Oklahoma
Oklahoma’s Improved Special Teams Failed to Make a Positive Impact at Texas Tech
Oklahoma’s particular groups have been peculiar in Saturday’s loss to Texas Tech.
Dropping its sixth sport of the 12 months, OU left lots on the sector within the 51-48 loss in extra time at Jones AT&T Stadium in Lubbock.
From the beginning, the Sooners (6-6 general, 3-6 Massive 12) did not execute within the third section of the sport.
Texas Tech (7-5, 5-4) return man Jordan Brown popped a 67-yard kickoff return on the primary play of the sport to set the Purple Raiders up on the Oklahoma 35-yard line.
“We had some good performs,” OU coach Brent Venables stated of the particular groups play after the sport. “However it’s been a unit that’s carried out very well all 12 months and tonight, I didn’t suppose we executed on plenty of performs very effectively.”
Oklahoma defensive lineman Jordan Kelley erased the protection bust on the following play, forcing a fumble, however the opening kickoff was an early indication of the evening to come back on particular groups.
For probably the most half, the improved emphasis on the third section of the sport has helped the Sooners this season.
Coming into the ultimate sport of the season, OU was 2-for-2 on pretend subject objective makes an attempt, changing a type of efforts right into a key landing in opposition to the Iowa State Cyclones.
Up 14-0 within the first quarter in opposition to the Purple Raiders, the Sooners tried a 3rd pretend subject objective.
The play seemed to be arrange for tight finish Brayden Willis to catch the ball and switch upfield for a landing, however the dependable playmaker dropped the ball and handed Texas Tech its first jolt of momentum.
Oklahoma has been extra aggressive on kickoff returns this 12 months, returning 24 kicks versus the 12 kickoffs the Sooners have been permitted to return final 12 months.
That aggression hasn’t essentially resulted in additional environment friendly play, nevertheless. The Sooners are averaging 20.04 yards per return this 12 months, which is just about the identical as OU’s 20.33 yards per return in 2021.
There have been main enhancements in punt returns this 12 months.
The Sooners common 13.27 yards per return, the 14th-best mark within the nation, a a lot better outcome than the 5.75 yards per return Oklahoma posted within the closing 12 months beneath Lincoln Riley.
However neither of these areas have been a optimistic for Venables’ staff on Saturday evening.
Within the first quarter, Marvin Mims had an 18-yard punt return wiped off the board by a holding name on true freshman Jaren Kanak.
Jeff Lebby’s offense nonetheless scored on the drive, however the OU offense needed to begin its march by itself 7-yard line as an alternative of the getting going from the Oklahoma 31-yard line.
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Earlier than halftime, the kickoff return staff price the Sooners much more subject place.
Jalil Farooq mishandled a kick he tried to truthful catch, which means Oklahoma took over on the 8-yard line as an alternative of the 25.
On Texas Tech’s subsequent kickoff, the Sooners once more bungled the truthful catch, and Gavin Freeman recovered a muffed kick to set OU up on the 14-yard line.
Lastly, a pair of subject targets turned the sport decisively in favor of the Purple Raiders.
As Texas Tech kicker Trey Wolff lined as much as attempt to ship the competition into extra time with eight seconds left on the clock, Venables burned a timeout to attempt to ice the kicker.
Although not an unusual technique in soccer, there was only one downside with the choice — OU blocked Wolff’s first subject objective try because the referees have been whistling the play useless for the timeout.
Wolff then stepped up and knocked by way of his second effort, sending the sport to extra time.
Within the second, Venables hoped the magnitude of the kick would get the very best of Wolff, because the Purple Raider kicker had already missed an additional level on the evening.
“I assumed, there’s a possibility for him to consider it,” Venables stated. “Hadn’t been nice on the day so far as the sector targets. Thought there’s a possibility to attempt to get in his head. It’s a strain second, a giant kick, and we blocked the primary one.”
Zach Schmit, Wolff’s counterpart on the OU sideline, was unable to step up and convert his strain kick in OT. The Sooner kicker missed his fifth subject objective of the season on Oklahoma’s offensive possession in extra time.
OU’s sideline thought the kick handed by way of the uprights, however Venables stated after the sport that the results of the sector objective was not reviewable by the officiating crew.
“I wasn’t watching, I used to be sort of hoping within the again,” OU operating again Eric Grey stated. “However after I noticed the replay I believe it went by way of. … After they did the replay and it appeared prefer it went over the upright. It was positively whacky. A bizarre feeling.”
A lot went fallacious for the Sooners to blow a 17-point lead on Saturday evening. Nobody error could be singled out as the explanation why Oklahoma misplaced the sport, however a number of errors on particular groups did nothing to snap momentum again up for the Sooners to assist flip the tide of the sport.
“Didn’t suppose we performed nice, clearly,” Venables stated. “Missed the sector objective, didn’t execute the pretend, gave up a giant kickoff return, had a penalty on an excellent return by Marvin — had a holding penalty. Extremely inconsistent.”
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Oklahoma
Column: What Does Beating Maine Do for Oklahoma? Improvement, Progress, Confidence
NORMAN — Back to business.
It wasn’t exactly a bye week for Oklahoma football — that comes next week — but the Sooners won’t have an easier time of it than they did last week against Maine.
OU returns to SEC action on Saturday when they visit Missouri — ranked No. 22 in the Coaches Poll, No. 26 in the AP Top 25 — followed by the open date and then back-to-back finishing strokes against No. 11 Alabama and No. 14 LSU.
The Sooners need one win to qualify for a bowl game for the 25th year in a row — and get those all-important postseason practices under their belt so the team can continue to march toward a successful 2025.
Did drubbing the Black Bears 59-14 help OU prepare in any way for this closing gauntlet?
I asked Brent Venables to put it in context for where the Maine game fits this most difficult of seasons.
“It’s just the next game,” he shrugged, “and next opportunity to improve. That’s what we wanted to see.
“Today was kind of a byproduct of — again, the last three weeks, we’ve been talking about seeing their improvement at the spots where we haven’t had — at the first part of the season where we weren’t as good, whether it’s on offense, just everywhere on offense. The last three weeks or so, seen guys getting better in practice and today was an opportunity to do that against someone else and do the basics at a high level.”
There’s the words that Sooner Nation has been waiting patiently to hear: “guys getting better at practice.”
Practices are closed, so we can only take Venables at his word. But if that indeed has transpired, then that’s where OU will draw from when they step onto Faurot Field on Saturday night, not from dragging poor Maine around last weekend.
“Certainly far from perfect,” Venables said after the Maine thing, “but I thought our guys did the basics well.”
Where Oklahoma really stands to benefit from such a thorough victory — OU had 665 yards total offense, while Maine managed just 251 — was in gaining confidence from something, anything good happening. Especially for an offensive line that has struggled all year just to do anything right.
“It hasn’t always been the best,” said center Troy Everett, “but today was great. A good confidence builder.”
“Boost of confidence going forward,” said quarterback Jackson Arnold. “We had a bunch of young guys in today on the o-line and for them being able to go out there and dominate today and build that confidence up is huge for us.”
Arnold is another one who needed a shot of confidence after mostly rocky performances all season. He got benched because of turnovers, then watched his replacement get taken out for the same reason. Arnold knows he needed to just see some good things happen before he stepped back into SEC play.
“I think it’s a sign of progress for us,” Arnold said after hitting 15-of-21 passes for 224 yards and two touchdowns and rushing for 45 yards and another score — with no turnovers and no sacks. “The way we prepare, the way we went into the game mentally, I think it speaks volumes about the coaches and how they prepared us for the week and the game plan they put together.”
Offensive coordinator Joe Jon Finley knows the Sooners overmatched the Black Bears. Although the OU offense opened with a punt and the defense gave up a 68-yard touchdown drive, the final score was always inevitable. What Finley wanted to see from last Saturday was something that goes much deeper than the scoreboard.
“I think it was just our guys continuing to take a step and learning how to compete,” Finley said. “The first big run we had today (Jovantae Barnes’ 74-yard near-TD) was a big-time effort play by our outside receiver, Brenen Thompson, on the left side. He goes all the way to get the into the field safety, and Barnes did a great job of making the corner miss. That’s how you draw it up and our guys executed it. Bauer Sharp finished on the blocks. I just think you see our offense get a little bit better every single day, every single week That’s exactly what we asked for.”
Meanwhile, defensive coordinator Zac Alley wasn’t too pleased to give up a touchdown on the Bears’ opening drive after Maine “showed us some new things that maybe we haven’t seen or haven’t worked on,” but he was happy with the way his defense maintained their focus and fell back on what they worked on in practice all week.
“We’re Oklahoma. We’re going to get somebody’s best shot all the time,” Alley said. “Just the ability to respond to something like this is something that’s not new, but the reality is when you face adversity again with the games we have remaining on the season and we’re going to respond the right way to that.”
Wide receiver J.J. Hester, a Tulsa native who began his college career at Missouri, will be additionally motivated this week to play his old squad. His 90-yard touchdown against Maine “catapults everyone,” he said, and was just the shot of confidence he needed to finish this season strong.
“It can help us a lot,” Hester said. “Sometimes you just need to see it happen and it happened today. So we’re just going to let that motivate us to keep going.”
Venables relayed a brief conversation he had with true freshman Daniel Akinkunmi, the offensive lineman from England who comes to Norman from the NFL Academy. Like most Londoners, he was raised on the soccer pitch, but Akinkunmi’s great stature — 6-foot-6 and 323 pounds (that’s 19.5 hands and 23.07 stone, using the King’s measurements) — drew him to American football.
Akinkunmi got into his first game on Saturday, and although he and two other true freshmen o-linemen were predictably nervous, his head wasn’t exactly swimming. Akinkunmi played eight snaps, did his job, graded out OK, and could be ready for additional duty in November.
“His first words were, ‘It was way easier than I ever thought it would be. I’ve been overthinking it,’ “ Venables said.
“It’s just the details,” Alley said. “Prepare so when you get out there you have an opportunity. … You’ve got to execute with the details of the things that we’ve seen and we’ve done. Sometimes the environment and the, ‘Oh man we’re playing a game’ — you get an adrenaline rush. And we’ve just got to calm down and do what we’re supposed to do.”
And for a team that’s 5-4 and striving to get just one more win (although Venables said last week he’d prefer to start a winning streak), the result of beating down an FCS opponent could actually translate to having just a bit more success in the SEC.
“Just get a little bit better at everything that you do,” Finley said. “We ran the ball very well today, and you have to be able to do that in this conference. Everything else, better. We’ve got some young O-linemen that fought their tails off, rotated, but gotta continue to find ways to run the ball. When do that, you got a chance to win.”
“Some stuff we still have to work on,” said Barnes, “but I feel like we took one step up, for sure.”
Oklahoma
How to Watch Oklahoma vs. Missouri
Oklahoma’s final non-conference game allowed the Sooners to build some momentum before their final three Southeastern Conference matchups.
OU dispatched of Maine 59-14 on Saturday, dodging the rain and any severe injuries, which is the best any team can ask for when stepping out to play FCS competition.
Running back Jovantae Barnes picked up where he left off in Oxford, rushing for 203 yards and three scores on 18 carries.
Barnes will be a big part of Oklahoma’s game plan this week, as OU renews hostilities with old Big 8 foe Missouri at 6:45 p.m. Saturday on SEC Network.
Against Maine, Barnes became OU’s first rusher this year to cross the 100-yard mark, and receiver J.J. Hester became the Sooners’ first pass catcher to go over 100 yards through the air in 2024.
Hester successfully ran a scramble drill with quarterback Jackson Arnold to produce a 90-yard touchdown catch against Maine, and his big day came at the right time.
This weekend’s trip to Columbia will serve as a reunion for Hester as he started his college career at Missouri before transferring home to Oklahoma.
Another big day could help Arnold have another strong showing in his second road start.
After getting into a groove against Ole Miss, Arnold completed 15-of-21 passes for 224 yards and two touchdowns against Maine while also rushing for 45 yards and another score on nine carries.
Defensively, OU rebounded from a tough first drive for another strong showing.
Oklahoma held the Black Bears to 251 yards, and the Sooners ended their turnover drought defensively.
Hester forced the only takeaway against Ole Miss, meaning the defense itself hadn’t handed the ball back to the offense since intercepting Quinn Ewers at the Cotton Bowl.
Safety Robert Spears-Jennings changed that with a forced fumble in the third quarter, and true freshman Reggie Powers had an interception in the fourth quarter until it was called back for a penally elsewhere on the play.
Hester won’t be the only face who has friends in both locker rooms on Saturday.
Missouri wide receiver Theo Wease started his career at Oklahoma, as did offensive lineman Cayden Green.
Wease is in his second season with the Tigers, and Green is pushing through his first year in Columbia after his controversial transfer this past offseason.
Missouri is hoping to get back quarterback Brady Cook for the contest against the Sooners, otherwise the Tigers will be forced to again turn to Drew Pyne to try and help move the ball.
Despite sitting idle on a bye last week, the Tigers dropped out of the AP Top 25. Their last outing was a 34-0 loss to No. 11 Alabama.
A win for OU would be its sixth of the season, getting the Sooners bowl eligible after a disastrous start to life in the SEC.
Oklahoma
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