th 12/8_____________________ 9th_ ________________ 9th 1/4______________________ 6th_ ________________ 7th 2001 AP USA Today/ESPN Preseason________________ 5th_ ________________ 6th 8/27_____________________ 5th_ ________________ 6th 9/2______________________ 4th_ ________________ 6th 9/9______________________ 5th_ ________________ 6th 9/16_____________________ NP_ ________________ NP 9/23_____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 9/29_____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 10/7_____________________ 11th_________________ 11th 10/14____________________ 9th_ ________________ 8th 10/21____________________ 7th_ ________________ 7th 10/28____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 11/4_____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 11/11____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 11/18____________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 11/25____________________ 3rd_________________ 3rd 12/2_____________________ 10th_________________ 10th 12/9_____________________ 9th_ ________________ 9th 1/5______________________ 5th_ ________________ 5th 2000 AP USA Today/ESPN Preseason________________ 7th_ ________________ 8th 8/27_____________________ 7th_ ________________ 8th 9/3______________________ 6th_ ________________ 8th 9/10_____________________ 5th_ ________________ 6th 9/17_____________________ 15th_________________ 15th 9/24_____________________ 13th_________________ 13th 10/1_____________________ 11th_________________ 10th 10/8_____________________ 25th_________________23rd 10/15____________________ NR_________________ 21st 10/22___________________ 22nd_ _______________20th 10/29____________________ 20th_________________ 20th 11/5_____________________ 19th_________________ 19th 11/12____________________ 14th_________________ 15th 11/19____________________ 12th_________________ 13th 11/26____________________ 12th_________________ 12th 12/3_____________________ 12th_________________ 12th 1/4______________________ 12th_________________ 12th 1999 AP USA Today/ESPN Preseason________________ 17th_________________ 16th 8/29_____________________ NR_______________ No Poll 9/5______________________ NR_________________23rd 9/12_____________________ NR_________________23rd 9/19____________________ 22nd_ _______________ 20th 9/26_____________________ 15th_________________ 15th 10/3_____________________23rd_________________23rd 10/10____________________ 19th_________________ 19th 10/17____________________ 18th_________________ 18th 10/24____________________ 12th_________________ 12th 10/31____________________ 11th_________________ 11th 11/7_____________________ 10th_________________ 10th 11/14____________________ 6th_ ________________ 6th 11/21____________________ 7th_ ________________ 5th 11/28____________________ 12th_________________ 12th 12/5_____________________ 14th_________________ 18th 1/4______________________ 21st_________________23rd 1998____________________ AP_ __________ USA Today/ESPN Preseason________________ NR_ ______________ No Poll 8/30___________________ No Poll______________ No Poll 9/6______________________23rd________________ 22nd 9/13_____________________ NR_ ________________ NR 9/20_____________________ NR_ ________________ NR 9/27_____________________ NR_ ________________ NR 10/4_____________________ NR_ ________________ NR 10/11____________________ NR_ ________________ NR 10/18____________________ NR_ ________________ NR 10/25____________________ NR_ ________________ NR 11/1_____________________20th_________________23rd 11/8_____________________18th_________________ 21st 11/15____________________25th_________________ NR 11/22____________________ NR_ ________________ NR 11/29____________________20th_________________23rd 12/6_____________________20th_________________ 23r 1/4______________________15th_________________ 16th UT’S 2011 NCAA RANKINGS TEAM Category Rank Avg./G Rushing Offense_____________ 17 (3)____ 218.86 Passing Offense______________ 90 (9)____ 195.71 Total Offense________________ 49 (7)____ 414.57 Scoring Offense______________ 40 (7)_____ 31.86 Rushing Defense_____________ 19 (2)____ 103.25 Pass Efficiency Defense_________ 9 (1)_____ 100.7 Total Defense_ ______________ 13 (1)____ 296.43 Scoring Defense_ ____________ 30 (2)_____ 21.71 Net Punting_________________ 39 (5)______ 39.6 Punt Returns________________ 56 (4)______ 8.44 Kickoff Returns______________ 10 (2)_____ 25.93 Turnover Margin_ ___________ 57 (6)_______ 0.0 Pass Defense________________ 21 (1)____ 192.29 Passing Efficiency____________ 66 (8)____ 129.01 Note: Big 12 ranking in ( ) INDIVIDUAL Foswhitt Whittaker, Sr., RB • Kickoff Returns_ ______________1 (1)____ 46.5 • All-Purpose Running__________ 80 (9)__ 112.71 Justin Tucker, Sr., PK/P • Field Goals__________________ 27 (4)____ 1.43 • Punting_____________________ 66 (7)___ 39.93 • Scoring_________________ T-51 (T-7)____ 8.14 Quandre Diggs, Fr., CB • Interceptions_____________ T-80 (T-7)____ 0.29 Adrian Phillips, So., CB • Interceptions_______________ T-66 (6)____ 0.33 Malcolm Brown, Fr. RB • Rushing_____________________ 40 (6)___ 90.71 Mike Davis, So., WR • Receiving Yards_ __________ T-98 (13)___ 59.71 Jaxon Shipley, Fr., WR • Receiving Yards_ ____________ 84 (11)___ 62.57 • Receptions_ _______________T80 (11)____ 4.71 MEDIA INFORMATION UT ON THE INTERNET MackBrown-TexasFootball.com twitter.com/MBTexasFootball Up-to-date information on UT’s football team is available on the Internet 24 hours a day at MackBrown-TexasFootball.com. Quotes from press conferences, releases, feature stories and game notes will be available on the Web site. You can also follow the Longhorn Football program at twitter.com/MBTexasFootball. UT WEEKLY PRESS CONFERENCE FEED The University of Texas’ weekly Monday press conference with head coach Mack Brown is available live on MackBrown-TexasFootball. com beginning at 11 a.m. (Central). CONFERENCE CALL Head coach Mack Brown participates in the Big 12 Conference’s weekly coaches conference call each Monday from 11:20-11:30 a.m. Contact Big 12 Media Relations Director Bob Burda at 214/742-1212 for the access number. COLLEGEPRESSBOX.COM The official media site for Big 12 football will provide one-stop access to updated contact information, media guides, game notes, game books, quotes, links and more for each of the conference’s 12 schools and the conference office. To obtain a password, send an e-mail to [email protected]. VIDEO CLIPS For UT video, please contact Mike Miller at Earl Miller Productions ([email protected]/512/458-4343/Fax: 512/458-4485). PHOTOGRAPHY Action shots of UT coaches and student-athletes can be requested by contacting the UT Athletics Photography Department at 512/4716573 or [email protected]. SATELLITE RADIO A live radio broadcast for each UT game can be heard on XM Satellite Radio Channel 202 (Subscriber Only). INTERNET VIDEO A cybercast featuring real time play-by-play, game statistics and much more is available for each UT game on a tape-delay basis at www. texassports.tv. BEVO-D UT and Time Warner Cable launched a joint venture in 2004 called Bevo-D, a new videoon-demand channel that will exclusively feature Longhorn sports. The channel is available to TWC digital subscribers and will include a number of current and historical football V-O-D options, including game replays. BEVO-D is now also available on the Dallas, San Antonio and Waco Time Warner Cable systems. LONGHORN IMG RADIO NETWORK For complete coverage of Texas Longhorns football, tune into the Longhorn IMG Radio Network or visit www.sportsradio1300.com. Craig Way (play-by-play), Roger Wallace (color) and Rod Babers (sidelines) call the action. Longhorn Sportsline, Mack Brown’s one-hour radio show, hosted by Craig Way, airs each Wednesday (7-8 p.m./Central) on LSN. Abilene*_ __________________ KZQQ-AM (1560) __________________________ KKHR-FM (106.3) Alpine*_____________________KVLF-AM (1240) Austin (flagship)*_ __________ KVET-AM (1300) ___________________________ KVET-FM (98.1) Bay City_ ___________________ KZRC-FM (92.5) Big Spring*___________________KBTS-FM (94.3) Carthage*__________________ KGAS-AM (1590) __________________________ KGAS-FM (104.3) Columbus___________________KULM-FM (98.3) Corpus Christi_______________ KEYS-AM (1440) Crockett_ ___________________ KIVY-AM (1290) Dallas*_ ___________________ KRLD-AM (1080) Del Rio*_ _________________ KWMC-AM (1490) Eastland*_ __________________ KEAS-AM (1590) Edna/El Campo_ ____________ KEAS -AM (1590) El Paso_ ____________________ KROD-AM (600) Fort Stockton*________________ KFST-AM (860) Greenville__________________ KGVL-AM (1400) Henderson*_ _______________KWRD-AM (1470) Houston*_ __________________ KFNC FM (97.5) Liberty_ ____________________ KSHN-FM (99.9) Livingston*__________________ KETX-FM (92.3) Lufkin_____________________ KSML-AM (1260) Malakoff*__________________ KLVQ-AM (1410) Marshall*_ _________________KMHT-AM (1450) __________________________KMHT-FM (103.9) Orange*_ __________________ KOGT-AM (1600) Raymondville/McAllen________ KSOX-AM (840) Rusk/Jacksonville*___________ KTLU-AM (1580) San Angelo*_________________KKSA-AM (1260) San Antonio*_______________ KTKR-AM (1260) __________________________ WOAI-AM (1200) San Saba*_ __________________KBAL-AM (1410) Temple/Kileen______________ KLTD-FM (101.6) Texarkana/Atlanta*___________ KPYN-AM (900) Tyler/Longview*_______________ KTBBAM (921) ____________________________KTBB-AM (600) * Longhorn Sportsline Affiliates SPANISH LANGUAGE BROADCAST The Longhorns Sports Network will also offer a Spanish Language Radio broadcast of all Texas Football games. USE OF AUDIO/VIDEO IN COVERAGE Any media entity collecting “video or audio materials” (film, traditional video or audio, digital video or audio, photos, etc.) from University of Texas Athletics events (games, practices, post-practice/post-game interviews and press conferences) may use that material only for traditional television newscasts, Webbased or print coverage, or other electronic transmission as approved by The University in writing, with a limitation of up to three (3) minutes in length from any single event. Its usage also must be used only as supporting video/audio for a reported story and not simply as rebroadcasted/streamed highlights or interview sessions. Such media entity may not offer any live video, audio or other coverage of the event (or tape-delay rebroadcast coverage in its entirety) without the advance, written permission of The University of Texas Athletics Department. POSTGAME The Longhorns’ locker room is closed. Interview requests should be given to Assistant AD for Media Relations John Bianco. Requested players will be brought to the Moncrief-Neuhaus Athletics Complex meeting rooms following home contests and to a designated interview area at road games. NO INTERVIEWS ARE TO BE CONDUCTED ON THE FIELD FOLLOWING THE GAME. After a NCAA required and team-enforced 10-minute cooling off period, players and coaches will be escorted to the interview area. Failure to abide by this rule will result in termination of credential. POST-PRACTICE AVAILABILITY Practices are closed to the public and media. Players and assistant coaches are available by request after Tuesday’s practice and assistant head coaches Major Applewhite and Duane Akina are available following Wednesday’s practice to wrap up the week. Your requests should be given to Assistant AD for Media Relations John Bianco. All post-practice interviews are done at the Moncrief-Neuhaus Athletics Complex. PHONE Phone interviews with Longhorns players and coaches should be requested at least 24 hours in advance through Assistant AD for Media Relations John Bianco (office: 512/471-1346/ cell: 512/748-9315). Based on their schedules, the call will either be made following practice or at an assigned time. The last chance for player interviews is after Tuesday’s practice. GAME 1: #NR/24 TEXAS (34) VS. RICE (9) SEPTEMBER 3 • ROYAL-TEXAS MEMORIAL STADIUM • AUSTIN, TEXAS ATTENDANCE: 101,624 (SELLOUT) • LHN WEATHER CONDITIONS: CLEAR (97 DEGREES) No. 24 Texas amassed 506 yards of total offense and kept Rice out of the end zone on its way to a 34-9 season-opening victory at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium. Texas won its 12th straight season opener and improved to 13-1 in season openers under Mack Brown. Mike Davis totaled a career-best 115 receiving yards, while Garrett Gilbert went 13-for-23 for 239 yards and a touchdown. The Texas defense held Rice to three field goals, as the Longhorns kept an opponent from reaching the end zone for the first time since the 2009 Big 12 Championship against Nebraska. The Horns limited the Owls to 224 yards of total offense on 60 plays. Emmanuel Acho tallied a team-best 10 tackles (3 solo), while Carrington Byndom led the Horns with two tackles-for-loss. Texas answered an early Rice field goal with a 39-yard field goal from Justin Tucker. The Horns’ 58-yard drive was highlighted by a 56-yard connection from Gilbert to Davis that moved the Horns into Rice territory at the Owls’ 27-yard line. Two drives later, UT capitalized upon a Rice miscue, as Adrian Phillips recovered a punt fumbled by the Owls’ Xavier Webb at the Rice 20-yard line. A Fozzy Whittaker 6-yard run set up 1st and goal for Texas just inside the Rice 10. Cody Johnson plunged into the end zone from a yard out on 3rd and goal, and Texas assumed a 10-3 lead with 14:19 remaining in the second quarter. The Longhorns extended their lead to 13-3 behind a 23-yard Tucker field goal. Buoyed by a 24-yard run by Gilbert, Texas marched 74 yards in 14 plays while taking 6:17 off of the clock. Gilbert connected with Darius White for 10 yards to the Rice 20, and Jaxon Shipley set up 1st and goal at the Rice 8 when he took an end-around down the left sideline for 12 yards. Tucker converted on his second field goal attempt moments later. Rice’s Boswell pulled the Owls within 13-6 just before halftime with a 49-yard field goal. Rice cut the Texas lead to 13-9 after advancing 46 yards on 7 plays in its first drive of the third quarter, but Texas effectively mixed its air and ground attacks on the ensuing drive to push its lead to 20-9. D.J. Monroe took a reverse for six yards before Gilbert found White for 13 yards to the UT 47. The Horns mixed in additional carries for Monroe, Malcolm Brown and Johnson before taking to the air to finish off the drive. John Harris took a reverse, escaped a defender and lofted a 36-yard touchdown pass to Shipley, who became the first true freshman to catch a touchdown pass in a season opener in Texas history. It also marked the first Texas touchdown pass by a non-quarterback since 1997 (Ricky Williams). Texas held Rice to one first down on its next possession, and after a Rice punt backed Texas up to its one-yard line, the Horns quickly found breathing room. A Rice offside penalty moved the ball to the UT 6 before Gilbert hooked up with Davis for another long strike, this time a 55-yard completion to the Rice 39. After another Texas first down, Monroe ran for 17 yards to set up 1st and goal at the Rice 10. After a Joe Bergeron carry to the Rice 7, Whittaker took a direct snap and found the end zone to give the Longhorns a 27-9 lead. Texas put the game well out of reach by going 94 yards on 11 plays while running off 5:17 in the fourth quarter. Brown carried seven times for 50 yards on the drive, which culminated with Whittaker taking a Gilbert screen pass 26 yards for a touchdown and a 34-9 Longhorns lead. Whittaker became the first Texas player to run for a touchdown and catch a touchdown pass in the same quarter since Selvin Young in the 2006 season opener against North Texas.Brown’s 86 rushing yards marked the most offensive production for a UT freshman in his debut since Jamaal Charles in 2005. SCORING SUMMARY Rice (0-1)___________________3________3________3________0_______ 9 TEXAS (1-0)________________3_______10________7_______14______ 34 FIRST QUARTER 7:35 RU - Chris Boswell 42-yd field goal Drive: 10 plays, 41 yards, TOP 3:52 4:31 UT - Justin Tucker 39-yd field goal Drive: 6 plays, 58 yards, TOP 3:04 SECOND QUARTER 14:19 UT - Cody Johnson 1-yd run (Tucker Kick) Drive: 5 plays, 20 yards, TOP 1:59 6:00 UT - Justin Tucker 23-yd field goal Drive: 14 plays, 74 yards, TOP 6:17 :56 RU - Chris Boswell 49-yd field goal Drive: 13 plays, 50 yards, TOP 5:00 THIRD QUARTER 9:07 RU - Chris Boswell 26-yd field goal Drive: 7 yards, 46 plays, TOP 2:22 5:32 UT - Jaxon Shipley 36-yd pass from John Harris (Tucker kick) Drive: 8 plays, 72 yards, TOP 3:29 FOURTH QUARTER 13:06 UT - Fozzy Whittaker 7-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 8 plays, 99 yards, TOP 3:33 5:57 UT - Fozzy Whittaker 26-yd pass from Garrett Gilbert (Tucker kick) Drive: 11 plays, 94 yards, TOP 5:17 TEAM STATISTICS UT RU First Downs_______________________________________ 22______________ 16 Carries-Net Yards Rushing_______________________ 48-229___________30-130 Pass Comp-Att-Int_____________________________15-27-0__________ 15-30-0 Net Yards Passing_________________________________ 277______________ 94 Total Plays-Yards_ _____________________________ 75-506___________60-224 Fumbles-Lost____________________________________ 1-1_____________ 3-2 Punts-Avg_____________________________________ 4-34.8___________ 6-42.7 Penalties-Yards__________________________________ 6-69____________ 5-45 Sacks By-Loss_ ___________________________________ 0-0____________ 2-16 Time of Possession_______________________________33:01____________ 26:59 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RICE Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Tyler Smith 10-67-0; Turner Petersen 7-43-0; Charles Ross 4-20-0; Taylor McHargue 5-13-0; Sam McGuffie 1-4-0; Jeremy Eddington 2-[-3]-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): Taylor McHargue 14-29-0-79-0; Sam McGuffie 1-1-0-15-0. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Vance McDonald 5-36-0; Randy Kitchens 4-31-0; Luke Willson 2-16-0; Tyler Smith 2-5-0; Michael Patterson 1-5-0; Brent Hotard 1-1-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Cameron Nwosu 9-3-12; Xavier Webb 7-2-9; Justin Allen 3-5-8; Corey Frazier 1-5-6; Phillip Gaines 4-1-5; Chris Jammer 3-1-4; Bryce Callahan 3-0-3; Paul Porras 1-2-3; Scott Solomon 1-2-3; Matt Nordstrom 2-0-2; Tanner Leland 2-0-2; Hosam Shahim 1-1-2; Brent Hotard 1-0-1; Brian Stacey 1-01; Dylan Klare 1-0-1; Jamael Thomas 1-0-1; Andre Brackens 1-0-1; Tyler Smith 1-0-1; Jared Williams 1-0-1; Jaylon Finner 1-0-1. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Kyle Martins 5-243-48.6; Taylor McHargue 1-13-13.0. TEXAS Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Malcolm Brown 16-86-0; D.J. Monroe 5-41-0; Fozzy Whittaker 9-33-1; Joe Bergeron 6-26-0; Jaxon Shipley 3-25-0; Garrett Gilbert 5-9-0; Cody Johnson 4-9-1. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): Garrett Gilbert 13-23-0-239-1; Case McCoy 0-2-0-0-0; David Ash 1-1-0-2-0; John Harris 1-1-0-36-1. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Fozzy Whittaker 4-55-1; Mike Davis 3-115-0; Jaxon Shipley 2-54-1; Darius White 2-23-0; Dominique Jones 1-14-0; John Harris 1-100; Cody Johnson 1-4-0; D.J. Monroe 1-2-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Emmanuel Acho 3-7-10; Keenan Robinson 2-6-8; Kenny Vaccaro 5-2-7; Adrian Phillips 2-3-5; Carrington Byndum 3-2-5; Jordan Hicks 4-1-5; Quandre Diggs 1-2-3; Jamison Berryhill 0-2-2; Nolan Brewster 2-0-2; Blake Gideon 2-0-2; Alex Okafor 1-1-2; Jackson Jeffcoat 1-1-2; Leroy Scott 0-11; Kheeston Randall 1-0-1; Sheroid Evans 1-0-1; Tevin Jackson 0-1-1; Mykkele Thompson 0-1-1; Josh Turner 1-0-1; Chris Whaley 1-0-1; Steve Edmond 1-0-1; Justin Tucker 0-1-1; Aaron Benson 0-1-1; Kendall Thompson 0-1-1; Reggie Wilson 0-1-1. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Justin Tucker 4-139-34.8 GAME 2: #24/21 TEXAS (17) VS. BYU (16) SEPTEMBER 10 • ROYAL-TEXAS MEMORIAL STADIUM • AUSTIN, TEXAS ATTENDANCE: 100,995 (SELLOUT) • ESPN2/3D WEATHER CONDITIONS: SUNNY SKIES (99 DEGREES) No. 24/21 Texas (2-0) utilized a multi-faceted offensive attack and a stingy defense to overcome a 10-point halftime deficit and hold on for a 17-16 victory over BYU (1-1) before 100,995 Saturday evening at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium. Texas trailed 13-3 going into the half, but the Horns’ Cody Johnson ran for touchdowns in the third and fourth quarters to give the Horns the lead for good. After yielding 168 yards of total offense to the Cougars in the first half – behind quarterback Jake Heaps’ 153 yards in the air – the Texas defense limited the Cougars to only 67 yards of total offense in the second half. Texas’ Quandre Diggs picked off Heaps late in the fourth quarter to help the Horns preserve the win. Malcolm Brown led the Longhorns’ ground attack with 68 yards on 14 carries. Four Longhorns accounted for 123 yards of passing, highlighted by Case McCoy’s 57 yards (7-of-8). Emmanuel Acho led the Horns with 13 tackles (five solo), while Jordan Hicks added 11 tackles (five solo). Ashton Dorsey registered his first career Texas sack of the night and added an additional tackle-for-loss. Carrington Byndom also had eight tackles (five solo). BYU’s Justin Sorensen booted a 30-yard field goal on the Cougars’ first series and followed with a 33-yard field goal to give BYU a 6-0 lead with 6:45 remaining in the first quarter. The Cougars struck early in the second quarter when Jake Heaps found Ross Apo for a six-yard touchdown pass that pushed the BYU lead to 13-0. An Adrian Phillips interception at the BYU 25 led to a Justin Tucker field goal that put the Horns on the board. Quarterback David Ash ran for nine yards, and with 3rd-and-2 from the BYU 17, Cody Johnson carried for five yards and a Texas first down. Carries from Brown and D.J. Monroe and a three-yard pass from McCoy to John Harris set up Tucker’s 23-yard field goal that cut the Horns’ deficit to 13-3 with 1:44 left in the second quarter. With Ash and McCoy rotating at quarterback in relief of starter Garrett Gilbert, Texas marched 62 yards on its opening drive of the third quarter – all on the ground - and Johnson plunged into the end zone from one yard out to cut the BYU lead to 13-10. Brown ran for four yards before Monroe scampered down the left flat for 26 yards. Brown carried for 11 and seven yards, respectively, and Monroe ran for another 13 yards to set up Johnson’s touchdown with 10:46 remaining in the third quarter. BYU answered with a 32-yard field goal from Sorensen that pushed the Cougars’ lead to 16-10 with 4:36 remaining in the third. Texas stopped BYU on its next possession and drove 52 yards on the ensuing drive to take a 17-16 lead. McCoy hit Jaxon Shipley for 14 yards and a Longhorns first down at the BYU 35. Facing 3rd-and-9 from the BYU 34, Shipley took a fierce hit and held on to a McCoy dart down the middle for 20 yards for another Texas first down at the Cougars’ 14. A six-yard run from Brown set up 1st-and-goal at the BYU 4, and Johnson took it in for his second touchdown to give the Longhorns their first lead of the game with 8:46 remaining. Texas held BYU to a three-and-out on its next possession before the Cougars returned the favor to get the ball back with 6:03 remaining. UT’s Phillips stuffed the Cougars’ J.D. Falslev for a one-yard loss on first down, and consecutive BYU penalties set up a 2nd-and-21 from the Cougars’ own 9-yard line. On 3rd-and-16, UT’s Diggs picked off BYU’s Heaps for his first career interception that effectively sealed the Texas victory. Texas took over with 3:39 left on the clock, and on 3rd-and-6 from the UT 47, Shipley and Ash reversed their conventional roles, as Ash hauled in a 23-yard completion from Shipley that moved the Horns to the BYU 30. Brown salted away the victory with a 14-yard run to the Cougars’ 14 before Texas ran out the clock. SCORING SUMMARY BYU (1-1)__________________6________7________3________0______ 16 TEXAS (2-0)________________0________3________7________7______ 17 FIRST QUARTER 9:33 BYU - Justin Sorensen 30-yd field goal Drive: 10 plays, 45 yards, TOP 4:02 6:45 BYU - Justin Sorensen 33-yd field goal Drive: 5 plays, 21 yards, TOP 1:59 SECOND QUARTER 11:41 BYU - Ross Apo 6-yd pass from Jake Heaps (Sorensen kick) Drive: 12 plays, 97 yards, TOP 5:04 1:44 UT - Justin Tucker 23-yd field goal Drive: 7 plays, 19 yards, TOP 3:15 THIRD QUARTER 10:46 UT - Cody Johnson 1-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 7 plays, 62 yards, TOP 2:42 4:36 BYU - Justin Sorensen 32-yd field goal Drive: 12 plays, 56 yards, TOP 6:02 FOURTH QUARTER 8:46 UT - Cody Johnson 4-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 8 plays, 52 yards, TOP 3:18 TEAM STATISTICS BYU UT First Downs_______________________________________ 14______________ 14 Carries-Net Yards Rushing________________________ 23-43___________43-166 Pass Comp-Att-Int_____________________________22-38-2__________ 12-20-2 Net Yards Passing_________________________________ 192_____________ 123 Total Plays-Yards_ _____________________________ 61-235___________63-289 Fumbles-Lost____________________________________ 1-0_____________ 1-0 Punts-Avg_____________________________________ 5-38.4___________ 5-41.8 Penalties-Yards__________________________________ 3-25____________ 8-46 Sacks By-Loss_ ___________________________________ 0-0____________ 1-10 Time of Possession_______________________________28:57____________ 31:03 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS BYU Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): J.J. Di Luigi 14-39-0; Josh Quezada 5-7-0; Riley Nelson 1-4-0; Michael Alisa 1-2-0; Jake Heaps 2-(-9)-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): Jake Heaps 22-38-2-192-1. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Ross Apo 3-40-1; Marcus Matthews 3-36-0; J.J. Di Luigi 3-24-0; McKay Jacobson 3-17-0; Austin Holt 2-41-0; Cody Hoffman 2-11-0; Richard Wilson 2-11-0; Bryan Kariya 1-7-0; Michael Alisa 1-5-0; Josh Quezada 1-1-0; J.D. Falslev 1-(-1)-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Spencer Hadley 7-5-12; Travis Uale 5-4-9; Daniel Sorensen 5-3-8; Kyle Van Noy 4-3-7; Eath Manumaleuna 4-4-0; Corby Eason 3-1-4; Jadon Wagner 1-3-4; Joe Sampson 2-1-3; Preston Hadley 2-1-3; Hebron Fangupo 2-1-3; Jordon Pendleton 1-2-3; Uona Kaveinga 0-0-3; Carter Mees 2-02; Graham Rowley 1-0-1; Ross Apo 1-0-1; Justin Sorensen 1-0-1; Michael Alisa 1-0-1; Romney Fuga 1-0-1; Travis Tuiloma 1-0-1. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Riley Stephenson 5-192-38.4. TEXAS Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Malcolm Brown 14-68-0; D.J. Monroe 3-40-0; David Ash 9-36-0; Cody Johnson 5-12-2; Garrett Gilbert 2-6-0; Fozzy Whittaker 4-4-0; Marquise Goodwin 1-3-0; Case McCoy 1-0-0; Jaxon Shipley 2-0-0; Team 2-(-3)-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): Garrett Gilbert 2-8-2-8-0; Case McCoy 7-8-057-0; David Ash 2-3-0-35-0; Jaxon Shipley 1-1-0-23-0. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Jaxon Shipley 3-39-0; Fozzy Whittaker 2-12-0; Marquise Goodwin 2-10-0; D.J. Monroe 1-26-0; David Ash 1-23-0; D.J. Grant 1-5-0; Darius White 1-5-0; John Harris 1-3-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Emmanuel Acho 5-8-13; Jordan Hicks 5-6-11; Carrington Byndom 5-3-8; Keenan Robinson 4-1-5; Kenny Vaccaro 3-2-5; Steve Edmond 3-0-3; Adrian Phillips 2-1-3; Blake Gideon 1-2-3; Quandre Diggs 1-23; Kheeston Randall 0-3-3; Jackson Jeffcoat 0-3-3; Ashton Dorsey 2-0-2; Alex Okafor 0-2-2; Mykkele Thompson 0-2-2; Joe Bergeron 1-0-1; Alex Zumberge 0-1-1; Desmond Jackson 0-1-1; D.J. Monroe 0-1-1; Nolan Brewster 0-1-1; Ryan Roberson 0-1-1; Leroy Scott 0-1-1; Calvin Howell 0-1-1; Chris Waley 0-0-0. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Justin Tucker 5-209-41.8. GAME 3: #23/21 TEXAS (49) AT UCLA (20) SEPTEMBER 17 • ROSE BOWL • PASADENA, CALIF. ATTENDANCE: 54,583 • ABC WEATHER CONDITIONS: PARTLY CLOUDY (81 DEGREES) No. 24/21 Texas (3-0) piled up 488 yards of total offense and forced four turnovers in a 49-20 victory over UCLA (1-2) Saturday afternoon at The Rose Bowl. Quarterback Case McCoy completed 12-of-15 passes for 168 and two TDs, both to tight end D.J. Grant, who caught a third TD from WR Jaxon Shipley. Running back Malcolm Brown carried the ball 22 times for 110 yards and a TD, while RB Fozzy Whittaker carried eight times for 63 yards and two TDs, including one for 36 yards. Wide receiver Mike Davis caught three passes for 77 yards. Safety Kenny Vaccaro and LB Keenan Robinson posted a team-best nine tackles each, and Vaccaro added an interception. Defensive backs Adrian Phillips and Carrington Byndom added one INT each, and LB Emmanuel Acho registered a sack. Texas converted its three first-half interceptions into touchdowns. Byndom’s interception of UCLA QB Kevin Prince on the Bruins’ first series of the game gave Texas the ball at the UCLA 45. On third-and-10, McCoy threw across his body and found a wide-open Grant for a 45-yard touchdown and a 7-0 Texas lead with 11:20 remaining in the first quarter. With Texas clinging to a 7-0 lead and after a fumbled punt, UCLA took over inside the UT red zone at the 19-yard line. On third-and-seven, Keenan Robinson pressured the QB, Blake Gideon deflected the pass and Adrian Phillips intercepted it producing a game-turning play. Brown ran for a first down to the UT 21, and Texas picked up two more first downs before WR Marquise Goodwin ran for 20 yards to the UCLA 11. Brown carried for three yards before Whittaker, on a misdirection, scampered eight yards into the end zone for a 14-0 Texas lead with 1:56 remaining in the first quarter. A Vaccaro interception at the end of the first quarter set the tone for another Longhorns touchdown. On third-and-three from midfield, QB David Ash hit Shipley for 14 yards and a Texas first down at the UCLA 36. Brown ran for 13 yards on the next play, and on third-andthree from the UCLA 16, Brown rumbled into the end zone, despite losing a shoe on the play, and pushed the Texas lead to 21-0 with 11:36 remaining in the second quarter. UCLA inserted QB Richard Brehaut in place of Prince on the next drive, and the Bruins drove 74 yards for a TD, as Derrick Coleman scored from one yard out to cut the Texas lead to 21-7. However, the Longhorns would answer with another TD two possessions later. On first down from the UT 41, Goodwin ran for 11 yards. On third-and-five from the UCLA 43, Ash hit Shipley for 12 yards and another first down. On third-and-18 at the UCLA 27, McCoy hit Davis for 25 yards to the Bruins’ 2-yard line. McCoy and Grant connected on their second touchdown of the day to give Texas a 28-7 lead just before halftime. UCLA’s Jeff Locke booted a 51-yard field goal as the second quarter expired to cut the Texas lead to 28-10. Locke added a 49-yard field goal to open the third quarter, but the Longhorns struck again and found the end zone. Brown carried three times for 20 yards, and on third-and-one from midfield, a deep pass from McCoy fell into the hands of Davis after being tapped into the air by UCLA cornerback Sheldon Price. Davis’ catch moved the Horns to the UCLA 5-yard line before Shipley took an end-around and threw to Grant for his third touchdown of the game, as Texas built a 35-13 lead. UCLA responded by driving 55 yards and picking up a one-yard touchdown run from Coleman, his second of the game, to cut the Texas lead to 35-20, but Texas took to the ground on its next possession and hammered its way into the end zone to answer the Bruins. Shipley carried for 15 yards to the UT 36, and after two more Texas first downs, Whittaker took a direct snap and dashed 36 yards for his second touchdown of the day to stake the Horns to a 42-20 lead. The Longhorns capped their productive afternoon on offense with a 50-yard drive that culminated with a Cody Johnson seven-yard touchdown that extended the Longhorns’ cushion to 49-20. SCORING SUMMARY TEXAS (3-0)_______________14_______14_______14________7______ 49 UCLA (1-2)_________________0_______10_______10________0______ 20 FIRST QUARTER 11:20 UT - D.J. Grant 45-yd pass from Case McCoy (Tucker kick) Drive: 3 plays, 45 yards, TOP 1:15 1:56 UT - Fozzy Whittaker 8-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 11 plays, 71 yards, TOP 4:46 SECOND QUARTER 11:41 UT - Malcolm Brown 16-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 7 plays, 57 yards, TOP 3:24 6:49 UCLA - Derrick Coleman 1-yd run (Locke kick) Drive: 11 plays, 74 yards, TOP 4:32 :21 UT - D.J. Grant 2-yd pass from Case McCoy (Tucker kick) Drive: 11 plays, 59 yards, TOP 3:20 :00 UCLA - Jeff Locke 51-yd field goal Drive: 3 plays, 28 yards, TOP :14 THIRD QUARTER 12:39 UCLA - Jeff Locke 49-yd field goal Drive: 6 plays, 44 yards, TOP 2:14 9:38 UT - D.J. Grant 5-yd pass from Jaxon Shipley (Tucker kick) Drive: 6 plays, 71 yards, TOP 2:51 4:29 UCLA - Derrick Coleman 1-yd run (Locke kick) Drive: 10 plays, 55 yards, TOP 5:00 1:40 UT - Fozzy Whittaker 36-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 7 plays, 79 yards, TOP 2:42 FOURTH QUARTER 2:57 UT - Cody Johnson 7-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 11 plays, 50 yards, TOP 5:51 TEAM STATISTICS UT UCLA First Downs_______________________________________ 23______________ 12 Carries-Net Yards Rushing_______________________ 50-284___________34-141 Pass Comp-Att-Int_____________________________16-20-0__________ 11-26-3 Net Yards Passing_________________________________ 204_____________ 176 Total Plays-Yards_ _____________________________ 70-488___________60-317 Fumbles-Lost____________________________________ 2-2_____________ 1-1 Punts-Avg_____________________________________ 3-46.3___________ 4-48.8 Penalties-Yards__________________________________ 3-25____________ 6-50 Sacks By-Loss_ ___________________________________ 1-2_____________ 0-0 Time of Possession_______________________________32:47____________ 27:13 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS TEXAS Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Malcolm Brown 22-110-1; Fozzy Whittaker 8-64-2; Joe Bergeron 5-36-0; Marquise Goodwin 3-33-0; Cody Johnson 6-22-1; Jaxon Shipley 1-15-0; D.J. Monroe 2-6-0; Case McCoy 1-2-0; David Ash 2-(-3)-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): Case McCoy 12-15-0-168-2; David Ash 3-3-031-0; Jaxon Shipley 1-1-0-5-1; Team 0-1-0-0-0. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): D.J. Grant 6-77-3; Jaxon Shipley 5-46-0; Mike Davis 3-770; Marquise Goodwin 1-5-0; Malcolm Brown 1-(-1)-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Kenny Vaccaro 8-5-13; Emmanuel Acho 5-5-10; Keenan Robinson 6-3-9; Adrian Phillips 7-1-8; Blake Gideon 3-5-8; Jackson Jeffcoat 3-3-6; Carrington Byndom 4-1-5; Jordan Hicks 3-2-5; Ashton Dorsey 2-1-3; Quandre Diggs 2-0-2; Jamison Berryhill 1-0-1; Sheroid Evans 1-0-1; Leroy Scott 1-0-1; Mykkele Thompson 1-0-1; Dravannti Johnson 0-1-1; Calvin Howell 0-1-1; Desmond Jackson 0-1-1; Alex Okafor 0-1-1; Kheeston Randall 0-0-0; Reggie Wilson 0-0-0. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Justin Tucker 3-139-46.3. UCLA Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Johnathan Franklin 15-58-0; Derrick Coleman 7-42-2; Kevin Prince 3-26-0; Josh Smith 1-6-0; Jordan James 1-3-0; Anthony Barr 1-2-0; Richard Brehaut 6-(-1)-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): Richard Brehaut 8-19-0-150-0; Kevin Prince 3-7-3-26-0. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Nelson Rosario 4-68-0; Joseph Fauria 2-29-0; Jordan James 1-40-0; Shaquelle Evans 1-16-0; Randall Carroll 1-13-0; Johnathan Franklin 1-6-0; Ricky Marvay 1-4-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Pat Larimore 7-2-9; Jordan Zumwalt 3-5-8; Sheldon Price 6-0-6; Tony Dye 2-4-6; Damien Holmes 4-1-5; Eric Kendricks 4-0-4; Aaron Hester 3-1-4; Dietrich Riley 2-2-4; Owamagbe Odighizuwa 2-2-4; Cassius Marsh 2-1-3; Sean Westgate 1-2-3; Dalton Hilliard 1-2-3; Donovan Carter 1-2-3; Justin Edison 2-0-2; Alex Mascarenas 2-0-2; Kennan Graham 1-1-2; Andrew Abbott 1-1-2; Iuta Tepa 1-0-1; Johnathan Franklin 1-0-1; Shaquelle Evans 1-0-1; Glenn Love 1-0-1; Datone Jones 1-0-1; Nate Chandler 1-0-1. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Jeff Locke 4-195-48.8. GAME 4: #17/17 TEXAS (37) AT IOWA STATE (14) OCTOBER 1 • JACK TRICE STADIUM • AMES, IOWA ATTENDANCE: 56,390 • FX WEATHER CONDITIONS: CLEAR (66 DEGREES) No. 17/17 Texas (4-0, 1-0 Big 12) opened up a 34-0 halftime lead and cruised to a 37-14 victory over Iowa State (3-1, 0-1 Big 12) Saturday evening in the Big 12 Conference opener for both teams at ISU’s Jack Trice Stadium. Texas forced three first-quarter turnovers for the second time in as many games, and UT produced another impressive all-around showing on offense, as the Horns effectively put the game away in the first half. Texas added a blocked punt that was returned for a touchdown, its first since the 2009 season against Missouri. Quarterbacks David Ash and Case McCoy each connected seven passes on 12 attempts. Ash threw for 145 yards and two touchdowns, while McCoy threw for 110 yards. Wide receiver Jaxon Shipley caught six passes for 141 yards and a TD, while WR Mike Davis caught three passes for 72 yards and a touchdown. RB Malcolm Brown carried 15 times for 72 yards, and TB Fozzy Whittaker carried seven times for 50 yards and a touchdown. Linebacker Emmanuel Acho and S Blake Gideon led the Longhorns with 12 and eight tackles respectively, while Acho added two TFL and a sack and Gideon also picked off a pass. Linebacker Steve Edmond added six tackles, including one for a loss, and S Kenny Vaccaro recorded six tackles, two TFL and one sack. Texas capitalized upon an Iowa State miscue and got on the board early in the first quarter. Longhorns DE Alex Okafor recovered a botched handoff from Cyclones QB Steele Jantz to RB James White at the ISU 29-yard line. On second-and-15 from the Iowa State 34, Ash found TE D.J. Grant for 19 yards down the left sideline. Justin Tucker connected on a 33-yard field goal to give UT a 3-0 lead with 7:30 remaining in the quarter. On the ensuing kickoff, UT cornerback Quandre Diggs stripped the ball from Iowa State’s Josh Lenz, and LB Tevin Jackson recovered at the Iowa State 29. On third-and-three from the ISU 22, Ash dumped a shovel pass to Whittaker for six yards and a Texas first down. Whittaker took a direct snap on the next play and scampered 16 yards into the end zone, as Texas assumed a 10-0 lead with 5:35 left in the quarter. On the next Iowa State drive, Gideon picked off Jantz at the UT 40 and returned the ball 43 yards to the Cyclones’ 17-yard line. Tucker connected on a 35-yard field goal with 3:23 left in the quarter to put the Horns up, 13-0. After an Iowa State missed field goal, UT was unable to convert on third-and-12 from its 37, but shortly after the play, the Cyclones’ Leonard Johnson was flagged for a personal foul that kept the Texas drive alive. The Horns made the Cyclones pay on the next play, as Ash found Davis down the middle for a 48-yard touchdown that pushed the Texas lead to 20-0 with 10:18 left in the quarter. The Texas defense stopped Iowa State on its next two drives before a pair of freshman defensive backs on the UT special teams unit produced a touchdown. Mykkele Thompson blocked a punt from Iowa State’s Kirby Van Der Kamp, and the ball fell into the waiting hands of Josh Turner, who sprinted 34 yards into the end zone to give the Horns a 27-0 lead with 4:30 remaining in the quarter. Texas struck moments later on a play that saw Whittaker, Shipley and Ash with their hands on the ball. Whittaker took the snap in the shotgun and handed to Shipley, who streaked past Whittaker toward the left sideline. Shipley pitched to Ash, who had lined up at wide receiver, and darted down the left sideline, where he eluded Iowa State’s Jacques Washington and hauled in a 40-yard TD pass from Ash that staked Texas to a 34-0 lead with 1:17 remaining in the half. The Longhorns’ defense stood tall once more and kept the Cyclones off of the scoreboard after Iowa State had driven into Texas territory for the fourth time in the first half. Gideon and Vaccaro sacked ISU’s Jantz on third and fourth downs, respectively, to end the Cyclones’ final threat of the half. Iowa State’s White put the Cyclones on the scoreboard with a two-yard touchdown run with 11:33 remaining in the game to cut the Texas lead to 34-7. Texas’ Tucker added a 29-yard field goal with 6:31 left in the game to push the UT lead to 37-7. Iowa State tacked on the game’s final score with 3:50 remaining when Jantz found Chris Young for an 18-yard touchdown. SCORING SUMMARY TEXAS (4-0)_______________13_______21________0________3______ 37 Iowa State (3-1)______________0________0________0_______14______ 14 FIRST QUARTER 7:30 UT - Justin Tucker 33-yd field goal Drive: 6 plays, 13 yards, TOP 3:09 5:35 UT - Fozzy Whittaker 16-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 4 plays, 29 yards, TOP 1:46 3:23 UT - Justin Tucker 35-yd field goal Drive: 4 plays, 0 yards, TOP :53 SECOND QUARTER 10:18 UT - Mike Davis 47-yd pass from David Ash (Tucker kick) Drive: 7 plays, 80 yards, TOP 2:02 4:30 UT - Josh Turner 34-yd blocked punt return (Tucker kick) Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, TOP 0:00 1:17 UT - Jaxon Shipley 40-yd pass from David Ash (Tucker kick) Drive: 5 plays, 67 yards, TOP 1:24 FOURTH QUARTER 11:33 ISU - James White 2-yd run (Guyer kick) Drive: 16 plays, 86 yards, TOP 3:21 6:31 UT - Justin Tucker 29-yd field goal Drive: 6 plays, 24 yards, TOP 2:22 3:50 ISU - Chris Young 18-yd pass from Steele Jantz (Guyer kick) Drive: 8 plays, 63 yards, 2:34 TEAM STATISTICS UT ISU First Downs_______________________________________ 19______________ 26 Carries-Net Yards Rushing_______________________ 40-145___________38-129 Pass Comp-Att-Int_____________________________14-24-0__________ 28-51-1 Net Yards Passing_________________________________ 255_____________ 251 Total Plays-Yards_ _____________________________ 64-400___________89-380 Fumbles-Lost____________________________________ 1-0_____________ 3-2 Punts-Avg_____________________________________ 4-31.8___________ 4-42.0 Penalties-Yards_________________________________ 10-74____________ 8-90 Sacks By-Loss_ __________________________________ 4-22____________ 2-17 Time of Possession_______________________________30:41____________ 29:19 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS TEXAS Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Malcolm Brown 15-63-0; Fozzy Whittaker 7-41-1; D.J. Monroe 5-31-0; Joe Bergeron 4-28-0; Case McCoy 3-2-0; Cody Johnson 1-0-0; Jaxon Shipley 1-0-0; David Ash 3-(-17)-0; Team 1-(-3)-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): David Ash 7-12-0-145-2; Case McCoy 7-12-0110-0. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Jaxon Shipley 6-141-1; Mike Davis 3-72-1; Fozzy Whittaker 2-7-0; D.J. Grant 1-19-0; Dominique Jones 1-13-0; Barrett Matthews 1-3-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Emmanuel Acho 6-4-10; Blake Gideon 7-1-8; Alex Okafor 3-5-8; Steve Edmond 6-0-6; Kenny Vaccaro 4-2-6; Carrington Byndom 5-0-5; Keenan Robinson 3-2-5; Quandre Diggs 3-1-4; Leroy Scott 3-0-3; Sheroid Evans 3-0-3; Jackson Jeffcoat 3-0-3; Jordan Hicks 2-1-3; Adrian Phillips 2-0-2; Josh Turner 2-0-2; Mykkele Thompson 2-0-2; Tevin Jackson 1-0-1; Chris Whaley 1-0-1; Dravannti Johnson 1-0-1; Kendall Thompson 1-0-1; Aaron Benson 1-0-1; Kheeston Randall 1-0-1; Ashton Dorsey 0-1-1; Reggie Wilson 0-1-1 Cedric Reed 0-0-0; Christian Scott 0-0-0. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Justin Tucker 4-127-31.8. IOWA STATE Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): James White 11-64-1; Shontrelle Johnson 10-47-0; Steele Jantz 13-12-0; Jeff Woody 1-7-0; Duran Hollis 3-(-1)-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): Steele Jantz 28-51-1-251-1. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Darius Reynolds 6-70-0; Aaron Horne 4-35-0; Jarvis West 4-28-0; Chris Young 3-41-1; Reid Branderhorst 3-23-0; Kurt Hammerschmidt 3-18-0; Darius Darks 2-11-0; Josh Lenz 2-11-0; James White 1-14-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Jacques Washington 5-3-8; Jake Knott 5-3-8; A.J. Klein 3-3-6; Jeremy Reeves 4-1-5; Ter’Ran Benton 4-1-5; Patrick Neal 4-0-4; Matt Tau’fo’ou 1-3-4; Leonard Johnson 3-0-3; Jake Lattimer 3-0-3; Jansen Watson 3-03; Stephen Ruempolhamer 2-1-3; Willie Scott 2-0-2; Cleyon Laing 1-0-1; Henry Simon 1-0-1; Jeff Woody 1-0-1; Aaron Home 1-0-1; Jeremiah George 1-0-1; Jace Hawley 0-1-1; Durrell Givens 0-1-1; Matt Morton 0-1-1; David Irving 0-1-1; Jake McDonough 0-1-1. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Kirby Van Der Kamp 3-119-39.7. GAME 5: #11/10 TEXAS (17) VS. #3/1 OKLAHOMA (55) OCTOBER 8 •COTTON BOWL • DALLAS, TEXAS ATTENDANCE: 96,009 • ABC WEATHER CONDITIONS: MOSTLY CLOUDY (78 DEGREES) No. 3/1 Oklahoma (5-0, 2-0 Big 12) defeated No. 11/10 Texas (4-1, 1-1 Big 12) by a 55-17 count Saturday afternoon in the 106th edition of the AT&T Red River Rivalry at a sold-out Cotton Bowl. The versatile RB Fozzy Whittaker – who had caught a touchdown pass and run for touchdowns while lined up at quarterback earlier in the season – added a kickoff return for a touchdown against the Sooners, and WR Jaxon Shipley hauled in a touchdown catch from QB David Ash. Ash completed 11-of-20 passes for 107 yards, while QB Case McCoy completed 9-of-16 passes for 116 yards. Running back Malcolm Brown carried the ball 17 times for 54 yards, and Whittaker averaged over seven yards per carry on six attempts. Linebacker Emmanuel Acho led the Horns with 10 tackles, while S Blake Gideon and LB Keenan Robinson had eight each. Defensive tackle Calvin Howell recorded one sack, while DE Jackson Jeffcoat had two TFL and S Christian Scott forced a fumble. Oklahoma took the game’s opening possession Mike Hunnicutt connected on a 26-yard field goal to give OU a 3-0 lead. Texas picked up a pair of first downs on its initial possession, but the Sooners’ Casey Walker sacked McCoy and forced a fumble that was recovered by OU’s Frank Alexander at the UT 33. The Sooners collected two first downs, and on third-and-four from the UT 7, Texas DT Kheeston Randall chased down OU’s Jones and forced an incompletion. Hunnicutt connected again from 24 yards to give the Sooners a 6-0 lead. The Horns got on the board on their next possession when Justin Tucker connected on a 46-yard field goal with 2:41 remaining in the first quarter. Running back D.J. Monroe carried for two yards on a third-and-one, and on second-and-five from the UT 40, McCoy hit Whittaker for 15 yards and another first down. Whittaker ran for 12 yards to the OU 33 on the next play before the Horns converted the field goal four plays later. Oklahoma extended its lead on the first play of the second quarter when QB Landry Jones found WR Kenny Stills for a 19-yard touchdown pass, as the Sooners assumed a 13-3 lead. Oklahoma’s Tony Jefferson picked off Ash on the next UT possession and returned the ball to the UT 33. Jones later found wide receiver Ryan Broyles for a fiveyard touchdown, as Oklahoma took a 20-3 lead with 11:43 remaining in the quarter. The Sooners took the ball into Texas territory on their next two possessions, but the UT defense stood tall and forced punts on both possessions. However, the Sooners added another score when OU’s Demontre Hurst returned an interception 55 yards for a touchdown and a 27-3 OU lead. Whittaker returned the ensuing kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown to cut the Sooners’ lead to 27-10. It tied the school record for the longest kickoff return for a touchdown, matching the effort produced by Johnny “Lam” Jones against SMU in 1978. OU drove 83 yards in the closing minutes of the second quarter, as Jones found Stills for a 14-yard touchdown and a 34-10 lead. The Sooners tacked on to their lead early in the third quarter when Alexander sacked McCoy and forced a fumble that was scooped up by David King and taken 19 yards into the end zone for a 41-10 OU lead. Sooners RB Dominique Whaley broke off a 64-yard touchdown run to push the Oklahoma lead to 48-10 with 8:02 left in the third quarter. Oklahoma added a touchdown in the fourth quarter when defensive back Jamell Fleming stripped the ball out of the hands of UT wide receiver Mike Davis and returned it 48 yards for the score. Two drives later, Monroe ran for 12 yards to the OU 35, and two plays later, Ash found Shipley for eight yards and a Texas first down. On fourth-and-four from the OU 19, Ash found Davis for 11 yards to the OU 8, and an Oklahoma personal foul penalty moved the ball to the OU 4. Ash connected with Shipley for a touchdown on the next play to cut the OU lead to 55-17. SCORING SUMMARY Oklahoma (5-0)______________6_______28_______14________7______ 55 TEXAS (4-1)________________3________7________0________7______ 17 FIRST QUARTER 12:14 OU - Mike Honnicutt 26-yd field goal Drive: 8 plays, 62 yards, TOP 2:46 7:10 OU - Mike Honnicutt 24-yd field goal Drive: 7 plays, 26 yards, TOP 2:20 2:41 UT - Justin Tucker 46-yd field goal Drive: 10 plays, 47 yards, TOP 4:25 SECOND QUARTER 14:56 OU - Kenny Stills 19-yd pass from Landry Jones (Honnicutt kick) Drive: 9 plays, 65 yards, TOP 2:39 11:43 OU - Ryan Broyles 5-yd pass from Landry Jones (Honnicutt kick) Drive: 8 plays, 33 yards, TOP 2:09 2:57 OU - Demontre Hurst 55-yd interception return (Honnicutt kick) Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, TOP 0:00 2:44 UT - Fozzy Whittaker 100-yd kickoff return (Tucker kick) Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, TOP 0:00 :31 OU - Kenny Stills 14-yd pass from Landry Jones (Honnicutt kick) Drive: 7 plays, 83 yards, TOP 2:07 THIRD QUARTER 13:35 OU - David King 19-yd fumble return (Honnicutt kick) Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, TOP 0:00 8:02 OU - Dominique Whaley 64-yd run (Honnicutt kick) Drive: 7 plays, 80 yards, TOP 2:02 FOURTH QUARTER 11:22 OU - Jamell Fleming 56-yd fumble return (Honnicutt kick) Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, TOP 0:00 2:31 UT - Jaxon Shipley 4-yd pass from David Ash (Tucker kick) Drive:8 plays, 47 yards, TOP 3:07 TEAM STATISTICS OU UT First Downs_______________________________________ 22______________ 22 Carries-Net Yards Rushing________________________ 19-86____________45-36 Pass Comp-Att-Int_____________________________31-52-0__________ 20-36-2 Net Yards Passing_________________________________ 367_____________ 223 Total Plays-Yards_ _____________________________ 71-453___________81-259 Fumbles-Lost____________________________________ 1-1_____________ 5-3 Punts-Avg_____________________________________ 3-31.3___________ 5-44.6 Penalties-Yards__________________________________ 7-68____________ 5-60 Sacks By-Loss_ __________________________________ 8-84_____________ 1-4 Time of Possession_______________________________22:06____________ 37:54 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS OKLAHOMA Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Dominique Whaley 13-83-1; Brandon Williams 3-7-0; Landry Jones 2-(-1)-0; Team 1-(-3)-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): Landry Jones 31-50-0-367-3; Drew Allen 0-20-0-0. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Ryan Broyles 9-122-1; Jaz Reynolds 6-92-0; Kenny Stills 5-51-2; Dominique Whaley 4-34-0; Austin Haywood 2-23-0; Roy Finch 2-11-0; Trey Millard 1-14-0; Dejuan Miller 1-13-0; James Hanna 1-7-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Jamell Fleming 11-2-13; Aaron Colvin 3-5-8; Travis Lewis 3-5-8; Tom Wort 4-3-7; Demontre Hurst 4-3-7; Frank Alexander 5-1-6; Jaydan Bird 4-2-6; Ronnell Lewis 5-0-5; Javon Harris 3-1-4; Tony Jefferson 2-24; David King 1-2-3; Casey Walker 2-0-2; Corey Nelson 1-1-2; Joseph Ibiloye 1-0-1; Stacy McGee 1-0-1; James Winchester 1-0-1; Patrick O’Hara 1-0-1; Torrea Peterson 1-0-1; Brennan Clay 1-0-1; Jamarkus McFarland 1-0-1; Quentin Hayes 1-0-1; Geneo Grissom 0-1-1; R.J. Washington 0-0-0; Chuka Ndulue 0-0-0. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Tress Way 3-94-31.3. TEXAS Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Malcolm Brown 17-54-0; Fozzy Whittaker 6-43-0; D.J. Monroe 3-23-0; Cody Johnson 1-3-0; Joe Bergeron 3-(-3)-0; Miles Onyegbule 1-(-13)-0; Jaxon Shipley 1-(-14)-0; Case McCoy 4-(-19)-0; David Ash 9-(-38)-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): David Ash 11-20-2-107-1; Case McCoy 9-16-0116-0; Jaxon Shipley 0-0-0-0-0. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Jaxon Shipley 9-89-1; Mike Davis 6-70-0; Blaine Irby 2-12-0; Malcolm Brown 1-19-0; D.J. Monroe 1-18-0; Fozzy Whittaker 1-15-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Emmanuel Acho 4-6-10; Blake Gideon 5-3-8; Keenan Robinson 4-4-8; Christian Scott 3-3-6; Adrian Phillips 3-3-6; Carrington Byndom 4-1-5; Kenny Vaccaro 3-2-5; Jackson Jeffcoat 1-3-4; Jamison Berryhill 2-1-3; Quandre Diggs 2-1-3; Alex Okafor 1-2-3; Dravannti Johnson 1-1-2; Calvin Howell 1-1-2; Kendall Thompson 0-0-2; Josh Turner 1-0-1; Ashton Dorsey 1-0-1; Fozzy Whittaker 1-0-1; Jordan Hicks 0-1-1; Leroy Scott 0-1-1; Kheeston Randall 0-1-1; Chris Whaley 0-0-0. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Justin Tucker 5-223-44.6. GAME 6: #22/21 TEXAS (26) VS. #6/7 OKLAHOMA STATE (38) OCTOBER 15 •ROYAL-TEXAS MEMORIAL STADIUM • AUSTIN, TEXAS ATTENDANCE: 100,101 • ABC WEATHER CONDITIONS: SUNNY (83 DEGREES) Texas freshman RB Malcolm Brown ran for 138 yards and two touchdowns, and senior RB Foswhitt Whittaker returned a kickoff for a touchdown, but No. 6/7 Oklahoma State (6-0, 3-0 Big 12) dealt the No. 22/21 Longhorns (4-2, 1-2 Big 12) a 38-26 defeat Saturday at Darrell K Royal– Texas Memorial Stadium. Brown averaged 7.1 yards on 19 carries, and Whittaker became the first Longhorn to return a kickoff for a touchdown in back-to-back games. Quarterback David Ash played from start-to-finish and completed 22-of-40 passes for 139 yards. Linebacker Keenan Robinson led the Texas defense with nine tackles (four solo), and DE Alex Okafor added one sack and an additional TFL. Cornerback Carrington Byndom registered four pass breakups. Texas held Oklahoma State to a three-andout on its first possession, but the Cowboys struck on their second drive following an interception by LB Caleb Lavey. OSU quarterback Brandon Weeden hit WR Josh Cooper for 37 yards to the Texas 1-yard line, and running back Joseph Randle plunged into the end zone on the next play for a 7-0 OSU lead. Texas advanced into OSU territory on its next possession but turned the ball over on downs at the Cowboys’ 31. Neither team could cash in on their subsequent possessions, but the Horns capitalized upon an OSU special teams miscue. Texas’ Justin Tucker punted to the OSU 15, and the ball hit Andrae May before being recovered by LB Tevin Jackson. Texas made Oklahoma State pay on the very next play, as Brown scampered into the end zone for a 15-yard touchdown that evened the score at seven. Two possessions later, the Cowboys drove 63 yards on eight plays, as Weeden hit WR Justin Blackmon for a 15-yard touchdown to give OSU a 14-7 lead with 8:34 remaining in the second quarter. Texas advanced 51 yards on its ensuing drive and picked up a 34-yard field goal from Tucker to cut the Cowboys’ lead to 14-10 with 3:09 left in the quarter. Whittaker carried 11 yards into OSU territory to the Cowboys’ 48. Oklahoma State struck once more just before halftime. Running back Jeremy Smith darted into the end zone on fourth-and-one from the UT 30 to stake the Cowboys’ to a 21-10 cushion with 38 seconds remaining in the half. OSU pushed its lead to 28-10 when Justin Gilbert took the third quarter’s opening kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown. However, UT’s Whittaker returned the favor and took the ensuing kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown – his second kickoff return for a touchdown in as many weeks – to trim the OSU lead to 28-17. Texas struck quickly after holding OSU scoreless on its next two possessions. Running back D.J. Monroe took a reverse for 21 yards to the OSU 39, and a pass interference call on OSU’s May moved the ball to the Cowboys’ 24-yard line. On the next play, Ash faked a throw and handed behind his back to Brown, who took off down the left sideline and tight-roped his way into the end zone for a touchdown as UT cut the OSU lead to 28-24. OSU advanced 64 yards to the UT 5 on its next drive but was stopped on third-and-goal. Quinn Sharp connected on a 22-yard field goal to push the Oklahoma State lead to 31-24. OSU struck again on its next possession when Smith took a handoff 74 yards into the end zone to give the Cowboys a 38-24 lead with 4:14 remaining in the third quarter. Texas nearly cut the OSU lead in half on its next possession, but on fourth-and-goal from the OSU 3, Whittaker hauled in a reception and went down inches shy of the goal line. Two plays later, however, OSU’s Weeden dropped back in the pocket, stepped out of the back of the end zone and yielded a safety and two points to Texas for the final margin. SCORING SUMMARY Oklahoma State (6-0)_________7_______14_______17________0______ 38 TEXAS (4-2)________________0_______10_______14________2______ 26 FIRST QUARTER 8:32 OSU - Joseph Randle 1-yd run (Sharp kick) Drive: 5 plays, 64 yards, TOP 1:17 SECOND QUARTER 14:46 UT - Malcolm Brown 15-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 1 play, 15 yards, TOP 0:04 8:34 OSU - Justin Blackmon 15-yd pass from Brandon Weeden (Sharp kick) Drive: 8 plays, 63 yards, TOP 2:05 3:09 UT - Justin Tucker 34-yd field goal Drive: 11 plays, 51 yards, TOP 5:17 :38 OSU - Jeremy Smith 30-yd run (Sharp kick) Drive: 9 plays, 80 yards, TOP 2:31 THIRD QUARTER 14:48 OSU - Justin Gilbert 100-yd kickoff return (Sharp kick) Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, TOP 0:00 14:36 UT - Fozzy Whittaker 100-yd kickoff return (Tucker kick) Drive: 0 plays, 0 yards, TOP 0:00 10:43 UT- Malcolm Brown 24-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 2 plays, 60 yards, TOP :44 6:53 OSU- Quinn Sharp 22-yd field goal Drive: 14 plays, 64 yards, TOP 3:44 4:14 OSU- Jeremy Smith 74-yd run (Sharp kick) Drive: 2 plays, 86 yards, TOP :29 FOURTH QUARTER 11:20 UT- Team safety TEAM STATISTICS OSU UT First Downs_______________________________________ 21______________ 24 Carries-Net Yards Rushing_______________________ 27-202___________49-231 Pass Comp-Att-Int_____________________________23-41-0__________ 22-40-2 Net Yards Passing_________________________________ 218_____________ 139 Total Plays-Yards_ _____________________________ 68-420___________89-370 Fumbles-Lost____________________________________ 1-1_____________ 1-1 Punts-Avg_____________________________________ 6-46.3___________ 7-41.1 Penalties-Yards__________________________________ 2-20____________ 3-30 Sacks By-Loss_ __________________________________ 5-41_____________ 1-1 Time of Possession_______________________________20:42____________ 39:18 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS OKLAHOMA STATE Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Jeremy Smith 7-140-2; Joseph Randle 17-68-1; Brandon Weedon 1-(-1)-0; Team 2-(-5)-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): Brandon Weedon 23-41-0-218-1. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Justin Blackmon 7-74-1; Josh Cooper 6-57-0; Hubert Anyiam 4-47-0; Joseph Randle 2-10-0; Jeremy Smith 1-11-0; Tracy Moore 1-11-0; Josh Stewart 1-8-0; Kye Staley 1-0-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Caleb Lavey 7-5-12; Justin Gilbert 7-4-11; Jamie Blatnick 6-3-9; Markelle Martin 3-5-8; Alex Elkins 5-1-6; Nigel Nicholas 2-3-5; Brodrick Brown 4-0-4; Daytawion Lowe 4-0-4; Anthony Rogers 2-1-3; Richetti Jones 1-2-3; Joe Mitchell 2-0-2; Christian Littlehead 2-0-2; Tyler Johnson 1-1-2; Andrae May 1-1-2; Shaun Lewis 1-1-2; Larry Stephens 1-0-1; Teddy Johnson 1-01; Wilson Youman 1-0-1; Deion Imade 1-0-1; Davidell Collins 1-0-1; Herschel Sims 0-1-1; Zack Craig 0-1-1; Ryan Robinson 0-1-1; James Castelman 0-0-0; James Thomas 0-0-0; Cooper Bassett 0-0-0. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Quinn Sharp 6-278-46.3. TEXAS Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Malcolm Brown 19-135-2; Fozzy Whittaker 9-36-0; D.J. Monroe 4-33-0; David Ash 15-21-0; Jaxon Shipley 2-6-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): David Ash 22-40-2-139-0. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Mike Davis 10-80-0; Marquise Goodwin 3-23-0; Jaxon Shipley 3-22-0; Fozzy Whittaker 3-(-4)-0; Darius White 1-7-0; Barrett Matthews 1-6-0; D.J. Monroe 1-5-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Keenan Robinson 4-5-9; Blake Gideon 3-3-6; Jordan Hicks 3-3-6; Kenny Vaccaro 3-3-6; Adrian Phillips 4-1-5; Christian Scott 4-1-5; Emmanuel Acho 2-3-5; Alex Okafor 1-4-5; Jackson Jeffcoat 2-2-4; Quandre Diggs 2-1-3; Kheeston Randall 0-3-3; Carrington Byndom 2-0-2; Chet Moss 1-0-1; Jaxon Shipley 1-0-1; Fozzy Whittaker 1-0-1; Alex Zumberge 1-0-1; Joe Bergeron 1-0-1; Dravannti Johnson 0-0-0; Tevin Jackson 0-0-0. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Justin Tucker 7-288-41.1. GAME 7: TEXAS (43) VS. KANSAS (0) OCTOBER 29 •ROYAL-TEXAS MEMORIAL STADIUM • AUSTIN, TEXAS ATTENDANCE: 99,211 • LONGHORN NETWORK WEATHER CONDITIONS: SUNNY (66 DEGREES) Texas (5-2, 2-2 Big 12) piled up 590 yards of total offense and held Kansas to only 46 yards Saturday evening in a 43-0 victory over the Jayhawks (2-6, 0-5 Big 12) before 99,211 at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium. It marked the first time Kansas had been shut out in 109 games (10 years). The Longhorns had success on both sides of the ball, recording a shutout for the first time since the Horns’ 62-0 win over Baylor in 2005, while RBs Malcolm Brown and Joe Bergeron became the first pair of Texas freshman running backs ever to rush for 100 yards or better in the same game as Texas amassed 441 rushing yards. UT also held Kansas to 36 total plays, the fewest allowed in Big 12 conference play history, while the Jayhawks’ three first downs were the fewest since they had four against Nebraska in 1972, and their 46 yards of offense were fewest since Nebraska held them to 48 in 1997. Bergeron came in for Brown later in the second half and led the Horns with 136 yards and two TDs on 13 carries. Brown carried 28 times for 120 yards and two TDs. Quarterback David Ash completed 14-of-18 passes for 145 yards and had one rushing TD and Case McCoy saw time in the second half. The Texas defense had a record-setting performance and allowed only three first downs. Kansas posted a net of -2 rushing yards and only 48 yards through the air. The Horns also recovered a fumble, picked off a pass and registered three sacks. Defensive end Jackson Jeffcoat led the team with seven tackles - three for a loss - including a sack. Cornerback Quandre Diggs registered five tackles (three solo), notched two TFLs and notched an interception on the night. Defensive ends Alex Okafor and Chris Whaley picked up one sack each. Texas opened up a 7-0 lead on its initial drive of the game, as it went 65 yards on 11 plays and picked up a six-yard touchdown run from Brown. The Longhorns found the end zone on their next drive when they drove 90 yards on 13 plays, highlighted by a 27-yard run from RB Fozzy Whittaker and a 19-yard completion to Whittaker from Ash. Ash called his own number and crossed the goal line from two yards out, as Texas took a 14-0 lead. Texas fell a yard shy of the end zone on its next possession when Ash was stopped short of the goal line on fourth-and-one, but the Longhorns added an unconventional safety on the next play to take a 16-0 lead early in the second quarter. Kansas threw an incomplete pass from its one-yard line, but the Jayhawks’ Jeremiah Hatch committed a personal foul hands to the face penalty in the end zone, resulting in the two points for the Longhorns. Texas found the end zone again two drives later. Running back D.J. Monroe carried for four yards before Ash hit wide receiver Jaxon Shipley for 15 yards and a first down. Brown carried for one yard before the Horns picked up their next first down on a personal foul penalty. Wide receiver Marquise Goodwin carried for 10 yards and another first down, and on third-and-two from the KU 3, Whittaker picked up two yards to set up first and goal. Brown plunged in from a yard out to stake Texas to a 23-0 lead with 2:22 left in the second quarter. Diggs picked off Kansas’ Jordan Webb at the Jayhawks’ 38, and UT’s Justin Tucker converted a 52-yard field goal as the second quarter expired to put Texas up 26-0 at the half. The Longhorns extended their lead to 33-0 on their second drive of the third quarter. Brown led off with three consecutive carries for 11 yards and a first down before Ash hit Goodwin for 27 yards to the KU 37. Goodwin carried for 12 yards before Bergeron carried for 21 yards to the Kansas 4-yard line. Bergeron finished off the drive with his first career touchdown run, as he plunged in from four yards out. Tucker later tacked on a 31-yard field goal to give Texas a 36-0 lead with 9:10 remaining in the game. Texas added a fourth-quarter touchdown on a drive featuring nothing but Bergeron. The freshman ran for 11 yards and a first down and then carried for eight yards to the Kansas 37. Bergeron carried two yards to the 35 and took it to the end zone on the next play to push the Longhorns’ lead to 43-0. SCORING SUMMARY Kansas (2-6)_ _______________0________0________0________0_______ 0 TEXAS (5-2)_______________14_______12________7_______10______ 43 FIRST QUARTER 10:06 UT - Malcolm Brown 6-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 11 plays, 65 yards, TOP 4:54 1:38 UT-David Ash 2-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 13 plays, 90 yards, TOP 6:20 SECOND QUARTER 11:31 UT -Team safety 2:22 UT- Malcolm Brown 1-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 9 plays, 56 yards, TOP 3:49 :00 UT - Justin Tucker 52-yd field goal Drive: 7 plays, 3 yards, TOP 1:44 THIRD QUARTER 3:13 UT - Joe Bergeron 4-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 7 plays, 75 yards, TOP 3:20 FOURTH QUARTER 9:10 UT- Justin Tucker 31-yd field goal Drive: 9 plays, 32 yards, TOP 5:40 6:02 UT-Joe Bergeron 35-yd run (Tucker kick) Drive: 4 plays, 56 yards, TOP 1:30 TEAM STATISTICS KU UT First Downs________________________________________ 3______________ 35 Carries-Net Yards Rushing_______________________ 20-(-2)___________72-441 Pass Comp-Att-Int______________________________7-16-1__________ 16-21-1 Net Yards Passing__________________________________ 48_____________ 149 Total Plays-Yards_ ______________________________ 36-46___________93-590 Fumbles-Lost____________________________________ 3-1_____________ 1-1 Punts-Avg_____________________________________ 7-42.4___________ 1-33.0 Penalties-Yards__________________________________ 4-27____________ 6-65 Sacks By-Loss_ __________________________________ 1-15____________ 3-23 Time of Possession_______________________________15:53____________ 44:07 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS KANSAS Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Darrian Miller 6-6-0; Tony Pierson 4-5-0; James Sims 3-50; Brando Bourbon 2-3-0; Rell Lewis 1-0-0; Jordan Webb 4-(-21)-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): Jordan Webb 7-16-1-48-0. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Brando Bourbon 1-20-0; Chris Matthews 1-13-0; Trent Smiley 1-8-0; Tony Pierson 1-8-0; DJ Beshears 1-5-0; Darrian Miller 1-(-1)-0; JaCor Shepherd 1-(-5)-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Steven Johnson 5-13-18; Keeston Terry 6-9-15; Isaac Wright 4-8-12; Brad McDougald 8-3-11; Tunde Bakare 3-8-11; Darius Willis 3-5-8; Toben Opurum 2-5-7; Tyler Patmon 4-2-6; Isiah Barfield 4-2-6; Lubbock Smith 0-5-5; Greg Brown 1-2-3; Keba Agostinho 1-2-3; Prinz Kande 0-3-3; Dexter Linton 1-1-2; Patrick Dorsey 0-2-2; Shane Smith 0-2-2; Ben Heeney 1-0-1; Huldon Tharp 1-0-1; Richard Johnson 1-0-1; Ray Mitchell 1-0-1;Nick Sizemore 0-1-1; Victor Simmons 0-1-1; Anthony Davis 0-0-0; Michael Reynolds 0-0-0; Patrick Lewandowski 0-0-0. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Ron Doherty 7-297-42.4. TEXAS Rushing (Att-Yds-TD): Joe Bergeron 13-136-2; Malcolm Brown 28-119-2; Fozzy Whittaker 9-68-0; Marquise Goodwin 5-52-0; Jeremy Hills 6-31-0; David Ash 8-15-1; DJ Monroe 2-13-0; Jaxon Shipley 1-7-0. Passing (Comp-Att-Int-Yds-TD): David Ash 14-18-1-145-0; Case McCoy 2-2-04-0; Team 0-1-0-0-0. Receiving (No-Yds-TD): Jaxon Shipley 5-47-0; Marquise Goodwin 4-36-0; Fozzy Whittaker 3-44-0; Mike Davis 2-4-0; DJ Grant 1-13-0; DeSean Hales 1-5-0. Tackles (Solo-Asst-Total): Jackson Jeffcoat 4-3-7; Keenan Robinson 3-3-6; Quandre Diggs 3-2-5; Kheeston Randall 2-1-3; Joe Bergeron 2-0-2; Alex Okafor 2-0-2; Josh Turner 1-1-2; Kenny Vaccaro 1-1-2; Steve Edmond 1-1-2; Emmanuel Acho 1-1-2; Jordan Hicks 0-2-2; A.J. White 0-2-2; Blake Gideon 1-0-1; Jamison Berryhill 1-0-1; Mykkele Thompson 1-0-1; Desmond Jackson 1-0-1; Chris Whaley 1-0-1; Calvin Howell 1-0-1; Kendall Thompson 1-0-1; Demarco Cobbs 1-0-1; Ashton Dorsey 0-1-1; Leroy Scott 0-1-1; Carrington Byndom 0-1-1; Christian Scott 0-0-0; Team 0-0-0. Punting (No-Yds-Avg): Justin Tucker 1-33-33.0. 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics 2011 SCHEDULE & RESULTS TEAM TOTALS Record: 5-2 (2-2, Big 12) Home: 3-1 Road: 2-0 Neutral: 0-1 TEXAS OPPONENTS SCORING_____________________________223___________ 152 Points Per Game_ ____________________ 31.9__________ 21.7 FIRST DOWNS________________________159___________ 114 Rushing_______________________________89____________ 35 Passing_______________________________61____________ 64 Penalty_ _______________________________9____________ 15 RUSHING YARDAGE_ ________________1532___________ 729 Yards gained rushing__________________1796___________ 888 Yards lost rushing_____________________264___________ 159 Rushing Attempts_ ____________________347___________ 191 Average Per Rush______________________ 4.4___________ 3.8 Average Per Game___________________ 218.9_________ 104.1 TDs Rushing_ _________________________16_____________ 7 PASSING YARDAGE__________________1370__________ 1346 Comp-Att-Int___________________ 115-188-7______137-254-7 Average Per Pass_ _____________________ 7.3___________ 5.3 Average Per Catch____________________ 11.9___________ 9.8 Average Per Game___________________ 195.7_________ 192.3 TDs Passing____________________________8_____________ 6 TOTAL OFFENSE_____________________2902__________ 2075 Total Plays___________________________535___________ 445 Average Per Play_ _____________________ 5.4___________ 4.7 Average Per Game___________________ 414.6_________ 296.4 KICK RETURNS: #-Yards____________ 30-778________ 34-845 PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards______________ 9-76_________ 12-64 INT RETURNS: #-Yards________________ 7-67__________ 7-79 KICK RETURN AVERAGE_ ____________ 25.9__________ 24.9 PUNT RETURN AVERAGE______________ 8.4___________ 5.3 INT RETURN AVERAGE________________ 9.6__________ 11.3 FUMBLES-LOST______________________ 12-8__________ 13-8 PENALTIES-Yards_ _________________ 41-369________ 35-325 Average Per Game____________________ 52.7__________ 46.4 PUNTS-Yards_____________________ 29-1158_______ 34-1438 Average Per Punt_____________________ 39.9__________ 42.3 Net punt average_ ____________________ 37.7__________ 38.3 TIME OF POSSESSION/Game__________ 35:33_________ 24:27 3RD-DOWN Conversions_____________ 49/108_________ 25/91 3rd-Down Pct________________________ 45%__________ 27% 4TH-DOWN Conversions_______________ 6/13__________ 4/15 4th-Down Pct________________________ 46%__________ 27% SACKS BY-Yards_____________________ 10-61________ 18-173 MISC YARDS____________________________0_____________ 0 TOUCHDOWNS SCORED_ ______________27____________ 17 FIELD GOALS-ATTEMPTS____________ 10-11_________ 11-12 ON-SIDE KICKS_______________________ 0-0___________ 0-0 RED-ZONE SCORES_____________(24-34) 71%____ (18-22) 82% RED-ZONE TOUCHDOWNS_ ____(16-34) 47%____ (10-22) 45% PAT-ATTEMPTS_______________(27-27) 100%___ (17-17) 100% TURNOVER MARGIN_______________ Even (15 gained, 15 lost) UT DATE RANK OPPONENT W/L SCORE ATT Sept. 3__ NR/24_ _ RICE__________________ W____ 34-9_ _101,624 Sept. 10_ #24/21_ _ BYU_ _________________ W____17-16__100,995 Sept. 17_ #23/21_ _ at UCLA_______________ W____49-20___54,583 Oct. 1___ #17/17_ _ at Iowa State*___________ W____34-17___56,380 Oct. 8___ #11/10_ _ vs. #3/1 Oklahoma*+______L_ ___10-55___96,009 Oct. 15__ #22/21_ _ #3/4 OKLAHOMA STATE*__ L_ ___26-38__100,101 Oct. 29____ --_ ___ KANSAS*______________ W____ 43-0_ __99,211 Nov. 5____ --_ ___ TEXAS TECH*___________ -_ ____ -__11:11 a.m. Nov. 12_ __ --_ ___ at Missouri*_ _____________ -_ ____ -______ TBA Nov. 19_ __ --_ ___ #17/19 KANSAS STATE*_ _ -_ ____ -______ TBA Nov. 24_ __ --_ ___ at Texas A&M*____________ -_ ____ -_____ 7 p.m. Dec. 3_ ___ --_ ___ at Baylor*_______________ -_ ____ -______ TBA * Big 12 Conference game // + Cotton Bowl (Dallas) ATTENDANCE Total____________________ 7 games_ ______ 608,913 (86,988 avg.) Home_ __________________ 4 games_ _____ 401,931 (100,483 avg.) Road____________________ 2 games_ ______ 110,973 (54,583 avg.) Neutral___________________1 game_________ 96,009 (96,009 avg.) RUSHING NAME____________ G____ATT_ __YDS___ AVG___ TD___ LONG Brown, Malcolm_____7_ ___ 131____ 635____ 4.8_____ 5_____27/OS Whittaker, Fozzy_____7_ ____52_ ___ 288____ 5.5_____ 4____36t/UC Bergeron, Joe________7_ ____31_ ___ 223____ 7.2_____ 2____35t/KU Monroe, D.J.________7_ ____24_ ___ 187____ 7.8_____ 0_____26/BY Goodwin, Marquise_ _6_ ____ 9______88_____ 9.8_____ 0____ 20/UC Johnson, Cody_______7_ ____17_ ____46_____ 2.7_____ 4_____7t/UC Shipley, Jaxon_______7_ ____11_ ____39_____ 3.5_____ 0____ 15/UC Hills, Jeremy________6_ ____ 6______31_____ 5.2_____ 0____ 13/KU Gilbert, Garrett______2_ ____ 7______15_____ 2.1_____ 0____ 24/EU Ash, David_________7_ ____46_ ____14_____ 0.3_____ 1_____23/OS TEAM_____________7_ ____ 3_____ (-6)___ (-2.0)____ 0_________ Onyegbule, Miles_ ___6_ ____ 1_____(-13)_ (-13.0)_ __ 0_________ McCoy, Case________6_ ____ 9_____(-15)__ (-1.7)____ 0______ 3/IS TEXAS_ ___________7_ ___ 347____1532___4.4_____ 16_ _ 36t/UC OPPONENTS_______7_ ___ 191____ 729____3.8_____ 7___ 74t/OU PASSING NAME_________ Ash, David_____ McCoy, Case____ Gilbert, Garrett__ Shipley, Jaxon___ Harris, John_____ TEAM_________ TEXAS_ _______ OPPONENTS___ G_ C-ATT-INT__ PCT_ __ YDS_ __ TD_____ RTG 7____ 60-97-5____ 61.9____ 604_____ 3_____114.06 6____ 37-55-0____ 67.3____ 455_____ 2_____148.76 2____ 15-31-2____ 48.4____ 247_____ 1_____113.06 7_____ 2-2-0_____100.0____ 28_ ____ 1_____382.60 3_____ 1-1-0_____100.0____ 36_ ____ 1_____732.40 7_____ 0-2-0______0.0_____ 0______ 0_______0.00 7___ 115-188-7___ 61.2____ 1370_ ___ 8____ 128.98 7___ 137-254-7___ 53.9____ 1346_ ___ 6____ 100.73 SCORE BY QUARTER 1st 2nd 3rd 4th TOTAL TEXAS_ _________47_ _____77_______49_______50______223 Opponents_______22_ _____62_______47_______21______152 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics RECEIVING PUNTING NAME G NO YDS AVG TD LONG Shipley, Jaxon___________7______ 33_ ___ 438____ 13.3_ ____ 3_______49/IS Davis, Mike_____________7______ 27_ ___ 418____ 15.5_ ____ 1_____ 56/RU Whittaker, Fozzy_________7______ 15_ ___ 129_____ 8.6______ 1_____ 26/RU Goodwin, Marquise_ _____6______ 10_ ____74______ 7.4______ 0_____ 27/KU Grant, D.J.______________7______ 9_____ 114____ 12.7_ ____ 3_____ 45t/UC Monroe, D.J.____________7______ 4______51_____ 12.8_ ____ 0______ 26/BY White, Darius___________7______ 4______35______ 8.8______ 0_____ 13/RU Jones, Dominique________7______ 2______27_____ 13.5_ ____ 0_____ 14/RU Brown, Malcolm_________7______ 2______18______ 9.0______ 0_____ 19/OU Harris, John_____________3______ 2______13______ 6.5______ 0_____ 10/RU Irby, Blaine_____________7______ 2______12______ 6.0______ 0______ 7/OU Matthews, Barrett________7______ 2______ 9______ 4.5______ 0_______6/OS Ash, David_____________7______ 1______23_____ 23.0_ ____ 0______ 23/BY Hales, DeSean___________5______ 1______ 5______ 5.0______ 0______ 5/KU Johnson, Cody___________7______ 1______ 4______ 4.0______ 0______ 4/RU TEXAS__________________ 7____ 115____1370___ 11.9_ ____ 8_____ 56/RU OPPONENTS___________7____ 137____1346____ 9.8______ 6__ 40/UC,OU NAME G NO YDS AVG. TB I20 BLK LONG Tucker, Justin_________ 7_ ___ 28____ 1158_ ___39.9_____0_____ 7_____ 0____ 54/OU TEXAS______________ 7_ ___ 28____ 1158_ ___39.9_____0____ 7_____ 0____ 54/OU OPPONENTS_ ______ 7_ ___234_ __ 1458_ ___42.3_____3____ 9_____ 1____ 70/UC ALL-PURPOSE NAME G NO YDS AVG TD LONG Shipley, Jaxon___________7______ 8______42______ 5.2______ 0______ 20/BY Turner, Josh_ ___________7______ 1______34_____ 34.0_ ____ 1______ 34t/IS TEXAS_ _______________7_____ 9______76_____ 8.4______ 1______34t/IS OPPONENTS___________7_____ 12_ ____64_____ 5.3______ 0______24/BY PUNT KO NAME, POS G RUSH REC RET RET IR FR TOTAL YPG Whittaker, Fozzy____7____ 288____ 129____ 0____ 372____ 0____ 0____ 789____ 112.7 Brown, Malcolm____7____ 635_____18_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0____ 653_____ 93.3 Shipley, Jaxon______7_____ 39_ ___ 438____ 42_ ___ 0_____ 0____ 0____ 519_____ 74.1 Davis, Mike________7_____ 0_____ 418____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0____ 418_____ 59.7 Goodwin, Marquise_ 6_____ 88_ ____74_____ 0____ 139____ 0____ 0____ 301_____ 50.2 Monroe, D.J._______7____ 187_____51_____ 0_____61_ ___ 0____ 0____ 299_____ 42.7 Bergeron, Joe_______7____ 223_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0____ 223_____ 31.9 Diggs, Quandre_____7_____ 0______ 0_____ 0____ 186____ 0____ 0____ 186_____ 26.6 Grant, D.J._________7_____ 0_____ 114____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0____ 114_____ 16.3 Johnson, Cody______7_____ 46_ ____ 4_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0_____50_ _____ 7.1 Gideon, Blake______7_____ 0______ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 43___ (-1)____42_ _____ 6.0 Ash, David________7_____ 14_ ____23_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0_____37_ _____ 5.3 White, Darius______7_____ 0______35_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0_____35_ _____ 5.0 Turner, Josh_ ______7_____ 0______ 0_____ 34_ ___ 0_____ 0____ 0_____34_ _____ 4.9 Hills, Jeremy_______6_____ 31_ ____ 0_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0_____31_ _____ 5.2 Jones, Dominique___7_____ 0______27_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0_____27_ _____ 3.9 Phillips, Adrian_____6_____ 0______ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 24____ 0_____24_ _____ 4.0 Roberson, Ryan_____7_____ 0______ 0_____ 0_____20_ ___ 0____ 0_____20_ _____ 2.9 Gilbert, Garrett_____2_____ 15_ ____ 0_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0_____15_ _____ 7.5 Ramirez, Cody_____1_____ 0______ 0_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0___ 13_____13_ ____ 13.0 Harris, John________3_____ 0______13_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0_____13_ _____ 4.3 Irby, Blaine________7_____ 0______12_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0_____12_ _____ 1.7 Matthews, Barrett___7_____ 0______ 9_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0_____ 9_______ 1.3 Hales, DeSean______5_____ 0______ 5_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0_____ 5_______ 1.0 TEAM____________7____ (-6)_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0____ (-6)____ (-0.9) Onyegbule, Miles_ __6____ (-13)____ 0_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0____(-13)_ __ (-2.2) McCoy, Case_______6____ (-15)____ 0_____ 0_____ 0_____ 0____ 0____(-15)_ __ (-2.5) TEXAS___________7___ 1532_ __1370___ 76_ __ 778___ 67___ 12____3835_ __ 547.8 OPPONENTS____ 7___ 729____1346___ 64_ __ 845___ 79___ 75____3138_ __ 448.3 *Includes blocked FG return yardage TOTAL OFFENSE NAME Brown, Malcolm____ Ash, David________ McCoy, Case_______ Whittaker, Fozzy____ Gilbert, Garrett_____ Bergeron, Joe_______ Monroe, D.J._______ Goodwin, Marquise_ Shipley, Jaxon______ Johnson, Cody______ Harris, John________ Hills, Jeremy_______ TEAM____________ Onyegbule, Miles_ __ TEXAS_ __________ OPPONENTS______ G PLAYS RUSH PASS YDS AVG YPG 7_____ 131____ 635_ ____ 0_____ 635_ ___ 4.8_____90.7 7_____ 143____ 14_____ 604_ ___ 618_ ___ 4.3_____88.3 6______64_ __ (-15)____ 455_ ___ 440_ ___ 6.9_____73.3 7______52_ ___ 288_ ____ 0_____ 288_ ___ 5.5_____41.1 2______38_ ___ 15_____ 247_ ___ 262_ ___ 6.9____131.0 7______31_ ___ 223_ ____ 0_____ 223_ ___ 7.2_____31.9 7______24_ ___ 187_ ____ 0_____ 187_ ___ 7.8_____26.7 6______ 9_____ 88______ 0_____ 88_____ 9.8_____14.7 7______13_ ___ 39_____ 28_____ 67_____ 5.2______9.6 7______17_ ___ 46______ 0_____ 46_____ 2.7______6.6 3______ 1______ 0_____ 36_____ 36____ 36.0_ ___12.0 6______ 6_____ 31______ 0_____ 31_____ 5.2______5.2 7______ 5_____ (-6)_____ 0_____ (-6)_ __ (-1.2)__ (-0.9) 6______ 1____ (-13)_____ 0____ (-13)__ (-13.0)_ (-2.2) 7_____ 535___ 1532___ 1370___ 2902____ 5.4___ 414.6 7_____ 445____ 729___ 1346___ 2075____ 4.7___ 296.4 KICK RETURNS NAME G NO YDS AVG TD LONG Whittaker, Fozzy_________7______ 8_____ 372____ 46.5_ ____ 2_ 100t/OU,OS Diggs, Quandre__________7______ 10_ ___ 186____ 18.6_ ____ 0_____ 29/OU Goodwin, Marquise_ _____6______ 6_____ 139____ 23.2_ ____ 0______ 40/BY Monroe, D.J.____________7______ 4______61_____ 15.2_ ____ 0_____ 17/RU Roberson, Ryan__________7______ 2______20_____ 10.0_ ____ 0__ 10/OU,OS TEXAS_ _______________7_____ 30_ ___ 778____ 25.9_ ____ 2_100t/OU,OS OPPONENTS___________7_____ 34_ ___ 845____ 24.9_ ____ 1____ 100t/OS PUNT RETURNS INTERCEPTIONS NAME G NO YDS AVG TD LONG GPhillips, Adrian_ _______7______ 2______24_____ 12.0_ ____ 0_____ 24/UC Diggs, Quandre__________7______ 2______ 0______ 0.0______ 0__________ ideon, Blake_____________7______ 1______43_____ 43.0_ ____ 0_______43/IS Byndom, Carrington______7______ 1______ 0______ 0.0______ 0__________ Vaccaro, Kenny__________7______ 1______ 0______ 0.0______ 0__________ TEXAS_ _______________7_____ 6______67_____ 9.6______ 0______ 43/IS OPPONENTS___________7_____ 7______79____ 11.3_ ____ 1____ 55t/OU FUMBLE RETURNS NAME G NO YDS AVG TD LONG Ramirez, Cody____________ 1_______1_______13______ 13.0______0_ _____ 13/RU Gideon, Blake_____________ 7_______1______ (-1)_____(-1.0)______0_ __________ TEXAS_ _______________7_____ 2______12_____ 6.0______ 0_____ 13/RU OPPONENTS___________7_____ 2______75____ 37.5_ ____ 2____ 56t/OU KICKOFF EFFICIENCY NAME G NO YDS AVG AVG/POSS TB Tucker, Justin ___________7______ 41_ __ 2,636_ __ 64.3_ ____ 26.6_ ______ 7 Russ, William_ __________1______ 2_____ 118____ 59.0_ ____ 31.0_ ______ 0 TEXAS_ _______________7_____ 43_ __ 2,754_ __ 64.0_ ____ 26.8_ ______ 7 OPPONENTS___________7_____ 36_ __ 2,333_ __ 64.8_ ____ 28.8_ ______ 5 Texas Kick-by-kick field position: RU: TB, TB, 16, 28. BY: 11, TB, 24, 15, 40. UC: TB, 24, 22, 21. IS: 15, 20, 20 OU: 17, 24, 30, 29, TD, 40, 14, 17, 32. OS: TB, 36. 32. 37. TD. 26. 36. 41. KU: 35, 46 Opponents Kick-by-kick field position: RU: 32, 48, 19, 18, 24, TB, TB. BY: 24, 24 29, 24. UC: 23, TB, 26, 38, 24, 35, 27, 26. UC: 18, 29$, 35, 26, 25, 16, 42, 27. OU: 29, 28, 17, TB. OS: TB, TB, TD, 32. KU: 22, 28, 21, 26, 19, 30, 32 Key: TB denotes touchback // * onside kick (UT recovered) // ^ drive started in UT territory // # drive started in opponent’s territory //$ fumble recovery //! UT Fumble //@ drive started in Opponent’s territory 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics 10-YARD GAINS BY PLAYER KO PUNT NAME NO TDRUSHREC RET RET IR FRLAT Whittaker, Fozzy 27 5 12 7 8 0 0 0 0 Shipley, Jaxon 21 2 2 18 0 1 0 0 0 Brown, Malcolm 17 3 16 1 0 0 0 0 0 Davis, Mike 13 1 0 13 0 0 0 0 0 Goodwin, Marquise13 0 6 1 6 0 0 0 0 Monroe, D.J. 11 0 5 2 4 0 0 0 0 Diggs, Quandre 10 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 Bergeron, Joe 7 1 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ash, David 6 0 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 Grant, D.J. 4 1 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 Roberson, Ryan 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 White, Darius 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 Jones, Dominique 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 Turner, Josh 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Harris, John 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Ramirez, Cody 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Hills, Jeremy 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Phillips, Adrian 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Gilbert, Garrett 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Gideon, Blake 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 TEXAS 142 14 55 52 30 2 2 1 0 TEAM EXPLOSIVE PLAYS 12+YARDS RUSHING OPPONENT UT OPP Rice_______________ 5_______ 3 BYU_______________ 5_______ 0 UCLA_____________ 6_______ 4 Iowa State_ _________ 4_______ 3 Oklahoma__________ 3_______ 1 Oklahoma State______ 6_______ 5 Kansas_____________11_______ 0 Texas Tech_ ________ -_ ______ - Missouri_ __________ -_ ______ - Kansas State_________ -_ ______ - Texas A&M_________ -_ ______ - Baylor_ ____________ -_ ______ - TOTALS__________ 40_______16 16+YARDS PASS/REC. UT OPP 5_______ 0 3_______ 2 3_______ 5 5_______ 3 5_______ 9 1_______ 3 2_______ 0 -_ ______ -_ ______ -_ ______ -_ ______ -_ ______ 24_______22 INDIVIDUAL EXPLOSIVE PLAYS RUSHING (12+ YARDS) YDSTYPENAME(S) *36 *35 27 27 27 26 24 *24 23 22 21 21 20 20 18 18 17 17 17 *16 *16 16 16 15 *15 14 14 14 14 14 13 13 13 13 13 13 12 12 12 12 12 Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Whittaker, Fozzy Bergeron, Joe Bergeron, Joe Brown, Malcolm Whittaker, Fozzy Monroe, D.J. Gilbert, Garrett Brown, Malcolm Ash, David Brown, Malcolm Monroe, D.J. Bergeron, Joe Brown, Malcolm Goodwin, Marquise Whittaker, Fozzy Whittaker, Fozzy Brown, Malcolm Monroe, D.J. Ash, David Brown, Malcolm Whittaker, Fozzy Bergeron, Joe Bergeron, Joe Shipley, Jaxon Brown, Malcolm Brown, Malcolm Brown, Malcolm Brown, Malcolm Goodwin, Marquise Goodwin, Marquise Brown, Malcolm Monroe, D.J. Ash, David Brown, Malcolm Brown, Malcolm Hills, Jeremy Shipley, Jaxon Whittaker, Fozzy Monroe, D.J. Goodwin, Marquise Bergeron, Joe * touchdown scored on play OPP UCLA Kansas UCLA Oklahoma State Kansas BYU Rice Oklahoma State Oklahoma State Iowa State Oklahoma State Kansas Rice UCLA Oklahoma Kansas Rice Rice Oklahoma State UCLA Iowa State Iowa State Kansas UCLA Oklahoma State BYU Oklahoma State Kansas Kansas Kansas BYU BYU BYU UCLA Oklahoma Kansas Rice Iowa State Oklahoma Kansas Kansas INDIVIDUAL EXPLOSIVE PLAYS PASSING (16+ YARDS) YDSTYPENAME(S) 56 55 49 *48 45 *45 *40 *36 27 *26 25 23 23 23 22 22 22 20 20 19 19 19 18 18 18 Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Davis, Mike from Gilbert, Garrett Davis, Mike from Gilbert, Garrett Shipley, Jaxon from McCoy, Case Davis, Mike from Ash, David Davis, Mike from McCoy, Case Grant, D.J. from McCoy, Case Shipley, Jaxon from Ash, David Shipley, Jaxon from Harris, John Goodwin, Marquise from Ash, David Whittaker, Fozzy from Gilbert, Garrett Davis, Mike from McCoy, Case Ash, David from Shipley, Jaxon Ash, David from Shipley, Jaxon Shipley, Jaxon from McCoy, Case Shipley, Jaxon from Ash, David Shipley, Jaxon from Ash, David Shipley, Jaxon from Ash, David Shipley, Jaxon from McCoy, Case Davis, Mike from Ash, David Grant, D.J. from Ash, David Brown, Malcolm from McCoy, Case Whittaker, Fozzy from Ash, David Shipley, Jaxon from Gilbert, Garrett Davis, Mike from McCoy, Case Monroe, D.J. from Ash, David OPP Rice Rice Iowa State Iowa State UCLA UCLA Iowa State Rice Kansas Rice UCLA BYU BYU Oklahoma Iowa State Oklahoma Iowa State BYU Oklahoma State Iowa State Oklahoma Kansas Rice Oklahoma Oklahoma * touchdown scored on play INDIVIDUAL EXPLOSIVE PLAYS PLAYS OF 20 YARDS OR MORE YDSTYPENAME(S) *100 *100 56 55 49 *48 *45 45 43 *40 40 37 36 *36 *36 *35 *34 30 29 28 27 27 27 27 26 26 *26 25 25 24 24 *24 24 23 23 23 23 22 22 22 22 22 21 21 21 21 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 KR KR Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass INT Pass KR KR KR Rush Pass Rush PR KR KR KR Rush Pass Rush Rush Pass Rush Pass KR Pass Rush INT Rush KR Pass KR Pass Rush Pass KR Rush KR Pass Rush KR Rush KR KR Rush KR Pass Pass Rush PR Whittaker, Fozzy Whittaker, Fozzy Davis, Mike from Gilbert, Garrett Davis, Mike from Gilbert, Garrett Shipley, Jaxon from McCoy, Case Davis, Mike from Ash, David Grant, D.J. from McCoy, Case Davis, Mike from McCoy, Case Gideon, Blake Shipley, Jaxon from Ash, David Goodwin, Marquise Whittaker, Fozzy Whittaker, Fozzy Whittaker, Fozzy Shipley, Jaxon from Harris, John Bergeron, Joe Turner, Josh Whittaker, Fozzy Diggs, Quandre Diggs, Quandre Whittaker, Fozzy Goodwin, Marquise from Ash, David Bergeron, Joe Brown, Malcolm Monroe, D.J. from Ash, David Monroe, D.J. Whittaker, Fozzy from Gilbert, Garrett Whittaker, Fozzy Davis, Mike from McCoy, Case Gilbert, Garrett Phillips, Adrian Brown, Malcolm Whittaker, Fozzy Ash, David from Shipley, Jaxon Diggs, Quandre Shipley, Jaxon from McCoy, Case Ash, David Shipley, Jaxon from Ash, David Goodwin, Marquise Brown, Malcolm Goodwin, Marquise Shipley, Jaxon from Ash, David Monroe, D.J. Goodwin, Marquise Bergeron, Joe Diggs, Quandre Whittaker, Fozzy Goodwin, Marquise Goodwin, Marquise Shipley, Jaxon from McCoy, Case Davis, Mike from Ash, David Brown, Malcolm Shipley, Jaxon * touchdown scored on play OPP Oklahoma Oklahoma State Rice Rice Iowa State Iowa State UCLA UCLA Iowa State Iowa State BYU Oklahoma State Oklahoma State UCLA Rice Kansas Iowa State Oklahoma State Oklahoma Oklahoma Kansas Kansas UCLA Oklahoma State BYU BYU Rice Oklahoma State UCLA Rice UCLA Oklahoma State Oklahoma State BYU Kansas Oklahoma Oklahoma State Iowa State UCLA Iowa State UCLA Oklahoma Oklahoma State UCLA Kansas Oklahoma Iowa State UCLA BYU BYU Oklahoma State Rice BYU 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics SCORING PAT PAT PAT PAT NAME G TD FG-A KICK RUSH RCV PASS SAFETY PAT RT POINTS PPG HIGH GAME Tucker, Justin__________7_______ 0_______ 10-11_ __ 27-27_ ______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0________57_ ____8.1__________13/IS Whittaker, Fozzy________7_______ 7________ 0-0_ ____ 0-0_ _______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0________42_ ____6.0________ 12/UC Brown, Malcolm________7_______ 5________ 0-0_ ____ 0-0_ _______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0________30_ ____4.3_____ 12/OS,KU Johnson, Cody__________7_______ 4________ 0-0_ ____ 0-0_ _______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0________24_ ____3.4_________ 12/BY Grant, D.J._____________7_______ 3________ 0-0_ ____ 0-0_ _______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0________18_ ____2.6________ 18/UC Shipley, Jaxon__________7_______ 3________ 0-0_ ____ 0-0_ _______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0________18_ ____2.6__________ 6/3x Bergeron, Joe___________7_______ 2________ 0-0_ ____ 0-0_ _______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0________12_ ____1.7________ 12/KU Ash, David____________7_______ 1________ 0-0_ ____ 0-0_ _______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0________ 6______0.9_________ 6/KU Davis, Mike____________7_______ 1________ 0-0_ ____ 0-0_ _______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0________ 6______0.9___________6/IS Turner, Josh_ __________7_______ 1________ 0-0_ ____ 0-0_ _______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0________ 6______0.9___________6/IS TEAM________________7_______ 0________ 0-0_ ____ 0-0_ _______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 2________ 4______2.3_______ 2/0S,KU TEXAS_ ______________7______27______ 10-11_ __ 27-27_ ______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 2_______ 223____ 31.9_______ 49/UC OPPONENTS__________7______17______ 11-12_ __ 17-17_ ______0-0________ 0________ 0-0_______ 0_ _________ 0_______ 152____ 21.7_______ 55/OU FIELD GOAL ACCURACY NAME_____________________G________10-19______ 20-29_ _____ 30-39______ 40-49_ _____ 50-59______ Tucker, Justin_______________ 7_________0-0________ 3-3_ _______5-6________ 1-1_ _______1-1________ TEXAS_ ___________________ 7_________0-0________ 3-3_ _______5-6________ 1-1_ _______1-1________ OPPONENTS_______________ 7_________0-0________ 4-5_ _______3-3________ 3-3_ _______1-1________ 60+______ TOTAL_ ______ PCT_ ______ LONG 0-0_ ______ 10-11________ 90.9%_______ 52/KU 0-0_ ______10-11________ 90.9%_______ 52/KU 0-0_ ______11-12________ 91.7%_______ 51/UC SCORING DRIVES TEXAS <10 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-89 90+ Touchdowns___________ 0_ _________ 1__________ 2___________0___________ 2_ _________ 6__________ 4___________5___________ 1_ _________ 3 Field Goals____________ 2_ _________ 2__________ 1___________1___________ 1_ _________ 2__________ 0___________1___________ 0_ _________ 0 OPPONENTS <10 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-89 90+ Touchdowns___________ 0_ _________ 0__________ 0___________1___________ 0_ _________ 1__________ 5___________1___________ 3_ _________ 0 Field Goals____________ 0_ _________ 0__________ 3___________0___________ 4_ _________ 1__________ 2___________0___________ 1_ _________ 0 TEXAS IN THE RED ZONE TEXAS ON FIRST AND GOAL Possessions___________________________________________________ 34 Total scores_ _________________________________________________ 24 Percentage_ ________________________________________________ 71% Points Scored________________________________________________ 136 Touchdowns (rush/pass)_______________________________ 16 (13/3) Field goals__________________________________________________ 8 Missed field goals____________________________________________ 1 Turnovers__________________________________________________ 1 On downs__________________________________________________ 7 Clock______________________________________________________ 1 Possessions___________________________________________________ 15 Total scores_ _________________________________________________ 13 Percentage_ ________________________________________________ 87% Points Scored_________________________________________________ 87 Number of plays____________________________________________ 29 Touchdowns (rush/pass)___________________________________ 12 (9/3) Field goals__________________________________________________ 1 Missed field goals____________________________________________ 0 Turnovers__________________________________________________ 0 On downs__________________________________________________ 2 Clock_________________________________________________________ 0 OPPONENTS IN THE RED ZONE Possessions___________________________________________________ 22 Total scores_ _________________________________________________ 18 Percentage_ ________________________________________________ 82% Points Scored_________________________________________________ 94 Touchdowns (rush/pass)________________________________ 10 (4/6) Field goals__________________________________________________ 8 Missed field goals____________________________________________ 1 Turnovers__________________________________________________ 1 On downs__________________________________________________ 2 Clock______________________________________________________ 0 TEXAS NON-OFFENSIVE TOUCHDOWNS YDS_________ 34___________ 100__________ 100__________ PLAY__________________ PLAYER___________ OPPONENT Punt Return (Blocked)_ ___Josh Turner__________ at Iowa State Kickoff Return___________ Fozzy Whittaker_____ vs. Oklahoma Kickoff Return___________ Fozzy Whittaker_ vs. Oklahoma State 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics SINGLE-GAME SUPERLATIVES INDIVIDUAL TEXAS OPPONENT Rushing Attempts_ _________________ 28_ __ Brown, Malcolm vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ ________________17_____ Randle, Joseph, vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) Yards Rushing____________________ 136_ __ Bergeron, Joe vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)___________________140_____ Smith, Jeremy, vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) TD Rushes_ ________________________ 2_ __ Johnson, Cody vs BYU (Sep 10, 2011)______________________2_____ Coleman, Derric, at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011) __________________________________ 2_ __ Whittaker, Fozzy at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)___________________2_____ Smith, Jeremy, vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) __________________________________ 2_ __ Brown, Malcolm vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) __________________________________ 2_ __ Brown, Malcolm vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011) __________________________________ 2_ __ Bergeron, Joe vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011) Long Rush_ ______________________ 36t_ __ Whittaker, Fozzy at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)_________________ 74t_____ Smith, Jeremy, vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) Pass attempts______________________ 40_ __ Ash, David vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011)_______________51_____ Jantz, Steele, at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011) Pass completions___________________ 22_ __ Ash, David vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011)_______________31_____ Jones ,Landry, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Yards Passing_____________________ 239_ __ Gilbert, Garrett vs Rice (Sep 03, 2011)____________________367_____ Jones, Landry, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) TD Passes__________________________ 2_ __ McCoy, Case at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)______________________3_____ Jones, Landry, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) __________________________________ 2_ __ Ash, David at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)_ ___________________ Long Pass_________________________ 56_ __ Gilbert, Garrett vs Rice (Sep 03, 2011)_____________________40_____ Brehaut, Richar, at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011) _________________________________________________________________________________________40_____ Jones, Landry, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Receptions_ _______________________ 10_ __ Davis, Mike vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011)_______________9_____ Broyles, Ryan, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Yards Receiving___________________ 141_ __ Shipley, Jaxon at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)________________122_____ Broyles, Ryan, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) TD Receptions______________________ 3_ __ Grant, D.J. at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)________________________2_____ Stills, Kenny, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Long Reception_ ___________________ 56_ __ Davis, Mike vs Rice (Sep 03, 2011)_ ______________________40_____ James, Jordan, at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011) _________________________________________________________________________________________40_____ Broyles, Ryan, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Field Goals_________________________ 3_ __ Tucker, Justin at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)__________________3_____ Boswell, Chris, vs Rice (Sep 03, 2011) __________________________________ 3_ __ Tucker, Justin vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011)__________________3_____ Sorensen, Justin, vs BYU (Sep 10, 2011) Long Field Goal____________________ 52_ __ Tucker, Justin vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ __________________51_____ Locke, Jeff, at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011) Punts______________________________ 7_ __ Tucker, Justin vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011)_____________7_____ Doherty, Ron, vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011) Punting Avg_____________________ 46.3_ __ Tucker, Justin at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)__________________ 48.8_____ Locke, Jeff, at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011) Long Punt_________________________ 54_ __ Tucker, Justin vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011)_________________70_____ Locke, Jeff, at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011) Long Punt Return_ ________________ 34t_ __ Turner, Josh at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)__________________24_____ Jacobson, McKay, vs BYU (Sep 10, 2011) Long Kickoff Return______________ 100t_ __ Whittaker, Fozzy vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011)____________ 100t_____ Gilbert, Justin, vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) _______________________________ 100t_ __ Whittaker, Fozzy vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) Tackles_ __________________________ 13_ __ Acho, Emmanual vs BYU (Sep 10, 2011)__________________18_____ Johnson, Steven, vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011) Sacks____________________________ 1.0_ __ Dorsey, Ashton vs BYU (Sep 10, 2011)___________________ 3.0_____ Alexander, Frank, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) ________________________________ 1.0_ __ Acho, Emmanuel at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)_ _________________ ________________________________ 1.0_ __ Vaccaro, Kenny at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)_ _______________ ________________________________ 1.0_ __ Acho, Emmanuel at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)_______________ ________________________________ 1.0_ __ Gideon, Blake at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)__________________ ________________________________ 1.0_ __ Okafor, Alex at Iowa State (Oct. 01, 2011)_ _________________ ________________________________ 1.0_ __ Howell, Calvin vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011)_________________ ________________________________ 1.0_ __ Okafor, Alex vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011)_ _____________ ________________________________ 1.0_ __ Jeffcoat, Jackson vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)___________________ ________________________________ 1.0_ __ Okafor, Alex vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ ____________________ ________________________________ 1.0_ __ Whaley, Chris vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ ___________________ Interceptions_ ______________________ 1_ __ Phillips, Adrian vs BYU (Sep 10, 2011)_____________________1_____ Sorensen, Danie, vs BYU (Sep 10, 2011) __________________________________ 1_ __ Diggs, Quandre vs BYU (Sep 10, 2011)_____________________1_____ Uale, Travis, vs BYU (Sep 10, 2011) __________________________________ 1_ __ Phillips, Adrian at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)____________________1_____ Jefferson, Tony, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) __________________________________ 1_ __ Vaccaro, Kenny at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)____________________1_____ Hurst, Demontre, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) __________________________________ 1_ __ Byndom, Carrington at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)________________1_____ Thomas, James, vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) __________________________________ 1_ __ Gideon, Blake at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)__________________1_____ Lavey, Caleb, vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) __________________________________ 1_ __ Diggs, Quandre vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)___________________1_____ Brown, Greg, vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011) Long Interception Return____________ 43_ __ Gideon, Blake at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)________________ 55t_____ Hurst, Demontre, vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) TEAM TEXAS OPPONENT Rushing attempts___________________ 72_ __ vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ ______________________________38_____ at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011) Yards Rushing____________________ 441_ __ vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ _____________________________202_____ vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) Yards Per Rush_ __________________ 6.1_ __ vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ _____________________________ 7.5_____ vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) TD Rushes_ ________________________ 5_ __ vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ _______________________________3_____ vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) Pass attempts______________________ 40_ __ vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011)________________________52_____ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Pass completions___________________ 22_ __ vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011)________________________31_____ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Yards Passing_____________________ 277_ __ vs Rice (Sep 03, 2011)_________________________________367_____ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Yards Per Pass___________________ 10.6_ __ at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)____________________________ 7.1_____ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) TD Passes__________________________ 3_ __ at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)_________________________________3_____ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Total Plays________________________ 93_ __ vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ ______________________________89_____ at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011) Total Offense_____________________ 590_ __ vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ _____________________________453_____ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Yards Per Play____________________ 7.0_ __ at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)_______________________________ 6.4_____ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Points____________________________ 49_ __ at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)________________________________55_____ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) Sacks By_ __________________________ 3_ __ at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)______________________________8_____ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) __________________________________ 3_ __ vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011) First Downs_ ______________________ 35_ __ vs Kansas (Oct 29, 2011)_ ______________________________26_____ at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011) Penalties__________________________ 10_ __ at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011)______________________________8_____ at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011) Penalty Yards______________________ 69_ __ vs Rice (Sep 03, 2011)__________________________________90_____ at Iowa State (Oct 01, 2011) Turnovers__________________________ 5_ __ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011)_ ____________________________4_____ at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011) Interceptions By_____________________ 3_ __ at UCLA (Sep 17, 2011)_________________________________2_____ vs BYU (Sep 10, 2011) __________________________________________________________________________________________2_____ vs Oklahoma (Oct 08, 2011) __________________________________________________________________________________________2_____ vs Oklahoma State (Oct 15, 2011) 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics GAME-BY-GAME STARTING LINEUPS OFFENSE______________TE________LT_______LG________ C__________ RG_ ________ RT_ ________FL_ _______ QB________ RB__________ FB__________ SE at Rice_______________D.Jones_ ____Allen_____Snow____ Espinosa_____ Walters______ Hopkins______Irby*_ _____ Gilbert____ Whittaker_____Johnson_______ Davis BYU_ _______________D.Jones_ ____Allen_____Snow____ Espinosa_____ Walters______ Hopkins_____ Shipley_ ____ Gilbert____ Whittaker_____ Grant*_ ______ Davis at UCLA_____________D.Jones_ ____Allen_____Snow____ Espinosa_____ Walters______ Hopkins____ Goodwin_____McCoy_ ___ Brown_ _____Johnson_______ Davis at Iowa State__________D.Jones_ ____Allen_____Snow____ Espinosa_____ Walters______ Hopkins____ Monroe_____McCoy_ ___ Brown_ _____Johnson_______ Davis vs. Oklahoma_________D.Jones_ ____Allen_____Snow____ Espinosa_____ Walters______ Hopkins____ Goodwin_____McCoy_ ___ Brown_ _____Johnson_______ Davis Oklahoma State_______ Grant____ Cochran____Snow____ Espinosa_____ Walters______ Hopkins_____ Shipley_ _____ Ash_____ Whittaker____ Monroe&______ Davis Kansas______________ Matthews_ _ Cochran____Snow____ Espinosa_____ Walters______ Hopkins____ Goodwin______ Ash______ Brown_ _____Johnson_______ Davis Texas Tech______________ at Missouri______________ Kansas State_____________ at Texas A&M___________ at Baylor________________ Consecutive starts_ ______(1)________(2)______ (19)_ ______(7)_________(19)_________ (11)_________(1)________ (2)_ _______ (1)__________ (1)__________ (7) Career starts____________(6)________(2)______ (26)_ ______(7)_________(19)_________ (11)________ (12)________ (2)_ _______ (4)_________ (10)_ _______ (12) DEFENSE_____________Buck_ _____ NT_________ DT_ ______ DE_ _______ SLB_________MLB_ ______ WLB_________CB________ SS________ FS_________ CB at Rice_______________Jeffcoat_ ___ Howell_ ____ Randall_____Okafor______ Hicks______ Robinson_____ Acho_______ Phillips____Vaccaro____ Gideon_____Byndom BYU_ _______________Jeffcoat_ ___ Dorsey_ ____ Randall_____Okafor______ Hicks______ Robinson_____ Acho________Diggs_____Vaccaro____ Gideon_____Byndom at UCLA_____________Jeffcoat_ ___ Dorsey_ ____ Randall_____Okafor______ Hicks______ Robinson_____ Acho_______ Phillips____Vaccaro____ Gideon_____Byndom at Iowa State__________Jeffcoat_ ___ Dorsey_ ____ Randall_____Okafor______ Diggs^_____ Robinson_____ Acho_______ Phillips____Vaccaro____ Gideon_____Byndom vs. Oklahoma_________Jeffcoat_ ___ Dorsey_ ____ Randall_____Okafor______ Diggs^_____ Robinson_____ Acho_______ Phillips____Vaccaro____ Gideon_____Byndom Oklahoma State_______Jeffcoat_ ____Scott!______ Randall_____Okafor______ Diggs!______ Robinson_____ Acho_______ Phillips____Vaccaro____ Gideon_____Byndom Kansas_______________Jeffcoat_ ___ Howell_ ____ Randall_____Okafor______ Hicks______ Robinson_____ Acho________Diggs_____Vaccaro____ Gideon_____Byndom Texas Tech______________ at Missouri______________ Kansas State_____________ at Texas A&M___________ at Baylor________________ Consecutive starts_ ______(7)________(1)_________(20)_______ (15)________ (1)_ ________ (33)________ (12)_ ________(4)________ (7)_______ (46)_ _______ (7) Career starts____________(9)________(2)_________(29)_______ (15)________ (4)_ ________ (33)________ (20)_ ________(5)_______ (13)_ _____ (46)_ _______ (7) * offense started game in a two-TE set &offense started game in a three-WR set %offense started game in a four-WR set ^ defense started game in a nickel package ! defense started game in a dime package 2011 OFFICIATING CREWS Rice Cooper Castleberry, Kevin Matthews, Ryan Dickson, Frank LeBlanc, Mike Cuttone, Tim Murray, Joey Wetzel, Rodney Doutel Oklahoma Scott Novak, Michael Cooper, Mike Moeller, Walt Coleman, J Taylor, Freeman Johns, Brad Van Vark, David Ames Missouri BYU Dan Romeo, Scott Teifer, Pete Gautreau, Marc Bovos, Dax Hill, Bobby Bernard, Ed Vinzant. Oklahoma State Mike DeFee, Tom Quick, Al Green, Kevin Vicknair, Bobby Ables, Eugene Hall, Scott Vaughan, Don Kapral. Kansas State Kansas Reggie Smith, Jim Adams, Chad Glenn, David Oliver, Corey Luxner, Scott Gaines, Mike Contreras, Judson Howard Texas A&M Texas Tech Baylor UCLA Randy Christal, Jim Adams, George Gusman, Kelly Deterding, Terry Jones, Joe Bluebaugh, Tom Bessant. Iowa State Rick Lourniet, Frank Villar, Cal McNeill, Mickey Bryson, Reggie Smith, Gene Semko, Donnie Aultman, Tom Robinson. 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics GAME-BY-GAME CAPSULES 1ST DOWNS RUSHING PASSING TOTAL 3RD DOWN TIME OF GAME R-PS-PN ATT-YDS TD LONG C-ATT-INT YDS TDLONG PLAYS-YDSTDs CONV. POSSESSION @ Texas__________12-10-0=22__48-229____2_ ___ 24_____ 15-27-0-2___ 277_ _ 2___ 56_ ____75-506-4_ _______ 8-16_______ 33:01 Rice_____________9-4-3=16____30-130____0_ ___ 20______ 15-30-0____ 94___ 0___ 15_ ____60-224-0_ _______ 2-12_______ 28:59 @ Texas__________9-5-0=14____43-166____2_ ___ 26______ 12-20-2____ 123_ _ 0___ 26_ ____63-289-2_ _______ 4-12_______ 31:03 BYU_____________3-9-2=14____ 23-43_ ___0_ ____ 9_ _____ 22-38-2____ 192_ _ 1___ 27_ ____61-235-1_ _______ 5-14_______ 28:57 Texas____________15-7-1=23___50-284____4_ ___ 36t_ ____ 16-20-0____ 204_ _ 3___45t_____70-488-7_ _______ 9-15_______ 32:47 @ UCLA_ ________5-6-1=12____34-141____2_ ___ 27______ 11-26-3____ 176_ _ 0___ 40_ ____60-317-2_ _______ 3-13_______ 27:13 Texas____________7-10-2=19___40-145____1_ ___ 22______ 14-24-0____ 255_ _ 2___ 49_ ____64-400-3_ _______ 4-14_______ 30:41 @ Iowa State______7-15-4=26___38-129____1_ ___ 14______ 28-51-1____ 251_ _ 1___ 19_ ____89-380-2_ _______ 4-15_______ 29:19 Texas____________7-12-3=22___ 45-36_ ___0_ ___ 18______ 20-36-2____ 223_ _ 1___ 22_ ____81-259-1_ _______ 5-16_______ 37:54 Oklahoma________2-17-3=22___ 19-86_ ___1_ ___ 64t_ ____ 31-52-0____ 367_ _ 3___ 40_ ____71-453-4_ _______ 8-15_______ 22:06 @ Texas__________14-9-1=24___49-231____1_ ___ 27______ 22-40-2____ 139_ _ 0___ 20_ ____89-370-2_ _______ 8-19_______ 39:18 Oklahoma State____8-12-1=21___27-202____3_ ___ 74t_ ____ 23-41-0____ 218_ _ 1___ 37_ ____68-420-4_ _______ 2-12_______ 20:42 @ Texas__________25-8-2=35___72-441____5_ ___ 35t_ ____ 16-21-1____ 149_ _ 0___ 27_ ____93-590-5_ ______ 11-16_______ 44:03 Kanas____________1-1-1=3____ 20-(-2)____0_ ____ 7_ ______7-16-1____ 48___ 0___ 20_ ____ 36-46-0_________ 1-10_______ 15:53 @ Texas__________ Texas Tech_ ______ Texas____________ at Missouri_ ______ @ Texas__________ Kansas State_ _____ Texas____________ @ Texas A&M_____ Texas____________ @ Baylor_ ________ 2011 CENTURY CLUB POINTS OFF TURNOVERS RUSHING UT OPP OPP UT OPPONENT____________ TOs___ POINTS_______ TOs__POINTS Rice____________________ 1_______ 0___________ 2_______ 7 BYU____________________ 2_______ 7___________ 2_______ 3 UCLA_ _________________ 2_______ 0___________ 4______ 21 Iowa State_______________ 0_______ 0___________ 3______ 13 Oklahoma_______________ 5_______31___________ 1_______ 0 Oklahoma State___________ 3_______ 7___________ 1_______ 7 Kansas__________________ 2_______ 0___________ 0_______ 0 Texas Tech_ _____________ 0_______ 0___________ 0_______ 0 Missouri_ _______________ 0_______ 0___________ 0_______ 0 Kansas State_ ____________ 0_______ 0___________ 0_______ 0 Texas A&M______________ 0_______ 0___________ 0_______ 0 Baylor_ _________________ 0_______ 0___________ 0_______ 0 TOTALS________________15______45__________ 15_ ____ 57 100 yards (4) Brown, Malcolm___________ 110 yards on 22 carries at ULCA, 9/17 Brown, Malcolm__ 135 yards on 19 carries vs. Oklahoma State, 10/15 Brown, Malcolm_________ 119 yards on 28 carries vs. Kansas, 10/29 Bergeron, Joe_____________136 yards on 13 carries vs. Kansas 10/29 RECEIVING 100 yards (2) Davis, Mike____________ 115 yards on three receptions vs. Rice, 9/3 Shipley, Jaxon______ 141 yards on stix receptions at Iowa State, 10/1 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics RUNNING BACKS #2 Fozzy Whittaker RUSHING OPPONENT ATT-YDS-TD LONG Rice__________________ 9-33-1_______ 7t BYU__________________ 4-4-0_ _______4 UCLA_ _______________ 8-63-2_______ 36t Iowa State_____________ 7-50-1_______ 16t Oklahoma_____________ 6-43-0_______ 18 Oklahoma State_________ 9-36-0_______ 11 Kansas________________ 9-68-0_______ 27 Texas Tech_ ______________ Missouri_ ________________ Kansas State_ _____________ Texas A&M_______________ Baylor_ __________________ RECEIVING REC-YDS-TD LONG 4-55-1_______ 26t 2-12-0_______ 12 0-0-0_ _______2-7-0_ _______6 1-15-0_______ 15 3-(-4)-0_ ______2 3-44-0_______ 19 Rushing attempts_ _____________________________18, vs. Oklahoma (So.) Rushing yards____________________________________ 75, vs. Baylor (Fr.) Long_ _______________________________________ 39t, vs. Wyoming (Jr.) Rushing TDs_______________________________________2, at UCLA (Sr.) Receptions_______________________6, vs. UCLA (Jr.); 6, vs. Oklahoma (Jr.) Receiving yards_______________________________ 59, vs. Texas A&M (Jr.) Long_ _________________________________________41, at Nebraska (Jr.) Receiving TDs_______________________________________ 1, vs. Rice (Sr.) RUSHING OPPONENT ATT-YDS-TD LONG Rice__________________ 4-9-2_ _______3 BYU__________________ 5-12-2________5 UCLA_ _______________ 6-22-1_______ 7t Iowa State_____________ 1-3-0_ _______3 Oklahoma_____________ 0-0-0_ _______- Oklahoma State_________ 0-0-0_ _______- Kansas___________________ Texas Tech_ ______________ Missouri_ ________________ Kansas State_ _____________ Texas A&M_______________ Baylor_ __________________ RECEIVING REC-YDS-TD LONG 1-4-0_ _______4 0-0-0_ _______0 0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______- RUSHING OPPONENT ATT-YDS-TD LONG Rice__________________ 6-26-0________9 BYU__________________ 0-0-0_ _______- UCLA_ _______________ 5-36-0_______ 27 Iowa State_____________ 4-28-0_______ 16 Oklahoma____________ 3-(-3)-0_ ______2 Oklahoma State_________ 0-0-0_ _______- Kansas_______________ 13-136-2______ 35t Texas Tech_ ______________ Missouri_ ________________ Kansas State_ _____________ Texas A&M_______________ Baylor_ __________________ RUSHING OPPONENT ATT-YDS-TD LONG Rice__________________ 5-41-0_______ 17 BYU__________________ 3-40-0_______ 26 UCLA_ _______________ 2-6-0_ _______3 Iowa State_ ____________ 5-31-0________9 Oklahoma_____________ 3-23-0_______ 12 Oklahoma State_________ 4-33-0_______ 21 Kansas________________ 2-13-0________9 Texas Tech_ ______________ Missouri_ ________________ Kansas State_ _____________ Texas A&M_______________ Baylor_ __________________ RECEIVING REC-YDS-TD LONG 0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______- RECEIVING REC-YDS-TD LONG 1-2-0_ _______2 1-26-0_______ 26 0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______1-18-0_______ 18 1-5-0_ _______5 0-0-0_ _______- CAREER HIGHS Rushing attempts_ _________________________________ 9, vs. ULM ( Fr.) Rushing yards_________________________________65, vs. Oklahoma (So.) Long_ ______________________________________ 60t, vs. Oklahoma (So.) Rushing TDs__________________________________ 1, vs. Oklahoma (So.) 100-yard games_________________________________________________ Receptions____________________1, vs. Rice (Jr.); vs. BYU (Jr.); vs. OSU (Jr.) Receiving yards____________________________________ 26, vs. BYU (Jr.) Long_ ___________________________________________ 26, vs. BYU (Jr.) Receiving TDs__________________________________________________ - #28 Malcolm Brown CAREER HIGHS Rushing attempts_ ________________________ 28, vs. Florida Altantic (Jr..) Rushing yards___________________________ 124, vs. Florida Altantic (Jr..) Long_ _____________________________________ 61, vs. Texas A&M (Fr.) Rushing TDs___________________________________3, vs. Oklahoma (Fr.) _________________________________________________3, vs. ULM (So.) 100-yard games____ 4, (8-102), vs. Texas A&M (Fr.); (19-109), at Baylor (So.) ___________ (28-124) vs. Florida Atlantic (Jr.); (14-107) vs. Texas A&M (Jr.) Receptions_______________________________________ 3, vs, Baylor (So.); Receiving yards________________________________ 33, vs. Oklahoma (Jr.) Long_ _______________________________________ 33, vs. Oklahoma (Jr.) Receiving TDs__________________________________________________ - #24 Joe Bergeron Rushing attempts_ _______________________________ 13, vs. Kansas (Fr.) Rushing yards___________________________________136, vs. Kansas (Fr.) Long_ _________________________________________ 35t, vs. Kansas (Fr.) Rushing TDs_____________________________________ 2, vs. Kansas (Fr.) 100-yard games____________________________1, (13-136), vs. Kansas (Fr.) Receptions_____________________________________________________ Receiving yards_________________________________________________ Long_ ________________________________________________________ Receiving TDs__________________________________________________ - #26 D.J. Monroe CAREER HIGHS #11 Cody Johnson CAREER HIGHS RUSHING OPPONENT ATT-YDS-TD LONG Rice_________________ 16-86-0_ _____ 20 BYU_________________ 14-68-0_ _____ 14 UCLA_ ______________ 22-110-1______ 16t Iowa State_ ___________ 15-63-0_ _____ 22 Oklahoma____________ 17-54-0_ _____ 13 Oklahoma State________ 19-135-2______ 27 Kansas_______________ 28-119-2______ 35t Texas Tech_ ______________ Missouri_ ________________ Kansas State_ _____________ Texas A&M_______________ Baylor_ __________________ RECEIVING REC-YDS-TD LONG 0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______1-(-1)-0_ ______0 0-0-0_ _______1-19-0_______ 19 0-0-0_ _______0-0-0_ _______- CAREER HIGHS Rushing attempts_ _______________________________ 28, vs. Kansas (Fr.) Rushing yards___________________________ 135, vs. Oklahoma State (Fr.) Long_ _________________________________________ 35, vs. Kansas (Fr.) Rushing TDs___________________ 2, vs. Oklahoma State; 2, vs. Kansas (Fr.) 100-yard games_____ 3, (22-110), at UCLA (Fr.); (19-135) , vs. Okla. St. (Fr.); __________________________________________(28-119), vs. Kansas (Fr.) Receptions______________________ 1, at UCLA (Fr.); 1, vs. Oklahoma (Fr.) Receiving yards________________________________19, vs. Oklahoma (Fr.) Long_ _______________________________________19, vs. Oklahoma (Fr.) Receiving TDs__________________________________________________ - 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics QUARTERBACKS #14 David Ash #6 Case McCoy OPPONENT COMP-ATT-INT YDS TD LONG Rice__________________ 1-1-0_ ________ 2_______ 0________2 BYU__________________ 2-3-0_ ________35_______ 0_______ 26 UCLA_ _______________ 3-3-0_ ________31_______ 0_______ 14 Iowa State_____________ 7-12-0________ 145______ 2_______ 48t Oklahoma____________ 11-20-2_ ______ 107______ 1_______ 22 Oklahoma State________ 22-40-2_ ______ 139______ 0_______ 20 Kansas_______________ 14-18-1_ ______ 145______ 0_______ 27 Texas Tech_ ______________ Missouri_ ________________ Kanas State_ ______________ Texas A&M_______________ Baylor_ __________________ OPPONENT COMP-ATT-INT YDS TD LONG Rice__________________ 0-2-0_ ________ 0_______ 0________ BYU__________________ 7-8-0_ ________57_______ 0_______ 20 UCLA_ ______________ 12-15-0_ ______ 168______ 2_______ 45t Iowa State_____________ 7-12-0________ 110______ 0_______ 49 Oklahoma_____________ 9-16-0________ 116______ 0_______ 23 Oklahoma State_________ DNP Kansas________________ 2-2-0_ ________ 4_______ 0________5 Texas Tech_ ______________ Missouri_ ________________ Kanas State_ ______________ Texas A&M_______________ Baylor_ __________________ CAREER HIGHS Pass attempts______________________ 40, vs. Oklahoma State (Fr.) Pass completions___________________ 22, vs. Oklahoma State (Fr.) Interceptions_____ 2, vs. Oklahoma (Fr.); 2, vs. Oklahoma State (Fr.) Passing yards___________ 145, Iowa State (Fr.); 145, vs, Kansas (Fr.) Passing TDs_______________________________ 2, Iowa State (Fr.) Long_ ___________________________________48t, Iowa State (Fr. Completion percentage________________ 1,000 (3-3) at UCLA (Fr.) CAREER HIGHS Pass attempts_______________________________ 15, at UCLA(So.) Pass completions___________________________ 12, at UCLA (So.) Interceptions____________________________________________ Passing yards_____________________________ 168, at UCLA (So.) Passing TDs________________________________ 2, at UCLA (So.) Long_ ________________________________ 49, at Iowa State (So.) Completion percentage_________________ 87.5 (7-8), vs. BYU (So.) CAREER TOTALS 400-yard passing games_ __________________________________ 0 300-yard passing games_ __________________________________ 0 200-yard passing games_ __________________________________ 0 Multiple TD pass games___________________________________ 1 Record as a starter_________________________________ 1-1 (.500) CAREER TOTALS 400-yard passing games_ __________________________________ 0 300-yard passing games_ __________________________________ 0 200-yard passing games_ __________________________________ 0 Multiple TD pass games___________________________________ 1 Record as a starter_________________________________ 2-1 (.667) RUSHING OPPONENT ATT-YDS-TDLONG Rice________________ 0-0-0_______ BYU_______________ 9-36-0_ ____ 13 UCLA_ ____________ 2-(-3)-0______1 Iowa State_________ 3- (-17)-0_____ Oklahoma_________ 9-(-38)-0_ ____8 Oklahoma State______ 15-21-0_____ 23 Kansas_____________ 8-15-1_ ____ 10 Texas Tech_ ___________ Missouri_ _____________ Kansas State_ __________ Texas A&M____________ Baylor_ _______________ RUSHING OPPONENT ATT-YDS-TDLONG Rice________________ 0-0-0_______ BYU________________ 1-0-0_______ UCLA_ _____________ 1-2-0_______2 Iowa State___________ 3-2-0_______3 Oklahoma_________ 4-(-19)-0_ ____2 Oklahoma State_______ DNP Kansas______________ 0-0-0_______0 Texas Tech_ ___________ Missouri_ _____________ Kansas State_ __________ Texas A&M____________ Baylor_ _______________ CAREER HIGHS Rushing attempts_ _________________ 15, vs. Oklahoma State (Fr.) Rushing yards_______________________________ 36, vs BYU (Fr.) Long_ ___________________________ 23, vs. Oklahoma State (Fr.) CAREER HIGHS Rushing attempts_ _____ 3, at Iowa State (So.); 4, vs. Oklahoma (So.) Rushing yards_______________ 2, at UCLA (So.); at Iowa State (So.) Long_ _________________________________ 3, at Iowa State (So.) Rushing TDs____________________________________________ - Rushing TDs_______________________________1, vs. Kansas (Fr.) 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics QUARTERBACKS PLACE KICKER/PUNTERS #7 Garrett Gilbert #19 Justin Tucker OPPONENT COMP-ATT-INT YDS TD LONG Rice_________________ 13-23-0_ ______ 239______ 1_______ 56t BYU__________________ 2-8-2_ ________ 8_______ 0________5 UCLA_ _______________ DNP Iowa State_____________ DNP Oklahoma_____________ DNP Oklahoma State_________ DNP Kansas________________ DNP Texas Tech_ ______________ Missouri_ ________________ Kanas State_ ______________ Texas A&M_______________ Baylor_ __________________ OPPONENT FG-FGA PAT-A POINTS LONG Rice___________________ 2-2_ _______ 4-4________10_______ 39 BYU___________________ 1-1_ _______ 2-2________ 5_______ 23 UCLA_ ________________ 0-0_ _______ 7-7________ 7________ Iowa Staet______________ 3-4_ _______ 3-3________12_______ 35 Oklahoma______________ 1-1_ _______ 2-2________ 5_______ 46 Oklahoma State__________ 1-1_ _______ 3-3________ 6_______ 34 Kansas_________________ 2-2_ _______ 5-5________11_______ 52 Texas Tech_ ______________ Missouri_ ________________ Kansas State_ _____________ Texas A&M_______________ Baylor_ __________________ CAREER HIGHS Pass attempts__________________________59, at Kansas State (So.) Pass completions________________________34, vs. Iowa State (So.) Interceptions___________________________5, at Kansas State (So.) Passing yards__________________________ 344, vs. Iowa State (So.) Passing TDs_____________2, vs. Alabama (Fr.); vs. Texas Tech (So.); ___________________ vs. Iowa State (So.); vs. Florida Atlantic (So.) Long_ ___________________________63t, vs. Florida Atlantic (So.) Completion percentage______________100.0 (1-1) vs.Colorado (Fr.) CAREER TOTALS 400-yard passing games_ __________________________________ 0 300-yard passing games_ __________________________________ 1 200-yard passing games_ _________________________________ 11 Multiple TD pass games___________________________________ 4 Record as a starter_________________________________ 7-7 (.500) RUSHING OPPONENT ATT-YDS-TDLONG Rice________________ 5-9-0______ 24 BYU________________ 2-6-0_______5 UCLA_ _____________ DNP Iowa State___________ DNP Oklahoma___________ DNP Oklahoma State_______ DNP Kansas______________ DNP Texas Tech_ ___________ Missouri_ _____________ Kansas State_ __________ Texas A&M____________ Baylor_ _______________ CAREER HIGHS Rushing attempts_ _________________ 14, vs. Florida Atlantic (So.) Rushing yards_________________________93, at Kansas State (So.) Long_ _______________________________31, at Kansas State (So.) Rushing TDs_____________________________ 2, at Nebraska (So.) TUCKER’S CAREER FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS 2011: RU: 39, 23. BYU: 23. IS: 33, 35, 31, 29. OU: 46. OS: 34. KU: 52, 31. 2010: RU: 51, 54, 44, 26. WY: 45, 36. TT: 27. UCLA: 31, 34. OU: 21, 22. NU: 27, 28. IS: 23, 37, 21. BU: 26, 31, 49, 40, 48, 21. OS: 37. FAU: 22, 43, 49. A&M: 24. bold denotes field goal made #19 Justin Tucker OPPONENT NO YARDS AVG. LONG Rice____________________ 4_________ 139_ _____ 34.8______ 47 BYU____________________ 5_________ 209_ _____ 41.8______ 50 UCLA_ _________________ 3_________ 139_ _____ 46.3______ 51 Iowa State_______________ 4_________ 127_ _____ 31.8______ 37 Oklahoma_______________ 5_________ 223_ _____ 44.6______ 54 Oklahoma State___________ 7_________ 288_ _____ 41.1______ 48 Kansas__________________ 1_________ 33_______ 33.0______ 33 Texas Tech_ ______________ Missouri_ ________________ Kansas State_ _____________ Texas A&M_______________ Baylor_ __________________ 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics RECEIVING #1 Mike Davis WR OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice_____________________ 3-115-0_ _______ 56 BYU______________________ 0-0-0_ _________UCLA_ ___________________ 3-77-0_________ 45 Iowa State_________________ 3-72-1_________48t Oklahoma_________________ 6-70-0_________ 18 Oklahoma State____________ 10-80-0_ _______ 20 Kansas____________________ 2-4-0_ ________ 5 Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ CAREER HIGHS Receptions__________________ 11, at Kansas State (Fr.) Yards_________________________ 115, vs. Rice (So.) Long_ ____________________ 45t, vs. Wyoming (Fr.) TDs________________________ 1, vs. Wyoming (Fr.) 100-yard games_________3, (7-104) vs. Wyoming (Fr.) ____(11-109) at Kansas State (Fr.); (3-115) vs. Rice (So.) #3 DeSean Hales WR OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice______________________ 0-0-0_ _________BYU______________________ 0-0-0_ _________UCLA_ ___________________ 0-0-0_ _________Iowa State_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma State_____________ 0-0-0_ _________Kansas____________________ 1-5-0_ ________ 5 Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ CAREER HIGHS Receptions__________________ 5, vs. Kansas State (So.) Yards____________________ 41, vs. Kansas State (So.) Long_ ___________________ 21, vs. Kansas State (So.) TDs_______________________________________ 100-yard games______________________________ #4 Darius White WR OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice______________________ 0-0-0_ _________BYU______________________ 0-0-0_ _________UCLA_ ___________________ 0-0-0_ _________Iowa State_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma State_____________ 1-7-0_ ________ 7 Kansas____________________ 0-0-0_ _________Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ CAREER HIGHS Receptions_______________ 1, vs. Oklahoma State (So.) Yards__________________ 7, vs. Oklahoma State (So.) Long_ _________________ 7, vs. Oklahoma State (So.) TDs________________________________________ 100-yard games_______________________________ #8 Jaxon Shipley WR OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice______________________ 2-54-1_________36t BYU______________________ 3-39-0_________ 20 UCLA_ ___________________ 5-46-0_________ 15 Iowa State________________ 6-141-1_ _______ 49 Oklahoma_________________ 9-89-1_________ 23 Oklahoma State_____________ 3-20-0_________ 10 Kansas____________________ 5-47-0_________ 15 Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ CAREER HIGHS Receptions____________________ 9, vs. Oklahoma (Fr.) Yards_____________________141, at Iowa State (Fr.) Long_ ______________________49, at Iowa State(Fr.) TDs____ 1, vs. Rice (Fr.);1 at ISU (Fr.) ; 1 vs. OU (Fr.) 100-yard games________ 1, (6-141) at Iowa State (Fr.) Kansas____________________ 0-0-0_ _________Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ #9 John Harris WR CAREER HIGHS Receptions_______________ 7, vs. Florida Atlantic (So.) Yards________________ 62, vs. Florida Atlantic (So.) Long_ ____________________26, vs. Oklahoma (Fr.) TDs__________________________________1, twice 100-yard games_______________________________ OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice______________________ 1-10-0_________ 10 BYU______________________ 0-0-0_ _________UCLA_ ___________________ 0-0-0_ _________Iowa State_________________ DNP Oklahoma_________________ DNP Oklahoma State_____________ DNP Kansas____________________ DNP Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ CAREER HIGHS Receptions_________________________ 1, vs. Rice (Fr.) Yards__________________________10, vs. Rice (Fr.) Long_ _________________________10, vs. Rice (Fr.) TDs________________________________________ 100-yard games_______________________________ #15 Darius Terrell, HB OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice______________________ 0-0-0_ _________BYU______________________ 0-0-0_ _________UCLA_ ___________________ 0-0-0_ _________Iowa State_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma_________________ DNP Oklahoma State_____________ DNP Kansas____________________ 0-0-0_ _________Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ CAREER HIGHS Receptions_____________________________________ Yards_______________________________________ Long_ ______________________________________ TDs________________________________________ 100-yard games_______________________________ #18 D.J. Grant TE OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice______________________ 0-0-0_ _________BYU______________________ 1-5-0_ ________ 5 UCLA_ ___________________ 6-77-3_________ 45 Iowa State_________________ 1-19-0_________ 19 Oklahoma_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma State_____________ 1-5-0_ ________ 5 Kansas____________________ 1-13-0_________ 13 Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ CAREER HIGHS Receptions________________________6, at UCLA (Jr.) Yards_________________________ 77, at UCLA (Jr.) Long_ ________________________ 45, at UCLA (Jr.) TDs___________________________ 3, at UCLA (Jr.) 100-yard games_______________________________ #19 Blaine Irby TE OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice______________________ 0-0-0_ _________BYU______________________ 0-0-0_ _________UCLA_ ___________________ 0-0-0_ _________Iowa State_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma State_____________ 0-0-0_ _________- #84 Marquise Goodwin, WR OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice______________________ DNP_ _________BYU______________________ 0-0-0_ _________UCLA_ ___________________ 0-0-0_ _________Iowa State_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma_________________ 0-0-0_ _________ -Oklahoma State____________ 3-23-0_________ 9 Kansas____________________ 4-36-0_________ 27 Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ CAREER HIGHS Receptions______________________ 4, vs. Kansas (Jr.) Yards________________________ 36, vs. Kansas (Jr.) Long_ _______________________ 27, vs. Kansas (Jr.) TDs______________________1, at Kansas State (Fr.) 100-yard games______________________________ #87 Dominique Jones, TE OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice______________________ 1-14-0_________ 14 BYU______________________ 0-0-0_ _________UCLA_ ___________________ 0-0-0_ _________Iowa State_________________ 1-13-0_________ 13 Oklahoma_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma State_____________ 0-0-0_ _________Kansas____________________ 0-0-0_ _________Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ CAREER HIGHS Receptions______1, at Kansas State (Fr.); vs. FAU (Fr.) _____________ 1, vs. Rice (So.); 1, at Iowa State (So.) Yards_________________________ 14, vs. Rice (So.) Long_ ________________________ 14, vs. Rice (So.) TDs______________________1, at Kansas State (Fr.) 100-yard games______________________________ #89 Barrett Matthews, TE OPPONENT REC-YDS-TD LONG Rice______________________ 0-0-0_ _________BYU______________________ 0-0-0_ _________UCLA_ ___________________ 0-0-0_ _________Iowa State_________________ 1-3-0_ ________ 3 Oklahoma_________________ 0-0-0_ _________Oklahoma State_____________ 1-6-0_ ________ 6 Kansas____________________ 0-0-0_ _________Texas Tech_ __________________ Missouri_ ____________________ Kansas State_ _________________ Texas A&M___________________ Baylor_ ______________________ CAREER HIGHS Receptions______________________ 2, vs. UCLA (So.) Yards_____________________ 19, vs. Wyoming (So.) Long_ ____________________ 19, vs. Wyoming (So.) TDs_______________________________________ 100-yard games______________________________ - 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics QUARTERBACK DRIVE CHART DRIVES DRIVES ENDED BY POINTS PTS/ QB STARTED TDs FGs MFG PUNT DOWNS TO SAFETY CLOCK SCORED DRIVE EFFIC. RICE Garrett Gilbert__________ 10_______ 4_______ 2_______ 0_______ 3_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 1_______ 34______ 34____60.0% Case McCoy____________3_ ______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% BYU Garrett Gilbert___________3_ ______ *Gilbert/Ash____________1_ ______ Case McCoy____________2_ ______ *McCoy/Ash____________6_ ______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 2_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 2_______ 0_______ 2_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 1_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% 0_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% 0_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% 1_______ 17_ _____2.8____ 50.0% UCLA Case McCoy____________8_ ______ 4_______ 0_______ 0_______ 3_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 28______3.5____50.0% David Ash______________2_ ______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 7_______3.5____50.0% *McCoy/Ash____________2_ ______ 2_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 14_ _____7.0___ 100.0% IOWA STATE Case McCoy____________5_ ______ David Ash______________4_ ______ *McCoy/Ash____________4_ ______ Team__________________1_ ______ 0_______ 1_______ 2_______ 0_______ 2_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 3_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 6_______1.2____40.0% 0_______ 7_______1.8____25.0% 1_______ 17_ _____4.3____ 75.0% 0_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% OKLAHOMA Case McCoy____________6_ ______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 2_______ 1_______ 1_______ 0_______ 1_______ 3_______0.5____16.7% David Ash______________8_ ______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 3_______ 1_______ 3_______ 0_______ 0_______ 7_______0.9____12.5% *McCoy/Ash____________1_ ______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% OKLAHOMA STATE David Ash_____________ 15_______ 2_______ 1_______ 0_______ 7_______ 2_______ 3_______ 0_______ 0_______ 17______1.1____20.0% KANSAS David Ash______________8_ ______ 4_______ 1_______ 0_______ 1_______ 1_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 31______3.9____62.5% Case McCoy____________3_ ______ 1_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 10______3.3____66.7% *McCoy/Floyd_ _________1_ ______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% PLAYER TOTALS David Ash_____________ 37_______ Case McCoy___________ 27_______ *McCoy/Ash___________ 12_______ Team__________________1_ ______ Garrett Gilbert__________ 13_______ *Gilbert/Ash____________1_ ______ 9_______ 5_______ 6_______ 0_______ 4_______ 0_______ 2_______ 4_______ 2_______ 0_______ 2_______ 0_______ 0_______ 14______ 1_______ 9_______ 1_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 5_______ 0_______ 0_______ 4_______ 2_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 7_______ 4_______ 1_______ 0_______ 1_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 69______1.9____29.7% 2_______ 47______1.7____33.3% 2_______ 48_ _____4.0____ 66.7% 0_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% 1_______ 34______2.6____46.2% 0_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% TEXAS_ ______________ 93_______ 24_ _____ 10_ _____ 1_______ 29_ _____ 7_______ 15_ _____ 0_______ 7______ 198______2.1____36.6% OPPONENTS__________ 90_______ 13_ _____ 11_ _____ 1_______ 35_ _____ 9_______ 15_ _____ 2_______ 4______ 124______1.6____26.7% *Both quarterbacks participated in the drive. CAREER TOTALS David Ash_____________ 37_______ Case McCoy___________ 29_______ *McCoy/Ash___________ 12_______ *Gilbert/Ash____________1_ ______ *McCoy/Floyd_ _________1_ ______ Team__________________1_ ______ 9_______ 5_______ 6_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 2_______ 4_______ 2_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 14______ 1_______ 10______ 1_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 4_______ 2_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 7_______ 4_______ 1_______ 1_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 0_______ 1_______ 69______1.9____29.7% 2_______ 54______1.9____34.5% 2_______ 48_ _____4.0____ 66.7% 0_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% 1_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% 0_______ 0_______0.0____ 0.0% KEY: FG - denotes successful field goal // MFG - denotes missed field goal // QB EFFIC is the percentage of drives that generated points // Team - Team running out clock at the end of half 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics DEFENSE NAME GP SOLO AST TOTAL TFL SACKS INT PBU QB-P FR-YDS FF BLK SAF HIGH GAME Acho, Emmanuel_ ____7_____ 26_____ 34_ ____60_ ______8-22_____ 2.0-10_______ 0_ ______2_ ______10_ ____ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0__________ 13/BY Robinson, Keenan_____7_____ 26_____ 24_ ____50_ ______ 2-3_ ______ 0_________ 0_ ______3_ ______ 7______ 0_______ 2____ 0____ 0________9/UC,OS Vaccaro, Kenny_______7_____ 27_____ 17_ ____44_ ______3-14_____ 1.0-8_______ 1-0_ _____6_ ______ 4______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0__________13/UC Gideon, Blake________7_____ 22_____ 14_ ____36_ ______ 1-5_ ____ 1.0-5______ 1-43______2_ ______ 0_____ 1--1_ ____ 0____ 0____ 0___________ 8/3x Hicks, Jordan_ _______7_____ 17_____ 16_ ____33_ ______ 1-1_ ______ 0_________ 0_ ______3_ ______ 1______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0__________ 11/BY Byndom, Carrington___7_____ 23_____ 8______31_ ______4-14_______ 0________ 1-0_ ____ 10_______ 1______ 0_______ 1____ 0____ 0___________ 8/BY Jeffcoat, Jackson_ _____7_____ 14_____ 15_ ____29_ ______7-23_____ 1.0-6________ 0_ ______2_ ______ 5______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________7/KU Phillips, Adrian_______6_____ 20_____ 9______29_ ______ 3-3_ ______ 0_______ 2-24______3_ ______ 0______ 1_______ 2____ 0____ 0___________8/UC Diggs, Quandre_______7_____ 14_____ 9______23_ ______ 3-4_ ______ 0________ 2-0_ _____6_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 2____ 0____ 0___________5/KU Okafor, Alex_________7_____ 8______ 15_ ____23_ ______7-20_____ 3.0-10_______ 0_ ______2_ ______ 7______1-0______ 2____ 0____ 0____________8/IS Edmond, Steve_ ______6_____ 11_____ 1______12_ ______ 2-2_ ______ 0_________ 0_ ______1_ ______ 1______ 0_______ 1____ 0____ 0____________6/IS Randall, Kheeston_____7_____ 4______ 8______12_ _______ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______1_ ______ 6______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________ 3/3x Scott, Christian_______4_____ 7______ 4______11_ _______ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 1______1-0______ 1____ 0____ 0__________ 6/OU Dorsey, Ashton_______6_____ 5______ 3______ 8________2-11_____ 1.0-10_______ 0_ ______0_ ______ 2______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________3/UC Scott, Leroy__________7_____ 4______ 4______ 8_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0____________3/IS Berryhill, Jamison_____7_____ 4______ 3______ 7_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0__________ 3/OU Thompson, Mykkele___7_____ 4______ 3______ 7_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 1____ 0_______ 2/BY,OU Turner, Josh_ ________7_____ 5______ 1______ 6_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______1-0______ 0____ 0____ 0________ 2/IS,KU Evans, Sherold________7_____ 5______ 0______ 5_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0____________3/IS Howell, Calvin_______7_____ 2______ 3______ 5________ 1-4_ ____ 1.0-4________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0__________ 2/OU Thompson, Kendall_ __7_____ 2______ 3______ 5_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0__________ 2/OU Bergeron, Joe_________7_____ 4______ 0______ 4_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________2/KU Johnson, Dravannti____6_____ 2______ 2______ 4________ 1-3_ ______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 1______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0__________ 2/OU Whaley, Chris________7_____ 3______ 0______ 3________ 1-9_ ____ 1.0-9________ 0_ ______1_ ______ 1______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________ 1/3x Brewster, Nolan______3_____ 2______ 1______ 3_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________2/RU Jackson, Desmond_ ___7_____ 1______ 2______ 3_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________ 1/3x Whittaker, Fozzy______7_____ 2______ 0______ 2_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0_______ 1/OU,OS Benson, Aaron_ ______6_____ 1______ 1______ 2_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0_________1/RU,IS Jackson, Tevin________6_____ 1______ 1______ 2_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 1______2-0______ 0____ 0____ 0_________1/RU,IS Wilson, Reggie_ ______7_____ 0______ 2______ 2_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 3______1-0______ 0____ 0____ 0_________1/RU,IS Zumberge, Alex_______7_____ 1______ 1______ 2_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0________ 1/BY,OS White, A.J.___________5_____ 0______ 2______ 2_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________2/KU Cobbs, Demarco______1_____ 1______ 0______ 1________ 1-5_ ______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________1/KU Moss, Chet_ _________3_____ 1______ 0______ 1_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________ 1/OS Shipley, Jaxon________7_____ 1______ 0______ 1_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________ 1/OS Monroe, D.J._________7_____ 0______ 1______ 1_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________ 1/BY Tucker, Justin________7_____ 0______ 1______ 1_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________1/RU Roberson, Ryan_______7_____ 0______ 1______ 1_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0___________ 1/BY TEAM______________7_____ 0______ 0______ 0_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 2______________ Ramirez, Cody_______1_____ 0______ 0______ 0_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______0_ ______ 0_____ 1-13_ ____ 0____ 0____ 0______________ Reed, Cedric_ ________5_____ 0______ 0______ 0_________ 0_ _______ 0_________ 0_ ______1_ ______ 0______ 0_______ 0____ 0____ 0______________ GP - Games Played; SOLO - unassisted tackles; AST - assisted tackles; TOTAL - total tackles; TFLs - tackles for loss; Sacks - quarterback sacks; QB-P - quarterback pressures; INT - interceptions; PBU - pass breakups; FF- forced fumbles; FR - fumble recoveries; BLK - blocked kicks; SAF - Safety Special Teams Tackles (includes tackles on punt returns, kickoff returns and plays involving offensive turnovers) NAME TT (SOLO) Berryhill, Jamison__________________7 (3) Scott, Leroy_______________________7 (2) Edmund, Steve_ ___________________5 (4) Thompson, Mykkele________________5 (2) Bergeron, Joe______________________4 (3) Diggs, Quandre____________________4 (3) Thompaon, Kendall_ _______________4 (1) Turner, Josh_ _____________________3 (3) Whittaker, Fozzy___________________2 (2) Phillips, Adrian____________________2 (1) Zumberge, Alex____________________2 (1) NAME TT (SOLO) White, A.J.________________________2 (0) Davis, Mike_______________________1 (1) Hicks, Jordan_ ____________________1 (1) Jackson, Tevin_____________________1 (1) Moss, Chet_ ______________________1 (1) Shipley, Jaxon_____________________1 (1) Byndom, Carrington________________1 (0) Benson, Aaron_ ___________________1 (0) Roberson, Ryan____________________1 (0) Tucker, Justin_____________________1 (0) 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics GAME-BY-GAME DEFENSIVE STATISTICS NAME UA-A TOTAL RU BYU UCLA IS OU OS KU Acho, Emmanuel_ ___ 26-34_ ___ 60____ 3-7____ 5-8_____5-5____6-4____ 4-6_ ___ 2-3_ ___ 1-1 Robinson, Keenan____ 26-24_ ___ 50____ 2-6____ 4-1_____6-3___ 3-2f_ __ 4-4_ ___ 4-5_ ___3-3f Vaccaro, Kenny______ 27-17_ ___ 44____ 5-2____ 3-2____ 8-5i____4-2____ 3-2_ ___ 3-3_ ___ 1-1 Gideon, Blake_______ 22-14_ ___ 36____ 2-0___ 1-2fi___ 3-5r_ _ 7-1i_ __ 5-3_ ___ 3-3_ ___ 1-0 Hicks, Jordan_ ______ 17-16_ ___ 33____ 4-1____ 5-6_____3-2____2-1____ 0-1_ ___ 3-3_ ___ 0-2 Byndom, Carrington___ 23-8_____ 31____ 3-2____ 5-3____ 4-1i____5-0____ 4-1_ ___ 2-0_ ___ 0-1 Jeffcoat, Jacks_ ______ 14-15_ ___ 29____ 1-1____ 0-3_____3-3____3-0____ 1-3_ ___ 2-2_ ___ 4-3 Phillips, Adrian_______ 20-9_____ 29____ 2-3r____2-1i_ __ 7-1fi_ __2-0____ 3-3_ ___ 4-1_ __ DNP Okafor, Alex_________ 8-15_____ 23____ 1-1____ 0-2_____0-1___ 3-5r_ __ 1-2_ ___ 1-4_ __ 2-0ff Diggs, Quandre_______ 14-9_____ 23____ 1-2____ 1-2_____2-0____3-1____ 2-1_ ___ 2-1_ ___3-2i Randall, Kheeston_____ 4-8_ ____ 12____ 1-0____ 0-3_____0-0____1-0____ 0-1_ ___ 0-3_ ___ 2-1 Edmond, Steve_ ______ 11-1_____ 12____ 1-0____ 3-0____ DNP___6-0____ 0-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 1-1 Scott, Christian_______ 7-4_ ____ 11____DNP_ _ DNP___ DNP___0-0____ 3-3f____ 4-1_ __ 0-0r Dorsey, Ashton_______ 5-3_ _____8_____DNP_ __ 2-0_____2-1____0-1____ 1-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 0-1 Scott, Leroy__________ 4-4_ _____8_____ 0-1____ 0-1_____1-0____3-0____ 0-1_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 0-1 Berryhill, Jamison_____ 4-3_ _____7_____ 0-2____ 0-0_____1-0____0-0____ 2-1_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 1-0 Thompson, Mykkele___ 4-3_ _____7_____ 0-1____ 0-2_____1-0___ 2-0p_ __ 0-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 1-0 Turner, Josh_ ________ 5-1_ _____6_____ 1-0____ 0-0_____0-0____2-0____ 1-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 1-1 Evans, Sherold________ 5-0_ _____5_____ 1-0____ 0-0_____1-0____3-0____ 0-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 0-0 Howell, Calvin_______ 2-3_ _____5_____ 0-0____ 0-1_____0-1____0-0____ 1-1_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 1-0 Thompson, Kendall_ __ 2-3_ _____5_____ 0-1____ 0-0_____0-0____1-0____ 0-2_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 1-0 Bergeron, Joe_________ 4-0_ _____4_____ 0-0____ 1-0_____0-0____0-0____ 0-0_ ___ 1-0_ ___ 2-0 Johnson, Dravannti____ 2-2_ _____4_____ 0-0____ 0-0_____0-1____1-0____ 1-1_ ___ 0-0_ __ DNP Whaley, Chris________ 3-0_ _____3_____ 1-0____ 0-0_____0-0____1-0____ 0-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 1-0 Brewster, Nolan______ 2-1_ _____3_____ 2-0____ 0-1_____0-0___ DNP__ DNP_ _ DNP___ DNP Jackson, Desmond_ ___ 1-2_ _____3_____ 0-0____ 0-1_____0-1____0-0____ 0-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 1-0 Whittaker, Fozzy______ 2-0_ _____2_____ 0-0____ 0-0_____0-0____0-0____ 1-0_ ___ 1-0_ ___ 0-0 Benson, Aaron_ ______ 1-1_ _____2_____ 0-1____ 0-0_____0-0____1-0____ 0-0_ __ DNP____ 0-0 Jackson, Tevin________ 1-1_ _____2_____ 0-1r____ 0-0____ DNP___1-0____ 0-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 0-0 Zumberge, Alex_______ 1-1_ _____2_____ 0-0____ 0-1_____0-0____0-0____ 0-0_ ___ 1-0_ ___ 0-0 White, A.J.___________ 0-2_ _____2_____ 0-0___ DNP____0-0____0-0___ DNP_ __ 0-0_ ___ 0-2 Wilson, Reggie_ ______ 0-2_ _____2_____ 0-1r____ 0-0_____0-0____0-1____ 0-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 0-0 Cobbs, Demarco______ 1-0_ _____1_____DNP_ _ DNP___ DNP__ DNP__ DNP_ _ DNP____ 1-0 Moss, Chet_ _________ 1-0_ _____1_____ 0-0___ DNP___ DNP__ DNP__ DNP_ __ 1-0_ ___ 0-0 Shipley, Jaxon________ 1-0_ _____1_____ 0-0____ 0-0_____0-0____0-0____ 0-0_ ___ 1-0_ ___ 0-0 Monroe, D.J._________ 0-1_ _____1_____ 0-0____ 0-1_____0-0____0-0____ 0-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 0-0 Roberson, Ryan_______ 0-1_ _____1_____ 0-0____ 0-1_____0-0____0-0____ 0-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 0-0 Tucker, Justin________ 0-1_ _____1_____ 0-1____ 0-0_____0-0____0-0____ 0-0_ ___ 0-0_ ___ 0-0 Ramirez, Cody_______ 0-0_ _____0_____ 0-0r___ DNP___ DNP__ DNP__ DNP_ _ DNP___ DNP TT MU KS NOTE: first number indicates number of solo tackles; second number indicates number of assisted tackles KEY: i - interception; f - forced fumble; r - fumble recovery; p - blocked punt; k - blocked FG; ep - blocked PAT TA BU 2011 Texas Longhorns Statistics TACKLES FOR LOSS (47) QB PRESSURES (47) Acho, Emmanuel_ _______ 8-22 Jeffcoat, Jackson_ ________ 7-23 Okafor, Alex____________ 7-20 Byndom, Carrington______ 4-14 Vaccaro, Kenny__________ 3-14 Phillips, Adrian___________ 3-3 Diggs, Quandre___________ 3-4 Dorsey, Ashton__________ 2-11 Robinson, Keenan_________ 2-3 Edmond, Steve_ __________ 2-2 Whaley, Chris____________ 1-9 Cobbs, Demarco__________ 1-5 Gideon, Blake_ ___________ 1-5 Howell, Calvin___________ 1-4 Johnson, Dravannti________ 1-3 Hicks, Jordan_ ___________ 1-1 Acho, Emmanuel_ _________ 10 Robinson, Keenan___________ 7 Okafor, Alex_______________ 7 Randall, Kheeston___________ 6 Jeffcoat, Jackson_ ___________ 5 Vaccaro, Kenny_____________ 4 Wilson, Reggie_ ____________ 3 Dorsey, Ashton_____________ 2 Hicks, Jordan_ _____________ 1 Byndom, Carrington_________ 1 Edmond, Steve_ ____________ 1 Scott, Christian_____________ 1 Johnson, Dravannti__________ 1 Whaley, Chris______________ 1 Jackson, Tevin______________ 1 SACKS (11) Diggs, Quandre_____________ 2 Okafor, Alex_______________ 2 Phillips, Adrian_____________ 2 Robinson, Keenan___________ 2 Byndom, Carrington_________ 1 Edmond, Steve_ ____________ 1 Scott, Christian_____________ 1 Okafor, Alex___________ 3.0-10 Acho, Emmanuel_ ______ 2.0-10 Dorsey, Ashton_________ 1.0-10 Whaley, Chris___________ 1.0-9 Vaccaro, Kenny__________ 1.0-8 Jeffcoat, Jackson_ ________ 1.0-6 Gideon, Blake_ __________ 1.0-5 Howell, Calvin__________ 1.0-4 FORCED FUMBLES (11) RECOVERED FUMBLES (8) Jackson, Tevin____________ 2-0 Ramirez, Cody__________ 1-13 Okafor, Alex_____________ 1-0 Phillips, Adrian___________ 1-0 Scott, Christian___________ 1-0 Turner, Josh_ ____________ 1-0 Gideon, Blake_ _________ 1-(-1) INTERCEPTIONS (7) Phillips, Adrian__________ 2-24 Diggs, Quandre___________ 2-0 Gideon, Blake_ __________ 1-43 Vaccaro, Kenny___________ 1-0 Byndom, Carrington_______ 1-0 BLOCKED PUNTS (1) Thompson, Mykkele____ 1, at IS BLOCKED FIELD GOALS (0) PASS BREAKUPS (43) Byndom, Carrington________ 10 Vaccaro, Kenny_____________ 6 Diggs, Quandre_____________ 6 Robinson, Keenan___________ 3 Hicks, Jordan_ _____________ 3 Phillips, Adrian_____________ 3 Acho, Emmanuel_ __________ 2 Gideon, Blake_ _____________ 2 Jeffcoat, Jackson_ ___________ 2 Okafor, Alex_______________ 2 Edmond, Steve_ ____________ 1 Randall, Kheeston___________ 1 Whaley, Chris______________ 1 Reed, Cedric_ ______________ 1 BLOCKED EXTRA POINTS (0) 10-TACKLE GAMES (7) 13____ Acho, Emmanuel vs. BYU 13____ Vaccaro, Kenny at UCLA 11_______ Hicks, Jordan, vs. Rice 10____ Acho, Emmanuel vs. Rice 10___ Acho, Emmanuel at UCLA 10_____ Acho, Emmanuel at ISU 10_____ Acho, Emmanuel vs OU 2011 TEXAS LONGHORNS DEPTH CHART (vs. Texas Tech) +has redshirted; RS - redshirt; * letters won; (#) career starts OFFENSE WIDE RECEIVER (H) NO PLAYER CL HT WT 8 Jaxon Shipley (3)_________________ Fr.-HS_ _ 6-1_____ 190 81 Miles Onyegbule (on-yay-boo-lay)___ Fr.-HS_ _ 6-4_____ 216 84 Marquise Goodwin** (12)_ __________ Jr.____ 5-9_____ 177 4 Darius White*_____________________So.____ 6-3_____ 200 89 Barrett Matthews** (6)______________ Jr.____ 6-2_____ 235 87 Dominique Jones* (6)______________ So.+_ __ 6-3_____ 235 82 Luke Poehlmann*_________________ Jr.+____ 6-7_____ 295 75 Trey Hopkins* (11)_________________So.____ 6-4_____ 298 70 Paden Kelley* (1)__________________So.____ 6-7_____ 295 WIDE RECEIVER (Z) NO 44 9 -or- 88 BUCK PLAYER CL HT WT Jackson Jeffcoat* (9)_ _____________ So._ ___ 6-5_____ 250 Dravannti Johnson* (5)_____________ Jr.+____ 6-2_____ 255 Cedric Reed_____________________Fr.-HS___ 6-6_____ 256 DEFENSIVE TACKLE (Nose) TIGHT END (Y) RIGHT TACKLE 90 Calvin Howell* (2)_______________ So.+____ 6-4_____ 290 -or- 85 Ashton Dorsey* (4)________________ So._ ___ 6-2_____ 295 96 Chris Whaley*_ _________________ So.+____ 6-3_____ 245 RIGHT GUARD 72 Mason Walters (19)*_______________ So.+_ __ 6-6_____ 315 66 Sedrick Flowers__________________ Fr.-HS_ _ 6-3_____ 313 -or- 79 Thomas Ashcraft*_________________ So.+_ __ 6-5_____ 315 CENTER 55 Dominic Espinosa (7)_____________ Fr.-RS_ _ 6-4_____ 298 73 Garrett Porter*____________________ So.+_ __ 6-6_____ 310 78 David Snow*** (26)________________Sr.____ 6-4_____ 295 77 Luke Poehlmann*_________________ Jr.+____ 6-7_____ 295 91 Kheeston Randall*** (29)_ _________ Sr._____ 6-5_____ 305 99 Desmond Jackson________________Fr.-HS___ 6-1_____ 285 95 Greg Daniels____________________Fr.-RS___ 6-5_____ 280 DEFENSIVE TACKLE STRONG END 80 Alex Okafor** (15)________________ Jr.____ 6-4.5_ ___ 260 92 Reggie Wilson*___________________ So._ ___ 6-3_____ 252 STRONGSIDE LINEBACKER 3 Jordan Hicks* (4)_________________ So._ ___ 6-2_____ 235 42 Tevin Jackson___________________Fr.-HS___ 6-2_____ 230 -or- 15 Demarco Cobbs*__________________ So._ ___ 6-2_____ 215 MIDDLE LINEBACKER LEFT GUARD 1 Keenan Robinson*** (33)_ _________Sr.+____ 6-3_____ 240 33 Steve Edmond___________________Fr.-HS___ 6-3_____ 255 LEFT TACKLE 18 Emmanuel Acho*** (20)___________ Sr._____ 6-2_____ 245 35 Kendall Thompson_______________Fr.-HS___ 6-3_____ 237 68 Josh Cochran (2)_________________ Fr.-HS_ _ 6-6_____ 285 -or- 56 Tray Allen*** (5)_________________ Sr.+_ __ 6-4_____ 310 WIDE RECEIVER (X) 1 Mike Davis* (12)_ _________________So.____ 6-2_____ 188 3 DeSean Hales**_ _________________ Jr.+____5-11_____ 175 -or- 16 Bryant Jackson_ _________________ Fr.-RS_ _ 6-2_____ 191 WEAKSIDE LINEBACKER 28 -or- 17 2 -or- 31 RIGHT CORNERBACK Quandre Diggs (5)_ ______________Fr.-HS___5-10_____ 200 Adrian Phillips* (5)_ ______________ So._ ___5-11_____ 199 A.J. White*______________________ So._ ___ 6-0_____ 180 Leroy Scott_____________________Fr.-HS___5-10_____ 193 FREE SAFETY QUARTERBACK 4 Kenny Vaccaro** (13)_____________ Jr._____ 6-1_____ 215 7 Mykkele Thompson (my-KELL)____Fr.-HS___ 6-2_____ 183 TAILBACK 21 Blake Gideon*** (46)______________ Sr._____ 6-1_____ 205 6 Christian Scott**__________________Sr.+____ 6-1_____ 225 29 Sheroid Evans (Sha-ROD)_________Fr.-HS___ 6-0_____ 185 23 Carrington Byndom* (7) (BINE-dum)_ So._ ___ 6-0_____ 180 25 Josh Turner_____________________Fr.-HS___ 6-0_____ 177 4 Kenny Vaccaro** (13)_____________ Jr._____ 6-1_____ 215 17 Adrian Phillips* (5)_ ______________ So._ ___5-11_____ 199 14 David Ash (2)_ __________________ Fr.-HS_ _ 6-3_____ 222 -or- 6 Case McCoy (3)_ __________________So.____ 6-2_____ 200 -or- -or- 28 Malcolm Brown (4)_______________ Fr.-HS_ _ 6-0_____ 213 2 Fozzy Whittaker*** (16)_ __________ Sr.+_ __5-10_____ 202 24 Joe Bergeron____________________ Fr.-HS_ _ 6-1_____ 230 26 D.J. Monroe** (3)_________________ Jr.+____ 5-9_____ 175 11 Cody Johnson*** (10)_ ____________ Sr.+_ __5-11_____ 252 41 Jamison Berryhill**_ _______________Sr.____5-11_____ 225 30 Ryan Roberson**_ ________________ Jr.+____5-10_____ 238 FULLBACK H-BACK 19 Blaine Irby** (4)__________________ Sr.+_ __ 6-3_____ 237 -or- 18 D.J. Grant (2)_____________________ Jr.+____ 6-3_____ 238 15 Darius Terrell_ __________________ Fr.-RS_ _ 6-3_____ 238 DEFENSE PLACE-KICKER NO PLAYER CL HT WT 19 Justin Tucker***___________________Sr.____ 6-1_____ 185 31 Ben Pruitt_______________________Fr.-HS^__ 6-1_____ 190 STRONG SAFETY LEFT CORNERBACK NICKEL PUNTER 19 Justin Tucker***___________________Sr.____ 6-1_____ 185 14 William Russ____________________ Fr.-RS_ _ 6-4_____ 193 -or- 14 David Ash______________________ Fr.-HS_ _ 6-3_____ 222 SPECIAL TEAMS PUNT RET: 8 Jaxon Shipley, 28 Quandre Diggs, 1 Mike Davis KICK RET: 2 Fozzy Whittaker, 28 Quandre Diggs, 26 D.J. Monroe KICKOFFS: 19 Justin Tucker, 14 Will Russ, 31 Ben Pruitt HOLDER: 86 Cade McCrary, 14 Will Russ, 8 Jaxon Shipley SNAPPER (PAT/FG): 48 Alex Zumberge, 49 Trey Wier, 78 David Snow SNAPPER (PUNTS): 48 Alex Zumberge, 49 Trey Wier, 21 Blake Gideon GUNNERS: 7 Mykkele Thompson, 17 Adrian Phillips, 31 Leroy Scott, 25 Josh Turner