Texas Longhorns running back Jerick Gibson (9) runs into UTSA safety Jimmy Wyrick (18) during the game at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium in Austin Saturday, Sept. 14, 2024.

Arch Manning stars after Quinn Ewers’ injury as No. 2 Texas rolls

Arch Manning passed for four touchdowns and ran 67 yards for another in relief of the injured Quinn Ewers as No. 2 Texas flew past UTSA 56-7 on Saturday night in Austin, Texas.

Manning went 9 of 12 for 223 yards in about two quarters of play in the most extensive action of the highly touted redshirt freshman’s career as the Longhorns (3-0) dominated from start to finish.

Ewers was 14 of 16 passing for 185 yards, two TDs and an interception in just over a quarter of play before sustaining a strained abdomen. He spent about 15 minutes in the Longhorns’ medical tent before going to the Texas locker room and returning to the field in street clothes before halftime.

That set the stage for Manning, and he impressed. Texas rang up a 614-260 advantage in total yardage.

Owen McCown led UTSA (1-2) with 132 yards passing while Robert Henry Jr. had 65 yards rushing on six carries.

Ewers led the Longhorns to a pair of touchdown drives in the first quarter while connecting with eight different receivers. The first ended in a 7-yard TD pass to Isaiah Bond with 9:27 left in the quarter and he later tossed a 19-yard scoring strike to Johntay Cook II and a 14-0 lead with six seconds remaining.

Ewers left the game early in the second quarter with a strained abdomen one snap after throwing a 49-yard pass to tight end Gunnar Helm. Manning went right to work, hitting DeAndre Moore Jr. with a 19-yard touchdown pass on his first snap from scrimmage to move the Texas lead to 21-0 with 12:10 to play before halftime.

Henry Jr. answered for the Roadrunners on the ensuing possession with a 53-yard TD run. Manning then ripped off a 67-yard scoring run to push Texas back in front by three touchdowns.

Manning flexed in the first four minutes of the third quarter, passing 51 yards to Bond for a score on Texas’ first possession and opening the second with a 75-yard TD pass to Ryan Wingo.

Bond finished the game with 103 yards receiving on five catches. Freshman Jerrick Gibson ran for 75 yards in 13 carries to lead the Longhorns.

The Longhorns added to their lead early in the fourth quarter with a 12-yard touchdown pass from Manning to Cook and finished the scoring with a 30-yard pick-six by defensive end Ethan Burke.

–Field Level Media

Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers (3) celebrates a touchdown against Michigan during the first half at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor on Saturday, September 7, 2024.

No. 2 Texas guarding against complacency vs. UTSA

Yes, No. 2 Texas’ win on the road over defending national champion Michigan last Saturday was uber-impressive and more than passed the eye test.

But the Longhorns are determined to keep their collective focus on a much bigger prize — a repeat spot in the College Football Playoff and more — heading into Saturday’s game against Texas-San Antonio in Austin.

The Longhorns (2-0) dominated Michigan 31-12 and were rewarded with a move up in the latest AP poll from third to second behind Georgia. Texas swamped the Wolverines behind Quinn Ewers’ 246 passing yards and three TD tosses, Gunnar Helm’s seven catches for 98 yards and a score and Matthew Golden’s six receptions including a touchdown.

Texas could have easily been ahead 35-0 at halftime but settled for a 24-3 lead. The Longhorns turned over things to their defense after the break and held Michigan to just 284 total yards of offense.

“As good as we think we played, in my humble opinion, we’re going to need to play better to go try to accomplish some of the goals that we have for the season,” Texas coach Steve Sarkisian said Monday.

The Longhorns have scored on all 11 of their trips to the red zone through their first two games, including 10 touchdowns, and are plus-4 in turnover margin.

“There are things that we need to clean up still, too,” Sarkisian said.

Sarkisian added that his goal is to make sure his team is not complacent, showing the Longhorns players a clip of Northern Illinois’ upset win over Notre Dame last Saturday as a “good reminder that we’re entitled to nothing.”

“We’re capable of anything,” Sarkisian said. “We’ve got a really good team, but we’re entitled to nothing, and we’re going to have to earn everything we get.”

The Roadrunners (1-1) were waylaid in their annual I-35 rivalry game with Texas State, losing on the road 49-10 last Saturday.

UTSA had two quarterbacks combine to pass for 252 yards, with Owen McCown playing the first half and completing 10 passes for 105 yards. Eddie Lee Marburger got the call after halftime, racking up 170 combined yards (147 of those passing) and the Roadrunners’ only TD.

“You find out a lot about yourself when you play in a big game,” UTSA coach Jeff Traylor said Monday. “Obviously what we found out from the Texas State we did not like. But we like what we learned after the game and in the two days since. We have a culture here that we are proud of. We went right back to work.”

Traylor, a member of Texas’ coaching staff in 2015-16, remarked that there have been four instances in his five-year tenure with the Roadrunners that his team “had their teeth kicked in. We’ve responded well every time.

“But the difference is we didn’t have the University of Texas football team waiting for us,” Traylor added. “Texas is talented up and down the roster — they are massive and they are very fast. We will be facing the best team we’ve ever faced since I’ve been (at UTSA). We will have to be a lot better to compete on Saturday.”

The Longhorns won the only other previous meeting, rolling to a 41-20 victory in 2022 in Austin.

–Field Level Media

Nov 24, 2023; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; UTSA Roadrunners quarterback Frank Harris (0) throws a pass during the first half against the Tulane Green Wave at Yulman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matthew Hinton-USA TODAY Sports

A Frisco Bowl win would carry extra meaning for Marshall, UTSA

Marshall had to survive a five-game losing streak in order to clinch bowl eligibility, but the Thundering Herd aren’t through the adversity just yet.

The program will turn to redshirt freshman quarterback Cole Pennington when Marshall takes on UTSA in the Frisco Bowl on Tuesday in Frisco, Texas.

Marshall (6-6) ended its skid by winning two of its last three games, including a 35-21 triumph over Arkansas State in the regular-season finale, to reach the important six-win plateau.

Starting quarterback Cam Fancher finished his season with 2,162 passing yards, 11 touchdowns, 11 interceptions and four rushing scores before entering the transfer portal. Marshall coach Charles Huff told a local TV station that Fancher’s decision didn’t surprise him since “there isn’t a lot of money for NIL (at Marshall) and the fans hate him. The kid has been miserable.”

Huff received blowback for the comments, including from Fancher’s mother.

“I was asked a question by a reporter and I inserted my opinion over facts about a situation, which ultimately created a little bit of a sandstorm,” Huff said. “It was truly based on my opinion of a small minority of fans, and I actually generalized the entire fan base. That was wrong. I take full responsibility for that.”

Fans may have been rankled by the coach’s faux pas, but now they will get to root for the son of a program legend. Pennington’s father is Chad Pennington, who parlayed a decorated career at Marshall into a long NFL career.

However, Cole Pennington had a 0-to-6 touchdown-to-interception ratio in three games filling in for Fancher this season.

“Bowl games are special in themselves,” Pennington said. “They’re just a great way to extend your time with the guys that you built a culture with and a chemistry with the whole season.”

Marshall’s weapons of note are running back Rasheen Ali (1,043 yards, 14 touchdowns) and Jayden Harrison, who has two kick return touchdowns and an FBS-high 31.9 yards per return.

UTSA (8-4) is heading to its fourth straight bowl game under coach Jeff Traylor, but the Roadrunners have yet to win one in the program’s brief FBS history.

The bowl appearance streak includes a trip to the 2021 Frisco Bowl, where No. 24 San Diego State beat UTSA 38-24.

“It’s important for us,” Traylor said. “There’s only a few things left in this program that we haven’t done, and this is one of those things we haven’t done, so for us it takes on a level of importance that’s probably more than most programs.”

UTSA made the move to the American Athletic Conference this season and found immediate success, winning seven straight conference games before a 29-16 loss to Tulane in the regular-season finale.

The Roadrunners offense relies on a pair of first-team All-AAC players, quarterback Frank Harris (2,506 passing yards, 323 rushing yards, 22 combined touchdowns, eight interceptions) and wide receiver Joshua Cephus (82 receptions, 1,049 yards, nine TDs).

“It’s my last (game), you know?” Cephus said. “I’ve been here all my time in college. I can’t miss an opportunity to go out and play with my teammates again. I’ll never have a chance to play college football again, so I’m trying to go out with a bang.”

–Field Level Media

Dec 16, 2022; Orlando, Florida, USA; UTSA Roadrunners quarterback Frank Harris (0) is tackled by Troy Trojans linebacker KJ Robertson (7) during the second quarter at Exploria Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-USA TODAY Sports

Defense rallies No. 24 Troy past No. 25 UTSA to win Cure Bowl

KJ Robertson made a game-changing interception and Gunnar Watson threw the go-ahead touchdown pass as No. 24 Troy rallied for an 18-12 victory over No. 25 UTSA in the Cure Bowl on Friday at Orlando, Fla.

Robertson’s interception was one of six takeaways by the Trojans (12-2), who ran their winning streak to 11, third-best nationally behind Georgia (15) and Michigan (13). Kimani Vidal rushed for 73 yards and a score and RaJae’ Johnson caught a touchdown pass as Troy won its fifth straight bowl game despite gaining just 169 yards.

Frank Harris passed for 198 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions for UTSA (11-3), which had a 10-game winning streak halted. Kevorian Barnes rushed for 132 yards and Zakhari Franklin caught a touchdown pass for the Roadrunners.

UTSA fell to 0-4 all-time in bowl appearances.

Troy linebacker Carlton Martial made 14 tackles to increase his all-time FBS record count to 577. Richard Jibunor had an interception, sack, forced fumble and fumble recovery while Watson passed for 113 yards and was intercepted twice.

The Roadrunners led by five and reached the Troy 9-yard line in the third quarter before Robertson intercepted Harris at the 2 and raced 61 yards. A 15-yard personal-foul penalty was tacked on to move the ball to the UTSA 22 with 5:11 left.

Five plays later, the Trojans took their first lead when Watson connected with Johnson on a 12-yard touchdown pass. Watson then tossed a two-point conversion pass to Clayton Ollendieck to give Troy a 15-12 lead with 2:43 left in the quarter.

Brooks Buce added a 27-yard field goal to give the Trojans an 18-12 edge with 9:18 remaining in the game.

On the next drive, a 53-yard scamper by Barnes gave UTSA the ball at the Troy 5. Barnes ran 2 yards on first down and Harris threw three incompletions — one was dropped in the end zone by Chris Carpenter — as the Roadrunners came up empty with 7:01 to play.

UTSA later got one first down before eventually giving the ball up on downs with 1:32 to go, and the Trojans ran out the clock.

UTSA led 12-7 at halftime after holding Troy to 66 yards in the first half.

The Roadrunners’ first two points came courtesy of the Trojans. On a third-down play from the Troy 7, center Jake Andrews hiked a shotgun snap past Watson while he wasn’t looking, and it rolled out of the end zone for a safety with 3:58 left in the first quarter.

UTSA increased the lead to 9-0 when Harris hit Franklin on a 2-yard scoring pass with 12:30 remaining in the half. Jared Sackett tacked on a 42-yard field goal with 6:21 left.

The Trojans struck with 50 seconds remaining when Vidal rushed 2 yards for a score.

–Field Level Media

Nov 13, 2021; San Antonio, Texas, USA; UTSA Roadrunners tight end Leroy Watson (1) runs in for a touchdown in the second half against the Southern Miss Golden Eagles at the Alamodome. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Dunn-USA TODAY Sports

Undefeated No. 22 UTSA gears up to face UAB in showdown

No. 22 Texas-San Antonio can clinch its first Conference USA West Division title and a berth in the league championship game when it hosts dangerous Alabama-Birmingham on Saturday afternoon in a Conference USA dustup in the Alamo City.

To reach those benchmarks, UTSA will have to be at its best. UAB is in a position to win their fourth straight division championship with a win over the Roadrunners this week and UTEP at home in its regular-season finale.

The Roadrunners (10-0, 6-0 in C-USA) are two wins away from a perfect regular season and are one of just three FBS teams that remain undefeated. UTSA has already established a record for points scored in a season (386) with a pair of games still on its schedule. Its 10-game winning streak, its six wins in six conference games and eight straight victories at home are all new program marks.

UTSA’s most recent game was a 27-17 home win over Southern Miss on Nov. 13 in which the Roadrunners forced three turnovers in the final seven minutes to secure the victory. Hunter Duplessis kicked a 24-yard tie-breaking field goal with 4:39 remaining before UTSA added a clinching touchdown three plays later on 9-yard TD run by Sincere McCormick.

Frank Harris passed for 227 yards and two touchdowns and ran for 54 yards in the win.

UTSA has just two wins over teams with a winning record but has found ways to win tight games against its stronger opponents and easily beat the teams it was expected to dominate. The Roadrunners’ resume has been impressive enough for them to earn a spot in the College Football Rankings the past two weeks.

“We’ve got a terrible, terrible taste in our mouth from last year when we left Birmingham (after a 21-13 loss),” UTSA coach Jeff Traylor said. “We know we’re a much better team. UAB is a really good team.

“To be a champ, you have to beat the champs, and the champs are coming here Saturday. They’ve won it three times in a row. To win the first one is always the hardest one. We’re smart enough to realize it’s a bigger game than normal.”

UAB (7-3, 5-1 C-USA) will be a formidable opponent for the Roadrunners. The Blazers have won two straight games, most recently a 21-14 road victory over Marshall on Nov. 13 in a rematch of the 2020 C-USA title game.

Dylan Hopkins has passed for 1,723 yards and 11 scores this season while DeWayne McBride leads UAB’s ground attack with 945 yards and 10 touchdowns on 145 carries. Gerrit Prince is the Blazers’ top receiver with 26 catches for 571 yards and seven TDs.

“This game has always been on our radar and now it is finally here,” Blazers’ safety Grayson Cash said. “They are undefeated, unbeaten and we know what we have ahead of us and we are ready for it. We’ve been saying every week is a championship week, and we have another one this week, so we will be ready to go.”

UAB leads the overall series, 4-1, and has won the last four meetings by an average margin of 20 points.

–Field Level Media