3 things I know, 3 things I think I know: Coaching changes, transfers and transition

Baylor football has to accomplish something with its search, the Texas Longhorns have pushed their chips into the 2020 pot and D'Eriq King's departure complicates Houston.

Every week, college football insider Shehan Jeyarajah will come to you with a roundup of everything he thinks – and things he thinks he thinks right now – about college football in Texas this week. 

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Three Things I Know

1. Baylor needs a splash

We’re officially coming up on a week since Matt Rhule left Baylor for the Carolina Panthers job. Athletic director Mack Rhoades was aware that Rhule’s departure was a possibility, but the Bears are in the midst of an almost silent process. 

The longer this wears on, the less likely that Baylor goes with an internal candidate. Likely losing defensive coordinator Phil Snow and linebackers coach Mike Siravo makes promoting from within more difficult. However, all options remain on the table. 

Regardless of what direction Baylor goes, Rhoades needs to draw attention. Baylor is in a tenuous position now heading into its fourth coach in six years. The next guy has to be someone who can continue to sell Baylor as a top destination and a place that can win at the highest levels. Matt Rhule proved it could be done – the next hire has to cement it. 

2. Houston’s 2020 upside is gone

When D’Eriq King opted to redshirt after four games, there was a risk that he could leave. Yesterday during the national title game, that came to fruition as King announced that he was entering the transfer portal. 

To be clear, entering the transfer portal simply means that schools can contact him. It’s not a commitment by any means. But still, it’s hard to see him returning to campus. 

Suddenly, King’s redshirt looks less like a genius Holgorsen maneuver and more like the best player in a program being dissatisfied. There’s still upside at Houston in 2020 with a host of transfer players eligible, but losing King and turning the program over to Clayton Tune full time makes for an underwhelming situation. 

3. Tarleton will have a tough entrance to Division-I

Transitioning levels of college football is tremendously difficult, as many programs from across the state can attest. Tarleton is better prepared than most to do it, but its first schedule proves that the Texans will have at least a few “welcome to the big time” moments. 

The Texans open against Sam Houston State and elite head coach K.C. Keeler. No. 8 Kennesaw State is on the schedule later in the year, along with perennial title contender South Dakota State. 

There are a handful of Division-II teams on the schedule that should provide some wins, but Tarleton won’t even be eligible to compete in postseason play for four seasons. It should pay off in the end, but the transition will still be brutal for Tarleton for the next several years. 

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