Fall practice starts this weekend in a make-or-break year for the Texas Longhorns. By late November we will know whether Texas is headed back to square one or if the Charlie Strong hire was a success. Or something like that.
Hype is a preseason tradition, and the least-honest of the storylines to excite fans is that this season is do or die. For Texas, however, there exists a number of wins — maybe seven, probably eight — at which Strong would secure another year without signaling beyond a doubt that Texas is on the upswing. Getting that straight is the first key in this season preview.
The second key is that we shouldn’t use Strong’s personal success or failure to gauge the status of the rebuild of the Texas football program. The days of “[Head coach’s name] Texas Football” are over. Whatever happens on the field this season, the coaches who turn on the lights in the football offices in 2017 will be looking at a very different program from the one Strong inherited in the spring of 2014.
Experience matters, and the 2017 Longhorns should have nearly as many career starts under their belts as anyone. When at least 12 and as many as 17 of your starters from the previous season won’t even be eligible to enter the NFL draft — players need to be three years removed from high school to clear that low bar — that tends to happen.
And though the sample size is small, early returns suggest those returning starters could be pretty good. To state the obvious, Texas players are all studs on paper, and a returning starter, almost by definition, was the best available player at his position the previous year.
Texas also had three players make freshman All-American lists last year. Two made the Football Writers Association of America list, more than the Longhorns have had in a single year since 2001 — and that’s only if you count kickers. Just looking at the FWAA Freshman All-American list over the years is instructive: Texas had a player make the list every year from 2001 to 2006, and then once more in 2008. After that, there was one freshman All-American in 2011, and then no more until 2015. Success is a lagging indicator here, but good young players turn into great older players, and great older players win more football games.