Texas Faces Quiet Pressure After Special Teams Shakeup

With revamped specialists and fresh talent, Texas aims to elevate their special teams from a strength to a game-changer this season.

Texas may be loading up everywhere for 2026, but the Longhorns’ special teams might end up mattering more than people realize.

That third phase was quietly one of the steadier parts of the 2025 season. While Texas dealt with plenty of other issues, the kicking game held up and even delivered a few big swings.

Mason Shipley gave the Longhorns reliability at kicker, finishing 16-for-19 on field goals and a perfect 40-for-40 on PATs. Jack Bouwmeester handled the punting with real impact, averaging 44.5 yards per punt, landing 14 kicks of 50-plus yards and pinning 23 inside the opponent’s 20-yard line.

Both of those jobs now belong to new faces, though Texas didn’t leave anything to chance. Memphis transfer Gianni Spetic is stepping in at kicker after a strong final season, going 14-of-17 on field goals and 49-for-49 on extra points.

He also gives Texas more range than Shipley had, going 4-for-5 from 50 yards and beyond with a long of 55. That matters for a team that was 2-for-5 from 50-plus yards in 2025.

At punter, Florida State transfer Mac Chiumento arrives to take over. He averaged 44.0 yards on 27 punts in his final season in Tallahassee, with 13 punts downed inside the 20 and six punts of at least 50 yards. The raw numbers show a pretty clean handoff from Bouwmeester’s production, especially considering Chiumento did his work on 32 fewer punts than Bouwmeester’s 59 attempts.

The return game gives Texas another edge. Ryan Niblett is back after a breakout year as a punt returner, when he piled up 476 yards on 21 attempts, scored two punt return touchdowns and averaged 22.7 yards per return. Those touchdowns weren’t just eye-catching stats; they were the kind of plays that changed games for Texas last season.

Texas has also tried freshman Jermaine Bishop Jr. in the return game, and he could become another option there.

So while the headlines around the Longhorns are going to center on Arch Manning, Colin Simmons and the rest of that loaded roster, special teams is shaping up as a real strength again. With Spetic, Chiumento and Niblett in place, Texas has rebuilt the unit and may have one of the nation’s best in 2026.

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