Texas Longhorns Week 3: Player-by-Player Breakdown

By PML College Insider | Austin, TX

🧠 QB Maalik Murphy

Stat line: 23 of 39 passing, 284 yards, 4 TDs, 3 INTs
Murphy delivered big plays — four touchdown passes show he’s capable of generating explosive results. But the three interceptions serve as reminders of the areas he must tighten. Late in the game, with the lead in his hands, the turnovers gave South Carolina life and made the finish tense.

Takeaway: Murphy continues to show the arm and the composure, but decision-making under pressure remains a work in progress.

🐂 HB CJ Baxter

Stat line: 11 carries, 45 yards, long 14
While his rushing output didn’t explode this week, Baxter’s role in keeping drives alive and his ability to make positive yards consistently deserve recognition. With how the game stayed tighter than expected, those “positive-yardage” carries mattered.

Takeaway: Baxter’s reliability is a foundation; the team needs him to be more dominant to put games away earlier.

⚡ WR Kaliq Lockett

Stat line: 4 receptions, 110 yards, 1 TD, long 66, 1 drop
Lockett was electric. His big play (66 yards) ignited Texas’ offense and gave them momentum. The one drop is a blemish, but the overall impact was strong.

Takeaway: Lockett is emerging as the game-changer in the passing game. Big plays matter.

🎯 TE Jack Endries

Stat line: 8 receptions, 81 yards, 2 TDs
Endries showed up in the red zone and moved the chains. Two touchdowns indicate the offense trusts him in critical scoring situations.

Takeaway: This kind of production from your TE is exactly what multiplies your offensive threats.

đŸ’Ș LB Ty’Anthony Smith

Stat line: 5 TFL, a key presence in run defense (based on stats you supplied)
Smith again anchored the defense, showing sideline-to-sideline speed and physicality. In a game where the opponent kept fighting, his consistency kept Texas from handing control over.

Takeaway: Smith is your defensive heartbeat — when he’s locked in, the unit performs.

đŸ§± CB Kobe Black

Stat line: 1 TFL, 4 tackles, consistent in coverage
Black continues to step up in coverage and in run support. With South Carolina threatening, his ability to hold his own helped Texas maintain the lead.

Takeaway: As your boundary CB, Black’s performance gives you faith when the offense is under stress.

đŸ§© CB Eli Bowen

Stat line: 11 tackles, 3 TFL (according to box) — wow
Bowen’s high tackle count and multiple tackles for loss underscore how active he was. He didn’t just cover — he involved himself in making plays everywhere.

Takeaway: Bowen is proving that he’s more than a secondary name; he is a playmaker who can flip field position and deliver clutch stops.

⚔ Defensive Front & Line Units

The front seven showed grit in a tighter game. While Texas won, the opponent was never blown out, which means the frontline had to keep applying pressure and making stops — and they did.

Takeaway: Some drives were extended by the opponent, but you held on. The group deserves credit for closing, though you’ll want cleaner finishes.

🧡 Coaching & Game Plan

Coach Hirsch and the staff deserve credit for the results but also for how the team responded to pressure. The offense showed big-play ability. The defense held on when the opponent rallied. That said: a six-point margin when your team is capable of dominating suggests there’s still a performance gap to close.

Takeaway: The blueprint is working, but you’ll tighten execution and consistency to avoid hanging on in future games.


✅ Final Takeaway

Win or lose, you need wins — and you got it. This one was tougher than it should have been, but it also revealed some vital truths:

  • Your offense can explode through Lockett and Endries when you let the game open up.
  • Your defense has difference-makers (Smith, Bowen, Black) who show up when the opponent fights back.
  • The narrative changes when your team executes consistently — the ceiling is high for this roster.

🔍 Areas to Improve

  • Quarterback turnovers: Murphy’s 3 INTs kept this close. In big games, you can’t give that away.
  • Game closing: Up six near the end? You want that margin bigger, or you want stops that seal it.
  • Offensive balance: While the passing game popped, the rushing output was modest. You’ll want more consistent ground yardage.