Emotionless takes on Saturday’s 17-10 loss to TCU

There’s more than one contributor to Saturday’s struggles.

The Texas Longhorns dropped a frustrating loss to the TCU Horned Frogs on Saturday night. The game felt within reach even late into the fourth quarter, but Texas couldn’t make the most of opportunities.

As with any frustrating loss, hot takes were abundant all night. Among them, that Quinn Ewers was the sole issue needing to be remedied for Texas.

Quinn Ewers had an atrocious game to put it mildly. I went in-depth on his struggles last night and didn’t hold back. Even so, Texas’ early struggles were far from all on Ewers.

Xavier Worthy and Ja’Tavion Sanders were every bit as bad as Ewers was on the game. Drop after drop plagued the Texas offense from the first series deep into the game.

The accuracy issues Ewers had in short to intermediate throws against Oklahoma State simply weren’t there. The freshman quarterback repeatedly hit receivers in the hands only to suffer dropped incompletions.

Let’s take a look at what to make of the game.

Bad offense plagues Texas in TCU loss

Quinn Ewers looked lost in Saturday’s defeat.

The Texas Longhorns took a brutal loss on Saturday. The offense played horribly.

It starts with quarterback play, which was abysmal on Saturday night. Quinn Ewers was off target for much of the night. Adding to his issues, Ewers couldn’t find the open man.

The big offensive miss involved Ewers not seeing Bijan Robinson running unabated to the end zone. Other than a strong effort from Jordan Whittington, his receivers didn’t do him any favors.

Xavier Worthy and Ja’Tavion Sanders dropped passes from the beginning of the game. Jahleel Billingsley added a drop of his own.

The Longhorns went away from the run with Bijan Robinson after laying a first half egg. Poor early play calling and critical drops put Texas in a hole. Ewers dug the hole deeper with clumsy football and inability to locate reads he couldn’t afford to miss.

All in all, Texas will look at the game as one it should have won and couldn’t capitalize.

Let’s discuss what it all means for Texas.