Texas has too big of a recent history for me to declare the ship righted and healthy after two games.
However, it's obvious we're on the right path. The offense has an embarrassment of weapons. Fast ones, strong ones, passing ones, running ones, and ones that do a bit of everything. Sark puts them on the field in combinations that hides his intent, but lets the possibilities play out. A defense that plays run will face a pass, and vice versa.
Critically, we now feature an OL that lets the QB play this out. I believe Texas had offensive talent in years' past, but lacked the OL to see it develop. Hudson Card admirably ran the offense within his limits. We don't know if Quinn Ewers has limits yet.
The players only meeting after the Tech game was mocked. However, I believe that was the meeting where the team leadership implored the defense to quit thinking and play with bad intentions. They knew what to do before. They just took a second to be sure. Against WVU, they took the shortest route to the ball, and arrived in ill humor. Possibly a speedy team like TCU might trick them out of position, but thus far, the defense seems to know their assignments and are executing violently.
ISU has a good defense. Their offense cannot score against air (frankly, just desserts after unfairly using Charlie Kolar as a cheat code all this time). If Texas scores on its first three drives, the game will be over by halftime. ISU isn't awful, but if Texas is what I think they are, the Longhorns should brush them aside in a businesslike way and proceed to the next game like Texas used to do.