Longhorns upend Tigers

The Longhorn offense proved too much for Missouri.

Published Oct. 18, 2008

AUSTIN, Texas — Senior quarterback Chase Daniel’s homecoming evening didn’t go quite as planned. His date ditched him and then took off with his close friend.

Texas quarterback Colt McCoy danced the night away with Daniel’s date — the Heisman. Turns out Daniel’s other buddy, the BCS Championship, is hot on McCoy's heels, too.

Texas proved why it is the No. 1 team in the nation Saturday night with a 56-31 stomping of the Missouri Tigers.

“They just outplayed us,” coach Gary Pinkel said. “There’s no excuses. We know who we’re playing. We know the type of team they were. They’re a heck of a team. They just outplayed us, out blocked us, kicked us, running, passing, coaching, everything.”

From the first snap, it was clear it wasn’t Missouri’s night. Sophomore wide receiver Jeremy Maclin caught a pitch on a reverse when he was pounded by 295-pound defensive tackle Roy Miller for a seven-yard loss.

The Tigers went three-and-out and failed to score on their opening drive for the first time all season.

“We can’t afford negative plays on first and second down,” Maclin said. “As you get in third-and-long situations, we’re good enough to recover, but in a hostile environment like this you can’t do that to yourself.”

And just as it was clear from Missouri’s first snap how the game would unfold, the Longhorns' start told the same story.

Texas moved the ball fluidly on its first drive. Every single snap went for positive yards. The only stop Missouri had on a single play was when a McCoy pass was tipped at the line, but the Tigers were called for a roughing the passer penalty. McCoy capped off the 94-yard long drive with a six-yard run up the middle for a touchdown.   

McCoy’s number skyrocketed from there. He finished the game 29 of 32 passing for 337 yards and two touchdowns. He added an additional 38 yards and two touchdowns on the ground.

“Colt McCoy and his execution was as good maybe as I’ve ever seen,” Pinkel said. “It starts there with their great execution to show how great of a football team they are.”

While Texas’ offense dissected a flimsy MU secondary, Daniel and his offense failed to match the Longhorns.

“Instead we went three-and-out,” Daniel said. "We got to work on that. We got to get better faster. That’s just how it is. It’s the truth.”

Missouri didn’t crack the scoreboard until the final seconds ticked off the clock to end the first half, when senior kicker Jeff Wolfert hit a 33-yard field goal. They trailed 35-3 at the midway point.

The Missouri defense had its best performance of the day at the start of the second half. It forced Texas to go three-and-out and recorded a sack against McCoy.

Daniel and the offense also looked re-energized. They picked up a couple of key third downs after going one for six on third down conversions in the first half. Sophomore tailback Derrick Washington completed a methodical drive of 81 yards in three minutes and 42 seconds with a two-yard touchdown run.

“They were able to get us out of a rhythm a little bit in the first half,” Daniel said. “We scored on four out of five series in the second half, but anytime you’re down 35 it’s going to be hard to come back.”

And they couldn’t. Texas quickly started playing like the team it was in the first half and pulled away.

The only true bright spot in the game came from Missouri’s senior tight end Chase Coffman, who broke the school’s all-time receptions record. He caught a career-high 12 passes in the game for 140 yards. On his third catch he passed former teammate Martin Rucker who held the previous receptions record with 203 grabs.

“I’d give all of them back for a win tonight,” Coffman said. “It’s just one of those things whatever I need to do to help the team to get a win I’ll do. I tried to get out there and make some plays.”

Despite this being the Tigers' second conference loss, they still have a legitimate shot to compete for the Big 12 North title as Kansas lost its second game of the season Saturday to Oklahoma.

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