Latest news with #MichaelTaaffe
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Longhorns safety Michael Taaffe shares his story with Texas Exes in Tyler
TYLER, Texas (KETK) — One of the best stories in college football has been Texas Longhorn safety Michael Taafe, who went from walk-on to one of the leaders on the Texas defense. Michael Taaffe honors those who died at Camp Mystic with special tie during SEC Media Days On Saturday, he was in East Texas, getting another chance to share his journey. It was all part of the annual Texas Exes Tyler-Smith County Chapter scholarship dinner, hosted at the Hollytree Country Club. This event helps raise money for East Texas students. Every year, they invite a special guest speaker, but Taaffe is the first ever current football player to take part in this ceremony. Taafe, who played high school ball for Austin Westlake, committed to Rice in 2020, but decided to go to U-T when they offered him a walk-on spot on the 40 acres. He excelled in his red-shirt freshman season and earned a scholarship before the Alamo Bowl. Since then, he has been an integral piece in bringing the Longhorns program back to prominence, and an example of what can be accomplished when you take a chance on yourself. He was also grateful for this opportunity and excited to be here in the pineywoods. Taaffe and the Longhorns will open the 2025 season with a rematch against last year's national champions, as Texas travels to Columbus, Ohio, to take on the Ohio State Buckeyes. OSU knocked Texas out of the college football playoff in the semifinal round last year. These two will kick the season off at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Aug. 30, and you can see all the action on FOX51. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


USA Today
6 days ago
- Sport
- USA Today
Why one Texas player called Kirby Smart a maniac
Texas Longhorns senior safety Michael Taaffe was one of three Texas players in Atlanta for the 2025 SEC media days. Taaffe along with the rest of Texas is confident ahead of the 2025 college football season. The Longhorns have a lot to be confident about. Texas is returning a ton of talent and advanced to the semifinals of the College Football Playoff last season before falling to the eventual national champion Ohio State Buckeyes. Texas did miss out on one of their goals, to win the SEC championship, last season because of the Georgia Bulldogs. Georgia beat Texas in Austin in a dominant defensive performance for the Bulldogs and then went on to topple Texas in overtime in the SEC championship. Taaffe and Texas will try to beat Georgia again in 2025, but this time it will be on the road. At SEC media days, Taaffe was asked what will be the difference this year to give Texas a huge SEC win. "Coach (Kirby) Smart is one of the most competitive coaches I have ever been against in my life," said Taaffe. "Like, physically hearing him on the sideline when I'm playing defense. I'm like who is this maniac?" "And it is their head coach trying to, you know, get a call or get something in and I think the team is embodied by the head coach. And he does a great job of embodying what their team is all about and to be honest, I think they out-physicaled us in that first game, so we gotta come with a physical nature and a sense of pride and knowing that if we want to get to where we want to go in December, then we gotta beat those guys," Taaffe said. Georgia and Texas will meet in Sanford Stadium on Saturday, Nov. 15. The Georgia-Texas game will be UGA's final SEC game of the regular season and it could be a preview of the 2025 SEC championship. Georgia and Texas' rivalry grew significantly on the same day Georgia and Texas took the stage at SEC media days. Texas beat out Georgia for five-star linebacker Tyler Atkinson and then flipped five-star Georgia defensive line commitment James Johnson. The Dawgs and Longhorns have a budding rivalry and are both vying to be the best team in the SEC.
Yahoo
15-07-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Texas Longhorns player honors flood victims at SEC Media Days
Texas senior defensive back Michael Taaffe made a fashion statement during his appearance at SEC Media Days Tuesday in Atlanta. However, it wasn't for show or to make an impression for the cameras and the various media members in attendance. Taaffe did it to honor the victims of a recent national tragedy close to home. Advertisement Taaffe wore a necktie that was emblazoned with the initials of 27 people who passed away during a series of flash floods earlier this month at Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian summer camp in Hunt, located in the Texas Hill Country. At the top of the list of initials on Taaffe's tie was the initials of Dick Eastland, the executive director of Camp Mystic, who passed away in the flood waters while attempting to rescue several of the campers. 'I want to shed light on what's going on in Texas to the SEC, to everybody around the country,' Taaffe said in an interview with Austin TV station KXAN. 'At the end of the day, football is important and it brings us joy, but this is more than football. Advertisement 'I wanted to show how important this is to us. We've been praying continuously for those families and the community, and I want to help them any way I can.' Taaffe, a native of Austin who played at Westlake High School, took part last week in a fundraiser at an Austin restaurant where he signed autographs and took photos with fans. He remarked, in another interview with KXAN, that he wanted to do his part to help those in need. 'It's super cool to see everybody here,' said Taaffe at the time. 'It brings tears of joy because it's so cool to see so many people show up. 'It's not about me. It's about the kids who were affected by this. The families.' Advertisement Taaffe continued his part to help those affected by the floods with his tie at SEC Media Days as one of the Longhorn players invited to the session. Texas, coming off back-to-back College Football Playoff appearances, begins what should be another highly anticipated season on Aug. 30 at Ohio State, a rematch of the Buckeyes' CFP semifinal win against the Longhorns in the Cotton Bowl. MORE SPORTS NEWS SEC Media Days: Arch Manning ready for role as college football's top celebrity QB in 2025 Texas coach introduced at SEC Media Days with playing of rival school's fight song What Auburn and former Oklahoma QB Jackson Arnold said about his return to Oklahoma Advertisement Former SEC head coach and offensive guru finds new role with Louisiana college program Nation's longest actively tenured athletic director at one school to announce his retirement Successful Oklahoma high school football coach receives honor from his college alma mater Bixby (Oklahoma) standout continues family tradition with commitment to Oklahoma State Former Baylor, BYU quarterback lands coaching position at Arkansas high school Instant replay approved for Missouri high school football championship games Former Oklahoma QB commit now commits to Florida State Oklahoma high school football defensive standout commits to New Mexico Advertisement Top Texas '26 tight end prospect decides to stay close to home, commits to TCU Texas Tech football lands commitment from East Texas 4-star 2026 cornerback Standout tailback from East Texas decides to stay in-state after making college commitment ESPN's "SportsCenter" program to be on location at Texas high school football scrimmage Who made the covers of popular Texas football preseason magazine? Texas UIL football championship games to be broadcast for free via a new broadcast agreement


USA Today
15-07-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
Everything Texas Longhorns safety Michael Taaffe had to say at SEC Media Days
The rise from walk-on to All-American makes Texas safety Michael Taaffe a special player. His remarkable story has captivated fans and media members across the country. Texas coach Steve Sarkisian called Taaffe's journey, "Probably the coolest story on our team right now is Michael Taaffe." Taaffe's return to the 40 Acres for his senior year was a huge boon for the Texas defense. Taaffe was one of the three players Texas took to SEC Media Days. Here is the transcript from Taaffe's question and answer period at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta, thanks to the Southeastern Conference media department: Q. What's the biggest challenge for the Texas secondary this year, and what are the differences you noticed between the two leagues? MICHAEL TAAFFE: The first answer, how are we going to handle success? So we obviously had a lot of success. We had the Thorpe Award winner in our back end. We had a second-round draft pick in our back end. And we had a couple of guys returning. So, how are we going to handle success? And are we going to be complacent with that success or are we going to raise the bar and raise the standard? What I'm always trying to do is I'm trying to raise the standard and understand that there's a bar and we've got to reset that every single year to keep chasing greatness because at the end of the day, if you want your name to be remembered, you've got to keep going and keep doing more. The leagues, the second question is it's different, right? It's a lot different. There's different speeds. There's different atmospheres. There's different weather. But I know in the SEC, what I can tell you about the SEC is you have to be physically prepared every single game. Your body has to be prepared every single game. There's no game where you can take it lightly. Q. Sark has said a few times this offseason how Arch has taken on more leadership responsibilities. He's taken that role by the horns, so to speak. How have you seen that? Is there an example where you came away maybe impressed of where he's making those strides? MICHAEL TAAFFE: Arch is obviously one of my best friends. I was his host when he was a recruit here on his OV. Ever since then, we hit it off. I think the one thing that I respected about him is he would look like an average Joe if you were walking across the halls, besides that he looked exactly like his uncles and his granddad. But he's such a down-to-earth guy. How he leads is he gets the respect of the locker room. It's not always the rah rah guy. You can be a leader so many different ways. But how he leads is he makes a personal relationship with every guy in the locker room and tries to get respect from them. That's leading by example. That's leading with intention by sitting with different people at lunch. That's going out of his way to show people, hey, it's nice and it's good to go thank people for holding the doors or thank people for cleaning up our locker room. So he leads by example, and he tries to set a standard for the guys, which is really cool. Q. What's the most common question you get about him? I'm sure you get a ton of them. MICHAEL TAAFFE: That's a great question. The most common question I get about Arch is -- oh, man, that's a good question. It's usually more generic, like, how is Arch looking? Is Arch the real deal? That's probably the biggest question I get: Is Arch Manning the real deal? My answer to that always is, just let his film do all the talking. Q. What's the most complicated pass offense you played against within those two conferences and then through your career, because you were in the playoffs last year against the eventual national champion Ohio State? MICHAEL TAAFFE: Every offense that I've gone against has given me some type of trouble, some type of misdirection, some type of scheme. That's a respect to our defense because they do stuff on film that's different than what they've shown. So I think that's a respect to our defense because we give them something that they've clearly never seen. But probably the hardest offense that I've gone against is Washington. When Michael Penix was there, Rome Odunze was there, Ja'Lynn Polk was there -- Kalen DeBoer, Coach DeBoer was the head coach there. That was probably the game that was toughest for me. Q. What did playing in the A&M-Texas game mean for you last year? And where did that interception you had in that game rank among your favorite football moments? MICHAEL TAAFFE: Top moment, hands down. I was telling my friends the other month, I think that was the coolest moment of my life. It's up there for moments of life. But I think it's so important to know that we had 13 years of no Texas-versus-Texas A&M rivalry. And then all of a sudden we get it back, and it's in College Station, it's at Kyle Field. And people argue that that's the best atmosphere in all of college football. To believe that it wasn't rockin' you would be a fool, because that place was -- I saw five fields when they were running out of the tunnel. It was shaking. It was loud. It was crazy. And it's so good for the great state of Texas, so good for college football, because in Austin there's no pro team. We are the pro team. The Texas Longhorns are the professional team. And in College Station, obviously the same. It's a rich tradition of just Texas fans going back and forth, and it's so fun for us as competitors. Q. Piggybacking off of that, you said "the best moment of your life," how much are you looking forward to this year that game being in Austin? MICHAEL TAAFFE: For sure, because I know that they got a taste of being able to scream for their fans. So the proud and few, the brave Longhorns that went to that stadium, I don't know how they did it. But I'm happy for them that they get to get a sea of burnt orange this next time that we go around. It's such a fun game. It brings out so much competitive nature out of you, brings out so much rich tradition and history and rivalry. That's what college football is all about, the rivalry games like Texas versus Texas A&M. And Marcel Reed, heck of a player. The guy they've got on offense, heck of a player, I'm excited. Q. Do you mind explaining a little bit about your tie? MICHAEL TAAFFE: For sure. My tie, the Texas floods happened this past week. And Camp Mystic is a girls church camp that was impacted pretty seriously. So all these initials are all the victims at Camp Mystic that lost their lives in the tragic flooding this past weekend. It's all the daughters, the 8-year-old girls that passed away in the cabins and their two counselors who gave their lives being heroes trying to save those daughters and those girls, and then the camp director who went back into the floods to try to save those girls' lives. I wanted to remember those victims because they deserve a light like this. What they did, they should be heroes, they should be remembered. Q. You mentioned your relationship with Arch and a lot has been made about your friendship with Cade, growing up in high school and stuff. Those are two of the top Heisman favorites going into the season. I'm not asking you to make a pick, if you had a vote, but what do you make about their cases for that award this year? What are they going to have to do to maybe put one over the top of the other? MICHAEL TAAFFE: Obviously this quarterback class is so talented this year. All the quarterbacks in the SEC are really talented alone, but bringing in guys like Klub, Cade Klubnik, makes this roster, this class of quarterbacks so unique, so competitive, a lot of juice. But the similarities that Arch and Cade have is they know how to take over a team. And they know that the team embodies their personality. So both of them walk on the field, it's, like, all right, it's game time, every time they step on the field. That's why I respect both of those guys because they have that sense of competitiveness that's, like, all right, nobody can stop me. It's really inspiring. Q. You played against Ohio State last year and Jeremiah Smith. What were your impressions of him, and how does he rank, maybe, in the athletes you've competed against? MICHAEL TAAFFE: I can't even rank him yet because I've got to play him again. But he, man, what he does on that football field, it doesn't seem like a real human's doing that, because he's just so unique. He's inspirational in all the talent, and he still is only 19 years old. So it's going to be really fun going against him because he's a freak of nature. I've watched a lot of his routes, almost all of them, dang near, from last year, and seeing how he gets in and out of breaks, seeing how he runs full speed, seeing how he stacks DBs, and obviously the best thing about him, one of his attributes, is going up and getting the football. You can put three DBs on him, but if you get it up in the air, he's going to go get it, which is really cool. Q. When did you know Colin Simmons was going to be special, and what is one eye-popping moment for you, you're kind of like, wow? MICHAEL TAAFFE: The second that he stepped on campus, I knew Colin Simmons would be the guy. He's one of the guys coming in that he's a three-year-and-out, first-round type of guy. I don't want to put too much pressure on him, but I know that's the expectation for himself. One of the plays, he wears this long towel in practice, it's like a shower towel. I'm like, what is this guy doing? All of a sudden he runs up with the 1s, one of the first weeks he's out here, and said, hut. A second later, he's getting back to the quarterback and he's giving our left and right tackles a heck of a day. It's definitely easier to play DB playing man coverage when you've got him going after the quarterback. It shocked my eye. It was like, is it that sweaty outside right now. Like, why is he wearing that towel? But then I watched him and he got after the quarterback. I was like, you can do whatever you want as long as you're getting to the quarterback like that.
Yahoo
29-06-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Four Texas Players Emerging as Leaders for 2025 Season
Four Texas Players Emerging as Leaders for 2025 Season originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Texas lost several of the teams top leaders to the 2025 NFL Draft this offseason. Kelvin Banks Jr., Jahdae Barron, Quinn Ewers and Gunnar Helm were just some of the key leaders from last season that are now in the NFL. Advertisement Fortunately head coach Steve Sarkisian has developed an incredible culture and many others players are ready to step into those shoes. According to Rivals' Anwar Richardson, four particular players have already claimed that role for the 2025 season. Quarterback Arch Manning, left tackle Trevor Goosby, linebacker Anthony Hill Jr., and safety Michael Taaffe are the four players primed to lead Texas on and off the field this year. Taaffe was the sure-fire pick as a captain this season, but the other three names are certainly encouraging. The starting quarterback on any team typically always needs to display a leadership role so its a great sign Manning, although fairly inexperienced, has stepped into that role nicely and his teammates respect him enough to do so. Goosby appears to be taking the same approach Banks did, and Hill is the top linebacker in college football. Advertisement Texas' defensive unit is expected to be the best in the country this season and Taaffe, Hill, Colin Simmons, Trey Moore and a few others are the reason why. The fact that many of Texas' top playmakers are also role models off the field is a key reason Texas is finding success recently. The Longhorns will open the season against Ohio State in Columbus on Aug. 30 at 11 a.m. CT. Related: Steve Sarkisian Delivers Confident Message on Season Opener at Ohio State This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 29, 2025, where it first appeared.