Why is nobody connecting the dots between Texas landing two blue-chip defensive tackles in the 2027 class and the red zone numbers the Longhorns put up last season? Texas converted 64% of red zone trips into touchdowns in 2025, which is solid but not elite when you look at the top SEC defenses. The problem was interior pressure on third and short and goal-to-go situations. Now you have Kasi Currie, a top-3 DT in the 2027 year, and Jabarrius Garror, the No. 4 OLB in the same class, both committing in the same week. That is exactly how you fix the red zone defense from the inside out. Currie is a 300-pound disruptor who collapses pockets, and Garror is an edge rusher who can set the edge and force runs back inside. The connection is obvious. Texas finished 2025 with a red zone touchdown percentage allowed in the mid-50s, which ranked around 40th nationally. That is not good enough in the SEC. These two recruits directly address that weakness at the line of scrimmage. The scheme fit is there too. The Longhorns run a multiple front that asks defensive tackles to occupy double teams and edges to set hard edges, which is exactly what Currie and Garror do best. The recruiting rankings will get the headlines, but the real story is how these two fit the specific red zone problems that cost Texas games last season. The coaching staff is building with purpose, not just collecting stars.