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The Good, The Bad and The Ugly: Kansas State

Jameson McCausland

Staff Writer
Joined
Aug 23, 2017
Messages
3,779
For the 4th straight week, the Longhorns came away victorious. It was not pretty, but Texas’ win over Kansas State gives the Longhorns their first 2-0 start to conference play since 2013. Let’s take a look at the good and the bad from an eventful game in Manhattan:

The Good

The Defensive Line

It was a big game for Charles Omenihu and Breckyn Hager, who both entered Saturday needing to get more pressure on the quarterback. Omenihu responded with two sacks, with his second resulting in a safety. Hager picked up his first sack of the season and finished the game with 4 total pressures. The pass he batted down at the line of scrimmage late in the 4th quarter saved the game for the Longhorns.

In addition to big games from the defensive ends, Chris Nelson and Gerald Wilbon did a good job of holding their own in the middle of the defensive line. Nelson had several disruptive plays in the backfield and Wilbon played well in a backup role.

Time-consuming Drives

As Tom Herman and Sam Ehlinger pointed out after the game, it is the 4th straight game the Longhorns have ended by taking a knee on the opponent’s side of the field. One of the biggest struggles in recent years for Texas is generating yards in the run game when everyone knows it’s coming. Against the Wildcats, it was Keaontay Ingram who carried the load with the game on the line with an assist from Sam Ehlinger, who had a couple of key first down runs on QB draws. In a game where the offense was only responsible for 7 points, a small bit of credit goes to the coaching staff for not just ramming it up the middle 3 times and trusting their defense.

The bad

Losing the Penalty Battle

For the 4th time in 5 games, Texas lost the penalty battle to the opposition. The Longhorns were penalized 10 times for over 100 yards, while the Wildcats were only called for 1 penalty, which ended up being offset by a Kris Boyd hold. Texas is ranked as one of the most penalized teams in the country, and it is a trend that has to end if the Longhorns want to take the next step and compete for a Big 12 title. Tom Herman took a subtle shot at Big 12 officiating in general after the game when he commented that he has to teach his offensive players how to draw penalties, but the Longhorns also have to quit getting in their own way. There is no reason for Andrew Beck to shove a guy in a back right in front of an official, or for Zach Shackelford to cheap shot somebody 10 yards away from the ball.

Pass Defense

Texas had an excellent game plan heading into Manhattan. The Longhorns sold out to stop the run because they knew Alex Delton would not be able to beat them through the air. The only problem was that the defense never found their grove after Bill Snyder went back to Skylar Thompson to start the second half. In my opinion, the Longhorns needed to drop 7 into coverage and force Thompson to squeeze the ball through tight windows. Instead they opted to crank up the pressure, resulting in a lot of quick completions and leaving Kris Boyd and Davante Davis on an island. Although the Wildcats only mustered 110 passing yards, it was not the best day for the Longhorn secondary.

The Ugly

Punting

Tom Herman and his staff are walking a tightrope when it comes to the punting unit. Ryan Bujcevski found himself under extreme pressure again and had a punt partially blocked due to a high snap. The word is out by now that Texas is struggling to protect their punter, and every remaining team on the schedule has access to film. It does not fall all on Bujcevski, however. He had to handle a snap that almost sailed over his head and his personal protectors continue to give players free paths to the ball.

Offensive Efficiency

The Texas offense had 8 possessions Saturday afternoon and they went as follows: Punt, TD pass to Collin Johnson, Field goal, punt, punt, missed field goal, punt and the final possession that resulted in a kneel down. It was an odd game, with both teams keeping the ball for long periods of time. Regardless, Texas stalled on offense far too many times against a defense that had been shredded by the two power 5 offenses it faced up to that point. Tom Herman said after the game that the plan was to keep Kansas State’s offense off the field, but 7 points from his offense could not have been what he was hoping for. Herman admitted it was an ugly win, and the Texas offense will need to turn in better performances in the coming weeks when the Longhorns could find themselves in a shootout or two. 

 
I am going to keep asking this question until somebody can explain it to me...

Why was that helmet to helmet hit on Sam not flagged for targeting. It was a big hit and the stadium went crazy for it. I waited...# 1 to see if Sam got up and next for the flag, and finally for the commentators to talk it to death ( like they did on Fosters ejection)...nothing but crickets. Did I just dream that it happened?

 
The punting is going to cost us a game if this sh*t continues. I'm not too happy with the FG success (not) either.

 
I am going to keep asking this question until somebody can explain it to me...

Why was that helmet to helmet hit on Sam not flagged for targeting. It was a big hit and the stadium went crazy for it. I waited...# 1 to see if Sam got up and next for the flag, and finally for the commentators to talk it to death ( like they did on Fosters ejection)...nothing but crickets. Did I just dream that it happened?
What part of the game was? I don't remember anything like that.

However if the other player had his head up, and contact was made with the facemask, then they won't call helmet to helmet. 

Over the past few weeks I've noticed players getting better about that, both college and pro. 

 
I am going to keep asking this question until somebody can explain it to me...

Why was that helmet to helmet hit on Sam not flagged for targeting. It was a big hit and the stadium went crazy for it. I waited...# 1 to see if Sam got up and next for the flag, and finally for the commentators to talk it to death ( like they did on Fosters ejection)...nothing but crickets. Did I just dream that it happened?
They wouldn't have penalized KSU even if KSU had carried guns. 

 
I think it was in the 3rd quarter, and to me it looked like he put the crown of his helmet right in Sams left ear hole.

Sam was trying to dive into the left side of the line.

Hell I didnt imagine it. Maybe it didnt happen exactly like I saw it, but I saw some thing and the whole stadium let out a cheer like it was a touchdown.They would not have shown it again on their jumbotron if they had one because they did not want to refs to get a second look.

 
I hope Herman learned a few things from this game

1. Never think 19 points is enough, don’t take your foot off the gas

2. Every time Ingram got in a rhythm they’d rotate in another back and the drive would stall.  I watched this kid in HS a lot.  He is a workhorse type back that the more he gets the better he does.  At least let him finish the drives he starts.  He is a better back in every facet of the game than Watson, and Watson is pretty solid.

 
I think it was in the 3rd quarter, and to me it looked like he put the crown of his helmet right in Sams left ear hole.

Sam was trying to dive into the left side of the line.

Hell I didnt imagine it. Maybe it didnt happen exactly like I saw it, but I saw some thing and the whole stadium let out a cheer like it was a touchdown.They would not have shown it again on their jumbotron if they had one because they did not want to refs to get a second look.
I remember the play and thought the same thing. I am going to try and rewatch it and see if I can catch that hit again 

 
when I saw it I was concerned that Sam would not get up and if he did that he would wander around in circles not knowing what was going on. He seemed fine though.

 
Time-consuming Drives

As Tom Herman and Sam Ehlinger pointed out after the game, it is the 4th straight game the Longhorns have ended by taking a knee on the opponent’s side of the field. One of the biggest struggles in recent years for Texas is generating yards in the run game when everyone knows it’s coming. Against the Wildcats, it was Keaontay Ingram who carried the load with the game on the line with an assist from Sam Ehlinger, who had a couple of key first down runs on QB draws. In a game where the offense was only responsible for 7 points, a small bit of credit goes to the coaching staff for not just ramming it up the middle 3 times and trusting their defense.
I was interested in the OU-Army game last week since Army almost had a huge upset. It didn't take too much to see how Army almost won the game. 

Here's the description of Army's offense. It looks like Stoops couldn't figure how to stop it.
 
The flex-bone offense has been a problem for defenses for years, whether it was being run by Georgia Southern or Georgia Tech, Army or Navy. Embedded into the attack is a strict adherence to one of football’s simplest truths: Your opponent cannot score without the ball.
 

I went into the Kansas State wanting the win of course, but also was hoping for a dominant ground game. It's been a disappointment that another back besides Keaontay hasn't step up. 
 
It looks like the best way to beat OU is to keep the high powered offense on the bench. That will also keep the Texas defense fresh. 
 
Still, the tale of the stat sheet shows how this near-upset game came to be (remember: OU was a 28.5-point favorite). Army ran 87 plays -- 78 rushing -- to Oklahoma's 40 and dominated the time of possession 44:41 to 15:19, nearly three times as much. Four of Army's seven offensive drives were 16 plays or more. The Knights couldn't always stop the Sooners offense -- Oklahoma still averaged nearly nine yards per play -- but were able to keep that offense off of the field
 
 
https://www.cbssports.com/college-football/news/oklahoma-vs-army-score-no-5-sooners-beat-black-knights-in-ot-escaping-a-scare-no-one-saw-coming/


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I am going to keep asking this question until somebody can explain it to me...

Why was that helmet to helmet hit on Sam not flagged for targeting. It was a big hit and the stadium went crazy for it. I waited...# 1 to see if Sam got up and next for the flag, and finally for the commentators to talk it to death ( like they did on Fosters ejection)...nothing but crickets. Did I just dream that it happened?
Is this what you’re talking about 




 
That may have been it...of course it did not look as violent as I remember....also, the camera angle is different.

 
Once the QB leaves the pocket, they become a runner. I couldn't tell from the video but I'm not sure he hit him with the crown of his helmet. Also, it didn't seem like he "launched" himself. He definitely didn't leave his feet.

 
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