The Norman Transcript

OU Sports

December 30, 2005

OU's new offense a wild ride

Sports Editor Clay Horning's column on the Holiday Bowl

SAN DIEGO — Rhett Bomar was occasionally spectacular and there were times you just knew a certain portion of the Sooner Nation, watching at home or in person at what used to be called Jack Murphy Stadium, the only major league stadium ever named after a sports writer, were celebrating Chuck Long’s departure to run the show at nearby San Diego State.

Because, for a while there, it was fun.

You kind of got the feeling Kevin Wilson, all season long, had been begging Long to direct more passes to Juaquin Iglesias; and for that matter, maybe even use the pass to set up the run.

But as great as that sounds and as beautiful as it looked for a moment here and a moment there at Thursday night’s Holiday Bowl, here’s what it yielded.

Three points.

It was anything but vanilla and still OU was limited to one measly Garrett Hartley field goal before the Pacific Life Holiday Bowl Presented by the San Diego Union Tribune was momentarily turned over to the North Island Credit Union Halftime Show.

And when the Sooners came back out, it looked like Wilson might produce a Second Half sponsored by Running It Up The Middle. It was almost like he got a good talking to from Bob Stoops at the half, who told him eight carries were nowhere near enough for Adrian Peterson.

It even seemed to work when Peterson’s long run and fumble appeared to turn into a Chris Messner touchdown before it was called back on Davin Joseph’s hold.

The Sooners didn’t respond by abandoning the run, but they quit trying to force it. And just like that, OU was off to the races.

You know what it looked like?

It looked like just the thing Wilson must have envisioned from the start. It looked great and fun and exciting.

Seven more and a lot less heartache if Peterson had only held onto the ball.

Long might have directed the two greatest back-to-back seasons of offense in Sooner history, and still, what Wilson came up with between the end of the regular season and what became Thursday night’s convincing but scary-as-all-get-out 17-14 victory over No. 6 Oregon, will only drive the Sooners and their fans bonkers waiting for next season to arrive.

Bomar might not have played his best game, but he still looked so comfortable, in the pocket and on the run, hitting receivers in stride and time and again on third down the way Jason White used to do it. And darned if the patterns the Sooners were running didn’t appear more aggressive, too.

And it’s not like OU got very far away from college football’s best running back. One busted play cost Peterson 17 yards the wrong way, so his numbers were a little skewed. As it happened, his best running came only after the Sooners quit trying to force him through the Duck line.

But there’s no getting away from Wilson.

Bomar was relaxed and Peterson’s best runs came on these funky misdirections that seemed to have been drawn up over the last three weeks.

And after dinking passes off to Peterson and his wide receivers, no play was called any better than the one that saw Bomar finally throw to J.D. Runnels after the he got behind the Duck secondary for a 17-yard touchdown pass, giving OU its first lead. It was like they were saving it.

Of course, OU played fantastic defense, too.

And Clint Ingram saved the day.

But that’s another story.

OU Sports
  • Even harder

    She was already a warrior.

    March 19, 2010

  • Tiny problem

    Celebrity gossip Web site TMZ.com reported early Thursday morning it has obtained a document showing Oklahoma freshman forward Tiny

    March 19, 2010

  • Down for the count

    OMAHA, Neb. — Three Oklahoma wrestlers are one win away from achieving All-American status after the first day of the NCAA Wrestling Championships at Quest Center.

    March 19, 2010

  • Sooners rely on their bullpen

    It’s typically one of the biggest momentum killers in a baseball. When a coach starts that slow walk out to the mound for a pitching change, there’s sense that nothing is going right.

    March 19, 2010

  • No one can stop them

    FULLERTON, Calif. — Eleventh-ranked Oklahoma’s trip to the West Coast continued Thursday in the first day of Cal-State Fullerton’s Judi Garman Classic.

    March 19, 2010

  • Another come-from-behind victory

    By John Shinn Transcript Sports Writer Casey Johnson winces every time he swings the bat. He has a nagging injury in his right hand that just won’t go away. A cold night like Wednesday only makes matters worse.

    March 18, 2010

  • No worries for Sooner women

    By Clay Horning Transcript Sports Editor Oklahoma is the No. 3 seed in the Kansas City Regional and will begin NCAA Tournament play around 9 p.m. Sunday at Lloyd Noble Center against South Dakota State. The Jackrabbits are the No. 14 seed.

    March 18, 2010

  • vernon.jpg Nothing easy

    By John Shinn Transcript Sports Writer All of the 330 wrestlers set to compete at the NCAA Championships today had to win tough mat

    March 18, 2010 1 Photo

  • OU wrestling notepad-Full Sooner squad heads to Omaha

    By John Shinn Transcript Sports Writer Oklahoma enters the NCAA Wrestling Championships ranked No. 8, but has put itself in a position to compete for the national championship.

    March 18, 2010

  • oubase.jpg Sooners do the little things, win

    Oklahoma wasn’t dominant Tuesday night at L. Dale Mitchell Park. It settled for doing all the little things right in a 4-2 victory over Massachusetts.

    March 17, 2010 1 Photo

Download Brackets

The Business Marquee

Community Calendar

Loading…
Events by eviesays.com