AUSTIN, Texas — Scan the rosters of Texas and Arizona State ahead of the Peach Bowl and the usual names pop out.
Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers and Thorpe Award winner Jahdae Barron. Arizona State All-American running back Cam Skattebo.
Another Longhorn who draws a lot of attention from Sun Devils coach Kenny Dillingham is Texas senior tight end Gunnar Helm, who has been catching everything thrown his way and even hurdling over defenders in a breakout season.
Helm’s 55 catches for 688 yards are both Texas tight end records as the No. 5-seeded Longhorns head into a New Years Day Peach Bowl matchup against No. 4-seed Arizona State in the College Football Playoff quarterfinals. He also has six touchdowns.
“He’s dynamic,” Dillingham said. “He’s not a tight end that clumsy and catches it and falls. He catches it and extends completions, which is something you never like to see when you’re going (against) a tight end. You don’t want them to catch it and run.”
Waited his turn
In the transfer portal era of college football, Helm is a rare case of relatively unheralded recruit who stayed patient, stayed put and developed in to a first-team all-Southeastern Conference player this season.
“I think somebody this predicted me to have nine receptions this year,” Helm after he caught six passes for 77 yards and a touchdown in a 38-24 first-round win over Clemson.
“We’ve just got a great connection, and (he) just always is open it seems like,” Ewers said.
Rated a 3-star recruit out of Edgewood, Colorado, some recruiting analysts had him as the lowest-ranked player in the Texas class that came to campus in coach Steve Sarkisian’s first year in 2021.
Helm had initially committed to former coach Tom Herman but stuck with Texas through the coaching change and a 5-7 season.
“I didn’t really have a choice,” Helm said earlier this season.
Also signed in that class was high school All-American Ja’Tavion Sanders, who over the 2022 and 2023 seasons would catch 99 passes and set the school’s single season and career pass catching records for tight ends. Helm caught 19 passes those two seasons.
Breaking records
The field finally opened up for Helm when Sanders turned pro after Texas made the playoff last season and was drafted by the Panthers.
Helm’s breakout game came in a 31-12 win at Michigan when he had seven catches for 98 yards and a touchdown.
Against Clemson, Helm caught a touchdown pass in the second quarter. He was wide open in the end zone but had to leap high to cradle the ball and still toe-tap his feet in the end zone to stay inbounds.
His size (6-foot-5, 250 pounds), athleticism and versatility as a blocker have Helm projected as an early-round draft pick in the NFL.
“We all know the path, his journey, the development that he’s had in our program. I’m super proud of him,” Texas coach Steve Sarkisian said. “(Ewers) can place balls in certain spots where he knows maybe if Gunnar doesn’t catch it, it’s probably incomplete ... They’ve been together for three years now, and I think there’s a lot of trust there.”
Peach Bowl pick
No. 5 seed Texas vs. No. 4 Arizona State (plus 12 1/2): The Sun Devils have won six in a row, and the question will be whether they’ll cool off with 24 days between games. Like Boise State, Arizona State leans heavily on its star running back. Skattebo has run for 494 yards and eight TDs over his last three games, and he’ll be playing with an “I’ll-show-them” attitude after indicating he was insulted by his fifth-place finish in Heisman voting. Texas’ defense is stout against the run, and its secondary has been one of the nation’s best. The Longhorns would like to think Cade Klubnik’s 336-yard passing game for Clemson in the first round was a one-off. Prediction: Texas 28-23. —Eric Olson