
Arch Manning, Texas top preseason poll Top 25 with huge expectations
I just have one question about that: Are we sure?
Pull the name off the jersey. Forget about the maturity, the presumed intangibles, the osmosis of a lifetime spent in proximity to two uncles who did some pretty good things on the football field. What do we really see?
We see a player who has thrown a mere 95 passes in two seasons on campus, a player who didn't play a meaningful snap against a good team last season outside of some situation-specific quarterback run packages. We also see a quarterback who was apparently not a viable option for Sarkisian in the second half of last season, even when it was clear that starter Quinn Ewers was not 100 percent healthy and dragging down the potential of Texas' offense.
Maybe it's not fair to read into that. Coaches are notoriously weird about quarterbacks, hypersensitive to locker room dynamics and public perception if they even acknowledge the possibility of a change. If Sarkisian's loyalty to Ewers wavered even an inch, it would have unleashed a cacophony of noise around the Texas program that might have been worse than watching his quarterback throw six interceptions over the final five games.
That said, if Manning wasn't ready to give Texas a better chance to win a national title last year when the deck was stacked in the Longhorns' favor everywhere else on their roster, isn't it fair to be a little skeptical that he's going to be ready now?
Most folks, it seems, are not skeptical. Manning begins the 2025 season as the betting favorite to win the Heisman Trophy at some prominent sports books. Texas was the far-and-away choice among SEC media members to win the league in their preseason poll, with Manning being named to the all-conference third team. And in perhaps the most outrageous bout of Arch Madness we've seen yet, ESPN/SEC Network commentator Paul Finebaum predicted he would be "the best college quarterback we have seen since Tim Tebow entered the scene in 2006."
Mind you, since Tebow's Heisman run in 2007, we've seen Cam Newton, Johnny Manziel, Jameis Winston, Marcus Mariota, Lamar Jackson, Baker Mayfield, Joe Burrow, Caleb Williams and Jayden Daniels come through college football. If Manning is even in the top half of that group, then yes, Texas will probably be this year's national champion.
But can't we just slow down a little bit given, you know, the lack of on-field evidence that Manning deserves this level of expectation?
A year ago, Manning in fact did get his chance to start for Texas when Ewers strained his oblique muscle in the middle of their third game against Texas-San Antonio. Manning remained at the controls for the next two home games against Louisiana-Monroe and Mississippi State and was largely good. Not transcendently great, but good.
Then Ewers return from injury, and that was pretty much Manning's season for all intents and purposes. Two full games and a little more than half of a third, all against bad opponents. And that was with the best and most experienced offensive line in college football protecting him. It's not a critique of Manning whatsoever to say we didn't learn much about what he's capable of.
Sarkisian talks about Manning in far more measured tones. He understands what the two-year buildup of hype has created and the potential for narratives to turn quickly if his quarterback plays poorly in the opener against No. 2 Ohio State. He also knows that turning over four starters on the offensive line is a wildcard that will probably make things incrementally more challenging for his inexperienced quarterback.
"He's a great guy. He's a great teammate," Sarkisian said last month at SEC Media Days. "He's got an unbelievable work ethic. And I think, if he stays true to himself, that's going to help him navigate these waters as they present themselves. We've got to do a great job of supporting him around him, as coaches, as players, and ultimately, I think he's prepared for the moment. But now it's just time for him to go do it and enjoy doing it quite frankly."
Notice that's quite a bit different than how Sarkisian spoke the same day about "the deepest and most talented defense that we've had" or the receiving corps that "we're really excited about."
Maybe that's just Sarkisian intentionally lowering the temperature, with the full understanding that his fan base has been frothing to watch Manning finally take his place in Texas history. Or maybe there's a tiny part of him that's skeptical his quarterback can live up to the trail of hosannas laid in front of him based more on name and reputation than on-field accomplishment.
One way or another, after more than half a decade of hearing about the next-in-line to the Manning quarterback dynasty, we won't have to wait long for an answer.

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Reuters
8 hours ago
- Reuters
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The Herald Scotland
14 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
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The Herald Scotland
14 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Texas, Arch Manning are No. 1. How Steve Sarkisian rebuild Longhorns
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That 55-48 loss was the first of six in a row, the program's longest such streak since 1956, and included a miserable 57-56 overtime defeat to Kansas - the Jayhawks' lone conference win and one of just two wins overall on the season. Steady progress ensued beginning in 2022, an eight-win finish highlighted by a 49-0 rout of the Sooners and five losses by a combined 25 points. The 2023 Longhorns won the Big 12 in the program's final year of membership before losing 37-31 to Washington in the College Football Playoff national semifinals at the Sugar Bowl. Last year's team nearly took the SEC by storm, losing only twice to Georgia - the second in overtime of the conference championship game - and then beating Clemson and Arizona State in the expanded 12-team playoff before losing a close game to eventual national champion Ohio State in the Cotton Bowl. "I mean, it was a tough loss, but that was the last season," said junior linebacker Anthony Hill. "We have a whole new team. We want to go out there and be 1-0 next year. That's all we'll focus on is just being 1-0, and we'll handle everything else when the time comes." The program has undergone a clear shift in mentality, embracing the "all gas, no brakes" mindset instilled by Sarkisian and his staff. But the primary factor behind this recent resurgence is simpler: Texas has procured an eye-popping talent level through traditional recruiting and the transfer portal, buoyed by a willingness to spend millions to compile the best roster money can buy. Arch Manning leads loaded Texas roster Though it's impossible to pinpoint the exact total spent on talent acquisition, the 2025 Texas roster is expected to cost between $35 and $40 million, the Houston Chronicle reported in the spring. The crown jewel of this roster is Manning, who enters his first year as the starter after throwing for 939 yards and accounting for a combined 13 touchdowns in the backup role to Quinn Ewers as a redshirt freshman. Manning is part of four consecutive signing classes ranked among the top five nationally by the major recruiting services. The No. 1-ranked class inked in this winter included four five-star and 14 four-star recruits, with eight signees ranked among 247Sports' top 85 prospects overall. Another 11 players joined the program through the transfer portal, with as many as five projected to start. "We have a bunch of good players and follow his lead," Manning said of Sarkisian. "This is a big-time conference. It's tough each week. But I think we've done a pretty good job. I'm hoping to carry that forward." To some degree, every program in the Power Four is trying to lean on NIL and the portal to build a deeper roster that layers traditional recruiting and player development with more established players acquired as transfers. The Longhorns' NIL offerings have joined the program's inherent advantages - members of an elite conference, one of the nation's strongest brands, competitive in the championship race - to turn Texas back into a trendy destination for the top prospects out of high school or the portal. "We're trying to build a roster that is one that can withstand the test of time," said Sarkisian. "We never wanted to come here and be a one-year-wonder team and then the next year be not very good. So we're trying to be sustainable for a long period of time. I think that that's what good programs do." No player embodies the program's enviable collection of NFL-ready talent more than Manning, who chose Texas because of his close relationship with Sarkisian and the chance to carve out his own reputation away from the shadows cast by his family's quarterback legacy. Like few before him - maybe his uncle, Peyton, and former Heisman Trophy-winning quarterbacks such as Tim Tebow - Manning will be watched, monitored and scrutinized at a level unmatched by any other active player in the Bowl Subdivision, his every performance held against the obscenely high standard set by his name, location and obvious physical gifts. "I take football pretty seriously," Manning said. "Other than that, just a regular guy." Handling hype and expectations A steady stream of factors have combined to make this the most highly anticipated season of Texas football in decades - a statement in itself given the annual hype around the program - and raised the boom-or-bust stakes to the point where anything less than an SEC crown and multiple playoff wins could be seen as a disappointment. One is the Longhorns' back-to-back playoff berths, with both years ending with the offense having opportunities in the red zone and in range of delivering an appearance in the championship game. (Fixing ongoing red-zone issues is a "huge emphasis of ours" this offseason, Sarkisian said.) The second is the wealth of depth and experience on the roster. While not necessarily represented in previous starting experience at Texas, which brings back only nine starters from last season, the run of top-ranked signing and portal classes in a row have created a conveyer-belt type of depth-chart substitution where rising stars such as sophomore edge rusher Colin Simmons (nine sacks in 2024) are poised to transition from key reserve roles into the starting lineup. And the third is Manning. If he plays well and the Longhorns win the SEC, Manning will be fodder for talk-show debate centered on the possibility that he enters the NFL draft after one season as the starter; if Texas struggles, the redshirt sophomore could easily become the scapegoat. There's no question the Longhorns are deserving of the hype. But what will decide this season is how Texas manages these intense expectations against a schedule that opens with a rematch at No. 2 Ohio State, features road trips to Florida and Georgia, includes the annual neutral-site matchup with Oklahoma and ends with the first matchup against Texas A&M at DKR-Texas Memorial Stadium since 2010. "But I also say we're the University of Texas, and the standard is the standard here, and that's competing for championships year in and year out," said Sarkisian. "It didn't matter when we were in the previous conference. It didn't matter now that we're in the SEC. It is what it is."