‘Lincoln Riley wasn’t touching that’: Joel Klatt dishes on Brent Venables’ historic 2023 class

In his evaluation of the 2023 recruiting classes, Fox Sports Joel Klatt shared that he loves what Oklahoma has done on the recruiting trail.

When Lincoln Riley left for USC, one of the big national talking points wondered how well Brent Venables and his staff would perform on the recruiting trail.

Riley himself intimated it was going to be easier to build a championship roster at USC.

“I’ve walked into four playoffs, and I’ve never had better than maybe the third-best roster (of the four teams),” Riley said. “Every other year, we were 4 of 4. We had really good rosters, but they weren’t the same. … I can’t imagine that there could be a setting that we could build a better roster than we can here.”

Time will tell if Brent Venables and his staff can get to a College Football Playoff. But based strictly on recruiting rankings, Riley’s comment was a lie.

The Sooners have done an incredible job over the last year on the recruiting trail and have a chance to follow their No. 4 class with another top-five group if a few things fall right. If they can build on their success on the recruiting trail in the 2022 and 2023 cycles, there’s no reason the Sooners will not be national title contenders in the future.

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On the latest Joel Klatt Show, the Fox Sports analyst broke down the 2023 recruiting cycle and had some positive things to say about the Sooners class. In particular, Klatt mentions Venables is already outperforming Riley on the recruiting trail.

Oklahoma. I thought Oklahoma had a really great class. And obviously the the rankings suggest that as far as the total class, in terms of recruits and transfers No. 6, their best since 2021, when Caleb Williams came in. They had the the No. 4 class in the country when it just looks at high school recruits. That’s their best high school class since 2005. So, like, Brent Venables did a great job. I looked back at some of these classes that they had had high school only over the last few years, and Lincoln Riley wasn’t touching that, you know. 2019 I believe they had like the sixth best class in the country. They had an eight in there, but then like 10, 13, 9, 19 in 2016. So Brent Venables has done a really good job. Their first class is the best they’ve had in a long time. Six of their best seven recruits are either defensive players or offensive linemen. How do you get good? How do you win going into the SEC? You better play good defense. You better play good on the line of scrimmage, and their best player overall is their quarterback that they got, Jackson Arnold. So I loved what Oklahoma did. – Klatt, The Joel Klatt Show

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It took Brent Venables just one year to put together one of the best recruiting classes in Oklahoma history. It’s an incredible signing class made even more incredible by the balance it has. As Klatt mentions, as the Sooners prepare to play in the SEC, they have to be good on defense and good up front on both sides of the ball.

Ten of Oklahoma’s four- and five-stars come on the defensive side of the football. The six offensive blue-chippers are the No. 4 quarterback, [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag], offensive linemen [autotag]Cayden Green[/autotag] and [autotag]Joshua Bates[/autotag], running back [autotag]Daylan Smothers[/autotag], and wide receivers [autotag]Jaquaize Pettaway[/autotag] and [autotag]Keyon Brown[/autotag]. With Bates, Green, Adepoju Adebawore and Derrick LeBlanc, Oklahoma added four blue-chip players to their offensive and defensive line.

That’ll have to continue or even get better to get on Alabama or Georgia’s level, but it’s a great start.

Perhaps the most impressive collection of players they brought in at one position is in the defensive backfield, where they added six four- and five-star defensive backs.

Lincoln Riley did a good job on the recruiting trail, but his best high school class in 2019 didn’t have the desired impact, and he definitely didn’t recruit this well on defense.

They had 16 blue-chip players signed to that class, eight of which were on the defensive side of the ball. Their highest-rated defensive player was ranked No. 163. That class had three top 200 defensive players signed. In the 2023 cycle, Venables added six top 200 players on defense, four of which were top 100 signees.

Of those 16 four- and five-star players in the 2019 class, only four or five had a significant impact for the Sooners: [autotag]Spencer Rattler[/autotag], [autotag]Woodi Washington[/autotag], [autotag]David Ugwoegbu[/autotag], [autotag]Theo Wease[/autotag] and [autotag]Jadon Haselwood[/autotag]. Of those five, only Woodi Washington remains with the squad. Everyone else transferred.

[autotag]Jaden Davis[/autotag], [autotag]Marcus Stripling[/autotag], [autotag]Joseph Wete[/autotag] and [autotag]Marcus Major[/autotag] are still with the squad, but have not taken the step into stardom.

In two recruiting cycles, Brent Venables has added 33 four- and five-star players to the Sooners’ roster. Nineteen are on the defensive side of the football.

Venables and his staff can recruit. That much has been made clear. They did a great job in the two months they had prior to 2022 national signing day putting together the No. 8 class in the nation. And did even better with a year to work with in the 2023 class. Given two years to work on the 2024 class, it’s possible Venables and his staff can recreate the success from 2023 or even exceed it.

And that’s what it’s going to take for Oklahoma to be in a position to contend with Alabama and Georgia, whether it is in the Big 12 or the SEC. With the success it has had on the trail, there should be little doubt that the staff can build a roster that can contend for national championships.

To steal from Riley, there may not be a setting where Oklahoma could build a better roster than it can here.

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Ted Roof embracing responsibility of leading Oklahoma’s defense

Defensive coordinator and linebackers coach Ted Roof said he’s ready to embrace the responsibility of coaching at Oklahoma.

Oklahoma’s new defensive coordinator and linebackers coach Ted Roof has been all over the map over the course of his 35-year collegiate coaching career.

He has been the defensive coordinator at Massachusetts, Western Carolina, Georgia Tech, Duke, Minnesota, Auburn, UCF, Penn State, North Carolina State, Appalachian State and Vanderbilt.

Auburn won the 2011 BCS national championship game 22-19 over Oregon with Roof pulling the defensive triggers. Before that, Roof was also Duke’s head football coach during the 2004-07 seasons.

So, why Oklahoma now? The biggest reason is Oklahoma head football coach Brent Venables. Roof said he’s known, respected and admired Venables for 10 years, but, after working directly with Venables last season as a defensive assistant at Clemson, he couldn’t say yes fast enough when the opportunity to come to Oklahoma presented itself.

“He’s a guy, again, that’s a very strong leader, has a great track record, but I wanted to be with great people and I am with him. He’s a guy that is going to touch, obviously as a head coach, is going to touch every part of our program, every aspect of it and do what he has to do to make this the absolute best experience he can for our players. At the same time, his passion, his energy, but his commitment because he knows what it’s like to hand kids off to somebody and the privilege and the responsibility that comes with it. I’m excited about that. I’m excited about being part of this staff, the group of men and women that he’s assembled,” Roof said.

Meeting with the media on national signing day, Roof talked about how proud he was to join the Oklahoma staff and what it meant to coach at a place that’s had Hall of Fame coaches like Bud Wilkinson, Barry Switzer and Bob Stoops.

“I have so much respect for the coaches and the players that have come through here before where we are right now. Wherever you go and whatever you do, you want to make an impact and you want to leave it better than where you found it. I’m certainly not critical of anything that’s gone on here and, at the same time, excited about the opportunity to try to make it better. Again, I know because of the history of Oklahoma and all of the great coaches, players, teams, tough-minded competitors that have built this place, there’s a responsibility that goes with it and one I’m ready to embrace,” Roof said.

Roof was familiar with the seven national championships and seven Heisman trophy winners Oklahoma has won and had in its history, but he said the 50 conference championships jumped out at him when he arrived in Norman and at Gaylord Family-Oklahoma Memorial Stadium for the first time.

Now, in order to add to the Sooners’ trophy collection, it’s about installing his and Venables’ vision and structure of this defense during the spring and fall before Oklahoma kicks off its 2022 season against UTEP. Roof described what he wants the Sooners to look like.

“Aggressive and attack. No matter what we’re doing, to do that above all else. Then, be multiple. Extremely multiple where you can get into some three-down structures, obviously four-down structures, some five-down structure. To continue on the attack, some simulated blitzes, things of that nature. You want to change the picture for the quarterback. Obviously, you’ve got to have the ability to stop the run, but the multiplicity of being able to change the picture for the quarterback and attack at the same time,” Roof said.

Again, the allure of continuing to work with Venables was too attractive to pass up. Over the 10 years since Venebles took over as Clemson’s defensive coordinator, the Tigers led the nation in sacks (445) and third-down conversion percentage defense (30.2%).

From 2013-16, Clemson led the nation in tackles for loss and were top 10 nationally in TFLs during the 2013-20 seasons.

Over that stretch, Venables’ defenses were second in opponent pass efficiency rating (111.1) and takeaways (244) and third in scoring defense (17.8 points per game).

“Again, attack, attack, attack in everything we do. Regardless of what the structure looks like, that’s what we hang our hat on. If you look at college football for the last 10 years, the amount of sacks and TFLs, it’s not even close. Clemson has led the country in both of those categories in the last ten years by a long stretch. That’s a combination of a lot of things, but certainly the mindset and the philosophy of the defense that coach Venables instilled. Players that are willing to do it and then players that have ability that can execute that as well, so it’s a combination of a lot of things but it starts with a mentality,” Roof said.

Oklahoma addressed its transfer portal and 2022 NFL draft defections by adding players out of the portal and with its 2022 signing class.

OU signed defensive backs Jamarrien Burt, Robert Spears-Jennings, Jayden Rowe and Gentry Williams; linebackers Jaren Kanak, Kip Lewis and Kobie McKinzie; and defensive linemen and edge rushers Gracen Halton, Kevonte Henry, Cedric Roberts, Alton Tarber and R Mason Thomas in its 2022 class.

The Sooners also brought in defensive linemen Jeffery Johnson and Jonah Laulu, linebacker T.D. Roof and defensive backs C.J. Coldon, Trey Morrison and Kani Walker out of the transfer portal.

“The emphasis is get better at every spot, you know, because at a place like this, when you go through the grind of a season, you’ve got to have quality depth. One deep is not going to get it done. I know that we’ve got some guys that have started some games in the front, but we were able to address the defense at every level. Certainly, if you’re not winning up front on defense, you’re not going to win very many ball games. If you can’t get to the quarterback and you can’t stop the run, that’s going to be a long day at the office,” Roof said.

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Oklahoma 2020 player card: No. 45 Joseph Wete

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

Here is the defensive No. 45 for Oklahoma.

There is a ton of momentum to having a 2020 college football season these days. No definite signs, yet, but the season would start less than 100 days from now.

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

Here is the defensive No. 45 for Oklahoma.

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Name: Joseph Wete

Number: No. 45

Year: Redshirt Freshman

Position: Outside Linebacker

Hometown: Washington D.C.

Height/Weight: 6-foot-4, 216 pounds

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Joseph Wete, a redshirt freshman from Washington D.C. was a four-star defensive end in the class of 2019.

Ranked as the No. 12 weakside defensive end in the country and the second-best player in the D.C. area.

Wete is an alum of Gonzaga High School and was teammates with 2021 Sooners prospect Caleb Williams. Williams is the No. 1 ranked quarterback in the country who has Oklahoma in his final three. The Sooners are in contention alongside LSU and Williams’ hometown Maryland Terrapins.

Wete has yet to play a snap for Oklahoma.

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