From doing more with less to doing more with more.

Texas Longhorns head coach Jim Schlossnagle and Max Weiner are beginning to build the pitching staff on the Forty Acres in their desired image, buoyed by pitcher-heavy 2025 recruiting class that ranked No. 1 nationally by Baseball America and several important additions from the NCAA transfer portal.

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“All of our freshmen are disgusting. They’re big, a lot of stuff behind them. We’ve got a lot of pitches to throw. I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of freshmen have important roles this year,” Texas sophomore left-hander Dylan Volantis said last month.

One of the biggest additions, literally and figuratively, is 6’5, 255-pound Brett Crossland out of Phoenix (Ariz.) Corona Del Sol. Because Crossland was ranked as a top-100 prospect by ESPN heading into the 2025 MLB Draft, it was a major coup to get the hard-throwing right-hander to the Forty Acres.

With a fastball that typically sits at 94 miles per hour but can reach 97, Crossland also features three secondary pitches with his curveball serving as his most valuable breaking ball. The key for Weiner is to ensure that Crossland that repeat his delivery consistent to avoid breakdowns in command.

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“Stuff’s nasty, confident guy. Totally see him being in one of the biggest roles,” Volantis said of Crossland.

Schlossnagle also noted Crossland’s confidence, as well as his improvement under Weiner.

Crossland isn’t even the biggest pitcher signed by the Longhorns in the 2025 class — that’s North Carolina product Sam Cozart, a 6’6, 260-pounder whose full beard belies his youth. Cozart hails from a family of talented athletes, as his parents met at UCF where his father played baseball and his mother played volleyball, and both older brothers played college baseball with his older brother Jacob now in the Cleveland Guardians organization.

Ranked as the No. 47 player nationally by Perfect Game, Cozart was formerly committed to Mississippi State as well as to Schlossnagle when he was at Texas A&M. Considered an advanced strike thrower with a fastball up to 96 mph, Cozart has three other pitches he can throw strikes, including a cutter, changeup, and curveball.

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Pitching for the Alumni team two weeks ago, Cozart threw four hitless innings, striking out five and allowing just three baserunners with his fastball typically sitting between 93 and 94 mph.

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