USA TODAY US Edition

Texas will have QB competitio­n between Ewers and Manning

- Paul Myerberg

Freshman quarterbac­k Arch Manning will compete for the starting job with sophomore Quinn Ewers, Texas coach Steve Sarkisian confirmed after the Longhorns held their opening practice of the spring.

“I’m not worried about who’s going to be on the cover of what magazine next week,” Sarkisian said Monday. “I’m more focused on is, is each guy focusing on what they need to do to develop to be the best player that they can be? Quinn has an entire year of a head start, but I don’t want to hold Arch back. I want to see how far he can take this thing and what it can look like.”

Ewers was the primary starter last season as Texas rebounded from a losing season in Sarkisian’s debut to win eight games and finish No. 25 in the USA TODAY Sports AFCA Coaches Poll. A five-star recruit who began his college career at Ohio State, Ewers threw for 2,177 yards and 15 touchdowns while completing 58.1% of his attempts.

But his hold on the starting job will be tested by Manning, the nation’s top overall 2023 recruit and one of the most high-profile prospects in recent college football history.

Will Manning start at Texas?

The next generation of Manning quarterbac­ks was recruited by every major program before settling on Texas and Georgia as finalists. By joining the Longhorns, Manning will go toe-to-toe with another top-end talent who holds one huge advantage: the experience of spending last year as the starter.

While Manning has the arm strength, maturity and mental makeup to produce as a freshman, he’ll have to battle through the predictabl­e growing pains that come with the transition to the Power Five.

After Manning’s first day of practice, “there’s some plays for sure that he would love to have back,” said Sarkisian. “There’s some other plays that he made where I think everybody was like, ‘Wow, that was a heck of a play.’ But he brings a worker’s mentality and he wants to be really good at this game.”

Ewers vs. Manning

In his first game after permanentl­y replacing the since-transferre­d Hudson Card last October, Ewers threw for 289 yards and four TDs as Texas demolished Oklahoma 49-0 in the Red River Rivalry. It would be the high point of a season that would quickly turn sour: Ewers hit on 38.8% of his throws with three intercepti­ons in a 41-31 loss to Oklahoma State two weeks later.

Overall, the sophomore’s performanc­e opened a door for Manning to step right in and take over as starter.

“He wants to be really good,” Sarkisian said of Ewers. “He wants to be a leader on this team. He wants to win a championsh­ip with these guys.”

While in competitio­n for the starting role, Ewers has helped Manning make the transition onto campus, Sarkisian added: “I think what he’s done, he’s serving for Arch and, ‘Hey, this is what it looks like, and this is how to go about your business.’ ”

Predicting Texas’ depth chart

At this point, Ewers has to be considered the most likely starter for the opener. A week later, the Longhorns travel to Alabama in a rematch of one of this past season’s best games, a narrow win for the Crimson Tide.

Even should he fend off Manning this spring and in preseason camp, Ewers likely will be on a very short leash during what could be a make-orbreak season for Sarkisian.

And while Texas may seem to be in an enviable position – only an elite handful of programs have one five-star quarterbac­k on the roster, let alone two – the transfer portal has created an almost nonstop game of musical chairs across the Bowl Subdivisio­n.

Ewers has already transferre­d and would need to leave as a graduate transfer or receive a waiver to be immediatel­y eligible should he decide to leave Austin.

 ?? AARON E. MARTINEZ/ THE AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Texas quarterbac­ks Arch Manning (16) and Quinn Ewers talk during the first spring practice.
AARON E. MARTINEZ/ THE AMERICAN-STATESMAN Texas quarterbac­ks Arch Manning (16) and Quinn Ewers talk during the first spring practice.

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