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Jeff Traylor speaks ahead of spring practice
from Vol. 65, Issue 7
by The Paisano
SAN ANTONIO – Three springs ago, UTSA handed the keys of the program to a high school football coach in hopes of leading the team out of the weeds in their ninth year as a collegiate program.
Now heading into his fourth season as head coach, Jeff Traylor is ready to take the back-to-back Conference USA Champions onto a new journey in the American Athletic Conference.
UTSA football has gained national attention over its last three seasons with Traylor at the helm. Amongst landing on national rankings and making three–straight bowl appearances, the Roadrunners managed to set the precedent that the rest of C-USA would have to run through them.
In the new 2023 season and now joining a new league, the last three seasons of success are reset.
The path to dominate the AAC like the Roadrunners did C-USA will not be an easy task. Though there were supposed trials and setbacks in the 2022 season, a new face of competition and unfamiliar environments will stand to test UTSA come late August.
Along with the new league, UTSA opens up its season with four out-of-conference games, which — much like last season — will give the Roadrunners little air to breathe in the competition.
“There are no easy ones on that schedule.
I mean, there’s zero,” Traylor said.
UTSA’s first contest is on the road against Houston, who gave UTSA a triple overtime season-opening loss in 2022. Then, after playing both I-35 rival Texas State and Army in the Alamodome, the Roadrunners close their non-conference schedule against college football powerhouse Tennessee in Knoxville, who will give UTSA a run for its money.
“I’m not sure my [athletic director] wants to keep her coach very long,” Traylor jokingly said of the upcoming season’s schedule. “It went to me that she’s trying to get rid of me [with that] schedule.”
The first four out-of-conference games will resemble the 2022 season.
The Roadrunners get a chance to redeem themselves for its triple overtime loss in the season opener, though the game will be played in Houston this time. UTSA then plays Army, who UTSA defeated in a double overtime effort. The extra game time carried over to the
Texas game, which is practically highlighted on the UTSA schedule as the only game with UTSA as a significant underdog.
This season, the ‘Runners will take their toughest test in Tennessee, which spent time as the No. 1 ranked team in the College Football Rankings.
Traylor just wants to get out of the non-AAC portion of the schedule healthy to avoid the onslaught of injuries the team faced last season.
“After that Texas game last year, I think our injury list was like around 30,” Traylor said. “My common sense says when we’re not as big as they are and we’re running into them a whole bunch, we probably need an extra week to recover, especially all four of those games in a row.
“I hope we don’t start off like last year where you go into triple overtime, double overtime to add another couple quarters to your play.”
Much to the athletes’ chagrin, injuries can be random. Instead of focusing on what playing tougher opponents can do, the team can look forward to the travel in the new environments.