Well, I guess now it's a little closer to official...
http://espn.go.com/dallas/college-football/story/_/id/10138466/mack-brown-resigns-coach-texas-longhorns
Texas coach Mack Brown to resign
Updated: December 14, 2013, 7:35 PM ET
ESPN.com news services
Mack Brown will resign as coach of Texas on Saturday, the school announced Saturday.
Brown has informed his team he will resign, sources close to the situation told the Longhorn Network, but he will stay to coach the Longhorns against Oregon in the Valero Alamo Bowl on Dec. 30.
Brown is 158-47 in his 16 seasons at Texas, nine wins short of tying Darrell Royal for the most in school history. He won 10 or more games for nine consecutive seasons (2001-09), and he's currently No. 10 on the FBS all-time coaching wins list.
Texas played in two BCS championship games, won two Big 12 titles, went to 14 bowl games and finished in the top 15 a total of 10 times during Brown's tenure. He coached more than 50 All-Americans and more than 70 All-Big 12 players at Texas, including five conference players of the year on offense and six on defense.
Since losing to Alabama in the 2010 BCS National Championship Game, Brown went 30-20 in his final four seasons and 18-17 in Big 12 games. Texas' four losses in 2013 came by an average margin of 21 points.
He finished with a 7-9 record against rival Oklahoma, but he did win his final Red River Rivalry -- upsetting the then-No. 12 Sooners, 36-20, at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas in October.
After starting this season 1-2 with nonconference losses to BYU and Ole Miss, Texas rallied to start 6-0 in the Big 12 before losing two of their final three games, including a 30-10 decision to Baylor in what had become a de facto Big 12 championship game on Dec. 7.
During Brown's tenure, Texas became a financial powerhouse among college programs. UT had the largest athletics budget in the country in 2012 at $161.9 million, and Longhorns football produced $103.4 million in total revenue and $79 million in net income.
He also helped make Texas one of the nation's strongest recruiting powers. Brown put together top-10 recruiting classes every year from 2006 to 2012, and also signed the consensus No. 1 class in the nation, led by Vince Young, in 2002.