Jackson jeffcoat
Alex Okafor
Carrington Byndom
Jordan Hicks
Kenny Vaccaro
POSITION
DE
FS
LB
CB
DE
HEIGHT
6'5"
6'1"
6'2"
6'0"
6'4½"
WEIGHT
245
218
235
180
265
CLASS
Junior
Senior
Junior
Junior
Senior
21 tackles for loss
82 tackles
65 tackles
15 pass breakups
14 tackles for loss
STAT
Texas has a game plan for leading the Big 12 in a charge against the SEC: hire away ITS coaches and do what the sec does best—Play Killer defense. ackson Jeffcoat was born in Dallas, the day after Christmas 1990, oblivious to the fact that the Texas Longhorns would days later be routed by Miami 46-3 in the Cotton Bowl. He was also unaware the following year, when UT went 5–6, the final season for head coach David McWilliams. By the time Jeffcoat was 7, McWilliams’ replacement, John Mackovic, had been fired after an equally disappointing 4–7 season in 1997. ¶ In other words, Jackson Jeffcoat can’t really remember anything but Mack Brown football—what folks in Austin simply refer to as Longhorns football, as if 1998 were the beginning of a completely new record book. ¶ Like every other eighth-grader in Texas, Jeffcoat sat glued to the 2006 Rose Bowl, pumping his fist as Vince Young stuck a rose between his teeth and cradled the school’s first BCS crystal football after a win against USC. But unlike other eighth-graders, Jeffcoat was the son of former Cowboys defensive end Jim Jeffcoat, and he was born to sack quarterbacks. ¶ Over the next four years, he grew into a svelte version of his father, a 6'5", 225-pound terror at end for Plano West High, the second-best player in the nation, according to ESPN Recruiting. He could have gone to Houston, where his dad was an assistant, or he could have gone to Oklahoma, where his sister had just signed to play basketball. But Jeffcoat loved three things: Texas, football and fishing, in that order. So when decision time came in 2010, just after UT had played in the BCS title game—its second appearance in five years—Jeffcoat saw the opportunity to continue Texas tradition. ¶ What followed was a freshman season that today leaves Jeffcoat struggling for words. “I was just shocked,” he says of going 5–7, Brown’s only losing campaign in a 15-year tenure. “It felt like we didn’t win a game.” It felt that way around Austin too. One year after playing for the national title, Texas wasn’t even heading to some meaningless bowl game. The mere mention of “five and seven” remains the source of extreme emotion for fans. ¶ For a 21-year-old just passing through on his way to the NFL, though, things don’t feel quite so dramatic anymore. The junior is quick to talk about how the program is on the rise after an 8–5 record in 2011. And he disagrees that the Tide’s dismantling of the Longhorns in the title game three seasons ago was a sign that the SEC had surpassed the Big 12 as a conference, that the SEC’s six years of dominance have completely altered the college football landscape.
by L a Rue cook reporting by Travis Haney
better in texas TOTAL yards allowed
rushing yards allowed -80
-80
-60
-60
-60
-40
-40
-40
-20
-20
-20
FBS Avg. (380.1)
102
ESPN The Magazine 08/20/2012
Photograph by Brent Humphreys
TEXAS
BIG 12 avg.
passing yards allowed
-80
FBS Avg. (155.5)
FBS Avg. (224.6)
+20
+20
+20
+40
+40
+40
+60
+60
+60
TEXAS
BIG 12 avg.
TEXAS
BIG 12 avg.