Texas Longhorns
Oct. 29---college fotball ---
Texas 47 ... Oklahoma State 28---college fotball ---
Down 28-12 at halftime, Texas came out and blew the doors off Oklahoma State thanks to Vince Young, who finished with a career-high 267 rushing yards highlighted by an 80-yard touchdown run on the opening drive of the second half as part of a 35-0 run. Ramonce Taylor added fourth quarter scoring runs from 57 and 12 yards out, and Neale Tweedie caught a 21-yard touchdown pass. In the first half, the Cowboys got a 17-yard touchdown run from Al Pena and two touchdown catches from D'Juan Woods with the second one coming on a tipped pass, but didn't score in the second half.---college fotball ---
Player of the game: Texas QB Vince Young completed 15 of 30 passes for 239 yards and two touchdowns with an interception and ran 21 times for 267 yards and two touchdowns. ---college fotball ---
Stat Leaders: Oklahoma State - Passing: Al Pena, 12-27, 152 yds, 2 TD---college fotball ---
Rushing: Mike Hamilton, 31-194. Receiving: D'Juan Woods, 4-90, 2 TD---college fotball ---
Texas - Passing: Vince Young, 15-30, 239 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT---college fotball ---
Rushing: Vince Young, 21-267, 2 TD. Receiving: David Thomas, 6-104, 1 TD---college fotball ---
What to take away from this game: Even after getting down big early against the Cowboys, there wasn't any panic considering how Texas rolled in the second half against them the previous two seasons. However, in the beauty contest that is the BCS, the rough first half, and 194 rushing yards by OSU's Mike Hamilton, might be just enough to edge Virginia Tech closer. To have a game like this against Colorado or Texas Tech would've been fine, but Oklahoma State has been awful all season long. Watch out Baylor; the Longhorns will be focused next week.---college fotball ---
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Oct. 22---college fotball ---
Texas 52 ... Texas Tech 17---college fotball ---
Vince Young threw two touchdown passes to Billy Pittman and Selvin Young ran for two second quarter scores in the stunning rout. Texas Tech scored on a three-yard touchdown pass to Taurean Henderson in the first quarter and was tied at ten early in the second, and then the Longhorns went on a run cranking out 28 straight points highlighted by a 73-yard scoring pass to Pittman. Tech QB Cody Hodges threw 64 times for 369 yards with two touchdown passes; Young ran seven times for 45 yards and a score.---college fotball ---
Player of the game: Texas WR Billy Pittman caught three passes for 138 yards and two touchdowns.
Stat Leaders: Texas Tech - Passing: Cody Hodges, 42-64, 369 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT---college fotball ---
Rushing: Taurean Henderson, 17-86. Receiving: Joel Filani, 9-82, 1 TD---college fotball ---
Texas - Passing: Vince Young, 12-22, 239 yds, 2 TD, 2 INT---college fotball ---
Rushing: Selvin Young, 16-77, 2 TD. Receiving: Ramonce Taylor, 5-65---college fotball ---
What to take away from this game: What else do the Longhorns have to do to deserve the number two spot? The defensive backs were all over the Texas Tech receivers, while the offense was efficient taking advantage of every big chance. The team is playing with a swagger and with supreme confidence, and it's stemming from Vince Young, who was able to shake off a few interceptions to help the team roll without a problem. The Longhorn defense might not be full of household names, but it's doing an amazing job. ---college fotball ---
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Oct. 15---college fotball ---
Texas 42 ... Colorado 17 ---college fotball ---
Vince Young showed right away that there was no post-Oklahoma letdown with two touchdowns runs followed up by a five-yard Selvin Young touchdown run followed up by another Vince Young score for a 28-0 lead midway through the second half. Colorado finally broke the run with a 48-yard Mason Crosby field goal, but Young answered right back with a 35-yard touchdown pass to Limas Sweed with 1:29 to play. Colorado got two touchdown passes from Joel Klatt, including an eight yard score to Evan Judge with one second left in the first half. Young closed out the Longhorn scoring with a 13-yard pass to Sweed.---college fotball ---
Player of the game: Texas QB Vince Young completed 25 of 29 passes for 336 yards and two touchdowns and ran ten times for 58 yards and three scores. ---college fotball ---
Stat Leaders: Colorado - Passing: Joel Klatt, 19-39, 189 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT---college fotball ---
Rushing: Hugh Charles, 13-38. Receiving: Evan Judge, 6-37, 1 TD---college fotball ---
Texas - Passing: Vince Young, 25-29, 336 yds, 2 TD---college fotball ---
Rushing: Vince Young, 10-58, 3 TD. Receiving: Limas Sweed, 7-88, 2 TD---college fotball ---
What to take away from this game: How much more dominant can Texas be? Vince Young is the obvious star, but the defense is doing a fantastic job crushing and killing at the line not allowing anyone's running game to get going. Holding on to the ball for 39 minutes helps the defense to stay rested, but the D is doing its job getting offenses off the field in a hurry. Colorado only managed 45 rushing yards and was never in the game. Young is playing at another level right now. ---college fotball ---
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Oct. 8---college fotball ---
Texas 45 ... Oklahoma 12 ---college fotball ---
Texas took the opening drive 82 yards in 12 plays finishing with a 15-yard Ramonce Taylor touchdown catch, but OU made it close late in the first quarter with two Garrett Hartley field goals. And then the rout was on for the Longhorns. Jamaal Charles barreled for an 80-yard touchdown run and Billy Pittman caught touchdown passes from 64 and 27 yards out. Rodrique Wright put the final exclamation point on the win with a 67-yard fumble return for a score. OU RB Adrian Peterson only ran three times for ten yards---college fotball ---.
Player of the game: Texas QB Vince Young completed 14 of 27 passes for 241 yards and three touchdowns and ran 17 times for 45 yards.---college fotball ---
Stat Leaders: Oklahoma - Passing: Rhett Bomar, 12-33, 94 yds, 1 TD, 1 INT---college fotball ---
Rushing: Donta Hickson, 5-22. Receiving: Joe Jon Finley, 2-21, 1 TD---college fotball ---
Texas - Passing: Vince Young, 14-27, 241 yds, 3 TD---college fotball ---
Rushing: Jamaal Charles, 9-116, 1 TD. Receiving: David Thomas, 5-50---college fotball ---
What to take away from this game: Phew. Texas finally got over the Oklahoma hump, and it did so in an emphatic way with Vince Young in complete and total command of the game. The OU offense had nothing going without Adrian Peterson, and the Longhorns didn't let if get close after an almost even first quarter. There were was too many penalties, 12 for 110, but it doesn't matter. The lines were terrific, the running game rumbled for 203 yards, and Vince Young showed again why he has to be considered more as an NFL passer. Everything is working.---college fotball ---
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Oct. 1---college fotball ---
Texas 51 ... Missouri 20 ---college fotball ---
Texas converted three turnovers into touchdowns and broke open a tight game with a 37-point run thanks to two Vince Young touchdown passes and two, one-yard Henry Melton touchdown runs. Young, who also ran for a 33-yard score, got what would turn out to be the game winning touchdown on a short pass to Jamaal Charles, who tiptoed up the sidelines before diving over the pylon. Missouri moved the ball well early and scored on a 12-yard Jimmy Jackson touchdown run and a three-yard Brad Smith dash, but wasn't able to get back in the end-zone until late in the fourth on a one-yard Smith run. ---college fotball ---
Player of the game: Texas QB Vince Young completed 15 of 22 passes for 236 yards and two touchdowns with an interception. He also led the team with 108 yards and a touchdown on 13 carries. ---college fotball ---
Stat Leaders: Missouri - Passing: Brad Smith, 19-37, 181 yds, 1 INT---college fotball ---
Rushing: Brad Smith, 25-57, 2 TD. Receiving: Sean Coffey, 6-43---college fotball ---
Texas - Passing: Vince Young, 15-22, 236 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT---college fotball ---
Rushing: Vince Young, 13-108, 1 TD. Receiving: Billy Pittman, 4-81---college fotball ---
What to take away from this game: Texas did a fantastic job of adjusting on the fly against the Missouri running game. Brad Smith and the boys moved the ball at will in the first quarter, and didn't do much of anything after. While Vince Young gets all of the publicity, but his supporting cast isn't bad, either, with the three-headed monster of Jamaal Charles, Selvin Young and Henry Melton running extremely well. How good is this team? It looked sloppy and unfocused throughout the first half, and still ended up winning on the road in a 31-point blowout.---college fotball ---
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sept. 17---college fotball ---
Texas 51 ... Rice 10---college fotball ---
Jamaal Charles scored on touchdown runs of 25, 25 and four yards to give Texas a 21-0 lead, and fumble recoveries for scores from Michael Huff and Frank Okam helped push the score to 45-0 before Rice finally got on the board late in the third quarter with a 37-yard field goal. Texas rolled up 361 yards on the ground with Vince Young rushing for 77 yards before coming out.---college fotball ---
Player of the game: Texas RB Jamaal Charles ran 16 times for 189 yards and three touchdowns.
Stat Leaders: Texas - Passing: Vince Young, 8-14, 101 yds---college fotball ---
Rushing: Jamaal Charles, 16-189, 3 TD. Receiving: David Thomas, 5-66
Rice- Passing: Chase Clement, 2-8, 57 yds---college fotball ---
Rushing: Quinton Smith, 11-76. Receiving: Jarrett Dillard, 2-70---college fotball ---
What to take away from this game: It's too early to start talking about Jamaal Charles as another Ricky Williams or Cedric Benson, but he certainly showed he can handle the workload as long as Selvin Young can't go. While Rice had no prayer of beating Texas, it would've been nice to see Vince Young build on his Ohio State performance with a strong passing outing, but it wasn't needed. The defense suffocated anything Rice tried to do early, but it's going to have to crank up the intensity a few notches again before dealing with Missouri and Brad Smith.
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Sept. 10---college fotball ---
Texas 25 ... Ohio State 22---college fotball ---
It lived up to the billing. Vince Young found Limas Sweed for a 24-yard touchdown pass with just over 2:37 to play to go up by one, and Ohio State gave it back on its ensuing possession on a Justin Zwick fumble. Texas turned the ball over on downs on the Ohio State one after Henry Melton just barely missed a touchdown just missing the pylon, but OSU QB Troy Smith was sacked for a safety to end all Buckeye hopes. Texas turned it over three times in its own end, but Ohio State could only manage three field goals out of them. Josh Huston connected on four field goals for the Buckeyes, but his missed 50-yarder gave the Longhorns new life late leading to the decisive touchdown drive.
Player of the game: Texas QB Vince Young completed 18 of 29 passes for 270 yards and two touchdowns with two interceptions and ran 20 times for 76 yards. Ohio State LB A.J. Hawk made 12 tackles, two sacks, three tackles for loss, forced one fumble, recovered a fumble and picked off a pass. ---college fotball ---
Stat Leaders: Texas - Passing: Vince Young, 18-29, 270 yds, 2 TD, 2 INT---college fotball ---
Rushing: Vince Young, 20-76. Receiving: Jamaal Charles, 6-69---college fotball ---
Ohio State - Passing: Troy Smith, 5-11, 78 yds, 1 TD---college fotball ---
Rushing: Antonio Pittman, 17-75. Receiving: Santonio Holmes, 4-73, 1 TD---college fotball ---
What to take away from this game: Vince Young will get all the praise and all the national love after his brilliant performance against Ohio State, but the clutch play of the defense deserves just as much credit for bailing out the offense after the turnovers. Safety Michael Griffin was all over the field making ten tackles, and DE Tim Crowder got consistent pressure in the backfield. And yes, Young was unbelievable considering the loss early on of Selvin Young to an injury. This was the game that put Texas in a position to play for the national title, but it can't let down in two weeks at Missouri. ---college fotball ---
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Sept. 3---college fotball ---
Texas 60 ... UL Lafayette 3---college fotball ---
Texas ran for 418 yards and never had a problem after ULL got its only points early on a Sean Comiskey 47-yard field goal. Freshman RB Jamaal Charles ran for a 14-yard score to start off a run of 54 unanswered points with David Thomas catching two scoring passes and Vince Young throwing for three scores and running for another. The only drama was in the Texas kicking game failing to convert three first half extra points.
Player of the game: Texas QB Vince Young completed 13 of 17 passes for 173 yards and three touchdowns with an interception. He also ran seven times for 49 yards and a score. ---college fotball ---
Stat Leaders: UL Lafayette - Passing: Jerry Babb, 9-18, 109 yds ---college fotball ---
Rushing: Caleb Rubin, 9-34. Receiving: Derrick Smith, 6-78---college fotball ---
Texas - Passing: Vince Young, 13-17, 173 yds, 3 TD, 1 INT ---college fotball ---
Rushing: Jamaal Charles 14-135. Receiving: Brian Carter, 3-65---college fotball ---
What to take away from this game: So there will be a lot of talk in Austin this week after the problems with the kicking game, but that's all there is to fault after the glorified scrimmage against UL Lafayette. Vince Young was razor sharp with his passes until his early throws in the second half. It would've been nice if there was a little more explosion from the passing game; Young was simply efficient. The bench was emptied and several young players got meaningful playing time, and that will come in extremely handy down the road. RB Jamaal Charles looks like the read deal, but so did Selvin Young and Ramonce Taylor. ---college fotball ---
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2005 Schedule ---college fotball ---
Sept. 3 – UL Lafayette (3-8 overall, 2-5 in Sun Belt) – Offense: This could be an interesting offense in Sun Belt play if all the parts come together. The quarterbacks are tremendous with Jerry Babb on the short list for Sun Belt Player of the Year, and backup Michael Desormeaux ready now to shine. Bill Sampy is one of the league's best receivers, but he needs to graduate this summer to remain eligible. The starting five on the line is experienced and decent, but there aren't any backups to rely on. The running game will rotate several backs.---college fotball ---
Defense: The Ragin' Cajuns had an up-and-down year with a great pass defense, at least statistically, because everyone spent so much time running the ball. The defensive line looked appreciably better this spring, but it has to generate more of a pass rush. The linebacking corps should be stronger with four experienced players. The strength is at corner with four players to rotate in the two spots, but the new safeties have some big shoes to fill.
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Sept. 10 – at Ohio State (10-1, 7-1 in Big Ten) – Offense: The offense was average to flat-out bad struggling with its consistency, and then came the Michigan game as QB Troy Smith had his breakout game giving hope for a more explosive 2005. The plan is for experience to turn into production with two good quarterbacks, some decent looking, but unproven runners, and a devastating receiving corps with Santonio Holmes and Heisman candidate Ted Ginn Jr. The line returns four starters and should be better. Finishing 98th in the nation in total offense and 71st in scoring offense again will be absolutely unacceptable.---college fotball ---
Defense: Nine starters return to a defense that was its typical bend-but-rarely-break self for most of the year, but it has to deal with defensive coordinator Mark Snyder moving on to take the Marshall head coaching gig. The nation's best linebacking corps leads the way with A.J. Hawk, Bobby Carpenter, Anthony Schlegel and Mike D'Andrea all sure to be making a ton of dough next year at this time. The secondary will be solid if it can find a second corner across from Ashton Youboty, and the line will be good if it can find a killer pass rusher.---college fotball ---
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Sept. 17 – Rice (4-7, 4-4 in Conference USA) – Offense: Another year, another claim by the coaching staff that there will be more passing. Trying to take a cue from Utah, the Owls will go to a shotgun a bit more and run a little bit of a spread attack, but this will still be a rushing offense. Joel Armstrong is a good all-around quarterback who needs to be more of a consistent passer. The backfield is loaded with speedy options that fit the system perfectly, while the line should be fine.---college fotball ---
Defense: The Owl defense was more than fine at preventing long drives finishing 50th in the nation, but it was killed by lousy field position and couldn't do anything when offenses got within scoring range evidenced by finishing 104th in scoring defense. Enough experience returns to hope for a better season with a good front line, a deep group of linebackers and some excellent safeties. The problem is the overall size in the back seven and the lack of a true shutdown corner.---college fotball ---
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Oct. 1 – at Missouri (7-4, 4-4 in Big 12 North) – Offense: The Missouri offense was a major disappointment last year failing to crank out the rushing numbers it should've and not getting enough pop in the passing game. The return of QB Brad Smith will make this a strong attack, but he needs to be let loose after being made into more of a pocket passer last year. WR Sean Coffey and TE Martin Rucker will be his main weapons until the running back situation is figured out. The line has work to do, but it will be better than it'll initially get credit for with some All-Big 12 caliber talent waiting to bust out.---college fotball ---
Defense; The Missouri defense has to replace most of the front seven, but it should still be good enough to stay at the high level set last year when it finished 14th in the nation. The secondary will be tremendous with three starters returning to the nation's number three pass defense, and it'll get help from Brian Smith and a front line that'll get to the quarterback. The concern is consistency against the run losing top tackles and Mizzou's all-time leading tackler James Kinney at weakside linebacker.---college fotball ---
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Oct. 8 - Oklahoma (9-2, 6-2 in Big 12 South) – Offense: There are some massive losses with QB Jason White, WRs Mark Clayton, Brandon Jones and Mark Bradley, and star linemen Jammal Brown and Vince Carter gone. Fortunately, all-everything back Adrian Peterson returns to carry the offense. The line and receiving corps needs retooling, but they'll each be solid with a little bit of time. The quarterback situation will get the most attention up until the opener with Rhett Bomar, Paul Thompson and Tommy Grady all good enough to get the nod with Bomar the likely starter after a few games. ---college fotball ---
Defense: This might not be the star-studded killer of past seasons, but it's still full of great athletes and should still be fantastic against the run. The main concern is in the secondary after OU only came up with eight picks. Top athletes like Eric Bassey and Chijoke Onyenegecha have to play up to their potential and new safeties Darrien Williams and Jason Cater have to shine right away. The front seven fill be more than solid thanks to the return of Dusty Dvoracek at tackle along with the emergence of an unheralded, but talented linebacking corps.
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Oct. 15 – Colorado (6-5, 4-4 in Big 12 North) – Offense: Colorado was brutally painful at times last year early, but it got better as the season went on against average teams. Against good defenses, the attack did absolutely nothing scoring nine against Missouri, seven against Texas and three against Oklahoma. With Bobby Purify graduating, the first step is to find a consistent running back to carry the offense. There are plenty of speedsters with several good options to choose from. The passing game needs QB Joel Klatt to revert to his 2003 form, but to do that the receivers have to start catching the ball and the line has to be better in pass protection. The tight ends, Joe Klopfenstein and Quinn Sypniewski, are outstanding.---college fotball ---
Defense: The Buffs had a rough 2004 finishing last in the conference in total defense, but the potential is there for this group to be much better with a ton of returning experience that should be used to the 4-3 defense it switched to last year. The back seven should be tremendous and it'll be a major shocker if the pass defense gives up 260 yards per game again. The front four will have issues against great running teams, but it'll get into the backfield.
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Oct. 22 – Texas Tech (9-2, 6-2 in Big 12 South) – Offense: You know what you're getting: a bazillion passing yards, a big season from RB Taurean Henderson, and one of the top ten offenses in America. A triggerman has to be found as QBs Cody Hodges has to take the job by the reins now that Graham Harrell is out with a broken leg, but don't expect the machine to stop rolling. The receiving corps and backfield is solid and diverse, but the line has to come together to allow the stars to shine. The right side is great with Manuel Ramirez and E.J. Whitley retuning to add some stability to the shaky rest of the line.---college fotball ---
Defense: The defense made great strides last year improving to 46th in the nation in total defense and got better as the season went on. Now this should be the best defense in the Mike Leach era with one of the Big 12's best secondaries, a strong linebacking corps, and a rising line with a potential superstar pass rusher in Keyunta Dawson. Overall depth is a bit of an issue and the run defense needs to be more physical, but there's reason to get excited about this group.---college fotball ---
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Oct. 29 – at Oklahoma State (5-6, 2-6 in Big 12 South) – Offense: One of the most unbalanced attacks, finishing 12th in the nation in rushing and 111th in passing, will go through a drastic change under offensive coordinator Larry Fedora, who coached at Florida last year. There will be more three and four-wide sets, but the running game won't be completely abandoned. Do the Cowboys have the personnel to run a passing attack? That remains to be seen as the receivers are inexperienced behind go-to target D'Juan Woods, and the line was build to grind out the running game. The big question is at quarterback where Donovan Woods, Bobby Reid and Al Pena will battle it out for the starting spot until the opener. ---college fotball ---
Defense: The defense will switch from a 4-2-5 to a 4-3 and will attack, attack and attack. The line will be a strength and could grow into one of the Big 12's best if tackles Ryan McBean and Xavier Lawson-Kennedy live up to their press clippings, and top pass rusher Nathan Peterson returns healthy from a torn ACL. The linebackers are experienced, but unspectacular. The secondary is a major issue with the tragic death of Vernon Grant casting a huge shadow over a group that needed some work anyway. Now it'll be up to several true freshmen to play key roles right away.---college fotball ---
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Nov. 5 – at Baylor (0-8, 3-8 in Big 12 South) – Offense: There's a decent mix of experience and up-and-coming talents, but now there has to be production after finishing 102nd in the nation in total offense and last in the Big 12 in scoring. There aren't enough good players to hand around most Big 12 teams in a shootout, but there's enough to work with to be effective. The passing game was surprisingly effective averaging 213 yards per game, and it should be better if Shawn Bell can stay healthy and hold down the starting quarterback job. The line is big and more talented with the return of Nick Pace from injury.---college fotball ---
Defense: The Bears got hammered for 37 points and 421 yards per game, but things should be a bit better with eight returning starters and the most depth head coach Guy Morriss has had. The pass defense gives up the short passes in bunches, but doesn't give up too many big plays and should be better with safeties Maurice Lane and Willie Andrews as good as any pair in the Big 12. The run defense has to be much better, especially in the middle of the line, and there needs to be a reliable pass rusher.---college fotball ---
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Nov. 12 – Kansas (6-5, 3-5 in Big 12 North) – Offense: The offense should be better as long as there's some consistency at quarterback. That's the issue with Adam Barmann and Jason Swanson sure to battle it out for the number one job up until opening day. The receiving corps will be better with an upgrade of talent, although it's inexperienced. Clark Green and Gary Green should provide more pop to the ground attack behind a veteran line.
Defense: Unsung all of last year, now the Jayhawk D should be a killer with eight returning starters and some serious talent at key spots. CB Charles Gordon will be on the short list for most All-America teams, while Nick Reid, Kevin Kane and Banks Floodman will all get All-Big 12 recognition of some sort. The line isn't full of stars, but it's going to be more than solid led by end Jermial Ashley.---college fotball ---
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Nov. 25 – at Texas A&M (7-4, 5-3 in Big 12 South) – Offense: The offense put up decent numbers finishing 20th in the nation and averaging 28.4 points per game, but it wasn't nearly as effective as it should've been running the ball against run defenses with a pulse. QB Reggie McNeal spread his throws around enough to come up with a big season, and now he needs his backfield to provide more help as Courtney Lewis has to stay healthy and steady backups need to emerge. There's experience on the line, but it'll be a juggling act to find the right combination. The whole of the receiving corps is better than the sum of its parts.---college fotball ---
Defense: While the defense made great strides from 2003's disaster, there were still problems that all came to a head in the Cotton Bowl loss to Tennessee. This is an experienced D with several solid players, but it's not all that fast and is missing sure-thing pass rushers and pass defenders. There's good size in the front seven and big hitters in the secondary. Now this group has to be much better against the pass and can't be pushed around against the run. There are too many veterans to ask for anything but even more improvement.---college fotball ---
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