During the second half of the 2024 college football season, ranked teams lost to unranked opposition on 30 occasions. In eight of those instances, the unranked team crafted the upset directly after its bye, benefiting from a second week to prepare.
Texas
Texas vs Kentucky: Why Longhorns face a trap laid by SEC schedule
That’s the circumstance No. 21 Texas football faces this week. Reclaiming a place in the AP Top 25 with an emotional rivalry victory over Oklahoma, the Longhorns will now encounter a scuffling Kentucky team that hasn’t played since Oct. 4.
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Texas Longhorns head coach Steve Sarkisian is interviewed on the field ahead of the Red River Rivalry, as the Sooners play the Longhorns at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Oct. 11, 2025.
The trap, contrived by the SEC’s scheduling algorithm, is set. How can the Longhorns avoid it?
MORE: Going 3-1 in October is a must for Texas football’s razor-thin CFP path in 2025
“They’ve had some extended time to look at what we do,” Texas coach Steve Sarkisian said Monday. “We have to do a good job of scouting ourselves. I’m sure they’re going to do some things that our opponents have done in previous weeks that caused us problems. So we have to see the forest through the trees here a little bit and not just get so focused on what’s right in front of us.”
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Texas Longhorns wide receiver DeAndre Moore Jr. (0) celebrates Texas’ Red River Rivalry win with the Golden Hat after the Longhorns beat the Oklahoma Sooners 23-6 at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Oct. 11, 2025.
It’s crucial, Sarkisian explained, for the Longhorns to understand how they’ve been hurt by their previous opposition coming into this kind of game. What pressure packages have harried quarterback Arch Manning? Which offensive schemes have flummoxed Texas’ defense? What happened on special teams that allowed Florida to block a punt in Week 6?
By answering these questions, Texas can prepare itself for bye week schemes Kentucky might design specifically to target the Longhorns (4-2, 1-1 SEC).
“Prep for some things that Kentucky hasn’t shown yet, but they clearly could do with some extended time to prepare for us,” Sarkisian said.
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The Wildcats spent much of their open week looking inward, according to coach Mark Stoops.
Kentucky (2-3, 0-3) is one of just two SEC teams still without a win over a Power 4 opponent. It has scored just 40 total points in three SEC games. The Wildcats’ last two foes, Georgia and South Carolina, have each hung 35 points on them.
The needs presented by their situation shaped their bye week approach, Stoops said.
“It was probably 70% Kentucky and 30% Texas, just because we felt like we needed the work,” Stoops said Wednesday. “That varies sometimes on when the byes fall and what kind of team you have and how many practices you have, all of those things. I just felt like we needed a lot of work. I felt like we got better and still got a jump on Texas as well.”
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Texas vs Kentucky: Why Wildcats’ bye week matters beyond scheme
The short-term benefits offered by bye weeks aren’t always generated by spending more time scouting the opponent. Open weeks present advantages associated with rest and health.
MORE: Texas football transfers Jerrick Gibson, Will Stone ‘essentially opted out’
Vanderbilt coach Clark Lea, whose team laid arguably the most notable bye-week trap of the 2024 campaign when it upset then-No. 1 Alabama, said he thinks there’s a “negative return” associated with spending too much time on the opponent. The Commodores are coming off their first bye of 2025 this week as they host LSU, and Lea said he devoted one extra practice to preparing for the Tigers.
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“We need to make sure we’re banking the learning, week in and week out,” Lea said. “It’s a good self-scout, systems review. We practiced three days last week, and each day we had a specific focus in terms of game-plan area that we needed to address.”
The Longhorns have already lost once this season to a team coming off a bye week. Expecting to see two-high safety looks from the Florida defense in Week 6, Texas instead found itself smothered by a Gators unit that unleashed its pass rush and dared the Longhorns to throw the ball deep.
Throughout his career, though, Sarkisian has managed this type of situation well. He owns a 62% career win rate overall and has won 65% of regular-season games against opponents coming off byes.
MORE: Why Steve Sarkisian says improvement for Texas QB starts with his eyes
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At Kentucky, Stoops hasn’t capitalized on many of these opportunities. The Wildcats are 6-10 coming off bye weeks since Stoops took charge in 2013, and one of those wins came against an FCS school.
This week, his chances of success hinge on Kentucky’s ability to ready redshirt freshman quarterback Cutter Boley for the moment. Since stepping in for the injured Zach Calzada, Boley has completed 57.1% of his passes for 627 yards with four touchdowns and three interceptions. He showed flashes when the Wildcats visited Royal-Memorial Stadium last year, throwing for 160 yards on 18 attempts with an interception against the Longhorns. And Stoops praised the youngster for his performance at Georgia last time out, when he completed 25 of his 41 attempts for 225 yards and two touchdowns with one interception. The coach designed his bye week practice plan to give Boley more “fastball looks” against his first-team defense.
“I’ve been pleased with his progress. We need to continue to see that growth. He made very much a big improvement between his first start this year and his second, so hopefully we’ll continue to see that improvement.”
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Texas
NTSB Confirms Texas Tesla Had 100% Floored Accelerator Pedal During Fatal Crash
In an incident that was horrific beyond words, late last month, a stunned family watched in horror as a car plowed into the Katy, Texas home of a 76-year-old mother and grandmother, killing her. The driver has been charged with manslaughter.
In the aftermath of the crash, it emerged that the car in question was a Tesla, and that the driver was making use of full self-driving mode (FSD) around the time the crash occurred. The victim’s family has named Tesla and the driver as defendants in a lawsuit. But per Electrek, Tesla was able to view crash data very quickly after the incident, and the head of AI at the company, Ashok Elluswamy, said the driver “manually overrode self-driving by pressing the accelerator all the way to 100% of the accel pedal in this residential area.”
In the days after the crash, Tesla fans took issue with coverage that characterized the car as in FSD when the crash occurred. CEO Elon Musk seemed to agree, replying to a post, “Yes, this makes no sense. FSD drives slowly through neighborhood streets and this was a high speed crash!”
But Musk seems to be assuming bad faith, as if coverage implied FSD had suddenly shifted into, perhaps, some kind of previously unannounced homicidal maniac mode and attacked a house. If anyone was saying this is what happened, they should apologize. It’s clearly not what happened.
And on Wednesday, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) largely confirmed Tesla’s version of events. Their report reads, in part:
“Electronic data recovered from the vehicle indicated that before the crash, the driver manually overrode FSD (Supervised) by pressing the accelerator pedal to 100%, and the vehicle’s speed was greater than 70 mph when the crash occurred.”
But cooler heads had noted weeks earlier that, like with good old fashioned cruise control, accelerating doesn’t boot you from FSD. The car takes the input, and stays in FSD. The question isn’t one of mechanics and technology, but one of philosophy: if FSD is meant to be “driving” when someone jams on the accelerator in a residential area, FSD may not be the “driver” in one important sense, but the car was still in FSD mode.
Because as much as Tesla would probably like FSD to be a total non-factor in the incident, that may not be the case either.
ABC News noted that, according to court documents, the driver claimed he “passed out” with the car in FSD on the highway, and that’s the last thing he remembers before the crash. He says he wasn’t sick, and medical records show no seizures, cardiac episodes, drugs, or alcohol.
A local Fox affiliate says records show the car was making deliveries for DoorDash while in FSD in the “hours and minutes leading up to the crash.” While in a neighborhood, it apparently signaled it was going to turn left onto one street, but instead the pedal went to the metal. This took the Tesla onto the victim’s cul-de-sac instead, and put it on its fateful collision course with her house.
To make matters weirder, other court records now show, per Electrek, that the driver had Googled the terms, “Tesla fsd not aggressive enough 2026,” “FSD is not aggressive enough for city driving,” and “Tesla fsd too timid.” That’s the kind of thing you Google when you’re looking for a Reddit post from someone sharing your consumer gripe.
In any case, the odds aren’t good that the driver wanted this to happen, nor that Tesla programmed its cars with evil intent. But FSD was being used around the time of this unusual fatal incident, and the public deserves to know more. Fortunately, a lot more will come out as the lawsuit progresses.
Texas
Texas AG secures 23andMe bankruptcy settlement after 2023 data breach
AUSTIN – Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said Wednesday he has secured a settlement of bankruptcy claims against genetic testing company 23andMe stemming from a 2023 data breach that exposed personal information, including some genetic ancestry data, of 6.9 million customers worldwide.
Paxton’s office said the settlement includes $150 million for a multistate coalition of 42 states. But because of limited funds in 23andMe’s bankruptcy estate and competing claims, the states’ recovery will be $18 million paid immediately, with Texas receiving $1,266,860.
23andMe disclosed in October 2023 that attackers had accessed accounts affecting 6.9 million consumers. Some of the information was later posted for sale on the dark web, according to Paxton’s office, which said the company learned of the breach months after the data became publicly available. The office said 23andMe initially denied a breach and later blamed consumers’ account settings and password practices.
Paxton joined a multistate investigation that concluded 23andMe used unreasonable security practices and failed to implement adequate safeguards against hacking, the office said.
23andMe filed for bankruptcy protection in March 2025. Paxton’s office said the settlement incorporates privacy and cybersecurity requirements, including enhanced security standards, comprehensive risk assessments and creation of an independent advisory board, along with enforcement of state privacy laws and continued consumer data deletion rights.
“Companies that collect and profit from Texans’ most personal information have a legal duty to protect it,” Paxton said in a statement.
The company also agreed to a $46.75 million class-action settlement in the bankruptcy case for affected U.S. consumers who submitted claims by Feb. 17, 2026, Paxton’s office said.
Copyright 2026 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.
Texas
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