Replay: Texas' last-minute rally falls short in 37-31 loss to Washington in Sugar Bowl
Alabama and Michigan put on a physical display in the Rose Bowl, a 27-20 Wolverines victory in the first of two national semifinals to set up next Monday's College Football Playoff championship game with the winner of tonight's Sugar Bowl. In the end, it was No. 2 Washington that held off a furious late-game rally from No. 3 Texas to advance. The Longhorns were favored by 3½ points.
This was our thread throughout the game for updates, scoring plays and analysis:
Texas rally come up short, but what an ending it was
Texas' onside kick after its field goal failed, and the Washington Huskies tried to run out the clock, but the Longhorns caught a break when a Washington injury on third down forced the clock to stop with 50 seconds left. The Huskies punted it away, and as Jordan Whittington was hauling the ball in for a fair catch, a Washington player was flagged 15 yards for catch interference.
That set Texas up with its final chance: down 37-31, at its own 31-yard line with 45 seconds left and no timeouts to work with.
Quinn Ewers threw incomplete on first down, then missed Ja'Tavion Sanders near midfield on second down. On third down, Ewers hit Whittington for a big gain down to Washington's 28-yard line with 25 seconds to go.
Ewers threw to Adonai Mitchell into the end zone, but it was incomplete. Washington cornerback Jabbar Muhammad was shaken up on the play.
On second down, with 20 seconds left, Ewers found Jaydon Blue down the right sideline to Washington's 12-yard line with 15 seconds left. That catch was upheld after a review.
On first-and-10 from the 12-yard line, with 15 seconds to go, Ewers found Blue out of the backfield for a short pass that actually lost a yard. On second-and-11 from the 13, Ewers threw incomplete to Mitchell in the end zone. There were 5 seconds left.
On third-and-11, Ewers was flushed out of the pocket and threw out of bounds. There was 1 second left.
On fourth down, Ewers' lob pass to Mitchell in the end zone fell incomplete
Washington advances to next week's CFP championship game against the Michigan Wolverines. That'll be a matchup of two undefeated teams.
Washington quarterback Michael Penix Jr. finished 29-of-38 for 430 yards and 2 touchdowns to lead the Huskies. Quinn Ewers bounced back from a lackluster first half to finish 24-of-43 for 318 yards and one score. The Longhorns committed two fumbles, one by CJ Baxter and one by Jaydon Blue, in the second half.
Texas' season ends at 12-2.
Texas cuts it to 37-31, with 1:09 left
How do you make up a 9-point deficit with 2:40 to play and two timeouts to use?
Quinn Ewers found Adonai Mitchell for a 12-yard pass, then hit Ja'Tavion Sanders for 20. Washington was flagged 10 yards for a defensive holding penalty, moving the ball to Washington's 13 with 1:24 left. Ewers found Gunnar Helm for a gain to the 7, but Texas settled for the field goal.
Bert Auburn's 25-yarder cut the Huskies' lead to 37-31 with 1:09 left. Texas will need an onside kick.
Texas has 2:40 left to make up a 37-28 deficit
There's 2:40 left to play, and Washington has made this a two-score game. Grady Gross' 27-yard field goal has the Huskies up 37-28.
Washington converted a third-and-2 pass to its tight end, then turned a short bubble-screen into a 14-yard gain to midfield as the game clock hit 5:00. Michael Penix Jr. hit Rome Odunze for 32 yards, however, down to Texas' 10 inside of four minutes. Tybo Rogers was stopped for a 2-yard loss on second down, and Texas called its first timeout with 2:50 left, and on third-and-10 Penix's pass toward the end zone was incomplete.
Texas cuts Washington's lead to 34-28
It took Adonai Mitchell two-and-a-half quarters to make his first catch, and his high grab of a 1-yard touchdown toss from Quinn Ewers has cut Washington's lead to 34-28 with 7:23 left in the game.
CJ Baxter came up limping after a tackle on the Washington sideline during the drive, but on the very next play, Ewers found Xavier Worthy for a 29-yard pass down the same sideline, setting the Longhorns up at Washington's 16-yard line with 9 minutes left. A pitch to Jaydon Blue moved the ball to the 3 for a first down, and then Ewers found Mitchell for the score. Baxter had re-entered the game for that play.
For the game, Mitchell has 3 catches for 21 yards and the touchdown. It's his fifth career CFP touchdown, the first four with Georgia.
Texas commits second turnover
The Longhorns committed their second turnover of the game when Jaydon Blue lost control of the ball at the end of a 21-yard gain early in the fourth quarter. The turnover came at Washington's 22-yard line, too, turning it over in scoring position while trailing 34-21.
Texas holds Washington to a field goal, but trails by 13
There's 14:51 left in the fourth, and Washington has extended its lead to 34-21 on Grady Gross' 41-yard field goal, his second kick of the game.
End of the third quarter, and Texas is in trouble
Washington is leading Texas 31-21 heading into the fourth quarter and will open the fourth with a third-and-5 at Texas' 18-yard line.
Texas' drive fizzles, Horns punt it away
Texas, trailing 31-21, couldn't generate much of a drive and the Longhorns have had to punt it away again. Washington still leads 31-21. There's 5:39 left.
The Longhorns' drives tonight, so far: punt, TD, punt, punt, TD, punt, TD, fumble, punt.
Huskies turn Texas turnover into a field goal
There's 7:44 left in the third quarter, and Washington leads Texas 31-21.
The Huskies made Texas pay for CJ Baxter's fumble, though the Longhorns stuffed a third-and-3 play from the 7-yard line for a 2-yard loss thanks to a stop from Ethan Burke and Byron Murphy II. On fourth-and-5 from the 9, Washington coach Kalen DeBoer, who gave up three points in the first half by unsuccessfully going for it on fourth-and-short from the 14, opted for the field goal, a 26-yarder from Grady Gross.
Michael Penix Jr.'s numbers: 18-of-21 for 330 yards and a pair of touchdowns.
Texas commits a costly turnover
Texas' first big mistake of the night has the Longhorns in a precarious position.
CJ Baxter lost the ball as he was going down after a run, and the Huskies recovered it on Texas' 33-yard line with 10:14 left in the third quarter, already leading 28-21.
Huskies take lead on first drive of second half
Washington got the ball to start the second half and made quick work of its opening drive, driving 70 yards on eight plays culminating with a 19-yard dart from Michael Penix Jr. Jalen McMillan between two defenders in the end zone. Penix was 6-of-6 on the drive.
It's 28-21 with 10:30 left in the third quarter.
Texas, Washington tied at halftime
Washington ran out the clock, and it's a 21-21 tie at haltime.
The Huskies will get the ball to start the second half.
Some thoughts:
∙ Texas looks off on offense. Yes, it's 21-21, but the Longhorns have gotten a couple of breaks on a fumbled punt return that set up a touchdown on offense and a defensive stop on back-to-back third-and-1 and fourth-and-1 tries from Washington at UT's 14-yard line.
∙ Xavier Worthy: 1 catch for 7 yards. Adonai Mitchell: no catches. Ja'Tavion Sanders: 3 catches for 19 yards. Those are Texas' three biggest targets in the passing game with four combined catches for 26 yards.
∙ Washington has outgained Texas, 305 yards to 213.
∙ Michael Penix Jr. is 11-of-14 for 255 yards and a touchdown. He's looked very solid with a great deep touch. Quinn Ewers, however, is 9-of-18 for 97 yards. And he's coming off a career game in the Big 12 championship game.
∙ CJ Baxter and Jaydon Blue have combined for 77 yards on 11 carries; Baxter is averaging 7.6 yards a carry and has scored a touchdown and Blue is averaging 6 yards a carry and has scored a touchdown. And Ewers has 36 yards on five carries, including one keeper for 21. We haven't seen him run this freely since the first half of the season.
Quinn Ewers leads Texas to a tying touchdown
There's 17 seconds left till halftime, and Texas has tied Washington for the third time tonight. It's a 21-21 game after CJ Baxter's 3-yard touchdown run.
Quinn Ewers engineered the 10-play, 72-yard drive that took only 1:03. Ja'Tavion Sanders converted a heady first down by stretching for a first down after a catch near the 40, and on a key third-and -1 from the 29, Ewers kept it and found some room over the middle for a big 21-yard gain. The Huskies were flagged for a late hit at the end of the play as Ewers was sliding, and it set Texas up at Washington's 3 with 20 seconds left.
Washington takes late first-half lead
There's 1:27 left in the first half, and Washington has taken a 21-14 lead on Michael Penix Jr.'s 29-yard touchdown pass to Ja'Lynn Polk, a pass that was tipped up by Longhorns cornerback Malik Muhammad but Polk was able to come up with in the end zone.
Washington gambles, then pays for it
There's 6:59 left in the first half, and Texas just stuffed Washington on a fourth-and-1 gamble at the Longhorns' 14-yard line. It's still a 14-14 game.
Michael Penix Jr. connected on his second long gainer of the game, this one a perfectly placed 52-yard pass to Rome Odunze, who was covered tightly by Ryan Watts. But David Gbenda made a big stop on third-and-1 at the 14, and Byron Murphy II, who scored the offensive touchdown on Texas' last drive, stuffed Dillon Johnson on fourth-and-1.
Texas will take over at its own 14.
Penix, who finished runner-up in this year's Heisman Trophy vote, is 6-of-8 for 190 yards to start out tonight.
Washington makes the first mistake of the game
Washington stopped Texas on its drive, but then committed the first major mistake of the game when Germie Bernard fumbled a punt return and Texas; Morice Blackwell Jr. recovered it at the Huskies' 22-yard line.
That set up Texas' second touchdown, and it's now a 14-14 game with 10:08 left in the half.
CJ Baxter had a 9-yard gain, then rattled off 8 yards though that play was nullified by a Ja'Tavion Sanders illegal shift penalty. But Jordan Whittington gained 17 yards on a slant to the 1-yard line, and defensive tackle Byron Murphy II, lined up in the backfield, bulled in for the short touchdown run. It's Murphy's second offensive touchdown of the season.
Washington takes 14-7 lead early in second
There's 13:08 left in the second quarter and Washington has taken a 14-7 lead on Dillon Johnson's 1-yard touchdown run. Johnson may be averaging just 1.4 yards a carry on his first seven runs, but two of them have been short touchdowns.
Texas, Washington tied 7-7 after first quarter
We're heading into the second quarter. It's a 7-7 game and Washington is driving. The Huskies will open the second quarter with a second-and-7 at Texas' 23-yard line.
Quinn Ewers is 2-of-6 for 38 yards, CJ Baxter has 71 total yards and Jaydon Blue has scored a short touchdown run to pace Texas. For Washington, Michael Penix Jr. has produced a pair of impressive throws: his 77-yard strike to Ja'Lynn Polk and a 29-yard dart to Germie Bernard. He also connected to an open Rome Odunze for 24 yards over the middle.
Texas, Washington exchange punts
There's 2:34 left in the first quarter. It's still a 7-7 game after Texas and Washington have exchanged punts.
Washington went three-and-out on its drive, as Texas edge rusher Ethan Burke had back-to-back stops, one an open-field tackle on a pass play, followed by a stop for no gain on second down. And the Longhorns' drive was spoiled by a pair of mistakes from right tackle Christian Jones, who was beaten for a sack at the front end of the drive and wiped out a 20-yard pass to CJ Baxter on third-and-17 at the end of it.
Jaydon Blue ties it up for Texas
Texas has answered Washington's touchdown with a touchdown of its own, a 5-yard scoring run from Jaydon Blue to make it 7-7 with 7:06 left.
It was a 75-yard drive for the Longhorns. It was Blue's third touchdown of the season.
The key play was a heads-up one from Quinn Ewers, who spun in the pocket and got rid of the ball quickly when confronted with a Washington rusher. CJ Baxter picked up the pass and scampered for 31 yards to the 25.
Baxter's off to a good start: 2 carries for 29 yards and he 31-yard catch that set up the score.
Washington goes up early after big pass play
There's 11:04 left in the first quarter, and Washington is leading 7-0.
Michael Penix Jr. threw a 77-yard strike to Ja'Lynn Polk down to the 2-yard line, and Dillon Johnson followed up with a short run right up the middle, taking on Michael Taaffe at the goal line. It was an 89-yard drive for the Huskies.
One early observation: the expected top matchup between Washington's offensive line, which won the Joe Moore Award as college football's best front line, and Texas' defensive line, which features Outland Trophy winner T'Vondre Sweat, looks as good as advertised.
Texas punts after its first chance
Texas got the ball first, and ended up having to punt.
CJ Baxter broke off a 16-yard run, but that was the only highlight of the drive. Quinn Ewers has started out 0-for-4 with a couple of misfires.
How we're picking the Sugar Bowl
We've got our regular Longhorns crew of beat writers Danny Davis and Thomas Jones and columnists Kirk Bohls and Cedric Golden in place at the Superdome. Here's how they're picking tonight's game:
Kirk Bohls: Texas 38, Washington 35 — I truly think Washington may have a false sense of complacency because it beat Texas in its home state in last year’s Alamo Bowl. Mindset is everything in college football, and the Huskies might be overlooking the fact the Longhorns were without Bijan Robinson, Roschon Johnson and DeMarvion Overshown and had an injured Xavier Worthy. That may be the type of advantage Texas needs to beat Washington and advance to the championship game.
Danny Davis: Texas — Five years after its last trip to New Orleans, Texas will be playing a team that actually wants to be in the Sugar Bowl but I think the results will be the same. Texas has enough offensive talent to win a shootout and move onto the national championship game.
More: Well, is Texas indeed back? Five years later, this Sugar Bowl means so much more
Cedric Golden: Texas 42, Washington 38 — Contrary to the 2018 Sugar Bowl, Texas football is back and the Longhorns will actually prove it with a showstopper of a win over Washington. Texas is the most complete team in the playoff field and will live up to that talent against the best team it has faced this season.
Thomas Jones: Washington 41, Texas 38 — I agree that Texas is the most complete team in the CFP, but its one glaring flaw — a questionable pass defense — could be exposed by what the Huskies do better than anyone in the country. Both teams ring in the new year with an offensive showcase, and the Huskies and star QB Michael Penix Jr. make the last possession of the game count.
Michigan stuffs Alabama at the end, moves to CFP title game
The winner of tonight's Sugar Bowl will face top-seeded Michigan in next Monday's CFP championship game. The Wolverines beat Alabama 27-20 in overtime in the Rose Bowl.
Michigan's Blake Corum scored from 12 yards out in the top half of the opening overtime to make it 27-20. Alabama answered with a short pass for no gain and a big run from Jalen Milroe to get to the 10, but Milroe was sacked for a big loss on second down, forcing a third-and-goal from the 14.
Milroe completed a pass to Jermaine Burton, but Burton was stopped at the 3. On the critical fourth-and-goal, after a pair of dueling timeouts, Milroe was stuffed on a quarterback keeper up the middle out of the shotgun — all with Texas and Washington waiting to get started in New Orleans.
Now it's the Sugar Bowl's turn.
The Rose Bowl is going into overtime
Michigan stopped Alabama on the Crimson Tide's final drive, forcing a punt with 44 seconds left, and then near disaster struck for the Wolverines. The punt returner bumbled the punt return at the 5, then recovered it inside the 1 with 44 seconds left.
But the Wolverines got out of the situation, and the Rose Bowl is going into overtime. It's 20-20 at the end of regulation.
Anyone up for a rubber match?
"There's about 30 minutes to kickoff in New Orleans. The winner of this Texas-Washington game will face the winner of the Michigan-Alabama game in next week's title game in Houston. The Longhorns, of course, handed the Crimson Tide their only loss of the season in the 26-16 win in Tuscaloosa on Sept. 9.
Or it could be Michigan. The Wolverines are threatening to put the Rose Bowl into overtime; they just scored a late touchdown to make it a 20-20 game in Pasadena. The Crimson Tide will have 1:34 left for a game-winning drive. Otherwise, they'll go into extra time.
The Longhorns are wearing their road whites tonight, by the way.
This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: Texas Longhorns football vs. Washington: Updates, scores, analysis