Texas is still making a push in USC territory, and this time the target is three-star linebacker Josiah Poyer.
Poyer verbally committed to USC on March 29, and for now he remains locked in with the Trojans. But national recruiting analyst Adam Gorney reported ahead of the July 10 weekend that Texas is “not going down without a huge fight” to try to flip him.
“According to a source, inside linebackers coach Johnny Nansen - who has considerable West ties - is making a serious run at Poyer with his NIL checkbook coming in hot,” Gorney wrote in his report.
Nansen’s connection to the region is part of what makes this one worth watching. He coached at USC during the 2014 and 2015 seasons under Steve Sarkisian, and later spent time at UCLA under Chip Kelly in the early 2020s.
He also has a track record of recruiting from St. John Bosco, one of the West’s powerhouse programs.
That matters because Texas has already shown it can win those battles in California. The Longhorns flipped five-star edge rusher Richard Wesley from Sierra Canyon in Chatsworth during the last recruiting cycle, then landed Wesley’s teammate, four-star defensive lineman Kasi Currie, in June.
If Texas could pull Poyer away, it would give the Longhorns and Nansen a much-needed inside linebacker commitment in the 2027 class. Texas’ class is already ranked No. 5 by On3/Rivals and No. 4 by 247Sports.
Still, this is not a simple grab-and-go. USC has been far more difficult to pry recruits away from since the arrival of general manager Chad Bowden. The Trojans have lost only two notable recruits in that stretch: five-star linebacker Xavier Griffin and 2027 four-star wide receiver Eli Woodard.
USC has also tightened its approach after building a new front office around NIL and recruiting. One of the biggest changes is the Trojans’ “no visit” policy once a player commits. That rule could make it tough for Texas to get Poyer to Austin, while USC works to keep him from wandering.
The Trojans have also put real effort into repairing and strengthening relationships with Trinity League programs, including St. John Bosco. USC sent multiple coaches to Poyer’s school for its college showcase in May, a sign the Trojans are treating this commitment like one they cannot afford to lose.
For Texas, the message is clear: the Longhorns are trying. For USC, the goal is just as obvious - hold the line and keep Poyer in the fold.
In Other News...
Texas May Have Finally Found The Backfield Arch Manning Needed
Texas spent the offseason reworking its backfield, and the shape of it now looks a lot more balanced around Raleek Brown and Hollywood Smothers. Brown arrived from Arizona State and gave the Longhorns the kind of burst and pass-catching presence that keeps a defense honest, while Smothers brings the downhill production and steady efficiency that can make a run game feel less one-dimensional. For a team trying to make life easier on Arch Manning, that kind of pairing matters.
The appeal goes beyond the top two names, too. Brown and Smothers give Texas a legitimate 1-2 punch, but the Longhorns also have Derrek Cooper and Michael Terry in the mix as young depth pieces who can develop into rotation options. If the room holds up the way it looks on paper, Texas may finally have the kind of backfield balance that lets the offense stay on schedule instead of leaning too heavily on the quarterback to create everything. [Read more 🡒]
Where Texas Portal Departures Are Suddenly Getting Another Shot
Texas spent the offseason watching a sizable chunk of its defensive depth chart and one specialist move on through the transfer portal, and the next stop for those players has already started to take shape. For a program that expects to reload every year, the more interesting part now is not just who left, but how quickly several of those departures found situations where they should matter right away.
A few of the exits were always going to land in places where opportunity was waiting, including at programs that need experienced help and are willing to give it. One of the seven departures was a starter for Texas, while others are stepping into spots where they are projected to be key pieces or even immediate starters, which says plenty about how the Longhorns roster churn is being viewed elsewhere. [Read more 🡒]
Ohio State Awaits Final Word In Massive WR Recruiting Battle
Monshun Sales is set to put an end to one of the most closely watched wide receiver recruitments in the country, with the five-star prospect planning to announce his college commitment Friday, June 17, live on the Pat McAfee Show. Texas is among the finalists, along with Alabama, Ohio State, Indiana and LSU, and the Longhorns have remained in the mix as several heavyweight programs have made late pushes for the elite pass catcher.
For Texas, the timing makes this one especially interesting. The Longhorns have been working to stay aggressive in a battle that could come down to the wire, with Indiana long viewed as the hometown school and one of the programs that had held the edge for much of the process. However it breaks, Sales decision will be a major one for a recruiting race that has drawn attention from across the sport. [Read more 🡒]
