Kicking, special teams became a problem for OU in 2024; Sooners banking on competition to pay off

Special teams wasn’t special for the Oklahoma Sooners last year but here’s hoping competition and a coaching change can turn it around.

The Sooners struggles on special teams went beyond the kicking situation in 2023. The return game didn’t provide much and was at times a detriment to the team.

Head coach Brent Venables had to find a new special teams coordinator after Jay Nunez left for the same position at Alabama. But that might have been a blessing in disguise.

According to ESPN’s overall efficiency rankings for 2023, Oklahoma’s special teams—placekicking, punting, punt return, kickoff coverage, and kickoff return—ranked No. 127 last year.

That’s not good enough, especially for a team that, while much improved, needed to be perfect in other aspects of the game. Heading to the SEC, there’s less margin for error as Oklahoma’s talent won’t be enough to win games. They’ll need every bit of a competitive advantage. That could come by way of special teams.

So Venables went out and hired former San Diego State special teams coordinator Doug Deakin as a special teams analyst.

Why Deakin?

In each of the last three seasons, the Aztecs finished in the top 10 in ESPN’s special teams efficiency rating. In 2022, the Aztecs ranked No. 2, and last year, they were No. 9. While he’s an analyst and won’t be on the field during game days, Deakin will coordinate this unit with the rest of the on-field staff to create a better and more positively impactful special teams unit for the Sooners. And he comes to Oklahoma with some work to do on the kicking and return game front.

Oklahoma’s field goal kicking wasn’t as good as it needed to be for the Sooners in 2023. Sure, it wasn’t horrible, but by the end of the season, trotting out Zach Schmit genuinely felt like a coin flip, even from distances inside the 40-yard line.

The Sooners’ kicker made less than 75% of his kicks for the second straight season. Schmitt missed six kicks in 2022 and six in 2023. Schmit was just 6 of 11 on attempts from beyond 30 yards. He had a miss in Oklahoma’s three-point loss to Oklahoma State that turned out to be a killer.

So, where do the fixes lie? Well, competition and better schemes are the plan.

OU secured a commitment from Florida State transfer kicker Tyler Keltner this winter.

Keltner is a redshirt senior who spent the first four seasons of his college career at East Tennessee State. He made 56 of 74 field-goal attempts and earned two All-SoCon second-team selections. He then spent this past season at Florida State, where he appeared in one game and converted on his only attempt.

He and Liam Evans, a 2024 commit, will add fresh legs and competition to that room. Evans was ranked the number seven kicker in the nation, according to Kohl’s Kicking Camp.

The punt return game can be better too. After [autotag]Gavin Freeman[/autotag]’s return for a touchdown against Arkansas State, the return game never seemed to click. Freeman muffed multiple punts in crucial moments that flipped the momentum in games. He also had just 122 punt return yards on the season, including that 82 yard return against Arkansas State.

The competition for punt return duties will be much more open than last year. Freeman will have a shot, but [autotag]Deion Burks[/autotag] and [autotag]Jaquaize Pettaway[/autotag] could push for opportunities. On kick return, Jalil Farooq will likely continue to lead the way for the Sooners, but Oklahoma will push him with competition as well.

According to the ESPN efficiency marker, Deakin’s special teams units at his previous school ranked in the top 10 nationally for three straight years.

If there’s a positive outlook on the return game, it’s the emergence of punter Luke Elzinga. Though it took time for the Sooners to settle on who their punter would be last year, once they went with Elzinga, they never turned back. His efficiency, power, and ability to drop the ball inside the 20 allowed Brent Venables to play the field position game more.

As the Sooners move to the SEC, they’ll see their competition improve week in and week out. They can’t afford to be average in any phase of the game and special teams is an area that has to be a winning phase for them in 2024.

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Oklahoma special teams analyst Jay Nunez off to Alabama per report

Oklahoma Sooners special teams analyst Jay Nunez is taking a position with the Alabama Crimson Tide per report.

Oklahoma’s special teams units were a major talking point during the 2023 season. From the kicking and return games to the coverage units, special teams were often a letdown for the Sooners.

The man charged with coordinating the special teams in an off-field role was Jay Nunez. According to a report from Parker Thune of OUInsider and Rivals, Nunez is leaving Oklahoma to join the Alabama Crimson Tide as special teams coordinator.

His short stint in Norman was marked with inconsistency and, at times, underwhelming performances from the special teams units.

Though we saw the emergence of punter Luke Elzinga, there was often curiosity as to why it took so long for him to take over punting duties. The kicking game struggled in a five-game stretch during the middle of the season, where Zach Schmit was just 5 of 11. That included the three-point loss to Oklahoma State, where he was 1 of 2.

The punt return game also became a bit of an adventure as Gavin Freeman struggled with his decision-making.

 

It’ll be interesting to see who takes over these duties moving forward. New defensive coordinator Zac Alley has experience coordinating special teams, but his focus will be on the defense and may not have a plate big enough to fit both units.

The Sooners will have to reorganize how they manage special teams on gameday as it’s been a position held by an off-field assistant in recent years.

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Attack Quinn Ewers: Keys to an Oklahoma Sooners win vs. the Texas Longhorns

Oklahoma faces off with Texas on Saturday in a big time matchup. Here are our 6 keys to the Sooners knocking off the Longhorns.

Oklahoma will have to up the level of play for its showdown with Texas. The Sooners have played some outstanding football throughout the season and have dominated nearly every team they played on one side of the ball or both.

Texas represents a significant leap into a new stratosphere regarding talent and the game’s overall magnitude.

Oklahoma will have to do some things this week that they’ve struggled to do all season. There are some major hurdles in winning the Red River Rivalry game this year.

Without further adieu, let’s look at what Oklahoma can do on Saturday and walk out of Dallas with the Golden Hat and first place in the conference.

Transfer punter Luke Elzinga featured on Ray Guy Award watch list

Oklahoma punter Luke Elzinga makes the Ray Guy award watch list ahead of the 2023 season.

Replacing Michael Turk will be an underrated storyline heading into the season. It probably won’t be much of an issue for the first couple of games, but as Oklahoma heads into conference play and the competition levels increase, having a punter capable of flipping field position when needed, like Turk, would be a significant benefit.

Enter Luke Elzinga, a transfer punter from Central Michigan University. Elzinga came over to Oklahoma after three years at CMU, where he was the primary punter for the last three seasons and a three-time All-Mid-American Conference performer.

In his first three seasons at the collegiate level, Elzinga averaged 42.4 yards on his 145 career punts. He’s registered 24 punts of at least 50 yards, 47 fair catches, 61 downed inside the 20-yard line, and only ten touchbacks. To add to his impressive resume, he’s also a three-time All-MAC Academic Team selection.

His performance last year made it possible for him to land on the preseason watchlist for the Ray Guy Award, handed out annually to the nation’s top punter. This marks the second consecutive season that Elzinga has been named to the watchlist for the Ray Guy Award but his first as a Sooner.

Former punter Michael Turk made the preseason watchlist last year before becoming a semifinalist in 2022. He averaged 46.79 yards per punt attempt during the 2022 campaign while earning first-team All-Big 12 honors. Turk was a weapon on special teams for Oklahoma.

Special Teams coordinator Jay Nunez and Oklahoma hope Elzinga can bring a similar level of consistency to the punter position.

With Elzinga’s selection to the preseason watchlist, he joins teammates [autotag]Danny Stutsman[/autotag] and [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag] as Sooners named to preseason awards watchlist.

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Oklahoma reportedly hiring Eastern Michigan’s Jay Nunez to oversee special teams in off-the-field position

According to Football Scoop’s Zach Barnett, Oklahoma is hiring Jay Nunez to oversee special teams in an off-the-field position.

Oklahoma head coach Brent Venables has reportedly added another piece to his staff.

According to Football Scoop’s Zach Barnett, the Sooners are hiring Eastern Michigan’s Jay Nunez to oversee special teams from an off-the-field position.

Nunez joined Eastern Michigan ahead of the 2017 season as the Eagles’ special teams coordinator and tight ends coach. In addition to his special teams duties, the Alva, Okla., native also served as Eastern Michigan’s co-recruiting coordinator in the 2018 and 2019 seasons.

In 2020, Nunez also coached defensive tackles for Eastern Michigan. Then, before this past season, Nunez was named the assistant head coach.

On Oct. 23 against Bowling Green this year, Eastern Michigan tight end Jere Getzinger blocked a punt and defensive back David Carter Jr. returned it 42 yards for an EMU touchdown. That extended a streak where Eastern Michigan blocked at least one punt, field goal or extra point in every season under Nunez’s leadership.

In 2020, Nunez and Eastern Michigan limited opponents to just 0.75 yards per punt return which ranked No. 10 nationally. During the 2019 season, punter Jake Julien set EMU’s single-season punting mark average of 43.8 yards per boot. In 2018, Eastern Michigan ranked second nationally in punts downed inside the five, fourth in punts downed inside the 10 and 23rd in punts downed inside the 20.

Before his five-year stint at Eastern Michigan, Nunez spent one season at Southern Illinois as the Salukis’ special teams coordinator and tight ends coach.

Southern Illinois led the Missouri Valley Conference in kick return average and ranked eighth nationally. At SIU, Nunez’s special teams units pulled off a successful fake PAT (vs. South Dakota State), a fake punt (vs. Murray State) and a fake field goal (vs. No. 23 Western Illinois). With Nunez as his tight ends coach, then-freshman Jacob Varble started 10 games, caught 16 passes for 202 receiving yards and one touchdown.

Nunez also served as Minnesota’s quality control assistant for special teams from 2011-15 under Gophers head coach Jerry Kill.

Nunez’s coaching start came at his alma mater Pittsburgh State where he worked with the offensive and defensive lines for two seasons. As a player at Pittsburgh State, Nunez was a four-year letter winner.

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