Texas
Texas spring game 2022: Live stream, watch online, TV channel, start time, date, storylines to watch
After a really depressing first season of the Steve Sarkisian period, Texas soccer will get a recent begin below the lights because the Longhorns host the Orange-White Spring Sport on Saturday night. Regardless of a 5-7 file, Texas nabbed a top-10 switch class within the nation and added a top-five recruiting class.
The most important fish will quickly be a family title in school soccer as quarterback Quinn Ewers returned to the Lone Star State after a yr at Ohio State. Nonetheless, Ewers is barely the tip of the spear. Texas additionally added former Alabama tight finish Jahleel Billingsley and Wyoming receiver Isaiah Neyor. Alabama receiver Agiye Corridor joins later this summer time.
With the brand new faces becoming a member of star operating again Bijan Robinson and receiver Xavier Worthy, the Longhorns have an actual shot to compete for the nation’s high offense if all the things comes collectively. Nonetheless, virtually nothing got here collectively in Sarkisian’s first season as Texas blew quite a few leads and misplaced seven consecutive video games for the primary time since 1957. There are main points that have to be addressed earlier than the Longhorns are prepared for primetime.
Whereas the sport shall be broadcast on the Longhorn Community, it is not going to seem like a standard soccer recreation. There is not going to be any rating stored or particular opposing groups. As an alternative, it’ll characteristic roughly 100 scrimmaged play capped off with a purple zone competitors on the finish.
Here is what you want to know for Texas’ 2022 spring soccer recreation.
The way to watch 2022 Texas spring recreation stay
Date: Saturday, April 23 | Time: 7 p.m. ET
Location: Darrell Ok. Royal Memorial Stadium — Austin, Texas
TV: Longhorn Community | Dwell stream: ESPN+
2022 Texas spring recreation: Must know
1. Quarterback controversy: Saturday marks the debut of touted quarterback switch Quinn Ewers in a burnt orange uniform. The previous No. 1 general recruit — and first excellent 1.0000 quarterback within the 247Sports Composite since Vince Younger — transferred from Ohio State over the offseason in hopes of taking the reins at Texas within the fall.
Nonetheless, the battle remains to be technically open between Ewers and Hudson Card, a former blue-chip quarterback recruit himself. The Austin product earned the beginning job to open 2021, however was later benched after poor play. With an extra yr within the system, can Card maintain off Ewers, who has not thrown a stay cross in two years? The spring recreation will give an early glimpse into the query.
2. Defensive development: Longhorns defensive coordinator Pete Kwiatkowski struggled in his first season after shifting from the Pac-12 to the Huge 12, however Texas had a possibility to up its defensive workers by including former TCU coach Gary Patterson as a particular assistant. Whereas Patterson will solely work in an off-field function, the spring recreation may give early indication as as to if Patterson could have some enter on protection.
Kwiatkowski’s protection struggled to discover a stability between versatile cross protection with the bodily run protection wanted to counter the altering Huge 12. Whereas Patterson’s ultimate unit at TCU struggled to defend the run, his 4-2-5 excelled for years. He is aware of Huge 12 offenses higher than anybody within the nation.
With a restricted spring recreation pattern, regulate the athletes that Texas makes use of in its linebacker and STAR roles. These positions have been a Patterson specialty.
3. Offensive line depth: Sarkisian introduced that spring recreation wouldn’t be conventional with separated groups and scores. In feedback to reporters, Sarkisian famous that the explanation for the change is lack of offensive line depth. Whereas the explanations is perhaps professional, missing the offensive line depth to play a spring recreation would not bode nicely.
Granted, Texas has six freshman linemen coming in the summertime after a monster recruiting class. One other freshman is on campus now. Three starters are again from a under common Huge 12 unit, however none are stars. Texas opted to not take any switch linemen with what number of star freshmen are getting into the sector.
Finally, the elite recruiting class pays dividends. In 2022, although? The restricted returners all must hit.
Texas
Texas vs. Arizona State Ticket Prices: Cheapest and Most Expensive Tickets for Peach Bowl
After getting through Clemson in the opening round of the inaugural 12-team College Football Playoff, the fifth-seeded Texas Longhorns now play the No. 4 seed and Big 12 champion Arizona State Sun Devils. Arizona State and Texas will meet in Atlanta at Mercedes-Benz Stadium for the Peach Bowl as part of the CFP quarterfinal round.
The Peach Bowl kicks off at 1 p.m. ET on New Year’s Day, the first of three quarterfinal games on the holiday.
The Sun Devils earned a first-round bye as the last of the four highest-ranked conference champions. Texas missed out on a bye due to a heartbreaking overtime loss to Georgia in the SEC championship game. The Longhorns cruised past Clemson, the ACC champion, in the first round with a 38-24 win on Dec. 21.
Although Arizona State received the bye and higher seed in the CFP field, Texas comes in as the favorite, higher-ranked team throughout the regular season. Texas finished ranked No. 3 in the CFP standings, while ASU was ranked No. 12. In the AP poll, Texas is ranked No. 4 and ASU is ranked No. 10.
This year marks the Sun Devils’ first CFP appearance. The Longhorns make their second appearance after they made the field last year before falling to Washington in the semifinals.
Now, Texas and Arizona state will battle in Atlanta to advance to this year’s semifinal. The winner will head to Dallas for the Cotton Bowl game.
Here’s what it costs to watch Texas and Arizona State in person at the Peach Bowl on New Year’s Day:
As of Tuesday, the get-in price for the 2025 Peach Bowl and College Football Playoff quarterfinal between Texas and Arizona State is pretty affordable. The cheapest pair of seats on GameTime are $19 each in section 327, row 20 which is in the upper section behind the end zone. SeatGeek has seats in the upper corner for $23 each while TicketMaster has seats in the upper corner near the sideline for $25.
To sit in the lower level, TicketMaster has seats available for $40 each in section 102, row 47 which is behind the end zone. GameTime has similar seats available in section 101, row 51 for $42 apiece. Club-level seats, which provide access to all-inclusive food and drinks, start at $189 a seat on TicketMaster.
To have a premium seating experience at the Peach Bowl, you’ll need a club-level ticket which provide access to the handful of clubs on the sidelines at Mercedes-Benz stadium.
If you’re an Arizona State fan, you can sit in the second row behind the Sun Devils’ bench at the 50-yard line for $447 a seat, which you can find on SeatGeek. Tickets drop down to $249 each a section over, in section 111, row 3 on GameTime.
For Texas fans, seats can be found in the club-level toward the front of the opposite sideline for $399 each in section 127, row 2, which is behind the Longhorns’ bench at the 40-yard line. Texas fans can sit in the front row behind the sideline for $581. Those seats are all found on SeatGeek.
Texas
How to watch Arizona State vs. Texas in 2025 Peach Bowl: TV channel, live stream
The quarterfinal round has arrived for the first-ever 12-team College Football Playoff, and the nation will finally get a look at one of the biggest Cinderella stories of all time — the Arizona State Sun Devils.
The Sun Devils were picked to finish last in their first season in the 16-team Big 12 by the media. They were projected to win 4.5 games by the oddsmakers.
And at the beginning of the 2024 season, the Las Vegas oddsmakers had ASU +10,000 to win the Big 12 Conference. That’s 100 to 1 odds. If you had wagered $100 on the Sun Devils to win the Big 12 in August, you would have walked away with $10,000.
How improbable has Arizona State’s run to the Peach Bowl been? According to Vegas Insider, the Sun Devils winning the Big 12 is the sixth-greatest upset in betting history, just behind the Boston Red Sox winning the World Series in 2004 (+12,000).
The oddsmakers continue to doubt the Sun Devils, listing them as 12.5-point underdogs to the Texas Longhorns in the 2025 Peach Bowl.
Arizona State is used to being in this position, and running back Cam Skattebo has unwavering confidence in the Sun Devils’ ability to compete at the highest level.
“They continue to keep saying that people are going to try to stop me.. There’s nobody out there that can stop me,” Skattebo said on Monday. “We played in 13 games, and I’ve been the target on each one, so I’m not too worried. We’re going to play our game and play ball and see what happens there.”
Here are details on how to watch No. 4 Arizona State vs. No. 5 Texas on New Year’s Day.
Arizona State vs. Texas TV channel, live stream
The oddsmakers have Texas as 12.5 to 13.5-point favorites. Here are the latest betting odds, courtesy of FanDuel Sportsbook.
Who: No. 4 Arizona State vs. No. 5 Texas in the Peach Bowl College Football Playoff quarterfinal
Spread: Arizona State +12.5 (-112)
Kickoff Time: Wednesday, Jan. 1 at 11 a.m. MST
Our Prediction: Arizona State 24, Texas 21
TV Channel: ABC, ESPN
Live Stream: Stream Arizona State-Texas live on fuboTV (Start your free trial)
Live Updates, Highlights: Follow the game on Arizona State On SI for live updates, in-game analysis and big-play highlights throughout Wednesday’s matchup
More Arizona State & Big 12 Analysis
Texas
Texas returns to Atlanta less than a month after losing SEC title game to face Arizona State in CFP
ATLANTA — The Texas Longhorns were in Atlanta less than a month ago, playing for a championship.
That one didn’t go as planned.
Now, the Longhorns get an A-T-L do-over when they face Arizona State at the Peach Bowl in a College Football Playoff quarterfinal game on New Year’s Day.
Fifth-seeded Texas (12-2) insists it has gotten over the disappointment of losing an overtime thriller to Georgia on Dec. 7, a result that denied the Longhorns a title in their debut season as a member of the SEC.
“Of course we’re going to kind of feel that a little bit, but we kind of want to move on and just get ready for Arizona State,” Texas linebacker Anthony Hill Jr. said. “They’re a good football team and we kind of don’t want to think about that (Georgia) game all over again.”
The Longhorns showed no signs of a hangover when they held off Clemson in the opening round of the expanded 12-team playoff.
If they can knock off Arizona State — Texas is a two-touchdown favorite — it will be back to their home state for a semifinal game against either Oregon or Ohio State in the Cotton Bowl.
Fourth-seeded Arizona State (11-2) has been one of the nation’s most surprising teams.
The Sun Devils went 3-9 a year ago in Kenny Dillingham’s first season as head coach. Making the move from the disintegrating Pac-12 to the 16-team Big 12, Arizona State was picked to finish dead last this season.
Instead, it was tied with three other teams for the top spot during the regular season and claimed the title all to itself in the Big 12 championship game, rolling past Iowa State.
This is a chance for Arizona State to prove to everyone that its stunning season was no fluke.
“We’re going to face one of the best teams in the country, if not the best team in the country,” Dillingham said Tuesday on the eve of the game. “It’s a really tall task for our guys. But by the same token, if you’re a competitor, you want to compete versus the very best in the best environments.”
Ewers vs. Leavitt
Quinn Ewers has a stellar resume as the Texas quarterback.
Sam Leavitt is out to prove he’s the better man.
The Arizona State QB has been a major reason for his team’s unexpected success. He’s eager for a head-to-head showdown with Ewers, who has passed for 2,867 yards and 26 touchdowns this season.
Leavitt has put up similar numbers, with 2,663 yards and 24 TDs.
“I’m just excited for the opportunity,” he said. “People keep counting me out since Day 1, and I’m going to go prove why I’m the better quarterback.”
Skattebo’s big stage
Cam Skattebo is Arizona State’s biggest star, a bowling ball of a running back who has become one of the rare players in FBS history to put up more than 2,000 yards from scrimmage.
He doesn’t lack for confidence, either, calling himself the best runner in all of college football.
The Peach Bowl provides a prime opportunity to back up his bravado, especially against a defense that has struggled with missed tackles.
“I feel like I’m the best,” Skattebo said. “I’m excited to play those guys because I’m going to present to them something new that they haven’t seen before. I’m excited, and hopefully they’re ready to play some football.”
Exes from Texas
The Longhorns will see plenty of familiar faces when they look across the line.
A half-dozen players on Arizona State’s overhauled roster used to play at Texas. They all ended up in Tempe through the transfer portal.
The list of ex-Longhorns players also includes receivers Jake Smith and Troy Omeire, defensive back Xavion Alford, defensive ends J’Mond Tapp and Prince Dorbah, and defensive tackle Zac Swanson.
“All those guys, obviously, they’ll be extra fired up to play the Longhorns,” Texas defensive back Michael Taaffe said. “Anytime you leave a school and you know some people, it’s always fun to play those guys.”
Dillingham said the Texas transfers have made a huge impact on the Arizona State program.
“We know what we’re getting when we’re getting a guy from that program, and that’s a guy who has worked really hard, competed and been pushed,” the Sun Devils coach said. ”Those are the things that we like to bring in.”
Turning it over
Turnovers usually play a key role in big games. It will be interesting to see how that works out in the Peach Bowl.
Arizona State has coughed up the ball only eight times, tied for the second-fewest turnovers in the FBS. Texas, on the other hand, has forced a nation-leading 29 turnovers.
Dillingham said it will be important to keep the pocket clean around Leavitt.
“It all starts with pass rush,” he said. “They get pass rush, they get tipped balls. Their defensive line gets in throwing windows.”
Texas coach Steve Sarkisian praised Skattebo and the rest of the Sun Devils for losing only three fumbles all year, to go along with five interceptions.
“You just don’t not fumble the ball. You work at not fumbling the ball,” Sarkisian said. “They’ve done a great job of controlling football games by not turning it over.”
Suspended star
Arizona State will have to play the first half without star defensive back Shamari Simmons, who is suspended for the first two quarters after being ejected for targeting in the Big 12 championship game.
“Shamari is a leader on our team,” Alford said. “It’s very unfortunate that he’s not going to be with us in the first half in the game, but he’ll still be there as a leader and as a teammate on the sidelines and things of that nature.”
Redshirt freshman Montana Warren will take Simmons’ spot in the lineup during the first half.
“God always has a plan, and I just feel like his plan right now is just basically showing who Montana Warren is to the world,” Simmons said. “He’s going to be a great defensive back for Arizona State for a long time coming.”
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