Troy Aikman, 1984
Troy Aikman may be best remembered as a 3-time Super Bowl-winning, NFL Hall of Fame quarterback with the Dallas Cowboys.
Aikman arrived in Norman in 1984 and was prepared to back up starter Danny Bradley.

Aikman would return for his sophomore season in Norman as the starter.
After leading the Sooners to the first three wins of the 1985 season Aikman suffered a broken ankle against Miami.
He was replaced by a true freshman from Carson, California who led the Sooners to eight-straight wins and a sixth national championship.
Aikman transfered to UCLA with Switzer’s help and the rest of the story as they say was history.
Jamelle Holieway, 1985

Jamelle Holieway was a 5' 9", 180 lb. quarterback from Banning High School in Wilmington, California when he arrived in Norman in 1985.
The Sooners were coming off a 9-2-1 season following three-straight 4-loss seasons and looking to reclaim their ranking atop the national standings.
Holieway found himself backing up sophomore Troy Aikman and up until that ill-fated broken ankle against Miami, it appeared Holieway was destined for a back up role.
However, the kid from Carson, California seemed born to run the Wishbone as the Sooners ran off 8-straight wins en route to the program's sixth national championship with a 25-10 win over Penn State in the Orange Bowl.
Holieway became the first true freshman quarterback to lead his team to a national title.
He seemed destined to a long, illustrious career at Oklahoma and more national championships.
However, after losing to Miami again in 1986 for the Sooners only loss, he was injured late in the 1987 campaign and replaced by red shirt freshman Charles Thompson.
Thompson would lead Oklahoma to victory over Missouri and Nebraska and in the Orange Bowl against Miami again for the national championship but the Sooners lost 20-14, the third straight loss to Miami in three seasons.
The Jamelle Holieway era at Oklahoma stood at 28-1, three straight Big 8 Championships and Orange Bowl appearances and one national championship.
Holieway rehabilitated his injured leg, backed up Thompson for the entire 9-2, 1988 season and then took over for an injured Thompson playing his last game in the Gator Bowl at the end of that season in a 13-6 loss to Clemson.
Ironically, that loss would also be the final game for Barry Switzer, as well.
Barry Switzer was fired in June of 1989 amid controversy in the program tied to a federal drug sting involving the arrest of Charles Thompson (whose orange clad, shankled image made the cover of Sports Illustrated) and other player incidents involving an athletic dormitory rape and shooting incident involving two players over a bad haircut.
Thompson served 17 months in prison and never played another down for Oklahoma.
He ended up at Central State University, a historically black university located in Wilberforce, Ohio. He played running back on the 1992 NAIA Division I national championship team. Thompson rushed for 1,018 yards on 200 carries and five touchdowns and caught 29 passes for 439 yards and seven touchdowns.
He left school after his junior year to enter the 1993 NFL draft but his past proved too much for NFL teams.
Thompson was not drafted.
His son Kendall was signed by Oklahoma in 2011 and played sparingly as a back up, red shirt sophomore quarterback before transferring to Utah in 2014.
Thompson's son Casey was signed by Texas in 2018 and is currently a red shirt sophomore quarterback.
Charles Thompson still lives in Oklahoma and is a motivational speaker including past visits with the University of Oklahoma football team.
The Collins Brothers, 1989
After the best two-decade run in Oklahoma history, the nineties saw the worse decade since the 1960's.
Left-over probation from the end of the Barry Switzer-era led to only six winning records, zero conference championships, three bowl game appearances and four head coaches.
And a slew of no-name quarterbacks.
Too many to mention here.
But a few freshmen quarterbacks made starts.
Red shirt freshman Eric Moore started all 11 games in 1995 in a 5-5-1 season for Howard Schnellenberger's only season in Norman.
Highly-recruited freshman Justin Fuente from Tulsa Union High School, started eight games in 1996 going 3-5 in a 3-8 season.
However, Fuente left for Murray State after his sophomore season in 1997.
Overall, 23 quarterbacks made starts for Oklahoma in the 1990's.
Cale Gundy will get the nod here.
The current Oklahoma inside receivers coach, Gundy arrived in Norman in 1990 and made five starts for head coach Gary Gibbs his freshman year leading the Sooners to an 8-3 record.
He would go on to finish his career 31-13-2 as a starting quarterback and hold every single-season and career passing record in Oklahoma history.
Gundy would be named an All Big 8 first team quarterback his senior season in 1993.
Nothing else to see here.
Rhett Bomar, 2005

Rhett Bomar was Rivals #1 rated high school quarterback from Grand Prairie, Texas signed by Bob Stoops following his consecutive BCS national championship runner-up finish in 2004.
Stoops returned freshman sensation running back Adrian Peterson and Norman was a buzz to see him paired with freshman phenom Bomar at quarterback.
However, Oklahoma lost 10 NFL draft choices from the past two BCS National Championship runner ups, and 2005 would be a rebuilding year.
Stoops knew as much and was leery of starting a true freshman quarterback in the home opener against Gary Patterson’s TCU Horned Frogs.
Stoops had reason to worry.
After red shirt junior quarterback Paul Thompson appeared shaky, Stoops quickly replaced him with Bomar.
However, Patterson’s stingy defense had neutralized an injured Peterson and made Bomar look like a true freshman.
A fourth quarter fumble by Bomar late in the game, one of four by the freshman, set up a TCU touchdown for the winning score and TCU upset Oklahoma 17-10.
Shocker.
Bob Stoops football juggernaut had been beaten at home in the season opener after going undefeated in the regular season the past two seasons.
Despite the loss, Stoops stuck with Bomar the rest of the season.
And suffered growing pains.
After back-to-back BCS National championship appearances, Oklahoma was in a rebuild mode losing Heisman Trophy winning quarterback Jason White and a slew of talent on both sides of the ball.
So Stoops suffered through a season of hard knocks with a true freshman quarterback.
A blowout loss on the road to UCLA followed by a 45-12 humiliation to eventual national champion Texas, resulted in a Sooner record of 2-3.
Holy crap.
What the hell was happening in Norman?
Stoops settled things down with better defense, limited Bomar’s risk-taking by having him hand-off to Adrian Peterson and reeled off five wins to finish the season 7-4.
A controversial, last-minute 23-21 loss to Texas Tech in Lubbock, when a Red Raider running back was deemed to have scored when replays clearly showed his behind had hit at the three yard line, was the only thing keeping the Bomar-led Sooners to 6 straight wins to end the season.
Oklahoma’s first-ever Holiday Bowl appearance followed against Oregon in San Diego.
And Stoops and company rode Bomar, Adrian Peterson and a much improved Sooner defense to a 17-14 win to finish the season 8-4.
Suddenly things looked bright for a quick turnaround in 2006.
Both Bomar and Peterson returned along with an improved offensive line and the defense that showed improvement the year before.
After a disastrous 2-3 start, an 8-4 season in 2005 now seemed palatable to Sooner fans looking for a return to the BCS national championship game.
However, disaster struck off the field as Bomar and another player were caught accepting illegal payments for no-show work at a local automobile dealership in Norman.
Stoops reacted quickly and booted Bomar and the other player from the team.
Paul Thompson was moved from wide receiver back to quarterback for the season opener and Oklahoma would go on to win its fourth Big XII Championship in the Bob Stoops era.
Bomar ended up at Sam Houston State and a brief NFL career as a backup.
What started out so promising for the former #1 rated high school quarterback in 2005, ended abruptly after just one season.
Sam Bradford, 2007

Sam Bradford entered the University of Oklahoma in the fall of 2006 as a lightly-recruited freshman from Oklahoma City's Putnam City West High School.
A Sooner legacy, his father Kent had played for Barry Switzer in the 1970's, after a red shirt year, Bradford won a three-way battle for the starting quarterback job in 2007.
Bradford led the Sooners to wins over Texas and Missouri in the Big 12 Championship Game and if not for a last-second loss in Boulder to a tough Colorado team 27-24 and upset in Lubbock to Texas Tech, after he left the game with a concussion, the Sooners would have gone undefeated.
A surprise blowout loss in the Fiesta Bowl to West Virginia 49-28 dropped Oklahoma to an 11-3 record.
Returning in 2008 for his sophomore season, Bradford improved the Sooners to a 12-2 season and Heisman Trophy win ending in the BCS National Championship game versus Florida.
A 24-14 loss to Tim Tebow and Florida in the BCS Championship Game only fueled the anticipation for the 2009 campaign as a host of starters were returning to Norman with Bradford.
However, Bradford was knocked out of the first-ever college football game in Jerry World in Arlington, Texas during the first half of the opening game against BYU.
Bradford suffered a clavicle injury, and although he rejected surgery and attempted an ill-fated comeback against Texas, was hurt again in the Cotton Bowl and was lost for the season.
The Sooners suffered along with freshman quarterback Landry Jones and finished 8-5 with a Sun Bowl victory over Stanford.
Although Bradford was eligible to return to Norman for his senior season in 2010, he elected to enter the NFL draft where he was promptly rewarded as the #1 overall selection along with fellow Sooners Gerald McCoy at #3 followed by Trent Williams at #4.
Landry Jones, 2009
Landry Jones was a highly-recruited quarterback from New Mexico and eventually signed with Oklahoma to back-up returning starter Sam Bradford in 2009.
However, Jones was thrust into the starter's role the first game against BYU and led the Sooners to a hard-earned 8-5 record.
You can hardly blame Jones.
True freshman who don't get any reps during the fall camp rarely see playing time except for injuries.
And that's exactly what happened to Jones his first year in Norman.
Despite being surrounded by a legitimate defense led by All-American Gerald McCoy, Jones struggled early and often to master the Oklahoma offense.
Following a 14-13 loss to BYU, Jones seemed to hit his stride in back-to-back blowouts of Idaho State and Tulsa, 64-0 and 45-0.
However, those wins were followed by a tough 21-20 loss in Miami to the #17 ranked Hurricanes and a 16-13 loss to #3 ranked and eventual national champion Texas in the Cotton Bowl.
A 10-3 loss to un-ranked Nebraska in Lincoln seemed to sum up Jones inefficiency at quarterback in 2009.
However, Jones would start his remaining three years in Norman and eventual assume every major passing record in the OU record book.
Jones led the Sooners to a 12-2 record and Co-Big 12 Championship in 2010 followed by a 10-3 record in 2011 and another 10-3 season and Big 12 Championship in 2012.

Ironically, Jones would be the last four-year starter for Oklahoma.
Trevor Knight, 2013
Trevor Knight was a highly-recruited dual-threat quarterback from San Antonio Reagan High School in 2012.
He red shirted his freshman year and won the starting job over Blake Bell in 2013.
