One might be Oklahoma’s most gifted receiver. The other two might be its most punishing blockers.
When looking at the Sooners’ fullbacks and tight ends, it truly has the potential to be a special group because of its versatility.
On the one hand you have Jermaine Gresham. The 6-foot-6, 260-pound junior made a very good case for being the best pass-catching tight end in college football last season. He caught a team-high 11 touchdown passes and was an absolute menace in the red zone.
He’s the essential “big target” every offense covets. He’s too big for most defensive backs to cover and too quick for linebackers to handle in wide spaces.
One of the Sooners’ offensive goals will be to get the ball in Gresham’s hands more often. He had only 37 catches last season. Getting that number around 50 would be a good sign.
“Guys like Jermaine Gresham, we will find more ways to get him the ball and all the other guys that are there,” OU coach Bob Stoops said. “There are only so many spans in the game and, to me, the hardest thing to defend is when you use the whole field and use all of your people. To me you can have certain coverage to where it’s hard to get to one guy but the other guys need to step up and that is where we need to go.”
Gresham can extend defenses. But this is the season he wants to become an all-around player. He’s been a big part of the offense the last two seasons. This is the year he could become an every-down player.
“I think I understand the game a whole lot better. I think I have a better understanding of the game of football,” Gresham said. “I’m in the top physical peak right now, so I’m a better all-around football player.”
If there’s been a chink in his armor, it’s been blocking.
Luckily for the Sooners, they have Brody Eldridge.
Offensive coordinator Kevin Wilson said Eldridge, a 6-foot-5, 265-pound junior, was the offense’s best player in the preseason. There’s no doubt Eldridge has become a favorite of the coaching staff over the last two years. He’s a bruising blocker who is dominant at the point of attack.
Eldridge caught only four passes last season, but was still named to the coaches All-Big 12 team. Expect to see both Eldridge and Gresham on the field a lot this season.
“I told (Jermaine) Gresham he didn’t have to listen to me, but to watch Brody,” Wilson said. And that has helped Jermaine into becoming a fantastic blocker. It’s exciting and intriguing to think of what these players can do for us.”
During the heyday of the wishbone era, fullback was a glamour position at OU.
Players like Leon Crosswhite, Kenny King, Stanley Wilson and others put up huge numbers running up the middle.
But since the Bob Stoops era began in 1999, carries have been almost as rare as losing seasons.
Matt Clapp and Eldridge will share time at the position this season. Clapp, a junior who spent last season in redshirt, is a slightly smaller version of Eldridge at 6-foot-3 and 234 pounds.
Neither are expected to get the ball very much this season.
“We get to catch a ball here and there, but that’s usually about it,” Clapp said.
Odds are that won’t change this season. But there’s a lot that goes into playing these positions that have nothing to do with the ball.
Whatever the Sooners decide to do, they have multiple options.
“We’ve got a lot of versatility,” Wilson said.
John Shinn
366-3536
jshinn@normantranscript.com
OU Sports
Versatility at fullback, tight end
- 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






