A 28-man signing class on the heels of a 6-7 season signaled there's a need for a talent infusion at every position within the Texas program. But for Texas, no single position requires a larger margin of error than quarterback.

Texas offered Texas Tech commit Tristen Wallace on Thursday.

Charlie Strong's solution to the problem?

Ten quarterback prospects in the 2016 class now hold a Texas offer with five of those being extended in the last 24 hours.

Texas won't get all of these prospects, obviously, and a few of them appear to be off the table already. 247Sports Composite five-star prospect Shea Patterson (Shreveport, La./Calvary Baptist) committed to Ole Miss on Tuesday while the nation's No. 2-ranked pro-style quarterback Malik Henry (Bradenton, Fla./IMG Academy) is locked into his commitment to Florida State.

That's not going to deter the Longhorns, however. Of the five quarterbacks offered since Wednesday, four of them are committed to other FBS prospects.

Four-star prospect Zach Smith of Grandview grew up liking Texas, but the 6-foot-4-inch, 215-pound signal caller appears to be rock solid with his Baylor commitment. The same goes for DeSoto's Tristen Wallace, a dual-threat quarterback with raw arm talent who grew up a Longhorn fan and has a sister who attends Texas, but he’s committed to Texas Tech.

Texas might be late to the party in terms of offering both recruits, but the staff is at least going to throw its hat in the ring. Wallace seems like the more likely of the two to flip, but for right now, the important thing is the Longhorns have set up the board at the most important position on the field before the first junior day.

It doesn't appear to be a tremendous year at quarterback within the state. According to the 247Sports Composite rankings, Arlington Lamar's Shane Buechele, who also holds a Texas offer and entered the start of the cycle as one of the staff's top targets regardless of position, is the state's top quarterback prospect checking in at No. 26 overall.

Still, with Buechele, Wallace, Smith, and Lucas Lovejoy's Bowman Sells, who also picked up an offer Wednesday, the Longhorns have extended offers to five of the state's top seven quarterback prospects. The only players among the top seven in the state who haven't been offered by Texas are San Angelo Central's Brennen Wooten, a TCU commit, and Channelview's Jalen Hurts, who like Wallace, is an athletic quarterback who can win games with his running ability with a nice passing upside down the road.

The Longhorns are hunting for quarterbacks, and in addition to casting a wide net within the state, the staff is also looking beyond the borders of Texas for help. Texas has offered two of the nation's top quarterbacks in the last 24 hours in St. Paul (Minn.) East Ridge Oregon commit Seth Green and LSU commit Feleipe Franks (Crawfordville, Fla./Wakulla), the nation's top-ranked dual-threat quarterback prospect.

Green ranks right behind Buechele in the 247Sports Composite dual-threat quarterback rankings. Including the recent offer to Xavier Gaines (Lake Wales, Fla.), the Longhorns have offered five of the nation's top seven dual-threat quarterback prospects in the country. Even previously offered prospects like Dwayne Haskins (Potomac, Md./The Bullis School) have the ability to make plays with their legs, so that could be an indication of what type of playmakers are needed under center on the Forty Acres going forward.

Either way, the five recent quarterback offers bringing the total to double digits speaks to two things when you break it down. The Longhorns are casting as lines out as possible looking for bites under center, and Texas is merely catching up with the rest of the country when it comes to having a broad scope when looking for a quarterback.

Ohio State has offered nine 2016 quarterbacks. Florida State and Michigan have offered seven quarterbacks, while Alabama has already extended eight quarterback offers in the class. Clemson and Miami (Fla.), two programs with talented and young quarterbacks, have offered 27 quarterbacks between the two of them. The four Baylor has offered (Patterson, Smith, Wallace and Gaines) all have Texas offers.

Ten total quarterback offers and five in a 24-hour period might seem a little ambitious, but it is par for the course with just about everyone else in the country. And since Texas has been lacking at the position for nearly half of a decade at this point, one of these offers could very well materialize into a prospect who winds up being an answer at quarterback for a program that hasn't any in several seasons.

It's bound to happen sooner or later.