A couple of things:
1. You can't tell from still photos what the QB saw at the time of throw. This is why teams watch film interlaced with tight shots, and wide shots, so that they can see the entire field. What a lot of fans complain about when the ball is in the air, and another receiver is "wide open" (not that this is what you are doing here, just that it is a similar situation) is really the speed of the safeties or backers reacting to the QB's eyes or reading the throw. I would need to see the actual video, but preferably the wide shot to see what was going on. That's why going to the game is so much better than watching on TV.
2. Calling out where the ball landed doesn't always make sense, since the throws are designed to go through specific 'windows' or to a certain point. If you miss on a post, the ball may land 15 yards past the receiver, but you may have made a decent throw and just missed by a few inches.
Personally, I think your photos show us trying to get a little greedy. The series started on the 8, and the first 2 throws were to the 30 and 40. That forced us into a third down where we were clearly going to have to run an out or a slant/drag to pick up 10, and the defense clamped down, and forced a poor throw. We played right into it and that was your ballgame.