We tried. We really tried. We failed.Three weeks into preseason practice we have no idea who the next quarterback will be at Oklahoma and a real good idea this Sooner offense, particularly with J.D. Runnels and Adrian Peterson sitting out contact, is sick and tired of having to face this Sooner defense.
Indeed, Wednesday’s scrimmage at Owen Field, the alleged last scrimmage of the preseason until OU coach Bob Stoops announced moments after its conclusion they might do it again the next Wednesday — you know, maybe 50 or 60 plays; might even let the fans come back — told us next to nothing about the state of Sooner football.
If you were standing in the northeast corner of the field, about the only thing you could be sure about was the existence of a middle-aged man with gray hair and a gray mustache, wearing a gray OU T-shirt, who loves Kejuan Jones “with all my heart.”
Only he wasn’t too sure about Kejuan’s first name.
“I love you Keyshawn,” he said. “I love all you all.”
Really. That’s as good as it got.
The offensive line allowed a ton of sacks. Then again, all it took was a phantom touch of the men in blue, Paul Thompson and Rhett Bomar, to get a play blown dead.
Bomar scored a touchdown … on a broken play. Thompson closed the scrimmage with a touchdown pass to Quentin Chaney … in a goal-line drill.
It’s not like anybody was going up and down the field.
Frankly, I think everybody expected a little more.
In fact, off the field, the atmosphere was quite game-like.
They hired enough referees to have spares. A few hundred fans were watching from their luxury suites or the stadium club. A P.A. announcer called out the plays. The scoreboard was on. Even the digital screens between the decks on both sides were flashing commercials. SoonerVision wasn’t just up and running, but showing replays … of one boring scrimmage.
Fans, the die hards, curled rosters in their hands like it was The Daily Racing Form. And come to think of it, everything happening cleared things up about as well most past performance charts, which is to say not at all.
When it was over, I had a brainstorm.
I would ask offensive coordinator Chuck Long a question with such expert wording, he was bound to break news. I was trying to get him to say what I’ve come to believe, that the real shocker would be naming anybody starting quarterback before the UCLA game.
Would you be surprised if you didn’t play both quarterbacks to begin the season?
“You have to leave that door open,” Long said.
Well, that’s definitive. Almost as definitive as what Stoops had to say a few minutes earlier about his quarterbacks.
“You know,” he said, “they’re learning and growing.”
Who isn’t?
Well, unless they’re trying to learn something new about Sooner football.
This was sort of interesting.
Stoops explained how it was difficult for either quarterback to do very much, considering each was leading an offense without two great players, Runnels and Peterson, against a defense that couldn’t be more familiar with its playbook. And then a few minutes later, Long explained it was all by design, so they could really look at the quarterbacks.
“This was a scrimmage on purpose to throw it,” Long said.
By the end, other than the true believers with the racing forms, it was more like a baseball game. Most everybody was looking and talking to each other and not so much following the action down on the field. What little action there was.
The dog days of summer?
Could be. A team can hit a wall.
So too, apparently, can one of the folks covering it.
Clay Horning366-3526cfhorning@normantranscript.com
OU Sports
Hitting a wall with OU
- OU Sports
-
-
Sooners did not show up to play
Texas had something to play for. So there’s that. If the Longhorns are to receive an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament, this was just the kind of game they absolutely had to win....
-
With W.V. set free by Big East, Big 12 schedule’s out and it’s backloaded for Sooners
With West Virginia finally receiving its release from the Big East Conference on Tuesday, the Big 12 Conference was finally able to release its conference football schedule for the 2012 season....
-
Red River rut
The rut Oklahoma has been trying to escape for the last two weeks continued to grow deeper with a 69-58 loss to Texas Tuesday night at Lloyd Noble Center....
-
OU gearing up for Texas’ Brown
If Oklahoma guard Steven Pledger had his way, tonight’s meeting with Texas will come down to two players: himself and Longhorn guard J’Covan Brown....
-
Sooners will have a dramatically new look up and down the order, on the mound
The clubhouse at L. Dale Mitchell Park hasn’t changed over the last year. Just about everything else has since the 2011 baseball season ended. The locker stalls have 20 new nameplates. The coaches’ locker room has two new ones as well. ...
-
Despite hard fight, UConn wins big
By its own standards, the Connecticut team that took the floor Monday night at Lloyd Noble Center was not in the same class as its previous incarnations. But a down year for the seven-time national champions is still better than just ...
-
Believe it or not, OU women are progressing
Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma appeared plenty willing to embarrass Oklahoma for a third time in seven games....
-
OU reeling from stunning loss to Texas Tech
As Oklahoma’s players headed toward the exit at United Spirit Arena on Saturday night, most had dazed looks on their faces. The 65-47 loss to Texas Tech was something they didn’t see coming....
-
Husky challenge
No time might seem like a good time to face Connecticut. The Huskies are always terrific and this season will enter Lloyd Noble Center likely ranked No. 2 following Notre Dame’s Sunday loss to West Virginia....
-
Sooners put finishing touches on perfect opener
Oklahoma capped off a perfect opening weekend of softball on Sunday with an 11-1 victory over Kent State. The Sooners were led by another strong outing from pitcher Keilani Rickets and an offensive explosion by Allee Allen....
- More OU Sports Headlines
-
Sooners did not show up to play






