Brigham Young University
Sep 06 | 05:30 PM
41 - 7
University of Texas at Austin
Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium

2100 San Jacinto Blvd. Austin TX 78717

jkitchen | Posted: 6 Sep 2014 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
jkitchen

Hill and Cougars hurdle Texas

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AUSTIN, Texas – Quarterback Taysom Hill's three rushing touchdowns led BYU football to a 41-7 domination of revenge-thirsty Texas on the Longhorns' home field Saturday. 

Hill made sure to remind the Longhorns of his 2013 performance by rushing for 99 yards and passing for 181 yards. 

"Once it became really clear what Texas’ plan was defensively–which was a very strong plan–and we were able to identify what they were doing, it was apparent that Taysom on a few different types of looks could carry the ball more," BYU head coach Bronco Mendenhall said. "So we targeted him to do that. We already know what kind of capable runner he is. Schematically we made some adjustments to make sure that could happen."

Game Book

Postgame Notes

BYU vs. Texas Photo Gallery

Senior transfer Jordan Leslie led the receivers with seven receptions for 85 yards. Jamaal Williams rushed for 89 yards on 19 carries, while Adam Hine rushed for 29 yards and two touchdowns.

Dallin Leavitt led the Cougars with seven tackles, followed by Robertson Daniel and Zac Stout with six tackles apiece. The defense held Texas to 2.1 yards per carry and a total of 82 rushing yards on 35 carries. Hill and Williams both out-rushed the entire Texas team. 

"Going all the way back to Monday and the first look we had at this opponent, we thought we matched up really well," Mendenhall said. "We thought we had a great chance to have a good win, and we thought we had a really good chance to win convincingly."

Up 6-0 at halftime, Cougar offense turned the tide to start the second half and scored touchdowns on four consecutive drives. Hill completed the first drive with a 30-yard touchdown run after hurdling a Longhorn defender on the 5-yard line. After the defense forced a quick three and out, an acrobatic catch by Leslie set up a 16-yard touchdown run by Hine

BYU's defense forced another quick three-and-out, and Mitchell Juergens returned the ensuing punt to the Texas 29-yard line. The short field set up a quick scoring drive for the Cougars, as Hill rushed for his second touchdown from a couple yards out. The Cougars proved they were not done on the subsequent kickoff, with Michael Alisa forcing a fumble that was recovered by Harvey Jackson on the Texas 24-yard line. Hill recorded his third rushing touchdown of the game from a yard out with just under six minutes left in the quarter.

"It was a great third quarter because of both sides," Mendenhall said. "Not only did we make a few key corrections offensively, but we created some turnovers that had short fields. So with the combination of playing good defense and taking the ball away, and then the adjustments we made offensively, it really came together nicely."

The offense hit its first snag of the half in the fourth quarter when Hill lost a fumble at midfield, but the defense recovered momentum when Alisa intercepted Tyrone Swoopes and returned it 30 yards into Texas territory. Hine took advantage, scoring his second touchdown of the game from eight yards out. The interception was Alisa’s first, which brought BYU’s streak of consecutive games with an interception to 12 to tie the longest streak in Mendenhall’s tenure.

The first quarter brought a defensive struggle, as BYU was the only team to score on a 21-yard field goal from Trevor Samson. Williams set up the field goal with a 31-yard rush to the Texas 16-yard line.

The Cougar defense showed physical dominance throughout the first half, forcing two punts and a missed field goal. In his first start, Texas quarterback Swoopes completed his first seven pass attempts for 72 yards, but BYU’s rush defense only allowed 21 yards on the ground.

Defense continued to be the theme in the second quarter, with Daniel stripping the ball from a Texas receiver and recovering the ball on the 50. The Cougar offense couldn’t capitalize on the turnover and was forced to punt the ball back to Texas. On the first play of Texas’ next drive, linebacker Jherremya Leuta-Douyere forced another fumble, recovered again by Daniel at the Texas 23-yard line. Samson connected on a 29-yard field goal to take the score to 6-0.

BYU is now 4-1 against Texas and returns to Provo for its first home game of the season against Houston Thursday at 7 p.m. MDT. The game will be broadcast live on ESPN and the Cougar IMG Sports Network.

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rachelhawks | Posted: 1 Sep 2014 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
rachelhawks

BYU takes on No. 24 Texas Saturday

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PROVO, Utah—After finding success in Connecticut, BYU football travels to Texas for a meeting with the No. 24 Longhorns Saturday at 6:30 p.m. CDT.

Fox Sports 1 will broadcast the game, with kickoff slated for 6:35 p.m. Fans can tune in for live coverage on ESPN Radio and the Cougar IMG Sports Network with Greg Wrubell, which can be found on Sirius XM 143, 1160 AM, 102.7 FM and BYUcougars.com. IMG's radio coverage will begin at 5:30 p.m. CDT.

BYUtv will provide pregame and postgame coverage, with Countdown to Kickoff starting at 5:30 p.m. CDT. Postgame coverage runs for half an hour after the game.

BYU (1-0) at Texas (1-0)
Saturday, Sept. 6, 2014 at 6:35 p.m. CDT
Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium
Austin, Texas

BYU Weekly Notes

Texas Weekly Notes

Series Info

  • BYU last met Texas in Provo Sept. 7, 2013. The Cougars pulled off a 40-21 victory after a two-hour storm delay.
  • The Cougars have recorded 16 wins against Big 12 opponents, the last coming in 2013 against Texas.
  • BYU started three freshmen last week–two on offense (center Tejan Koroma and left tackle Ului Lapuaho) and one on defense (boundary corner Jordan Preator). 
  • Bronco Mendenhall began his 10th season as head coach of the Cougars with the season opener at UConn. Mendenhall has an 83-34 record entering his 10th year. BYU ranks 12th in total wins during his tenure. (Texas has 89 wins to rank sixth.) With the win against UConn, BYU improves to 7-3 in season openers, including 3-2 on the road, in the Mendenhall era. Mendenhall is 6-3 in the second game of the season.
  • Nine Cougars claim Texas as their home state–Trey Dye, Tejan Koroma, Ross Apo, Teu Kautai, Harvey Jackson, Garrett Juergens, Mitchell Juergens, Jordan Leslie and Michael Yeck.

Offense

  • Junior quarterback Taysom Hill scored a career-high five touchdowns against UConn (three passing and two rushing). He finished the game 28-36 with 308 passing yards, his third career game with 300 or more passing yards.  He also set a personal best with a 177.1 pass-efficiency rating. The junior led the team with 97 rushing yards and two scores, earning College Football Performance Awards Quarterback of the Week Honorable Mention and FBS Independent Offensive Player of the Week.
  • Nine different receivers caught a pass against UConn, including Colby Pearson, Jordan Leslie, Mitch Mathews, Terenn Houk, Algernon Brown, Adam Hine, Paul Lasike, Devin Mahina and Mitchell Juergens

Defense

  • Sophomore cornerback Michael Davis recorded a career-high eight tackles and one pass breakup against UConn.
  • Senior linebacker Zac Stout set a new career high (and tied for a team high) with 10 tackles against UConn. His previous high was six against Nevada in 2010. He also added one sack and 1.5 tackles for loss.
  • Junior linebacker Jherremya Leuta-Douyere recorded a personal best with five tackles while also added a forced fumble against UConn. He forced the fumble on UConn’s first play from scrimmage to help set up a BYU touchdown.
  • Linebacker Bronson Kaufusi was named FBS Defensive Player of the Week after registering four tackles against UConn, including two sacks, two tackles for loss, two quarterback hurries and one fumble recovery. It was his first game as a linebacker after switching from the defensive end position.

Quotes

Coach Mendenhall

Challenge of facing Texas after the blowout last year:

“That will be the story all week of what happened last year, but I don’t think from a coach's perspective that will affect the outcome of the game at all. Certainly,  the media and the fans will talk about it, but we have to get prepared and ready to play a football game. I’m looking forward to it. We like the opportunity we have and based on what we saw from the players today, it’s going to be a good week.”

Preparing for the backup QB:

“I thought Ash was a really good player. It is the University of Texas and the thought that they may not have a really good backup isn’t very smart. We’ve seen some of his film from the spring game and some from the bowl game and he’s really fast, athletic and big. The game plan might change a hair for them but it’s week two, so there are lots of changes.”

Impact of Texas losing starting center:

“Probably a bigger impact than the quarterback, you have the QB-center exchange and making calls at the line and handling all that.”

Amount of penalties vs. UConn:

“There was tons of aggression out there and I love that. I would rather have that and try to bring it back a little than the penalties being because of lack of effort. We highlighted the affect of penalties and how they take us the opposite way we want to be going.”

Travel schedule:

“I would like to arrive early again, but it’s difficult with school starting. I probably would with a bye; we obviously did it with our opener. It’s really difficult once you’re in the middle of your season. “

Secondary depth:

Jordan Preator and Michael Davis both played really, really well, and so I’m so confident in our depth and the competition it provides. Now we get Jordan Johnson and Robertson Daniel back, that is day by day and it will be the entire season, we add two more corners to add to our already strong depth.”

Taysom’s confidence after UConn:

“The game looked like it slowed down for him and I was really impressed. To me it looked like he picked up right where he finished from a year ago.”

Making a national statement vs. Texas:

“When we went independent the idea was to play the best teams, on the biggest stages in front of the most people and this is a great chance to do that. So when you play well and win those games it helps your program.”

On the offensive line:

“I liked the way they played, and I’m sure the storylines have been the number of penalties, but they protected Taysom. There were no false starts, so they played in a lot of ways cleaner and they were just nasty and that’s where all the penalties came from.”

On kickoff team:

“I’ll travel whoever can kick it a long ways.”

 

Remington Peck

Amount of snaps for D-line:

“We played way too many plays, and I think the coaches recognized that as well, so it will be nice having Kesni and Marques back this week.”

Experience of teammates playing at Texas in 2011:

“They’re a little bitter. They felt like they should have won the game. Obviously, it’s a cool place to play and a lot of excitement will be there.”

Having respect of Texas:

“I think we have their respect. If we don’t, I don’t know why we wouldn’t. I feel like it’s going to be a different game with a different team this year. Last season they came in a little bit cocky and thinking it was going to be an easy game, and it won’t be like that this year.”

Playing Texas on a national stage:

“Obviously the Longhorns are a team nationally known. If we can pull off the win I think it will definitely help us earn some national respect. It would mean a lot to beat them. It’s something we’ve worked hard for and this is a game we really need to win.”

On suspended players working their way back:

“It was hard for them last week not being there, and they’ve been working hard trying to get back. From what I saw today, it seems like their work has paid off.”

 

Jordan Leslie

On first game as a Cougar:

“It was fun seeing the stands right in the corner of BYU fans, it was exciting. It was fun going out there, and Taysom had a heck of a game.”

What he learned in the first game:

“Seeing all the players in a game setting, it just raised our confidence and helped me to know that we’re going to have a chance to win every game we play.”

Playing football in Texas:

“Oh, Texas football is like no other. We always have the argument, Cali or Texas, and being from Texas I have to say Texas. It’s fun, it’s intense and people demand a lot from you. I know UT fans are circling this game the way they got beat last year.”

Playing against his hometown team:

“When I was in high school I talked to Texas a few times but never got a scholarship, so I always want to play against them. Saturday night is a night to come out and show off and have our team win.”