Oklahoma
What does Oklahoma State’s Mike Gundy think of college football technology, rule changes?
Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy talks about first spring practice
Oklahoma State football coach Mike Gundy talks about Cowboys’ first spring practice
OSU ATHLETICS
STILLWATER — Mike Gundy is never short on opinions.
And this offseason, college football is not short on impactful rule changes.
So the Oklahoma State coach has thoughts on the new technology and guidelines coming to the game this season.
The three most notable rule changes are:
- Two-minute warning time stoppages at the end of each half, like the NFL.
- In-helmet communication devices for a coach to speak to a player on the field.
- Tablets on the sidelines for teams to review in-game video.
Particularly when it comes to using technology, Gundy has been a vocal proponent of improving what is available to college programs.
He suggested last year the need for an in-helmet communication system amid the Michigan sign-stealing scandal.
Still, he feels college football ventured into the technological advancement a little too softly with its newest change.
Here’s a look at what Gundy had to say about the three major changes at hand:
More: Some Oklahoma State football game times set, including early starts for Arkansas, Colorado
Communication device ‘doesn’t do much’
Following the NFL’s footsteps, college football will allow one player on each side of the ball to have an in-helmet communication device so a coach can speak directly to the player until the play clock reaches 15 seconds.
Gundy is excited to see the communication devices brought in, but he doesn’t believe the guidelines are broad enough to impact the game or stop sign stealing.
“In the NFL, they huddle up on both sides of the ball,” Gundy said. “Colleges don’t huddle up. So one ear piece in one player, in my opinion, doesn’t do much for college football on either side of the ball.
“One guy either has to yell what he hears to everybody, which is not gonna go over good in a big stadium with a college football environment, or you’re back to signaling. So I think it’s a step in the right direction, but I’m just not sure we took the step that’s gonna stop the issues that forced us into this situation.”
Gundy’s solution? Allow teams to use five communication devices at a time.
“Your quarterback gets one and your skill kids on offense get one,” Gundy said. “Then your quarterback’s always gonna tell the line what to do.
“On defense, you can give it to two safeties, your corners and one linebacker, and he becomes the quarterback on defense. That’s what I proposed to them, but I’m a process-of-elimination guy who solves problems really easily. I didn’t have to think that through. But they didn’t buy it.”
During spring practice, Gundy used the devices on both sides of the ball. Obviously, the quarterback was the option for the ear piece, but Gundy said the defensive decision was being toyed with.
“We haven’t made that decision yet,” he said. “We were hoping multiple ear pieces would be allowed. We’ve had the discussion about who gets it. I would guess with most college football teams, it’ll be a linebacker or safety.”
More: How Gavin Freeman’s Oklahoma State ties led him from OU to Cowboys football in portal
Tablets a needed upgrade
Again copying the NFL, college football will allow 18 video-capable tablets on each sideline for players and coaches to review video of the current game only.
On NFL television broadcasts, cameras regularly catch players using the handheld tablets on the sideline for a quick review session of the previous series.
“We’re migrating toward the NFL in everything we do,” Gundy said. “With the technology and the two-minute warnings, and paying players, we’re becoming a minor-league system of the NFL is basically what’s happening. Revenue sharing is right around the corner.
“Each position group and multiple other people — whoever they (the NCAA decision-makers) determine can have them — will use (tablets) just like you see in the NFL,” Gundy said. “When I would go watch my boys play high school football, they would come off to the sideline and go watch a 70-inch TV that they had wired up and they could go over their stuff.
“We’re just now getting to a tablet, but we can’t use anything other than just that tablet.”
More: How Oklahoma State football’s Parker Robertson learned he was no longer a Cowboys walk-on
Two-minute warning adds strategy
Another idea plucked from the NFL, college football will now have an automatic stoppage with two minutes left in each half.
It’s an interesting change, considering last year’s move to shorten the game by eliminating certain late-game clock stoppage situations.
The previous changes made it easier for a winning team to run down the clock, but this will provide an additional stoppage without a team using a timeout.
“There is some strategy involved in that,” Gundy said. “When you’re on defense and you’re trying to get the ball back, you’re trying to use your timeouts and force them to use the two-minute warning as another timeout when the offense doesn’t want to. So there’s some strategy that goes into it.
“Last year’s change, if you got behind by multiple scores with seven minutes to go in the game, it felt like the clock never stopped. You were really in trouble. I think that’s gonna stay the same with the exception of that one timeout.”
Oklahoma
North Carolina, Oklahoma advance to the Men’s College World Series finals
Oklahoma is just three outs away from steamrolling through the right side of the bracket and knocking out Georgia to reach the championship finals.
To prepare, let’s take a look at what arms we should expect for the Sooners just like we did for the North Carolina earlier.
The Sooners have leaned heavily on their freshmen pitching trio in Cord Rager, Xander Mercurius and Nick Wesloski throughout Omaha. The first two went at least seven innings, while Wesloski tossed 5.2 innings on Wednesday. Even though they used relievers LJ Mercurius and Jackson Cleveland in the first two games, neither pitched more than two innings nor allowed a run.
If LJ, who entered for Wesloski on Wednesday, finishes the game, he will have gone 3.1 innings.
That sets up Oklahoma very well to matchup with UNC, which went 3-0 and also hasn’t used many arms up to this point.
If OU does win, expect Rager, Xander Mercurius and Cleveland to be ready to go. Rager, who hasn’t pitched since their first round game against Alabama on Saturday, June 13, would have a full week of rest.
Oklahoma
Rep. Kevin Hern wins Oklahoma GOP nomination for U.S. Senate, governor’s race heads to runoff
U.S. Rep. Kevin Hern easily won Oklahoma’s GOP nomination for U.S. Senate on Tuesday, and the race for a new governor in the deeply conservative state began with Republicans Gentner Drummond and Mark Mazzei advancing to a runoff.
In a primary that again tested President Donald Trump’s status as Republican Party kingmaker, both Hern and Mazzei carried his endorsement in their bids to win open races for two of Oklahoma’s biggest offices. With nearly all the votes counted, Drummond, the state’s attorney general, was narrowly ahead of Mazzei, a former state senator.
The primary had Republicans picking their preferred successor to outgoing Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt and a nominee for the Senate seat once held by Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin. Democrats haven’t won a Senate seat in Oklahoma since 1990.
Hern’s most serious potential GOP rivals stayed out of the Senate race after Trump endorsed him even before Mullin was confirmed as a replacement for fired Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. Hern received more than 50% of the primary vote to avoid a runoff.
He struck a somewhat bipartisan tone in speaking with reporters after winning big, touting his experience as a House member working on issues such as trade and energy. He promised to represent conservative principles and “Oklahoma ideologies” in the Senate and noted he already has relationships with senators.
“We have a lot of friends in a lot of different states, including blue states,” Hern said.
READ MORE: Live Results: Oklahoma midterm primaries
Trump endorsed Mazzei last month in a hotly contested race that also had other major candidates, including former Oklahoma House Speaker Charles McCall and Chip Keating, a former state public safety director who is the son of a two-term governor.
Drummond told reporters at his watch party that he had expected a runoff after Trump endorsed Mazzei and suggested that Trump could reconsider his endorsement of Mazzei, saying, “who knows?”
“Mr. Mazzei got a bump, but now he’s got to earn the rest,” Drummond said.
Trump repeated his endorsement of Mazzei on his Truth Social platform on Monday. Mazzei told supporters Tuesday night, “All I can say is, ‘Wow.’
“Eighteen months ago when we started this adventure, no one thought this was possible,” he said. “The political insiders said we had no chance. We started at zero, but who in here actually had faith we could get the job done and get in the runoff? You did.”
Mazzei also boosted his campaign with personal funds — nearly $10.9 million, or almost 95% of the $11.5 million he raised, according to campaign finance reports. Drummond put $2.5 million from his own pocket in raising about $7.2 million. Together, Drummond, Mazzei, Keating and McCall contributed $22.5 million of their own funds to their campaigns, or 72% of their combined fundraising of more than $31 million.
READ MORE: Oklahoma begins choosing a new U.S. senator and governor in crowded primary
The winner of the GOP runoff will face Oklahoma House Minority Leader Cyndi Munson, who won the Democratic nomination Tuesday by a wide margin.
In a solidly Republican state, the races for two of Oklahoma’s biggest offices set off a political scramble. To replace Mullin in the Senate through this year, Stitt appointed Republican Alan Armstrong, an energy executive, but state law prohibited him from seeking a full term.
In November, Hern will face the winner of a Democratic runoff between N’Kiyla Thomas, a nurse and community activist, and Jim Priest, an attorney and minister.
The governor’s race is open because Stitt is finishing his second four-year term and cannot serve a third under the state constitution. Trump has seemed eager for him to go.
As head of the National Governors Association, Stitt drew Trump’s ire earlier this year over a dispute over invitations to White House events at the group’s annual meeting. The fallout led to Trump attacking Stitt on social media as a “RINO,” meaning Republican in Name Only.
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Oklahoma
Oklahoma’s minimum wage will stay at $7.25 as voters reject increase
It’s not happening. Oklahomans said no to increasing the state’s minimum wage from $7.25 to $15 an hour by 2029.
More than 55% of voters, or about 348,000 people, voted against approving State Question 832, according to unofficial results from the Oklahoma State Election Board.
Had it passed, the minimum wage would have gradually increased over the next three years to $12 in 2027, $13.50 in 2028 and $15 in 2029. Once it reached $15 an hour, all new increases would have been based on the cost of living, as determined by the U.S. Department of Labor Consumer Price Index data.
For now, it will remain at $7.25 — where it has stayed since Oklahoma last increased it in 2009.
In the leadup to the vote, Oklahomans shared mixed views on whether an increase to the minimum wage would harm small businesses or if the pay raise was long overdue for low-wage jobs.
Prominent figures like Mayor Monroe Nichols voiced support for the wage increase while business groups like the Tulsa Regional Chamber expressed concerns. Following the vote, the chamber said it agreed with Oklahomans that the initiative was not “the best solution.”
“The inclusion of automatic annual increases tied to national inflation metrics rather than Oklahoma’s unique economic conditions did not reflect wage policy with a balanced approach,” the chamber wrote in a statement Tuesday night.
The chamber will continue to work with state lawmakers to support legislation that will promote long-term economic growth, job creation and business competitiveness.
Around 350,000 Oklahomans make less than $15, Arindrajit Dube, a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, previously told The Oklahoma Eagle and Tulsa Flyer. Most businesses that pay $15 or less are either in the retail or restaurant industries.
Dube previously pushed back on the idea that wage increases would lead to higher prices. He pointed to examples of states that recently passed similar minimum wage increases like Nebraska, Florida and Arizona, which have not had noticeable price hikes.
John Croisant, the Democratic nominee for Oklahoma’s 1st Congressional District, shared similar thoughts at the Tulsa County Democratic Party’s election night watch party.
“Other red states, even Missouri and Florida, have implemented the minimum wage increase — they haven’t had prices go up,” Croisant said inside NEFF Brewing. “We’re 50th in education, we’re 48th in health care, we’re 46th in (a) living wage. We’re not really doing anything to help support (residents.)”
The proposal was opposed by Tulsa County GOP leadership, who told News on 6 it had the potential to hurt small businesses.
For more Election Day results from the Tulsa Flyer and Oklahoma Eagle, click here.
Ismael Lele is a Report for America corps member and writes about business in Tulsa for The Oklahoma Eagle. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep him writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting this link.
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