Buy stock in the Oklahoma Sooners’ College Football Playoff pursuit

Should you buy or sell the Oklahoma Sooners stock for the college football playoffs in ’21?

When it comes to the College Football Playoffs only one Big 12 school has found its way into the four-team tournament. The Oklahoma Sooners’ four appearances tie them with Ohio State for the second-most behind the six appearances for Alabama and Clemson.

Despite the fact that OU has dominated the Big 12 Conference, that first semifinal victory in the College Football Playoffs has been elusive. The teams that will look to challenge the Sooners are the usual suspects in the conference with Iowa State, Texas, and Oklahoma State looking to take down the champs. Those teams were a combined 1-3 against Oklahoma last year.

[listicle id=26268]

Spencer Rattler gives this team a chance with his return in 2021, the Heisman contender will need to raise his game. He must avoid the slow start as he had in 2020 for the team to compete and Rattler will have a plethora of weapons to choose from. Kennedy Brooks will reprise his role as the starting back with transfer Eric Gray and Seth McGowan joining in. Marvin Mims, Theo Wease, Jadon Haselwood, Austin Stogner, and Jeremiah Hall will be some of his biggest weapons. There will be plenty more but this team is chock full of offensive playmakers.

For the defense, they will be led by Nik Bonitto and Isaiah Thomas on the edges. The duo combined for 16.5 sacks and 23.5 tackles for losses a season ago. They will once again be tasked with being disruptive in the backfield. Perrion Winfrey and Jalen Redmond will look to control the interior. The big question is which linebackers will step up in 2021 with Caleb Kelly, Brian Asamoah, David Ugwoegbu, and DaShaun White being the main rotational guys. Can the secondary replace the production lost by Tre Brown, Tre Norwood, and Brendan Hadley-Riles’ departures?

[lawrence-related id=27569]

247Sports takes a look at some of the CFP contenders in a game of buy or sell. Are you buying the Sooners?

247Sports Says…

Even if the hypothetical price is high right now for these national championship contenders, there’s a good chance Oklahoma’s stock still hits the moon this season. Recently voted college football’s fourth-best coach nationally heading into the 2021 campaign, Lincoln Riley is still hunting for that elusive national title and looks to have a team that will be on the doorstep once again. Not only is Heisman frontrunner Spencer Rattler capable of a noteworthy season for the Sooners, but Oklahoma’s defense should be playing at its best of his tenure with guys like Woodi Washington, Perrion Winfrey and Nik Bonitto returning.

If you’re a believer in the Sooners winning big in 2021, you always have to love Oklahoma’s schedule favorability. This team will likely only take on a single nationally-ranked opponent the first 2.5 months of the season (vs. Texas) and won’t play another until Iowa State on Nov. 20. By that time, Riley’s team will know where they stand in the Playoff race and should be playing with maximum confidence given the relatively easy road prior to the home stretch. Everything is falling into place ahead of what should be a special season in Norman for a team that’s loaded at various spots.

How will Todd Monken’s air raid offense translate to Georgia football?

New Georgia football offensive coordinator Todd Monken takes over a talented UGA offense with air-raid scheme.

After a pedestrian year from the Georgia Bulldogs on offense in 2019, Kirby Smart wasted no time making scheme changes, bringing in Todd Monken from the Cleveland Browns to take over for James Coley as offensive coordinator and play caller.

Monken has coached all over the football landscape, including 23 years of college coaching experience and eight years coaching in the NFL.

Most recently, Monken spent a season as the offensive coordinator for the Cleveland Browns and before that, three seasons as the offensive coordinator and receivers coach for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

As offensive coordinator at Oklahoma State from 2011-2012, Monken coached Brandon Weeden, Justin Blackmon and the air-raid Cowboys offense to record breaking seasons, averaging well over 500 yards a game.

So, how does Monken’s air-rade scheme fit with a Georgia team built for defense and a power run game?

In 2019, the Bulldogs struggled with the deep passing game and the blame can’t be all on Coley, as Jake Fromm had issues with his deep ball and other than George Pickens, receivers either struggled with injuries, getting separation from defenders or dropped passes.

In 2020, there will be no shortage of depth or talent on the Georgia offense and in the light of recent off-season moves, it seems Kirby is planning to be more aggressive offensively.

The Bulldogs bring in a great arm in Wake Forest transfer quarterback Jamie Newman, paired with returning receivers George Pickens and Dominick Blaylock and added five receivers in the 2020 recruiting class.

Georgia will have the ability to stretch the field on anyone and that is exactly what Monken’s offenses do. Still, the traditional Georgia run game can only benefit from the space the air-raid creates.

As Cleveland Browns offensive coordinator in 2019, Monken led an offense that saw former Georgia great Nick Chubb run for nearly 1,500 yards, so we can expect that running backs Zamir White and James Cook will get their fair share of touches in 2020.

Bulldog fans should be excited to see what 2020 will bring for this young team. In Monken’s system, expect to see much more complex route trees than in previous years, as well as a more aggressive approach to offensive strategy because of the security blanket that is the Georgia defense.