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    Nathan Karseno
    Nathan Karseno
    Nov 15, 2025, 17:30
    Updated at: Nov 15, 2025, 22:08

    Texas eyes revenge, seeking a crucial upset as Georgia surges toward another playoff berth in this explosive top-10 SEC clash.

    The No. 10 Texas Longhorns face the No. 5 Georgia Bulldogs at Sanford Stadium on Saturday night as two of the SEC's best clash in a top-10 matchup - just the second one we've seen across college football in the past month.

    Both teams come in riding some momentum, as Texas is winners of its last four games and Georgia has won five straight and looks to power toward yet another College Football Playoff berth.

    The Horns are riding high after an upset win against No. 9 Vanderbilt in a game where they were in full control early, but narrowly escaped after a fierce Commodore comeback.

    It was smooth sailing for the Dawgs as they defeated Mississippi State by 20 points last time out.

    Here at LonghornsRoundtable, we get you everything you need to know about this rematch of last year's SEC title game.

    How to Watch

    Who: Texas (7-2, 4-1 SEC) vs. Georgia (8-1, 6-1)

    Where: Sanford Stadium, Athens, Georgia

    Date: Saturday November 15, 2025

    Kickoff: 6:30 p.m. CST / 7:30 p.m. EST

    TV Channel: ABC

    Streaming: Fubo TV

    Announcers: Chris Fowler & Kirk Herbstreit

    Betting Odds

    Courtesy of DraftKings

    Moneyline: Georgia (-225), Texas (+185)

    Spread: Georgia -6 (-105)

    Total: 48.5

    - Georgia has won 17 of their last 20 games as the favorite

    - Georgia is 4-1 ATS in their last five games as the favorite

    - Texas is 2-6-1 ATS this season

    Injury Update

    The Longhorns will return some much-needed help in the secondary as defensive backs Michael Taaffe and Jelani McDonald are active after missing the last few games.

    Texas has no players listed on the SEC Student-Athlete Availability Report ahead of this matchup with Georgia.

    Sark Sounds Off

    Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian recently made headlines by calling how opposing teams formulate their schedule in the SEC.

    "I'm not comfortable. I don't think there's enough continuity from the scheduling standpoint in the SEC," Sarkisian said. "I think there are some distinct advantages that some teams have."

    "They play non-conference games the second-to-last game of the season, and we're playing all of ours in the front end," the coach added. 

    Next week around the conference, Georgia hosts Charlotte, No. 3 Texas A&M hosts Samford and No. 4 Alabama hosts East Illinois. Meanwhile,  Texas will play against new permanent conference rival Arkansas.

    Read more about Sark's frustrations here.

    Road to CFP

    If Texas were to fall on Saturday in Athens, there may still be an avenue in which making the the SEC title game and College Football Playoff is a reality - but they'll need to wipe the floor with Arkansas and outlast their hated rival Aggies in Austin to close out the season.

    Click here for an inside look at every combination of the Longhorns' final three games and what they may mean for postseason contention.