Former Sooners Cody Thomas and Sheldon Neuse both involved in trade

Two former Sooners were traded for one another on Friday with Cody Thomas headed to Oakland and Sheldon Neuse off to Los Angeles.

A fun MLB trade for Oklahoma fans went down on Friday as two former Sooners were dealt for one another. Outfielder Cody Thomas and infielder Sheldon Neuse are switching teams, with Thomas heading to the Oakland Athletics and Neuse going to the defending World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers, per ESPN’s Jeff Passan.

Thomas played two seasons in Norman, while also being a quarterback for the football team, batting .279 and hitting six home runs with 28 RBI. Since being drafted by the Dodgers in 2016, he has done some good things in the minor leagues making his rise up to the Double-A affiliate Tulsa Drillers. He is yet to make his MLB debut.

Neuse, meanwhile, has broken through to the big leagues with the Athletics. After being drafted by the Washington Nationals in 2016, he was dealt to Oakland almost exactly one year later. He made his MLB debut in 2019 appearing in 25 games batting .250 with 7 RBI.

Now, these two former Sooners teammates are swapping home cities. Both teams are set to play their in their first spring training game in just over two weeks on Feb. 27th.

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Former Oklahoma quarterback Cody Thomas hits, robs a home run in spring training with Los Angeles Dodgers

Former Oklahoma quarterback Cody Thomas made his presence known in spring training with the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Cody Thomas has arrived for big league spring training camp with a bang.

The 13th round MLB Draft selection in 2016 by the Los Angeles Dodgers has slowly been creeping his way up the ladder over the last four seasons. After a stellar 2018 campaign in advanced-A, Thomas spent all of 2019 with the double-A affiliate Tulsa Drillers and was invited for big league spring training camp in 2020.

The former Oklahoma quarterback made his presence felt.

Thomas replaced star Dodgers’ center fielder Cody Bellinger for his second appearance in the spring. He is now 1-for-3 with two RBI and a home run during the big league portion of spring training.

Although his batting average (.236) was down in 2019 with Tulsa in double-A, Thomas still had the most home runs of his minor league career with 23.

As a quarterback at Oklahoma during the Sooners tumultuous 2014 season, Thomas made three starts. He completed 23-of-50 passes for 292 yards and two touchdowns. Thomas began to focus on baseball only after the 2015 season.

The Los Angeles Dodgers return to spring training action on Tuesday at 2:10 p.m. CT against the Arizona Diamondbacks. It is undetermined how long Thomas will stick with big league camp or what level he’ll start at in 2020.

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Five years later: A retelling of Samaje Perine’s record-breaking 427-yard game

On this day five years ago, Samaje Perine did the unthinkable. Sooners Wire’s Brayden Conover was there, takes you through the historic day.

Records and awards are broken and won all the time at the University of Oklahoma.

While going through one of the worst seasons in the Bob Stoops’ Era, you’d be hard pressed to find a better moment or performance than Samaje Perine’s 427-yard NCAA record breaking performance. 

Perine, a freshman at the time, carried it 34 times to break Melvin Gordon’s record set a week prior, and TCU great LaDainian Tomlinson’s that was set in 1999. 

On the fifth anniversary of this performance, Sooners Wire’s Brayden Conover gives you his perspective on that day from inside Gaylord Family-Oklahoma Memorial Stadium in Norman, Oklahoma.


NOV. 22, 2014.

It was a rainy, chilly and dreary Saturday in Oklahoma.

Just as we always did, my step-dad and I got to our seats plenty early to watch warmups. We sat in section 18, row five, seats 26-28 so we had a close view of the visiting team’s warmups and would throw kicking balls that escaped the net in the North end zone back to trainers. After a lengthy lightening delay, we made our way back to our seats, already drenched and oblivious to what was about to take place.

We knew that with the weather, the Sooners would likely keep it on the ground with a combination of Samaje Perine, Keith Ford and Alex Ross.

Perine, though, had other plans.

On Oklahoma’s first possession, Perine stayed on the sideline as Ford got the start. After a negative one yard run and two five yard gains from Ford, the Sooners punted away.

Oklahoma regained possession after a Kansas three-and-out. This time, Perine jogged onto the field. All he needed was one play to kick off his historic day, taking it 49 yards to the house on the first play of the drive. The smallest crowd I’ve seen at Gaylord Family-Oklahoma Memorial Stadium erupted as the Perine gained the lead for the Sooners.

On the next drive, Ford checks back in and fumbles after two plays, giving Kansas the ball.

After an uneventful rest of the quarter, Perine finished with 61 yards on six carries after the first quarter and the Sooners were up 10-0.

From there, Oklahoma’s career rushing yards leader took over.

In the second-quarter, Perine tallied 161 yards on 12 carries with two touchdowns. He dominated the Jayhawks to the tune of 222 yards and three touchdowns on just 18 first half carries.

At halftime, there were rumblings that if he kept the pace, he would break Melvin Gordon’s record of 408 rushing yards that was set just the week prior as Wisconsin beat Nebraska also on a rainy Madison, Wisconsin day. Of course, no one really thought a true freshman would break a record that was previously held by TCU’s LaDainian Tomlison (406 yards) and stood for nearly 16 seasons just seven days after the new bar was set.

But once again, Perine had other plans.

On Oklahoma’s first possession of the third quarter, Perine once again needed just one play. Running 66 yards for a touchdown, the crowd that remained knew they were in for a treat.

The chants began as the offense jogged off the field.

“PERINE! PERINE! PERINE!”

The 30,000 or so fans that remained, had their voices heard as the chants reverberated against the empty metal bleachers.

Some 288 yards and four touchdowns on 19 carries with 13:56 left in the third. Everyone in the stadium hoped the defense could get the ball back as soon as possible, just to see No. 32 trot out there again.

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