Texas
Louisiana-Monroe Defensive Players To Watch vs. Texas in Week 1
The Texas Longhorns and albeit many of the nation, has eyes set on the Week 2 assembly between Texas and Alabama.
However earlier than the hype-filled matchup on Sept. 10, the Longhorns have to have their concentrate on the season-opening residence recreation towards the Louisiana-Monroe Warhawks of the Solar Belt convention.
Texas is coming off a 5-7 season, this system’s worst end since 2016. Fortuitously, the one approach to go is up after such a disappointing first 12 months underneath coach Steve Sarkisian, who’s already getting his workforce prepared for the opening recreation of the 2022 season on Sept. 3.
Together with struggles on offense, Louisiana-Monroe, who completed the 2021 season with a 4-8 file, was poor on the defensive aspect of the ball as nicely. The Warhawks have been second within the convention in complete yards allowed per recreation (453.1), first in complete passing yards allowed per recreation (290.3), and second in complete factors allowed (402).
Ensure that to stay with LonghornsCountry.com by our season preview sequence, the place we are going to analyze each opponent on the Longhorns schedule in 2022. We have already appeared on the Louisiana-Monroe matchup as an entire, in addition to offensive gamers to observe on ULM’s roster.
Now let’s check out among the defensive gamers Texas ought to have its eye on.
LB Zack Woodard
Woodard was ULM’s second-leading tackler a season in the past (89 tackles) whereas tallying 3.5 sacks, three passes defended, and one decide.
Woodard’s greatest recreation of the 12 months got here in a 27-24 loss to Arkansas State the place he posted 15 complete tackles and a sack. It is price nothing that he had 11 complete tackles the next week agaisnt extra stout competitors within the LSU Tigers, although the Warhawks misplaced 27-14.
As a fifth-year senior with among the most expertise on ULM’s protection, he is in place to reclaim his beginning roll at MIKE linebacker for the Warhawks this fall.
Scroll to Proceed
LB Quae Drake
One other linebacker to be careful for is Drake, who did a bit of little bit of all the pieces final season. He had the fourth-most tackles on the workforce (54) whereas including 2.5 sacks, an interception, one cross defended, and a fumble restoration.
At 6-2, 220, he is one of many larger guys on a small Warhawks protection and will do some harm towards a Texas O-line that struggled mightily final season.
S Jabari Johnson
Within the secondary, Johnson is a man that each Hudson Card and Quinn Ewers ought to preserve tabs on. From his security spot final season, he had the third-most tackles on the workforce (57) and had an interception, one cross defended, and a compelled fumble.
Within the first recreation of the season, he intercepted Kentucky quarterback and future potential first-round decide Will Levis on the primary drive of the sport. ULM scored on the following possession to go up 7-0, surprising the Wildcats’ residence crowd. However the Warhawks weren’t in a position to capitalize on the momentum, as they misplaced 45-10.
Nonetheless, Johnson proved his big-play capability on protection can change the tide of a recreation, as he’ll search for one other season-opening interception towards the Longhorns.
You possibly can comply with Zach Dimmitt on Twitter at @ZachDimmitt7
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Texas
North Texas school finds success in cellphone ban
Texas
Gov. Greg Abbott issues executive order targeting Chinese government operatives in Texas
Gov. Greg Abbott issued an executive order on Monday, directing the Texas Department of Public Safety to target and arrest people trying to execute influence operations on behalf of the Chinese government to return dissidents to China.
Abbott’s action is in response to “Operation Fox Hunt,” a Chinese government initiative that is intended to root out corruption in that country but in practice has also been used to intimidate Chinese citizens living abroad, harass Chinese pro-democracy activists and even forcibly repatriate dissidents and government officials in some cases. The U.S. justice department has successfully prosecuted individuals in connection to the Chinese initiative.
“The Chinese Communist Party has engaged in a worldwide harassment campaign against Chinese dissidents in attempts to forcibly return them to China,” Abbott said in a news release. “Texas will not tolerate the harassment or coercion of the more than 250,000 individuals of Chinese descent who legally call Texas home by the Chinese Communist Party or its heinous proxies.”
Abbott’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Conor Hagan, a spokesperson for the FBI office in Houston, said the agency has pushed a public campaign since January to stop the harassment, intimidation and assault of people in the United States by foreign governments. The FBI is looking for potential victims in the Houston area who have been harassed by agents of the Chinese government.
Hagan said the Chinese government has targeted its own citizens living within the United States as well as naturalized and U.S.-born citizens who have family overseas.
“Their actions violate U.S. law and our treasured American individual rights and freedoms,” Hagan wrote in an email.
The FBI office in Houston has set up a hotline for people who believe they are victims of these types of actions by the Chinese Communist Party: (713) 693-5000..
State Rep. Gene Wu, D-Houston, who was born in China and immigrated to the United States applauded Abbott’s move Tuesday.
“The ability to speak your mind and live freely are the core promises of the American Dream; and any who seek to take that away stand against Texas values,” Wu said.
Last year, Wu criticized Texas Republicans for pushing legislation that would ban citizens and foreign entities from countries including China from buying land in Texas. He urged Abbott to also support Chinese immigrants by opposing such legislation.
The Chinese government has set up “police service stations” across the world, according to Abbott’s executive order, and one such station was rumored to be in Houston.
“We will continue to do everything we can to protect Texans from the unlawful and repressive actions of the Chinese Communist Party,” Abbott said.
Abbott charged DPS with identifying and charging people suspected of crimes related to Operation Fox Hunt; work with local and federal authorities to assess incidents where foreign governments are harassing Texans; provide policy recommendations on how to counter these threats and set up a hotline to reported suspected acts of coercion related to “Operation Fox Hunt.”
On Thursday, Abbott issued a second executive order aimed at hardening the systems of state agencies and public higher education institutions from being accessed by hostile foreign nations.
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This story was originally published by The Texas Tribune and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
For copyright information, check with the distributor of this item, The Texas Tribune.
Texas
Texas football and Texas A&M are on a collision course but wait …| Golden
WATCH: Cedric Golden on how Texas football left Arkansas with a win
The No. 3 Longhorns took a 20-10 win in Fayetteville.
Only two teams control their destiny when it comes to winning the Southeastern Conference. And they play another.
But not this weekend.
Texas football and Texas A&M football are on a collision course to play for a spot in the conference title game, but that hype won’t reach a fevered pitch until Thanksgiving weekend.
The path is open but the winning still must happen to get there. Either say, the Horns and Aggies can’t assume wins are coming against either Kentucky or Auburn. Too many upsets have already happened to buy into point spreads or an opponent’s recent struggles.
When the No. 3 Longhorns take the field for Senior Day against the unranked Wildcats, they will apparently walk into Royal-Memorial with no thoughts of the Aggies and the resumption of a football rivalry that’s been lying dormant for the last 14 years.
The same goes for the guys in College Station (wink, wink).
Horns face a Kentucky team that’s struggled lately
Since losing 13-12 against Georgia on Sept. 14, the 4-6 Wildcats have gone 1-4 in conference play. But that win was a 20-17 doozy at Ole Miss, which is currently playing as well as anyone in the country.
The league has been all over the place in 2024 from that UK upset in Oxford to Vanderbilt posting wins over Alabama and at Kentucky one season after the Commodores went 2-10 overall and 0-8 in conference play.
“That’s obviously the craziness of the SEC,” UT tight end Gunnar Helm said. “Everybody’s good and everybody’s beating everybody. There’s not one team that’s sticking out that’s beating everybody like there’s been in years past. So everybody’s good. Every road win in the SEC is huge, and we know that, but obviously, we’ve got to move forward and get ready for a great Kentucky team coming in here.”
The Longhorns avoided the upset bug in a real dogfight over the weekend, and the 20-10 decision over Arkansas was rightfully celebrated by a locker room that’s won 10 straight road games dating back to the 2022 season. Six of those victories have come by double digits.
One thing is for certain. If I’m either one of those teams from Texas that sit atop the conference with 5-1 records, the last thing I’d want would be to be stuck in a quagmire of programs that could all finish the regular season at 6-2 and be at the mercy the tiebreaker gods. That should go double for Texas which lost to Georgia, one of those that’s desperate to remain inside the top 12 of the College Football Playoff rankings.
Texas is no stranger to scoreboard watching
Coach Steve Sarkisian said the Horns can take a lesson from the 2023 team that was scoreboard-watching as it fought to secure a spot in the playoff, which was just four teams at the time.
“We were at the mercy of other teams dictating our fate and our future,” Sarkisian said. “Last year, we said, ‘Hey, we’re going to control what we do’ and we’ve kind of continued to sing that same song this year with what we’re doing. I think our players, in a weird way, they see all that.”
The big difference is the comfort in them knowing that two wins and another in Atlanta will get them a first-round bye and a spot in the national quarterfinals.
“They recognize that, but they’re so focused on what’s happening right now and what’s right in front oft hem, that I don’t know if they’re that concerned about that,” Sarkisian said. “But they’re so focused on ‘Man, I just want to play good this week,’ and that for a coach… that’s a really good place to be.”
As for Saturday, expect to see a lot of pregame pageantry as locker room veterans like Helm, Jahdae Barron, Barryn Sorrell, Alfred Collins, Jake Majors, left tackle Kelvin Banks Jr. and yes, quarterback Quinn Ewers — who was mum on the possibility of coming back for a fourth season — will take center stage. But the goal is the goal.
The Horns aren’t winning with style, but they’re winning behind a defense that’s on pace to be the best in school history and an offense that has made the right plays at the right time to keep its conference title dreams on the right track.
Three seasons after a 5-7 nightmare that was its head coach’s first season, the Horns are so close to making SEC history, which would come with beating their heated rival when a whole nation will be watching.
Ahem, in two weeks.
Saturday’s game
Kentucky (4-6, 1-6) at No. 3 Texas (9-1, 5-1), 2:30 p.m., ABC, 1300, 98.1, 105.3 (Spanish)
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