Arch Manning injury details emerge after Texas QB’s offseason surgery

Texas will keep it simple with quarterback Arch Manning this spring as sixth-year coach Steve Sarkisian and the Longhorns gear up for a pivotal 2026 season as one of college football’s national championship frontrunners. 

Manning, a redshirt junior sitting near the top of the preseason Heisman list, will be limited to start after offseason foot surgery as Texas opens spring drills Monday.

In a new interview with Chip Brown of Horns247, Cooper Manning said his son suffered the foot injury in 2024 — when Arch was a backup to Quinn Ewers and saw action as a run threat and spot starter. Cooper said Arch’s ailment worsened during the Longhorns’ 17-7 win at Texas A&M in November during a first-quarter touchdown run.

Facing a 4th-and-2 situation, the quarterback planted near the sideline to maintain his balance and stay in play en route to the end zone for the game’s first points. That foot pain persisted throughout the 2025 season as QB1, but Manning didn’t miss time.

“The injury was something that had been bothering him all year,” Cooper Manning told Chip Brown of Horns247 this week. “He’d been doing therapy for it, and I think he kind of aggravated it in the Texas A&M game the year before on that (15-yard) touchdown run he had (in 2024). So, he’d been doing therapy on it all year, and finally just said, ‘Look, I want to go ahead and just get this thing fixed and not have to worry about it anymore.’

“So he feels good. He’s out of the boot, walking, doing some throwing, and excited to get back to full speed. When that is, I’m not sure. He’s just following the doctor’s orders. But he’s getting in the groove, and his exposure to spring ball will only increase as we get more toward the spring game (on April 18).”

Here’s the play where Manning…

..

[ad_2]

Read More