Texas Longhorns 41, Michigan Wolverines 27

The Longhorns delivered a dominant second half to beat the Wolverines and double the betting line in the Cheez-It Citrus Bowl. Arch Manning had a spectacular game, becoming the first player in Citrus Bowl history (80 years) to run and to pass for over 150 yards. For all who say that these bowl games don’t matter, go watch the post-game videos and see the joy and celebration from the Longhorns. It mattered to them. Texas finishes the 2025 season with 10 wins.
Those who say that the bowl games don’t matter are correct in this sense. They do not matter in terms of the regular season ranking or who is going to be an All-American or who will win the Heisman Trophy or some other award. And I concede that in many ways a lot of bowls matter much less these days because of all the kids who opt out of playing, whether it be for the NFL or with the intention of entering the transfer portal.
But where the bowl games do matter is this. It matters to the kids who choose to play. It matters to these young men who get a chance to play in a football game with their teammates, many for the last time. For every young man who plays his heart out in a college football ball game, win or lose, it matters. And if it matters to him, and you’re a fan of that team, then the game should matter to you. With all the issues plaguing college football, we should be celebrating the bowl games for those players who choose to play, who choose to compete, and who choose to say, “this game matters”. The Citrus Bowl mattered to the Texas Longhorns. And it mattered to me.
It sure as hell mattered to Arch Manning. Mattered enough for him to have an epic, historic day. Per one source, he is the first FBS quarterback in over thirty years to have over 200 yards passing (221), over 150 yards rushing (155), multiple passing (2) and rushing (2) touchdowns, average over 15 yards per carry (17.2), no sacks, and no turnovers in a game. This was against the No. 21 defense in the country, allowing just 101.7 yards per game rushing and 210.6 yards per game passing. No. 16 scoring defense, allowing 18.7 points per game, and Arch Manning scored 24. (For those of you calling BS, VY was sacked in the 2005 Okie State game, and while he rushed for 267 yards, he averaged 12.7 yards per carry. But, basically Arch did to Michigan what Vince Young did to the Okie Aggies. Good company.)
Arch Manning’s game QBR was 99.1. Southern Cal’s Jayden Maiava, who has the highest season QBR for 90.0, had a season best game QBR or 96.5. Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza, second nationally with a season QBR of 89.5, had a best game QBR of 97.4.
Quinn Ewers
Before looking at the great win, make sure you watch this. I know something is really good when over a dozen people send me a clip or post about something (and thanks to everyone who did).
https://x.com/FinsXtra/status/2006894939175539014
Quinn talks about relationships and legacy and what matters. Arch Manning is the only 5 star quarterback from the 2023 and 2024 classes to not leave his school.
The Citrus Bowl
Here are some highlight reels. My game recap follows, and then my thoughts on the game are below.
From ESPN, a little over 18 minutes
Arch Manning Highlights, under 7 minutes
Every Play, from Texas Clips – about an hour:
Game Recap
Texas got the ball first, and after a couple of short passes that got nowhere, Arch dropped back and hit Ryan Wingo over the middle on third and 10 for a 22 yard gain to midfield. Two plays later, we got to see Christian Clark’s first carry, and he busted it right for a 22 yard gain to the Michigan 31. A 9 yard pass to Jack Endries got Texas to the Wolverine 22, and after Clark lost a few, Texas settled for a 43 yard Mason Shipley field goal. 3-0 Texas.
Michigan moved the ball on a couple of good Bryce Underwood passes, but after a false start penalty, nice defense on a screen pass for a 3 yard loss, Colin Simmons sacked Underwood on third and 18. Michigan punted, and on the next Texas possession, Manning and the Horns did nothing (although I did like the third down hand off play to Nick Townsend – we just completely failed to block). Three and out.
Michigan moved the ball on their next possession, initially on two very good runs by Kuzdzal (8 and 11 yards), but the big play for Michigan was the Texas facemask penalty by Littleton which turned a third down stop into a 17 yard play for a first down. A couple of plays later, a nice 8 yard sack by Bo Barnes pushed Michigan back to midfield. But Michigan hit a 53 yard field goal to tie the game. 3-3
On the ensuing kickoff, Ryan Niblett fumbled for the first time and Michigan got the ball on the Texas 23. On third and 6 Underwood escaped pressure and managed to get the ball to Bell falling out of the endzone. After a long review, Bell’s toenail was in the endzone long enough for it to be a Wolverine touchdown. 10-3 Michigan
Manning went to work. Passes to Townsend and No. 13. Clark had two good runs up the middle, and Texas was at midfield. After No. 13 dropped a nice long pass, Manning sent to Mosley on a screen that Mosley turned into a 20 yard gain to the Michigan 31. Clark barely got a yard, Arch had to scramble for 3, and on third and 6 Michigan was offsides. Clark was stuffed, and so on fourth and 1, a cool play where Endries shifted under center, and the ball was snapped between his legs to Arch in the shotgun. Arch went left fast and 16 yards later Arch had us first and goal at the 3 yard line. Clark punched it in. 10-10 game 77 seconds into the second quarter. 75 yards in 11 plays. Good drive.
The Wolverines responded with a 69 yard touchdown drive. Underwood ran for 11 yards on the first play. On third and 7, Underwood had all day to find a receiver for a first down. Underwood used his legs for a 9 yard gain and then a big 33 yard run to the Texas 4 yard line. Then he hit Marsh for the score. 17-10 Michigan.
Arch and the offense went back to work. Good work, like a 5 yard pass to Mosley and a 9 yard Clark run. Bad work like DJ Campbell’s holding penalty that turned a 20 yard Manning run into a 10 yard loss. On first and 20, Manning and Mosley connected again for 15. An incompletion and a delay of game penalty had Texas behind the chains again, third and 10 from Texas 45. No worries. Arch Manning, got it to Wingo for a 26 yard completion. A Michigan facemask got Texas to the Wolverine 17 yard line, and Manning found a wide open Jack Endries in the middle of the endzone. Big Jack made a good catch and did a great job of holding on after a big hit. 17-17.
Texas got a three and out, and Niblett got a nice return, backed up a bit by a blindside block penalty on Kobe Black. Manning had another nice pass to Mosley, but the Horns couldn’t do much else. We did have a play with 3 flags, a holding on Texas and offsetting unsportsmanlike conduct. After the punt, Michigan was held (a great play by Simmons on one of the running plays). Texas got the ball back at the 45 yard line, and Christian Clark got us started with a 10 yard run and then a 13 yard run to the Michigan 45. Arch picked up a first down to the 21 with his legs. But after a couple of incompletions, on third down with a minute left, the ball was snapped while Arch and Sark were “talking” and Arch wasn’t looking. Lost 22 yards and the opportunity for points. Underwood only had a minute, but he did get the Wolverines into field goal range. But they missed the 45 yard field goal.
Very entertaining first half
Michigan opened the half with a great 43 yard return of the kick-off (not the first one of the day), and they converted a fourth and 1 to get a first down. A few plays later, a holding penalty put the Wolverines in 2nd and 17, and on third and 6th they got a few yards. Michigan converted another fourth down, and I was a bit nervous. Roberson made a great play to prevent what have might have been a touchdown. Texas held Michigan to a field goal. 20-17 Michigan.
Texas opened with a good swing pass to Wingo, and on second and 3 Clark with a great 12 yard run, negated by a holding penalty on Baker. So instead of first down at the UT 39, it is second and 13 from the 17 yard line. Arch checked down to Endries, and on third and 6 Arch Manning dropped back but saw green and took off, gaining nearly 20 yards. But another holding penalty (on Lockett) brought the ball back to the Texas 26. Manning overcomes again, and Lockett redeemed himself to pick up the first down. A roughing the passer call helped, and a pass to No. 13 and another good run (7 yards) from Clark, and Texas had a first down in plus territory at the Michigan 38. Sark and Manning took a shot on the next play, and the Michigan defenders tackled McCutcheon in the endzone before the pass arrived, giving Texas a first down at the UM 23. After an incompletion, Arch Manning again with superior field vision tucked and ran – this time for a 23 yard touchdown. Arch Attitude. 24-20 Texas.
For some unknown reason, Banks and ST kicked short again, and Marsh had a 51 yard return to give Michigan a short 38 yard field to use to get the lead back. A huge opportunity for the Wolverines that they never should have had. Underwood ran for 7, then Kuzdzal up the middle for 11 to the UT 18. A short run and a Texas offsides later, Michigan had a second down at the Texas 10. One of the least penalized teams in 2025 got their 7th flag of the game, this time a costly 15 yard personal foul after Underwood picked up a first down to the 5 yard line, backing Michigan up to the 25. A couple of plays later, Wardell Mack with a great interception at about the 7 yard line. Texas picked up a PF, and Manning had to start work at the Texas 4. A terrible ball placement cost Texas a first down, and Texas punted the ball back.
After a few yards and a penalty, Michigan could not convert the 3 and 13 from midfield, but on the first play of the fourth quarter, Underwood again converted a fourth down. Michigan picked up 16 on third and 17, and once again Texas could not stop the Wolverines on fourth down. Three plays later, Underwood scored according to the officials to give Michigan a 27-24 lead.
Manning & Co. answered. A 12 yard completion to No. 13. Arch scrambled for 8 on third and 10 to get to the UT 46. On 4th and 2, Manning somehow escaped the collapsing pocket as Michigan blitzed, and Arch ran for 15 to the Michigan 39. Clark with another big run, 12 yards. A few plays later, Manning with a perfect pass to hit Lockett for the thirty yard touchdown to regain the lead at 31-27.
With the way the teams had traded punches and scores, it felt like this might be one of those “whoever has the ball last wins”. It didn’t turn out that way.
Michigan’s Marsh with another good kick return, but on third and 8, Ty’Anthony Smith picked off Underwood.
The next play will be part of the Manning legend. Arch Manning, 60 yards to the house. The analytics showed that Arch hit 21.7 miles per hour. Texas 38, Michigan 27.
On the second Michigan play after the kick-off, Ty’Anthony Smith did it again. Underwood third interception in four possessions. Really good reads by Smith.
With the ball at the Michigan 34, Sark played it conservative and Texas settled for a 51 yard Mason Shipley field goal and a 41-27 lead with 3:38 to play.
Finally kicked it deep for touchback, and Underwood completed some passes in trash time. Too little, too late. Texas goes to 3-0 all time against Michigan.
TCT Thoughts
I thought Texas would have a good day offensively, but it was even better than my usually over-optimistic predictions. Texas ran for 100 yards more than I projected, and while I expected Arch to get some yards, I was not expecting 155! Nor Arch Manning hitting 21.7 mph on a 60 yard gallop. Christian Clark showed great toughness and skill, averaging 5.25 yards per carry. Turns out we didn’t need anyone else running the ball as the Horns went 105 yards over their average against the No. 14 rush defense which had been allowing 101.7 per game. Arch lit em up with his arm too, and Wingo and Mosley were big.
My biggest concern was the defense, and who would step and be our leader on that side of the ball. Ty’Anthony Smith answered the bell. A team high 9 tackles (8 solo) plus the two interceptions. Kade Phillips, Jelani McDonald, and Graceson Littleton played well. We didn’t shut Michigan down like we did the Land Theieves and Texas Agricultural & Mechanical, but Texas did force turnovers.
Some odd stat observations: Michigan was 5 of 6 on fourth down. Coming into the game, Michigan was #136 in the country – last – in fourth down conversions, just 2 of 12, and Texas was 8th in fourth down defense, having allowed just 9 of 25. Go figure.
Texas ended the season with just 2 fumbles.
Before the Citrus Bowl, Michigan had committed 48 penalties this season, averaging four flags and 34.4 penalty yards. The box score says 9 penalties for 95 yards, and there were at least a couple of offsetting. Texas exceeded its yellow flag average, with 12 for 103 yards.
Winning the turnover battle 3 to 1, and the timing of those turnovers, was the key to the win defensively.
We need to give Steve Sarkisian and his staff some big credit here. They had this team ready to play football. With so many key pieces missing, Sark found the right guys to replace the opt-outs, complete the puzzle, and put a pretty darn good product on the field.
Arch Manning was without question the MVP. He led the team, showed grit and determination, and flat-out dominated the Michigan Wolverines.
Here are Arch’s stats in the last three games (as requested by Tony Dewar):
| Passing | Arkansas | Texas A. & M. | Michigan |
| Yards | 389 | 179 | 221 |
| Attempts | 30 | 14 | 21 |
| Completions | 18 | 29 | 34 |
| Completion Percentage | 60.0% | 48.3% | 61.8 |
| Yards/Attempt | 13.0 | 6.2 | 6.5 |
| Yards/Completion | 21.6 | 12.8 | 10.5 |
| Touchdowns | 4 | 1 | 2 |
| Interceptions | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Sacks | 0 | 2 | 0 |
| Rating | 212.9 | 111.5 | 135.8 |
| QBR | 92.4 | 91.9 | 99.1 |
| Rushing | Arkansas | Texas A. & M. | Michigan |
| Yards | 5 | 53 | 155 |
| Yards per Attempt | 2.5 | 7.6 | 17.2 |
| Touchdowns | 1 | 1 | 2 |
A great TV draw by the way. This “unimportant, doesn’t matter bowl game” drew 9,051,104 million viewers — more than twice as many as last year’s Citrus Bowl (4,256,377).
Arch Manning
26 minutes of Arch Manning 2025 highlights
Kamukama Foundation
Kamukama Foundation’s mission is to nourish the spiritual, emotional, physical, and educational well-being of impoverished youth living in rural Uganda. Through student sponsorships and wrap-around services, sponsored students are opened to a world of hope and opportunity. Next month, Kamukama will open the doors to our dorms, providing a new home for our most vulnerable students. You can consider supporting Kamukama by making a gift or sponsoring a bed for one of their students.
General Donation Link: https://kamukamafoundation.org/donate/
Sponsor a Bed: https://kamukamafoundation.org/dormitory-sponsor/
Our great and dear friends Jeanne and Lew Little started Kamukama, and they have brought some of the best and most faithful people I know into the Kamukama family, especially my daughter Mary Elizabeth Fleming. This is an extraordinary ministry, and I ask you to join me in supporting it.
Give us generous hearts, minds, and spirits, O God, so that what we give may help others to know your love. Through Jesus Christ, we humbly pray. Amen.
College Football Playoffs – Semifinals
All four coaches in the semifinals worked under Nick Saban at Alabama. Cignetti, Cristobal, and Golding were assistant coaches (Golding DC) and Dan Lanning worked as graduate assistant coach under Saban in 2025.
Thursday January 8
No. 10 Miami (FL) Hurricanes (12-2) vs. No. 6 Ole Miss Rebels (13-1), in the Fiesta Bowl, 6:30 p.m. on ESPN from Glendale, Arizona. The line opened at Miami minus 3, and early Thursday morning it is Miami -3.5. Money lines are Miami minus 170, Ole Miss plus 142. Over/under is 52.5.
A huge and historic game for Arch’s grandfather’s alma mater. As long time readers know, Ole Miss is my “second school” (at the FBS level – Go Generals!). My son Charles attended Ole Miss, and I had some great times there going to dinners on the Square, “tailgating” in The Grove, and going to games at Vaught-Hemingway. Oxford is a wonderful little town, and the whole region is full of friendly folks and history.
I think the Rebels are in for a tough game, and the oddsmakers and statistical models agree. But, as you will note in my recap of the Ole Miss win over Georgia, that was the case for that game too, even more so. Trinidad Chambliss is one of the most exciting players in college football this year and probably the best story of 2025.
Ole Miss Game Notes for my Rebel friends:
https://olemisssports.com/documents/2026/1/4/25OM_FBNotes_15Miami_CFP_Rd3_FiestaBowl.pdf
Stats (cribbed from the game notes):


I am going with Trinidad Chambliss and Kewan Lacy and an SEC battlefield-tested defense to upset the Miami Hurricanes. Hotty Toddy!
BCF Game Projection:
| Projected Winner | Projected Loser | PW | PM | PF | PA | PT |
| Miami | Ole Miss | .630 | 4.8 | 28.8 | 24.0 | 52.8 |

Parker Fleming’s CFB Graphs:

Friday January 9
No. 5 Oregon Ducks (13-1) vs. No. 1 Indiana Hoosiers (14-0), The Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl, 6:30 p.m. on ESPN from Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. Indiana opened as a 4 point favorite. The line early Thursday morning was Indiana minus 4. Over is 48.5. Money line – Oregon +150, Indiana -180. Indiana to win and cover.
| Projected Winner | Projected Loser | PW | PM | PF | PA | PT |
| Indiana | Oregon | .550 | 1.8 | 25.4 | 23.6 | 49.0 |


College Football Playoffs – Quarterfinals
After last weekend, since we went to the 12-team playoffs, 9 out of 10 conference champions have lost their opening game, and 7 out of the 8 teams who had a first round bye lost their opening game. The only exception, the 2025 Indiana Hoosiers. Bet we see a 16 team playoff for 2026 or 2027.
No. 10 Miami (FL) Hurricanes 24, No. 2 Ohio State Buckeyes 14 in The Cotton Bowl Classic. The underdog Canes doubled the line with their 10 point upset of The Ohio State University. Vegas was wrong, and all the models were wrong. BCF had it 25-15 Ohio State, CFB Graphs had it 27-19 Buckeyes, and ESPN’s model said Ohio State had a 70.5% win probability. Miami’s defense was impressive. Ohio State’s first half possession: Punt, Punt, Interception – Pick 6, Punt, Punt, Missed field goal. Miami had one decent drive, but the play of the half was the 72 interception return for the Miami Hurricanes. Ohio State started the second half with a solid 82 yard scoring drive, highlighted by an 18 yard Bo Jackson run and a 23 yard Sayin pass to Smith. Miami answered with a field goal to get the lead back to 10.
Buckeyes got a very good 75 yard touchdown drive, with Julian Sayin going 4 for 4 (12 yards, 9 yards, 22 yards, and a 14 yard touchdown pass to Smith). Cut the lead to 17-14. But that would be it for 2025 Buckeye season, as Miami got another score and then another interception to seal the win.
Most amazing stat: Miami was not penalized in the game. There may have been an offsetting penalty, but no penalties in the box score. Miami? Miami??
No. 5 Oregon Ducks 23, No. 4 Texas Tech Red Raiders 0. Money can’t buy you love and it doesn’t guarantee wins, but it should be able to buy you at least a field goal in the College Football Playoffs. We know now that Cody and South Plains Aggies have signed Brendan Sorsby (from Cincinnati) for a reported $5 million. I will have more on the portal in the final edition in a week or two, but holy cow. Anyway, back to the game. I felt bad for my Tech friends. Great season, top 4 national seed, playing in the Orange Bowl, and then Behren Morton goes 18/32 for 137 yards and 2 picks and is sacked 4 times, finishes with minus 32 yards rushing and QBR of 18. Brutal. We all have been there, and it sucks. The line had the Ducks by 2.5, and BCF had it 26.5 to 20 Oregon. But ESPN gave Tech a 51.6% win probability, and CFB Graphs gave Tech a 59% chance and a projected score of 26-21.
No. 9 Alabama Crimson Tide 3, No. 1 Indiana Hoosiers 38 in The Rose Bowl. Well, at least Alabama scored. The Ty Simpson injury didn’t help, but I don’t think it mattered. Fernando Mendoza was almost perfect (14/16, 192 yards, 3 touchdowns) and the Hoosiers rushed for 215 yards. Alabama rushed for 23 yards. The worst Alabama loss since 1998, per Dr. J.P. Ferguson. The Vegas line and all the models had Indiana winning. I was wrong about Bama covering the 7 point line.
No. 6 Ole Miss Rebels 39, No. 3 Georgia Bulldogs 34, in the Sugar Bowl. Not just the best playoff game, or bowl game, but one of the best games of the year. Wow. Ole Miss got a couple of first quarter field goals to get a 6-0 lead, but Georgia charged back in the second quarter two big touchdowns and then a 47 yard fumble recovery and touchdown run to make it 21-12 at halftime.
Chambliss led the Rebels on a great drive in the third quarter to cut the lead to 21-19. A Georgia field goal pushed lead back to 5. But Chambliss and Lacy and the Rebs answered with another good drive to take the lead 27-24. On the next Georgia possession, the Ole Miss defense was stout, finishing off with a sack and forcing a Gunner Stockton fumble, recovered at the UGA 23. 2 Trinidad Chambliss passes later, it was 34-24 Ole Miss.
Stockton and Georgia shredded the Rebs on the next possession, starting with a 15 yard DPI call, then an 11 yard pass, an 11 yard Frazier run, a 20 yard pass, and an 18 yard touchdown pass to make it 34-31. After Ole Miss punted, Georgia drove for a field goal to tie the game at 34 with 56 seconds to play. Chambliss hit Stribling for 40 yards to the Georgia 30, but after 3 incompletions, Ole Miss lined up for a 47 yard field goal with 6 seconds on the clock. Carneiro nailed it. 37-34 Rebs.
The last 6 seconds took, I don’t know, 15 minutes or more? What a mess. All’s well that ends well. Vegas had Georgia by 6.5. BCF had Georgia by 6.2. ESPN said UGA had a 60.1% win probability, CFB Graphs gave the Dawgs a 55.9% win probability and a predicted score of 28-25. Wrong on all counts. Rebs were Ready!
Hotty Toddy! Some highlights:
ESPN, 28 minutes:
The final 2 minutes of the game – wild:
Under 5 minutes, from The Flagship:
Bowl Games
No. 23 Iowa 34, No. 14 Vanderbilt 27, the ReliaQuest Bowl. The Commodores were favored by 4 and Diego Pavia had a decent day throwing the ball (347 yards and 2 touchdowns), but Vandy couldn’t run the ball. 51 yards, 36 of which came from Pavia. Sedrick Alexander and the other Dore backs combined for 15 yards. The Hawkeyes pounded out 167 yards on the ground, and Iowa QB Mark Gronowski threw for 2 scores and ran for another.
Arizona State 39, Duke 42, in another good Sun Bowl. Blue Devils were favored by 3, which is pretty impressive in the new bowl era. A lot of offense – Sun Devils with 619 yards, Blue Devils with 539 yards, and both teams over 200 yards rushing.
Nebraska Cornhuskers 22, No. 15 Utah Utes 44, in the Las Vegas Bowl. Utah covered. Ute quarterback Devon Dampier with 310 yards passing and 2 touchdowns and 148 yards rushing and 5 touchdowns, 96.2 QBR.
Rice 10, Texas State 41, Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl.
Navy 35, Cincinnati 13, Autozone Liberty Bowl. Really great to see one of our great service academy teams dominate like this.
No. 17 Arizona Wildcats 19, Southern Methodist Mustangs 24 in the Trust & Will Holiday Bowl. I missed the casket toss. Wild game. Ponies led 24-0 at half, Arizona got 19 in the second half while holding SMU scoreless.
Wake Forest 43, Mississippi State 29 in the Duke’s Mayo Bowl. Another sorry showing by the SEC. The dumping of the mayonnaise is nasty, and I sure don’t remember the winning coach’s family participating in the past.
Texas Men’s Basketball
The Longhorns opened SEC play with a tough overtime loss at home to Mississippi State, 98-101. Some tough moments in the game. Tuesday night, Texas traveled to Tennessee. Our old coach Rick Barnes and his Vols whipped the Horns pretty good in Knoxville, 85-71. It is hard to have a re-building year under a new coach in the Southeastern Conference. Trust the process, support the team. Hook Em Horns.
Texas Women’s Basketball
The No. 2 Longhorns are 17-0. They opened SEC play on the road New Year’s Day in Columbia with 89-71 win. Last Sunday, the Horns held off No. 15 Ole Miss for a 67-64 win at the Moody Center. Thursday night, Auburn is in Austin for a 7:00 p.m. tip.
Texas Baseball
Texas opens with UC Davis on Friday February 13. 36 days!
ESPN’s FPI

2025 College Football Power Index – ESPN
Bill Connelly’s SP+
SP+ is a tempo- and opponent-adjusted measure of college football efficiency. SP+ is intended to be predictive and forward-facing.

PFF Grades

Music
Three songs from America. Ventura Highway has been on my mind lately.
A Horse With No Name, live from 1973
Ventura Highway, live from 1975
https://youtu.be/ujsOx33f4mk?si=Un89SSNL_CQjWYed
Tin Man, live from 1975
Jim Nicar
1902: “B. Hall” – U.T. Austin’s first men’s dorm – looking east from an upper floor in Old Main. The Longhorn Band, Texan newspaper, and “Eyes of Texas” originated here. Immediately behind the hall is the site of the future East Mall, DeLoss Dodds Way, and LBJ Library.

From Jim’s post on X on January 6, 2026.
Picture of the Week
A burnt orange sunrise over downtown Austin.


On X: @tctayloratx
On LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/tctatx
On Instagram: @tctayloratx
On Facebook: www.Facebook.com/Tim.C.Taylor
and: www.Facebook.com/Juan.Heisman
You can contact me by mail:
Tim Taylor P.O. Box 5371 Austin, Texas 78763-5371
