Why Josh Pate believes Quinn Ewers will win the Texas QB battle in the fall

Josh Pate believes not much separates Quinn Ewers and Hudson Card right now, but Ewers will definitively separate in the fall.

Another year, another quarterback competition at Texas. Continue reading “Why Josh Pate believes Quinn Ewers will win the Texas QB battle in the fall”

LOOK: First glimpse of Quinn Ewers at Texas’ spring practice

Quinn Ewers is finally in Texas gear.

Today is a day that Longhorn fans have been chomping at the bit for. There has been a Quinn Ewers sighting in a Texas uniform.

Well…kind of. Ewers can be seen sporting a black jersey that each quarterback wears, in an unmarked helmet during Texas’ first practice of spring football. Nonetheless, Texas football is back in gear, as the Longhorns begin preparing for the highly anticipated spring game.

Ewers, who decided to forgo his senior season of high school to attend Ohio State, will be competing with Hudson Card for the rights to the starting gig.

It was reported that Card started the practice off with the ones, but Steve Sarkisian mentioned that the two quarterbacks will be rotating and splitting reps evenly all spring.

Card is looking to out-duel Ewers and win his second straight quarterback competition, as he was able to beat out Nebraska quarterback Casey Thompson prior to the 2021 season. The only issue for Card was he wasn’t able to hold onto the starting job and was yanked after a poor performance in Week 2 against Arkansas.

Many are counting on Ewers to win the job outright even with his limited experience, as the has an immense amount of expectations surrounding him due to his perfect rating as a recruit.

This spring session will give both quarterbacks a prime opportunity to build a lead over one another.

Opinion: Hudson Card deserves another shot as Texas’ starting QB

It’s time to shake things back up and put Hudson Card in as the starting quarterback.

When Steve Sarkisian announced Hudson Card was going to be the starting quarterback for the season opener, all I wanted was for it to be the final decision. No going back and forth on a week to week basis. No flip-flopping during games, rotating one in and another out.

For the first two weeks, my wishes were not granted. Casey Thompson got to play a majority of the second half against Louisana and once Sarkisian had seen enough of Card’s struggles against Arkansas, he was replaced. Heading into the Rice game, Thompson was named the starter.

From there, Sarkisian has done what I originally asked for. No. 11 has been the guy, through thick and a lot of thin.

But now, it’s time to shake it back up and put Card in as the starting quarterback.

I’ll preface this by saying Thompson is far from the main issue with this Texas team. The offensive line cannot protect, whether it be run or pass blocking. No edge player on the roster gives a Big 12 tackle an ounce of fear in obvious pass-rush situations. Nobody can seem to tackle either. The wide receivers go missing or drop balls.

We could go on for a while.

Inserting Card as the starter is not going to magically fix all of those problems. He’s a redshirt freshman with two career starts and one that was brutal to watch. Struggles are going to be somewhat expected.

Where we do not know if he can help this team, though, is in the second half of these games Texas has blown for three consecutive weeks. Sarkisian never gave Card the opportunity to prove himself there — the leash was too short.

For some reason, the head coach has been a lot more generous with Thompson. Maybe because from a numbers perspective, it has not been awful. Sarkisian pointed out Thompson threw five touchdowns against Oklahoma despite the loss during one of his press conferences.

The famous old eye test has shown otherwise.

Thompson has shown us how he plays in the second half. Especially on the final drive of the game when a touchdown is required. 0/5 with an interception combined vs Oklahoma State and Baylor.

Twice now has Thompson had the opportunity to wash away poor performances with a late score to keep Texas in the ball game. Twice he has done, quite literally, absolutely nothing.

Bigger picture, looking at just the second half, Texas is scoring 9.0 points when you factor out Texas Tech. The killer mentality needed to put Sarkisian’s ‘All gas, no brakes’ mantra on display has been lacking for a month now.

With all the problems with this team, a quarterback who can win despite the issues is needed. Card may not be the answer, but the opportunity is at least deserved. If it was not, Sarkisian would have never originally named him the starting quarterback.

What we do know is Thompson is a solid quarterback during the first halves of games. Once he comes out of the locker room, attempting to maintain the lead he helped build, something magically switches. The killer mentality is clearly not there.

Even in his three wins against Rice, Texas Tech, and TCU — Thompson’s performances have not elevated Texas to victories. Lesser opponents and Bijan Robinson did. Never have you ever been able to say he’s single-handily lifted the team to a win.

The time is now.

Making a switch heading into a tough road crowd in Ames against Iowa State may not make a lot of sense. However, at some point, the leash is extended too far before it snaps and everything is lost.

With a 4-4 record and a Big 12 championship way out of the equation, next season should become the main point of focus. Four games and a possible bowl game remain. Sarkisian has the opportunity to see if Card can really be a difference-maker in live Big 12 games.

Otherwise, we’ll be year again in a year, in the exact same position, still debating about who should be the starting quarterback. And Sarkisan’s seat will go from ice cold to a just melted, room temperature glass of water.