As a hip-hop bass drum reverberated from the jubilant visitors locker room Saturday backstage at Moody Center, the host Texas Longhorns had no choice but to take their medicine.
Texas
Texas A&M OC Collin Klein hired as Kansas State football coach after Chris Klieman retires
Kansas State announced Thursday it has officially hired Collin Klein, the school’s legendary former quarterback, as its next head coach.
Klein, a Heisman Trophy finalist in 2012 and former K-State assistant, has served as Texas A&M’s offensive coordinator for the last two seasons. He will continue in that role during the Aggies’ upcoming appearance in the College Football Playoff, the school said.
Klein agreed to a five-year contract with an average base salary of $4.3 million. He succeeds Chris Klieman, who announced his retirement Wednesday after seven seasons leading the Wildcats. Upon Klieman’s departure, The Athletic confirmed Wednesday that Klein was a likely successor given his ties to the school.
“We are excited to welcome one of our all-time greats back home to Manhattan,” Kansas State athletic director Gene Taylor said in a statement. “Collin is a tremendous leader who cares deeply about his players. The grit, toughness and aggression he displayed as a player still fuels him today as a coach, and he is determined to carry on the tremendous success this program has achieved.”
As a player under Kansas State legend Bill Snyder, Klein led Kansas State to a 21-5 record in two seasons as the starter in 2011 and 2012. That included an appearance at No. 1 in the Associated Press poll, a Big 12 championship and a berth in the Fiesta Bowl. In 2012, he finished third in the Heisman Trophy voting behind Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel and Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te’o.
He joined Snyder’s staff in 2014 and spent nine of the next 10 seasons serving in various capacities on the staff under Snyder and later under Klieman. Klein was K-State’s quarterbacks coach from 2017 until 2021, and then assumed offensive coordinator duties in 2022 and 2023. Klein was part of K-State’s staff when the Wildcats won the 2022 Big 12 championship.
Klein moved to College Station in 2024 to join Mike Elko’s first Texas A&M staff as offensive coordinator. This season, the 11-1 Aggies rank in the top 32 nationally in scoring offense, total offense, rushing, passing, first downs and fourth-down conversion percentage. They’ve allowed the fewest tackles for loss per game and the 11th-fewest sacks per game.
“My family and I could not be more grateful for the opportunity to come home,” Klein said. “Thank you to President (Richard) Linton and Gene Taylor for believing in us to lead the Cats into a new era. The position of head coach at Kansas State has a long legacy of service, hard work, determination and competitive greatness that I am honored to carry forward.”
Kansas State has not yet decided whether it will participate in a bowl. The Wildcats (6-6) are eligible, but Taylor said recently he would leave it up to the players. There have been conversations but no formal vote on whether to play in a bowl if invited, a team source told The Athletic. If K-State plays in a bowl game, Klieman would serve as the coach for it. If Kansas State declines a bowl game, the spot would fall to teams with 5-7 records, in order of their Academic Progress Report (APR) score. That order starts with Rice, Auburn, UCF, Mississippi State and Florida State, according to an NCAA source.
Klein, a member of K-State football’s ring of honor, will be introduced as the Wildcats’ new coach Friday afternoon. The No. 7 Aggies are in position to host a first-round game in the Playoff, which would fall on either Dec. 19 or Dec. 20, but their final ranking and CFP destination won’t be finalized until Playoff selection day Sunday.
Texas
How a fatal four minutes vs Texas A&M underscores a bigger issue for Texas basketball | Golden
They couldn’t stop the music.
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Somehow it makes sense because they couldn’t stop the Texas A&M Aggies, either.
MORE CED: Why Texas QB Arch Manning is on a path to super stardom
“They outclassed us,” Texas coach Sean Miller said. “They were the better team from start to finish.”
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Texas A&M Aggies forward Jamie Vinson (4) dunks as Texas Longhorns center Matas Vokietaitis (8) defends during the second half of Lone Star Showdown, Jan. 17, 2026 at the Moody Center in Austin. Texas A&M won the game 74-70.
With a tough road test coming up against resurgent Kentucky on Wednesday, the Horns, who entered this one with two straight wins over ranked opponents, are once again in Miller’s crosshairs and this time it isn’t for something that occurred over the course of an entire game, but a snippet of action that proved too monstrous to overcome.
TEXAS AT KENTUCKY
When/where:6 p.m. Wednesday in Lexington, Ky.
TV/radio: SEC Network; 1300 AM, 98.1 FM.
None of the 11,422 in attendance — aside from the ones wearing maroon — saw this coming, especially after former Aggie killer Tramon Mark’s 3-pointer tied it at 29-29 at the half. The Aggies, however, emerged from the locker room a different team to start the second half. And to their own detriment, so did the Longhorns.
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Over a span of two minutes and 31 seconds, the Aggies assumed command with a 9-2 run — eight from guard Rylan Griffen — and just like that, the Horns were swimming upstream in what must have felt like a thousand-pound weighted vest.
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Texas A&M Aggies guard Jacari Lane (5) drives past defense from Texas Longhorns guard Simeon Wilcher (7) during the second half of Lone Star Showdown, Jan. 17, 2026 at the Moody Center in Austin. Texas A&M won the game 74-70.
Try as they might, the Horns never recovered from that early second-half blitz.
“I’m telling you right now, in the first four minutes of the second half, we were not ready to play,” Miller said. “There’s one team that was running fast and there’s one team that was not running nearly as fast as they could. There’s one team that came out at halftime, ready to play all the way to the end — from start to finish — and one team that, for whatever reason, just couldn’t quite get up and get after it like you’re capable of in the SEC in a game of this meaning.”
MORE CED:NIL, portal were needed but college football lost its way
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It should be mentioned that Miller took responsibility for his team’s lack of bounce-back in that span and, bless his heart, he couldn’t get over what mathematically was only 10% of the game. He went on to say the words “four minutes” 10 times in his 23-minute interview.
I expect the Horns will hear it several hundred times over the next few days leading into the trip to Lexington. Team leaders Jordan Pope and Mark are the barometer, but they need help. The Texas bench produced a scant five points, one more than Aggies backup center Jamie Vinson, who’s emerging as a nice option off the A&M bench after appearing in only one SEC contest as a Longhorn last season.
“We definitely have to have a short term memory,” Mark said. “We have to go at Kentucky and win a basketball game.”
Bigger wasn’t better for Texas
It wasn’t that Texas allowed the Aggies to take over, but how the Horns went about their business on the defensive end. The Aggies are smaller than we’re used to seeing — post Rashaun Agee, who’s 6-foot-7, is A&M’s tallest starter — but they played bigger and consistently caught the Longhorns slipping with smart back screens that resulted in easy layups. Agee finished with 17 points and 11 rebounds and won his personal matchup with Texas big Matas Vokietaitis, who played well with 14 points and nine boards.
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MORE HORNS: Where Texas and A&M baseball rank in the preseason
“I’m a Birmingham guy, and there’s a guy from Leeds, Alabama by the name of Charles Barkley,” said A&M coach Bucky McMillan. “He was undersized a lot, but he was able to get things done if you gave him enough touches around the basket.”

Texas Longhorns guard Tramon Mark (12) shoots the ball as Texas A&M Aggies guard Ali Dibba (6) defends during the second half of Lone Star Showdown, Jan. 17, 2026 at the Moody Center in Austin. Texas A&M won the game 74-70.
All told, the Aggies made 15 of 25 field-goal attempts in the second half, including a half-dozen 3-pointers in 10 attempts. That’s the recipe for an ugly home loss after the Horns climbed out of a casket with two conference wins — including a big one at Alabama — to avoid a second straight 0-3 SEC start.
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MORE HOOPS: Best photos from Longhorn-Aggie basketball
“When that happens, that’s on me,” Miller said of the second-half’s early slumber. “You can’t spot a team eight points in a game like that and expect to come out on top.”
They sit at 11-7 overall and 2-3 in league play while the Aggies rose to 14-4 overall and an SEC-best 4-1. The league is still ultra-competitive, but isn’t as dominant as last season’s product that qualified a record 14 teams for the Big Dance. With 13 regular-season games remaining, the Horns are still in the mix. But games like Saturday, the late collapse in the opener against Mississippi State and the no-show at Tennessee will be mentioned if they fail to make the tourney field in a couple of months.
MORE HORNS: What OL transfers mean for Texas QB Arch Manning
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Texas is a veteran team and it’s troubling that its first-year coach is still having issues with the effort or lack of, at times. It points to a bigger problem. Consistency wins in this league and the goal has to be 9-9 at minimum. Somewhere along the line, the Horns will have to start stacking wins. Miller understands what it takes to win in the SEC even if this is his first foray in the league. Saturday’s loss dropped him to 14-13 all-time against SEC opponents as a coach dating back to his first stint at Xavier in 2005. He’s now 1-1 against the Aggies, in case you’re wondering.
There will be other meetings, including a Feb. 28 return engagement in College Station. Between now and then, the Horns will have plenty of time to figure out how to put together a full 40 minutes of hoops.
Kudos to the Aggies, who took this win even if one can’t blame Miller for believing his team gave it away.
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The Horns blinked for four minutes.
Sometimes that’s all it takes.
Texas
Texas football: What OL transfers mean for QB Arch Manning
Before Arch Manning could release the deep ball, Florida defensive lineman Brien Taylor Jr. plowed over left guard Connor Stroh, latching onto Manning and slinging the Texas football quarterback to the ground with the ease of a large dog whipping around a favorite chew toy.
This was Manning’s life during the first half of the Longhorns’ season, with a six-sack showing Oct. 4 by the Gators marking the low point for a beleaguered Texas offensive line.
With its transfer portal movements — and roster-retention efforts — the Texas coaching staff has signaled its intent to avoid a similar outcome in 2026.
The Longhorns started their offseason by retaining left tackle Trevor Goosby, who was considered one of the five best NFL prospects at his position by prominent ESPN draft expert Mel Kiper Jr. Then, they added Oregon State guard Dylan Sikorski, who solidified himself as a strong interior pass-blocker during his redshirt freshman season with the Beavers.
Thursday, Texas landed a commitment from Wake Forest tackle Melvin Siani, one of the best pass-blockers in the nation last year. Just 10 other power conference tackles played 500 snaps or more and allowed 10 or fewer quarterback pressures. In seven of the 13 games he played, he did not give up a pressure, according to Pro Football Focus.
The difference between the offensive line Texas fielded during that disastrous effort at Florida in 2025 and the one the Longhorns could run out in 2026 looks dramatic — at least according to the metrics.
These are the five Texas linemen who played the majority of the snaps in that game, followed by the percentage of their 2025 pass-blocking snaps that resulted in a quarterback pressure against Manning:
• Brandon Baker: 4.6%
It’s unclear how exactly the Longhorns will align their offensive line to incorporate their additions — and more incoming transfers could be on the way. Moving right tackle Brandon Baker inside to guard to allow space for Siani is one solution that could make sense. If that scenario plays out, Texas could field an entire offensive line full of players who allowed pressures on less than 5% of their pass-blocking reps last season:
• Connor Robertson: 3.9%
Robertson’s introduction at center helped spark a midseason improvement for the Longhorns along the line, particularly in pass protection. In Manning’s first seven games, opposing defenses put him under pressure on 41.4% of his dropbacks. During his final six games, that pressure rate fell to 30.3%.
Manning’s first seven games ended with him completing 60.3% of his passes, averaging 207 yards per game with 12 touchdowns and five interceptions. In the second half of the season, when provided with a pass-protection unit that was merely average rather than disastrous, he posted a 62.3% completion percentage, averaging 286 passing yards with 14 TDs and two interceptions.
The unit in front of Manning has the potential to play more than just average football in 2026. If the Longhorns can support their quarterback with strong play in the trenches, what version of Manning can they unlock?
Texas
Warming shelters opening overnight in North Texas
The Salvation Army is opening warming shelters across North Texas overnight on Saturday. Below is a list of locations.
North Texas warming shelters
Dallas County
- The Carr P. Collins Social Service Center (5302 Harry Hines Blvd)
- The Garland Corps Community Center (451 West Avenue D)
Tarrant County
- The Arlington Corps Community Center (712 W. Abram St)
- The Mabee Social Service Center (1855 E. Lancaster Ave)
Collin County
- The McKinney Corps Community Center (600 Wilson Creek Pkwy)
Find out more at the Salvation Army website.
The Source: Information in this article comes from the Salvation Army of North Texas.
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