DaShaun White on Sooners linebacker depth: Can’t ask for a better setting

The Oklahoma Sooners linebacker group has a ton of experience and talent and is ready to help the Sooners defense take the next step.

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After allowing 40 points per game in the Oklahoma Sooners’ first three Big 12 contests in 2020, the Oklahoma Sooners allowed just 17 points per game the rest of the way. Over the season’s final seven games, including the Big 12 Championship game and the Cotton Bowl, the Sooners defense burst onto the scene and announced this isn’t the same defense that the nation’s come to expect.

In the second half of 2020, the Sooners defense started trending toward why OU was winning games. For several seasons, the Sooners were winning games despite the defense. Heading into 2021, they’re looking to build off of that stellar finish and be part of the reason the Sooners contend for a national championship in 2021.

With a lot of attention paid to the defensive front and the defensive back group, the linebacker depth has quietly become one of the best units on the team. One would be hard-pressed to find a group with the level of experience and depth at a position that the Sooners have entering 2021.

DaShaun White, Brian Asamoah, David Ugwoegbu, Caleb Kelly, Shane Whitter, Jamal Morris, Bryan Mead, and Danny Stutsman make up an ultra-talented group of players. With White, Asamoah, Ugwoegbu, and Kelly, the Sooners have four guys who have played a lot of snaps for the program and will lead the defense into 2021.

Speaking to the media on Wednesday, White discussed the depth the linebacker group brings to the table and the work they’ve put in to get to where they are.

It’s definitely motivating. Just be in a situation where there’s always competition. As a player, you can’t ask for a better setting. Just an opportunity to surround yourself with something like that. Around the country there’s not a lot of place where you get into the three-deep group and it’s still a really, really solid group.  That’s really a just testament to our group and how hard we work. I think the linebackers work extremely hard. We do a lot of extra together.

During his appearance, White was asked how the linebackers performed during the scrimmage. He mentioned that the linebackers “had a great day” and were “getting into the backfield… running relentlessly after the ball carrier” He later went on to joke that he “felt bad for the ball carriers.”

With the Sooners’ talent upfront in Isaiah Thomas, Nik Bonitto, Perrion Winfrey, Jalen Redmond, and La’Ron Stokes, the Sooners’ linebacker corp is poised for a fantastic season. Though they might be the most underrated group on the roster, that doesn’t mean they won’t be as impactful as any position on the team. This is a group that’s ready to compete and wreak havoc on opposing offense.

Oklahoma Sooners Snapshot Profile: No. 3 Jamal Morris

The pre-spring player profile of Oklahoma Sooners’ Jamal Morris.

Accessing the current roster, Sooners Wire profiles the current players with linebacker Jamal Morris up next. The former four-star prospect appeared in one game in 2019 against South Dakota. The next season, Morris compiled five tackles in ten games. A preseason look at the No. 38 recruit in Texas by ESPN. Continue reading “Oklahoma Sooners Snapshot Profile: No. 3 Jamal Morris”

Oklahoma 2020 player card: No. 3 Jamal Morris

Sooners Wire will be creating player cards for readers to be introduced to the 2020 roster. Here is the second No. 3: Jamal Morris

There is a ton of momentum to having a 2020 college football season these days. No definite signs, yet, but the season would start three and a half months from now.

Sooners Wire will be creating player cards for readers to be introduced to the 2020 roster.

Here is the second No. 3 on Oklahoma’s roster.


Name: Jamal Morris

Number: No. 3

Year: Redshirt freshman

Position: Linebacker

Hometown: Houston, Texas

Height/Weight: 6-foot-2, 211 pounds


There were a handful of players who spent 2019 rehabbing for injury or training to play a different position in 2020. Former safety Jamal Morris fit into that group.

The Fort Bend Bush High School product was named a four-star prospect by Rivals in the 2019 recruiting class. Morris was listed as the No. 22 safety in the country and No. 45 player in the state of Texas.

He was recruited to Oklahoma by former defensive coordinator Mike Stoops and defensive backs coach Kerry Cooks. Morris picked Oklahoma over Texas and other offers from the likes of LSU, Michigan and Notre Dame.

The redshirt freshman made the move to linebacker after the 2019 season where Oklahoma has limited depth at in 2020. Morris will get a chance at the weak-side linebacker position with Caleb Kelly and Brian Asamoah. He played in one game in 2019 in the second game against South Dakota.

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Robert Barnes, Jamal Morris have moved positions from safety to linebacker

Two of OU’s safety have come down to play at linebacker. Lincoln Riley announced that Robert Barnes and Jamal Morris have made the move.

Two of Oklahoma’s safety have come down to play at linebacker.

The Sooners were going to be thin behind returners DaShaun White, Brian Asamoah and Caleb Kelly for linebackers coach Brian Odom’s second season. Former safeties Robert Barnes and Jamal Morris have made the move to help him out, Lincoln Riley announced on Monday.

Barnes was a starter for majority of Oklahoma’s 2018 season. He appeared in 11 games, including starts in the final eight games of the season that ended with a loss to Alabama in the College Football Playoff at the Orange Bowl. Barnes’ spot was taken by the tandem of Patrick Fields and Delarrin Turner-Yell in 2019 as he only appeared in four games and redshirted.

“I think it was one of those situations where we just kind of looked at where he was and opportunities for the future,” Riley said at his press conference Monday in regards to Barnes’ 2019 campaign. “I don’t know if necessarily those two decisions were made at the same time. I think more, it’s about where he was as a player at that point and thinking that that year could be of benefit. And then as time went on with conversations that we continually to have, it makes sense all the way around.”

Morris got to Oklahoma as an early enrollee from the 2019 recruiting class. He was a four-star safety out of high school with offers from the likes of Georgia, LSU, Michigan, Notre Dame and Texas. Morris could be seen in street clothes on the sidelines for much of the 2019 season as he redshirted.

Riley and Alex Grinch welcome in early enrollee Shane Whitter from the 2020 recruiting class as the only newcomer into the linebacker room for the spring.

Barnes comes into the spring at 6-foot-2 and 215 pounds, up 12 pounds from the end of the 2019 season. Morris comes in at 6-foot-2 and 211 pounds, up 16 pounds from the end of last season.

Oklahoma begins spring practice on Tuesday.

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