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Steve Sarkisian sets high tempo, expectations in first Texas Longhorns football practice

Sure, Texas football coach Steve Sarkisian knows it’s hot. He just spent a couple of hours Wednesday in the midday heat, wearing a black Longhorns T-shirt, orchestrating the team's first summer practice of the season at Denius Fields on the eastern edge of campus.

Yes, he also knows his talented team has genuine hopes of playing football until Jan. 20, the date of the College Football Playoff championship game that will cap the first 12-team playoff.

But Sarkisian also knows he can’t worry about pacing his squad quite yet — especially as he and his coaching staff try to set the tone for a program coming off a 12-2 season, a Big 12 championship and the school’s first appearance in the College Football Playoff.

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Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers drops back to pass during the first summer practice at Denius Fields on Wednesday. The Longhorns enter their first season in the SEC with high expectations after going 12-2 and reaching the College Football Playoff a year ago.
Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers drops back to pass during the first summer practice at Denius Fields on Wednesday. The Longhorns enter their first season in the SEC with high expectations after going 12-2 and reaching the College Football Playoff a year ago.

“We're going to go hard for the first 2½ weeks,” Sarkisian said during his first press conference of the preseason. “I think that's a mindset. You know, we believe in the toughness in our program. And we have to push them (the players) to places where maybe they think they couldn’t go and then excel in those places.”

Hitting the field with 2023 momentum

Sarkisian tempered that tough talk with a shoutout to his medical staff and the sports science that he says increases the efficiency of practice as well as the safety of the players. But the message was still sent with the two-hour practice that kicked off just before 3 p.m., and the players seemed to embrace the challenge.

“We had really good energy, and the guys came out with really good intent,” Sarkisian said. “It just felt great to be back on the practice field.”

Now entering his fourth season at Texas, Sarkisian has plenty of reasons to feel good, even if his team has to navigate the treacherous SEC for the first time. He cited a veteran offensive line and a talented set of running backs as well as a three-year starter at quarterback in Quinn Ewers.

“And I feel like we're faster” on defense, he said. “Especially from an edge perspective and then the second level with our ’backers and our star and then even into the back end. We’ve got real speed back there.”

Coach Steve Sarkisian blows the whistle to start a drill during the first summer practice Wednesday. “We're going to go hard for the first 2½ weeks,” he said. “I think that's a mindset. You know, we believe in the toughness in our program.”
Coach Steve Sarkisian blows the whistle to start a drill during the first summer practice Wednesday. “We're going to go hard for the first 2½ weeks,” he said. “I think that's a mindset. You know, we believe in the toughness in our program.”

More: Longhorn Confidential: Getting ready for the first practices of the 2024 football season

Sarkisian: Texas still has work to do

So what worries Sarkisian the most, especially as Texas will ramp up scheme-specific practices in the coming weeks in preparation for the Aug. 31 opener against visiting Colorado State?

“There's a ton,” he said. “Every year you go into camp, I try to take nothing for granted. You try to let things play out the way that they do, and then you start to figure out as you go the strengths of your team and then start pouring into the strength of the team.”

Defensive back Ziky Umeozulu gets some water between drills Wednesday. The Longhorns are practicing in the afternoons to help prepare them for a 2:30 p.m. kickoff in their season opener Aug. 31.
Defensive back Ziky Umeozulu gets some water between drills Wednesday. The Longhorns are practicing in the afternoons to help prepare them for a 2:30 p.m. kickoff in their season opener Aug. 31.

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Which ones become the go-to receivers in a rotation full of transfers and freshmen that looks seven deep? How can the Longhorns replace All-American defensive tackles T’Vondre Sweat and Byron Murphy II, last year’s breakout defensive stars? And what can Texas do to shore up a pass defense exposed by quality quarterbacks throughout the 2023 season? Personnel decisions must be made, even if Sarkisian is picking from a deep pool of talent.

“I feel like I'm crying from a yacht right now,” Sarkisian said with a chuckle. “You know, to some degree, that's a good problem, that we have too many good players. That's the idea: You try to recruit really well, you try to recruit really good players that have great character and that work hard, and I think that's what we can say about these guys right now. They work extremely hard. They work hard with one another. And I hope they make it really difficult on us. That's a good problem to have.”

This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: Sarkisian sets high expectations as Longhorns start football practice