TEXAS LONGHORNS PLAYER-BY-PLAYER EVALUATION

Quarterfinal Win vs. No. 9 Notre Dame — 42–28

Texas Advances to the National Semifinal

In a game where Notre Dame threw the kitchen sink—vertical shots, tempo, exotic blitzes, and a relentless passing attack—your Texas Longhorns responded with poise, balance, and toughness. The 42–28 victory was far from a cruise; it required stars to play like stars, role players to execute, and your veterans to steady the ship.

Below is the full unit-by-unit, player-by-player breakdown of who delivered, how they impacted the win, and where their performance elevates Texas heading into the semifinal.


QUARTERBACKS

Maalik Murphy — 19/30, 185 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT; 8 rushes, 70 yards, 1 TD

This game was a microcosm of Murphy’s identity: controlled aggression, the ability to stress defenses with both arm and legs, and the resilience to shake off mistakes.

  • Passing:
    • 63% completion rate against one of the most complex safety rotations you’ve seen all season.
    • The lone interception came on a disguised robber concept; he responded with two straight scoring drives afterward.
    • His 17-yard TD strike was a perfect timing throw off a high-low read.
  • Rushing:
    • His 39-yard keeper was the most important play of the third quarter—flipping field position and reestablishing momentum.
    • Averaged 8.8 yards per carry, consistently punishing Notre Dame for playing too much 2-man.
  • Pocket presence:
    • Took 3 sacks, but avoided two more with smart movement.

Verdict: A winning, composed performance—exactly what a senior QB should provide in a playoff atmosphere.


RUNNING BACKS

CJ Baxter — 17 carries, 93 yards, 2 TDs

Your tone-setter. Your hammer. Your closer.

  • 5.5 YPC against a top-10 rush defense.
  • Two red-zone touchdowns where he powered through contact at the 3-yard line.
  • Created 30 yards after contact, proving once again that Texas’ run game is built on physical identity.
  • The offensive line fed off him—his downhill finishes forced Notre Dame to commit extra hats, which opened your RPO game.

Verdict: Championship-level back. Controlled the flow of the offense.


M. Terry III — 4 carries, 40 yards, 1 TD

The perfect change-of-pace spark.

  • Averaged 10.0 YPC, including a 22-yard burst that broke the Irish’s pursuit angles.
  • His touchdown run early helped Texas seize a two-score cushion.

Verdict: Efficient, explosive, decisive.


WIDE RECEIVERS + TIGHT ENDS

Jaime Ffrench — 7 receptions, 52 yards, 1 TD

The offensive MVP of the passing game.

  • When Murphy needed a reliable separator, Ffrench was the answer.
  • 50 RAC yards speaks to his toughness and willingness to attack underneath windows.
  • Scored on a perfectly executed quick out where he beat press at the line and finished through contact.

Verdict: Volume receiver, chain mover, pressure-proof.


Kaliq Lockett — 4 receptions, 46 yards

Quietly one of the most important contributors.

  • Worked the intermediate windows brilliantly.
  • His 17-yard catch on 3rd & medium was one of the game’s turning points.
  • One drop, but otherwise reliable and efficient.

Verdict: The glue guy of the receiving room today.


M. Terry III — 3 receptions, 38 yards

Dual-threat weapon.

  • Helped Murphy against blitz looks as a safety valve.
  • Turned a simple swing pass into a 26-yard RAC gain that set up Baxter’s second touchdown.

Verdict: Huge impact as both runner and pass-catcher.


J. Endries — 2 receptions, 25 yards

When Texas needed a tight-end presence, Endries answered.

  • Beat man coverage twice on seam-release concepts.
  • His 17-yard catch in the 4th helped bleed the clock.

Verdict: Under-the-radar but valuable.


CJ Baxter (receiving) — 2 receptions, 21 yards

Did damage on checkdowns and flats.

  • Forced linebackers to widen their fits.
  • His reliability allowed Murphy to avoid unnecessary risks.

Verdict: Complete three-down back performance.


OFFENSIVE LINE

Protection:

  • 3 sacks allowed, but far more were avoided thanks to recovery blocks.
  • Handled Notre Dame’s twisting front better as the game progressed.

Run Blocking:

  • Generated 203 rushing yards and multiple explosive gains.
  • Consistently reset the line of scrimmage.

Standouts:

  • Interior trio was excellent on combo blocks.
  • The tackles played disciplined against wide outside-backer alignments.

Verdict: A playoff-worthy trench performance.


DEFENSE

Notre Dame threw for 376 yards—but Texas played a classic “bend but don’t break” game and won the situations: red zone, third down, pressure moments.

Below are the individual defensive evaluations.


Shane McOliver — 13 tackles, 3 TFLs, 1 sack

YOUR DEFENSIVE MVP.

  • Played like a coach on the field.
  • Diagnosed screens, option plays, and Irish motions instantly.
  • His 3 TFLs came at massive moments—two on 2nd & short, one on a crucial RPO.
  • Sack came on a green-dog blitz where he closed space violently.

Verdict: Best game of his senior year. Leader. Difference-maker.


K. Black — 10 tackles, 1 TFL, 1 INT

Game-changer.

  • His interception deep in Texas territory prevented a possible go-ahead score.
  • Played downhill and confident in run fits.
  • Wrapped up well in space.

Verdict: Tone-setting, opportunistic performance.


J. Williams — 8 tackles

Quietly strong.

  • Firm in his zones, clean in pursuit.
  • Prevented two potential explosive plays by taking disciplined angles.

Verdict: Dependable, smart football.


E. Bowen — 7 tackles

Another consistent presence.

  • Strong perimeter run defense.
  • Didn’t allow yards after contact when aligned in the alley.

Verdict: Steady, physical, and trustworthy.


D. Walters — 6 tackles

Solid complementary performance.

  • Closed well on intermediate crossers.
  • Delivered a big open-field stop late in the 3rd.

Verdict: Reliable rotational value.


X. Fils-Aime — 6 tackles, 1 TFL

Key contributor in space.

  • His TFL stopped Notre Dame’s tempo series cold.
  • Strong hip-turning in coverage.

Verdict: Athletic and impactful.


L. Lefau — 5 tackles

Played his role well.

  • Filled interior gaps with strength.
  • Prevented cutback lanes that Notre Dame typically exploits.

Verdict: Important in maintaining defensive structure.


F. Walker — 4 tackles

Showed burst off the edge.

  • Nearly got home twice on pressures.
  • Provided containment on rollout concepts.

Verdict: Good discipline game.


C. Fite — 3 tackles, 1 sack

Timely splash play.

  • Sack came on a perfectly executed twist.
  • Brought needed interior push in the fourth quarter.

Verdict: Situational disruptor.


D. Williams Jr. — 2 tackles, 1 TFL

Strong rotational snaps.

  • His TFL in the red zone forced Notre Dame into a field-goal attempt.

Verdict: High-energy impact.


SPECIAL TEAMS + GAME SITUATIONAL NOTES

  • Kick coverage was clean—no explosives allowed.
  • Field position battles were controlled by disciplined fair-catch strategy.
  • Complimented your offensive balance perfectly.

FINAL VERDICT

Your Texas Longhorns looked like a No. 1 seed:

  • Balanced offense (203 rushing, 185 passing)
  • Explosive run game
  • Reliable QB play under pressure
  • Defensive situational dominance
  • Superstar performances from Baxter, Ffrench, McOliver, and Black

This is the performance of a team built for January football.

Texas moves on—battle-tested, confident, and still undefeated.

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