Former Huskers QB Adrian Martinez discusses leaving Nebraska

Why exactly did Adrian Martinez hop in the transfer portal?

When Nebraska takes the field for the first time in 2022 it will do so without a familiar face leading the charge. Adrian Martinez was a mainstay on the team for the last four seasons in Lincoln.

During that stretch, the Huskers were 15-29 and missed a bowl game each and every season. Not once did they reach the six-win threshold to qualify for the postseason. While it might not be fair, quarterbacks are judged on wins and losses. It isn’t a quarterback stat, but don’t ask the court of public opinion that.

As the Nebraska signal caller, Martinez threw for 8,491 yards, 45 touchdowns, and 30 interceptions. He also rushed for another 2,301 yards with 35 touchdowns. He did a lot for the team but he also turned it over quite a bit. After four seasons with Scott Frost, Martinez opted to transfer to Kansas State.

When it comes to his decision to leave, Martinez opened up about leaving the school he spent four years with.

“The narratives I’m fighting against, well, I haven’t been to a bowl game and I haven’t had a winning season,” Martinez said. “Now football is a team sport, but I play quarterback and often times you get associated with those kinds of things and I want to win. I want to go play in a bowl game and I want to win a bowl game. So that was another reason why I came here. I feel like we have a great opportunity to win. And that’s something if I do and I play the right way, I know we’re gonna have an opportunity to do. Part of that’s not turning over the ball as much, part of that is being accurate all the time, making the right decisions. And that comes with playing quarterback, yes, but I feel confident in the system and with the progressions I’ve made that I’ll be able to take that next step.”

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¡Ya debutó! El mexicano 141 en jugar en el beisbol de la MLB

El debut fue muy positivo para el cachanilla que terminó las primeras cuatro entradas con el cero en el marcador

Se llama Adrián Martínez, es lanzador, nacido en Mexicali, Baja California y ya debutó con los Oakland Athletics esta tarde ante Detroit Tigers en la amplia cartelera de la MLB para el 10 de mayo.

El cachanilla se convierte así en el jugador número 141 en debutar en el beisbol de las Grandes Ligas y en el novato número 18 que lo hace para la organización de Oakland este año.

© Raj Mehta-USA TODAY Sports

Para los Athletics, Martínez es el primer mexicano en debutar desde 2015 cuando tenían en el montículo al culichi Arnold León y para México, es el segundo jugador en debutar este 2022, pues ya el pasado 8 de abril hizo su estreno en la MLB Daniel Duarte con los Cincinnati Reds.

El debut fue muy positivo para el cachanilla que terminó las primeras tres entradas con el cero en el marcador y para la apertura de la cuarta, su ofensiva lo respaldó con dos carreras para aventajar a los Tigers 2-0 y permitirle al abridor cerrar el capítulo con el partido en la bolsa ante un débil equipo de Detroit.

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Dillon Gabriel among most impactful QB transfers per USA TODAY Sports

Dillon Gabriel comes in at No. 2 in USA TODAY Sports’ top 10 most impactful transfer quarterbacks of 2022.

The spring game finally allowed Oklahoma fans to see the latest quarterback addition through the transfer portal, [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag]. With anticipation of his debut building for months, Gabriel was the player most fans and analysts were excited to watch.

In Oklahoma’s spring game, he didn’t disappoint, completing 65% of his passes for 250 yards and two touchdowns. He showed what made him a coveted transfer portal option for the Sooners and many schools in the Power Five.

Gabriel was interested in Ole Miss before Jeff Lebby was hired away to Oklahoma. Gabriel was at UCLA and had a great chance to take the starting job in Chip Kelly’s offense. Immediately upon [autotag]Caleb Williams[/autotag]’ entrance into the transfer portal, Gabriel announced he was moving to Norman. Stocked with one of the 10 best quarterbacks in the country, the Oklahoma Sooners look primed to contend for the Big 12 championship once again.

With spring ball wrapped up, Paul Myerburg looks at the ten most impactful transfer portal quarterbacks, and Dillon Gabriel comes in at No. 2, sandwiched between Caleb Williams at No. 1 and [autotag]Spencer Rattler[/autotag] at No. 3.

Beyond his two-plus years of starting experience at UCF and his sterling touchdown-to-interception ratio (70-14), Gabriel seems poised to flourish with the Sooners due to his connection to new offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby, who previously held the same position with the Knights. He’s a great fit for the scheme and accompanying skill talent as the Brent Venables era gets underway in Norman. – Myerburg, USA TODAY Sports

Gabriel also comes in ahead of Jaxson Dart, J.T. Daniels, Adrian Martinez, and Quinn Ewers.

The Oklahoma Sooners got a good player in Dillon Gabriel. Despite his experience and production, Gabriel comes into 2022 with something to prove after a shoulder injury sidelined him for much of 2021. Gabriel’s led from the beginning with his work ethic on the field and his relationship building off of it.

In the spring game, Dillon Gabriel gave us a glimpse of the talent he will unleash on the Big 12 stage. September can’t get here quick enough.

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Post-Spring look at who will start at quarterback for each Big 12 team

A look at who will start at quarterback for each of the Big 12 schools in 2022?

The Big 12 has seen a shake-up at the most important position in football. Turnover from the 2021 season features six schools expected to have a new starting quarterback in 2022.

Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas State, West Virginia, Baylor, and Iowa State will rollout new signal-callers this season. Four of those teams got their new quarterback through the transfer portal while Baylor and Iowa State went with in-house options to lead their squads into this college football season.

Adrian Martinez comes into the Big 12 as the most experienced quarterback with 38 starts under his belt according to Pro Football Focus. Spencer Sanders is second among projected starting quarterbacks in career games started with 32. Max Duggan has started 30 and [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag] comes in fourth for most games started among Big 12 quarterbacks in their collegiate careers.

Hunter Dekkers is the only quarterback expected to start in the Big 12 that hasn’t started a game in his career according to Pro Football Focus. He takes over for Brock Purdy on an Iowa State team looking to bounce back after their disappointing 2021 season.

With spring ball wrapped up, let’s look at who will start for each team in the Big 12 this season.

Updated prediction of each starting quarterback in the Big 12 for 2022

The Big 12 conference will have plenty of new faces at the quarterback position in 2022. 

The Big 12 conference will have plenty of new faces at the quarterback position in 2022.

Between the transfer portal and graduation, the majority of the league is looking to replace its starter from the 2021 season. Spencer Sanders (Oklahoma State) and Gerry Bohannon (Baylor) are the only established starters coming back.

Many Big 12 teams struck gold in the transfer portal at the quarterback position. Texas landed former five-star recruit Quinn Ewers from Ohio State and Oklahoma brought in Dillion Gabriel from UCF to reunite with Jeff Lebby.

Longtime Nebraska starting quarterback Adrian Martinez is looking to provide some stability to the position at Kansas State.

West Virginia hit a late home run in the portal with the addition of Georgia transfer JT Daniels. Daniels gets to join forces yet again with his former offensive coordinator Graham Harrell, this time in Morgantown.

Here is an updated projection of each Big 12 team’s 2022 starting quarterback after news surfaced that JT Daniels will be heading to West Virginia.

247Sports highlights Kansas State as ‘dark horse’ in Big 12 title race, potential upset for Oklahoma

Looking at games that might have upset potential, 247Sports circled Oklahoma’s matchup with Kansas State, calling the Wildcats a Big 12 “dark horse.”

With several weeks of spring practice to go, the Oklahoma Sooners look positioned to be contenders in the Big 12 yet again. It’ll be another competitive year in the Big 12 with Baylor, Oklahoma State, and Texas but there might be some other teams that could cause problems in the conference.

Over at 247Sports, Will Backus looked at some of the games in the 2022 season that might have upset potential. The Oklahoma Sooners landed on the list with an old nemesis from the Lincoln Riley era, Chris Klieman and the Kansas State Wildcats.

Kansas State is this writer’s pick for Big 12 dark horse. The conference is as wide open as ever, and most teams have gone through some sort of massive change, be it to the coaching staff or on the roster. Oklahoma was a victim of both. The Sooners lost coach [autotag]Lincoln Riley[/autotag] to USC, and Riley took starting quarterback [autotag]Caleb Williams[/autotag] and star wide receiver [autotag]Mario Williams[/autotag] with him. Outside of those, Oklahoma lost [autotag]Spencer Rattler[/autotag], its top two rushers, four of its top five receivers, three of five starting offensive linemen, its top three sack leaders and three of its top four linebackers. Even with Oklahoma’s transfer additions, that is an absurd amount of attrition. – Backus, 247Sports

Listen, we get it, the Oklahoma Sooners lost a ton of guys to the transfer portal and to the draft. But it’s not like the cupboard’s bare behind them or that they didn’t add players in the transfer portal to replace them. Oklahoma got arguably the best quarterback in the transfer portal not named Caleb Williams or Spencer Rattler. One could make the argument that [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag]’s experience and production puts him in that tier of player even if he didn’t have the same number of stars or hype that the former Sooners’ quarterbacks came to OU with.

On defense, the Sooners brought in several veteran player to help mitigate the departures of six starters. [autotag]Jeffery Johnson[/autotag], [autotag]Jonah Laulu[/autotag], [autotag]T.D. Roof[/autotag], and [autotag]Trey Morrison[/autotag] arrive at Oklahoma with a ton of snaps under their belt. Each has a chance to start or become a significant rotational player for the Sooners in 2022, and at the same time, they’ve got players all over the defense that have been sitting behind future NFL players, developing and waiting for their chance.

While [autotag]Perrion Winfrey[/autotag], [autotag]Nik Bonitto[/autotag], and [autotag]Isaiah Thomas[/autotag] were big losses, the Oregon game showed off the potential from the defensive front as they harrassed Ducks’ quarterback Anthony Brown into three sacks against a pretty good Oregon offensive line.

On offense, they return their best wide receivers from the last two seasons in [autotag]Marvin Mims[/autotag] and [autotag]Theo Wease[/autotag]. Mims has led the Oklahoma Sooners in receiving yards each of the last two seasons. In 2020, Wease tied with Mims for the team lead in receptions. [autotag]Drake Stoops[/autotag] returns and [autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag] looks primed for a breakout in 2022.

On the offensive line, [autotag]McKade Mettauer[/autotag] helps mitigate the loss of [autotag]Marquis Hayes[/autotag], who was an anchor of the Oklahoma offensive line for several seasons. The only question with that unit is who will start at right tackle?

Kansas State is the exact opposite. The Wildcats surgically plugged any holes on their roster via the transfer portal. The big addition was Nebraska quarterback Adrian Martinez, who had a roller coaster 2021 but was considered a Heisman Trophy contender just a couple years ago. Chris Klieman’s squad also boasts running back Deuce Vaughn, one of the most electric players in the nation, and what should be the best defensive line in the Big 12. With this being both teams’ first conference game, this is a prime opportunity for Kansas State to establish itself as a threat. – Backus, 247Sports

Deuce Vaughn has been a problem for years and will be a problem again in 2022, but if Chris Klieman can’t help [autotag]Adrian Martinez[/autotag] protect the ball better, Kansas State won’t contend in the Big 12. He’s a solid quarterback that kept Nebraska in some games last season, but his penchant for putting the ball on the ground also put them behind in a lot of games.

Chris Klieman is one of the best coaches in the Big 12 and the Wildcats have been a thorn in the side of the Sooners at times, but Oklahoma is still the more talented team. An upset is always a possibility in the competitive Big 12 conference, but the Oklahoma Sooners will be the favorite in nearly every game they play in 2022 if not all of them.

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Dillon Gabriel No. 1 in Athlon Sports Big 12 QB rankings, but how does the rest of the conference stack up?

Dillon Gabriel No. 1, but how did Athlon Sports rank the quarterbacks in their way-too-early Big 12 rankings?

How it stands at the quarterback position can determine a lot about your favorite football team’s future. Nothing’s guaranteed on the field, but having the best quarterback in the conference gives you a leg up on the competition. Well, at least it should.

One of the more disappointing aspects of the 2021 season was the Oklahoma Sooners had a significant talent advantage at quarterback compared to their conference mates, but weren’t able to take advantage. There were a host of reasons, but the play of Spencer Rattler and Caleb Williams wasn’t what Oklahoma has come to expect at the position in recent years.

Perhaps, we’ve been spoiled by the Heisman-level play provided by former quarterbacks Baker Mayfield, Kyler Murray and Jalen Hurts. At the same time, in several games in 2021, the quarterback play was subpar leading to losses at Baylor and Oklahoma State and creating way-too-much drama in a win over Kansas.

Dillon Gabriel takes the reigns at quarterback for the Oklahoma Sooners with lowered expectations nationally. Inside the Big 12, however, Gabriel is considered the best in the conference according to Athlon Sports Steve Lassan. Recently, Lassan projected each of the starting quarterbacks for the Big 12 and ranked them 1-10 with Gabriel coming out on top.

Despite the coaching change and the switch to Jeff Lebby’s offense, the Sooners remain a favorite in the Big 12. Having the best quarterback helps. But as we saw in 2021, it’s going to take more than a quarterback for the Oklahoma Sooners to win games in the new-look defensive Big 12.

The defenses Baylor and Oklahoma State will put on the field in 2022 is what make each a significant contender for the conference crown. Spencer Sanders and Gerry Bohanon may not be the quarterback Gabriel has proven to be, but their teams aren’t asking them to throw 40 times to win a football game. Efficiency and ball security are the names of the game in Stillwater and Waco, and when those two are efficient and protect the football, their teams are difficult to beat.

There are still several quarterback battles to play out in spring ball, but here’s how Athlon Sports ranked the Big 12 quarterbacks.

Oklahoma Sooners’ 2022 opponents ranked

The Oklahoma Sooners 2022 schedule offers several tough matchups, but how do their opponents rank when stacked up against one another?

The Oklahoma Sooners get the benefit of home-field advantage against the top teams of the Big 12 in 2022. After going on the road to face Baylor and Oklahoma State last season, they’ll get the 2021 Big 12 championship representatives in the friendly confines of Owen Field.

An early-season clash in Lincoln against the Nebraska Cornhuskers will provide a huge test to the new-look Sooners. Late season road trips to Iowa State, West Virginia, and Texas Tech loom large as well.

Every year in the Big 12 provides a tough slate of games, but the Sooners coaching staff is no stranger to preparing for and playing in tough environments and big-time matchups.

In an early look at the 2022 schedule, let’s see how the Oklahoma Sooners stack up as we rank their matchups from worst to first.

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Oklahoma’s Dillon Gabriel ranked No. 1 Big 12 quarterback by Athlon Sports

Oklahoma quarterback Dillon Gabriel earned the top spot in Steven Lassan’s pre-spring, way-too-early Big 12 quarterback rankings.

Dillon Gabriel’s decision to transfer to Oklahoma has the Sooners in a great spot entering 2022. It means OU has a quarterback in place with 25 collegiate starts, over 8,000 passing yards and 70 touchdown passes to his name.

“It was a chance to play with a really good team. This school’s got a lot of history with quarterbacks, but also just with great players,” Gabriel said in his recent podcast appearance.

Athlon Sports’ Steven Lassan projected who each Big 12 team’s starting quarterback would be and ranked the 10 quarterbacks. Oklahoma offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby already named Gabriel the starter on national signing day, so there’s no mystery in Norman.

Lassan ranked Gabriel as the Big 12’s No. 1 quarterback in his “pre-spring, way-too-early” Big 12 quarterback rankings for 2022.

After Gabriel, Lassan ranks Oklahoma State’s Spencer Sanders No. 2, Texas’ Quinn Ewers No. 3, Baylor’s Gerry Bohanon No. 4 and Kansas State’s Adrian Martinez No. 5.

In the bottom half of his Big 12 quarterback rankings, Lassan ranks TCU’s Max Duggan No. 6, Texas Tech’s Donovan Smith No. 7, Kansas’ Jalen Daniels No. 8, Iowa State’s Hunter Dekkers No. 9 and West Virginia’s Nicco Marchiol No. 10.

Here’s what Lassan wrote about Gabriel.

The transfers of Spencer Rattler (South Carolina) and Caleb Williams (USC) depleted Oklahoma’s quarterback room. However, the news isn’t all bad here for the Sooners. Although Williams will be missed, Gabriel arriving as a transfer from UCF softens concerns about this position. Also, Gabriel worked under offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby at UCF in ‘19, so the transition in scheme should be minimal. There’s a lot of new around Gabriel this offseason, so spring practice is all about acclimation and getting everyone comfortable in the new scheme. Developing depth behind Gabriel is a must. – Lassan, Athlon Sports.

OU signed four-star quarterback Nick Evers back in December. Evers is already on campus, so that should help Oklahoma in building that depth behind Gabriel.

In the meantime, Lebby and OU feel great that Evers is leading the Sooners in this transition year.

“The guy’s averaging over 300 yards a game, three touchdowns a game in 26 starts, so you can’t argue that piece of it, but I think probably the thing that I’m most excited about is this guy knows how to operate. He knows how to walk in the building every single day have great ownership in how he’s going to operate, how he’s going to take command of the offense and what it means to be a quarterback. To me, that is huge and that is critical as we set the tone and the standard of how we’re going to do things,” Lebby said.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. Let us know your thoughts, comment on this story below. Join the conversation today.

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Breaking down the QB situation at each Big 12 school

A deep dive into each Big 12 quarterback battle.

It was an eventful offseason across all of college football.

The coaching carousel and transfer portal have had a ripple effect across the sport. Many of the biggest changes took place within the Big 12 conference.

The majority of the teams in the Big 12 will have different quarterbacks running their offense next season. Only Baylor and Oklahoma State return bona fide starters from a year ago.

The conference added highly sought-after transfers in Quinn Ewers (Texas), Dillon Gabriel (Oklahoma) and Adrian Martinez (Kansas State). Each of which will have a good chance at the starting job.

The Texas Tech and TCU quarterbacks will get a fresh start under new coaching staffs and offensive styles after rotating in a bunch of guys a year ago.

Now that everything has seemingly settled down with coaches and transfers finding their future homes, we can take take a deeper dive into each Big 12 teams quarterback situation heading into spring ball.