UH has a pretty darn good defense actually, ranked top 20 in FCS. Houston has actually been doing very well on the recruiting front the last couple years despite having to compete with A&M, UT, and LSU.
I was about to say, as someone who doesn't watch UH, wasn't their defense a bit improved this year?
The point is, looking at one single game, which wasn't even that bad in the first place is not a good practice for determining a players stock. You have to evaluate a player as a whole and look at their entire body of work and skill set and determine how that may translate into the NFL.
65% completion and 206 yards against one of the best defenses in his respective conference is not a single game damnation on Teddy not being a first overall pick. If you don't like him at 1.1, that is fine, but use more than one game, that was actually not that bad, as your reasoning.
Eh, it's still worth looking at someone's 'worst' game just for the sake of comparison. That said, these were my takes:
1:17 - Everything up to this point looked just fine; Houston's corners are covering UL's pretty well but Teddy is still getting the ball to his guys. I only point out this play because it was an incompletion because the WR slipped, and on the play following it Teddy should have just thrown the ball away, but he still got some yardage under pressure, which could effect punts. It's not first down, but it's something; he didn't get sacked.
2:03 - Holy inside pressure, Batman! Sacked, though I think any QB not named JFF would have been sacked, as well.
2:18 - Gets the ball out very quickly with pressure in his face, but WR bobbles the throw and drops it.
2:28 - Good coverage by UH's secondary; Teddy checks it down and gets what he can; second time this has happened on 3rd and 15+. There wasn't a big sack before this that I noticed, so maybe some runs got stuffed? Won't be able to tell without watching the full game.
2:57 - Again, has to check it down on 3rd and 23(!!!) after a DB blitz wasn't blocked. At this point I'd like to see Teddy challenge UH deep, but at this point the ball was right next to UL's end zone so I can't blame Teddy too much.
3:11 - Throws off-balance and doesn't get enough air under the ball; WR has to come back for it but it bounces off the hands. I think this was the most pressure I've seen Teddy under.
3:23 - Turns his head way too early on the screen pass and the LDE notices and swats the pass down.
3:33 - Internal Pressure, Part 2: Electric Boogaloo. Teddy does a nice job of escaping to his right and getting the ball out, but again this came on a 3rd and 15. Early MVP vote for this game goes to Houston's defensive line; they must have been stuffing runs all day.
4:02 - Teddy gets the ball out as the pocket implodes, but his receiver (#10) drops it, ugh. On second watch, it looks like Teddy was pressured into throwing it behind 10, who can only palm it with his left hand.
4:12 - Houston's Dline doin' work; Teddy has a 7-step drop and almost immediately has to start running left before throwing it away.
4:26 - Teddy has nobody to throw to (last play of the half so it probably wanted to go deep); Houston's line breaks through (there's a flag, so holding?) and Teddy again has to run left and throw it away.
4:53 - Goin' deep! Would have been a touchdown but the receiver was pushed OOB at the 3 yard line after beating his man and making the catch. Probably could have dived for the TD, but whatever. There's no plays made in the RZ, so I'll assume UL just punched it in and didn't throw.
5:30 - Teddy gets a ball out and accurately to his receiver out near the boundary on a 3rd and 13 play, where only his guy could catch it; Teddy might not have Mettenberger's arm strength but if he can make those throws all day he might not need it.
6:01 - 3rd and 9 (UL must have called a LOT of runs - especially considering the video is only 7:38 long; doesn't seem like it was super-effect, though) and AGAIN Teddy is being thrown to the wolves by his line; internal pressure nearly forces a pick, though luckily it was just defended.
6:31 - Just wanted to note that UL seemed to use a lot of screen plays this game that, like their runs, seemed to blow up more than be effective. Just weird play-calling.
So, overall thoughts:
-Houston's defensive line seemed very effective, going by downs and yardage (a surprising number of 3rd and 10+ plays with a couple of sacks to show for it)
-I agree with what was said earlier: UL's receivers didn't seem like they could get a lot of separation and Teddy was forced to run away from incoming pressure
-Teddy did all the things that he normally does, but it was complicated by all the third and longs and his offensive line not giving him much help.