Sooners wide receiver Marvin Mims named to 2022 Biletnikoff Award watch list

Expected to take another step forward in his production, wide receiver Marvin Mims was included on the 2022 Biletnikoff Award watch list.

Perhaps no player on the Oklahoma Sooners roster will benefit more from the change in offensive play caller than wide receiver Marvin Mims.

For the second season in a row, Mims led the Oklahoma Sooners in receiving yards, despite finishing fourth on the team in targets behind Jadon Haselwood, Michael Woods, and Mario Williams. Mims averaged 22 yards per reception last season and had huge days against Tulane, Texas, and Texas Tech.

Mims was incredibly underutilized down the stretch in 2021, receiving just eight targets the final three weeks of the season against Baylor, Iowa State, and Oklahoma State. Games in which the offense struggled for all or parts of those contests.

With a new play caller in Jeff Lebby and a believer in Brent Venables, Marvin Mims is about to take the college football world by storm.

Heading into year three with the Oklahoma Sooners, Marvin Mims has been named to the Biletnikoff Award watch list for 2022.

Awarded annually since 1994, the only Oklahoma Sooner to take home the Biletnikoff was Dede Westbrook back in 2016.

Mims, who admitted he would have transferred had Lincoln Riley stayed in Norman, will get a new lease on life in an offense that feeds its number one wide receiver. Ole Missā€™ No. 1 receiver in 2021, Dontario Drummond, received 94 targets. Thatā€™s more than double the number of targets Marvin Mims received last season.

Drummond also had the fifth-most snaps among Rebels last season with 902. Marvin Mims was ninth on the Sooners in snaps played with just 470, second to Jadon Haselwood among wide receivers.

If Drummond’s usage is any indication, then Mims is looking at his first 1,000-yard season with the Oklahoma Sooners in 2022. For the Sooners to get back to the top of the mountain in the Big 12 and into contention for the College Football Playoff, Mims will need to be the focal point of the Sooners’ passing attack.

[vertical-gallery id=60188]

Contact/Follow usĀ @SoonersWireĀ on Twitter, and like our page onĀ 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.

ā€˜Heā€™s a game changerā€™: Fresh start provides opportunity for Marvin Mims to have explosive 2022

In a new offense with a new quarterback, more opportunities could lead to an explosive season for Sooners wide receiver Marvin Mims.

Heading into 2021, the expectations had risen for sophomore wide receiver Marvin Mims. After tieing for the team lead in receptions and leading the team in yards and touchdowns, many expected Mims to take another step forward in performance and production.

While his yards per reception exploded from 16.5 in 2020 to 22 in 2021, he saw fewer targets and recorded fewer receptions than the year before. And Mims played in two more games in 2021 than he did his freshman year due to COVID.

Despite not having a 1,000-yard season to his name (yet), Mims was ranked No. 8 by Anthony Treash in Pro Football Focus’ top 25 wide receivers heading into 2022.

Depth at wide receiver limited Mims’ opportunities last year. Even with Theo Wease missing pretty much the entire season due to injury, oddly, Mims wasnā€™t utilized as much as he should have been in 2021.

Jadon Haselwood led the Oklahoma Sooners in snaps at wide receiver with 588. He received more than 100 snaps on the offensive side of the ball than Marvin Mims. Compare that to a school like Alabama, who had one of the most prolific offenses in the country, and they had three wide receivers with more than 600 snaps on the season. Slade Bolden, who was third on the Crimson Tide with 57 targets, still had 16 more targets than Mims, who finished fourth on the Oklahoma Sooners. Jameson Williams and John Metchie each recorded more than 100 targets on the season. Mims was fourth on the Sooners in targets behind Haselwood, Michael Woods, and Mario Williams. He had just four more targets than Jeremiah Hall.

Mims admitted on Thursday at Big 12 media days that the lack of opportunities was frustrating.

“There wasnā€™t as many targets as I was looking for, nowhere near it,” Mims said. “It was kind of a letdown, but at the end of the day I had to just keep battling through it. There were times where I was really unhappy about it with both the receiver coach and the offensive coordinator, but it was what it was.ā€

The Oklahoma Sooners’ offense struggled with inconsistency several times in 2021. In the passing game, Oklahoma failed to get the ball to their best playmaker in Marvin Mims. He had three or fewer targets in nine games last season. Against Oklahoma State, when the offense was struggling to move the ball in the second half, Mims saw just two targets. Six players saw more targets than Mims in that game. His one reception was a four-yard catch.

Despite the lack of opportunities, Mimsā€™ big play ability allowed him to the lead the Sooners in receiving yards for the second year in a row.

In a new offensive system, Mims will be one of the biggest beneficiaries of returning Sooners. The break neck pace that Jeff Lebby wants to play at will increase the number of snaps per game, increasing the number of opportunities Mims and the rest of the wide receiver group will receive.

Dontario Drummond, who led the Ole Miss Rebels in receiving in 2021 saw 802 snaps last season. That led to 94 targets that Drummond turned into 76 receptions for 1,031 yards and eight touchdowns.

Imagine if Marvin Mims saw a similar workload? Well we might just see that this year.

Mims and new starting quarterback Dillon Gabriel are building a rapport. One that should lead to opportunities for the electric wide receiver to easily eclipse his numbers from his first two years in Norman, which will further put into question the lack of usage.

ā€œI think what’s really cool about me and Marvin is we’re very similar in just the way we approach football, but also the way we approach life,” Gabriel shared with the media at Big 12 media days. “And as we connected and continue to have conversations over the past six or seven months, I just feel really confident in the person he is. Heā€™s a great human being and someone that I’d love to be friends with. And that’s why this relationship has been so smooth, so easy. And that’s like not even on the field, right? What he’s been able to do on the field is elite. Heā€™s a game changer. And he’s proven it last year, but what he’s about to do this year is take it to a whole another level. And Iā€™ve seen him grow in so many ways.ā€

Heading into his third year, the only returning primary receiver from last year, and with the full support of his quarterback and his offensive coordinator, Marvin Mims looks like a player about to explode in 2022.

[vertical-gallery id=60188]

Contact/Follow usĀ @SoonersWireĀ on Twitter, and like our page onĀ 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.

Can Ole Miss’ Dontario Drummond bully his way onto Cowboys regular season roster?

The Running Rebels wideout slipped through the draft. Did Dallas find a camp body or a contender to make an impact down the line? Tyler Browning (@DIabeticTyler) dives into the tape.

The Dallas Cowboys are notorious for adding multiple wide receivers in the undrafted free agency race following three days of drafting. This year they added four, including Ole Miss standout Dontario Drummond. Drummond started off his career at the community college that was brought to fame by the Netflix TV series, Last Chance U, East Mississippi Community College, helping lead his team to a national title in the 2017. He became the all-time East Mississippi CC leader in receptions as well as receiving yards.

Following his time at East Mississippi CC he was labeled as a 3-star recruit, and chose Ole Miss over the likes of Arkansas and Kansas, among others. The receiver class in this past draft was fairly deep so it was possible to see a number of draftable players slip through the seventh round.

Rams 7-round mock draft: Final edition

With the draft coming up in just 2 days, here’s our final mock draft for the Rams, going all 7 rounds to project what Les Snead will do

It’s officially the week of the 2022 NFL draft (*proceeds to rub hands together*) and it’s always exciting to see where certain prospects land as they hope to live out their dream of playing in the NFL. Los Angeles Rams fans will have to wait a while until their team makes a selection, with their first pick not coming until No. 104 in the third round.

With it being days before the draft begins, I’ll be conducting my final mock draft for the Rams. Los Angeles currently owns eight total picks, though we all know that Les Snead loves to make trades during the draft to either move up or compile more draft capital.

Amidst all of the chaos and uncertainty before the draft, here is my final seven-round mock draft for the Rams. Just note that this is how I envision Los Angeles drafting and does not entirely reflect what I would do with each pick.

Players to watch: LSU vs Ole Miss

Which player do you think can make the most impact for LSU this Saturday?

LSU and Ole Miss face off this Saturday in what could prove to be a pivotal game in the SEC West standings.

The 12th ranked Rebels currently sit at 5-1, 2-1 in the SEC. If they were to lose this game, they would need to win out. If the Rebels win tomorrow, then they can afford to lose to Auburn and still make it to the SEC Championship if Auburn were to lose any game that followed.

LSU could seriously throw a wrench into Ole Miss’ plans. Especially with the unknown QB situation for the Rebels.

Here are six players to watch during LSU’s matchup with Ole Miss this weekend.