Oklahoma football: Four telling takeaways from a win, season that got away

November 28, 2021

An Oklahoma football team is moving ahead to the Big 12 Championship. It just isn’t the one that resides in Norman. For the first time in seven seasons, the Sooners will not be represented when the Big 12 title game is played next weekend at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The Sooners (10-2, 7-2) gave […]

Oklahoma football: Four telling takeaways from a win, season that got awayStormin in NormanStormin in Norman – An Oklahoma Sooners blog

Read more...

Lincoln Riley reportedly leaving Oklahoma for USC Job

A disappointing day after for the Oklahoma football program just got a whole lot darker with the news on Sunday that Lincoln Riley is leaving the program. There are an avalanche of reports circulating Sunday afternoon, including ESPN, that Riley has accepted the vacant head coach’s position at USC, another college blue blood program. The […]

Lincoln Riley reportedly leaving Oklahoma for USC JobStormin in NormanStormin in Norman – An Oklahoma Sooners blog

Read more...

Reports: Lincoln Riley leaving OU to become head coach at USC

NCAA Football: Iowa State at Oklahoma
Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

For the first time since 1998, the Oklahoma football program will have a coaching search.

According to multiple reports, Oklahoma Sooners head coach Lincoln Riley is leaving Norman to accept the same role with the USC Trojans.

In five years as the head coach at OU, Riley amassed a record of 55-10 and led the Sooners to four Big 12 Championships as well as three appearances in the College Football Playoff. He also coached two Heisman Trophy winners — Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray — during his time in Norman. Since arriving in 2015 as offensive coordinator, the program his been the face of offensive football, regularly leading the nation in a number of statistical categories.

According to Dusty Dvoracek, we can look for Bob Stoops to serve as the interim head coach for OU’s bowl game.

There’s an awful lot to unpack today and in the days to come, and we’ll be sure to do just that. For now, the focus immediately shifts to a coaching search, and it’ll be fun to put together a preliminary list of potential candidates. At the moment, Dave Aranda should be at the top of the list, and I think OU needs to make him tell them ‘no’. He might do just that, but they have to try. At any rate, OU will keep the move the SEC in mind as far as a fit is concerned, so it’ll be interesting to see which names begin to pop up.

To say that this is shocking is an understatement, and this absolutely stings from a recruiting perspective. Having said that, this program has been elite for decades upon decades, and that won’t change due to the departure of one coach. We truly are entering into a new era for this program, and I’m choosing to be optimistic.

Read more...

Oklahoma football: Sooners drop several spots in national polls

Oklahoma football’s down season followed form in the two weekly polls after the Sooners 37-33 loss to Oklahoma State. The Sooners dropped three spots, to No. 13 in the Associated Press Top 25 and two spots into the No. 11 position in the Coaches Poll. Meanwhile, Bedlam winner Oklahoma State is up to No. 5 […]

Oklahoma football: Sooners drop several spots in national pollsStormin in NormanStormin in Norman – An Oklahoma Sooners blog

Read more...

Recap: OU falls to Oklahoma State, 37-33

NCAA Football: Oklahoma at Oklahoma State
Alonzo Adams-USA TODAY Sports

Some highly questionable no-calls tainted an otherwise entertaining game of college football.

On a cool Saturday night, the No. 10 Oklahoma Sooners were bested the No. 7 Oklahoma State Cowboys (11-1, 8-1) in Bedlam, 37-33. With the loss, OU falls to 10-2 on the season, finishes 7-2 in conference play and misses out on a chance to rematch OSU in the 2021 Big 12 Championship Game.

Despite a relatively strong overall performance from the Oklahoma State defense, Caleb Williams had himself a solid showing in front of an ultra-hostile environment. On the night, the true freshman dual threat accounted for 252 passing yards and three touchdowns on 20 of 39 attempts. He also added 36 rushing yards on 19 carries.

In the first half, things looked like they were shaping up into another classic Bedlam shootout, with OSU and OU trading scores back and forth. The Cowboys started things off with a 30-yard touchdown connection between Spencer Sanders and Tay Martin. Then the Sooners answered with a TD of their own from Williams to Brian Darby. Martin would score again before ‘Superman’ found Austin Stogner for a beautiful 29-yard reception in the end zone.

At 14 all in the second quarter, OSU quickly responded with a 100-yard kickoff return. After the teams traded field goals, Woodi Washington showed why he’s one of Oklahoma’s top defensive backs with two picks on the night, including one right before the break to set up the offense. Soon thereafter, Williams dropped a beauty of a pass to Brayden Willis to tie up the game going into the half.

The third quarter couldn’t have started much better for the Crimson & Cream. A Michael Turk punt pinned Oklahoma State near their own goal line, then Perrion Winfrey forced a fumble that was recovered for a safety. Then when it seemed like OU was about to give the ball right back on another punt, the Cowboys return man muffed the catch that would be picked up in the end zone by Justin Broiles for a special teams score.

Going into the fourth quarter, Oklahoma held a nine-point lead and all the momentum, but Sanders put his team on his back as he scampered for a 37-yard touchdown run. As another OU offensive possession was squandered immediately afterward, the Cowboys capitalized once again to retake the lead behind a Jaylen Warren run. Down the stretch, there were several chances for Lincoln Riley’s group to overcome the challenge of taking down the Pokes inside Boone Pickens Stadium, but ultimately, too many mistakes were made on offense, defense and special teams to get the job done.

Perhaps the greatest takeaway for most OU fans is the incredible lack of calls that would normally seem blatantly obvious to even the most casual of spectators. There were a multitude that drastically affected the game, including a would-be drive extending personal foul penalty that was eventually picked up inexplicably and this uncalled defensive pass interference that would have set the Sooners up with a first and goal opportunity on the final meaningful possession of the game. Every fanbase cries about the officiating in a loss, but the timing and selection of when to throw a flag in this contest seemed to be more than a little convenient if not peculiar.

Next, Oklahoma will stay home during conference championship weekend for the first time in years as it awaits its bowl destination. It’s not a position the Sooners thought they’d be in coming into the month of November, but the season-long inconsistency issues on both sides of the ball directly led to both losses that leave OU in an unfamiliar spot this postseason.

Oh, and just in case you were wondering, Lincoln Riley is not going to LSU, so that’s that.

Follow Crimson & Cream Machine on Twitter!

Read more...