OU football: Could OU use both Blake Bell and Trevor Knight?

BY JASON KERSEY, Staff Writer, jkersey@opubco.com

NORMAN — Realizing his team had an issue with red-zone and third-down offense, Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops and his staff devised a special set of plays to take advantage of their backup quarterback’s unique skill set two years ago.

The result was incredible efficiency in short-yardage situations and important game experience for Blake Bell, who now displays calm and poise as the Sooners’ starting quarterback.

When Bell was cramping up in the third quarter of Saturday’s win at Notre Dame, speedy redshirt freshman Trevor Knight entered the game and immediately provided a spark, picking up 30 yards on an option keeper.

Having seen the change of pace Knight provided in relief duty, might coaches call Bell to the sideline on occasion this season and crank their offense up to the speed of Knight?

“Yeah, it’s not a bad idea if you think about it,” Stoops said during his Monday news conference.

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OU football notebook: Sooners defense stays diverse

BY RYAN ABER AND JASON KERSEY, Staff Writers

SOONERS DEFENSE STAYS DIVERSE

Oklahoma still used primarily a three-man front on defense against Notre Dame but used it in different ways than it did the first three games of the season.

The Sooners regularly used four linebackers, with two close to the line of scrimmage on many plays against Notre Dame’s offense, which was more traditional than most the Sooners will face.

The defensive scheme allows Oklahoma to change the defense to match the personnel offensively while keeping the same personnel on the field itself.

“To this point, I’ve liked what I’ve seen,” OU coach Bob Stoops said.

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OU Football 2013 | Sooners vs. Notre Dame | Film Study

Big edition of our ‘Film Series’ this week coming off the win in South Bend.  A lot took place in this game so there will obviously be quite a bit to try and detail.

Will certainly be paying attention to the play along the lines on both sides of the ball and both from a positive and negative aspect, the play of Blake Bell, and some of the different things Mike Stoops did with his defense in this game.

Let’s get started.

* We’ve mentioned it on the site and the podcast, but the weapon that Nick Hodgson has become cannot be under estimated.  He put all but one of his kickoffs thru the end zone in this game and limited the return opportunities for George Atkinson who obviously proved on that 80-yard run he has speed to burn.

Also, to that same point, you have to love what Jay Boulware has been able to accomplish in his first year as special teams coach.

* As I and others predicted, ND goes right at Zack Sanchez early and he plays this first pass perfectly.  Still hard to believe he’s just a redshirt freshman given his level of play thru four games.

* First of several plays Frank Shannon is going to make in this game, doing a superb job of not getting swept in the trash, avoiding the block of the ND tight end, and blowing up an Atkinson run on 2nd down.

* 1st Qtr, 14:23 – 3rd & 7 ND from their 28.  Corey Nelson’s pick six.  This is the first of several examples of just how creative Mike Stoops can be out of this 3-3-5 defensive set.

Here you can see OU pre-snap.

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From top to bottom you have: Striker, Nelson, Grissom, Phillips, and Tapper.  They have five guys on the line, overloaded to the left side of ND’s line, with only Grissom and Phillips having their hands on the ground.

At the snap, Nelson is going to twist to his left and off of Grissom’s rush which confuses ND’s left tackle and guard who both crash down on Grissom and leave Nelson for the center. Which obviously leaves Striker untouched coming off the edge.  Here it is from a better angle.

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To be fair, Nelson is really just a right place/right time in terms of the ball literally falling into his waiting arms.  Given the number of sure INTs he’s already dropped so far this season, OU was probably pretty lucky this actually turned into six points (sorry, Corey).  Still as I said earlier, creative call from M.Stoops and Tim Kish as to my knowledge this is the first stunting we’ve seen from the linebackers this season.

From a ND perspective, I can certainly understand the frustration on this play from Rees’ perspective.  You would hope he could have some sense of the rush and either throw the ball away or tuck it before it’s knocked loose.  I know we did with Landry who seemed to have the same problem.  7-0 OU

* 1st Qtr, 14:04 – 1st & 10 ND from their 29.  Shannon’s INT.  In my opinion, this Rees INT was a result of a couple things.  (1) A bad throw from Rees who led his receiver too much to the inside.  (2) The ND receiver, T.J. Jones, having a case of alligator arms coming across the middle with Frank Shannon baring down on him.

I’ll leave it up to you to decide.  As you can see from the play and replays, Rees has a clean pocket with virtually zero pressure. It just looks to me like a really poor throw on his part, which from what I heard at the game certainly is not an anomaly.

Oh, and props to Shannon for hauling that in even with the club he was playing with on his right hand.

* Honestly, I think a lot of what OU did in their short passing game (which I HATE people calling an “extension of the run game”) was simply a matter of Heupel taking what ND was giving them.  The Irish corners were playing so far off it was too tempting to pass up.  They did that a number of times, often backed up in their own end, for an easy first down or something close to it.

AND credit to the OU receivers who did an outstanding job blocking on the edges.  I can’t remember who called me out on the site for saying in a previous week that this was something they excelled at, but you know who you were and I hope you were watching on Saturday! (haha)

* 1st Qtr, 12:25 – 2nd & 2 OU from the ND 9.  Several good things happening here on this Damien Williams TD run and one not so good thing.

First, the not so good thing.  This play will not go on Nila Kasitati’s personal highlight reel as he gets obliterated by ND’s Louis Nix.  Here is the beginning of the play with Nix easily tossing Kasitati aside with a simple swim move.

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From the look of the play, it appears as though Williams is going to have to bounce it to the outside regardless but this . . .

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. . . made it an absolute necessity.

Fortunately, Williams has the speed to (easily and understandably) run away from Nix and thanks to two blocks from Trey Millard and Jalen Saunders is able to sneak it into the front corner of the end zone.  No chance he scores without either of those blocks.

Now Millard’s block is certainly no thing of beauty, but he gets just enough of the ND defender it allows Williams to use his speed to get the corner.  And while Saunders is never going to pancake someone, he is at minimum effective enough at getting in the way that he seals the edge giving Williams the sideline and a path the the end zone. 14-0 OU

* I thought the Corey Robinson offensive pass interference call was a pretty obvious one and not just because I’m an OU fan.  Saw on the ND site they thought it was a bad call, which wasn’t overly surprising I suppose, but he did pretty clearly push off.  I would concede that it’s a call that doesn’t normally get made however.

* I just want you to watch what Jordan Phillips does to the ND right guard on this play.

That’s a play that will never show up in the box score, but good lord does he ever destroy the pocket for Rees with that ridiculous bull rush.  I mean, wow.

* Bell definitely missed I think three throws here in the first quarter that could have easily helped OU extend their lead. You have to take the good with the bad and Bell is never going to be Sam Bradford when it comes to accuracy, but Sammy B wasn’t extending plays with his legs like Bell does either.  So like I said, you take the good with the bad.

* I don’t see a Big 12 team on OU’s schedule that will run the ball like Notre Dame did on Saturday (outside of possibly Texas, though their o-line doesn’t scare me), but the limitations of this 3-3-5 set as it’s currently constructed from a personnel standpoint is pretty obvious.  But Mike Stoops didn’t design it with the Irish in mind, he designed it for Big 12 play and the plethora of spread offenses OU will face.

* Shallow crossing routes are still an OU defense’s kryptonite.

* 1st Qtr, 6:17 – 1st & 10 ND from the OU 40.  Um, Mr. Striker your jock strap is waiting for you on the 42 yard line.  Boy, did Atkinson ever put a move on him in the backfield.  He (Atkinson) turns a sure loss into a one yard gain primarily because of the pursuit from Grissom and Nelson, but Striker is going to hear about that one in the film room.

* 1st Qtr, 5:41 – 2nd & 9 ND from the OU 39.  As I mentioned above about the limitations, here they are really on display.  On this particular play, you have OU in a 3-4 (with Dominique Alexander in for Julian Wilson) and ND in a heavy set to their left side.

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And on the play you’re going to have 6’7″ 270 pound Troy Niklas matched up with 6’0″ 220 pound Eric Striker.  That’s a lot to ask of Striker to be able to hold up and on this play the mismatch is particularly glaring as you’ll see below.

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Nicklas has driven Striker all the way from the line of scrimmage almost to the 35-yard line.  And he blocks Striker so effectively that he actually drives him back into Gabe Lynn (who also takes a poor angle) which leads to the big run from Tarean Folston.

That’s not a match up Striker should be expected to win, but it’s one you can bet future OU opponents will pick up on and try to replicate when they face this undersized Sooners defense.

* For all the things Sanchez did well in this game, he gets beaten pretty badly on ND’s first touchdown throw from Rees to Jones.  Kind of looked like he got caught with his eyes in the backfield and just lost his man.  Did not appear to me, based on his reaction, like he was expecting inside help from the safety.

* 1st Qtr, 3:57 – 1st & 10 OU from their 24.  Here is a really good example of just one of the creative ways the offensive line dealt with Nix.  On this particular play, Gabe Ikard snaps the ball and immediately releases into the second level, basically ignoring Nix altogether.  Adam Shead crashes down to his right, while Trey Millard is left to deal with the monster in the middle.

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Millard (wisely) goes for the cut block on Nix who, to his credit, does a good job of not being taken off his feet but who is also effectively taken out of the play regardless.

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As a result, Williams has a clear lane to run thru and uses his vision to cut it back behind Bronson Irwin, who has also released to the second level, and Saunders on the outside once again allowing Williams to find the sideline for a nice gain on first down.

(Okay, we’re not even out of the first quarter yet and we’re pushing 2,000 words.  I’m going to have to move this along a little quicker.  Apologies.)

* 1st Qtr, 1:19 – 3rd & 4 ND from their 26.  Just wanted to point out the fantastic move here from ND’s T.J. Jones.  He runs a simple quick option route right at the marker and has to leave his feet for just a second to bring in Rees’ pass. But in doing so, Jones lands with both feet simultaneously while also spinning away from Julian Wilson and easily picking up the first down.  Looks like a fairly simple play and it’s probably a first down regardless, but it was incredibly athletic and equally impressive.

End of the first quarter, OU leads 14-7.

* Can’t possibly overstate how impressed I already am with OU’s interior line and the game plan Bill Bedenbaugh instituted for his game.  They’ve brought blocks from a variety of different people and spots against Louis Nix and it’s very obviously slowed him down, if for no other reason than literally on every down his blocker/s could be coming from different spots.

* 2nd Qtr, 13:39 – 3rd & 3 ND from the OU 39.  Really impressive play from Nelson here who is out in space all by himself against a mobile Andrew Hendrix who keeps the ball on a zone read.

So many impressive aspects of this play, namely if Nelson doesn’t make this play it looks like an easy first down to extend a potential Irish scoring drive.  Never mind the fact in the split-second he has to make the play, he makes the right read and doesn’t crash down on the running back.  Then the quickness and athleticism he possesses to make the hit on Hendrix and blow the play up.

* This Blake Bell arm punt of a pass to Lacoltan Bester is so bad it actually inadvertently causes the ND corner to create the contact and draw a pass interference call.  Bell put WAY too much air under that ball as Bester actually had a step on his man and a better, leading throw could have produced a big gain.

* Two short yardage situations now, including this 4th and 1 at the 9:15 mark of the 2nd quarter, where ND has stuffed OU.  And on both there really isn’t much to point out other than the Irish flat out winning the battle at the point of attack.

* 2nd Qtr, 9:09 – 1st & 10 ND from their 42.  Rees and the offense take over after that big fourth down stop and OU gets incredibly lucky here with a really poor pass from the ND quarterback.  Folston leaks out from the back field and as we’ve seen in weeks past, Shannon reacts slowly in coverage leaving the ND back basically wide open.

Rees horribly overthrows Folston, who with his speed and absolutely nothing but green grass in front of him easily takes this to his house.  I remain 100% convinced if this pass is completed and doesn’t take Folston off his feet, it’s a ND touchdown that ties the game and could seriously have changed how this game plays out.  Especially considering ND is coming off that fourth down stop and if on the very next play they get a 58-yard touchdown every ounce of momentum would be on their side.  Like I said, OU was VERY lucky here.

* 2nd Qtr, 5:40 – 2nd & 10 ND from the OU 24.  Two things here on this almost INT.  (1) Sanchez should have been able to haul in this interception.  (2) I’ve seen some people say he was beat on the play, but from everything I can see that is not the case as it really looks to me as though he has inside help from the safety and played his man (to the outside) accordingly.  Great position and another solid play from the redshirt freshman, but you still got to haul that in.

* Then Rees comes back on the very next play and throws his third INT of the game.  And while the first two may not have been on him, though I’d argue with you on the second, there is no question about this one.

This throw is late, a touch behind the receiver, and thrown into blanket coverage from the aforementioned Zack Sanchez who could have just as easily got the INT instead of tipping it to Julian Wilson.

* Huge scramble by Bell at 3:14 mark on a 3rd and 8.  Looks like he never comes off his initial read, but not sure it would have matter as the Irish look to have solid coverage across the board on the play.  This, my friends, is what a mobile QB can do for you.

* I’m not telling any of you anything you didn’t already know, but Bell’s poise in this game has been amazingly impressive.

* 2nd Qtr, 0:54 – 1st & 10 OU from the ND 29.  While this is an impressive play both from Bell and Bester that extends OU’s lead to 21-7, Bell actually misses him on the initial route.  Bester is running a skinny post and gets a step on his man to the inside.  It’s not an easy throw for any QB to make and I’m not going to speculate as to whether or not that’s why Bell doesn’t make this throw on the initial read.

But to his credit, Bester does not pout and quit on the play instead improvising on the fly and working his way back towards Bell.  The OU quarterback maintains his technique and footwork then unleashes a pass to Bester who also does a good job coming back to the ball instead of waiting on it which, in my opinion, would have allowed the ND defender to break up an eventual touchdown pass.  OU leads 21-7.

* I’d have been just as upset as the ND fans around me were if it was Bob Stoops choosing to take a knee with 40 or so seconds remaining on the clock.

Sooners lead 21-7 at the half.

* 3rd Qtr, 12:43 – 1st & 10 ND from their 20.  Even on this 80-yard Atkinson touchdown run, it’s not much more than ND winning the battle at the point of attack.  Well, okay, actually that’s not entirely accurate.  First and foremost, credit to the Irish up front for a very well executed play.  But OU could have prevented this from being the huge gain that it was and at the very least preventing the touchdown.

First of those being the hold ND’s left guard is allowed to get away with on Frank Shannon.  Now to be fair, it wasn’t egregious enough of a hold that you would make that big of a stink about it.  We all know the ‘they could call holding on every play’ saying and that probably applies here.  Second, Dominique Alexander basically removes himself from the play with a horrible recognition of where the play was going.  If he attacks towards the play immediately, he might not make the tackle but he likely forces Atkinson towards the hash and at least close enough for Colvin to make a tackle from behind.  Third, Quentin Hayes takes a horrible angle on the play and much like Alexander essentially removes himself from the play.  Gabe Lynn didn’t have anywhere near enough of an angle, or more importantly the top end speed, to catch Atkinson so once he got into the open it was pretty much academic.

If there is a positive here, it’s that a lot of what happened is correctable.

* I can’t believe I’m actually about to type this, but I think Trey Franks needs to be given a chance to return kicks full-time.

* 3rd Qtr, 11:34 – 3rd & 1 OU from the ND 43.  This will go down in the box score as a simple two yard from from Damien Williams, but he should have easily been stopped short of the first down line.  He essentialy beats two completely unblocked ND defenders and powers through the second to get the yardage he needs for a first down.

I don’t care that it’s only two yards, that’s a big time run.

* People want to ask why Trevor Knight won the starting job, go back and watch that run he makes on the zone read on his first play from scrimmage.  Yeah, it’s one play but that it’s that kind of play that helped him win the job.  You just saw essentially the exact same play right before it with Bell and he took it for about eleven yards.  Knight it for thirty.

Understand, I’m not saying that alone justifies the decision as much as I’m simply pointing out it as that kind of play-making ability that played a significant role in the choice of Knight as the starter to open the season.

* I’m not entirely sure I agree with Stoops’ comments in his presser on Monday that Knight’s goal line run for a loss of six or so yards was on the running back (Williams) missing a block.  Just looks to me like a solid job by ND defending the zone read and there being very little there even if Williams makes the block Stoops expected him to make.

End of the third quarter, OU leads 27-14.

* I think we sufficiently covered ND’s final touchdown on the podcast.  Just a busted coverage/assignment from the OU secondary, one of the few mistakes they made on Saturday.  Stuff happens.  OU leads 27-21.

* 4th Qtr, 12:35 – 3rd & 3 OU from the ND 46.  This will be a play I remember for a long time.

And not just because I was there to witness it, though that certainly doesn’t hurt, but mainly just because of how big of a play it was in the game.  Notre Dame had just scored to make it a one possession game, it’s on a third down, and if OU doesn’t convert the Irish could theoretically go down and take a lead which I’m not sure I see OU recovering from.

Oh, all that and how hilariously helpless #59 for ND looked trying to (1) get over in coverage against Sterling Shepard and then even more so (2) how he futilly reaches out attempting to make a tackle as Shepard easily pulls away from him on the way to the end zone.  Also enjoyed Shepard’s ‘flexing’ celebration at the end.

* Don’t sleep on that throw Bell made to Shepard for the two point conversion either.  Put it right on the money and low enough where only his many could make a play on the ball.  OU leads 35-21.

* Some really solid play from the OU defense from here on out limiting the Irish offense to essentially nothing and never allowing them a chance to believe they were still in the game.  Notre Dame helped them by having to throw, but that takes nothing away from what Mike Stoops and this OU defense accomplished on Saturday.

* Equally as impressive a job on the part of the OU offense to pick up first downs and keep that clock running.

* 4th Qtr, 9:05 – 2nd & 9 OU from the ND 48.  Another little detail, but Damien Williams ability to make the catch on this screen pass and both (1) not lose this balance while (2) getting up field for positive yards was very impressive.

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I mean look where he catches that ball.  Like I said, impressive.

* Brennan Clay running really hard here in the fourth quarter AND that’s after the nasty hit he took earlier in the quarter.

And that’s a wrap.  Plenty to be excited about while still several things Stoops and his staff and sell their guys on needing to improve upon as they prep this week for Saturday’s game against TCU.

We’ll see you back here next week once again for another edition of our ‘Film Study’ series.  Thanks for reading!

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Report: Texas athletic director DeLoss Dodds stepping down

Texas athletic director DeLoss Dodds will announce Tuesday afternoon that he will step down next August after 32 years in the position, three well-connected sources told the Austin American-Statesman on Monday.

Dodds, 76, will announce his retirement after vigorously denying a report earlier this month that he would leave his job before the end of this year.

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Weekend Recap: Big Twelve Taking Shape

The Big Twelve conference no longer has a winless team thanks to Iowa State’s Thursday night win at Tulsa, and the conference may now be a two horse race thanks to Oklahoma State getting shutdown at West Virginia.

Last week I wrote that Baylor may be the team to look out for in the Big Twelve. A few O-State fans took issue by saying that we should take into consideration a team’s opponents before declaring them a conference front runner. I thought they were talking about the Bears but apparently they were talking about the Cowboys. The loss in Morgantown is inexcusable and, at this point in time, there’s no way that OSU can be considered as a favorite in the conference anymore. Sure there’s time to rebound and get back into the race but the Cowboys have already given a one game lead to Baylor and Oklahoma. On top of that, there were a lot of deficiencies exposed within this team on Saturday. You have to say that the conference is a two-horse race right now.

Here’s a quick recap of the weekend’s action.

Iowa State 38 – Tulsa 21: The Cyclones picked up their first win of the season and they did it with their offense. The 38 points that the Cyclones scored are a season high, eclipsing the previous high of 21 points in the loss to Iowa. Quarterback Sam Richardson threw for 255 yards and two scores while Aaron Wimberly ran for a season-high 137 yards. Now the question is, can ISU keep their offense humming against Texas on Thursday night?

West Virginia 30 – Oklahoma State 21: Shocker of the week! The Cowboys made just about every mistake imaginable in this game. Fumbles, interceptions, dropped passes, missed blocks, shanked punts, missed field goals and poor coaching decisions were on display in Morgantown. There’s a lot of work to do in Stillwater this week.

TCU 48 – SMU 17: There’s no doubt that the Horned Frogs played their best quarter of the season when they posted 31 fourth quarter points. Trevone Boykin passed for 228 yards and two scores with no turnovers and the TCU defense held SMU to 0.5 yards per carry while forcing five turnovers.

Oklahoma 35 – Notre Dame 21: Absolutely the best win for the Big XII this season! The conference has taken it on the chin in non-conference games but the Sooners brought a little redemption back. In just the second start of his career, Blake Bell passed for 232 yards and two scores while also rushing for 59 yards. The defense forced Irish quarterback Tommy Rees into throwing three interceptions and held him to just 104 total passing yards.

More from Crimson And Cream Machine:

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OU Football 2013 | Bob Stoops Weekly Press Conference (ND/TCU)

It’s Monday and you know what that means . . . another Bob Stoops press conference!

I’ve heard several local media members speculate that Stoops could be pretty salty today given some of his comments following Saturday’s win and looking to avoid what is being labeled as a ‘trap game’ against TCU this weekend. The insinuation being that sandwiched between the Notre Dame and Texas, there is a chance the Sooners could be caught either (1) on a let down after a big win or (2) looking ahead to their rival who looks to be down yet again.

Either way, I’m quite certain we can expect the same level of intelligence when it comes to the questions that will be asked. So at least we have that to entertain us.

As always things get started shortly after noon and you can follow along live courtesy of Sooner Sports TV.

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Oklahoma Football | Week 5 | Three Takeaways

Heading into the weekend, the Oklahoma Sooners and their fans had questioned the level of competition. Were we seeing the actual product on the field or was something amiss, a problem left undiscovered? Many of those questions about who this team is and can be were answered as Oklahoma earned a 35-21 win over the Notre Dame Fighting Irish.

Three Takeaways

When Push Comes To Shove, The Offensive Line Can Hold Their Own

Over the past several years, many criticized this Oklahoma Sooners team and the perceived finesse mentality. That case was strongly backed by a lack of success in the running the ball consistently and even more so with the redzone woes. All those troubles have seemed to vanish, replaced with undeniable leadership and a hard nose attitude.

An experienced Sooner O-Line headed to South Bend to take on the Notre Dame Fighting Irish knowing, without the shadow of doubt, this would be the biggest test of the season. Headlined by Louis Nix, the Irish possess a defensive front seven with the potential to land six of those in the NFL. Before Saturday came around, ND was giving up 114.25 rushing yards per game and had allowed two touchdowns through four games. There is no question that this unit is not only big, but also nasty.

While Oklahoma came off as timid to start the game, they quickly matched the physicality of Notre Dame in the trenches springing the rushing attack to 212 yards in South Bend. The effort marked the most yards given up on the ground by the Irish this season. Without only three pass rushes recorded on Blake Bell, the Sooners remained productive on offense with credit going to the offensive line for buying him time to make a read and find open receivers. Needless to say, ND failed to record a sack on Saturday.

Sterling Shepard Continues To Be A Major Asset

With the exit of Kenny Stills, the coaching staff began to look for a complimentary receiver for Jalen Saunders. However, the tides may have shifted at this point. There is no question that Saunders is an irreplaceable receiver, but playing the position is more than just catching a pass. Equally important to the success of a season is the ability of the receivers to block down field. During the stint of the Show Thread, this became a topic that a few readers commented on.

While I am not sure that I agree 100% with what was said, fact remains that Sterling Shepard can do it all. Not only does he make himself available time and time again as an open receiver, but he is able to do something with the ball in his hands. If you are looking for evidence of exactly what I am talking about look not further than this play…

Oklahoma Solidified Themselves As A National Contender

Sure, a win against the likes of the Baylor Bears will give the defense a confidence boost. But, there is only one thing that can compare to going into South Bend to play one of the most storied programs in history…escaping with a win! Playing on the road in front of a hostile crowd with question marks left unanswered usually does not bode well. With poise and resilience, this is an Oklahoma team that accepted the challenge and rose to the occasion. Not only did the win push the Sooners to the front of the Big XII conversation, it also threw their name into the national picture with a top 10 ranking in the Coaches’ Poll.

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Sooners In The NFL | Week Four

Another busy week for the former Sooners in the NFL, highlighted once again by Adrian Peterson’s 100+ yard, two touchdown performance versus the Steelers in jolly ol’ England.  Undrafted rookie free agent Tony Jefferson continues to make an impact for Arizona and Gerald McCoy played well in the same game that Jefferson’s Cardinals eventually won.  Another week in which Sam Bradford receives little help from his offensive line and is forced to scramble for his life on virtually every play.

Several for OU guys playing for the Saints Monday night, so if you’re not planning to watch the game be sure to check back Tuesday morning to see how they played.

Frank Alexander (Panthers) – bye week

Sam Bradford (Rams) – 19-for-41, 202 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT

Ryan Broyles (Lions) – played, no stats, 1 target

Chris Chester (Redskins) – started at right guard

Jamell Fleming (Jaguars) – played, no stats

Dominique Franks (Falcons) – 1 pass defended

Jermaine Gresham (Bengals) – 3 catches for 53 yards

James Hanna (Cowboys) – played, no stats

Garrett Hartley (Saints) – playing Monday night

Tony Jefferson (Cardinals) – 7 tackles

Lane Johnson (Eagles) – started at right tackle

Landry Jones (Steelers) – played (apparently), no stats

Davin Joseph (Bucs) – started at right guard

Travis Lewis (Lions) – 2 special teams tackles

Phil Loadholt (Vikings) – started at right tackle

Curtis Lofton (Saints) – playing Monday night

Gerald McCoy (Bucs) – 1 tackle, 1 sack, 1 pass defended, 1 fumble recovery

Stacy McGee (Raiders) – 1 tackle

DeMarco Murray (Cowboys) – 14 rushes for 70 yards, 5 catches for 20 yards

Adrian Peterson (Vikings) – 23 rushes for 140 yards, 2 TDs (including this 60-yarder)

Donald Stephenson (Chiefs) – played, no stats

Kenny Stills (Saints) – playing Monday night

Trent Williams (Redskins) – started at left tackle

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O-line steps up, showcases OU’s physicality in win over Notre Dame

For months, Oklahoma’s offensive line pointed at Saturday as a defining day for them. Notre Dame’s physical defensive line had roughed them up 11 months ago. If the Sooners wanted to be an elite offense it couldn’t get shoved around up …

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OU football: Trevor Knight shines during brief playing time vs. Notre Dame

BY RYAN ABER, Staff Writer, raber@opubco.com

SOUTH BEND, Ind.– It wasn’t much, just six plays in a game that had more than 125 of them.

But Trevor Knight savored it as much as he could.

With Knight sidelined the last two weeks with a knee injury, Blake Bell has seized not only the Oklahoma starting quarterback job but the role as team leader.

But Saturday at Notre Dame, Knight got another chance to quarterback the Sooners with the game on the line when Bell went to the locker room for intravenous fluids after cramping up in the third quarter.

He immediately reminded Sooners fans about why there was so much excitement when he was named the starter.

Even three weeks removed from spraining all four ligaments in his left knee — “that doesn’t happen very often,” Knight said — the redshirt freshman was quick on his feet.

When Bell trotted off, co-offensive coordinator Josh Heupel called a read-option play right off the bat.

Knight kept the ball and ran for 30 yards, the longest play on the ground for the Sooners in the 35-21 win.

“I’ve been out of it for the first time in my life for a couple weeks,” Knight said.

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Sooner Nation Podcast | Recapping The Sooners And Irish

Oklahoma moves to 4-0 on the season with a 35-14 win over Notre Dame, in South Bend, on Saturday. Jordan is going to start off the podcast by telling us about his trip to the game, the atmosphere there and, most importantly, his breaking the jinx.

Use the media player to listen to the podcast live, beginning at 8:30 (CST)

Of course we’ll get into the review of the game as well as we breakdown both the offensive and defensive performances and name our MVPs.

We will also get into the Big Twelve rundown and have our fun with O-State stumbling in Morgantown.
We encourage your participation in the podcast by leaving your questions and comments below.

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OU football notebook: Defense bends, then finishes strong

BY JASON KERSEY AND RYAN ABER, Staff Writers

DEFENSE BENDS, THEN FINISHES STRONG

On the second play of the fourth quarter in Oklahoma’s 35-21 win at Notre Dame on Saturday night, Fighting Irish tight end Troy Niklas caught a Tommy Rees pass with no Sooners defenders anywhere close and Niklas cruised in for a 30-yard touchdown.

After the play, Sooners defensive coordinator Mike Stoops was upset with defensive back Quentin Hayes.

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OU football: ‘Belldozer’ disappears in short-yardage situations

BY JASON KERSEY, Staff Writer, jkersey@opubco.com

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Blake Bell played another excellent game in Oklahoma’s 35-21 win at Notre Dame, completing 22 of 30 passes for 232 yards and two touchdowns.

The junior also displayed his ability to make things happen with his legs, picking up 59 yards on 12 carries.

But among his most notable rushes were the unsuccessful ones, short-yardage carries that used to be automatic for Bell.

Early in the second quarter, Oklahoma faced a fourth-and-1 situation at Notre Dame’s 43-yard line.

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