Oklahoma
Why Oklahoma CB Gentry Williams Feels ‘Amazing’ and ‘Grateful’ After 2024 Injury
NORMAN — For Oklahoma’s defense to reach its potential in 2025, the health of cornerback Gentry Williams needs to be at the top of the checklist.
Williams, a fourth-year junior from Tulsa, has seemingly limitless potential when he’s on the field and healthy.
But Williams has missed time due to injury in each of his three seasons as a Sooner, including 11 games last year after his recurring shoulder dislocation limited him to just two games.
Williams might be the Sooners’ fastest player, and at 5-foot-11 and 185 pounds, he has an adequate frame to compete in the SEC. What makes him stand out, however, are his uncanny reaction time and his long arms, allowing him to stick with receivers and make plays on the football.
Williams has played in just 24 games in his career, however, with just 12 starts. He’s at a place now where he needs to play in games and develop the kind of instincts through experience that can elevate him to elite status.
Williams’ reps in spring practice this month have been restricted — he’s been withheld from contact whenever possible — but he’s back on the field after multiple surgeries in back-to-back years.
“I feel really good,” Williams said Tuesday after practice. “You know, every day is a new challenge. But I feel amazing. I’m grateful for this opportunity. I feel great and I’m ready for the season when it comes.”
When Brent Venables got the Oklahoma job in December 2021, literally the first recruit he saw after getting off the plane in Norman was Williams. As the former defensive coordinator at Clemson, Venables knew of Williams’ reputation as a dynamic and versatile talent. Williams had committed to OU two months earlier, so keeping a player this good in-state was certainly one priority. Re-engaging the community and the culture at Tulsa Washington was another.
Williams was the top high school recruit in Oklahoma in that 2022 class, and he was the No. 11 cornerback in the country despite coming off a knee injury his junior year.
Williams said he’s felt that love from Venables during the last three years, as well as from cornerbacks coach Jay Valai and the rest of the defensive staff. Being Venables’ very first recruiting priority made an impact on him.
“Yeah, we’ve had conversations about that,” Williams said. “He talks about my Booker T days, about me playing every position, quarterback — everything but corner, basically. So we joke about that. But (I’ve) been grateful to have him and Coach Valai — basically the whole defensive staff has been here since I’ve been here. So that’s been amazing.”
Williams played in 12 games as a true freshman but miss the bowl game. He made 10 starts as a sophomore in 2023, but missed three games with the shoulder. He had it repaired last winter, but then hurt it again in the season opener last year. He tried to come back the following week but fell on it on the first play of the game and was lost for the season after just 18 total snaps.
Williams played 399 total snaps in 2023, including 329 as a wide corner, per Pro Football Focus. He got in for 250 snaps in 2022, mostly on special teams but also got 54 of his 59 defensive snaps at wide corner.
In his 2023 season as a full-time and healthy corner, Williams was thrown at 39 times and opposing receivers caught 26 passes (66.7 percent) for 286 yards (11.0 yards per catch with just one touchdown.
Iowa State hit him for a 67-yard TD, but he also had an interception that game — one of three on the season. He gave up just two other receptions of 20 yards or more all season.
Williams knows he needs to be better at the art of tackling — he missed 11 tackles during his 2023 season, or 26.8 percent, per PFF — but that’s a hard thing to work on with a trick shoulder.
One thing Williams knows for sure is that he doesn’t want to sit out again this year. He struggled with missing so much time last year until he realized he could contribute by being the best teammate he could be.
“Obviously it’s tough,” he said, “but it’s a team sport and I still wanted to be there for my guys. Like RJ (Robert Spears-Jennings), he had an excellent season. Gracen Halton had an excellent season. So taking what I went through and my struggles, but let somebody else understand that they had great seasons, and living through them and seeing them shine, man, it made it a lot better for me going through those tough times.”
He’s leaned heavily on Spears-Jennings, his best friend from Tulsa and a fellow freshman DB in the 2022 class.
“That’s my brother,” Williams said. “Words can’t even explain how thankful I am on and off the field. Man, he’s been there for me throughout everything in my life. He’s been there every step of the way. So when I had that surgery and I came back to the house — I had the surgery in Tulsa — and when I came back, he was just screaming, ‘G-Dub! G-Dub!’ So it was like a moment we had. Seeing his success this (past) year was amazing. It felt like I had success. So it was great.”
And through the difficult times, Williams also leaned on Venables and Valai.
“You know, Coach Venables, he’s been on my side throughout everything,” Williams said. “I do applaud him. I’m thankful to him that he’s gonna continue to give me this opportunity to be out here and play with the team. That’s the biggest thing, I want to continue to play with them. And he’s been a very great support system, him and Coach Valai have been very supportive, and I appreciate that. I really do.”
And of course, Williams has leaned most of all on his family for their support.
“Amazing. That’s my rock,” he said. “I do it for them. That’s the reason I’m still out here (and) keep going, my dad and my mom and my little sister. Everybody. Words can not explain how grateful I am, and I will keep going for them.”
Williams will take it slow the rest of this spring and probably throughout summer workouts, and he may even stay somewhat cautious when training camp rolls around in August.
But come September, Williams will be all in, full contact and full throttle. That’s the only way this game can be played.
“Just stay true to who I am,” he said, “trusting God, trusting Coach Valai, trusting Coach Venables and trusting my teammates that I’m gonna be who I am and show them every day. You know, I gotta prove to them and gain their trust every single day. That’s just what I want to do. I’ve been through things, but God has got a plan for me and I’m gonna keep going.”
Oklahoma
Oklahoma AG & 21 other state attorneys general sue Uber over unfair subscription services
OKLAHOMA CITY (KFOR) – Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond is taking action against Uber Technologies LLC and Uber USA LLC after alleging the use of deceptive and unfair practices in selling subscription services.
According to the Drummond office, the lawsuit against Uber Technologies LLC and Uber USA LLC seeks to uncover an alleged variety of unfair operations in selling Uber One subscription services.
On Monday, Drummond, alongside a coalition of 21 other state attorneys general, joined the lawsuit filed initially by the Federal Trade Commission.
Drummond says the lawsuit alleges the following:
- Uber is accused of improperly using negative option marketing tactics when it offered free trial subscriptions – a practice that automatically charges consumers if they do not cancel a free trial.
- Uber allegedly misled consumers about the amounts they could save when subscribing to Uber One and made it extraordinarily difficult for consumers to cancel once enrolled.
- Uber is also accused of charging consumers before their billing date, including users whose free trial had not yet ended.
“Oklahoma law prohibits deceptive trade practices and I will always fight to hold accountable any company who breaks the law,” Drummond said. “Unless Uber is stopped in court, they are likely to continue cheating and harming hardworking Oklahomans.”
The AG’s office says the lawsuit seeks restitution, penalties, costs, and an injunction against Uber for alleged violations of Oklahoma’s Consumer Protection Act and the U.S. Restore Online Shoppers’ Confidence Act.
The lawsuit is currently scheduled for trial on February 2027, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.
Here is the state coalition list; in addition to Oklahoma, it includes Maryland, Alabama, Arizona, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wisconsin, as well as the District Attorney for Alameda County in California.
Click complaint to read the lawsuit.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma Running Back Upgraded on Second College Football Playoff Availability Report
Oklahoma running back Jovantae Barnes was upgraded on the second College Football Playoff availability report of the week.
Barnes appeared on Tuesday’s report as probable, but he was left off Wednesday’s report, meaning he will be available for Friday’s contest against Alabama.
Barnes appeared in four games during the regular season, carrying the ball 19 times for 45 yards and a touchdown. He also caught one pass for 16 yards.
The senior running back was able to redshirt by only playing in four games. Postseason games, including the College Football Playoff, do not count against eligibility, so Barnes will be able to maintain eligibility in 2026 and still be able to take the field for the Sooners in the CFP.
Oklahoma’s main injury concern, center Jake Maikkula, continues to linger.
Maikkula was listed as questionable on the report for the second straight day.
Maikkula missed OU’s regular-season finale against LSU due to what Brent Venables labeled as an “infection”. He was fully suited up during a brief 15-minute practice viewing window on Monday, but he was working off to the side instead of with Oklahoma’s starting offensive line group.
Read More Oklahoma Football
Oklahoma’s best news of the week came on Tuesday.
Star pass rusher R Mason Thomas was not listed on the week’s first availability report, meaning he’s good to go to take on the Crimson Tide.
Thomas earned All-SEC First Team honors in 2025 despite missing a majority of Red November.
He appeared in nine regular-season games, totaling 23 tackles, 9.5 tackles for loss and 6.5 sacks. Thomas also forced two fumbles, and he scooped up a Joey Aguilar fumble and returned it all the way for a touchdown. He sustained a quad injury on the play, however, which cost him the Alabama, Missouri and LSU games.
Thomas also missed the first half of OU’s SEC opener against Auburn after he was ejected in the second half of Oklahoma’s win over Temple for targeting.
Defensive backs Gentry Williams, Kendel Dolby and Jeremiah Newcombe were all ruled out for the CFP opener on Tuesday.
Dolby announced that he intends to enter the transfer portal on Wednesday.
When asked about the defensive back after Dolby’s announcement on Wednesday, Venables was short.
“I’m not going to talk about anybody that’s not here,” he said.
Alabama tight ends Josh Cuevas and Danny Lewis Jr. were both upgraded to probable after the tight end duo was listed as questionable on the week’s first availability report.
The Sooners and the Crimson Tide will battle at 7 p.m. on Friday, and the game will air on ABC and ESPN.
Oklahoma
Six bridges damaged by semi truck hauling ‘illegally over-height’ load, Oklahoma Turnpike Authority says
Oklahoma authorities are investigating multiple bridge strikes that occurred along the I-44/Will Rogers Turnpike on Tuesday afternoon.
On December 16, 2025, “an illegally over-height commercial motor vehicle drove this afternoon from Tulsa to near Miami,” causing damage to “multiple county bridges above the I-44/Will Rogers Turnpike,” according to the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority (OTA).
The OTA notes that “it is illegal for trucks taller than 14 feet to travel the state highway system without permits and approved routes. The bridges damaged today range from 14 feet and 11 inches to 15 feet and 4 inches in vertical clearance, well above the legal limit.”
“We are continuing to see damage to our state transportation infrastructure from illegal, over-height semi-trucks. This is a critical issue that puts the traveling public at risk and is unacceptable. We are extremely grateful no one was injured in this incident,” OTA Executive Director Joe Echelle said. “We implore truck drivers to follow all Oklahoma laws and work with the state’s Size and Weights permitting office to ensure that all travelers are safe on our roadways and that our infrastructure remains undamaged by these careless acts.”
Officials say that the following bridges were struck:
- E. 530 Rd. – closed between S. 4130 Rd. and Lakeway Rd.
- S. 4220 Rd. – closed between E. 460 Rd. and E. 470 Rd. east of Claremore
- N. 429 Rd. – closed between E. 390 Rd. and SH-28
- N. 4300 Rd. – closed between E. 380 Rd. and W. 390 Rd.
- N. 4310 Rd. – open
- W. 370 Rd. – open
The Will Rogers Turnpike is open, but drivers should expect temporary delays as crews continue to inspect the damaged bridges.
“OTA is working closely with officials from Rogers County, City of Claremore, the Oklahoma Highway Patrol and ODOT in response to this incident,” the agency said.
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