Oklahoma Sooners offense trending in right direction

With three games to go, are the Oklahoma Sooners finally hitting their stride on offense?

The Oklahoma Sooners offense certainly isn’t where it needs to be. Nobody is going to mistake the 2024 Oklahoma offense for one that led to four Heismans in this century. However, after switching to Joe Jon Finley as their playcaller, the Sooners have found a rhythm.

Oklahoma scored 14 points in the first half against Ole Miss. That was the most they’d scored in the opening 30 minutes since putting up 21 points in the first half against Tulane. That was back on Sept. 14. Nearly two months ago.

Just before halftime against the Rebels, OU went on a 92-yard drive to take the lead, converting critical third downs and showing good balance. Though there were less than two minutes, the run game kept the Ole Miss defensive line from pinning their ears back. We all saw what happened late in the game when OU was forced to throw. Oklahoma didn’t have nearly as much success in the second half. Chalk that up to an inexperienced playcaller failing to make adjustments or Ole Miss keying in on what the Sooners wanted to do. Either way, it shouldn’t detract from the positive strides the Sooners made in the first half.

Then this week, against Maine, the Sooners started slow with a punt on their first drive, but that was the only time they didn’t have a success. The Sooners scored on all but one drive (the Sam Franklin fumble in the red zone) and put up their highest point total of the season.

In both weeks, Jackson Arnold completed more than 70% of his passes, showing a greater comfort level running the offense. He looked more confident and poised in the pocket and displayed better awareness of when to scramble.

The running game finally found its legs with Finley’s influence increasing. It started against South Carolina, but because of the early 21-point deficit, the Sooners couldn’t fully lean into running the ball.

But against Ole Miss, a team that had only allowed 66 yards per game and two yards per carry on the season, the Sooners had arguably their best day running the football as Jovantae Barnes and Taylor Tatum both averaged more than four yards per carry. Barnes ran for 67 yards. Taking sack yardage out of the equation, Arnold ran for 99 yards, according to Pro Football Focus.

And the run game success continued last week as Barnes ran for 203 yards on 18 carries and the team tallied 381 rushing yards against Maine.

The offense still has room to improve but given the injuries Oklahoma’s suffered on offense, it’s not surprising this year has been a struggle. But here’s hoping they can build off of the last two weeks and finish the season on a high note.

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