Trio of Sooners among ESPN’s top 100 players for the 2024 season

The Oklahoma Sooners were represented on both sides of the ball in ESPN’s top 100 players for the 2024 season.

The Oklahoma Sooners have a number of talented players on both sides of the ball. If there’s reason for optimism heading into the season it’s that the defense is as talented or possibly more talented than the group on offense.

And that’s a good thing.

The Sooners needed a more well-rounded team during the [autotag]Lincoln Riley[/autotag] era and appear to be trending toward that under [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag]. The defense has talent at every level of the defense, led by [autotag]Danny Stutsman[/autotag] and [autotag]Billy Bowman[/autotag].

Offensively, they’ve got the talent to have one of the best offenses in the nation. If [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag] lives up to expectations, the Oklahoma offense will be humming all year long.

The Sooners may not have as much name recognition as some of the other teams across the country, but they have a trio of players that will be household names in 2024. ESPN released its top 100 college football players heading into the season and the Sooners had three players land on the list.

74. Deion Burks, WR

Despite playing for a 4-8 Purdue team last season, Burks was one of the top non-quarterback additions in the winter transfer portal. He gives new Oklahoma QB [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag] a No. 1 target who can find the end zone (seven touchdowns in 2023) and stretch defenses. Burks had a reception of 42 yards or longer in four games last fall, including an 84-yard score against Fresno State. – ESPN

Outside of the quarterback, there may be no player more important to Oklahoma’s offensive success than [autotag]Deion Burks[/autotag]. He looks like a thicker, stronger version of Marquise “Hollywood” Brown. Taking over in the slot after [autotag]Drake Stoops[/autotag] had a career year, expectations are high for Burks after he electrified in the Sooners spring game.

73. Billy Bowman, S

Bowman has started 29 of the 35 games he has played in his career and was named a first-team All-Big 12 player for his efforts in 2023. He was second in the country with six interceptions (three of which he took back for touchdowns) and ranked third on the team with 63 total tackles. – ESPN

[autotag]Billy Bowman[/autotag] took the nation by storm in 2023 with his six interceptions and three interceptions returned for a touchdown. Now in his fourth season and third in Brent Venables defense, the sky is the limit for the athletic safety.

32. Danny Stutsman, LB

The senior linebacker is one of the players who will be key to Oklahoma’s success in 2024. An All-Big 12 first-team selection last season, Stutsman led the Sooners with 104 total tackles, 51 solo tackles and 16 tackles for loss. He also had three sacks, a pick, two forced fumbles and a fumble recovery. – ESPN

Everything’s prepped and ready for Danny Stutsman to have another fabulous season for the Oklahoma Sooners. With improved defensive line play and linebacker depth, OU will get the most out of their star linebacker this season.

Notables

  • In the Oklahoma Sooners’ first SEC game, the offensive line will have to do battle with ESPN’s No. 1 player, James Pierce, Jr. It will be quite the test for the offensive tackles Jacob Sexton and Jake Taylor.
  • One-time Oklahoma commit turned Missouri Tiger, [autotag]Luther Burden[/autotag] comes in at No. 5.
  • LSU linebacker Harold Perkins, who has been on a bunch of preseason first team All-American squads alongside Danny Stutsman ranked No. 14 in the nation.
  • Former Sooners quarterback [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag] came in at No. 16 overall, seven spots ahead of Texas’ [autotag]Quinn Ewers[/autotag].

That’s just a few of the 19 players that the Oklahoma Sooners will face in 2024.

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Oklahoma Sooners success isn’t all on Jackson Arnold

The Oklahoma Sooners have a more complete team heading into 2024, taking some of the pressure off of their first year starter at quarterback

Quarterback is the most important position in football. Make no mistake about it. That’s why they’re the highest-paid players in the NFL and why they’re moving the biggest needle on the name, image and likeness licensing front.

But football is the ultimate team sport. Having great quarterback play can elevate a team that may have other deficiencies. That’s what we saw during the [autotag]Baker Mayfield[/autotag], [autotag]Kyler Murray[/autotag] and [autotag]Jalen Hurts[/autotag] era of Sooner football. Those elite quarterbacks were able to put the Sooners into contention despite a defense that wasn’t consistent enough.

That isn’t the case anymore. For what feels like the first time in a long time, the Oklahoma Sooners aren’t solely dependent on their quarterback to be superhuman.

So while all eyes are on [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag] and the Oklahoma offense, the Sooners are heading into the SEC in somewhat unfamiliar territory. The strength of the team is on the defensive side of the ball.

Led by a talented and experienced defensive unit, the Sooners look ready to change the narrative that’s persisted for the last decade. Entering Year 1 in the SEC, Oklahoma isn’t going to rely on its quarterback playing Super Saiyan football for an entire season for it to have a chance to win football games.

That’s because they have a defense capable of being one of the best in the conference, which will take the pressure off Arnold and the offense. Gone are the days when the Sooners have to score 40 to have a chance to win. After allowing 30 points per game in the first season under Brent Venables in 2022, the Sooners have improved by nearly a touchdown a game to 23.5 points per game.

They allowed 30 or more in just three games last season and allowed fewer than four yards per carry. This team held the vaunted Texas offense to 23 points in the Red River Showdown, forcing the 2024 Heisman front-runner into two interceptions and stopping the Longhorns short of the end zone four times from the 1-yard line.

They weren’t perfect last year. There’s room to improve, but the Oklahoma Sooners did just that.

Venables convinced [autotag]Danny Stutsman[/autotag], [autotag]Billy Bowman[/autotag], [autotag]Woodi Washington[/autotag] and [autotag]Da’Jon Terry[/autotag] to return for another season. That gave the Sooners valuable experience and production. In addition to the development of [autotag]Gracen Halton[/autotag], they added one of the more dynamic defensive tackles in the nation, [autotag]Damonic Williams[/autotag], along with true freshmen phenoms [autotag]David Stone[/autotag] and [autotag]Jayden Jackson[/autotag]. Once considered a weakness of the Sooners’ defense, the defensive interior is now a strength. Combine that with the additions of [autotag]Caiden Woullard[/autotag], who had 9 1/2 sacks for Miami (Ohio), [autotag]Danny Okoye[/autotag], [autotag]Nigel Smith[/autotag], and [autotag]Wyatt Gilmore[/autotag] and the further development of [autotag]R Mason Thomas[/autotag] and [autotag]Adepoju Adebawore[/autotag]. The result is a Sooners defensive front that is loaded with experience and promising young players fighting to break into the rotation.

From the front four to the back seven, the Oklahoma defense is ready to take the next step. And that’s great news for Arnold and the Sooners offense.

The Sooners have a more complete team, even with questions on the offensive side of the ball. They have a team more capable of playing complementary football.

As Arnold gets adjusted to life as the starting quarterback and the offensive line comes together, the defense will lead the way for the Sooners in 2024.

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Danny Stutsman named to Butkus Award watch list

Danny Stutsman is the heart and soul of Oklahoma’s defense.

The preseason recognition continues to roll in for Oklahoma Sooners star linebacker [autotag]Danny Stutsman[/autotag]. After making preseason watch lists for the Nagurski Award, the Walter Camp Player of the Year Award and the Bednarik Award, the senior made another watch list on Tuesday.

Stutsman has made the Butkus Award preseason watch list. The Butkus Award is given to the best linebacker in college football. It’s named after Dick Butkus, a two-time All-American at Illinois, who went on to have a spectacular career in the NFL, eventually being enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Oklahoma has had four winners of the Butkus Award. [autotag]Brian Bosworth[/autotag] is the only two-time winner in the awards’ history, winning for the inaugural two seasons the award was given out in 1985 and 1986.[autotag]Rocky Calmus[/autotag] (2001) and [autotag]Teddy Lehman[/autotag] (2003) also brought home the Butkus Award. The Sooners are one of two schools with four winners, joined at the top by Alabama.

Stutsman made the watch list before the 2023 season. What followed was a campaign where he was 15th in the nation in tackles for loss last season, averaging 1.3 per game. Stutsman led the Sooners with 104 total tackles, including 16 tackles for loss. He had three sacks, two forced fumbles, and one fumble recovery last year, as well as a pick-six. He also had three pass breakups in coverage. He came back to OU to get a chance to further develop and play in the [autotag]SEC[/autotag].

Stutsman has the most preseason watch list nods on the team with four, edging out safety [autotag]Billy Bowman[/autotag] by one. He’s become one of the undisputed leaders of the Sooners along with Bowman and quarterback [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag].

Stutsman allows new defensive coordinator/linebackers coach [autotag]Zac Alley[/autotag] to have another coach on the field in his first season in Norman. Stutsman is going into his third year playing in the system and is able to lead the way for some of the less-experienced personnel.

Oklahoma looks ready to roll defensively in 2024, as Venables continues to transform the roster. If Stutsman can perform up to the standard that names like Bosworth, Calmus, and Lehman set at linebacker, it could be a special year in Norman.

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ESPN thinks this early season game is key for Oklahoma

The Sooners can’t overlook this opponent early on in their schedule.

College football season is getting closer. One surefire way to tell that the season is almost upon us is the release of the Associated Press Top 25. Even though the AP Top 25 isn’t as useful in the [autotag]College Football Playoff[/autotag] era, it’s something for fans to get excited or upset about in the days before the season kicks off.

The Oklahoma Sooners ranked 16th in the AP Top 25, the same place they landed in the US LBM Coaches Poll. OU has a daunting schedule in 2024, as it enters the SEC. However, ESPN believes a crucial early season, nonconference game could be telling for its chances to make the [autotag]playoff[/autotag] this year.

ESPN went team-by-team through the AP Top 25, giving best-case and worst-case scenarios for each. Then, it highlighted one game early in the season that will be crucial for that team.

OU’s ceiling was placed at an excellent 11-1, which would pleasantly surprise even the staunchest of Oklahoma defenders. However, the Sooners’ floor was placed at 6-6, which would be very disappointing after a 10-3 season last year. The ESPN matchup predictor put the Sooners at 9-3, which would have them on the verge of the playoff.

Head coach [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] improved from 2022 to 2023 and. Despite the program entering the [autotag]SEC[/autotag], the expectation is for it to take another step forward in 2024.

With the brutal SEC schedule on many people’s minds this offseason, a nonconference matchup that isn’t getting a lot of buzz was picked as OU’s key early season game. On Sept. 14, the [autotag]Tulane Green Wave[/autotag] come to town, and ESPN believes the Sooners will need to be at their best that day to win.

Oklahoma’s stiffest pre-SEC tune-up may well come when Tulane visits Norman for the third time since 2017. Oregon quarterback transfer Ty Thompson and running back Makhi Hughes, the reigning [autotag]AAC[/autotag] Rookie of the Year, should test the Sooners’ experienced defense, and a Green Wave defense that held opponents to 20.5 points per game will challenge first-year starter [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag]. A week before Tennessee visits to open SEC play, Oklahoma can’t overlook Tulane — it was only three years ago that the Green Wave nearly upset the Sooners in Norman. – Eli Lederman, ESPN.

The Tulane contest could be seen as a classic trap game before the Volunteers arrive for a highly-anticipated matchup on Sept. 21. The Sooners and Green Wave have met twice in their history, both in Norman.

The first meeting came in 2017, when the Sooners won in decisive fashion, 56-14. Oklahoma was on its way to a third straight [autotag]Big 12[/autotag] title that year during their run of six in a row. The Sooners also made the playoffs for the second time in three years (and the first of three in a row and fourth out of five in total) that year, going 12-1.

The second meeting was far more interesting.

In 2021, the season opener was supposed to be played in New Orleans, but it was moved to Norman due to Hurricane Ida. In the first sign of trouble in [autotag]Lincoln Riley[/autotag]’s final season at OU, the highly-ranked Sooners couldn’t put the Green Wave away, barely hanging on for a 40-35 victory. Oklahoma blew a big lead and nearly suffered a catastrophic loss.

The Sooners failed to live up to expectations in 2021, missing the conference title game. Riley departed for USC hours after the regular season ended, leading to the hire of Venables a week later.

The Sooners would do well to take Tulane seriously. It has been one of the best programs at the Group of Five level the past couple of seasons. With all of the changes and realignment in college football, the Green Wave are looking to make the playoff in the 12-team expansion era. The Group of Five level has been significantly thinned after UCF, Cincinnati, Houston, BYU and SMU joined a Power Four league. After head coach Willie Fritz left to coach the Houston Cougars, who OU will see a week before it plays Tulane, the Green Wave hired former Troy head coach Jon Sumrall. It’s a move that was regarded as an excellent hire in New Orleans.

Additionally, this game likely means more to Tulane than it will Oklahoma. With a win, it could make a huge early statement that it should be the non-Power Four team that gets a shot in the postseason.

In short, the Sooners have to be ready to go when Tulane marches in on Sept. 14. With its incredibly difficult conference schedule, OU can’t afford a loss in the nonconference schedule if it wants to live up to the standard this season. As much fun as the following week’s game against Tennessee will be, the Sooners need to be 3-0 when the Volunteers get to Norman.

That means taking care of business against what could be a very pesky opponent in the Tulane Green Wave.

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Oklahoma duo named to Bednarik Award watch list

Pair of Sooners named to the Bednarik Award watch list.

Preseason [autotag]watch list[/autotag] season rolls right along this summer, as we count down the days to the beginning of the 2024 college football season. The Oklahoma Sooners kick things off in less than three weeks. They’ll host the Temple Owls on Friday, August 30.

As OU enters the [autotag]SEC[/autotag], Sooner fans are as excited about the defensive side of the ball as they’ve been in a long, long time. Under third-year head coach and defensive maven [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag], that unit looks to finally be capable of playing up to the Oklahoma standard.

Star power and veteran leadership are certainly part of the reason why. The offseason returns of linebacker [autotag]Danny Stutsman[/autotag] and safety [autotag]Billy Bowman[/autotag] meant the Sooners would have no shortage of experience at two key spots. That’s doubly important as OU breaks in new defensive coordinator [autotag]Zac Alley[/autotag].

Stutsman and Bowman had already been named to the Bronco Nagurski Trophy preseason watch list, but the duo wasn’t done.

The pair was named to the Chuck Bednarik Award preseason watch list on Monday. The Bednarik Award is given to the best defensive player in college football. The award is named in honor of Chuck “Concrete Charlie” Bednarik, who was an All-American at the University of Pennsylvania and later an All-Pro linebacker and center in the NFL. He is a member of both the College and Pro Football Hall of Fame. Oklahoma has one previous winner of the award, which was created in 1995. [autotag]Teddy Lehman[/autotag], one of Venables’ finest pupils at linebacker, took home the trophy in 2003.

Stutsman was 15th in the nation in tackles for loss last season, averaging 1.3 per game. He was Oklahoma’s lifeblood and the team’s leader. He was named a second-team Walter Camp All-American and a third-team AP All-American while tallying over 100 tackles for the second straight year.

Bowman was a nightmare in the secondary for opposing offensive coordinators. Three pick-six touchdowns accompanied his six total interceptions last year, making him one of the most dangerous defensive backs in all of college football.

The 2021 classmates have stepped into leadership roles for the Sooners, joining Venables and sophomore starting quarterback [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag] at [autotag]SEC media days[/autotag] last month.

If Oklahoma wants to get back to playing dominating, suffocating defense, Stutsman and Bowman will need to continue leading the way. The Sooners have a chance to be special on that side of the ball in 2024, but they won’t be able to get there without their two Bednarik Award watch list stars.

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Where does Brent Venables land in USA TODAY Sports’ SEC head coach rankings?

Oklahoma’s 23rd head coach enters his third season at OU with something to prove.

Oklahoma Sooners head football coach [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] is entering his third season leading the program. After a disappointing 6-7 finish in 2022, OU bounced back in 2023 with a 10-3 mark. With the Sooners moving from the [autotag]Big 12[/autotag] to the [autotag]SEC[/autotag], Venables’ already daunting challenge of rebuilding the program gets tougher.

Venables has been preparing for the SEC move since arriving two-and-a-half years ago. His primary focus has been getting Oklahoma ready to compete in college football’s most difficult conference.

While OU’s roster looks to have improved again this offseason and could be ready to take another step forward, the SEC schedule will be extremely difficult to navigate.

Part of the reason for this is the number of excellent coaches, teams and players in the conference, as USA TODAY Sports noted when they ranked all 16 SEC head coaches heading into the 2024 season.

With Alabama‘s Nick Saban retiring this winter, the choice at the top was obvious. Georgia head coach Kirby Smart is the best in the business and is one of three active head coaches to have won a national championship. Only Smart, Clemson‘s Dabo Swinney and North Carolina‘s Mack Brown can say that. The Bulldogs have won two out of the last three national titles, losing just two total games in three seasons, both to Saban and the Crimson Tide.

Behind Smart in the SEC, there are a number of excellent coaches who still have things to prove, but where does Brent Venables rank among them?

Out of the 16 head coaches in the conference, USA Today Sports’ Blake Toppmeyer has Venables at No. 11.

The jury remains in deliberations as to whether Venables will be a hit at OU. He misfired in Year 1 before rebounding last season, but the Sooners limped to the finish. His expertise comes on defense, a unit that remains under construction but is improving. His star quarterback ([autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag]) and offensive coordinator ([autotag]Jeff Lebby[/autotag]) departed in the offseason. The fork in the road of his tenure arrives this year. – Toppmeyer, USA TODAY Sports

Venables landing at 11th has him trailing Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian (No. 3) by eight spots. Sarkisian, who has had one good season in Austin, is ranked above every SEC head coach except Smart and Brian Kelly at LSU.

Venables signed a contract extension this offseason, proving Oklahoma believes it has the guy both for the present and for the future. At least among the decision-makers in Norman, there is no deliberating “whether Venables will be a hit at OU.”

While Toppmeyer praises Venables’ defense and the improvements they’re making, he fails to mention what the Sooners gained on offense when Gabriel and Lebby went elsewhere this offseason. [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag] steps into the spotlight as the starting quarterback, with [autotag]Seth Littrell[/autotag] calling the plays. One could argue the Sooners are in a better spot in 2024 with a more physically gifted QB and a more experienced playcaller running the show.

For Venables, who isn’t interested in the outside noise, it’s a huge opportunity on a bigger stage in the SEC in 2024. Either he proves the doubters right and OU regresses, or the Sooners take another step forward this season, and there will be a healthy dose of respect for Venables and Oklahoma on these lists next year.

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Oklahoma center Branson Hickman makes Rimington Trophy preseason watch list

Branson Hickman may prove to be one of the best transfer portal additions for Brent Venables and his staff in 2024.

Oklahoma Sooners offensive lineman [autotag]Branson Hickman[/autotag] has made his second preseason award watch list for the 2024 season, all before playing a down for OU.

After Hickman made the Outland Trophy watch list last week, the transfer center was named to the Rimington Trophy watch list on Friday. The Rimington Trophy is given to the best center in college football. The Outland Trophy is awarded to the best interior lineman in the country, regardless of which side of the ball they play on.

Hickman was a big get the the portal’s post-spring window for head coach [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] and offensive line coach [autotag]Bill Bedenbaugh[/autotag]. The pair needed some major help at the center position as they rebuilt the offensive line, replacing all five primary starters from a year ago.

Hickman, formerly of SMU, has been the offensive lineman receiving the most national praise on OU’s roster since coming to Norman, and is likely in the driver’s seat to start at center. The offensive line has been a topic of conversation all offseason long as Oklahoma joins the [autotag]SEC[/autotag], and Hickman will be tasked with helping to protect quarterback [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag] and open up running lanes for [autotag]Gavin Sawchuk[/autotag] and the rest of the running back room.

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What does CBS Sports think of Oklahoma’s offensive supporting cast?

New starting QB Jackson Arnold will have plenty of weapons to get the ball to in 2024.

Quarterback is one of the most important positions on any football team. It’s been called the hardest job in all of sports. Quarterbacks are often praised when their team wins and blamed when their team loses, regardless of how they played.

Most of the time, a great quarterback is only as good as the pieces around him. His head coach, offensive play-caller, offensive line, running backs, tight ends, and wide receivers can make or break his performances.

The Oklahoma Sooners are just three weeks away from beginning the 2024 season. OU has a new starting quarterback this season, as true sophomore phenom [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag] takes the wheel after [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag]’s offseason transfer.

There’s no doubt that Oklahoma is Arnold’s team both in the present and the future and head coach [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] and the rest of the coaching staff have done their best to set the talented youngster up for success. After all, the duo of Venables and Arnold are the faces of the program more than anyone else. Their success or failure will be dependent upon each other and both are aware of that.

The other 133 FBS programs that are about to begin their seasons are also trying to set their QB(s) up for success heading into 2024. CBS Sports college football analyst Clint Brewster ranked the 12 programs that are doing the best job of it.

The Sooners landed at No. 10 on the list, sixth-best in the [autotag]SEC[/autotag]. Oklahoma enters their new conference with a new face under center who is getting a good deal of support from the rest of his offense, according to Brewster.

Oklahoma let Dillon Gabriel walk to turn the offense over to five-star sophomore Jackson Arnold. The Sooners easily have one of the top receiver rooms with newcomer [autotag]Deion Burks[/autotag] from Purdue and returning pass catchers [autotag]Nic Anderson[/autotag], [autotag]Andrel Anthony[/autotag], and [autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag] to name a few. There’s also speed merchant [autotag]Brenan Thompson[/autotag], who could have a breakout season. At running back there’s [autotag]Gavin Sawchuk[/autotag] and [autotag]Jovantae Barnes[/autotag], but don’t forget about incoming blue-chipper [autotag]Taylor Tatum[/autotag]. On the offensive line, Oklahoma has some holes to fill (all five spots, actually) but picked up what could be one of the best centers in the country with [autotag]Branson Hickman[/autotag] in the portal. – Brewster, CBS Sports

OU’s loaded wide receiver room will be nursing some injuries as the season gets underway, but Burks will be a go-to wideout for Arnold. The two displayed incredible chemistry in the spring. The running backs will need to be better early than they were in the first half of the season last year, but Sawchuk looks ready to carry the load after playing well over the season’s last five games in 2023.

The offensive line has been the concern since the winter, but Venables seems confident in that unit’s ability to get the job done and keep Arnold upright. The Sooners may go as Arnold goes in 2024. Helping him make the big plays and avoid mistakes will go a long way towards a successful season.

New co-offensive coordinators [autotag]Seth Littrell[/autotag] and [autotag]Joe Jon Finley[/autotag] replace [autotag]Jeff Lebby[/autotag], now the head coach at Mississippi State. Littrell is serving as the main play-caller. He’ll need to develop his young quarterback and support Arnold as best he can in his first season as a full-time starter in college.

Ohio State topped Brewster’s list with Gabriel’s Oregon Ducks coming in second. LSU was the best of the SEC’s 16 teams in this category.

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Where does Oklahoma land in ESPN’s SEC preseason power rankings?

OU’s first preseason in the SEC sees some doubt from national analysts.

The Oklahoma Sooners are about three weeks away from beginning the 2024 football season, their first as a member of the [autotag]SEC[/autotag]. Talking season and prediction season are almost over, but for now, we still have a few more weeks of projections to go.

ESPN has been previewing the college football season, going conference-by-conference to look at each team. On Thursday, staff writers Chris Low and Mark Schlabach previewed the SEC, giving their power rankings and [autotag]College Football Playoff[/autotag] outlook for the conference.

The duo had the Sooners as the eighth-best team in the conference, matching ESPN’s Football Power Index and the SEC media poll. Here’s what they had to say about the Sooners landing in the middle of the league.

“In his third season at OU, [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] likes the experience on this team, with many players having been in the program for three years now,” Low and Schlabach wrote. “The Sooners’ schedule in Year 1 in the SEC is challenging, to say the least.”

The pair also had Oklahoma as a playoff long shot along with Texas A&M. In all, they believed three SEC teams should make the [autotag]playoff[/autotag] (Georgia, Texas and Alabama) with four more in the running (Ole Miss, Missouri, Tennessee and LSU) ahead of the Sooners and Aggies, who they believe have less of a chance.

“There’s no question the Sooners were better in Venables’ second season in 2023, but it might be rough sledding in Year 1 in the SEC,” they said. “Oklahoma faces a brutal road slate that includes games at Auburn, Ole Miss, Missouri and LSU, as well as home contests against Tennessee and Alabama, and the [autotag]Red River Rivalry[/autotag] game against Texas. Quarterback [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag] takes over for [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag], who left for Oregon. The bigger question is up front on offense, where all five starters departed. The Sooners are hoping five transfers can help: tackles [autotag]Spencer Brown[/autotag] (Michigan State) and [autotag]Michael Tarquin[/autotag] (USC), guards [autotag]Geirean Hatchett[/autotag] (Washington) and [autotag]Febechi Nwaiwu[/autotag] (North Texas) and center [autotag]Branson Hickman[/autotag] (SMU).”

Oklahoma’s home matchup with Tennessee was specifically highlighted. OU’s first conference game is starting to generate plenty of buzz. After all, it’s not every day that the program’s most recent national championship-winning starting quarterback and his team come to town.

“It’s Oklahoma’s SEC debut and a homecoming of sorts for [autotag]Josh Heupel[/autotag], who played quarterback for the Sooners and was the runner-up for the [autotag]Heisman Trophy[/autotag] in 2000,” Low and Schlabach said. “But his exit as OU’s offensive coordinator in 2014 wasn’t his fondest memory as he was fired by [autotag]Bob Stoops[/autotag]. Both teams have talented young quarterbacks in their first years as starters, Nico Iamaleava at Tennessee and Jackson Arnold at Oklahoma. It should be a wild atmosphere in Norman with the winner making a major statement in the playoff chase.”

Lastly, linebacker [autotag]Danny Stutsman[/autotag] was named one of the duo’s favorite players in the conference heading into the season. The senior will have to be instrumental if OU will be better again defensively.

“Stutsman is a big reason the Sooners improved from 106th in the FBS in rushing defense (187.5) in 2022 to 44th (138.6) last season,” they said. “Stutsman is a tackling machine with more than 100 stops in each of the past two seasons to go with six sacks and two forced fumbles. His return should help OU take another step forward under Venables.”

As previously stated, the Sooners have been picked to be middle-of-the-pack, specifically eighth in the conference, multiple times in the last month. Venables and his team have reiterated time and time again that they aren’t focusing on any outside noise or anything but themselves and getting better. Still, you have to think they’re seeing the lists and predictions and remembering that the national media thinks they’ll be an average SEC team in 2024. As the games come closer, Oklahoma is almost through talking season. They’ll finally have an opportunity to prove themselves on the field.

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Takeaways from Joel Klatt’s Oklahoma Sooners 2024 preview

Joel Klatt is cautiously optimistic about the Sooners, but still thinks they’re a bit behind a few other SEC programs.

The Oklahoma Sooners have nearly made it through a long offseason. Just about three weeks remain until football season is back at OU.

Nationally, Oklahoma is thought to be a somewhat middle-of-the-road team in its first season in the [autotag]SEC[/autotag]. The Sooners were picked eighth in the preseason SEC media poll and outside of the top 16 in the US LBM Coaches Poll.

One of Fox Sports’ leading college football experts, Joel Klatt, has the Sooners a bit higher in his preseason rankings. On “The Joel Klatt Show: A College Football Podcast,” he revealed his top 25 teams heading into the season.

Klatt has the Sooners ranked No. 15 (surprisingly, one spot behind USC) and sixth in the SEC. That’s a bit more of a favorable draw than what OU has been getting nationally and in the conference.

But Klatt gave some interesting reasons he has Oklahoma where he does, beginning with the defense.

Defense Ready to shine

“I really love OU, so why are they 15th? Well let’s go through it,” Klatt said. “[autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] now entering Year 3 had nice jump last year with 10 wins. Going to the SEC, the defense has veteran talent. I think that the defense can be better and they need to be better. They gave up far too many big plays a year ago. They’ve got [autotag]Billy Bowman[/autotag] in the back end, they’ve got [autotag]Danny Stutsman[/autotag] who comes back, they need to keep improving.”

Oklahoma’s continued defensive improvement will be paramount if the Sooners want to compete in the SEC. There’s no doubt OU is entering a trenches and defensive-minded league and will have to excel in those areas to have sustained and high-level success. However, Klatt had far more to say about OU’s offense.

The Next Great QB

“[autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag] is going to take over at quarterback as [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag] goes on to Oregon. Now just the same as Kansas State (Klatt’s No. 16 team), what we have to do is start trusting these programs,” Klatt said. “So Avery Johnson at Kansas State and Jackson Arnold at Oklahoma, within those programs they are thought to be better than than the options that they had. Now what you’re going to have is two teams that will be in my top four in Oregon and Ohio State that took those quarterbacks, Will Howard, who was cast off by Kansas State, and Dillon Gabriel by Oklahoma, and those teams are placing hopes on those guys’ shoulders. Now maybe less so Will Howard at Ohio State than Dillon Gabriel at Oregon, but shouldn’t that lead us to believe that there are upgrades behind them at Oklahoma and Kansas State? That’s what I believe in Jackson Arnold and so I think that they could be and and should be much better than what they were even a year ago when they won 10 games.”

The point Klatt is making, as it refers to the Sooners, is it was always the plan in Norman that Arnold would sit and learn behind Gabriel in 2023 before taking the reins and becoming the starter in 2024. Once Gabriel decided to stay in college football, he and OU made the decision together that he would transfer and play elsewhere so Arnold could take his place in the starting lineup.

Everyone expected that Gabriel’s college days were over, but in an interview with The Athletic’s Christopher Kamrani (subscription required), Gabriel and his family revealed he had received a seventh-round/undrafted free agent NFL draft grade. That led to his decision to return for one more year of college football. However, according to the story, it was Arnold who was the motivating factor in Gabriel’s decision to transfer away from Norman, in a very positive sense.

According to Gabriel’s mom via The Athletic, the former OU quarterback was concerned “Jackson might leave, and he didn’t want that for the program.”

So, saying that Gabriel was “cast off” by OU isn’t entirely accurate. All parties involved (Gabriel and OU) felt they needed to do right by Arnold and own up to the promise that had been made and the plan that had been set up months in advance.

In the end, everyone may benefit.

Gabriel gets to join an Oregon roster that many believe is ready to compete for a [autotag]Big Ten[/autotag] title (and maybe more) under head coach Dan Lanning. Oklahoma begins a new era under center in the SEC with Arnold, who fans have been waiting to see for a long time. His upside and talent seem limitless at this point.

To that point, Arnold’s abilities and skills have Klatt excited for how he can unlock a new level in OU’s offense.

Deep Shots Engaged

“Another thing that I would say about Arnold is I do think that Arnold is a better fit schematically in what he brings to the table and then what their wide receivers and their talent can do on the outside,” Klatt said. “I made this point a year ago. They’ve got [autotag]Nic Anderson[/autotag] as a wide receiver, [autotag]Andrel Anthony[/autotag], a transfer from Michigan from last year, [autotag]Jayden Gibson[/autotag], [autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag], they’re going to bring in a transfer this year, [autotag]Deion Burks[/autotag], and that’s a downfield passing team and a wide receiver core that is best downfield. Dillon Gabriel is a point guard; he wants to throw the ball short, be accurate and get the ball out of his hands. That’s not what they had last year. So I felt like they were not quite optimized with what they had on the field a year ago and now moving forward, I think that they can be optimized.”

Though OU’s wide receiver room is going to be a bit banged up early in the season, Klatt’s point still rings true. Gabriel lacked some of the arm strength and anticipation on deep throws that Arnold already has in his wheelhouse. Simply put, the two are just different types of quarterbacks with what they do well. Oklahoma has deep threats all over the field at wide receiver, and the expectation is that the Sooners will run the ball quite a bit and then take deep shots more frequently in the passing game. Deep passes are one area that the Sooners can improve upon from a year ago.

But Klatt’s main reason for having the Sooners at No. 15 comes back to a major talking point this offseason for Oklahoma: Its schedule.

Brutal Schedule

“Their schedule is brutal. Brutal,” Klatt said. “I’m just going to give you the six toughest games that they have. They’re going to face Tennessee, Texas in that neutral game, at Ole Miss, at Missouri, Alabama, at LSU. That’s just their six toughest games. They have some other ones that are also tough, like they play Auburn. The schedule does them no favor. So think about this now, if you just play it out and you play out the math, they have to take care of business in every other game outside of these six, and split those six and go 3-3. If they can go 3-3 in those six games, I believe that they’re going to be a playoff team, and should be a playoff team, I’ll state it right now in the preseason. If they split those six games, 3-3, they should, and will, go to the [autotag]College Football Playoff[/autotag] … brutal schedule. They win three of them, they’ll go to the playoff.
All six of the teams Klatt mentioned as OU’s toughest games were inside his Top 25. Four teams were ranked above the Sooners (Texas, Ole Miss, Alabama and Missouri) and two were behind Oklahoma (Tennessee and LSU) with only two teams from the SEC not on OU’s schedule in his Top 25 in Georgia and Texas A&M.
While Klatt mentioned the road trip to Auburn, he didn’t mention home contests against Tulane and South Carolina, which aren’t layups either. Only the home games against Temple, Houston and Maine look likely to be easier wins for the Sooners, but college football is nothing if not unpredictable.
Yes, the schedule is brutal. It’s been written about all offseason long, along with the offensive line concerns. But, as Klatt illustrated, there is a path to navigating the treacherous waters.
The Sooners have to take care of business against Temple, Houston, Tulane, Auburn, South Carolina and Maine if they want to to meet expectations this year. Of those games, Auburn will likely be the toughest opponent, but OU should be favored, even on the road.
Splitting games against Tennessee, Texas, Ole Miss, Missouri, Alabama and LSU will be extremely difficult. But, as Klatt said, doing so, and taking care of business elsewhere to get to 9-3 with that schedule in this conference should be enough for a playoff berth, even with the unknown parameters of the new 12-team model.

And what better way for Venables and the Sooners to prove to the country that Oklahoma is fully back to being itself than by getting to the the College Football Playoff in Year 1 in the SEC?

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes and opinions. You can also follow Aaron on X @AaronGelvin.