Bauer Sharp answered the question at tight end for the Sooners

Bauer Sharp impressed in this first game as a Sooner. Can he step up in the passing game?

Coming into the 2024 season, the Oklahoma Sooners had some questions at the tight end position.

Two years ago, [autotag]Brayden Willis[/autotag] was one of the best players on the team, combining his ability as a receiver with his excellent blocking skills to have a very productive season. Though OU went just 6-7, the senior had a career year in his final collegiate season, catching 39 passes for 514 yards and seven touchdowns while opening up holes in the running game.

Last year, the Sooners expected similar contributions from [autotag]Austin Stogner[/autotag], who returned to Norman after a year in South Carolina. But the tight end production dipped, as Stogner caught just 17 passes for 196 yards and one touchdown. He also struggled to match Willis’ effectiveness as a blocker. Too often last season, it felt like OU was playing 10-on-11 when running the ball with a tight end in the game.

But that’s where Southeastern Louisiana tight end [autotag]Bauer Sharp[/autotag] comes in. After serving as a game captain, he ended the night as OU’s leading receiver with 47 yards on five catches with a touchdown. He seemed to be the only option aside from Burks that could consistently create separation and catch the ball.

Though he came from an FCS school, Sharp looked the part of a Power Four tight end. He and [autotag]Jake Roberts[/autotag] got the initial snaps at tight end, with the latter serving in more of a blocking role. Sharp, who started the game, has been earning high praise since the spring, with one player in his corner being superstar senior linebacker [autotag]Danny Stutsman[/autotag].

Sharp displayed sound chemistry with [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag], often acting as a safety valve over the middle of the field for his quarterback as pressure closed in. With the struggles of the offensive line and the running game, he’ll be asked to provide more in the passing game, especially until the bigger names get healthy.

Of course, it’s only been one game. Maybe the running game will get on track in the next couple of weeks. Maybe the offensive line gets healthy and in sync. Maybe [autotag]Brenen Thompson[/autotag], [autotag]J.J. Hester[/autotag] and the other depth options at wide receiver just had a rough night and will be just fine. Maybe [autotag]Andrel Anthony[/autotag] gets back to his pre-injury self much earlier than expected and [autotag]Nic Anderson[/autotag] is able to stave off any other injuries. .

But in the meantime, Bauer Sharp will need to build on his strong first game in a Sooner uniform to take some of the load off of Arnold and [autotag]Deion Burks[/autotag]. Oklahoma has a struggling Houston squad on the schedule next, before a sneaky non-conference game against Tulane. The Sooners need to use the next two weeks to find a rhythm and an identity running and throwing the ball in [autotag]Seth Littrell[/autotag]’s offense before the Tennessee Volunteers and conference play arrive on their doorstep on September 21st.

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The Good, the bad and the ugly from the Oklahoma Sooners win over Temple

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly from the Oklahoma Sooners week one win over the Temple Owls.

The Oklahoma Sooners had a strong start in their 51-3 win over the Temple Owls. They did just enough on offense to take advantage of a great defensive effort.

Oklahoma knew it didn’t need to go deep into the playbook to beat the Owls. While the offensive performance isn’t quite what we’d expect from the Sooners, it didn’t need to be for OU to win and cover the 42 1/2-point spread.

There was a lot of good in Oklahoma’s win over the Owls and some stuff that has to improve as the Sooners move through the 2024 season. Here’s a look at the first installment of the good, the bad and the ugly from Week 1.

The Good: Defense is Back in Norman

It’s just one game, but the Oklahoma Sooners defense looked great against the Temple Owls on Friday night.

The Sooners held Temple to less than 200 yards of total offense and 1.9 yards per carry. Oklahoma’s defense recorded six turnovers, the most in a game since 2003. It also recorded six sacks and nine tackles for loss. The production came from everyone.

The Owls couldn’t get much going offensively as the Sooners frustrated them with a relentless defensive effort.

The Sooners will face tougher teams down the road, but you have to be happy about what they put on the field to start the 2024 season.

The Bad: Run Game Needs Work

Yes, the Oklahoma Sooners ran for 217 yards. You take the 28 yards from sacks out of the equation and the yardage number jumps to 245. On the surface, that looks pretty good. But nearly a third of that rushing total came on the final drive when [autotag]Michael Hawkins[/autotag] and [autotag]Taylor Tatum[/autotag] added 76 yards to the total.

In the first half, OU ran for 4.1 yards per carry. By contrast, the Sooners averaged 9.1 yards per carry in the second half. A much better number, but Temple went deeper into the depth chart as the game went on.

Yes, the offense had a vanilla game plan, but the first-team offense should have been more effective against the Temple Owls. The unit was without [autotag]Jake Taylor[/autotag] and lost [autotag]Branson Hickman[/autotag] to injury in the early going.

The Sooners will have an opportunity to right the ship when they take on a Houston Cougars team that allowed UNLV to rush for nearly 200 yards and average 4.1 yards per carry.

The Ugly: Wide Receiver Depth takes another Hit

The Oklahoma Sooners wide receiver room was lauded this offseason for being one of the deepest in the nation. Well, that depth is going to be put to the test as the Sooners suffered another significant injury.

[autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag], who was third on the team in receiving yards in 2023, was expected to have another strong season but suffered a broken foot in the first quarter of the win over Temple. That’s the second significant injury suffered by the wide receiver during the last month. [autotag]Jayden Gibson[/autotag] was lost for the season in the preseason.

[autotag]Nic Anderson[/autotag] has been banged up and is expected to be ready to roll this week against the Cougars, and Oklahoma will need the breakout star from 2023 to have a repeat season this year.

[autotag]Deion Burks[/autotag] looked good and [autotag]Brenen Thompson[/autotag] is off to a nice start to the season. But the Sooners need Anderson back and will need a younger player to earn a significant role in the wide receiver rotation.

Oklahoma can’t afford another significant wide receiver injury.

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Sooners wide receiver Jalil Farooq expected to miss significant time with injury

The Oklahoma Sooners will be without wide receiver Jalil Farooq for an extended period of time.

The Oklahoma Sooners went into fall camp feeling great about a deep wide receiver room. Fast forward through the first week of the regular season and that depth has evaporated.

Despite a 51-3 win over Temple, the Sooners have taken a hit on the injury front.

Senior wide receiver [autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag] hauled in a 47-yard reception to help the Sooners score on their first possession. He then left the game and was seen on the sidelines with a walking boot. In his postgame press conference, [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] revealed that Farooq will miss the next 6-8 weeks with a broken foot.

https://twitter.com/JoshMCallaway/status/1829718447120331055

Oklahoma lost [autotag]Jayden Gibson[/autotag] for the season during fall camp and were without [autotag]Nic Anderson[/autotag] in week one. [autotag]Andrel Anthony[/autotag] made his return to the field, but had a limited snap count, making one catch for four yards.

Transfer wide receiver [autotag]Deion Burks[/autotag] was really good in his debut for the Sooners, catching three touchdowns on six receptions. But Oklahoma’s going to need someone to step up among their young blue chip wide receivers. [autotag]Ivan Carreon[/autotag], [autotag]Zion Kearney[/autotag], [autotag]Jaquaize Pettaway[/autotag], and [autotag]Zion Ragins[/autotag] each earned time in the win over Temple, but they’ll likely be asked to do more over the next two months while Farooq works his way back to the field.

https://twitter.com/EricBaileyTW/status/1829720359077363750

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3 keys for the Oklahoma Sooners vs. the Temple Owls

The Oklahoma Sooners take on the Temple Owls on Friday night and here are three keys to the game.

The Oklahoma Sooners kick off their season in a unique way in 2024. Instead of the traditional Saturday game, OU will host the Temple Owls on Friday night to get things rolling this year. The game will begin at 6 p.m. and will be televised on ESPN. The Sooners, Owls, ESPN, and the [autotag]SEC[/autotag] all agreed to the change, which allows Oklahoma’s first official game as a member of the SEC to be highlighted on Labor Day weekend.

Oklahoma enters Year 3 under head coach [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] and will be looking to start strong with bigger fish to fry later on the schedule. Still, overlooking any opponent in the unpredictable world of college football would be a mistake, so here are three keys for the Sooners as they welcome the Owls to Norman.

1. Execution

Oklahoma has more talent than Temple. Plain and simple. The Sooners would have to be way off their game to lose this one, but, nothing in college football is guaranteed.

The most important thing coaches want to see on Friday night is execution of offense, defense, and special teams. Sure, the occasional procedural penalties will come with the first game of the new season, but all three units need to show high-level execution this week.

As Oklahoma breaks in new coordinators on all three units and plenty of newcomers will be playing their first game at OU, it’s impossible to expect perfection. But mistakes on offense, missed assignments on defense, and mishaps on special teams shouldn’t (and won’t) be tolerated.

2. Avoid Turnovers

Going hand-in-hand with execution is avoiding turnovers. No FBS team forced fewer turnovers than Temple last season, with just five total takeaways. The Owls only intercepted opposing quarterbacks three times and return zero players who registered a pick in 2023.

Turnovers plagued Oklahoma in their loss against Arizona in December’s Alamo Bowl. They’ve had nine months to work out the kinks, but fans will have their eyes on the turnover numbers all season long.

Sacks should also be mentioned here. Perhaps the biggest difference between the 2022 Temple defense and the 2023 Temple defense was the pass rush. That was a clear strength two seasons ago when the Owls registered 38 sacks, but that number went down to 22 last year. OU’s rebuilt offensive line knows that this is the first of 12 chances to prove everyone who doubted them this offseason wrong. A clean sheet against Temple would be a great start.

3. Stay Healthy

Perhaps the biggest thing fans and coaches will want to see on Friday night is the Sooners walk away as healthy as they can be after the game. Oklahoma is a little banged up coming into the season. Several players are dealing with injuries.

Aside from wide receiver [autotag]Jayden Gibson[/autotag]’s season-ending injury, none of the other players seem to be out for the year at this point, and most are day-to-day. However, the last thing OU needs is more players going down with anything more that bumps and bruises. Health will be the most important factor to keep track of during the game.

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Brent Venables updates injury status for pair of key wide receivers ahead of Temple

Brent Venables revealed that Nic Anderson will be out this week but Andrel Anthony will return vs. Temple.

The Oklahoma Sooners wide receiver room has been banged up this offseason. It’s arguably the deepest position group on the team, bu that depth has taken a hit through fall camp.

[autotag]Jayden Gibson[/autotag] will be out for the season, and now we know that [autotag]Nic Anderson[/autotag] will be out for Oklahoma’s week one matchup with Temple. [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] confirmed that Anderson will miss week one.

Both players figured to be among the Sooners’ top four wide receivers this fall.

However, some good news came from Venables’ press conference. Wide receiver [autotag]Andrel Anthony[/autotag] will return to the field, suiting up for the first time since suffering a season-ending knee injury during Oklahoma’s win over Texas.

Anderson had a breakout campaign in 2023, hauling in 38 receptions for 798 yards and 10 touchdowns. Though listed as day-to-day by Venables earlier in the week, the Sooners will likely be patient with his recovery, knowing they’ll need Anderson for tougher contests ahead.

Anthony was experiencing a breakout season in his own right in the first half of the year. After catching just 19 passes in his first two seasons at Michigan, Anthony tallied 27 receptions for 429 yards and a touchdown before missing the second half of the season.

All eyes turn to senior [autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag], incoming transfer [autotag]Deion Burks[/autotag], emerging speedster [autotag]Brenen Thompson[/autotag], and Anthony to lead the Sooners passing attack this week against the Owls.

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Brenen Thompson rising to the occasion ahead of first career start

Brenen Thompson has had a fantastic offseason and looks like a breakout candidate ahead of his first career start.

It’s no secret the deepest unit on the team has faced its challenges in fall camp. The Sooners lost [autotag]Jayden Gibson[/autotag] for the season. [autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag] was banged up early but looks to be on tract to start against Temple. [autotag]Andrel Anthony[/autotag] is working his way back from the season-ending knee injury he suffered against Texas last season, but [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] says there are no limits for Anthony as the season approaches. Another projected starter, [autotag]Nic Anderson[/autotag] is currently listed day-to-day.

That’s opened the door for one of the under-the-radar options to take advantage and cement his place in the starting lineup come week one. Former Texas Longhorns transfer [autotag]Brenen Thompson[/autotag] is slated to start this Friday night against the Temple Owls. The speedster played in a rotational role in 2023, flashing his big-play speed with seven catches for 241 yards and two touchdowns. He averaged an incredible 34.4 yards per reception in limited time.

As the Sooners start the season, Brent Venables is pleased with the growth Thompson has shown ahead of his first collegiate start.

“He’s become one of our best leaders,” head coach Brent Venables said Monday. “Incredibly vocal. Really bright young guy that really cares about his teammates. He can run the entire route tree. He’s focused on not being labeled as just a nine-route or go-ball guy. He’s done a great job, whether it’s the curls, the mesh, the digs, cross the middle of the field. Shows great toughness and durability.”

The toughness and durability are going to be key for the Sooners going forward. But hearing Venables talk about Thompson’s expanded route tree shines a light on what the former track star could do for the Sooners.

If Thompson can be a threat to the defense at every level of the passing attack, it will open up so many more options for the Sooners offense. Combined with a guy like Deion Burks, who has flashed the speed to win deep as well, defenses will have a difficult time accounting for the speed that the Sooners have at wide receiver. And because of that speed, defensive coordinators will be forced to leave two safeties high, which will open up options in the short to intermediate passing game as well as the rushing attack.

Thompson has shown the potential to be a dynamic weapon in the Sooners offense, but there wasn’t a clear path to playing time. The injuries Oklahoma’s suffered, combined with his fantastic offseason have opened the door for Thompson to have a breakout season for the Sooners.

“I think (my expectations) are the highest,” Thompson said. “I think I got the highest expectations, even over Coach V. I think my expectations of myself are higher than what he has for me. I’m trying to go win for this team. I’m trying to put this team first. I’m trying to do everything in my ability to win for this team.”

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Sooners star wide receiver ready to go for 2024 season

After suffering a knee injury in 2024, Sooners wide receiver Andrel Anthony appears to be ready for the start of the 2024 season.

The Oklahoma Sooners have been battling the injury bug at wide receiver during fall camp. [autotag]Jayden Gibson[/autotag] was lost for the season, and [autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag] missed time with a toe injury, though he is now said to be ready to go.

But one healthy wide receiver who has made substantial progress this fall is [autotag]Andrel Anthony[/autotag].

Anthony, who transferred in from Michigan in 2023, had a tremendous start to the season before going down with an ACL tear in the Red River Showdown. Through five and a half games, Anthony recorded 27 catches for 429 yards and one touchdown. He became [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag]’s go-to guy in the early going. He had three games over 75 yards receiving and was on his way to a big day against Texas, with five catches for 42 yards.

The injury put a damper on what could have been a big year. As the 2024 season approaches, however, Anthony sounds like he’s ready to roll.

“He’s doing good,” Brent Venables shared with the media on Tuesday evening. “He won’t be required to wear (the brace). We’re obviously trying to be careful with him. He doesn’t have any limits.”

Venables shared it would be up to Anthony whether he would continue with the knee brace, but the senior wide receiver is off and running.

It has been nearly 10 months since his injury, and he has made tremendous progress this offseason to get back. With Gibson out for the year, Oklahoma’s wide receiver rotation will need the speedy Anthony. It’s unlikely he’ll start right away, but the Sooners will make sure to ramp him up through the first three games of the season to get him game-ready when [autotag]SEC[/autotag] play hits.

If he can recapture his early season success from a year ago, the Sooners have a nice rotation of wide receivers for Jackson Arnold to rely on.

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Brent Venables shares update on Jayden Gibson’s injury situation

Oklahoma Sooners head coach Brent Venables provided an update to Jayden Gibson’s injury situation.

The Oklahoma Sooners wide receiver room is one of the deepest in the country. That depth has been put to the test during fall camp with several key receivers dealing with a variety of injuries.

Last week, George Stoia of SoonerScoop and On3 reported that wide receiver [autotag]Jayden Gibson[/autotag] suffered a knee injury in practice. OU hasn’t made details of the injury available but when Sooners head coach [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] met with the media on Tuesday, he revealed Gibson “won’t be back.

It’s a devastating blow for Gibson, who was on track to build off of a 2023 season in which he caught 14 passes for 375 yards and five touchdowns. He operated in a rotational role for the Sooners, starting the season as the No. 5 wide receiver but seeing more opportunities after [autotag]Andrel Anthony[/autotag] was lost for the season in the [autotag]Red River Rivalry[/autotag]. And he took advantage of the increased playing time.

Gibson was explosive and provided another big-play threat in the passing game due to his remarkable size and speed combination. Now, Gibson hopes to return in time to start for the Sooners in 2025.

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Oklahoma Sooners wide receiver depth being put to the test

Oklahoma Sooners relying on wide receiver depth as they work to get several players back from injury.

Entering fall camp, no position group on the Oklahoma Sooners roster was as deep as wide receiver. In just a year and a half, [autotag]Emmitt Jones[/autotag] has added and developed incredible competitive depth at one of the game’s most important positions.

Through a couple of weeks of fall camp, that depth is being tested. Jayden Gibson suffered a knee injury, [autotag]Nic Anderson[/autotag] was dinged up last week and [autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag] and Andrel Anthony have been working their way back to game readiness.

Those four were among the top five wide receivers from 2023 and are expected to play significant roles in 2024. But the Sooners are working through fall camp without them.

As reports from the first scrimmage of fall camp surfaced, it sounds like the offense had a rough day. The defense is going to be really good, but the first team offense missing most of the two-deep at wide receiver (aside from Deion Burks) is going to make things a little more difficult for Jackson Arnold.

That’s why building depth and development is so important. With Anderson, Farooq, Anthony and Gibson out, [autotag]J.J. Hester[/autotag], [autotag]Ivan Carreon[/autotag], [autotag]Brenen Thompson[/autotag], [autotag]Jaquaize Pettaway[/autotag], [autotag]Zion Kearney[/autotag] and Burks had an opportunity to work with the first-team offense.

The Oklahoma Sooners have 17 days before they open the season with Temple on Aug. 29, giving Jones and the training staff plenty of time to get wide receivers ready to go. For the Sooners to have their offense humming early and often in 2024, health is paramount.

Oklahoma has the depth it can rely on, but getting Anderson, Farooq and Anthony back to 100% will make a huge difference for the Sooners passing attack.

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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?

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