Texas
Arch Manning stats today: How did Texas football QB perform in Oklahoma win?
Oklahoma Sooners QB John Mateer gives hand injury update
Oklahoma Sooners quarterback John Mateer says he feels ‘no pain’ after loss to Texas Longhorns
Arch Manning had arguably his best performance of the 2025 college football season on Saturday, Oct. 11.
It was perfect timing for the Longhorns, as they defeated No. 6 Oklahoma 23-6 in the Red River Rivalry to bounce back from a disappointing loss to Florida the week prior. After throwing two interceptions in the loss to the Gators on Oct. 4, Manning played a clean game with no turnovers against the Sooners.
Manning was also aided by better play from his offensive line. He was sacked just once by Oklahoma’s defense, after being thrown to the turf six times against Florida.
The victory gets Texas (4-2, 1-1 SEC) back on track for the SEC standings and the College Football Playoff race, if it can continue its winning ways for the rest of the season.
Here’s a look at Manning’s stats today in his first start in the Red River Rivalry vs. Oklahoma:
Arch Manning stats today vs Oklahoma
Here’s a full look at Manning’s line on Oct. 4 vs. the Sooners in the Red River Rivalry:
- Completions: 21
- Attempts: 27
- Percentage: 78%
- Passing yards: 166
- Touchdowns: 1
- Interceptions: 0
- QB Rating: 141.6
- Rush attempts: 4
- Rushing yards: 34
- Yards per carry: 8.5
Texas
How the Top 25 Fared in Week 11 of Texas High School Football
The regular season ended for Texas high school football on Saturday with Richmond Randle being the final Top 25 team to play.
There was only one showdown of Top 25 teams in Week 11. Humble Summer Creek picked up a 27-0 win over Galena Park North Shore in what was a showdown of top teams in Houston.
This will be the final Top 25 fared of the season.
1. Southlake Carroll, idle
2. Allen beat Plano East, 45-6
3. Richmond Dr. Thomas E. Randle beat Rosenberg Lamar Consolidated, 56-7
4. Austin Lake Travis beat Austin, 40-14
5. Celina beat Lake Dallas, 48-7
6. Aledo beat Denton, 77-0
7. Fort Worth North Crowley beat Crowley, 27-6
8. Duncanville beat Cedar Hill, 29-0
9. Dallas South Oak Cliff beat vs. Dallas Thomas Jefferson, 48-0
10. Prosper beat Plano West, 62-28
11. Galena Park North Shore lost to No. 12 Humble Summer Creek, 27-0
FINAL: Humble Summer Creek Humbles Galena Park North Shore in District 23-6A Title Showdown; Scoring, Highlights
12. Humble Summer Creek beat No. 11 Galena Park North Shore, 27-0
13. Dripping Springs beat at Austin Westlake, 45-35
14. Carthage beat Brownsboro, 56-8
15. Spring Branch Smithson Valley beat Victoria East, 59-0
16. Dickinson beat Deer Park, 66-27
17. Fort Bend Ridge Point beat Fort Bend Austin, 70-22
18. Pearland beat South Houston, 69-0
19. Iowa Colony beat Texas City, 40-7
20. Denton Billy Ryan beat North Richland Hills Birdville, 52-7
21. Port Arthur Memorial, Idle
22. Prosper Walnut Grove beat Frisco Independence, 63-13
23. Brenham beat Belton, 49-28
24. Angleton beat Crosby, 31-7
25. Houston C.E. King beat Channelview, 76-7
Texas
‘Ain’t nobody here.’ Texas A&M takes pride in emptying another SEC stadium
Video takeaways from Missouri football’s 38-17 loss to Texas A&M
Here are our takeaways from Missouri football’s 21-point loss to Texas A&M on Saturday in Columbia, which eliminated Mizzou from CFP contention.
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Rueben Owens II scored his second touchdown late in the fourth quarter, and he looked into the stands expecting to see fans. He saw rows of empty seats.
“I was like, ‘Dang, there ain’t nobody here,” Owens, the Texas A&M running back, said.
That’s the sign of a rout in motion.
Then Owens shifted his gaze toward the southeast corner of Missouri’s Memorial Stadium. He saw packed stands in that nook. That’s where Aggies fans congregated and celebrated as No. 3 Texas A&M pulled away in a 38-17 romp over No. 17 Missouri.
“That just shows a lot of love from the 12th Man,” Owens said.
The wind whipped, and the temperature plummeted after the sun set. That tends to happen on fall nights in the Midwest. Combine the elements with the increasingly lopsided score, and most Missouri fans headed for warmth or to pursue something more pleasurable to the eye.
Those wearing maroon and white in the southeast corner still wouldn’t leave, even after the clock showed 0:00. They cheered and they chanted, and wide receiver KC Concepcion decided he’d join the party. He ascended the steps from the field and gave the fans what they wanted: another reason to chant and cheer.
“KC! KC! KC!” they chanted.
Aggies fans waited too long for a season like this.
It’s not finished yet, but pinch yourself, because it’s the second weekend of November, and Texas A&M hasn’t folded. To the contrary, these Aggies grow stronger. They’re undefeated. They’re on a march toward Atlanta.
Mike Elko reminded of why he took Texas A&M job
This is what’s long been expected of a program steeped in financial resources, blessed with gleaming facilities, backed by loyal fans and rooted in fertile recruiting terrain.
And it became a rite of summer we’d vault the Aggies into some lofty position in preseason polls. And it became a rite of November we’d say another Texas A&M team showed itself to be overhyped.
As one coach after another failed, we kept considering this a top-shelf job. Because, never mind the history, why shouldn’t this program succeed?
That’s what Mike Elko thought when he succeeded Jimbo Fisher.
“From a CEO perspective, obviously I believe this is what this program is capable of,” Elko said. “That’s why we’re here. We’re here because we believe in the ceiling of this program.”
“This is kind of what everyone had been talking about with this program for a long time,” Elko added. “For nine games we’ve lived up to it. Now, we’ve got to go finish.”
Mike Elko is done talking about the past
They’re already finishing better than how they did last season, when a three-loss November spoiled an otherwise solid debut to Elko’s tenure.
Throughout the offseason and into the preseason, one word became a mantra around the program.
Finish.
By now, Elko’s tired of hearing about last season’s collapse. When a reporter referenced the events of last November, Elko waved it aside.
“Is this our weekly last year question?” he said, a tad miffed at the query.
He’s also a tad miffed at his run defense. Missouri’s 207 rushing yards stood out as a blemish on this result. Asked how the Aggies handled the running back tandem of Ahmad Hardy and Jamal Roberts, Elko offered a succinct assessment.
“Awful,” he said.
An unfinished product, these Aggies, but an undefeated one.
“The culture of this group is really strong,” Elko said. “The work that they put into this thing is really strong. They believe in each other, and they believe in what we’re doing.”
Texas A&M’s vulnerabilities on defense help explain why the College Football Playoff committee ranked it behind Ohio State and Indiana, even though the Aggies own better strength of schedule and strength of record metrics.
That feedback from the committee “motivated us a lot,” linebacker Daymion Sanford said. The Aggies allowed fewer points against Missouri than they did in their past two wins, but an asterisk accompanies that achievement. Missouri started its third-string quarterback, Matt Zollers, and its pass game became a conquest of incompletions.
Why let asterisks and caveats interfere with a celebration in the stands, though? Just as Texas A&M did at LSU, the Aggies kept scoring until the stands cleared, ‘til all who remained supported the road team.
“I love to see that,” Sanford said. “With our fans, it almost feels like it’s a home game for us, every time we clear out the fans.”
That leaves one road game on Texas A&M’s schedule. It will play at rival Texas on Black Friday.
That leaves one to wonder, when Owens looks into the stands in Austin late in the fourth quarter, what will he see?
Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.
Texas
Appeals court says Texas can enforce drag show ban, suggests not all drag shows violate state law
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A federal appeals court has ruled that Texas can enforce a 2023 law that prohibits drag shows in public or when children are present, although the ruling indicates that the judges do not believe all drag shows would be restricted under the measure.
Senate Bill 12 bans drag performers from dancing suggestively or wearing certain prosthetics on public property or in front of children. Business owners could face a $10,000 fine for hosting these performances, and performers who violate the law could be slapped with a Class A misdemeanor.
A three-judge panel in the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday reversed an earlier decision by a district court, returning the case to the district court, according to The Texas Tribune.
In Thursday’s decision, the judges ruled that most of the plaintiffs, which included a drag performer, a drag production company and pride groups, were not found to have planned a “sexually oriented performance,” meaning they could not be harmed by the law that seeks to restrict sexually explicit dances, the outlet reported.
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Senate Bill 12 bans drag performers from dancing suggestively or wearing certain prosthetics on public property or in front of children. (Patrick Lantrip/Daily Memphian via AP, File)
The ruling also suggests that the court does not believe all drag shows are sexually explicit and, therefore, are not impacted by the ban.
In September 2023, U.S. District Judge David Hittner ruled that the law was unconstitutional, writing that it “impermissibly infringes on the First Amendment” and that it is “not unreasonable” to believe it could affect activities such as live theatre or dancing.
Critics of the ban have previously argued that GOP lawmakers were attempting to label all drag shows as sexually explicit, as Republicans continue to target the performances in Texas and several other states.
The court found that performances described by a drag production company are arguably sexually explicit, although the ruling does not specifically state which actions were included.
APPEALS COURT ALLOWS ARKANSAS’ FIRST-IN-THE-NATION BAN ON GENDER TRANSITION CARE FOR MINORS TO BE ENFORCED
The ruling suggests that the court does not believe all drag shows are sexually explicit and, therefore, are not impacted by the ban. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
“When asked whether the performers ‘simulate contact with the buttocks of another person,’ the owner testified that the performers sit on customers’ laps while wearing thongs and one performer invited a ‘handsome’ male customer ‘to spank her on the butt,’” the ruling said. “When asked whether the performers ‘ever perform gesticulations while wearing prosthetics,’ the owner testified that in 360 Queen’s most recent show, a drag queen ‘wore a breastplate that was very revealing, pulsed her chest in front of people, (and) put her chest in front of people’s faces.’”
Judge Kurt Engelhardt also wrote in a footnote that there is “genuine doubt” that these actions are “actually constitutionally protected —especially in the presence of minors.” He was joined by Judge Leslie Southwick, while Judge James Dennis disagreed.
“That gratuitous dictum runs headlong into settled First Amendment jurisprudence and threatens to mislead on remand,” Dennis wrote in his partial dissent.
The court also removed most of the defendants from the case before sending it back to the district court to reconsider a part of the measure that centers on the Texas attorney general’s job in enforcing the law.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton praised the ruling, saying in a news release that he “will always work to shield our children from exposure to erotic and inappropriate sexually oriented performances.”
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton praised the ruling, saying he “will always work to shield our children from exposure to erotic and inappropriate sexually oriented performances.” (Hannah Beier/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
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“It is an honor to have defended this law, ensuring that our state remains safe for families and children, and I look forward to continuing to vigorously defend it on remand before the district court,” he said.
The plaintiffs and the ACLU of Texas, which represents the plaintiffs, described the ruling as “heartbreaking,” adding that they plan to continue fighting the law.
“We are devastated by this setback, but we are not defeated,” they said in a joint statement. “Together, we will keep advocating for a Texas where everyone — including drag artists and LGBTQIA+ people — can live freely, authentically, and without fear. The First Amendment protects all artistic expression, including drag. We will not stop until this unconstitutional law is struck down for good.”
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