The Oklahoma Sooners are making their own luck in close games

While OU should be winning games by a bigger margin, their final drive performances provide hope.

On Tuesday, Lincoln Riley spoke to the media and provided his thoughts after the season’s first month. With three of the Sooners’ first four games coming down the wire, Riley addressed concerns that Oklahoma is simply “surviving” each week.

Surviving vs. go take them and win them and I feel like we’ve gone and taken them and won them It’s great to be in all these different situations. You can’t simulate those. I think some of the guts and toughness that our football team has showed early in the season is, I think, a cause for a lot of our excitement as a staff and the team’s excitement that if we can continue to improve and get to the level of play that we feel like we’re capable of, you combine that with the toughness and resiliency of being in the tough moments, typically that makes for a good football team. – Lincoln Riley credit Sooners Sports TV

While Oklahoma’s close games against FBS competition are objectively a cause for concern, there are encouraging signs underneath how OU is winning them.

If the Sooners were winning games off opponent fumbles or missed field goals, then a definitive argument could be made that the Sooners are, in fact, “merely surviving.” But Riley is correct. Oklahoma is “taking” these close wins.

In week one, Nik Bonitto and Perion Winfrey sacked Tulane quarterback Michael Pratt on a critical third down with two minutes remaining. On the very next play, Delarrin Turner-Yell stopped Pratt a yard short of the marker to shut the door on the Green Wave. 

Against the Cornhuskers, OU’s defensive front stood tall once more to sack quarterback Adrian Martinez twice in the final minute to kill the clock and prevent a go-ahead score. 

Saturday vs. WVU was the first time this season that Oklahoma needed to drive for a go-ahead score in the final minutes. The offense responded with a 14-play 80-yard drive where Spencer Rattler shrugged off a stadium of boos to go a perfect six-for-six to set up Gabe Brkic for the game-winning field goal. 

With the exception of week two’s 76-0 blowout win over Western Carolina, the final scores of Oklahoma’s games have been alarming. But in each and every one of them, the Sooners’ have made their own luck and not relied on an opponent’s miscue to win the game.

That is the difference between “surviving” a close game or earning the win. And I believe that’s why Riley is still confident in the 2021 Sooners.

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly from the Sooners 16-13 win over West Virginia

As the Sooners held on to beat the Mountaineers let’s take a look at The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly from the week 4 win.

Strangely, the Oklahoma Sooners have had a couple of wins in a row where there’s been more bad to talk about than good in the week following the win. But that’s where we are in the 2021 college football season with a team that is supposedly one of the five best teams in college football, and they’re just not living up to those preseason expectations.

After beating Nebraska by a touchdown last week, the margin of victory was cut to three this week as they held on to beat West Virginia for their first Big 12 win of 2021.

The start of this season has felt like a shifting of the tides as the offense struggles, and the defense is forced to keep them in games. Though they’re 4-0 on the season, it doesn’t feel like it as they haven’t lived up to expectations by a long shot.

As we do every week, let’s take a look back and find The Good, the Bad, and The Ugly from the Sooners week 4 win over the West Virginia Mountaineers.

Up Next: Oh, they’re that kind of team now?

Opinion: The Sooners have flaws, but don’t dub them “losers”

Is concern over the Sooners valid after four weeks of play? Absolutely. But is it fair to dub them one of college football’s “losers?”

Many words adequately describe the start of the Oklahoma Sooners 2021 football season. You could call it surprising; a Lincoln Riley team struggling in three of its first four games is something few anticipated — especially when you consider how easy the nonconference schedule was supposed to be.

You could also label it an offensive disappointment. Fans anxiously awaiting another year of high-flying offense and blowout wins haven’t received what they anticipated. That much is undeniable. 

The one thing you can’t call Oklahoma at this point of the year is a loser. However, that’s precisely how CBS Sports categorized the Sooners after their 16-13 win over the West Virginia Mountaineers.

 The Sooners survived one-score quarterback battles against Tulane’s Michael Pratt and Nebraska’s Adrian Martinez early in the season. Needing a field goal as time expired to beat a mediocre West Virginia team is disgusting.

The game against WVU was the third straight Big 12 game in which Oklahoma scored 27 points or fewer. The Sooners didn’t have a single game under 28 points in Lincoln Riley’s head coaching tenure before this streak. The last time Oklahoma scored fewer than 24 points in consecutive home games at all was 1998, according to ESPN’s Chris Fallica.

Oklahoma is the only team CBS Sports places in the “loser” category after winning its game. 

Mentioned alongside the Sooners is Clemson, who fell to NC State 27-21, and North Carolina, who took a 45-22 drubbing at the hands of Georgia Tech. Both the Tigers and the Tar Heels sit at 2-2 after week four. 

The Sooners? A perfect 4-0. 

Say what you want about the offense’s inability to live up to expectations, but a team that has yet to lose a game absolutely cannot, under any circumstance, be deemed a loser. 

I will concede that this is the year Oklahoma is supposed to be the unstoppable force and the immovable object. To see the defense consistently rise to the occasion while the offense vanishes for drives at a time is certainly frustrating.  

Yes, the fact that this has happened against every FBS opponent Oklahoma has faced is concerning. However, is this pattern instead revealing an identify shift within the team?

Oklahoma’s defense — particularly its defensive front — has forced Tulane, Nebraska, and West Virginia into the mud with them. Opponents convert just 29 percent of their third downs against the Sooners, a mark that leads the Big-12 and is top 25 in the entire FBS. If that’s not enough, OU ranks ninth in the country in rush defense, conceding just over four yards per carry.

Against West Virginia, the defense held quarterback Jarret Doege to 160 passing yards and he rushed for just 1.6 yards per carry. And finally, when the Sooners needed it most, the offense reignited on a 14-play, 80-yard drive that set up Gabe Brkic for the game-winning field goal.  

Is the strength of this Oklahoma team shifting from offense over to defense? I don’t know, maybe. It’s still too soon to tell.

What I do know is the Sooners are undefeated through four games and anything but losers. 

Best Grades from Pro Football Focus in OU’s win over WVU

Taking a look at the best grades from Pro Football Focus for the Oklahoma Sooners in their win over West Virginia.

The Oklahoma Sooners have started to find a way to win defensive battles in 2021. It’s a far cry from what the Sooners looked like just a couple of years ago when they had to score 40-50 points per game to win. The defense in those early years of Lincoln Riley’s tenure as offensive coordinator and then head coach were some of the worst years of defense this program’s ever seen.

The script has flipped for the 2021 Oklahoma Sooners. The offense has been inconsistent. They haven’t been able to run the ball as effectively as they’d like and the Sooners defense is carrying the day.

For the second straight week the Sooners were unable to reach 30 points while the defense held their opponent to fewer than 16 points. While we’d certainly like to see more points scored, the Sooners are going to win a lot of games if they can continue to keep their opponent to fewer than 20 points a game.

There will be challenges in the coming weeks with Kansas State, Texas, and TCU on the docket, but the Sooners defense looks more up to the challenge than at any other point in the last five years.

Let’s take another look at Saturday’s win over West Virginia through the lens of Pro Football Focus (Subscription required) and take a look at which Sooners graded in the top five of various categories.

Oklahoma’s offense isn’t firing on all cylinders, lands on USA TODAY’s ‘Misery Index’

After yet another close win, the Oklahoma Sooners find themselves featured on USA TODAY’s week 4 ‘Misery Index.’

The Oklahoma Sooners did nothing to dissuade the doubters in their 16-13 win over the West Virginia Mountaineers on Saturday evening. It was a tough defensive battle, and while Spencer Rattler led OU on a game-winning drive, it wasn’t enough to silence the critics of the Oklahoma Sooners.

This is a team that’s been a double-digit favorite in all three of four of their wins and was only able to cover the spread against the lowly Western Carolina Catamounts.

This team, though they’re 4-0 hasn’t convinced anyone that they’re one of the best four teams in the country though they stayed at number four in the USA TODAY Sports AFCA Coaches Poll. Over at USA TODAY Sports, Dan Wolken provided his weekly “Misery Index” and the Sooners sort of made history, but in a bad way.

In the long and storied history of the Misery Index, there has never been a 4-0 team landing in such a prominent position. But Oklahoma is a special case after a 16-13 win over West Virginia that continues a trend of underwhelming performances this season against mediocre opponents. It got so bad Saturday night that quarterback Spencer Rattler was repeatedly booed and fans chanted “We want Caleb,” referring to highly touted freshman Caleb Williams.

Wolken had more to say about the Sooners’ inconsistent offense, but the call for the backup quarterback turned a win into feeling like a loss.

It wasn’t a performance that lived up to expectations. But of course, nothing has in 2021. For an offense that was returning a host of starters on offense and bringing in talented transfers, the Sooners were supposed to be even better than they were when they lost two games a year ago.

Spencer Rattler has lofty expectations to live up to, but after the string of quarterbacks that came before him, perhaps those were unfair and unrealistic expectations. Sure, he was the number one quarterback recruit in his class, but the Sooners run of quarterbacks to start the Lincoln Riley head coaching era is almost unimaginable.

Style points matter in college football. However, the Sooners can’t care about anything other than executing their offense and winning. Focusing on the wrong thing is how a team can find itself playing from behind. If the Oklahoma Sooners are able to win every game this season, it won’t matter if it’s by 3 points or 30 points. They’ll accomplish everything they have their eyes set on and nobody will care about how good a win looked.

The Sooners certainly have some things to improve upon as they get set for a tough matchup against a Kansas State team that’s had their number the last two years. At the same time, they’re a team that’s close to putting it all together if they can get a better performance from the offensive line moving forward.

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Oklahoma continues its slide down the AP Top 25 Poll

Despite a 4-0 record, Oklahoma continues to slide in the AP Top 25.

Another week, another hard-fought win for the Oklahoma Sooners. 

OU’s 16-13 win over West Virginia is its third nail-biting victory through four games. Despite a 4-0 record, Oklahoma continues to fall in the polls due to its inability to win games in a commanding fashion.

After dropping to no. 4 in the USA TODAY Sports AFCA Coaches Poll, Oklahoma also slides to no. 6 in the latest AP Top 25.  

Two members of the Big 10 now sit above the Sooners. Penn State (4-0) moves into the four spot after knocking off Villanova, and the Iowa Hawkeyes (4-0) continue to hold steady at no. 5.

After OU, Cincinnati (3-0), Arkansas (4-0), Notre Dame (4-0), and Florida (3-1) round out the top 10.  

Arkansas skyrocketed to no. 8 after taking down Texas A&M, 20-10. And Clemson plummeted to no. 25 after falling to NC State on the road.

Dropped from the rankings:

No. 14 Iowa State, No. 18 Wisconsin, No. 21 North Carolina, No. 25 Kansas State

Others receiving votes:

Texas 131, Maryland 91, San Diego State 57, Boston College 55, SMU 44, Kentucky 26, Iowa State 25, LSU 24, Arizona State 23, Virginia Tech 20, Wisconsin 13, Rutgers 6, Kansas State 5, UTSA 4, Oregon State 4, Louisville 3, North Carolina 1

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions.

Why Turning to Caleb Williams doesn’t make sense

A deep look at why turning to Caleb Williams makes no sense for the #Sooners.

Norman, Oklahoma was on pins and needles the entire way last night as Oklahoma faced off against West Virginia. The Sooners would win the game by a score of 16-13. It was not easy and it included a roller coaster of emotions. It’s fairly obvious to point out that the center of their issues was the Sooners’ offensive woes.

The offense mustered an un-Oklahoma like 313 yards. They only had a single turnover which came when quarterback Spencer Rattler threw a very ill-advised ball into double coverage while targeting slot receiver Drake Stoops. After the interception to West Virginia’s Jackie Matthews, a loud chant of “We want Caleb!” — referring to backup true freshman quarterback Caleb Williams started.

This would occur a few more times when the offense as a whole would stall out or the Sooners had an incompletion. There are a few things to unpack here but the first is the booing itself. Optics matter in everything and recruiting is no different. The fans of the Oklahoma Sooners were booing their team’s starting quarterback on national television of a primetime night game because  of the collective struggles of the offense(coaches included.) The Sooners had many recruits in attendance that heard what went down. You could not pick an easier way for teams to recruit against yours than to have the starting quarterback of a (still) undefeated booed as the entire country watches.

Dean Blevins, a former Sooners quarterback, weighed in on the booing.

 

To compound that, the fans asked for his replacement and made it loud and clear on multiple occasions. There’s a lot wrong with thinking that is the solution and we’ll break down why it doesn’t make sense. Benching Rattler for Williams is an idea in theory if you only think that Spencer is the single issue with the Sooners’ lack of offensive cohesion.

After watching the likes of Dante Stills, Akheem Mesidor and the rest of the West Virginia Mountaineers defensive line bully the Sooners, they should not get a pass and directly played a part in why the offense looked bad. The offensive line couldn’t get a push in the running game and, on no less than ten passing attempts, was beaten so badly that Rattler didn’t have enough time to make reads and had to bail out of the pocket.

Williams is a true freshman quarterback who has not played enough meaningful football in game situations to justify throwing him out there behind the play of this offensive line as it currently stands.

Yes, he’s more of a dual threat than Rattler. Are the 50-60 yards he gives you from scrambling and designed runs worth it?

He doesn’t help open up lanes on the ground to add balance and keep teams from pinning their ears back and rushing and blitzing the quarterback. Will he even have time to scan the field and make the right reads?

What does Lincoln Riley do if he makes the switch and Williams struggles? Does he then go back to his quarterback in Rattler, whose confidence is broken? We’re not talking like bench him for a series to calm him down as Riley did to Rattler in the Red River game in 2020. We’re talking move him to second string. That’s a dangerous game with disastrous results that only a team clinging to its playoff hopes should be doing. That’s not the case here.

It’s borderline unreasonable to throw a true freshman out there in the conference part of your schedule while undefeated because of what he may bring. He’s not a known commodity and the Sooners very much have a lot to play for considering how shaky everyone not named Alabama looks over the course of this season so far.

The years of Baker Mayfield, Kyler Murray, and Jalen Hurts, plus the Heisman expectations yearly, have jaded the Sooners fans. We’ve reached the point where we assume that level of play is sustainable but people fail to realize they weren’t playing that level because of just themselves. They (Baker and Kyler) had elite offensive line play, which made calling plays that much easier.

Rattler has not played great at all. He’s not even played to his 2020 level aside from the Western Carolina game. He’s admitted as much to the media the week. However, he still offers you more than what Williams can offer you presently if only because he’s played more games and has success at this level.

Williams is ultra-talented and will have the keys to this car as early as next year. He will have his time to shine. In order for the 2021 Sooners to navigate and find themselves into the College Football Playoff, this offense led by Rattler needs to find its rhythm.

When the team needed him most, Rattler went 7 for 7 to orchestrate a game-winning drive. His offensive line showed up when they had to and they got the job done. There’s stuff to take from that and build from and Lincoln Riley will have to do just that.

Riley offered some thoughts postgame that show he’s aware of the level of accountability that needs to happen in order for this offense to get moving in the right direction:

Accountability needs to happen from top to bottom, starting with Lincoln Riley and then trickle down through the other offensive position coaches and all through the players. It’s a collective effort when it’s going right and it’s a collective effort when things look wrong like they did last night.

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College Football Schedule, Predictions, Game Previews, Lines, How To Watch: Week 4

College Football schedule, predictions, lines, and how to watch: 2021 Week 4 from Thursday, September 16 to Saturday, September 18

College Football schedule, predictions, lines, and how to watch: 2021 Week 4 from Thursday, September 16 to Saturday, September 18


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College Football Schedule: Week 4

Week 4 Schedules, Game Previews, Predictions
ACC | AAC | Big Ten | Big 12 | C-USA
IND | MAC | M-West | Pac-12 | SEC | Sun Belt

All Times Eastern

ACC College Football Schedule, Predictions: Week 4

Friday, September 24

Wake Forest at Virginia 
Prediction: Virginia 37, Wake Forest 31
Line: Virginia -3.5, o/u: 70
Final Score: Wake Forest 37, Virginia 17

Liberty at Syracuse 
Prediction: Liberty 27, Syracuse 20
Line: Liberty -6.5, o/u: 53.5
Final Score: Syracuse 24, Liberty 21

Saturday, September 25

Missouri at Boston College
12:00, ESPN2
Prediction: Game Preview
Line: Missouri -1.5, o/u: 58
Final Score: COMING

New Hampshire at Pitt
12:00, ESPN+
Prediction: Game Preview
Line: Pitt -24, o/u: 54
Final Score: COMING

Richmond at Virginia Tech
12:00, ACC Network
Prediction: Game Preview
Line: Virginia Tech -27.5, o/u: 47.5
Final Score: COMING

Central Connecticut at Miami
12:30, ESPN3
Prediction: Game Preview
Line: Miami -35.5, o/u: 54.5
Final Score: COMING

Clemson at NC State
3:30, ESPN
Prediction: Game Preview
Line: Clemson -10, o/u: 47.5
Final Score: COMING

Louisville at Florida State
3:30, ESPN2
Prediction: Game Preview
Line: Louisville -1, o/u: 61
Final Score: COMING 

Kansas at Duke
4:00, ACC Network
Prediction: Game Preview
Line: Duke -16, o/u: 57.5
Final Score: COMING

North Carolina at Georgia Tech
7:30, ACC Network
Prediction: Game Preview
Line: North Carolina -13.5, o/u: 64.5
Final Score: COMING 

Week 4 Schedules, Game Previews, Predictions
ACC | AAC | Big Ten | Big 12 | C-USA
IND | MAC | M-West | Pac-12 | SEC | Sun Belt

NEXT: American Athletic Conference College Football Schedule, Predictions: Week 4

Which under-the-radar Sooner can make an offensive impact vs. WVU?

Which under-the-radar Sooner can make an offensive impact in week 4?

This week, we find our under-the-radar player in the middle of Oklahoma’s offensive line. With the first three weeks of the college football season in the books, the spotlight slowly begins to shift toward position groups that have yet to declare a bonafide starter.

 Lincoln Riley told the media that he feels the offensive line will come together just fine, and Bryant Crews of Sooners Wire believes Andrew Raym gives the offense its best chance for success

In the second quarter of the Nebraska game, he replaced Robert Congel to start a drive and the Sooners immediately ripped off a 22-yard run in a game that saw them run the ball the best they had all season.

Raym, a sophomore, has all the natural talent in the world, and if the past game versus Nebraska was any indication, he can help take this line to another level. It remains to be seen who will get the start, but replacing Congel mid-game and not relinquishing the spot seems like a real possibility.

Does Raym give the Sooners their best chance vs. a sturdy West Virginia run defense?

Through three games, the Mountaineers are allowing a meager 2.6 yards per rushing attempt. That could be trouble for a Sooners’ offense that needed every inch of its 194 rushing yards to beat Nebraska. West Virginia has been winning the line of scrimmage with a cast of various players, as linebackers, defensive backs, and linemen have all found ways to push the ball backward.

Player TFLs Yards Lost
Jared Bartlett, LB 3.5 20
Alonzo Addae, S 3.0 11
Jackie Matthews, DL 2.5 13

Whether Raym or Robert Congel gets the start on Saturday, their performance is crucial to a Sooners win. The ability to hold up inside against lineman or extra box defenders could give Rattler the opportunity he needs to jumpstart the engine of Oklahoma’s passing game. 

Or, worst-case scenario, if big plays don’t appear downfield, the Sooners may need to fight through the teeth of West Virginia’s run defense or beat it horizontally. 

Either way, Andrew Raym’s play on Saturday or the impact of his absence makes him an under-the-radar candidate.

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3 defensive keys for Sooners vs. Mountaineers

What are the three defensive keys the Sooners should focus on against the Mountaineers in week 4?

The Oklahoma Sooners face their first conference opponent of the 2021 season when the West Virginia Mountaineers roll into town Saturday night. 

Yesterday, Sooners Wire provided an in-depth look at WVU’s strength, weakness, and key players heading into the matchup. Armed with that knowledge, here are the Sooners’ three defensive keys vs. the Mountaineers.

Up Next: First Key to the game!