Mack Brown’s first five seasons at Texas ended with a 49-15 mark and a .766 winning percentage. Steve Sarkisian’s first five seasons in Austin have produced a 48-20 record from 2021-25.
On the surface, those numbers look close enough to invite the comparison. But the two runs unfolded in very different college football worlds, and that’s exactly what made the discussion worth having in this week’s Horns247 Roundtable.
The question at the center of it all was simple: what should be made of the five-year starts for Brown and Sarkisian?
Chip Brown’s answer leaned toward Sarkisian, arguing that the current Texas coach’s 48-20 start is more impressive than Brown’s 49-15 opening stretch. Brown’s case started with the obvious: Mack Brown’s first five years were successful. But Chip Brown pointed to the baggage that came with those seasons, including the Chris Simms-Major Applewhite quarterback controversy, which he said seemed to create more fireworks off the field than on it and still sparks message board debate 25 years later.
He also noted a painful miss in the 2001 Big 12 title game. Texas had beaten Colorado 41-7 earlier that season, but the Longhorns let the rematch slip away, a loss that cost them the conference championship and a shot at the national championship game against the Miami Hurricanes.
Those are the kinds of details that keep the comparison from living only in the record book. Both starts were strong.
Both built momentum. But the path each coach took through those five seasons tells a different story, and that was the point of the roundtable conversation.
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The bigger question is how that progress shows up when the defense tightens and the pressure rises, because Sarkisian also sees a player who has already been through enough adversity to learn from it. Mannings development has been obvious in the way hes been discussed around the program, but the next stage is about turning that growth into consistent production. If the mechanics hold and the mental side stays sharp, Texas may finally get the version of Manning it has been waiting to see. [Read more 🡒]
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In one recent pick of a Big 12 all-time starting five, Joel Embiid and Blake Griffin were joined by Kevin Durant, a trio that instantly gives Kansas fans plenty to argue about. Embiids Kansas connection and Griffins Oklahoma roots are easy enough to place, but Durants place in the conversation comes with an NBA rsum so decorated that leaving him off would be nearly impossible, even if the debate over the rest of the lineup is where the real fight starts. [Read more 🡒]
Texas May Face Its Toughest Road Test Yet At LSU
The road through the SEC will have a fresh look in 2026, and Texas already has one of the seasons most daunting trips circled. LSU and Texas have both spent the offseason reshaping their staffs and rosters, with the Tigers and Longhorns trying to position themselves as legitimate conference and national title threats. Texas decision to bring back Will Muschamp on the defensive side fits the kind of win-now urgency that usually comes with a game of this size.
The matchup lands in Baton Rouge on Nov. 14, and it could tell a lot about how far Texas has come under its revamped defensive setup. LSUs biggest unknown remains up front, where protection could be tested by Texas defensive front if the Longhorns arrive with the kind of physical edge their return to contention suggests. By then, both teams will have spent months living with the expectations that come with major coaching changes and a deep transfer cycle, which makes this one feel less like a regular-season stop and more like a late-season measuring stick. [Read more 🡒]
