Final game grades, report card for Oklahoma-Baylor

The game is never as good or as bad as it looks initially. Here are the final game grades, report card after rewatching Oklahoma and Baylor.

As Lincoln Riley says, “The game is never as good as you thought, and it’s not going to be bad.”

On first glance, I really could not figure out how to explain this game. The Oklahoma offense and Jalen Hurts went from looking like a defeated group to one of the best in college football. The defense went back to its first eight week self.

After every game, Sooners Wire’s Kegan Reneau will rewatch and provide his final thoughts before moving on to the next one.

Here are the grades for the unit and the grades for individuals who ended up on the stat sheet or were noticeable for Oklahoma. These grades reflect how the Sooners played on that game indicative of the perception Reneau expects them to play.


QUARTERBACK — B

Jalen Hurts — B

So, let’s account for two halves of football. 

You put a truth serum in anyone watching that game, the thought of making a change at quarterback didn’t sound like a bad one for Oklahoma to make.

Then, Jalen Hurts became the best player in college football in the second half.

He got a C- for the first half and an A in the second half. Hurts was so, so good coming out of the locker room. Precise and accurate pre-snap reads led to quick throws against man and match quarters coverage. 

If this is the turning point for the Jalen Hurts’ Era at Oklahoma, it comes right at the perfect time. 

RUNNING BACK —  B+

Kennedy Brooks — B+
Rhamondre Stevenson — B

Brooks and Stevenson missed a couple of holes and cut backs, but overall, this was quality work when Oklahoma needed it the most. 

H-BACK — B

Jeremiah Hall — B
Brayden Willis — B

This position remains as steady as it comes. Willis’ touchdown and Hall’s blocking was the right blend at the H-back position. 

WIDE RECEIVER — B+

Charleston Rambo — B
Nick Basquine — B-
A.D. Miller — B+
Theo Wease — A
Jadon Haselwood — N/A

The beginning of the Theo Wease, Jadon Haselwood and Trejan Bridges Era is near, but how about the contribution by A.D. Miller? One of the crazier offseason stories ended up playing out in Oklahoma’s favor. 

TIGHT END — A+

Lee Morris — A+
Austin Stogner — A+

The Lee Morris game everyone will be talking about forever. Austin Stogner’s two touchdown catches provides just another look at the future. 

OFFENSIVE LINE — C+

Stopping James Lynch was a major problem up front, and it was enough to really cause issues for Oklahoma’s offense and the offensive line. R.J. Proctor was a better fit than Erik Swenson. I’d expect this to continue.

OFFENSE — 83

Jalen Hurts second half saved this grade from a low C to a mid-B. The offense was outright dominant, and for the first time all year, didn’t rely on CeeDee Lamb to make it look statistically historic. Take away the turnovers by Hurts, how many yards does Oklahoma put up on one of the best defenses in college football?

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2020 NFL draft order: Look at where Eagles stand with 1st-round pick after Week 11

The Philadelphia Eagles would currently hold the No. 15 pick in the NFL Draft.

The Philadelphia Eagles currently sit at 5-5 on the NFL season, with hopes of a playoff run during the next six weeks.

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If the Eagles are unable to make the playoffs, they’ll settle somewhere into the middle of the first round, hoping to use that pick on a possible wide receiver or young cornerback. With Week 12 of the NFL regular season upon, Draft Wire broke the selection order for the NFL Draft and as it stands right now, the Eagles would be picking at No. 15 in the first round.

As it currently stands, the Eagles would have options at No. 15. If they decide to address the defensive line, they could target South Carolina’s Javon Kinlaw, a strong and forceful defensive tackle.

If not a defensive tackle, the Birds could have their choice of either Oklahoma wideout CeeDee Lamb, Florida cornerback, CJ Henderson, Alabama wide receiver Henry Ruggs III and Clemson wide receiver Tee Higgins.

CeeDee Lamb’s status for TCU game ‘up in the air’ per Lincoln Riley

The Sooners’ best player may or may not get an opportunity to play in what may be his last home game.

Oklahoma’s best player may or may not get an opportunity to play in what may be his last home game.

Wide receiver, CeeDee Lamb was held out of last Saturday’s game with a undisclosed head injury. Lamb did suit up and go through warm ups in full pads and helmet. However, once game time rolled around, Lamb was without his helmet and changed into street clothes at halftime.

Per Lincoln Riley, Lamb’s availability for this week’s game against TCU is “up in the air”. Without Lamb, multiple wide receivers stepped up against Baylor, including two touchdowns from true freshman, Austin Stogner and one touchdown caught by true freshman, Theo Weese.

Lamb was just named to the Biletnikoff semifinal list today and is the only Big 12 representative on the list.

On the season, Lamb has 983 yards receiving on just 44 receptions, including 13 touchdowns.

Oklahoma and TCU are set to kickoff at 7p.m. CT on FOX.

Jalen Hurts named Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week

The “baddest man in college football” gets yet another weekly award.

The “baddest man there is” gets yet another weekly award.

Jalen Hurts was named Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week for the third time this season.

His performance, specifically in the second half, helped bring Oklahoma all the way back from being down 28-3 at one point and 31-10 at the half.

Following a poor first half performance, Hurts only had one crucial turnover inside the Baylor five yard line, late in the third quarter. His 411 total yards helped open the flood gates, allowing the Sooners to claw back.

Aside from his three other offensive player of the week honors, Hurts has also earned Big 12 newcomer of the week twice so far this season.

This marks the tenth Big 12 weekly award given to a Sooner. Hurts is responsible for five with CeeDee Lamb named offensive player of the week twice as well as Kenneth Murray and ‘Bookie’ Radley-Hiles being named defensive player of the week once, each.

Oklahoma faces TCU this Saturday at 7p.m. CT on FOX.

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Kickoff time, broadcast details set for Oklahoma-Oklahoma State (Bedlam)

Both Sooners and Cowboys fans will be able to sleep in Thanksgiving weekend. Oklahoma and Oklahoma State get a night kickoff for Bedlam.

Both Sooners and Cowboys fans will be able to sleep in Thanksgiving weekend.

After having five straight 11AM kickoffs, the Sooners will close the regular season with four straight primetime games.

Bedlam gets the primetime treatment on FOX, showcasing one of the Big 12’s best rivalries as of late.

Oklahoma played Iowa State, Baylor, TCU and will now play Oklahoma State all in primetime to close out the back half of the Sooners’ schedule. With this much exposure in the spotlight, Oklahoma has taken advantage of their opportunities so far with a near upset against Iowa State and a historic 25-point comeback against Baylor.

This will be the one hundredth and fourteenth meeting between the Sooners and Cowboys. Oklahoma leads the all-time series with 88 wins, 18 losses and seven ties.

The Sooners have yet to lose a game against Oklahoma State since 2014, winning 58-23 in 2015, 38-20 in 2016, 62-52 in 2017 and 48-47 last year in Norman.

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Oklahoma’s CeeDee Lamb named a Biletnikoff Award semifinalist

Oklahoma’s star wide receiver, CeeDee Lamb was named to the Biletnikoff Award semifinalist list alongside 11 others from across the country.

CeeDee Lamb looks to follow in the steps of Dede Westbrook.

Oklahoma’s star wide receiver was named to the Biletnikoff Award semifinalist list alongside 11 others from across the country.

If Lamb were to win the award, he would be just the second Sooner to do so. Since the award has been founded, only Dede Westbrook has been awarded the honor for his 2016 season. Westbrook also finished in the top four in Heisman voting, taking the trip to New York City with Baker Mayfield.

Lamb would make the eighth Big 12 winner, following Westbrook, Oklahoma State’s James Washington (2017), and Justin Blackmon (2010-11), Texas Tech’s Michael Crabtree (2007-08) and Baylor’s Corey Coleman (2015).

Notable names who made the semifinal list include last years winner, Jerry Jeudy, from Alabama, his teammate DeVonta Smith, Ja’Marr Chase and Justin Jefferson of LSU and Omar Bayless from Arkansas State.

Lamb, so far on the season has 44 receptions for 983 yards and 13 touchdowns.

Oklahoma plays TCU this Saturday at 7 p.m. CT on FOX.

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So, Oklahoma’s win over Baylor is what ‘Sooner Magic’ is

Don’t act like you haven’t heard an OU fan say it before. The phrase Sooner Magic has been thrown around, but it was on display Saturday.

WACO, Texas — Don’t act like you haven’t heard an Oklahoma fan say it before.

Growing up in the state of Oklahoma or spending time around Sooners, the word ‘Sooner Magic’ is sprinkled throughout Oklahoma football lore.

As head coach Lincoln Riley entered the postgame press conference after his team put together the greatest comeback in the program’s storied history, the room became dead silent.

It stayed that way.

Then Riley looked up from the stats page in front of him.

“Well, that was fun. Where do you start?”

Where the hell do you start after overcoming a 28-3 deficit to beat Baylor 34-31 in its own stadium keep your dreams and hopes alive?

It’s easy, really.

Sooner Magic.

“You never know 100% that you’re going to be able to come back from something like that, but I think they all felt like we had a chance,” Riley said after the game. “I got to be honest, even at Kansas State when we got down in that third quarter, I think maybe about half of us really believed we had a chance to come back and win that thing. In this one, there was not one person on that sideline that didn’t believe it.”

Belief absolutely had to be there.

But Jalen Hurts becoming the best player in college football after looking like a player that could be replaced at halftime. A defense that was knocked around and then down turning into a dominant force. A slew of freshmen receivers having a coming out party.

None of it actually makes sense.

Ask Jalen Hurts, who acknowledged that the media in the postgame press conference probably didn’t think they’d win after halftime, which he was 100 percent right.

Not a single non-biased person who watched the first half of that game thought the Sooners could overcome it. That’s the magic in it, but this one may be the biggest trick the Oklahoma football team has pulled out of the hat yet.

“It’s a moment where you’ve got to embrace it,” Hurts said about heading to the Oklahoma fans in the standing room only section in McLane’s Stadium south end zone. “You’ve got to embrace it and enjoy. Coach Riley, man. Coming in here, I always say it’s a challenge. A challenge coming to play here, a challenge coming in and having to put your full and complete trust in a whole entire new group, something you’re not used to. But man when we have that trust, when we have that belief in one another, when we’re going out there and executing without any doubt, we’re pretty good.”

Since Riley got to Norman, Oklahoma, in 2015, the magic has been rampant.

Down 17 points in Knoxville, Tennessee, in one of the loudest environments in college football, some walk-on named Baker Mayfield illustrious Oklahoma career was born in a comeback 34-27 overtime win over Tennessee in which the Sooners scored 14 points in the fourth-quarter.

The Sooners erased a 45-24 with 21 unanswered in the fourth-quarter lead against Texas in OU-Texas part I in 2018 after the offense sputtered and the defense put up a performance its coordinator got fired for. Then, already once this year, Oklahoma about erased the first 25-point deficit of the season in the fourth-quarter against Kansas State after an abysmal performance by Alex Grinch’s defense and the first blemish on Jalen Hurts’ OU career.

This time around, Lincoln Riley ended up on the right side of the comeback—one that he will cherish and hopes it can spark this team in the right direction.

“As a coach, there’s a lot of great wins. We’ve been lucky to have a ton of them here. Coming back like we did, how it all played out, this one is up there for sure. I am beyond proud, also beyond excited about us continuing to grow. I think people still see we got a lot of things to continue to grow and get better. I think this can be a catalyst for that. I think it will be.

Our best ball is coming soon.”

The numbers won’t help anyone truly understand.

The film will to an extent, but it will still leave you questioning, ‘How?’

It’s unthinkable. It’s unimaginable. It’s inexplicable.

That’s the Sooner Magic, though. The same thing my grandpa told my dad about during his day. Then my dad told me during his.

I just had to see it happen for my own eyes to believe.

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WATCH Jalen Hurts, Lincoln Riley celebrate after Oklahoma’s historic comeback against Baylor

It was a historic comeback. Oklahoma did something that hasn’t ever been done at OU. Watch Lincoln Riley and Jalen Hurts celebrate.

It was a historic comeback in all facets.

Down 28-3 in the second-quarter and then 31-10 at half, No. 10 Oklahoma (9-1, 6-1) pulled a comeback of the ages and beat No. 13 Baylor (9-1, 6-1) 34-31.

The celebration was on, but no one embraced the win more than Sooners’ head coach Lincoln Riley and quarterback Jalen Hurts.

Their celebrations were delayed with the rest of the team on the field as both finished up on-field interviews. Then the party was on inside McLane Stadium as Oklahoma completed its biggest comeback in program history. 

Program history.

Here is Hurts and Riley embracing with each other and then going and celebrating with Oklahoma fans that traveled down to Waco, Texas, for the game.

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Just how historic Oklahoma’s comeback against Baylor was

We knew what we were watching was unprecedented, but Oklahoma’s comeback victory over Baylor was historic in OU and college football history

What?

How?

No. 13 Baylor (9-1, 6-1) threw a haymaker Ali would have been shook by. The Bears jumped out to a 28-3 lead in the first half against No. 10 Oklahoma (9-1, 6-1), and went into halftime up 31-10.

The Sooners took it, laid on the ground for longer than they should have, then got back up and took the fight to Baylor.

Kicker Gabe Brkic secured an Oklahoma lead with a 31-yard field goal and 1:45 to go in the game. Then, RUSH linebacker Nik Bonitto picked off Baylor quarterback Charlie Brewer on the final drive to put a nail in the Bears’ College Football Playoff coffin.

The Sooners comeback was historically great in college football history. Here is what records Oklahoma’s win broke Saturday night:

The 25-point deficit the Sooners overcame was the biggest comeback win in the history of the program. Previously the record was 21 points against Iowa State in 1970 and Kansas State in 1981.

According to ESPN Stats & Info, Oklahoma’s 31-10 halftime deficit is the largest margin overcome to defeat an FBS team that entered the game 9-0 or better since NCAA classification began in 1937. USC overcame 17 points against 9-0 Notre Dame in 1964, then Nevada overcame a 10-0 deficit to Boise State in 2010.

It was that kind of night for Oklahoma—a season-saving night.

The Sooners take on TCU this upcoming Saturday at 7 p.m. on FOX.

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3 reasons why Oklahoma beat Baylor 34-31

There aren’t enough adjectives to describe Oklahoma’s roaring comeback over Baylor. Here are three reasons why the Sooners pulled it out.

In miraculous fashion, No. 10 Oklahoma overcame a 28-3 first half deficit to shock No. 13 Baylor 34-31 with a game-winning field goal.

The Sooners looked dead.

Jalen Hurts’ turned the ball over three times. The defense couldn’t get a stop. Baylor had all the momentum from the second drive until halftime.

Here are three reasons why Oklahoma came back in the second half and beat Baylor.

CONTROLLING THE CLOCK

In the second half, the Sooners flipped the script on the main strategy to beat them.

Oklahoma had the football for 24:20 of the 30 second half minutes. The Sooners out-gained Baylor 368-to-69 and outscored the Bears 24-0. That is also aided by the help of a defense that forced two takeaways and three three-and-outs in the second half alone.

It truly is hard to find a time this season where Oklahoma played better than in the second half against Baylor on the road.

TAKEAWAYS

They ended the streak.

The last time the Oklahoma defense forced a takeaway prior to Saturday’s night game was on Sept. 28 against Texas Tech when Neville Gallimore ran down a ball carrier and popped the football free.

Parnell Motley got it going after Baylor’s running back sprung free on its first drive of the second half. The senior defensive back popped the ball free from behind as safety Pat Fields picked it up.

The game-sealing play came from an interception by RUSH linebacker Nik Bonitto who dropped into the flats and in front of the receiver running a quick out route.

Takeaways equal victory, as Alex Grinch says, and did Oklahoma learn that lesson the hard way at Kansas State, but flip that script on College Football Playoff hopeful Baylor.

BELIEF

There is not a stat or a number to bring up here.

After Jalen Hurts’ fumbled on the two-yard line heading into the end zone, you’d have been crazy not to think that his journey and Oklahoma’s season was over. The Sooners, though, stayed the course.

A three-and-out later, a surge from the young pups in Oklahoma’s receiving corps and Hurts finding a new gear culminated into what has become the latest version of Sooner Magic.

Questions about this team were valid. The Sooners answered them and showed the world who they were this Saturday night.

That doesn’t happen without confidence and belief from the top-down of Oklahoma’s football program.

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