Oklahoma Sooners on the move in NFL free agency

Several Oklahoma Sooners on the move in the first week of NFL Free Agency.

Oklahoma recently sent seven Sooners to the NFL Scouting Combine to participate in the most extensive interviews of their lives. They hope to hear their names called at the end of April in the 2023 NFL draft.

While their careers are just getting started, Oklahoma’s representation in the NFL is rich. Several Sooners have established solid reputations but had interesting decisions to make early in the NFL free agency cycle.

We’ve taken the liberty and rounded up all the news about current Oklahoma Sooners and their situations with regard to free agency and new deals this offseason so far.

How did the Browns’ rookies grade in Year 1?

A look back at the 2022 Browns rookie class.

After trading back and trading multiple picks to Houston for Deshaun Watson the Cleveland Browns ended up picking nine players in the 2022 NFL Draft. Fans were surprised when the team traded out of the second round completely and shocked when they decided to take corner Martin Emerson with their first pick.

Around the NFL writer Nick Shook released his grades for all of the AFC North’s rookie classes. Overall Shook graded the 2022 class for the Browns as a C plus. Let’s look over Shook’s grade and his comments as well as some thoughts of my own about the rookie class. This class takes a step forward in 2023 and will be important if the team wants to make the playoffs.

 

After strong sophomore season, Sooners WR Jalil Farooq headed for huge 2023

After a strong performance in 2022 where he was third on the team in total yards, Sooners WR Jalil Farooq is set to have a huge season in 2023.

A freshman during the 2021 season, Oklahoma Sooners wide receiver [autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag] didn’t see much playing time. That was until the Alamo Bowl after [autotag]Mario Williams[/autotag] and [autotag]Jadon Haselwood[/autotag] departed via the transfer portal, and [autotag]Michael Woods[/autotag] declared for the 2022 NFL draft.

That left [autotag]Marvin Mims[/autotag], [autotag]Drake Stoops[/autotag], and Farooq, then a true freshman for the Sooners, to lead the way for Oklahoma in their matchup against the Oregon Ducks.

Mims and Stoops did what they do, each recording a touchdown reception from then-quarterback [autotag]Caleb Williams[/autotag]. But it was Farooq’s performance that provided a glimpse of the future at wide receiver.

In his first extended action in the Alamo Bowl, Farooq caught three passes for 64 yards in the win over the Ducks. He had 48 yards after the catch, and each of his three receptions went for a first down.

That led to an opportunity for him to earn a feature role with the Sooners in 2022. And he didn’t disappoint.

Operating on the outside, opposite Marvin Mims, Farooq became the do-it-all option for the Sooners in 2022. He had 37 receptions for 466 yards and five touchdowns. He also ran the ball 12 times for 121 yards, averaging 10.1 yards per carry on the season.

Only Eric Gray and Marvin Mims had more total yards than Farooq’s 606 in 2022. Farooq was also the Sooners’ best kick returner, averaging 22.9 yards per return on 12 opportunities for 275 yards.

He was a threat in the run game on reverses and helped the Sooners in the intermediate part of the field. He ran hard and with purpose with the ball in his hands and is a perfect fit in Jeff Lebby’s offense. An offense that wants to run a lot of wide receiver and bubble screens and jet sweep action.

Jalil Farooq’s after-the-catch ability will make him a huge threat in Oklahoma’s offense in 2023. With Marvin Mims gone and doubt as to who will replace him, Farooq should see a huge uptick in touches both as a receiver and a runner. With more of a focus on getting the ball in his hands, Farooq will push for 1,000 total yards next year in Lebby’s fast-paced offense.

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2022 Season Review: Grading the Browns’ wide receiver room

How did the position perform during the 2022 season?

One of the biggest positions with questions on the roster going into the 2022 season was the Cleveland Browns wide receiver room. Outside of Amari Cooper, there wasn’t much-proven talent on the roster. On top of that people questioned if Amari Cooper was even a number one in the NFL anymore.

Plenty of questions were answered while others didn’t give much of a reason to think they can perform consistently at this level. The team will likely need to add more speed this offseason but fans should be feeling better about the group after last season as they overachieved in 2022.

Here is a look at how the wide receivers performed last season.

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After being underutilized at the end of 2021, Marvin Mims off to a hot start to begin 2022

After a frustrating end to the 2021 season, Marvin Mims is showing why he needs to be targeted early and often for the Oklahoma Sooners through two games in 2022.

The last month of the 2021 season was frustrating for a lot of reasons. The Oklahoma Sooners lost games to Baylor and Oklahoma State to knock them out of Big 12 and College Football Playoff contention. Those losses sandwiched a disappointing day offensively in a win over Iowa State.

Among the frustrations was the lack of targets directed toward wide receiver Marvin Mims. Mims, who led the Sooners in receiving yards for the second straight season, received just eight targets against Baylor, Iowa State, and Oklahoma State; combined.

Eight. Targets.

Here’s how the targets were distributed over the final three weeks of the season to Oklahoma’s top five receivers in that three-game stretch.

Targets Receptions Yards Touchdowns
Michael Woods 14 7 87 0
Jadon Haselwood 12 6 83 0
Jeremiah Hall 9 8 113 0
Mario Williams 8 4 28 1
Marvin Mims 8 4 43 0

Mims tied for fourth in targets over the last three weeks of the regular season. Some of that was due to the way defenses were playing Mims, as they were looking to take away the deep ball. But there were zero adjustments made by Lincoln Riley to find other ways to get Mims the ball. Riley failed to get his best playmaker the football in a stretch of games where the Oklahoma Sooners were struggling to move the ball.

It was a stretch of games that had Marvin Mims on the verge of transferring had Riley stayed at Oklahoma.

“There wasn’t as many targets as I was looking for, nowhere near it,” Mims said told 247Sports’ Chris Hummer at Big 12 Media Days in July. “It was kind of a letdown, but at the end of the day I had to just keep battling through it. There were times where I was really unhappy about it with both the receiver coach and the offensive coordinator, but it was what it was.”

But with the coaching change that brought Jeff Lebby in to coordinate the offense, Marvin Mims is showing why that frustration was warranted.

Through two games, Marvin Mims has been targeted 12 times. He’s turned those 12 targets into an incredibly efficient 10 receptions for 244 yards and two touchdowns. He’s on pace to shatter his career-best numbers and is still averaging 24.4 yards per reception on the season.

Though he was targeted once in the first 29:24 of game time, Marvin Mims made his final three targets of the first half count. On three straight plays, Dillon Gabriel looked Mims’ way and the two connected for gains of 13, 14, and 36 yards, culminating in a touchdown.

Better late than never.

His performance on Saturday helped spark an Oklahoma Sooners’ offense that struggled for nearly 29 minutes of the first half. From the final drive of the half through the third quarter, the offense erupted for 31 points. It was his 36-yard touchdown reception at the end of the first half that got the Sooners on the board.

“… he ran by the guy in half-field coverage, and Dillon (Gabriel) makes a great throw,” Oklahoma head coach Brent Venables said “And Marvin makes a great play right over the shoulder, and, you know, good competitive play there when it counted the most. And it was, what a great play that was by both of them.”

It was a clutch play at a time when the Sooners needed someone to come through for them. The Sooners’ leading receiver for the 2020 and 2021 seasons came through with a big-time play to prevent Oklahoma from possibly trailing Kent State going into halftime. That was part of a career-high performance for the third-year Sooners wide receiver.

“And super proud of Marvin Mims, man, and what a display he put on tonight,” Venables said. “He’s my player of the game. Again, 203 all-purpose yards or whatever he does when he touches that ball, man. It’s electric. So 163 career yards receiving 36-yard touchdown, the 41-yard punt return, longest punt return we’ve had in three years.”

Only one other time in Marvin Mims career did he have seven receptions. The 2020 Big 12 title game win over Iowa State. On that day, he had seven receptions for 101 yards and a touchdown to help Oklahoma capture their sixth straight Big 12 title.

The Oklahoma Sooners need to feature Mims more moving forward. Seven to ten targets a game should be the goal because when he gets targeted, he produces. If Saturday against Kent State is any indication, Mims may see all the targets he wants and then some.

Offensive Coordinator Jeff Lebby said after the game, “Wanted to force the ball to him to give him the opportunity to go make plays and get us down the field. And it worked out the way we wanted.”

As the Sooners prepare to take on Nebraska, they must look to Marvin Mims early and often. He’s the type of player that can suck the air out of a hostile road crowd with his big play ability. While Jeff Lebby wants the Sooners to have a dominant running game, perhaps the clearest path to making that happen might be to air it out to his best offensive weapon.

As Mims makes plays down the field, he forces teams to commit more personnel to slow Oklahoma’s passing attack, leaving fewer defenders available around the line of scrimmage to stop the run. Tradition would argue that teams use the run to set up the pass, but times have changed. In modern college football, where passing attacks are so efficient, and good pass defenders are hard to come by, establishing your passing attack can open the ground game, as we saw on Saturday against Kent State.

The Nebraska Cornhuskers rank 113th in the NCAA in passing yards allowed. Oklahoma’s road trip could feature another opportunity to air it out with Dillon Gabriel and Marvin Mims leading the way. And it could mean another career day for the Sooners’ talented wide receiver.

But only if they make it a point to get him the football.

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‘Loves to compete’: Jalil Farooq slated to start for the Oklahoma Sooners

After providing a glimpse of his ability in the Alamo Bowl, Jalil Farooq is set to make the first start of his career against the UTEP Miners.

In the aftermath of the 2021 season, the Oklahoma Sooners lost the top four players in receptions. [autotag]Michael Woods[/autotag] and [autotag]Jeremiah Hall[/autotag] left for the NFL, while [autotag]Jadon Haselwood[/autotag] and [autotag]Mario Williams[/autotag] found new opportunities via the transfer portal.

But that doesn’t mean the Oklahoma Sooners don’t have talent in their wide receiver room. Oklahoma brings back its leader in receiving yards from the last two seasons, [autotag]Marvin Mims[/autotag]. Mims was underutilized by the previous coaching staff, especially in the second half of the season.

Returning to the field after missing nearly all of 2021 is the guy that tied with Mims for the team lead in receptions in 2020, [autotag]Theo Wease[/autotag]. Wease brings back his dynamic yards after the catch ability that helps turn short receptions into big gains.

But the receiving talent doesn’t stop there.

One of the big takeaways from the Oklahoma Sooners Alamo Bowl win over Oregon was the performance of [autotag]Jalil Farooq[/autotag]. Farooq, who had played sparingly during his freshman season, had a memorable performance that provided a glimpse of his future with the Sooners.

Against the Ducks, Farooq had three receptions for 64 yards, including a total of 48 yards after the catch.

He’s carried that over into a fabulous spring and fall camp and has earned an opportunity to start for the Sooners in Week 1 vs. UTEP.

“I think the thing with ‘Lil, man, is he’s continued to mature, one,” Lebby said in his week on media availability. “He’s been the same guy in the building every single day. He’s got this huge future, and I think he’s just now starting to figure it out. And the guy loves to compete. He loves to play football. And, to me, he’s shown what we’re all about as a unit, as a team. He’s worked incredibly hard. He’s been the same guy. He’s been accountable. He’s been dependable. He’s been tough. And so those things have put him in a position to go do some fun things this fall.”

And this is part of the fun that Farooq provides on the field. His speed and ability to break tackles in the open field give Oklahoma another playmaker in the passing game.

A trio of Theo Wease, Marvin Mims and Jalil Farooq are going to put a lot of pressure on opposing secondaries. While Mims and Wease are more established names, it will not be long before defenses will have to account for Farooq as well. And that will open things up even more for the Sooners’ passing attack.

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Where Oklahoma Sooners prospects rank heading into Day 3 of the 2022 NFL draft

After Nik Bonitto and Brian Asamoah were taken on Day 2, there are several Sooners still available for the final day of the 2022 NFL draft.

Heading into Day 3 of the 2022 NFL draft, several Sooners have yet to hear their name called. The only real surprise is Perrion Winfrey, who was projected to go in the top 100 picks by nearly every mock draft we’ve evaluated over the last four months.

Whoever takes the talented defensive line prospect is going to get a steal.

But the Sooners have several really good players remaining on the board that could impact teams in Year 1. [autotag]Isaiah Thomas[/autotag], [autotag]Kennedy Brooks[/autotag], [autotag]Marquis Hayes[/autotag] and [autotag]Delarrin Turner-Yell[/autotag] would provide solid depth and could develop into starters at the NFL level.

[autotag]Gabe Brkic[/autotag] could kick for a number of NFL teams, but kicker is one of those positions that doesn’t always get drafted. The same goes for [autotag]Jeremiah Hall[/autotag]. He could be a starting fullback in the NFL, but will teams value the position enough to spend a draft pick.

[autotag]Michael Woods[/autotag] and [autotag]Tyrese Robinson[/autotag] can help some teams, but they may have their choice of teams as undrafted free agents.

Let’s take a look at the remaining Oklahoma Sooners draft prospects, and how they ranked according to Dane Brugler, Matt Miller and Bleacher Report.

Oklahoma Sooners 2022 NFL Combine testing results

How did the Oklahoma Sooners perform at the NFL combine? Here are the results.

11 Oklahoma Sooners participated in the 2022 NFL Combine over the weekend. In addition to the testing that occurred, the annual scouting event in Indianapolis provided the first opportunity for players to meet with teams ahead of the NFL draft in late April.

Players didn’t participate in every event as most will wait for Oklahoma’s Pro Day on March 9th to do more on-field work or to test on the bench press.

The only player to take part in each of the combine’s on-field tests was Jeremiah Hall. Hall’s being viewed as a fullback at the next level and has a chance to hear his name called in the 2022 NFL draft because of his pass-catching prowess.

Kicker Gabe Brkic didn’t participate in any on-field testing, but a kicker doesn’t need to run fast or bench 225 a bunch of times to be a good kicker.

As Oklahoma gets set to host its pro day on Wednesday, here’s where 11 of the 12 NFL draft prospects stand.

Testing numbers come via NFL.com

How has NFL.com graded Oklahoma’s NFL draft hopefuls heading into the scouting combine?

As several Oklahoma Sooners prepare for the NFL draft, here’s how NFL.com’s draft analysts have the hopefuls graded.

Figuring out where players will get selected in the NFL draft isn’t a guessing game you want to put a lot of money on. Many players will get a consensus draft slot, like Alabama’s Evan Neal or Michigan’s Aidan Hutchinson. Both of those players are consensus top five players in the draft.

In a year where there isn’t a sure-fire quarterback occupying the top spot, it’s challenging to determine where the top players will land. While it’s likely those players will go in the top five, it’s not always a sure thing. Positional value comes into play.

It gets even more difficult as the draft goes along. Some teams will value a trait that other teams deem less valuable. Because NFL teams differ so much on draft analysis and projections, draft analysts will vary.

As we’ve seen in recent mock drafts, as many as four Oklahoma Sooners could go in the top three rounds of the 2022 NFL draft. Nik Bonitto and Perrion Winfrey have been top 60 players throughout the draft process, but joining them recently is linebacker Brian Asamoah. In the Draft Wire’s latest three-round mock draft, Marquis Hayes jumped into the top 100 as well.

Over at NFL.com, they’ve done scouting reports on eight of the 12 Sooners declared for the NFL draft and eight of the 11 Sooners who will participate in this week’s festivities in Indianapolis.

Let’s look at how NFL.com has the Sooners graded at this point in the draft process.

Oklahoma Sooners TE Brayden Willis announces that he’s back for 2022

On his weekly show, the Podcast on the Prairie, Brayden Willis announced he’s returning to the Oklahoma Sooners for 2022.

Amid the turnover that the Oklahoma Sooners have seen on both sides of the football, an atmosphere of anticipation has followed the Sooners around, waiting for insight into what veterans of the team will be doing. With 11 starters heading to the NFL, several on their way out via the transfer portal, there’s reason for excitement any time a player decides to stay.

On his weekly show, The Podcast on the Prarie, with fellow Sooners’ TE/H-Back Jeremiah Hall, Brayden Willis made it known he’s not leaving. Willis will be returning for the 2022 season for the Oklahoma Sooners.

As it stands, Brayden Willis and Missouri transfer Daniel Parker Jr. will be the only tight ends on the roster with experience to start the 2022 season. The 2022 recruiting class will be adding Kaden Helms and Jason Llewelyn to the group, but it’ll be good not to have to rush the true freshman into action.

As part of the three-rotation at TE/H-Back with Jeremiah Hall and Austin Stogner, Willis put up the best season of his Sooners career, catching 15 passes for 177 yards and two touchdowns.

Beyond the box score, Willis was an asset in the run game. For much of the first half of the season, Willis was the highest graded tight end in the Power Five according to Pro Football Focus.

Though his usage in the passing game was limited due to the rotation, he flashed an ability to get open in the middle of the field and help the Sooners as a short to intermediate option in the passing game.

Though we’re a long way from the start of the 2021 college football season, Willis likely projects as the starter at tight end in new offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby’s offense.

With Jadon Haselwood, Michael Woods, Mario Williams, Austin Stogner, and Jeremiah Hall heading out the door, Willis faces a great opportunity to make a name for himself in his final season with the Oklahoma Sooners.

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