Football Records – Through 2024

Five Texas Longhorns football records that will never be broken
There have been a lot of impressive feats on the football field by the Texas Longhorns over the years, by five records stand out among all the others.
Chris HummerJun 15th, 2015, 2:05 PM Horns 247

Texas Longhorn Football individual records that will probably never be broken.

Ricky Williams’ two straight games with 300 rushing yards

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Ricky Williams did a lot of near-superhuman things during his four years on the Forty Acres, but his feat of two straight games with 300 rushing yards during the 1998 season is peerless. Williams, who dashed for 318 yards against Rice on Sept. 18 and then 350 yards the next week against Iowa State on Oct. 3, is the only player in NCAA history to run for 300 yards in two straight games. Williams went on to win the Heisman Trophy that season, rushing for a school-record 2,124 yards and 27 touchdowns. Those marks alone will be hard to break, but it’s difficult to imagine anyone sniffing 300 yards in two straight games again.

Colt McCoy’s 76.7 completion percentage in 2008

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Colt McCoy owns quite a few Texas Longhorns records. Actually, his name is pretty much at the top of every possible passing list. Still, it’s McCoy’s incredible accuracy during the 2008 season that stands out. McCoy completed 332-of-433 passes as a junior in 2008 on the way to a second-place finish in the Heisman voting. His passing campaign is the most accurate by a quarterback in NCAA history with a minimum of 150 attempts, and it’s a mark no Longhorn is likely to approach anytime soon. As a bonus feat, McCoy’s 45 career victories under center will also be pretty difficult to reach.

 

 

 

 

Britt Hager’s 195 tackles in 1988

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Defensive records haven’t been kept nearly as long as their offensive counterparts, but that doesn’t make Britt Hager’s 1988 season any less impressive. Hager complied 195 total tackles and 17.7 tackles per game as a senior in 1988. Only one Longhorn player in history has come within 20 of that mark – Lionel Johnson in 1976 – and the second closest was Jordan Hicks in 2014 when he put up a team-high 147. Hager’s total, which came in only 11 games, seems safe for a very long time.

 

 

Kiki DeAyala’s 22.5 sacks in 1982

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Michael Strahan set the NFL’s single-season sack record in 2001 with 22.5 sacks over 16 games; Kiki DeAyala reached that number for the Longhorns in 11 games. Only six other Texas players have come within even 10 of that mark with Ken McCune (1980), Bill Acker (1978) and Tim Campbell (1977) coming the closest with 14 sacks each. Only four players in NCAA history have had more sacks in a single season than DeAyala did for Texas in 1982, and two of them are multiple-time NFL Pro Bowlers – Derrick Thomas and Terrell Suggs.

 

 

Earl Campbell’s 11 straight 100-yard rushing games in 1977

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There was no tougher player in Texas Longhorns history than Earl Campbell, and his streak of 100-yard rushing games during the 1977 season is a testament to that. Campbell dashed for 100 yards or more in every game of a perfect regular season for the Longhorns, averaging 6.5 yards per carry and 158.5 yards a contest. Campbell finished the season with 1,744 yards and 18 touchdowns, earning the school’s first Heisman Trophy as a result. Since Campbell’s feat, no player has had a 100-yard game streak longer than seven, and it’s unlikely any Longhorn will ever again reach the 100-yard mark in every game during a season.

 

Texas remains one of the historically great programs in American college football.  We are truly one of the Blue Blood programs.

All-Time Wins as of 2024

1.

Michigan

1012 wins

2.

Ohio State

978 wins

3.

Alabama

965 wins

4.

Texas

949 wins

5.

Notre Dame 

948 wins

6.

Oklahoma Sooners

944

7.

Yale

936 wins

8.

Penn State

930 wins

9.

Nebraska

917 wins

10.

Harvard

901 wins

All of the stats listed below are as of 2018

By Winning Percentage

1.

Michigan

.729

2.

Ohio State

.729

3.

Notre Dame

.728

4.

Alabama

.727

5.

OU

.726

6.

Texas

.704

7.

Southern Cal

.698

8.

Nebraska

.690

9.

Penn State

.690

10.

Tennessee

.674

We are number 2 in all-time bowl appearances with 56 (tied now with Georgia), behind Alabama (71).  Horns are at number 5 in all-time bowl wins with 30.

In the State of Texas, the top 12

            1.         Texas – 916

            2.         Texas Agricultural & Mechanical – 749

            3.         Texas Christian University – 655

            4.         Baylor – 607

            5.         Texas Technical – 571

            6.         North Texas – 521

            7.         Texas State – 516

            8.         Southern Methodist – 505

            9.         Henry March Rice University – 475

            10.       Houston – 445

            11.       UTEP – 397

            12.       UTSA – 45

All time winning percentage for Texas FBS schools:

            1.         Texas – .704

            2.         Texas Agricultural & Mechanical – .602

            3.         Texas Technical – .553

            4.         Houston – .543

            5.         Texas Christian University – .540

            6.         Texas State – .523

            7.         Baylor – .512

            8.         North Texas – .503

            9.         Southern Methodist – .480

            10.       Henry Marsh Rice University – .433

            11.       UTSA – .425

            12.       UTEP – .397

FBS Teams in Texas, weeks ranked at Number 1

            1.         Texas – 45

            2.         Texas Agricultural & Mechanical – 6

            3.         Texas Christian University – 2

            3.         Southern Methodist – 2

            5.         Baylor – 0

            6.         Texas Technical – 0

            7.         North Texas – 0

            8.         Texas State – 0

            9.         Henry Marsh Rice University – 0

            10.       Houston – 0

            11.       UTEP – 0

            12.       UTSA – 0

Texas Offense

Statistic 2018 vs. 2019 ranked nationally

Rushing Offense

#91 – 153.1 ypg

#48 – 176.5 ypg

Passing Offense #35 – 258.5 ypg

#20 – 289.3 ypg

Total Offense #58 – 411.6 ypg

#14 – 465.8 ypg

Scoring Offense #45 – 31.1 ppg

#17 – 35.2 ppg

First Downs #31 – 23.2/game

#7 – 25.0/game

Tackles for Loss Allowed #54 – 75; 5.4/g, 313 yards

#77 – 76; 5.9/g, 288 yards

Third Down Conversions #18 – 46.4%

#7 – 48.946.4%

Red Zone Offense #83 – 82%/66%

#12 – 92%/78%

Long Scrimmage Plays #30 – 203/10+; 66/20+; 6/30+

#10 – 238/10+; 64/20+; 28/30+

Long Rushing Plays #76 – 64/10+; 9/20+; 5/30+

#25 – 85/10+; 14/20+; 6/30+

Long Passing Plays #22 – 139/10+; 57/20+; 21/30+

#16 – 153/10+; 50/20+; 22/30+

Penalties #98 –7.4/g; 63.9 ypg

#114 –7.3/g; 68.5 ypg

Incredible improvement last year.

Texas Defense

Statistic 2018 vs. 2019 ranked nationally

Rushing Defense #28 – 131.4 ypg

#45 – 138.9 ypg

Passing Defense #110 – 261.4 ypg

#127 – 289.8 ypg

Total Defense #67 – 392.8 ypg

#97 – 431.5 ypg

Scoring Defense #57 – 25.9 ppg

#65 – 27.5 ppg

Tackles for Loss #18 – 98.5; 7.1/g, 365 yards

#40 – 83; 6.4/g, 282 yards

First Downs Allowed #67 – 20.6/game

#100 – 22.5/game

Third Down Conversions #109 – 44.3%

#65 – 39.1%

Red Zone Defense #17– 76%/57%

#104– 88%/57%

Long Scrim. Plays allowed #101 – 196/10+; 59/20+; 28/30+; 18/40+

#128 – 216/10+; 69/20+; 25/30+; 17/40+

Long Rushing Plays allowed #35 – 55/10+; 12/20+; 3/30+

#53 – 62/10+; 16/20+; 4/30+

Long Passing Plays allowed #123 – 141/10+; 47/20+; 25/30+

#130 – 154/10+; 53/20+; 21/30+

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