Top transfer chooses Texas Longhorns
Texas Longhorns quarterback Arch Manning doesn't always enjoy the spotlight that comes with his famous family name.
Of course, the Longhorns were a final four team in the College Football Playoff. Ohio State knocked them out in the Cotton Bowl to head on to the National Championship Game. When
Sid Miller, a Republican and Commissioner of the Texas Department of Agriculture, posted on X on Thursday: "Hollywood is dying. Productions can't get out of California fast enough. Texas will benefit without subsidizing the folks that brought us woke, anti-Christian bigotry, socialism, transgenderism, etc."
The Texas Longhorns are adding some championship-winning experience to their roster for 2025. Per On3's Hayes Fawcett, Ohio State Buckeyes defensive
Texas athletics both generated revenue and had operating expenses of more than $300 during the fiscal year of 2024.
Ohio State had arguably the best team on paper heading into the college football season, and it showed when the games started. The Buckeyes went 10-2 during the regular season before crushing the opposition in the College Football Playoff.
With some of the best players in the country joining new schools in 2025, who will have the biggest impact on next year's College Football Playoff?
Quinn Ewers was back for a third year with hopes of leading Texas to a title, winning a Heisman Trophy and boosting his draft stock. Arch Manning, on the other hand, hails from the most famous quarterback family in existence and is a former five-star as well.
With the start of their third Big 12 spring football practices around the corner, the University of Cincinnati Bearcats offered a sneak peek at their new transfer portal additions for 2025 on Thursday. Coming off of seasons of 3-9 and 5-7, Scott Satterfield's staff again hopes the new additions can lead to a coveted bowl game.
The Arch Manning era at Texas is underway, and the star quarterback is making big moves in the offseason. The former five-star recruit announced a NIL partnersh
It's probably not a reach to say there's not a college football program in the country that wouldn't want Jeremiah Smith in their wide receiver room. The Ohio S