Sam Bradford won the right to be Oklahoma’s starting quarterback. But what exactly he’s won remains a mystery to the redshirt freshman from Oklahoma City.
That’s the thing with the Sooners’ quarterbacks this season. Neither Bradford, junior Joey Halzle nor freshman
Keith Nichol have a proven track record of success.
They don’t really have a proven track record of anything at the college level. It was one the reasons the quarterback competition became such a long process.
Bradford was the best of the three in practices and scrimmages. It was enough to give him the starting job.
“He has nice size and I think he sees well. And I think he can make all the throws, as far as deep and intermediate,” offensive coordinator Kevin Wilson said. “He can move well and plays on the run. I think he is probably one of the more composed guys.”
But there’s a level of trust that must exist between the quarterback, the coaching staff and the team. There’s a difference between thinking a quarterback will do the right thing and knowing it.
In the end, speculating about the Sooners’ offensive success is like putting a motor together and not having any gasoline. There’s no way of knowing if it will run without the key ingredient.
There’s a wide-spread belief quarterback play is that final ingredient for the eighth-ranked Sooners. Bradford will be surrounded by championship-level talent on all four sides.
“Offensive line, tight ends, running backs, wide receivers. Every position you can think of is going to be a weapon this year,” he said.
But those weapons become muzzled without an effective quarterback.
Josh Heupel and Jason White put up incredible numbers in their seasons as OU’s starting quarterback. Fans remember the great plays they created, but coaches also remember the disasters they avoided.
“The thing they had, they both played really smart,” Bradford said. “They took care of the football. I think that’s one of the biggest things. If something is not there, you can’t force it.”
Composure in tough situations is what a defines a quarterback. Bradford is untested in that regard.
Bradford has all the other tools to follow the trail Heupel and White blazed. He’s 6-foot-5 and 220 pounds. He has a strong right arm, but is nimble enough to get out of the pocket and make something happen.
He’s ready to put all those tools to use when the Sooners open the season at 6 p.m. Saturday against North Texas at Owen Field.
Bradford’s excited about the opportunity. He also knows the pressure of his position is enormous.
“I’ve seen all the great teams here. I’ve seen OU win,” he said. “I think now it’s my responsibility to go out there and help this team win football games.”
The Sooners think he will. But no one knows for sure.
“My coach said that if you have hope in one hand and put pile of something in the other hand, you have the same stuff,” Wilson said. “He needs to transfer that to Saturdays and we will not know until we get out there.”
Bradford’s job is to remove the doubt.
John Shinn
366-3536
jshinn@normantranscript.com
OU Sports
Mystery man
Bradford is the starter, but lack of experience leaves lingering question
- OU Sports
-
-
Sooners make winning look easy
As Oklahoma’s players locked arms around the pitching circle, coming together for what passed as a celebration following Saturday’s 7-1 NCAA Super Regional-clinching victory over Arizona, three gloves remained near second base....
-
There are no easy outs in the lineup
Looking for a gameplan to stop Oklahoma? Well, one may or may not be available, but walking two of the first three Sooners you face certainly isn’t part of it. Just ask Arizona’s Kenzie Fowler....
-
Sooners will play for Big 12 championship
OKLAHOMA CITY, — It’s been 16 years since Oklahoma won the Big 12 tournament. It’s closer now than its ever been to ending the streak. The Sooners rolled through Baylor, 7-2, on Saturday at Bricktown Ballpark to advance to the tournament’s ...
-
Sooners send five more to nationals
AUSTIN, Texas — Oklahoma track and field teams had five more individuals qualify for the NCAA Championship on Saturday evening at the NCAA West Preliminary. The men’s 4x100-meter relay team also advanced to the national semifinals....
-
OU sophomore Jao-Javanil wins NCAA golf title
FRANKLIN, Tenn. — Oklahoma’s Chirapat Jao-Javanil made Oklahoma golf history Friday, becoming the first Sooner, man or woman, to win an individual NCAA national championship....
-
Pitching staff is exactly where Golloway wants it to be
When the Big 12 tournament began, Oklahoma felt like it had the pitching staff to make a deep run. Dillon Overton, Jordan John, Jonathan Gray and Damien Magnifico gave them four quality starters and a closer — Steven Okert — capable of ...
-
Sooners shut out Wildcats, need one more win for WCWS entry
Oklahoma might have scored more runs, not committed an error and starting pitcher Keilani Ricketts could have been just a little more efficient along the way....
-
Sooners send 4 more to NCAAs
AUSTIN, Texas – Oklahoma’s track and field teams added four individuals to the list of Sooners advancing to the NCAA championship Friday at the NCAA West Preliminary. In addition to the four new qualifiers, Brittany Borman advanced to the ...
-
Big 12, SEC deal breaks the mold
It is unclear what the on-the-field product of the game-for-which-there-is-not-yet-a-name will be. Indeed, all we really know is the Big 12 and SEC plan to play a game on Jan. 1, 2015 (and on every Jan. 1, thereafter) that will include ...
-
Rivalry helped shape program
For coach Patty Gasso, it goes all the way back to 1995, her first year at Oklahoma. That was when her Sooners played Arizona six times throughout the season. Those Sooners were “annihilated” in all six of those contests....
- More OU Sports Headlines
-
Sooners make winning look easy



