Oklahoma
Oklahoma State football early enrollees arrive this week. What to know about the newcomers.

STILLWATER — A collection of Oklahoma State’s latest football additions will report to campus this week to get enrolled before classes begin Tuesday.
Coming off a 10-4 season, the Cowboys are bringing in 12 new players at the semester break who will be around to take part in spring practice. That number could still grow by one or two more, depending on how things shake out in the next few days.
For now, the group includes all five transfer portal additions plus seven of the 18 players from the high school recruiting class who signed letters of intent last month.
Here’s a look at three things to know about the early enrollee group:
More: Oklahoma State football’s ‘grandpas have unfinished business’ in return to 2024 Cowboys
Cowboys get key running back addition
OSU was in a difficult position recruiting running backs out of the transfer portal, faced with the challenge of selling a player on backing up the nation’s top back, Ollie Gordon II.
Yet the Cowboys found a player with local ties and experience in the Southeastern Conference, landing a commitment on Wednesday from Arkansas transfer A.J. Green — a product of Union High School in Tulsa.
The 5-foot-11, 205-pound back rushed for nearly 1,000 yards over the last three seasons, and he can get involved for spring ball to be settled in the offense in plenty of time for what will be a unique but important role next fall.
So the Cowboys will have three scholarship running backs in spring ball with Gordon, Green and redshirt freshman Sesi Vailahi. Two true freshmen — Rodney Fields Jr. and Jaden Allen-Hendrix — will arrive in the summer.
More: Oklahoma State football LB Collin Oliver ‘looking forward to one final ride’ with Cowboys
Secondary focus for Oklahoma State
The biggest influx of early enrollees will be at defensive back, with three incoming freshmen and a transfer portal addition in Kobe Hylton from UTEP.
Among the high school players is Landyn Cleveland, who had perhaps the most impressive offer list of anyone OSU signed in this class. He had offers from Michigan, Washington, OU, Penn State, several SEC programs and many from around his home state of Texas, including the Longhorns.
The 6-foot, 183-pound defensive back from Mansfield (Texas) Legacy High School could fit multiple roles in the OSU secondary, and his early arrival gives the coaches an opportunity to find out where he fits best.
Two more Texas boys, Willie Nelson from Longview and David Kabongo from Roanoke, are in the mix for spring as well.
Hylton, with multiple years of college experience will have the edge in competing for a regular spot, having totaled 145 tackles over the past two seasons.
Young defensive backs have had the best opportunity for early playing time in recent years. This past season, Dylan Smith stepped into a part-time starting role at safety as a true freshman, and Kam Franklin appeared primarily on special teams in six games and still maintained his redshirt status due to postseason games no longer impacting eligiblity.
The Cowboys rotated several players in the secondary, and most of them return. Eight players started games at one of the five spots and only one is known to be gone, with D.J. McKinney having announced his transfer to Colorado.
The team’s top cornerback, Korie Black, has not made an official announcement on his status for 2024, and he has left open the idea he could declare for the NFL Draft when he last spoke to the media.
Either way, the competition for starting jobs will be intense based on the amount of experienced players in the group.
More: A Baylor Jeep. An Oklahoma State football scholarship. How Josh Ford flipped allegiance.
Cowboys reboot tight end
Last year, OSU used the transfer portal to reform its tight end position, as well as the way it used.
But two tight ends and one fullback exhausted their eligibility this past season, including Josiah Johnson (698 snaps) and Braden Cassity (273 snaps), who were the two most-used players in the group.
Both of OSU’s tight end additions are enrolling early, with super-senior Tyler Foster coming in from Ohio, and Josh Ford making the move from Stillwater High School.
Foster and Ford are more traditional tight ends than Johnson, who began his career as a quarterback at UMass, and Cassity, who was recruited to OSU as a defensive end before switching to tight end then fullback.
And the newcomers bring good size. Foster is 6-foot-7, 249 pounds, and Ford is 6-foot-6, 252 pounds. They’ll both get a chance to work their way into the rotation in spring with Quinton Stewart and Tabry Shettron as the returning tight ends.
Jake Schultz, Bryce Drummond and Luke McEndoo will fill out the fullback depth chart.
While Ford will face the growing pains in making the jump to the college game, the early start should benefit him. Foster, on the other hand, seems likely to contend for a starting job right away.
More: Taking a look at contract status, postseason bonuses for Oklahoma State’s Mike Gundy, assistants
Oklahoma State football’s spring enrollees
Incoming freshmen
Name, Position, Height, Weight, Hometown (School)
Landyn Cleveland, DB, 6-0, 183, Mansfield, Texas (Legacy)
Josh Ford, TE, 6-6, 252, Stillwater
Tre Griffiths, WR, 6-3, 200, Keller, Texas
Temerrick Johnson, LB, 6-3, 209, Midlothian, Texas (Heritage)
David Kabongo, DB, 5-11, 185, Roanoke, Texas (Byron Nelson)
Willie Nelson, DB, 5-11, 170, Longview, Texas
Armstrong Nnodim, DL, 6-2, 257, Mesquite, Texas (Horn)
Transfer portal additions
Obi Ezeigbo, DE, 6-5, 252, Ewing, New Jersey (Gannon)
Tyler Foster, TE, 6-7, 249, Pickerington, Ohio (Ohio)
Isaia Glass, OL, 6-5, 295, Sun Tan Valley, Arizona (Arizona State)
A.J. Green, RB, 5-11, 205, Tulsa (Arkansas)
Kobe Hylton, DB, 6-0, 205, Snellville, Georgia (UTEP)

Oklahoma
Baylor looks to bounce back on the road in game against Oklahoma State

WACO, Texas (KXXV) — To say the least, it has been a memorable four games for Baylor football so far this season.
A walk off field goal by Arizona State at McLane Stadium brings the Bears to 2-2 for the season and now they are heading to Stillwater looking to bounce back against Oklahoma State.
Watch the full story here:
Baylor looks to bounce back in road game against Oklahoma State
“Saturday’s game was a tough one,” head coach Dave Aranda said. “But, I think the message there is that hey, you can prepare, you can practice, you can do all of the things — that doesn’t mean you’re gonna win. There’s still more things that you gotta do.”
“There’s no participation trophy for preparing right and staying late and doing the extra all these details matter and so we’re really focused on that,” he added.
The Bears enter Stillwater following the firing of Oklahoma State head coach Mike Gundy after 21 years on the job. While the Cowboys are reeling, the Bears understand that they still have a talented roster.
“They play hard, you know. They get after the ball, their record doesn’t reflect the kind of team they are. They got a lot of talent and they’re gonna be ready to play,” safety Devyn Bobby said.
“Same thing we always talk about — respect all, fear none. We take that into every week, you know they’re still a great program. They have great coaching staff, great athletes on the field, so we gotta be prepared and ready for them,” wide receiver Kobe Prentice said.
After the Arizona State game, head coach Aranda spoke about complimentary football. While the defense had a great game last week, the offense struggled — and they are looking to find that balance.
“Obviously we didn’t get the win, so we got to get better so you know a lot of people might say we had a great game but we didn’t get to win — we could have had more stops, had more turnovers, but you know we’re still having to attack everyday mindset and we’re trying to get better,” Bobby said.
“The higher level than all of that is the team is that you know if one side’s down the other side picks it up. We need to be able to have that, you know, when we’ve played at the level that we need to play, we play that way and so we’re going to continue to aim for it,” Aranda said.
Baylor vs Oklahoma State is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. this Saturday.
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Oklahoma
Oklahoma State football fires coach Mike Gundy after 21 seasons, school announces

Mike Gundy thinks Oklahoma State football woes are ‘fixable’ this season
Mike Gundy says he has no desire to stop coaching the Oklahoma State football program amid the Cowboys’ 11-game losing streak against FBS competition.
Oklahoma State football has fired head coach Mike Gundy after 21 seasons, the program announced on Tuesday, Sept. 23.
Gundy, previously the second-longest tenured head coach with one program in college football, led the Cowboys to a 1-2 start this season, including a 19-12 loss to in-state foe Tulsa on Sept. 19, which was OSU’s first at home to Tulsa since 1951. Oklahoma State also lost to Oregon 69-3 in Week 2.
“Cowboy Football reached an unprecedented level of success and national prominence under Coach Gundy’s leadership,” OSU athletic director Chad Weiberg said in the announcement. “I believe I speak for OSU fans everywhere when I say that we are grateful for all he did to raise the standard and show us all what is possible for Oklahoma State football.”
Oklahoma State is amid its longest losing streak to Power Four teams in program history, having lost 11 straight against such teams. The Cowboys went 3-9 last season and were winless in Big 12 play. Gundy leaves the program with a 170-90 career record and has the school’s winningest coach of all time. He has 108 more wins than Pat Jones, who ranks second in program history with 62 wins.
Gundy is owed a $15 million buyout from the school due to be fired prior to Dec. 31, 2027, according to his contract obtained by the USA TODAY Network.
Gundy said after the Tulsa loss that he had no interest in 2025 being his final season with the program, and was swarmed with questions about his future with the school.
“In 21 years it’s a different position than I’ve been in,” Gundy said. “As I say every week, my job is to evaluate the overall program, players, the systems … And then I have to make a decision on where we’re at based on what we have. That’s what I do. We’ve certainly been in a different situation a lot of years in a row, but currently we’re not in that situation.”
The 58-year-old coach helped build Oklahoma State into a perennial Big 12 title contender after taking over for Les Miles in 2005. He nearly led the Cowboys to the national championship in 2011, and was Big 12 Coach of the Year in 2010, 2021 and 2023.
The fall from grace was fast for the program, as the Cowboys earned a spot in the Big 12 championship in 2023, and also beat archrival Oklahoma in the final Bedlam for the foreseeable future.
Gundy, a former Oklahoma State quarterback and Midwest City, Oklahoma, native, has only coached four seasons at other schools in his career, serving as passing-game coordinator at Baylor in 1996 and receivers coach at Maryland from 1997-99. He was an assistant at Oklahoma State from 1990-95, and again from 2001-04.
Oklahoma State will turn to a new coach for the first time in over 20 years for the 2026 season, and they’ll look to lead the program back to the heights of Gundy’s prime in Stillwater.
Oklahoma
AP Top 25 Continues Troubling Trend for Big 12, Oklahoma State’s Future

The Big 12 is still having a rough time in the national landscape.
Over the weekend, the Big 12 had some interesting matchups as it secured an unbeaten record in nonconference games. While a couple of matchups between Big 12 teams on Friday kept the conference from having a perfect record, the 12 teams in action combined for a 10-2 mark, which is the best they could have achieved in Week 3.
However, that didn’t mean a whole lot for the Big 12 in the AP poll, which dropped on Sunday. The conference had only three teams in the top 25, with No. 12 Iowa State, No. 16 Utah and No. 17 Texas Tech representing the Big 12.
In terms of how bad that is for the Big 12, the conference’s most recent departures in Texas and Oklahoma came in at Nos. 8 and 11, respectively. Meanwhile, the other three power conferences have at least one team in the top four and multiple teams in the top seven.
Of course, the AP poll is only good for discussions, as evidenced by winless Notre Dame’s inclusion, with the independent program riding the coattails of last season’s runner-up performance. The real rankings won’t come until the final weeks of the year, with the College Football Playoff’s top 25 ultimately being all that matters in the end.
To put it simply, the AP poll is unlikely to have any impact on OSU this season. The Cowboys’ loss at Oregon will keep them from receiving a single vote for quite some time, even if they could somehow put together a sizeable winning streak starting with the Tulsa matchup.
Of course, if the Cowboys could find a way to put together any sort of streak, perhaps in a similar fashion to 2023’s winning streak, they might be able to break through anyway, given the Big 12’s status nationally. Sure, the Cowboys won’t be any sort of contender at the national level any time soon, but a 5-1 start would probably be good enough to get them into the polls and the Big 12 title conversation.
In terms of the long-term future, the Pokes might not even be saved by any type of resurgence. Considering the Big 12 is easily the laughing stock of the Power Four, it needs a program to essentially save it from becoming irrelevant in the national landscape.
With OSU being the laughing stock of the Big 12, there’s no reason to expect the Cowboys to be the saviors the conference desperately needs.
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