Oklahoma
Oklahoma’s Offensive Line Preparing for a Set of Major Tests After the Bye Week
The offensive line is rounding into form on the good time for Oklahoma.
Within the Sooners’ final outing, Invoice Bedenbaugh’s unit dominated the Kansas entrance seven.
OU rushed for 298 yards and 5 touchdowns, averaging 5.2 yards per keep it up the bottom.
Working again Eric Grey posted his finest speeding effort in an Oklahoma uniform for the third time this season, including 176 yards on 20 carries within the win.
And whereas Grey has gotten higher and higher at making defenders miss because the season has pressed on, his potential to burst untouched to the second stage of the protection has been made potential by nice performances within the trenches.
“Coach DeMarco (Murray) talks about on a regular basis profitable these one on one battles, as a result of on the finish of the day, they can not block all people,” Grey stated after the win over Kansas. “You bought to make one miss, and I am glad that I might try this immediately. Massive props to the o-line for getting me to the second stage, however it was undoubtedly nice
“… When you will get your operating again to the protection, it’s on him to make them miss, and that is the place the massive touchdowns come.”
Regardless of the turbulent begin to convention play, the Sooner speeding assault is ranked seventeenth within the nation, averaging 222.6 yards per sport.
Oklahoma was even capable of rush the soccer at occasions towards Texas when everybody within the Cotton Bowl knew operating performs had been popping out of the wildcat bundle, a testomony to the improved physicality and total play up entrance.
“I really feel like our major aim each week is to be extra bodily,” OU left deal with Anton Harrison stated. “We’ve to be most bodily on the sector each week to win. It begins with us up entrance.
“Offense and protection, it begins with the trenches. And I really feel like after we play good, we’re gonna win the video games.”
Over the following two weeks, the offensive line should take one other step ahead.
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Iowa State and Baylor are on the horizon, and each groups at the moment are within the high 30 within the nation stopping the run.
Jon Heacock’s Cyclone protection is thought for dropping into protection and making opposing offenses win play after play to methodically work their approach down the sector.
However a line of defense anchored by Will McDonald IV has nonetheless dominated up entrance, permitting solely 105.3 speeding yards per sport.
Then when the Sooners return to Norman to host Baylor, the inside of OU’s offensive line should take care of Siaki Ika and Jaxon Participant.
Dave Aranda’s protection gave Lincoln Riley’s offenses as a lot hassle as Iowa State, and offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby may have an opportunity to resolve the riddle for Oklahoma in back-to-back weeks.
Lebby has no reservations about operating the soccer again and again if that’s what defenses are giving him.
The OU offensive line might want to open holes for Grey and Jovantae Barnes on early downs to maintain the Sooners out of apparent passing downs, the place McDonald, Ika, Participant and the Baylor linebacker corps will have the ability to pin their ears again and attempt to assault quarterback Dillon Gabriel.
A win towards Kansas on the eve of the off week gave the offense confidence on the observe subject. The line of defense expertise is about to choose up, nevertheless, and the offensive line should proceed to play bodily, assignment-sound soccer for the Sooners to proceed to have success to finish the season.
“All people in that locker room understands we now have the chance to be actually, actually good on offense,” Lebby stated. “So for us to have the ability to go play clear and play the way in which we performed (towards Kansas), outdoors of the turnovers and the mishap there on the finish of the primary half, was actually good to see.”
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Oklahoma
Oklahoma transfer DB commits to Colorado
Oklahoma transfer DB Makari Vickers committed to Colorado, he told On3’s Hayes Fawcett. He will have three years of eligibility remaining.
Vickers spent two seasons in Norman, but took a redshirt this past year. He played in four games, totaling one tackle in that time. That came after eight appearances in 2023 when he had eight tackles and a pass defended as a true freshman.
Vickers played high school football at Tallahassee (FL) Robert F Munroe Day School, where he was a four-star prospect. He was the No. 83 overall recruit in the 2023 cycle, according to the On3 Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies.
To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire.
The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and X account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.
Deion Sanders and the Buffaloes have once again been active in the transfer portal so far this cycle. Makari Vickers marks the seventh commitment for Colorado and is the latest splash on Wednesday.
Colorado picked up a notable commitment from former Liberty quarterback Kaidon Salter on Wednesday. He will join elite signee Julian Lewis in the Buffs’ quarterback room and arrives as the No. 11-ranked quarterback to hit the portal so far, according to the On3 Industry Transfer Rankings.
This past season, Salter threw for 1,886 yards and 15 touchdowns while adding 579 rushing yards and seven scores on the ground. That came after a breakout 2023 campaign when he had 2,876 passing yards and 32 touchdowns in the air to go with 1,089 rushing yards and 12 touchdowns in the running game.
Over the course of four seasons, Salter had 5,889 yards, 56 touchdowns, 17 interceptions, a 58.7% completion percentage, 2,006 rushing yards and 21 rushing touchdowns. He will have one year of eligibility remaining as he makes his way to Boulder.
Oklahoma
No. 24 Michigan Wolverines vs. No. 14 Oklahoma Sooners Preview: Not just bluffin
With just two losses on the season — by a combined four points — the No. 24 Michigan Wolverines are in a good place. Dusty May’s squad is on track for an NCAA Tournament berth but would like more, which means the Wolverines could use another solid non-conference win on the resume. The last opportunity for that is Wednesday in Charlotte, with the No. 14 Oklahoma Sooners the final Power Five opponent left on the schedule.
Like the entire SEC, the undefeated Sooners are making headlines this season. On its way to winning the Battle 4 Atlantis, Oklahoma has four wins over top-100 KenPom teams, the same total as Michigan. The Wolverines (23rd) sit higher in the analytics than the Sooners (37th), but the polls have the teams flipped. This should be a good one at the Jumpman Invitational.
No. 24 Michigan Wolverines (8-2) vs. No. 14 Oklahoma Sooners (10-0)
Date & Time: Wednesday, Dec. 18, 9 p.m. ET
Location: Spectrum Center, Charlotte, NC
TV/Streaming: ESPN2
Oklahoma has been solid on both ends of the floor, with not many deficiencies in its profile. Freshman Jeremiah Fears, the No. 44 player in the 247Sports Composite, has been as advertised, averaging 16.7 PPG while leading the team with 4.7 APG. Fears and friends play with some pace, move the ball well, and like to take threes; this will be a test for the Wolverines after a couple rougher defensive performances.
The last time these teams met was in the Second Round of the 2008-09 NCAA Tournament as Blake Griffin’s squad took down the No. 10 Wolverines, who rejoined the Big Dance after an 11-year absence. Present day, this is the third edition of the Jumpman Invitational, completing one rotation. Michigan lost to North Carolina in 2022 and Florida last season, with both games coming down to the wire.
One Big Question: Where is the discipline?
I am not going to talk about turnovers every single game because unfortunately they do not seem to be going away. What I do think is worth mentioning is the general concept of discipline and patience, specifically against athletic teams that like to run. Against the Razorbacks, Michigan played right into their hand by rushing passes, leading to easy looks in transition off sloppy mistakes.
The Wolverines will need to lock down Fears on Wednesday, which becomes much more doable in the half court. Oklahoma has a top-50 eFG rate, so playing disciplined defense, but also smart offense, is essential to avoid yet another subpar defensive performance. The Sooners are not a great offensive rebounding team, but cleaning up the glass also remains an area where the defense must show more attention. Michigan has a solid defense (No. 15) already, and cleaning up its wild play will only make it even stronger.
One Thing to Watch: Play the percentages
Michigan ranks 39th in adjusted offense, but has the 15th-best eFG rate — and sixth-highest two-point shooting percentage in the country. The biggest reason for this gap is obviously turnovers, but even with this frustrating Achilles heel, the Wolverines have posted over 1.20 PPP in the last two games, mostly due to an insane 68.4-percent shooting mark inside the arc. Basically when the Wolverines get a shot off, good things are going to happen; it is those shotless, turnover-filled possessions that have been limiting this team.
The Sooners rank in the 200s in two-point defense, though many of those struggles were to begin the season. Still, the Danny Wolf-Vlad Goldin combo should feast again. Wolf has seen his turnover rate slowly drop, while Goldin is hitting 80 percent of his shots at the rim over the past four games after missing some bunnies earlier this year. Eventually teams will figure out how to stop this duo (or at least sell out to prevent it), but until that comes the Wolverines should continue hammering this advantage.
Oklahoma
Thunder go cold, will ‘learn’ from NBA Cup loss
LAS VEGAS — The only good thing about the Oklahoma City Thunder’s offensive performance in Tuesday’s NBA Cup final is that it doesn’t count toward regular-season statistics.
The Thunder had their worst offensive outing of the season in a 97-81 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks, hitting what would be season lows in points, field goal percentage (33.7%) and 3-point percentage (15.6%).
“I never look at it as like, we just missed shots,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. “I could have done a better job shaking us free at different times in that game, but we can learn from it.”
Oklahoma City superstar Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had an uncharacteristically inefficient 21-point performance. He was 8-of-24 from the field, including 3-of-12 when Milwaukee’s Andre Jackson Jr. was the primary defender, according to ESPN Research tracking.
“He did a good job tonight, but I don’t think he was the reason for my type of night,” said Gilgeous-Alexander, who is averaging 30.3 points on 51.0% shooting this season. “The way I felt tonight, I still got to my spots. I just didn’t make anything. Things like that happen. Nights like that happen. Yeah, he played hard, was aggressive. Nothing I haven’t seen before. I felt like it was me missing more so.”
Gilgeous-Alexander went 2-of-9 from 3-point range. He was the only Oklahoma City player to make multiple 3s, as the Thunder shot 5-of-32 from long distance.
“It’s hard to win that way,” said Thunder center Isaiah Hartenstein, who scored 14 of his 16 points in the first half. “You just sometimes have those nights.”
According to Second Spectrum tracking, the Thunder had an expected 3-point percentage of 34.9% based on the quality of their looks against the Bucks. The 19.3% drop-off to Oklahoma City’s actual 3-point percentage was the Thunder’s most drastic of the season.
“I think for the most part we got good looks,” said Thunder forward Jalen Williams, who finished with 18 points on 8-of-20 shooting. “When you’re playing a good team, you’ve got to continually generate good looks and also make shots. I feel like that was just one of those nights. Defensively, I thought we were pretty good. Sometimes, it just doesn’t go in and you have to have enough will to keep doing the right thing and moving the ball and let the chips lay where they lay.”
Oklahoma City made only one of 17 3-point attempts in the first half, but the Thunder stayed in the game primarily by attacking the paint against the bigger Bucks. The Thunder scored 26 points in the paint and were 13-of-16 from the free throw line in the first half.
Those numbers plummeted in the second half, when the Bucks held the Thunder to only 31 points as Milwaukee turned a one-point halftime margin into a lopsided final. Oklahoma City scored only eight points in the paint and attempted only six free throws in the second half.
“We missed some shots that we normally make,” Thunder guard Alex Caruso said. “They do a good job of crashing down in the paint and we got some easy ones early and then just missed some open [3s] that could have spread them out, bring them out of the paint a little bit. … At the end of the day, you need a couple to go in if you’re going to win at a high level.”
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