Oklahoma Sooners Football: Caleb Williams shines as OU tops TCU, 52-31

October 16, 2021
TCU v Oklahoma
Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images

Caleb Williams threw for four TDs and ran for another. The defense was less impressive.

Providing a follow-up to his performance against the Texas Longhorns was going to be no easy task, but freshman phenom Caleb Williams matched and exceeded expectations as the Oklahoma Sooners topped TCU by a score of 52-31.

Williams opened the evening by completing eight consecutive passes, and he continued the fine form throughout the evening. When TCU’s offense was finding, the DC native was always there with an answer of his own. He would end the night with a stat line of 18-23 with 295 passing yards and four TDs while also adding 66 yards and a TD on the ground. If there was any doubt about him being the real deal, tonight took care of that.

After breaking out and providing the winning score a week ago, Kennedy Brooks quietly had a fantastic night of his own, running for 153 yards on 20 carries and adding a rushibg TD of his own. Eric Gray wasn’t able to find as much success, and he punctuated the night with his first TD as a Sooner to seal the win.

Along with Williams and Brooks, Jadon Haselwood had a huge night in his own right, hauling in three TD receptions. With the offense beginning to open up, look for the former five-star recruit to truly thrive and become one of the team’s primary big-play threats.

Oddly enough, these were the first three TDs he has scored against an FBS program since arriving in Norman (the other three came against South Dakota in 2019 and Western Carolina earlier this season).

Unfortunately, the momentum of the second half in Dallas did not translate for the OU defense, as TCU was able to gain 519 yards of total offense. The secondary continues to provide red flags, and things only deteriorated further when DJ Graham left the game due to concussion protocol. To be fair, Grinch’s defense did come up with some timely stops against one of the better offenses in the conference.

The win brings OU to 924 all-time wins, pulling the Sooners ahead of Notre Dame for fifth in the history of college football.

Next up for the Sooners is an 11 a.m. contest against the lowly Kansas Jayhawks in Lawrence. If you’ve never been to Lawrence and are able to make it this week, I highly recommend it. You get a stress-free game, plenty of OU fans in the stands and a BEAUTIFUL campus. The fall foliage should be on point.

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Oklahoma vs. TCU: Game Thread, How to Watch & Final Thoughts

Oklahoma v Texas
Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images

After a huge comeback win in Dallas, the Sooners are looking to stay focused amid distractions.

After a huge comeback win over the Texas Longhorns in Dallas, the Oklahoma Sooners are looking to stay focused amid distractions as they face Gary Patterson’s TCU Horned Frogs. The rise of Caleb Williams, the future of Spencer Rattler and the ingenuity of the OU Daily have ruled the headlines all week, but avoiding a letdown against a well-coached team will be no small task.

Take it away, Toby.


Time & TV: Saturday, Oct. 16 at 6:30 p.m. CT on ABC

Commentary: Chris Fowler, Kirk Herbstreit and Holly Rowe

Streaming: WatchESPN

Line: Oklahoma -13.5 (as of Saturday at 2:30 p.m. CT)

O/U: 64


OU-TCU Game Primer

Seth’s Game Preview

C&C Machine Q&A with Frogs O’ War’s Melissa Triebwasser

Kamiar also caught up with Melissa to preview TCU and more from this week at OU

Frogs O’ War Q&A with C&C Machine’s Jack Shields

Allen Kenney looks at how Oklahoma can utilize both Caleb Williams and Spencer Rattler

Check out this officially licensed Marvin Mims TD shirt from BreakingT


Final Thoughts

On paper, an offense that has found its stride on the ground should feast on a TCU defense that has allowed over 200 rushing yards per game this season. Unfortunately for the Sooners, Patterson has never made things easy for an OU offense, and it’ll be interesting to see what he cooks up for this one. With that in mind, I don’t expect the OU offense or Caleb Williams to ever find complete comfort, but the personnel disparity should win the day in the end.

On the other side, OU’s issues at corner remain, but Max Duggan isn’t the man to make them pay (or at least not to the full extent). While he’s a solid quarterback who can give defenses fits with his legs, his deep ball accuracy leaves a bit to be desired. OU’s athletes on defense should also do enough to corral him and prevent him from extending too many plays.

Prediction

Oklahoma 44, TCU 28

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Oklahoma vs. TCU: Game preview, storylines & predictions

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: OCT 02 Texas at TCU
Photo by Matthew Visinsky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Gary Patterson’s Texas Christian squad prepares for OU during a very interesting week in Norman.

The No. 4 Oklahoma Sooners (6-0, 3-0) are back in the comfy confines of the Palace on the Prairie after making a comeback for the ages in the Red River Showdown last Saturday. This weekend, the TCU Horned Frogs (3-2, 1-1) are due up, pitting offensive mastermind Lincoln Riley against Gary Patterson’s defensive wisdom for the eighth time in seven seasons.

OU has been especially dominant at the Palace as of late, having won 24 of its last 25 home games dating back to the 2017 season, including an active streak of seven consecutive victories in Norman.

Date, Time & TV: Saturday, Oct. 16 at 6:30 p.m. CT on ABC

Line: Oklahoma -13.5 (as of Friday at 4 p.m. CT)

O/U: 64

Lincoln Riley’s final word on Friday:

OU-TCU Game Primer

C&C Machine Q&A with Frogs O’ War’s Melissa Triebwasser

Kamiar also caught up with Melissa to preview TCU and more from this week at OU

Frogs O’ War Q&A with C&C Machine’s Jack Shields

Allen Kenney looks at how Oklahoma can utilize both Caleb Williams and Spencer Rattler

Check out this officially licensed Marvin Mims TD shirt from BreakingT

Major Storylines

Who does Lincoln Riley start at QB?

That’s the big question that’s been on everyone’s mind ever since true freshman Caleb Williams came in for Spencer Rattler and led OU to a record-breaking comeback victory against Texas. Once the celebratory dust finally settled, things took a strange turn this week after the OU Daily published a report that Williams was practicing with the first-team, leading to Riley pulling the plug on all media access until after this Saturday’s game against TCU.

All QB drama aside, it’s pretty plain to see for anyone who watched the Red River game that Williams gave Oklahoma’s offense something it hadn’t shown in its previous five contests. Whether it was his energy or his play-making abilities, the team around him responded and looked more like the championship-caliber group they were projected to be coming into the season. If you ask me, I believe Williams will get the start against TCU, but I also expect to see Rattler play a significant portion of the game throughout the night. Bottom line: while this isn’t an ideal situation for the Sooners to be in mid-way through the regular season, it isn’t necessarily a bad thing to have two capable quarterbacks competing for the No. 1 spot.

Watch out for TCU’s Zach Evans and Kendre Miller

The Horned Frogs have leaned heavily on their run game this season, and for the most part they’ve been successful on the ground, production-wise. Sophomore RB Zach Evans leads the way for Gary Patterson’s offense, as he’s put up some monster stats in just five games. Coming into the weekend, he’s recorded 586 rushing yards and five touchdowns on 74 carries, and he’s added 95 receiving yards and another score on seven catches. Keep an eye on his availability, however, as he was sidelined in the second half against Texas Tech last week after sustaining what has since been reported to be a minor foot injury.

Sophomore Kendre Miller has also proven himself to be a threat from the backfield, racking up 302 yards and six TDs on 34 rushes. Additionally, both Miller and Evans top the Big 12 with 8.9 and 7.9 average yards per carry, respectively, so it’ll be paramount that OU’s run defense steps up like it has for the majority of this season to contain TCU’s explosive duo.

Gary Patterson’s defense has struggled in 2021

Gary Patterson’s name is synonymous with defense. That’s what happens when you’ve built a reputation of fielding some of the smartest and most productive defenses in college football over the years. However, that hasn’t been the case for the Horned Frogs in 2021. By the numbers, TCU ranks 91st nationally in turnovers gained (six), 95th in third-down defense (.422 conversion percentage), 99th in total defense (429.2 yards allowed per game), 116th in rush defense (206.0 rushing yards allowed per game), 122nd in total team sacks (6.0) and 126th in tackles-for-loss per contest (3.8) coming into this weekend.

Needless to say, those kinds of statistics do not bode well for Patterson’s team considering they’re about to face an Oklahoma offense that may have finally turned the corner and hit another gear with a potentially new starting QB. If these figures stay true on Saturday, it could be another long night for Gary’s group.

Does Kennedy Brooks pick up where he left off?

Kennedy Brooks is quietly building himself a case as the most underrated running back in OU history. His patience is second-to-none, and he’s deceptively fast when he breaks into the open field. Coming off a career-high 217 yards and a pair of game-changing touchdowns, what will he do against a vulnerable TCU run defense?

Well for starters, in two career games (‘18 and ‘19) against the Horned Frogs, Brooks has carried the ball a total of 43 times for 317 rushing yards (7.4 average ypc) and one touchdown. That’s about as dominant of a two-game sample as you’ll find from any one player. Given what he looked like a week ago, his presence on the field should be squarely on the minds of Gary Patterson and company.

Prediction

Looking at how much the TCU defense has struggled this season, especially against teams with respectable rushing attacks, I don’t envision OU having any real difficulty with generating yards on the ground. As anyone who has watched Oklahoma under Lincoln Riley could tell you, when his offenses are able to run the ball at will, it’s nearly impossible to stop. I believe Caleb Williams will get the starting nod, and both he and Kennedy Brooks will hurt the Horned Frogs with their legs throughout the night. That’ll gradually open up play action for guys like Marvin Mims and Mike Woods to take the top off of Patterson’s secondary. On the other side, the Sooners’ defensive line and linebackers will have their hands full with defending Zach Evans, but the pass rush be able to hurry Max Duggan into some dangerous throws that will keep them from moving the ball consistently. In the end, I see this as a relatively drama-free outing for the home team from start to finish.

Oklahoma 38, TCU 17

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OU vs. TCU Q&A with Frogs ‘O War: Zach Evans, keys to the game and realignment talk

October 15, 2021
TCU v Texas Tech
Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images

Melissa Triebwasser of Frogs O’ War drops by to talk about Zach Evans, Max Duggan and the TCU Horned Frogs.

After an incredible win over the Texas Longhorns in Dallas , the Oklahoma Sooners will need to avoid any kind of letdown as Gary Patterson’s upset-minded TCU Horned Frogs come to town. Here to talk about OU’s opponent is Melissa Treibwasser of Frogs O’ War.

Gary Patterson’s gamble on Zach Evans has paid off big time, as the former five-star running back is clearly thriving in Fort Worth. What should OU fans know about him entering Saturday?

Zach came in with a lot of questions, but the kid has been awesome on and off the field. He’s an absolute delight to talk to, he’s doing great in the classroom, he’s always looking to build up his teammates. You hear a lot of things about kids in the recruiting process, but the person we are getting to know at TCU is pretty special. I hope that whatever it was that was getting him to make some bad decisions is eradicated because his future is so bright. He’s got the speed, power, and explosiveness to make a lot of money playing football, and it’s not inconceivable that he could be a first or second round draft pick 18 months from now.

What I love about watching him play is that he seeks out contact, can break tackles, and can run by guys. Evans has a high football IQ, understands where the holes are and can make a lane when the o-line fails him. He’s a pretty good receiver, too. He really is the whole package. We have yet to really see TCU lean on him offensively, and Saturday — if he’s healthy — could be the first time that happens. I’m really interested to see what he can do if the governor comes off.

Speaking of the offense, junior QB Max Duggan seems to improve a little as time goes on and is now one of the better QBs in a league that knows how to produce great QBs. Which aspect of his game seems to have improved the most since the last time OU fans saw him?

Well, umm… that’s a great question, because there’s a prevailing thought around the fan base is that he hasn’t really improved much since his freshman year. Duggan still struggles to complete passes, especially the deep ball, and whether that’s something to do with him or a failing of the play callers remains to be established. But even when he was given a call sheet that focused on intermediate balls in the middle of the field against Texas, the results weren’t great. What Max does well is will his team in tough situations: he’s unquestionably a great leader, he makes tough plays with his feet, and he’s good for a couple of “wow” pass plays a game. But it’s the simple things that he continues to struggle with, setting TCU up to need that grit down the stretch. I still think Max Duggan can be a really good QB, but at some point he has to prove that he can indeed win games with his arm, and we haven’t seen that in 2021.

Speaking of Duggan, which of his weapons should we be most aware of coming into this weekend?

Well, if Quentin Johnston is still out, that hurts a lot. But I love what Taye Barber and Derius Dvis have brought to the table as veterans, and Blair Conwright has had some nice moments in his sophomore campaign. Savion Williams and Quincy Brown are the two elite athletes that haven’t quite gotten in a regular rotation of making plays, but when they get the ball they make big things happen. I am kind of banking on Conwright to be a surprising star Saturday night in Norman — Duggan is developing a nice repoire with him over the last few weeks.

Defensively, things have surprisingly been less than smooth up to this point. What seems to be the biggest issue for this group?

Can I say all of it?

CB2 is a huge problem; Trevius Hodges Tomlinson is awesome but it’s been a sieve on the other side with Noah Daniels out or limited since early last season. The safeties haven’t been much better — though TJ Carter played well at Tech — and the linebackers, outside of Dee Winters, look overmatched. But it all starts with the pass rush and the front line against the run. We thought the defensive line would be the defense’s biggest strength, but injuries to Khari Coleman and Corey Bethley have apparently been too much to overcome. Coleman has returned and shored up the pass rush, but you or I could probably average four yards per carry on the ground up the middle. Which is totally fine because it’s not like there are any good running backs in the Big 12 this season.

How are TCU fans feeling about the future of the athletic department in light of the departures of Oklahoma and Texas from the Big 12? Are people excited for the new chapter with the new members?

From a pure football entertainment factor, I love it. You’re telling me OU, which has absolutely dominated the conference for the last half a decade, is going to leave, we are going to replace them with three really fun football programs and Holgo, and they’re going to take those a-holes in Burnt Orange with them? Sign. Me. Up.

But do I think that this is the death of college football as we now know it and will also absolutely destroy women’s and non-revenue sports? Yeah, we are screwed. I don’t blame Oklahoma for taking the SEC paycheck: the Sooners win. A lot. The next logical step is joining what will soon be the football version of the G League. But what it’s financially going to do to the remaining eight member’s athletic department budgets is concerning.

Who is your favorite Oklahoman of all time?

Okay I will admit I did some googling, but apparently Ron Howard was born in Oklahoma, and as a huge fan of his movies — and Arrested Development — I will choose him.

What does TCU have to do to pull the upset this year?

I’m titleing my “Keys to the Game” piece this week “Thoughts and Prayers”, if that tells you how I am feeling about this thing.

But seriously, GP will need to come up with the game plan of a lifetime against a true freshman QB, pull out all the stops on the blitzes, and hope for a few turnovers and a lucky bounce here or there. Maybe Max can finally connect on a few of those deep balls, and Zach Evans can help the Frogs control the clock and keep OU off the field on offense.

How do you see this one playing out? What’s your score prediction?

I’ve said it a few times now, but I think these two teams trade scores on their first drives, the Frogs pull ahead thanks to a turnover, and it’s all Sooners from there. OU 41, TCU 31. (we cover! yay!)

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Oklahoma Football: Two quarterbacks are better than one

October 14, 2021
NCAA Football: Oklahoma at Texas
Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

It’s Caleb Williams’ world for now, but OU can still win with Spencer Rattler at QB.

The old football saying goes something like, “When you have two quarterbacks, you don’t have a quarterback.”

What a dumb saying. You won’t find a more important position in sports. If they’re good, you want as many quarterbacks on your team as circumstances allow.

The Oklahoma Sooners currently have two. In guiding the squad to a thrilling 55-48 win over the Texas Longhorns in the Red River Showdown over the weekend, ballyhooed freshman Caleb Williams showed why he is seen as OU’s QB of the future. He’s almost certainly OU’s QB of the present after that performance.

Spencer Rattler’s detractors are legion, but he gave Lincoln Riley a reason to put so much faith in his ability when recruiting him out of high school. Whatever his faults, you simply cannot deny Rattler’s immense potential. And it’s not merely potential, either: The Sooners have a 15-2 record in games Rattler has started at quarterback, not to mention a Big 12 championship to their credit. They’ve been winning with him running the show.

If having those two quarterbacks on your team is a problem, it’s a good one to have. But what is the best way to maximize their talents in what remains of the season?

What happened in Dallas

We should start with what happened on Saturday: Rattler’s benching felt like a microcosm of what we’ve seen from the OU offense all season.

Using their standard 2-4-5 base alignment, the Longhorns bottled up OU’s running game with Rattler behind center in the first half. Excluding sacks and Williams’ 66-yard touchdown run, the Sooners rushed for 49 yards on 15 carries in the first two quarters when Rattler was taking snaps. The Horns showed little concern for Rattler’s ability to run, and the Sooners OL couldn’t block the UT front well enough to move the ball on the ground without shifting from OU’s preferred 11 personnel grouping to two tight ends as a standard alignment. Of course, going to 12 personnel created its own set of problems because it meant taking a dangerous passing threat off the field.

The Sooners could have lived with a diminished rushing attack if they could throw the ball well enough to keep the chains moving. Unfortunately, it became apparent after Rattler’s second turnover (and a few other near misses) that he wasn’t protecting the ball well enough to keep OU in the game.

NCAA Football: Oklahoma at Texas
Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

It doesn’t seem like a coincidence that OU’s ground game shifted into a higher gear after Riley inserted Williams at QB late in the second quarter. The Sooners rushed for 216 yards on 23 attempts from that point forward. Add in Williams’ TD jaunt earlier in the game and OU averaged 11.8 yards per carry with Williams at QB.

With Texas forced to respect Williams as a runner, running backs Kennedy Brooks and Eric Gray combined for 188 yards on 17 rushes. Meanwhile, Williams’ mobility enabled him to elude the Texas pass rush and wear out the defenders giving him chase.

What happens next?

NCAA Football: Oklahoma at Texas
Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

To be clear: It didn’t take surreptitiously observing an OU practice this week to know Caleb Williams would be the first-string QB when the Sooners hit the field Saturday night against TCU. Riley said as much without actually saying it at his media availability on Tuesday when he mentioned that Rattler got a day off from practice on Monday. Moreover, we all saw what happened in the last game.

Keep in mind, though, that everyone outside the program doesn’t know what we don’t know. Riley made Rattler the starter at QB for a reason, and OU’s head coach never displayed any signs of doubt about the decision. He gave Williams the occasional snap in short-yardage situations, but there were no other packages for the freshman signal caller incorporated into the offense. Riley handed Williams the reins only after Rattler appeared close to imploding.

That should make all of us on the other side of Norman’s iron curtain wonder why Riley didn’t take a more proactive approach to getting Williams in games earlier. And what happens when opponents spend the week before a game preparing for Williams at QB? Taking over against a team like Texas that built its defensive game plan around the other QB is one thing, but a team gunning specifically for you is something else entirely.

Given the up-and-down performance of OU’s offensive line so far, Williams’ mobility ultimately raises the ceiling of this offense. Importantly, the Sooners are at their best when they can leverage an arsenal of talented receivers – Williams works well in personnel groupings with more of them on the field.

Considering Rattler’s prodigious talents as a passer, though, you understand why Riley is so keen to keep him in the fold. It seems like a tall order to play some kind of rotating system of QBs at this point in the season, but it’s not impossible. Riley could even lean into Rattler’s strengths by playing him in 12 personnel groupings, forcing defenses to adjust midstream to more power running and play-action passing.

OU will probably ride with Williams for the foreseeable future. But so long as Rattler stays engaged, the Sooners could still win plenty of games with him at wheel.

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BOOM! Five-star DL Gabriel Brownlow-Dindy commits to Oklahoma

October 12, 2021
NCAA Football: Western Carolina at Oklahoma
Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

Sooners are officially recruiting elite talent on defense.

The Sooners aren’t just recruiting at an elite level on offense, but now it’s defense as well. Five-star 2022 defensive lineman Gabriel Brownlow-Dindy lives in Lakeland, Fla., but he has family connections in Norman, Okla. and has decided to commit to the Sooners over Ohio State, Clemson, Texas A&M, and several other programs.

Dindy may be the most talented defensive player that the Sooners have signed in quite some time. He gives off some MAJOR Myles Garrett and Ed Oliver vibes. He stands at a frame of 6’3”and 270 lbs., but is an incredibly athletic big man. He has the strength to bull rush opponents, but also the quickness and athleticism to get around offensive linemen. He’s already rated as a top 10 player in the nation, if he were 6’5”, he’d likely be No. 1.

Dindy is Oklahoma’s 15th commitment for the 2022 recruiting cycle and the third defensive lineman of the class. According to 247Sports Composite, he is the No. 10 player nationally, the No. 4 DL, and the No. 2 player from the state of Florida. If the Sooners continue to be able to reel in elite defensive talent like what they’re getting in Brownlow-Dindy, they’ll soon be able to dominate the game from both sides of the ball.

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