Kind of surprising as it means sls continues to be left farther and farther behind, but someone may have pointed out the absolute idiocy of expecting astronauts to climb up a 2 story ladder, with no backup, in an Eva suit if they went with the "favored" option for the lander.
You have BO at least CLAIMING they'll have a heavy lifter flying next year. You have spacex with a heavy lifter already flying now. You have ULA with a smaller lift, but high energy upper stage ready to go.... why are we still not exploring earth orbit rendezvous for Orion? EOR, even if you give ULA 2 billion to build an adapter and set a centaur up for the lunar injection burn, and SpaceX 2 billion to man rate the Falcon Heavy( or hell, don't man rate heavy.... put the orion on heavy empty, rendezvous a dragon with it in orbit, no man rating required), plus pay for an Orion and the 4-6 launches necessary to set it all up with an unmanned test flight and a manned circumlunar flight, you STILL are cheaper than paying for two SLS flights to donthe same thing.
If ULA doesn't want to play ball in a 4 year/fixed price contract, I'm reasonably sure, without doing the numbers, spacex could be talked into doing the whole mission, and the falcon S-2 should be more than capable of making the TLI burn.
There are just simpler options all the way around. We're stuck in the Apollo mindset of minimal number of launches for maximum weight, but the cost per KG and cost per flight difference has made that need less imperative. Starship will be amazing for the weight that it can lift, and more flights definitely reduce complications, but we're going to stand around and kick rocks for a bigger and better rocket until we get left behind.