What is the Texas Longhorns football NIL and roster strategy for the 2027 season?
Direct Answer
The Texas Longhorns enter the 2027 football season with the loudest brand in college football, a deep donor base, and a long list of structural risks that could turn a top-three preseason ranking into a 9-3 disappointment. Steve Sarkisian, entering Year 7 in Austin, has built a program around Arch Manning at quarterback, a Texas One Fund collective reportedly clearing $20M+ annually for football, and an SEC schedule that punishes every margin-of-error mistake the Big 12 used to forgive.
The negative case is real. Arch Manning still has a limited Power Conference starting sample, Sarkisian has flirted with NFL openings every offseason since the 2024 CFP semifinal run, the House v. NCAA settlement compresses the financial moat Texas built when collective dollars were unregulated, and Texas A&M plus Oklahoma have closed the in-state recruiting gap.
Chris Del Conte and the donor board have one of the best on-paper hands in the sport for 2027 and a non-trivial chance they still misplay it.
1. The Arch Manning Question Has Not Been Answered
Arch Manning, a redshirt junior heading into his third season as the named starter, came to Austin with the heaviest expectation any quarterback recruit has carried since Andrew Luck. His 2025 starting line was uneven. The Florida State game in October, when Quinn Ewers was already in the NFL, exposed real concerns about mid-rep processing under SEC pressure.
Manning posted top-15 efficiency numbers, but the eye-test gap between his ceiling reps and his average reps was wider than Texas wants to admit publicly. Going into 2027, the negative case has three legs.
- Sample size is still thin. Manning will enter the season with roughly 22 to 25 career starts, almost all against an SEC schedule that punishes inexperienced quarterbacks more than any league in the country.
- The room behind him is unproven. Backup reps in 2025 and 2026 went to a rotation of mid-three-star development arms after the staff lost a portable-IP transfer to Ole Miss in the 2026 portal window.
- The NIL ceiling is partly priced. Manning's reported low-seven-figure annual NIL number is already baked into Texas One Fund cash flow, which means a step-back season hurts the collective's renewal narrative with mid-tier donors.
If Manning takes the leap and finishes top-five in Heisman voting, every other risk on this page softens. If he plateaus, the rest of the negative case compounds quickly.
2. Sarkisian, Del Conte, And The NFL Pull
Steve Sarkisian's NFL flirtation is the open secret of the Texas program. He interviewed for at least two head coaching openings in the 2025 and 2026 cycles by widely circulated reporting. Athletic director Chris Del Conte has paid Sarkisian into the top three of the coaching salary table and re-papered his contract with NFL-style buyout language, but money is no longer the lever it was five years ago because the Texas job is no longer obviously the better job financially.
For 2027 specifically, the risk is not that Sarkisian leaves in-season — it's that the staff around him gets poached in waves. Coordinator turnover after the 2025 season already cost Texas a respected offensive line coach to Notre Dame and a defensive backs coach to the Chargers. Every offseason that ends with Sarkisian still in Austin is also an offseason where his lieutenants get one more round of NFL phone calls.
3. The Texas One Fund Opacity Problem
The Texas One Fund, the umbrella football-focused collective, has been one of the most effective NIL operations in the sport since 2023. It is also one of the most opaque public-facing collectives in the SEC, with limited donor-level transparency relative to peers like Tennessee's Spyre Sports or Georgia's Classic City Collective.
That worked in the pre-settlement era when collectives competed on speed and discretion. In the post-House v. NCAA settlement environment, where revenue sharing is on-book and clearinghouse review applies to NIL deals above the disclosure threshold, opacity stops being a competitive advantage and starts being an audit risk.
Three specific concerns sit on the 2027 horizon.
- Donor concentration. Public reporting suggests the top 25 Texas donors fund a disproportionate share of football collective cash. If one or two of those donors pull back during an oil price downturn, the collective absorbs a real hit.
- Clearinghouse exposure. Deals routed through the collective that don't survive the new NIL Go review process could be retroactively voided, which creates roster instability the staff has not had to manage before.
- Renewal fatigue. Donors who wrote checks in 2023 and 2024 to "compete with A&M" are now being asked to write the same checks while the financial gap narrows. The pitch is harder.
4. SEC Schedule Shock And The Post-CFP Regression Curse
The 2027 SEC schedule, by current rotation models, lines Texas up with three likely top-ten opponents on the road and a closing stretch that includes A&M and a probable cross-division game. The Big 12 version of Texas could survive two losses and still make the playoff. The SEC version of Texas at 9-3 is a real possibility that ends the season outside the top 12. Historical CFP semifinal teams have a documented regression pattern in Year N+2 — coaching staff churn, NFL departures from the front seven, and the loss of fifth-year leadership all hit at once.
Texas is now squarely in that window.
Austin itself, despite the brand mythology, is also no longer the obvious recruiting advantage it was a decade ago. A&M's College Station NIL machine, Oklahoma's renewed in-state push under Brent Venables, and Houston's emergence as a Big 12 destination have all chipped at the talent funnel that used to land in Austin by default.
FAQ
Q: Is Arch Manning actually a bust risk? A: Bust is too strong, but the negative scenario where he is a good-not-great SEC starter with a second-round NFL projection is realistic enough that Texas cannot plan its 2027 collective burn rate as if he is locked in for Heisman contention.
Q: How much does the House settlement actually hurt Texas? A: It compresses the gap. Texas was outspending most SEC programs at the football collective level by a real margin. Revenue sharing caps and clearinghouse review pull every program toward a tighter band, and Texas loses more of its edge than Alabama or Georgia do.
Q: Will Sarkisian leave for the NFL before 2027? A: Probably not given the buyout structure, but the 2026-27 NFL cycle is a real risk window. Del Conte's succession planning is the underdiscussed Texas story.
Q: What is the realistic 2027 win total? A: 9 to 10 wins is the median outcome. The 11-1 ceiling requires Manning to leap. The 8-4 floor requires only that two of the four risks on this page bite.
Sources
- ESPN — Texas Longhorns program reporting and CFP coverage archive
- The Athletic — Steve Sarkisian contract and NFL interest reporting
- On3 — Texas One Fund collective valuation and roster spend estimates
- Yahoo Sports — Arch Manning starting season analysis and SEC efficiency metrics
- Austin American-Statesman — Chris Del Conte and Texas athletic department reporting
- CBS Sports — SEC 2027 schedule rotation modeling
- House v. NCAA settlement final terms — Court filings and NCAA guidance documents
- 247Sports — Texas recruiting class composition and in-state competition trend data