Sunday, July 26, 2020

History of Freshman Quarterbacks at Oklahoma


Red shirt freshman Spencer Rattler is poised to start at quarterback for the University of Oklahoma, if and when there is an actual college football season.

That puts him in rarefied air at tradition-rich Oklahoma where two of the last three Sooner quarterbacks have won the Heisman Trophy and were selected back-to-back #1 NFL draft choices.

Oh, and don’t forget Sam Bradford and Jason White who won Heisman’s in the first decade of the 21st century!

So with that review, let’s travel way back in the Sooner football time capsule to 1972, the first year freshmen became eligible to play NCAA football in 20 years, and take a look at how freshmen and red shirt freshmen quarterbacks have fared in Norman.

Kerry Jackson, 1972.

Barry Switzer had been Oklahoma’s Offensive Coordinator since 1966. 

And it was at Switzer’s suggestion three games into the 1970 season that convinced head coach Chuck Fairbanks to switch offenses to the Wishbone.

Fast-forward to 1972 after a record-breaking 1971 offensive performance that resulted in 472 yards rushing per game, and Switzer was busy recruiting looking for the next Jack Mildren.

He leaned on a relationship from his Arkansas days with Galveston Ball High School Coach Joe Wooley, who was born in El Dorado, Arkansas not far from Switzer’s hometown of Crossett, Arkansas.

Switzer told Berry Tramel of the Daily Oklahoman in 2013, 

“I knew Joe really well. Good relationship with him. I thought we could get Kerry.”

But there was only one problem.

Kerry Jackson was black.

And as Tramel pointed out, black quarterbacks were years away from being accepted by college fan bases.

Prentice Gautt was the first black football player at Oklahoma in 1957.

Texas integrated football in 1970.

Alabama in 1971.

A black quarterback at the University of Oklahoma in 1972 seemingly was unheard of.

But “Bootlegger’s Boy” Switzer got the approval from Fairbanks to recruit Jackson and he signed with the Sooners and immediately earned playing time.


Jackson backed up Senior Dave Robertson and was OU’s third leading rusher through four non-conference games with 286 yards on 44 carries.

An ankle injury suffered in a game 5 loss to Colorado, Oklahoma’s only loss on way to an 11-1 record and #2 national ranking, limited Jackson’s playing time the rest of the year.

On a very good Oklahoma football team.

The 1972 Sooners featured a high-powered rushing game featuring senior halfback Greg Pruitt from Houston. Both Pruitt and center Tom Brahaney would be named All-Americans.

Plus the Oklahoma defense featured all three Selmon brothers for the first time featuring nose guard Lucious and tackles Lee Roy and Dewey Selmon, all eventual All-Americans. Rod Shoate and Derland Moore were named  All-America in 1972, as well.

Oklahoma would face Penn State in the 1972 Sugar Bowl which would be the first night-time Sugar Bowl and only time the game was played twice in the same year following the 1971 game which was played on New Year's Day 1972.

Kerry Jackson saw action and is shown in this rare black and white video from the game (the only images of Jackson as a Sooner that I could find!) NOTE: Sorry, video doesn't play on mobile devices.


However, that was the end of Kerry Jackson’s future as Oklahoma quarterback.

Fairbanks resigned in January to coach the New England Patriots and Switzer was elevated to head coach.

In April, Jackson was deemed ineligible as it was revealed administrators at Galveston Ball High School had changed the transcripts of Jackson and teammate Mike Phillips so that they could qualify for OU.

Jackson had to sit out the 1973 season and watch a sophomore named Steve Davis run the Wishbone to near-perfection leading OU to a 10-0-1 record.

However, due to Jackson’s and Phillips’ ineligibility from  the year before, the Sooners were ineligible for television or bowl games for the next 2 years.

Davis would return in 1974 and lead Oklahoma to an undefeated season and fourth national championship.

He did it again in 1975 with an 11-1 record and fifth national championship.

Davis would end his career and Switzer’s first three years with a 32-1-1 record.

No one ever heard from Kerry Jackson again.

Even Switzer was amazed 41 years later as he related to Tramel,

“Kerry Jackson was going to be our quarterback,” Switzer said. “Steve Davis would never been the damn quarterback if Kerry had been eligible. Kerry was really a good talent. He was going to be a great player.”

To his credit, Jackson stayed in Norman. Even after he suffered a broken sternum in an off-season car crash not long after his ineligibility was announced. 

He eventually backed up Davis in 1974 and rushed for 12 yards on 17 carries.

In 1975, he was fourth string behind Dean Blevins, Joe McReynolds and Thomas Lott.

Kerry Jackson finished his Oklahoma career with 316 yards rushing on 67 carries and one touchdown and 231 yards on 15 for 49 passing and no touchdowns and 6 interceptions.

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.


And deservedly so.


But before he became Mr. Cowboy, Aikman was a freshman quarterback at the University of Oklahoma.


Barry Switzer was coming off of three straight 4-loss seasons when he recruited Aikman from Henryetta, Oklahoma.

Aikman arrived in Norman in 1984 and was prepared to back up starter Danny Bradley.


However, Bradley was injured before the seventh game and Aikman found himself thrust into his first collegiate start for the #2 ranked Sooners against unranked Kansas in Lawrence.


Oklahoma entered the game 5-0-1, it's only blemish a 15-15 tie suffered two weeks before in Dallas.


No one expected Oklahoma to miss a beat with Aikman at quarterback.


However, after leading the Sooners to a first quarter field goal, Aikman was bullied and buried by Mike Gottfried's defense as Kansas upset Oklahoma 28-11.


Switzer said this after the game,


Aikman was a,


"whipped pup...but a great kid, gave us all he had, wrong place, wrong time for him."




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. 


Charles Thompson, 1987


Charles Thompson's career was inter-twined with  Jamelle Holieway as the red shirt freshman from Lawton took over late in the 1987 season replacing an injured Holieway.


Thompson led Oklahoma to victories over Missouri and Nebraska and then he started in the Orange Bowl against Miami for the national championship.


Oklahoma's offense proved no match for Miami's superior defense which bottled up Thompson and the Wishbone attack.


The Sooners late touchdown via "fumblerooski" only seemed to highlight Miami's superior defense.


The only way Oklahoma could score was via a trick play.


Thompson led the Sooners to a 9-2 record in 1988 substituting for the injured Holieway.


However, he too would be injured in the final game of the season and was replaced by Holieway in the bowl game versus Clemson, a 13-6 loss.



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

Charles Thompson’s arrest created a quarterback scramble.

Steve Collins won the starting job over fellow freshman Tink Collins (not related) and became the first red shirt freshman to start the home opener in OU history on September 2 with a 73-3 win over New Mexico State.

However, Collins suffered a broken finger in the September 9 win against Baylor and Tink Collins replaced him. 

Sophomore Chris Melson got the start following the Baylor win and, in what was to become a signature loss in the Garry Gibbs era, the Sooners laid a night-time egg in the desert in a 6-3 loss to Arizona.

Gibbs went back to Tink Collins the rest of the way until November with Steve Collins return.

Tink Collins was 3-2 replacing Steve Collins and was benched after a 20-3 loss at Colorado.

Steve Collins would finish 2-1 losing to Nebraska 42-25.


This was Gary Gibbs first season replacing Barry Switzer and the first year of probation with no television or bowl games and a reduction in scholarships and recruiting visits.

The Big 8 torch was passed to Colorado and OU finished third in the Big 8 at 7-4.

After an incredible run from 1984 thru 1988, the Sooners would end the decade with a four loss season. 

Gibbs who was touted earlier in the decade as an up and coming defensive genius linked to the USC job, never recovered from the crippling NCAA sanctions Switzer left him.



The Sooners' three-year probation included a two-year bowl ban and a one-year ban on live television appearances. More importantly the number of scholarships which could be given annually was cut from 25 to 18 for two years. 

The number of official campus visits for recruits was reduced from 85 to 50 for two years. And the number of full-time coaches permitted to recruit off campus was cut from 10 to eight for a year.

And the NCAA instructed OU to take disciplinary action against three staffers, including two assistant coaches and a former recruiting coordinator.

OU was charged with 20 violations over an eight-year period. Most damning was a $1,000 offer from an assistant coach to Hart Lee Dykes, a highly recruited receiver who eventually signed with Oklahoma State (who also was put on a 4-year NCAA probation at the time).

However, the NCAA also found the Sooners were illegally scalping game tickets for players and one player was cited for accepting payment for work not performed and for receiving free use of a car 
owned by his employer.

And Switzer was cited for a violation for supplementing assistant coach Mack Brown's salary from his own pocket because there was not enough money in the budget to match what Brown previously made at a previous job.


Switzer called the NCAA violations "piss-ant" and revealed other violations the NCAA was unaware of in his biography "Bootlegger's Boy", that all fell under the category of helping student-athlete's through hardship.

How bad were the NCAA sanctions on the Oklahoma program?

Well, the five years before the sanctions and probation, Oklahoma went 51-8-1 with one national championship and the Sooners entered bowl seasons in contention for two other national championships.

Post-probation, OU's next three coaches combined to go 61-50-3. After a two year bowl ban ended, the Sooners only qualified for a bowl game in three of eight years.

The Oklahoma program would not fully recover until Bob Stoops was hired away from Florida in 1999.

The 1990's--The Lost Decade


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 loss to Texas 45-35 in the Cotton Bowl was the only blemish during the regular season but the Longhorns returned the favor on a last-second loss at Texas Tech that enabled the Sooners to win a three-way tie for the Big 12 Championship on a razor-thin tie-breaker rule.

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. 


He will be remembered by Sooner fans for incredible comebacks in Morgantown against West Virginia 50-49 and Oklahoma State in overtime in Norman 51-48 in 2012 and back-to-back blowouts against Texas in 2011 and 2012, 55-17 and 63-21.

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. 



Knight's running style would prove him injury prone and Bell would win the hearts of Sooner fans leading comeback wins over Notre Dame and Oklahoma State in 2013 following Knight injuries.


Following a 10-2 season in 2013, Knight led the Sooners to a huge upset win over Nick Saban and Alabama in the Sugar Bowl and seemingly propelled Oklahoma back into the national discussion for the 2014 season.


However, Knight would struggle mightily against Kansas State and TCU, in losses directly attributable to his pick-six interceptions, and eventually suffered an injury against Baylor in a third loss causing him to miss the last three regular season games.

He was replaced by red shirt freshman quarterback Cody Thomas who was 2-1 with wins against Kansas and Texas Tech followed by an overtime loss at home to Oklahoma State.

Knight returned for the Russell Athletic Bowl game and was 17-37 and 103 yards passing and 3 interceptions in a 40-6 loss to Clemson.

Red shirt sophomore Baker Mayfield won the quarterback competition for new Offensive Coordinator Lincoln Riley and took over in 2015 and Knight would eventually transfer to Texas A & M as a graduate transfer after the 2015 season.


Summary

So, the past 48 years of Oklahoma freshman quarterbacks certainly has been a roller coaster ride.


Since Kerry Jackson's inauspicious debut and subsequent ineligibility in 1973, the Sooners have seen a host of freshmen quarterbacks take their shot at leading Oklahoma to the promised land.


However, only true freshman Jamelle Holieway accomplished that feat coming off the bench to replace an injured Troy Aikman in 1985 and leading Oklahoma to eight straight wins culminating with a 25-10 win over Penn State in the Orange Bowl for the Sooners sixth national championship.


How rare was Holieway's true freshman heroics?


There wouldn't be a true freshman win a national championship for his school for another 33 years until true freshman Tua Tagovailoa led Alabama to a come-from-behind win against Georgia in the 2018 College Football Playoff.


So what to think about red shirt freshman Spencer Rattler taking the reigns in Norman in 2020?


No quarterback has entered his first start higher-rated or more accomplished than Rattler.


He has all the tools to be the best ever at Oklahoma.


However, as the past has shown, high school recruiting rankings can't predict eventual success in the college football world.


Just look no further than #1 rated Rhett Bomar's tenure in Norman to see what can happen to highly recruited freshman quarterbacks in Norman.


And as highly recruited as Rattler is, he isn't without his own off-field baggage.


Rattler was suddenly suspended at the end of his senior year in high school in Arizona for unnamed personal misconduct.


Lincoln Riley wasn't worried about whatever transgressions Rattler had done because he never wavered in his support and honored his scholarship offer.


But that behavior and that of guys like Rhett Bomar before him is enough to have Sooner fans old enough to remember a little nervous putting all of our eggs in one freshman basket heading into the upcoming season.


Let's hope Rattler has his head squarely on his shoulders and can handle the bright glare that goes with being a freshman quarterback at the University of Oklahoma.


And let's hope that if he can't or somehow is injured or comes down with COVID-19 and misses a game, that Tanner Mordecai, Chandler Morris and Tanner Shafer are just as capable back ups as Jamelle Holieway, Charles Thompson and Paul Thompson.


Because history has proven that at some point a back up quarterback, true freshman, red shirt freshman or even a wide receiver, will be called upon to save a game or a season.



Boomer.

















Tuesday, July 21, 2020

2020 Oklahoma Football Preview Part Two: Defense

After six and a half years of Mike Stoops Part Deux, Lincoln Riley did what many Oklahoma fans had been demanding. 

He fired Bob Stoops brother.

About 48 hours after his defense gave up 48 points to Texas, the most points in Red River Rivalry history.

A rivalry that spanned 114 years at the time.

After placing an interim tag on long-time friend and mentor Ruffin McNeill for the remainder of the 2018 season, Riley made his first coordinator hire with Ohio State defensive coach Alex Grinch.


Grinch came from Ohio State via Washington State where he spent three years honing his Speed-D philosophy trying to keep up with Lincoln Riley’s former coach and mentor Mike Leach’s Air Raid offense.

Whatever he did, it worked as Grinch's Washington State defense ranked 99th in total defense in 2014, the year before his arrival in Pullman, and by his final season in 2017 the Cougars ranked 16th in total defense and only allowed 11 touchdown passes.

Grinch’s philosophy is simple. 

There are only so many possessions in football. So if you can create turnovers for your offense, that gives your team more opportunities to score.

Grinch absolutely believes the defenses sole purpose is to return the football to the offense.

So Grinch devised this strategy that placed a premium on creating turnovers. 

This strategy believes that playing faster, more aggressively "down hill" causes more opportunities to gang tackle and thus create turnovers.

Grinch's players not only tackle aggressively but they are intent to strip the ball upon arrival as well.

Grinch performed a private study while at Washington State and he found that a defense should create two turnovers per game, or 24 total in a 12 game season. 

And that those 24 turnovers should result in a minimum of nine wins per year.

How did that strategy work in 2019 for Oklahoma?

Well, Grinch’s Oklahoma defense created 11 turnovers which equaled the 2018 total. 

The Sooners also finished the regular season at 11-1, won its fifth Big XII Championship and made its fourth College Football Playoff suffering another blowout loss to LSU in the Sugar Bowl.

Identical results to the previous regimes in 2018, 2017 and 2015 under Mike Stoops.

However, the Oklahoma defense improved statistically from 114th nationally in total defense to 38th. And the pass defense ranking rose from 130th to 58th while the rushing defense improved from 59th to  32nd. 

Overall, the Sooners defense led the Big XII in total defense in league play.

So even without the turnover numbers he so craved, Grinch made huge strides in improving the Oklahoma defense across the board.

Understandably, his Speed D philosophy requires a certain type of player and forced several transfers from the program, most notably highly touted freshman Ron Tatum, moved former top recruits to offense (Michael Thompson, who later entered the transfer portal) and slimmed down the best lineman to a below 300 pound level in Neville Gallimore.

He positioned his corners closer to the line of scrimmage and dared officials to throw more pass interference calls than give up long completions.

His defensive lineman were slimmer and faster and the outside linebackers were longer and faster and created quarterback pressure.



The highlight of Grinch’s new defensive philosophy was the annual Red River Rivalry when Sooner defenders sacked Texas quarterback Sam Ehlinger nine times. 

A series record.

That defensive performance propelled Oklahoma to its fifth straight Big 12 Championship and fourth College Football Playoff in five years.

And that’s where the wheels fell off in Alex Grinch’s Speed Defense.


Joe Burrow and his LSU teammates exploited Grinch’s defense in a record-setting 63-28 victory in the Peach Bowl en route to a National Championship against Clemson two weeks later.

Now, to be completely fair to Grinch, the Oklahoma defense was already down two starters when sophomore Bookie Radley-Hiles got tossed for targeting early in the first half.

That might not have made a difference in the outcome but you try playing LSU’s top rated offense without three defensive starters.

So, as Sooner fans we must turn the page and forget about the Peach Bowl results.

Here's what the 2020 Oklahoma defense will look like for the home opener against Missouri State.

Nose Guard

Oklahoma loses its best nose guard in Neville Gallimore plus his two backups in Marquis Overton and Dillon Faumaatau.

Because Grinch was hired in January of 2019 and got a late start in recruiting it was hard for him to make any inroads into the NewWave19 class of 2019.


But he had a full year under his belt in 2020 and he turned his focus elsewhere to the junior college ranks.

Where he signed Perrion Winfrey, the highest ranked player in juco. Winfrey was a standout nose guard at Iowa Western Community College and should provide ample talent to replace Gallimore.

Grinch also dipped back into the juco ranks and signed Josh Ellison from Blinn Junior College. 

Another highly rated juco player, Ellison is a former 4-star from A&M Consolidated and was rated as the 8th best juco player in 2019.

Both Winfrey and Ellison will be expected to make immediate contributions.

They will be joined by redshirt sophomore Jordan Kelley from Tulsa Union. 

Let’s hope Winfrey and Ellison play up to their hype.

However, I’m skeptical about relying on Juco players as front line starters on your defensive line.

They’re junior college players for a reason: they weren’t good enough to sign with a Power Five School out of high school.

Grades, talent deficiencies or attitude kept them sidelined. 

And heaven forbid they bring a drug riddled past to Norman.

We already have three players suspended for the first five games because of failed drug tests prior to the Peach Bowl.

Yes, one of those three was a first-year juco player.

Just sayin’!

Defensive Tackle

Midwest City redshirt sophomore Jalen Redmond returns from a stellar season and will start at defensive tackle.

Redmond was sidelined by a rare blood clot disorder his true freshman year that sidelined his season.

However, Oklahoma trainers moderated his snap count early and he showed no signs of any problems playing throughout the season.

Redmond is a beast and has the quickness to wreak havoc on opposing quarterbacks. Just ask Sam Ehlinger.

Backing up Redmond will be junior college transfer, senior LaRon Stokes.

Stokes played well in 2019 and will provide added toughness and experience.

Redshirt freshman Kori Roberson will provide added depth and athleticism.

Hopefully, Wichita, Kansas redshirt freshman Marcus Hicks can find playing time, as well. Hicks has bulked up considerably from his arrival in Norman and wouldn't surprise if he squeezes into the rotation.

Defensive End


St. Louis junior Ronnie Perkins established himself as a top defensive player in 2019 and was added to the Bednarik and Nagurski Award Watch list as well as named a pre-season All Big 12 selection for 2020.

Perkins solidified the defensive end position and proved a formidable run stopper and pass rusher.

However, he was one of three Sooners who failed a drug test prior to the Sugar Bowl and he will have to sit out the first five games.

Just as his absence hurt the Sooners chances against LSU, Oklahoma will miss Perkins presence until he is cleared to play against Iowa State on October 17.

At least he’ll be fresh for the second half of the season.

Sophomore Marcus Stripling had the Sooner coaches raving toward the end of the season.

The former 4-star from Houston possesses the size, speed and athleticism to provide quality snaps. He’s not as physical as Perkins but will make up for it with his speed and length.

Redshirt junior Isaiah Thomas from Tulsa Memorial will round out the rotation. Sooner fans will remember Thomas' fourth quarter sack against Baylor in the Big XII Championship game which left many looking around asking, "Who was that?"

Inside Linebackers

Oklahoma loses Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year Kenneth Murray at the “MIKE” position.

Murray chose to leave a year early and was rewarded with a first round NFL draft selection by the Los Angeles Chargers.

He will be replaced by redshirt sophomore DaShaun White.


White played well in 2019 beside Murray at the WILL spot and has already been selected as a Butkus Award Watch List player in 2020.

Joining White at the WILL linebacker spot will be redshirt senior Caleb Kelly. 

Kelly was a 5-star heavily recruited player who was phenomenal in the 2016 Sugar Bowl against Auburn, Big 12 Championship game versus TCU in 2017 and his strip fumble against Georgia in the 2017 Rose Bowl resulted in a scoop and score by Steven Parker.

Yep, Kelly is the real deal and only an injury last season has stunted his progress. 

But he’s a gamer and instead of sitting out last year and taking his chances in the NFL draft, he chose to return late in the year and was prepared to give up his redbshirt by playing in a fifth game had the Sooners beaten LSU.

Yes, I like both White and Kelly in tandem to maintain the level of play Murray and White provided in 2019.

Sophomore Brian Asamoah played well when given his chance and will backup Kelly at WILL. Kelly would probably get first shot at MIKE if anything happens to White.

Inside linebackers Coach Brian Odom has done a good job getting his players lined up correctly and they are playing sound fundamentally which is something this group had not always done in the past.

Expect more of the same level of consistency in 2020.

Outside Linebackers

Jamar Cain was a surprise late addition to the coaching staff in 2020. Cain arrives in Norman fresh from Arizona State where he helped Herman Edwards resurrect the Sun Devils defense.

Cain will coach both defensive ends and outside linebackers. He will find the outside linebackers cupboard is full of quality players to choose from in 2020.

Tulsa Victory Christian redshirt senior, Jon Michael-Terry was having a standout season at RUSH linebacker before he suffered a season ending injury early in the season.

Expect him to regain his starting spot for the season opener against Missouri State.

Joining Terry at the RUSH position will be sophomores David Ugwoegbu and Nik Bonitto.

Both Ugwoegbu and Bonitto fit Alex Grinch's Speed Defense by adding plenty of speed and length to the outside rush position and both played extremely well in 2019.

Bonitto’s game-ending interception saved our season in Waco.

Cornerbacks

First-year coach Roy Manning arrived last year from UCLA and immediately impacted Alex Grinch's Speed Defense philosophy by creating more aggressive press coverage.

This was a welcome relief from the seven yard cushions in the Mike Stoops era that drove Sooner fans nuts.

No one perfected this new style of play more than senior Parnell Motley who had a record year.

However, Motley graduated.


That leaves Tulsa Union senior Tre Brown holding down one corner spot.

Brown started all 14 games in 2019 and recorded 40 tackles and 11 pass break ups.

He possesses ridiculous 4.43 speed which was never more on display than his come-from-behind tackle of Baylor receiver Chris Platt to save the Big XII Championship game in December as well as the Sooners College Football Playoff hopes.

Brown will anchor one side of the field.

The other spot will be contested between sophomore Jaden Davis, who played in all 14 games last year and recorded one start versus West Virginia, and redshirt junior Tre Norwood, who returns after a season ending knee injury in August camp that wiped out his junior season.

Norwood started 14 games in 2018 and tied for fifth on the team with 58 tackles. He will bring experience at the other corner spot if he can beat out Davis.

Expect new-comber, 4-star freshman Joshua Eaton from Houston to compete for back up duty. At 6' 2", Eaton has the length and speed Alex Grinch wants at this position.

Safeties

Junior strong safety Delarrin Turner-Yell should make a full recovery from his collarbone injury suffered in preparation for the Sugar Bowl game. 

His absence was sorely felt as Joe Burrow repeatedly picked on his replacements in freshman Woodi Washington and redshirt sophomore Justin Broiles.

Redshirt freshman Jeremiah Criddell will back up Turner-Yell and expect incoming freshman Bryson Washington to get on the field at some point. 

A 4-star recruit from Los Angeles, Washington possesses the size that Alex Grinch wants here at 6' 2" and was rated as the #8 safety in the 2020 recruiting class by ESPN. Washington chose Oklahoma over Alabama and Texas and won't sit on the sidelines long.

Redshirt junior Justin Broiles played in all 14 games in 2019, including a start in the Sugar Bowl. Not sure Broiles can squeeze past Criddell and Washington in this spot but he provides added depth at the position.

Tulsa junior Patrick Fields returns at free safety and will be backed up by redshirt freshman Woodi Washington who gained valuable experience in the Sugar Bowl.

Brendan "Bookie" Radley-Hiles returns for his junior season at nickel back after an embarrassing exit from the Sugar Bowl for an unnecessary targeting call in the first half.

Bookie was very sound all season for Alex Grinch's Speed Defense and seemed to settle down in his second season and performed very consistently.

However, knucklehead plays like the one that go him ejected from the Sugar Bowl hurt the team and cannot be repeated in 2020.

Expect Jeremiah Criddell to double as his back up here as well as at strong safety behind Dellarin Turner-Yell.

Alex Grinch likes to have Swiss knife interchangeable players in the secondary and after the Sugar Bowl melt down, do you blame him?

So expect Criddell to get long looks here and at strong safety.

A late-addition wildcard to this mix is Justin Harrington from Bakersfield College in Bakersfield, California. 

Harrington was a late signee in December after the early signing period. However, he was a no-show for the July 1 reporting date in Norman. 

Several verified reports now have him enrolled at OU and in Norman with the team.

If so, that’s good news for Alex Grinch. 

Because Fox Sports just ranked Harrington as a top 10 juco signee in the class of 2020.


At 6’ 3” and 215 lbs., Harrington would make an ideal nickel back and is flexible enough to stay on the field for both passing and rushing downs. He can play safety and if he adds weight could also be a candidate at linebacker.

At any rate, Harrington’s size is what Grinch wants at safety and he will be an interesting mix into the secondary.

Summary

Alex Grinch made a difference in restoring credibility to Oklahoma's beleaguered defense in 2019 despite the lopsided loss to LSU in the Sugar Bowl.

He improved all facets of the defense and its total ranking rose from 114th to 38th.

Even though he fell way short of  his 24 turnover margin with 11, the Oklahoma defense was dramatically improved.

He needs more influx of his type of players for his system and 2020 showed some marked improvement toward that goal.

New-combers Perrion Winfrey, Josh Ellison, Bryson Washington, Joshua Eaton and Justin Harrington all will see playing time in 2020. 

They will add to the 2019 class that includes Kori Roberson, LaRon Stokes, Marcus Hicks, Marcus Stripling, David Ugwoegbu, Nik Bonitto, Jaden Davis, Jeremiah Criddell and Woodi Washington.

That's a pretty impressive group of new faces who weren't around in 2018 for that 48-45 record-breaking loss to Texas that resulted in Alex Grinch's arrival in Norman.

Here's to more Speed D in 2020 and another Big XII Championship and fifth College Football Playoff appearance for Oklahoma.











Sunday, July 19, 2020

2020 Oklahoma Football Preview



It’s mid-July, so despite COVID-19 rearing it’s ugly head threatening a spring football season, here’s my annual Oklahoma football preview. 

Part One: the Offense.

The Sooners are picked by league coaches to win their sixth straight Big 12 Conference Championship.

Most of that confidence stems from Lincoln Riley's three-year tenure as head coach. Since Riley arrived in 2015 as Offensive Coordinator, Oklahoma has made four College Football Playoff appearances, had back-to-back Heisman Trophy winners and first round NFL #1 draft picks in Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray and has compiled a 36-6 overall record his first three seasons.

Riley has been anointed as the "quarterback whisperer" and his most recent two recruits at the position have been ranked the consensus #1 quarterback in their respective recruiting classes.

How bad is it for the rest of the Big 12?

Red River rival head coach Tom Herman of Texas began his tenure in 2017, the same year as Riley started in Norman, is 1-3 head-to-head and was asked in the off-season what stood in the way of Texas' getting over the hump against their main rival?

Herman said it was essential to continue an effort to recruit and develop elite talent and then added,

"...then hopefully one of these days they'll stop having first and second round draft picks at quarterback."

OU-ch.

Sorry to tell Coach Herman but Spencer Rattler and Caleb Williams might just keep that OU tradition alive well past his shelf life in Austin.

College football legacies are born when the coaches winning reputation surpasses that of its elite players they recruit and develop.

The Lincoln Riley era has been well-solidified in only his third season in Norman drawing comparisons to Barry Switzer's own 32-1-1 first three year start. 

The only thing missing are Barry's two national championships.

So it is appropriate we will start with the strength of the team: Lincoln Riley’s offense.

Quarterback

For the fourth straight season, Oklahoma will start a different quarterback.

However, this time an unproven redshirt freshman will get the call.

Spencer Rattler is a heralded 5-star recruit from Scottsdale, Arizona. He arrived in Norman last summer just in time to backup Alabama transfer Jalen Hurts.

Rattler saw limited action in 2019 to preserve his redshirt season but displayed brief glimpses of the talent that he developed in the desert as the top dual-threat quarterback in the nation.

Despite redshirt sophomore Tanner Mordecai being listed higher on the depth chart last season, the job is Rattler’s to lose.

Lincoln Riley will go with an unproven redshirt freshman for the first time during his tenure at OU. 

Baker Mayfield had a transfer season at Texas Tech plus a redshirt year in 2014 before taking the reigns in 2015.

Same for Kyler Murray who transferred from Texas A&M.  Except Murray sat a second year in 2017 when Mayfield was awarded an extra year of eligibility.

Can you even believe that now looking back?

Hurts came straight from a three-straight CFP Championship game appearance and SEC Player of the Year honor at Alabama as a graduate transfer for his sole season in Norman.

So, even though Mordecai has two seasons under his belt with Riley, Rattler will be the starter against Missouri State on September 5 or August 29, if the NCAA grants OU’s request to move up the game.

If history is any indication, Sooner fans should hang on as Rattler will be the most-heralded, least experienced quarterback to start a season in Norman since true freshman Rhett Bomar in 2005 (Paul Thompson actually started the home opener but was replaced by Bomar after a shaky start and Bomar started the rest of the season).

And OU fans remember how the home opener turned out against TCU that year.

Rattler possesses a quick-release, rocket arm and is nimble in the pocket.

He can make all of the throws and is shifty-fast to escape pressure while still keeping his eyes downfield. He threw for over 11,000 yards in Arizona during his high school career and added 1,000 yards rushing.

The only knock is his diminutive stature. 

Listed at 6’ and 197 lbs., Rattler will need to be protected as he’s not the physical specimen Hurts was and you saw how much punishment Hurts absorbed in 2019.

But we’ve been down this "size matters" road before with both Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray and those two worked out just fine.

If Mordecai doesn’t enter the transfer portal, expect to see him if anything happens to Rattler. True freshman Chandler Morris from Highland Park, Texas will be third on the depth chart. Redshirt senior Tanner Schafer was just placed on scholarship in February.

This is an area of huge upside potential that comes with some risk if past history tells us anything.

Let’s hope Rattler can maintain his health, poise and head on-and-off the field.

Lincoln Riley is staking his reputation on him.

Running Backs

A position that looked loaded with depth heading into 2020, has rapidly vanished since the Sugar Bowl against LSU.

Redshirt Junior Kennedy Brooks returns for his third season and will headline the running game. Brooks emerged as the star of the backfield in 2019 totaling 1,011 yards and six touchdowns on 155 carries. His 6.5 yards per carry ranked 9th nationally and first in the Big 12 while splitting carries with Trey Sermon, the Sooners fourth leading rusher with 385 yards on 54 carries, and Senior Rhamondre Stevenson, 515 yard on 64 carries.

The Mansfield, Texas native was named a pre-season All Big 12 selection by league coaches.

All seemed poised for growth in 2020 especially since last season's leading rusher was quarterback Jalen Hurts, 233 carries and 1,298 yards, and he is now in the NFL.

But Sermon entered the transfer portal and is now an Ohio State Buckeye (that sounds strange) and Stevenson was suspended for the first 5-games due to a failed drug test prior to the Sugar Bowl.

So that leaves junior T.J. Pledger, redshirt freshman Marcus Major and true freshman Seth McGowan as the depth at running back. 

Pledger and Major have 50 carries between the two of them in three seasons.

The early schedule is front-loaded and daunting. 

An early home game against an improved Tennessee, chomping at the bit on the off-season message boards for revenge of their 2015 loss in Knoxville, followed by a tough road game at Army and their option run game that stretched the Sooners to overtime in 2018, the Big 12 opener against Baylor in Norman and  the annual Red River Rivalry with Texas in Dallas and a tough road trip to Ames against pesky Iowa State.

None of these are hospitable environments or situations for an untested redshirt freshman quarterback and thin receiver corps lacking a spring season of practice.

Sooners will need to keep Brooks healthy and hope the young-uns can provide adequate backup until Stevenson returns from suspension.

Offensive Line

We started last season with a new crew at offensive line as four long-time starters were all NFL-drafted.

Those growing pains were evident early as Jalen Hurts became a one-man show with his breakaway runs from the pocket.

Things did settle down later as Bill Bedenbaugh worked his magic and 91% of those starts return.


Redshirt junior center Creed Humphrey, a preseason All America pick and returning Big 12 Co-Offensive Lineman of the Year, returns with 14 starts at center and leads a line of redshirt juniors in Adrian Ealy, 12 starts at right tackle, Marquis Hayes, 13 starts at left guard, and Tyrese Robinson, who started 14 games at right guard. Humphrey and Ealy were both named Preseason All Big 12 selections. 

Redshirt senior Erik Swenson, 8 starts at left tackle, will get the nod at first. However, UCLA sophomore transfer Chris Murray's status remains in NCAA limbo but he has 24 starts at UCLA and would push for a starter position if available. Redshirt freshman Stacey Wilkins, redshirt sophomore Brey Walker and redshirt freshman E.J. Ndoma-Ogar are three heralded recruits who will be counted on to add quality depth. True freshman Andrew Raym from Broken Arrow, has Bedenbaugh raving and could see action at guard or center if necessary.

This experienced Sooner line will be formidable to deal with and is just what Lincoln Riley needs for an unproven quarterback, inexperienced running back and receiving corps.

Receivers

Another unit that was heralded as deep with 5-star talent returning has been decimated in the off-season.

Junior Charleston Rambo leads a group which lost NFL first round selection CeeDee Lamb to the Dallas Cowboys and long-time Sooner favorites Nick Basquine and Lee Morris to graduation and Mykel Jones to the transfer portal.

Heralded Sophomore Theo Wease returns after seeing limited action in 2019 but his fellow NewWave19 Triplets didn’t fare as well.

Sophomores Jadon Haselwood and Trejan Bridges will miss at least the first five games and maybe more.

Haselwood suffered a lower leg injury in the off-season and his return is doubtful in 2020.

Bridges failed a drug test prior to the Sugar Bowl and will sit the first five games.

And graduate transfer Theo Howard from UCLA suffered an Achilles injury in the spring although he is making progress toward a return in 2020.

So that leaves Lincoln Riley with not only an unproven redshirt freshman at quarterback but the least experienced receiver corps he’s had his first six years in Norman, as well.

Redshirt Sophomore Drake Stoops returns and heralded Texas high school sensation Marvin Mims arrives but that’s about it for quality depth.

And none of these cats had a spring season to gel with Spencer Rattler.

So grab a roster and get your popcorn. 

H-Back

Sophomore Austin Stogner returns replacing retired Grant Calcaterra.

At 6’ 6” and 259 lbs., Stogner showed that he is more than a capable replacement for the former All Big 12 Calcaterra whose career was cut short by concussions last October.

Stogner has the size and speed to provide match up hell for opposing defensive coordinators

Junior Brayden Willis and redshirt junior Jeremiah Hall also return and add a power element to this traditional strength of the spread passing  and running game of the Lincoln Riley Air Raid offense.

Prediction

This unit would be considered a rebuild at any other program.

However, with Lincoln Riley calling the plays, record-setting offensive production has been the norm.

Sure there are plenty of unproven fresh faces in this group but Riley has shown a knack for blending young talent with experienced guys here and there to make a record-setting offensive unit each year.

Yes there’s no proven face at quarterback and the running backs and receiver corps are thin but the o-line is loaded upfront and Riley is the offensive guru who will need to deploy all of his magic to make this unit hum early.

I think this offense will only get better as the year progresses.

Let’s hope they don’t stub their toe early and survive the front-loaded schedule while the young-uns learn on the job quickly.

If so, the October 24 Bedlam match up in Norman could be a preview of the Big 12 Championship Game in December.

NEXT—Year two of Alex Grinch’s Speed Defense.




Saturday, July 11, 2020

Lincoln Riley Press Conference.

Lincoln Riley Press Conference.


Monday, October 5, 2020. NORMAN, Oklahoma.

“Good afternoon, everybody. 

Wanted to start by telling everyone we had a really good week of practice last week. Really impressed with the enthusiasm and execution. 

Especially considering we’ve all been chomping at the bit to actually play a game since we’ve been in this holding pattern.

Really looking forward to playing Texas Saturday night, especially how unique a setting here in Norman will be, even without fans, and especially since it was going to be our season opener and all.

But a bit of bad news this morning to share. 

Our starting center Creed Humphrey, consensus All-America and one of our leaders, tested positive yesterday for Covid-19.

As a result, our entire offensive line including coach Bill Bedenbaugh, have been placed in quarantine for seven days.

Also, our entire defensive line including coach Calvin Thibodeaux, have also been placed in quarantine as a precaution.

At this time, we have not had any other players or coaches or staff impacted by this situation.

However, I’m not gonna answer any questions here or speculate any but just turn it over to Joe Castiglione. Thank you.

Athletic Director Joe Castiglione:

“Today, after consultations with President Harroz and the University Board of Regents, I regret to inform you that we’ve decided to cancel the rest of the University of Oklahoma Sooners 2020 football season due to the developments regarding the positive testing of Creed Humphrey and the impact on the rest of our team.

I’m sure everyone realizes you can’t play a football game without an offensive or defensive line.

And although I can’t predict the future, who knows what player grouping will be impacted next week with this virus.

This uncertainty regarding available personnel, and the impact it places upon our coaches and players preparation has made continuing football operations untenable.

The health and safety of our student athletes, coaches and staff is our top priority. 

We aren’t going to take any chances of placing anyone in a position to jeopardize their health in these trying circumstances with this virus.

So again, sad to report it, but the 2020 University of Oklahoma football season has officially been cancelled.

I will now take a few questions”

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