The author isolates on two mistakes by Jumper, two mistakes by Foreman, one missed FG by Medley, and a fumble by Kamara across four of our games. Four players, six plays.
It's a lot more complicated than that.
Earlier in the season, I counted up 14 specific plays and decisions that--any one of them, just one--would have flipped the Oklahoma game outcome. Most by players not executing as well as they should, but a couple were coaching decisions, as well. The whole team--offense, defense, special teams, and coaching staff--lost that game.
Same with Florida. Though I didn't count up key "flip" plays, I'd bet there were a dozen or so.
Arkansas was a train wreck. I don't think you can boil that game down to any one or two or even three plays. We simply played abysmally (about as bad as against North Texas, without the talent buffer).
Alabama we played very well, we were just up against a superior, deeper and more seasoned team.
So, bottom line is, the author's perspective is far too simplistic. Shouldn't just point fingers at a few players and say they're the cause of 4th quarter comebacks by our opponents. Team wins, and team losses, every one of them.
Go Vols!