The Texas Longhorns are headed back to Baton Rouge for the first time since September 2019, and this one already feels loaded. Tiger Stadium is one of the toughest places in college football, and when Texas and LSU meet there in November, the spotlight will be squarely on Arch Manning.
That last trip between these teams came in a very different era. LSU had Joe Burrow in the middle of what would become a historic season, with Ja’Marr Chase and Justin Jefferson giving the Tigers a terrifying passing attack.
Texas, meanwhile, was still sitting inside the AP Top 10. LSU won that one 45-38 in Austin, and another high-scoring battle would not be a surprise when the teams meet again seven years later.
For Manning, the stakes are obvious. He’ll be entering the season with a full year of starting experience behind him, and Texas is giving him more help, including one of the best wide receivers in the country in Cam Coleman.
But the Longhorns have already lived through a similar setup before. Manning had plenty around him in last season’s game against Georgia, and Texas still came up short.
That’s why this trip to Death Valley matters so much. One of Manning’s jobs this year is simple: don’t let history repeat itself.
In the best-case scenario, Texas arrives in Louisiana with real momentum and a College Football Playoff spot within reach, sitting at least in the top five. LSU is expected to be right in the thick of the conference race too, especially with Lane Kiffin running the show. That only raises the pressure on a game that already carries plenty of it.
The comparison to last year’s Georgia loss keeps coming back, but there’s one major difference. Texas should not be walking into this matchup with two losses already hanging over its playoff hopes. That changes the feel, but not the importance.
Manning has already shown he can bounce back when things go sideways. After a road loss to unranked Florida last season, he responded with a standout performance against No.
6 Oklahoma in the Red River Rivalry. And after the Georgia defeat, he closed the year with three strong outings in wins over Arkansas, Texas A&M, and Michigan.
That’s part of why he enters 2026 as one of the Heisman Trophy favorites. Still, if he can’t deliver in a game like this late in the season, it could all end up feeling hollow.
Even if Texas makes the College Football Playoff.
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The last meeting came in 2023, when Texas handled the Red Raiders decisively, and that result has only added to the confidence around the Longhorns side of the rivalry. For now, there is no future game confirmed, but Merediths comments serve as a reminder that the Texas-Texas Tech conversation never really goes away for long. [Read more 🡒]
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Black is still working to lock down a starting spot, and that pursuit matters because Texas has been searching for more certainty on the back end. If he can get there, the Longhorns would not just be adding another talented defensive back, they would be reuniting two players who know each other well and could give the secondary a cleaner, more cohesive look heading into the next stage of the season. [Read more 🡒]
