These Five Houston Games Could Define The Cougars' Next Step

As the Houston Cougars gear up for the 2026 season, key matchups hold the potential to make or break their campaign.

Houston’s 2026 schedule looks friendlier than the one that produced a 10-3 finish and a bowl win, but there are still a few landmines waiting for the Cougars.

The season opened with a 4-0 burst that hinted at what Houston could be, even if most of those games came outside the conference. That early run set the tone, but the rest of the year left the sense that the Cougars had more in them.

Now, with 2026 on deck, most of the slate projects as manageable. The real question is which matchups can still turn into a problem.

Baylor is one of those games. The Bears have not had much success in the Big 12 lately, but they have worked to rebuild a defense that had been struggling.

Their 2025 season was only okay, yet there is reason to think they could climb in the conference next year. They may not make a massive leap, but they have enough to catch Houston if the timing is right.

Kansas State belongs in that same conversation, though the setup is a little different. The Wildcats had a solid 2025 in the Big 12, but they also went through plenty of change this offseason.

They finished just about even in conference play and had trouble even reaching a bowl game last year. Still, their defense could make them dangerous.

Houston’s offseason additions and transfers should help limit the threat, but Kansas State has the kind of profile that can still create trouble.

Cincinnati is another team Houston has to keep an eye on. The Bearcats have long been the conference underdog, but 2026 looks like one of their better chances to make noise.

The new transfers should help patch some holes and bring more consistency. The concern for Houston is Cincinnati’s offense, especially against a Bearcat defense that has plenty of issues stopping the run.

Utah may be the most complete challenge on the schedule outside of Texas Tech. The Utes are coming off a strong 2025 campaign and return most of their roster, which makes them a real threat in the Big 12.

The question mark is the offense, which still has work to do. Their own schedule could also hold them back in the rankings, so if Houston finds a way to beat them, the Cougars could gain an edge in the race for the Big 12 title game.

And then there is Texas Tech, the clear headliner. Houston’s toughest test is not really up for debate.

The Red Raiders reached the title game and made a deep CFP run last season, and they will host the Cougars in Lubbock. That alone makes the matchup a major obstacle.

Houston will have to win on the road against one of the league’s biggest teams, and that is a tall order.

In Other News...

Houston Suddenly Faces Its First Real Test Of This Roster Rebuild

Houstons roster overhaul has already shown up in the win column, with the Cougars climbing from a 4-8 finish in 2024 to a 10-3 bowl-winning season. Even so, the next phase of the rebuild is where the depth chart starts to matter, and the backfield is one of the first places the staff has to sort out what kind of team this really is.

The running back job is open enough to draw a real battle, with DJ Butler, ReShaun Sanford II and transfer Makhi Hughes all in the mix and no obvious automatic starter. With Dean Connors now gone, Houston is looking at a competition that could define the early shape of the offense, especially if Sanford is able to push back into the picture and Hughes brings the kind of experience that makes every rep count. [Read more 🡒]

Willie Fritz Just Raised The Stakes For Houston Football

Willie Fritz did not come to Houston to spend his time merely stabilizing a program. The veteran coach arrived from Tulane with the kind of long-view ambition that fits a place with Big 12 membership, better resources and the kind of recruiting footprint that can change quickly when the right coach starts stacking classes and transfers.

Houston has already given him a promising start, with a 10-3 season and momentum that has the Cougars looking more like a program on the rise than one trying to catch up. The bigger question now is how far that progress can go in a league where the margin is thin and the path to something bigger has opened up, even if the teams standing in the way are already easy to spot. [Read more 🡒]

Houston May Be Walking Into A 2026 Big 12 Trap Game

A 2026 trip to Boulder could end up looking a lot trickier for Houston than it seems on paper. Colorados upside under Deion Sanders gives the Cougars a potential trap-game feel, especially if the Buffaloes keep building around a more dangerous offense and lean on the kind of home-field edge that can make life uncomfortable for visiting teams.

Folsom Field brings more than just noise, with altitude, cold weather and air quality all part of the equation for a road team trying to stay sharp. Houston does have experienced pieces such as Conner Weigman, and that kind of veteran presence should matter in a game that could swing either way if the Cougars handle the moment cleanly. [Read more 🡒]