Oklahoma Sooners ranked No. 13 in latest College Football Playoff Rankings

After being handed its first loss, the Oklahoma Sooners fell five spots to No. 13 in the latest College Football Playoff Rankings.

It wasn’t a matter of if, but rather how far would Oklahoma fall in the latest College Football Playoff rankings after its 27-14 loss at Baylor this past weekend.

The answer is five spots down the board to No. 13 nationally for the Sooners in the third edition of the 2021 season’s CFP Rankings. Oklahoma is the lowest-ranked one-loss power-five program.

Baylor jumped up two spots to No. 11 after outscoring Oklahoma 20-7 in the second half to hand the Sooners their first loss. Oklahoma State moved up one spot to No. 9 after the Cowboys’ 63-17 blowout win over TCU.

The top four remained the same: Georgia is No. 1, Alabama is No. 2, Oregon is No. 3 and Ohio State is No. 4.

The next three in the rankings saw no change either. Unbeaten group of five member Cincinnati remained just outside the coveted top four slots at No. 5 after a 45-28 win at South Florida.

Michigan remained ranked sixth and Michigan State remained seventh. Notre Dame jumped up one spot to No. 8 and Wake Forest climbed two spots to round out the top ten at No. 10.

Oklahoma’s five-spot tumble matched Texas A&M for the largest drop of any team in this week’s CFP Rankings.

At this point, the Sooners would need to make history in the CFP era in order to make it back into the program’s fifth playoff appearance.

Over the course of the College Football Playoff, the lowest-ranked teams at this juncture to eventually make it in have been Michigan State in 2015 and Oklahoma in 2019 when both teams were ranked ninth in the third CFP rankings.

With the odds now stacked against them, redshirt senior tight end and H-back Jeremiah Hall said immediately after the loss to Baylor that all Oklahoma can worry about now is winning out and seeing where the Sooners eventually land in the final CFP rankings.

“In the grand scheme of things, we all know that it does hurt our national championship chances, but, at the same time, weā€™ve been in this position before. Weā€™ve made it into those College Football [Playoff] talks before. Weā€™ll see how that goes because we canā€™t control it. Ultimately, we still have other goals in front of us. We are on a week-to-week basis, but we still want to win these games out, we still want to make it to a Big 12 championship, win that game and see where everything else takes us,” Hall said.

Oklahoma plays Iowa State in Norman at 11 a.m. on Saturday in its second consecutive Big Noon Kickoff on FOX.

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‘Still a whole lot left’: Oklahoma looks to recalibrate after Baylor loss

Oklahoma head football coach Lincoln Riley said there’s “still a whole lot left for this football team” after the loss to Baylor.

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Even though the calendar is halfway home through the month of November, Saturday felt more like Halloween than it did Thanksgiving for Oklahoma.

The Sooners were haunted by Baylor’s high-powered rushing attack and fell victim to their own undoing as true freshman quarterback Caleb Williams threw a pair of interceptions.

It all added up to a 27-14 road loss for Oklahoma against Baylor. The Sooners now must turn the page on what had been a string of 23 consecutive November wins for the program and the nation’s longest active winning streak at 17 games.

Afterwards, Oklahoma head football coach Lincoln Riley voiced his frustration with OU’s performance but emphasized the importance of his team’s response.

“Disappointing. Still a whole lot left for this football team. That’s the advantage of winning your first nine games is you do set yourself up to be able to overcome something like this. Disappointed obviously that we have to overcome it, but it is what it is. We’ll bounce back like we always do and like we fully expect to,” Riley said.

Redshirt senior defensive lineman Isaiah Thomas described what the mood in the locker room was like after the Bears outscored the Sooners 20-7 in the second half to hand OU its first loss.

“You know, what you would expect. Guys quiet trying to wrap their head around a loss. It was the first time we felt this way this season. Second-handedly, coach Riley also uplifting us, also letting us know that we still are 9-1 and we still have the rest of the season in front of us. A lot of football to be played left. Opportunities to make a statement that this game isnā€™t who we are. Like I said, what you would expect for it to be kind of gloomy in there but also uplifting to see what the bright side is,” Thomas said.

Sophomore wide receiver Marvin Mims was asked what the frustration was like for he and his teammates after Oklahoma recorded its second-fewest total offensive yards in a game this season with the 260 it was held to by Baylor.

“I mean, I donā€™t think it really matters what point we are in the season. At the beginning of the season, we were kind of low, too, not playing up to our standard and how we like to play offense. We got two tough teams, two good defensive teams left to play. One at home, one in a hostile environment. Weā€™re just trying to hit the nail on the head, go back in there Monday and just go back to work,” Mims said.

Oklahoma’s College Football Playoff hopes aren’t completely dead after this loss, but redshirt senior tight end and H-back Jeremiah Hall understood that it meant the Sooners no longer control their own destiny.

“In the grand scheme of things, we all know that it does hurt our national championship chances, but, at the same time, weā€™ve been in this position before. Weā€™ve made it into those College Football [Playoff] talks before. Weā€™ll see how that goes because we canā€™t control it. Ultimately, we still have other goals in front of us. We are on a week-to-week basis, but we still want to win these games out, we still want to make it to a Big 12 championship, win that game and see where everything else takes us,” Hall said.

Now, the question becomes which path does Oklahoma take.

Are the Sooners set to crumble with more good competition looming? Or, will Oklahoma rise up like Novembers’ past, win these next two games at home against Iowa State and at Oklahoma State and then have the chance to defend their status as six-time defending Big 12 champs?

Senior safety Delarrin Turner-Yell shared one final message Riley gave to the team.

“He told us that this game is either going to do two things to this team. Either itā€™s going to tear it apart or itā€™s going to bring us together. And also he told us we have a lot of football in front of us. We still have the things that we want to accomplish this year in front of us, so itā€™s very important that we put this game to bed and that we attack the practice field next week and just do the things that we need to do in order for us to finish out strong this season,” Turner-Yell said.

OU has the chance to reverse any negative narratives beginning on Saturday at 11 a.m. when the Sooners welcome in the Cyclones for a Big Noon Kickoff on FOX.

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Looking back on the 2017 recruiting class and itā€™s impact on the 2021 Oklahoma Sooner Sooners

A deeper look at the remaining members of Oklahoma’s 2017 recruiting class and their contributions to the 2021 Oklahoma Sooners.

The bye week is the perfect time for reminiscing and reflecting as the current Oklahoma Sooners enjoy their time off relaxing, resting, and recovering from a grueling stretch where they played football for nine straight weeks.

These 2021 Sooners are led in part by many seniors who are looking to cement their legacy in Sooner history. Specifically, we’ll look at the Sooners of the 2017 class. Some have come and gone but upon further review, it’s hard not to marvel at the work of the Sooners coaching staff (past and present) for being instrumental in landing and developing such talent.

As it stands, eight of the 28 members of that class are already in the NFL. CeeDee Lamb, Tre Brown, Kenneth Murray, Creed Humphrey, Adrian Ealy, Marquise Brown, Tre Norwood, and Trey Sermon (yes, he transferred to Ohio State but he spent 3 years in Norman).

Current members of that class like Justin Broiles, Jeremiah Hall, Marquis Hayes, Isaiah Thomas, Tyrese Robinson, and Kennedy Brooks are on the precipice of the NFL themselves.

Letā€™s take a look at these seniors and their contributions to the program and their role going forward for the remainder of the season.

Best Pro Football Focus Grades from Oklahoma’s win over Texas Tech

How did Pro Football Focus grade the Oklahoma Sooners in their 52-21 win over Texas Tech?

With their win on Saturday, the Oklahoma Sooners moved to 9-0 on the season and are well situated to make their annual “Championship November” run to the Big 12 championship.

With their toughest games on the schedule still to be played, Oklahoma will need to come out of the bye ready to play their best football of the season. If their performance vs. Texas Tech was any indication, they might be on the verge of streaking into December, a trip to Arlington, and hopefully a chance at the national title in the College Football Playoff.

The Sooners played a complete game in their 52-21 win over the Red Raiders and received standout performances from several players on both sides of the football.

Like we do each week, let’s take a look at how Pro Football Focus graded the Oklahoma Sooners in the win.

Passing with flying colors: Report Card for Sooners complete win vs Texas tech

How did the Oklahoma Sooners grade out in their dominant performance against the Texas Tech Red Raiders in this week’s Report Card?

One week removed from their worst performance of the year to date, Lincoln Riley’s Oklahoma Sooners played perhaps their best game of the season. In every facet, the Sooners were better than the Texas Tech Red Raiders. For a team that came in hoping to play inspired football following the firing of the head coach, one may wonder if it had the opposite effect.

Nonetheless, this is hardly about the psyche of Texas Tech and more about the Sooners’ finally putting together a complete performance. In a 52-21 victory, everyone had to put their best foot forward. Let’s go through the different position groups and discuss the performances from each unit.

10 Bold Predictions for the Oklahoma Sooners matchup with Texas Tech

As the Sooners look to improve to 9-0 on the season, here are 10 bold predictions for their matchup with the Texas Tech Red Raiders.

Despite how we feel about the Oklahoma Sooners through eight games, the reality is theyā€™re an undefeated team. As years pass, that becomes an increasingly more difficult thing to do. Itā€™s the first time in Lincoln Rileyā€™s tenure as head coach that theyā€™ve made it this deep into the season undefeated.

It can be easy to take wins for granted. To hear the great Toby Rowland tell it, fans were not happy with Oklahomaā€™s 66-59 win in the 2016 game vs. Texas Tech.

Because how you win still matters in college football, itā€™s easy to let the details of the win overtake the joy that your team won.

The Oklahoma Sooners are in the driverā€™s seat for a berth in the Big 12 Championship and still remain a favorite to make the College Football Playoff per FiveThirtyEightā€™s latest projections.

Heading into their matchup Saturday against Texas Tech, the Sooners are still looking for a complete team effort. Is this the week it comes?

As we wait to find out, here are 10 bold predictions for Oklahomaā€™s game vs. the Texas Tech Red Raiders.

Jeremiah Hall has turned into one of Oklahoma Sooners’ ‘bell cows’

Redshirt senior Jeremiah Hall is being counted upon to lead No. 4 Oklahoma as it looks to find another gear to close the 2021 season.

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Fresh off a 35-23 victory over Kansas that left something to be desired for No. 4 Oklahoma, the Sooners are searching for leadership, maybe more so now than at any other point this season.

Redshirt senior Jeremiah Hall hopes to be one of the voices his teammates can turn to and trust. The H-back was voted one of OU’s team captains before this 2021 season commenced and his message in the locker room is paramount at this juncture.

Yes, Oklahoma is 8-0 and still, the odds-on favorite to repeat as Big 12 champions for a seventh consecutive year. Still, part of Sooner Nation can’t shake that sense of impending doom if the Sooners don’t more closely resemble what many expected this team to be.

Hall even confessed that the thought of this team not achieving its goals, if Oklahoma keeps playing the way it has lately, does at times creep in.

“I would say thatā€™s definitely a thought. Thatā€™s not something that you can say that itā€™s easy to ignore. At the same time, itā€™s just a thought,” Hall said.

The Charlotte, N.C., native was quick to point out that if he had told his teammates in week three or four that winning close wasn’t a sustainable way to do business, then he’d look pretty silly right now with Oklahoma still perfect.

However, as one of the elder statesmen and captains on this team, Hall knows he needs to convey the message that the play across the board just hasn’t been good enough for OU.

“I know that this isnā€™t the type of football I want to continue to play. This isnā€™t something I want to take into the Big 12 Championship, or the College Football Playoffs, or bowl season, or the rest of the season. All I know is that we just got to be better. At the end of the day, weā€™re finding ways to win games, and thatā€™s what Iā€™m hanging my hat on right now,” Hall said.

That’s an interesting balancing act for the leaders on this OU football team to manage as they get geared up to host Texas Tech on Saturday afternoon in Norman. It’s the best start to a season in Hall’s career on campus and, yet, it feels Oklahoma is nevertheless just scratching the surface of its potential.

“I always like to keep things in perspective. Iā€™ve never been 8-0 and I said that last week, so I can smile, I can keep my head up about that. But, like Alex [Grinch] and like coach Riley said, we donā€™t have much time to continue to say that we have time, that weā€™re going to be able to fix these things,” Hall said.

“Itā€™s not that Iā€™m pressuring my guys to hurry up and act right and be perfect, but, at the same time, we do have a little bit more urgency, especially from the older guys because the older guys can understand. The younger guys are still figuring stuff out.”

Hall mentioned redshirt senior left guard Marquis Hayes, redshirt senior right tackle Tyrese Robinson and senior H-back Brayden Willis as players he’s talked to about helping impart the gravity of Oklahoma’s situation to younger teammates.

“They understand the urgency that Iā€™m talking about because theyā€™ve been through it with me. Those are the older guys that Iā€™m talking to about making sure that we lead and get everybody to have that same urgency. Iā€™m a little bit in the middle. Iā€™m not changing anything drastically. Iā€™m not making excuses for anybody or anything like that, but I do understand whatā€™s at hand and I know that we have to play better,” Hall said.

If it’s not listening to his voice and digesting what Hall has to say, his teammates can simply look to mirror Hall’s growth as a player during his time at OU.

“I know weā€™ve talked about it over the last few years. Heā€™s really improved as a receiver. I think made himself a more versatile player than he was when he walked in the door, and thereā€™s just a lot of trust with the guy. I mean, the guyā€¦ you know what youā€™re going to get every day at practice, you know what youā€™re going to get every single game,” Oklahoma head football coach Lincoln Riley said of Hall.

“He rarely makes mental mistakes. Heā€™s always into it. No matter if the jobā€™s catching the ball and scoring a touchdown or itā€™s making a tough, gritty block in the box. Whatever it is, you just, you know that typically heā€™s going to get his job done and heā€™s going to come to compete and be ready every day,” Riley continued. “Heā€™s definitely one of our bell cows, one of our big leaders. Heā€™s always been a good presence in this program, but his leadership is at as high a level right now as itā€™s been throughout his career.”

Hall is one of the greater development success stories in recent Oklahoma football history. The 6-foot-2, 248 pound captain entered OU’s program as a three-star recruit according to 247Sports.

Before this season started, Hall reflected on his recruitment to Oklahoma in the inaugural episode of his podcast alongside Willis titled “The Podcast on the Prairie.”

“How he got in contact with me, I guess that’s just the Lord’s work,” Hall said of Riley’s recruitment.

Hall said he remembers the day Oklahoma came to see him workout alongside his high school quarterback.

“Iā€™ll never forget the day where East Carolina came to look at me, Appalachian State, Syracuse, OU, and I think about four other schools were all lined up watching me and my quarterback throw routes. It was like a dream come true at that time. I had all these coaches lined up and all these colors,” Hall said.

It didn’t take long for then-OU assistant coach Jay Boulware to call back and offer Hall.

“He called me one day, and he said they were going to offer another H-back, and I was just like, ā€˜You know what, I donā€™t like that.ā€™ So, I think I committed a couple days later. I was like, Iā€™m going to hold my spot. I committed before I even took a visit to OU,” Hall said.

Now, he’s one of the most important offensive pieces for Oklahoma. Hall has four touchdowns in OU’s past four games, including a receiving score in each of the past two against TCU and Kansas.

Hall’s lasting contribution on this season and program will be measured in more than his individual production the rest of the way.

“So far this week we’ve been emphasizing competition. You know, just straight out there going to compete, trying to bring back that fall camp mindset as if weā€™re 0-0 again. I think weā€™ve done a good job of that, especially today. Weā€™ll get some more of that competition tomorrow and weā€™re looking to make sure that carries over into Saturday and that we make sure that we play to our standard of football,” Hall said.

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Positional Report Card: How did the Sooners grade out in their win vs. Jayhawks?

In what turned out to be the Oklahomaā€™s worst performance of the season, how did each position group grade in this weekā€™s Report Card?

Despicable. That’s it. That’s the word for Oklahoma’s collective performance against the Kansas Jayhawks.

Of course, they did enough in the second half to win the game and hop on the bus for Norman still undefeated. However, not one group put their best foot forward and it’s a start contrast from last week’s performance.

Some individual efforts were nice but collectively, position group by position group, this may have been the lousiest game of the year.

Without further ado, let’s look at the positional grades Oklahoma earned for their game against Kansas.

Oklahoma Sooners Survive, beat Kansas Jayhawks 35-23

The Oklahoma Sooners survived, beating the Kansas Jayhawks 35-23 on Saturday to improve to 8-0 on the season.

Of all the ugly wins the Oklahoma Sooners have achieved in 2021, their 35-23 win over the Kansas Jayhawks was easily the ugliest. Kansas jumped on top of the Sooners with their first drive of the game, taking a 7-0 lead and that was the story for much of this game. In a game where they came in as 38 point underdogs, the Jayhawks went toe-to-toe with the No. 2 team in the country.

Oklahoma couldn’t do anything offensively or defensively for much of this game and the Jayhawks led the Sooners at halftime 10-0.

In the second half, the Sooners’ offense finally awakened as they outscored Kansas 35-13 to run get the win. But it was a much closer game than the score even indicates as the Jayhawks looked like they might pull off the upset.

The Sooners didn’t get their first lead of the game until there was 12:35 remaining in the fourth quarter. That on a Kennedy Brooks one-yard score.

Oklahma was then able to extend their lead to 28-17 after Caleb Williams 40 yard-touchdown run on fourth and 3. He’s making a habit of having big touchdown runs in critical moments of games.

In that moment, it felt like the Sooners were ready to take the game over, however the Kansas Jayhawks and Alex Grinch’s playcalling had other ideas. In prevent mode with just under eight minutes to play, the Oklahoma Sooners defense allowed Kansas to score in under two minutes to bring the score to 28 to 23.

The Sooners were able to blow up Kansas’ attempt at an end around to shut down the two point conversion and keep a five-point lead.

With the score 28-23, the Sooners then went on a 12 play, 75-yard drive that took 5:14 off the clock to put the game away with another Kennedy Brooks one-yard touchdown run.

Caleb Williams was 15 of 20 for 178 yards passing, two touchdowns, and an interception. Kennedy Brooks was held to 3.3 yards per carry, toting the ball 24 times for 79 yards and two touchdowns. Eric Gray led the way for the Sooners receiving corps with three receptions for 42 yards, and Jadon Haselwood and Jeremiah Hall added touchdowns for the Oklahoma Sooners.

The Kansas Jayhawks gave the Oklahoma Sooners all they could handle in a game that never should have been this close. The Sooners thought they could walk in and take the game without having to execute or play disciplined football. Kansas almost proved them wrong, keeping the game in upset alert until the very end.

The 8-0 Oklahoma Sooners next face the Texas Tech Red Raiders at home next Saturday at 2:30 p.m.. Kansas falls to 1-6 and will next travel to face the Oklahoma State Cowboys in Stillwater.

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Best Pro Football Focus Grades from Oklahoma’s win over TCU

Who earned the highest grades from Pro Football Focus in the Oklahoma Sooners 52-31 win over the TCU Horned Frogs?

On Saturday night, the Oklahoma Sooners were in a dog fight in the first half of their matchup against the TCU Horned Frogs. Though the game ended as a 21-point blowout win for the Oklahoma Sooners, it was a three-point game when the Sooners took over with 1:25 left in the second quarter.

Caleb Williams and the offense went 76 yards on five plays, culminating in an 11-yard touchdown strike to Jadon Haselwood on a beautiful back-shoulder throw, to make it 24-14. From that point, the Sooners never looked back.

They forced the Horned Frogs to punt on the opening possession of the second half, and another Williams to Haselwood touchdown essentially put the game out of reach, 31-14.

Though TCU battled to get back in the game, the Oklahoma Sooners had an answer at every corner and never let the game get closer than 14 points the rest of the way.

As we do each week, let’s look back at how Pro Football Focus graded the Sooners in their 52-31 win over the TCU Horned Frogs.