FORT WORTH — On Friday, former Texas quarterback Colt McCoy explained his thoughts on the upcoming Longhorns season, the Dallas Cowboys, how NIL is changing college football and why he moved the event to Fort Worth.
“When I retired from the NFL last year, we settled here in Fort Worth,” he said at the 15th annual Colt McCoy Performance Camp at All Saints Episcopal School. “It’s been awesome planting our flag here. My family’s loved it. It’s been a really good move for us. Certainly miss Austin, but felt like since I was here, I wanted to go ahead and keep my football camp going, and so we’re having it here in Fort Worth. It’s really a chance for me to pour into some kids in the community, bring parents and families out here, and really just have two days of instruction, of teaching, of fun.”
McCoy’s alma mater, Texas, is a favorite to win the upcoming national championship according to oddsmakers, and despite the Longhorns’ recent success, the school hasn’t been to a national championship game since 2009 when McCoy was still starring in Austin.
Arch Manning will be behind center for the Longhorns this season, and McCoy, who’s known the quarterback since he was 3 years old, said it was the Louisiana native’s time.
“I think Arch is in a position to really go out there and play great. He’s obviously very talented. He’s a great kid,” said McCoy. “It’s nice that he got a few cracks at it last year, but he’s certainly waited his time. He’s been patient, and he’s paid his dues. I know he’s really excited to get out there.”
McCoy said he believed in the Longhorns, but acknowledged all the new faces on the team and the difficult schedule facing Texas.
“Lots of high expectations, as usual, last two years been in the college football playoff, but I think this is a new team. This is a lot of inexperience, a lot of really awesome players, but kind of first time getting out there,” said McCoy. “I’m excited to watch [head coach Steve Sarkisian] is an unbelievable coach. I know he’ll have him ready to go, think everybody’s excited to watch Arch Manning, but you got five new offensive linemen in front of him that hadn’t played a whole lot, right? You got a whole new secondary. There’s a lot of really talented players that don’t have a ton of experience that are going to have to kind of figure it out quick this year. Ohio State week one on the road, you go to Florida, you go to Georgia, play Oklahoma in the Cotton Bowl. I mean, it’s not an easy schedule. So they’re going to have their hands full. But I’m betting on them. I’m really excited to watch them play.”
One of the biggest changes from McCoy’s time in Austin has been the addition of NIL or name, image and likeness, which has drastically altered the college football landscape even more so with the most recent changes, the introduction of a salary cap for schools estimated at around $20.5 million.
McCoy acknowledged the benefits of NIL but said, as a fan of the sport, he wanted college football’s traditions to be a priority.
“I don’t think anybody has an answer on how college football is going to look in the next year, two years, three years, five years, right? But I know there’s a lot of smart people trying to figure it out and keep the sanctity of college football there. That’s what we all want. We want rivalries. We want good conferences, good competition. I think the NIL and the [revenue] sharing and the antitrust laws that are trying to be put in play, I think all that is a step in the right direction and for me, personally, I’m just a fan. I’m glad that the players can capitalize on their name, image and likeness. But at the same time, I want there to be the joy, the community and the sanctity of college football, I want to keep that alive,” said McCoy.
McCoy also spoke highly of former Longhorn and Dallas Cowboys running back Jaydon Blue, who he said was a good fit for the franchise.
“He’s a dynamic sort of out of the backfield, can run, can catch, can make people miss. He’s fast. He’s got a lot of what you want from a kind of a third-down back in the NFL, and those guys are very valuable. And I think Jaden blue can turn into that in the NFL, and he’s got a great quarterback in Dak [Prescott] and a great team,” said McCoy. “So I think he’s, he’s in a position to really make an impact early.”
Proceeds from HIS CAMP camp will benefit Cooks Children’s, which McCoy said was his way of giving back to the community.
©2025 Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Visit star-telegram.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.