Steve Sarkisian May Have Finally Solved Texas' Biggest Roster Debate

With a strategic mix of seasoned recruits and savvy transfers, Coach Sarkisian's Texas team looks poised to surpass expectations with its deepest roster yet.

Steve Sarkisian has spent his Texas tenure building the way the best programs do: load up on elite recruiting classes, then use the transfer portal as a tool instead of a crutch. That approach has given the Longhorns talent for years. Now, heading into fall camp after a 10-3 season that fell short of expectations, it may finally have given Sarkisian his deepest roster yet.

There’s a reason that idea has some weight to it. Sarkisian’s offensive ceiling has already been on display before, most notably during his two seasons as Alabama’s offensive coordinator.

After the Crimson Tide missed the College Football Playoff in 2019, he helped drive one of the most explosive offenses of his career in 2020. In that COVID-shortened season against an all-SEC schedule, Alabama put up 48.5 points per game and 541.6 total yards per game.

Mac Jones handled the quarterbacking, Devonta Smith and Jaylen Waddle stretched defenses vertically, and Najee Harris gave the attack its physical edge.

That season has become something of a template for what Sarkisian wants when everything is clicking.

Texas now looks built in a similar shape. The Longhorns added Cam Coleman through the transfer portal to pair with Ryan Wingo at receiver, and they brought in Hollywood Smothers and Raleek Brown to give the backfield more explosive options. After a 2025 season in which the pieces around Arch Manning didn’t meet the standard, Sarkisian and his staff went to work on the roster around him.

The offensive line got help too. Melvin Siani and Laurence Seymour were added to join returning starters Trevor Goosby, Connor Robertson, and Brandon Baker.

That matters because Sarkisian’s offense needs the run game and the pass game to work together. The wide-zone scheme has to force defenses to commit, and the play-action game has to punish them when they do.

If a defense has to bring a safety down to help stop the run, Texas can attack outside with speed.

What makes this version of Texas different from a pure portal-built team is that Sarkisian still leans hard on high school recruiting and development. That remains the backbone of the program, and it doesn’t sound like that formula is changing.

Retention has also helped shape the picture for 2026. Texas managed to keep important pieces in place, especially on defense.

Kobe Black, Wardell Mack, and Derrick Williams all came back to a secondary that is trying to rebound from a disappointing season. The Longhorns also got key returns from Goosby and Jelani McDonald instead of losing them early to the NFL Draft.

And while the portal gets plenty of attention, Texas is still benefiting from the kind of recruiting haul that used to be the clearest sign of a title contender. The Longhorns are now two years removed from signing the No. 1-ranked recruiting class, and that 2025 group is entering its second season in Austin. Some of those players are about to take on larger roles, which matters even more in a sport where experience is at a premium.

The result is a roster that feels deeper, older, and more complete than the ones Sarkisian has had before. For a program that has already flashed high-end talent, that could be the difference.

In Other News...

Former Texas QB Landed Inside Taylor Swift And Travis Kelce's Wedding

A former Texas quarterback found himself in an unexpected spot this weekend, taking in the Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce wedding at Madison Square Garden with his wife. For Longhorn fans, the name carries a familiar ring: Shane Buechele was a notable part of Texas football before moving on to the NFL, and his path eventually took him through Kansas City, where he spent multiple seasons with the Chiefs and became part of the broader orbit around one of the leagues biggest stars.

Buecheles time with the Chiefs was mostly spent on the practice squad, but it was enough to build a relationship with Kelce that now makes the wedding appearance make a little more sense. His football story has already covered plenty of ground, from his memorable college debut at Texas to his pro career in Kansas City, and this latest stop adds a very different kind of footnote to a rsum that has already stretched well beyond Austin. [Read more 🡒]

Steve Sarkisian Watching Local Talent Slip Toward Texas Rivals

A local name is moving toward the finish line, and it is one Texas fans have had reason to track closely. Jaiden Fields, the three-star athlete from Hutto, has built his profile as a two-way player, making noise at both wide receiver and strong safety while drawing attention from programs outside the Longhorns usual in-state comfort zone.

For Steve Sarkisian, the more interesting part may be the one that is not there: Texas has not been heavily involved in Fields recruitment, even as the decision date approaches. With an announcement expected on July 7, the Longhorns are watching a nearby talent head toward a choice that could land elsewhere, another reminder that keeping top local players home is never automatic. [Read more 🡒]

Steve Sarkisian May Finally Be Rebuilding Texas Around Arch Manning

After a disappointing 2025 campaign, Steve Sarkisian is spending this offseason trying to make Texas look more like a team built to put Arch Manning in position to thrive. The Longhorns have attacked the roster around him, adding Hollywood Smothers and Raleek Brown through the transfer portal to help the rushing game, while also bringing in offensive line transfers Melvin Siani and Laurence Seymore to stabilize the front.

The bigger picture is just as important for Texas. With Cam Coleman, Ryan Wingo and Emmett Mosley V forming a flexible receiver group, the Longhorns have the pieces to lean into a more aggressive offense and take some pressure off Manning. The question now is whether all of those additions can finally turn the promise around him into the kind of attack Sarkisian has been trying to build. [Read more 🡒]