The Norman Transcript

OU Sports

October 11, 2008

Part of OU's loss is on the coach

Commentary

DALLAS — You know what you’re getting with Bob Stoops.

Great coach.

Great recruiter.

Stand up guy.

Terrific helmsman.

As difficult as he can be to interview, he poses nothing but certainty. The good kind. The kind that inspires confidence. Comfortable in his own skin, he knows where he’s going.

Maybe he never thought he’d win a first national championship only two years into his head coaching career. Maybe he thought it would take three or four. So natural in his role, he’s made five conference championships look far more par-for-the-course than any kind of fantastic achievement, which it is.

So how could he lose his touch?

How could he lose it so dramatically and emphatically?

Though Stoops’ Big-Game-Bobness has been in question for some time, ever since OU made a habit of losing its last game of the season, his exposure until recently has been limited. Even if his teams have occasionally appeared less than ready, it wasn’t a matter of the coach taking an unwise course in the moment.

Until now.

It’s true, Oklahoma’s 45-35 loss to No. 5 Texas had several culprits …

Ryan Reynolds knocked out for the season with a torn ACL; Colt McCoy making more plays than Vince Young ever did against OU; the officials hitting Travis Lewis with at least one personal foul for trying to hold McCoy up and taking an interception away from Lamont Robinson; OU’s special teams ceasing to be; a Sooner running game that’s run off a cliff.

… yet for the second straight time, Stoops’ role in a loss couldn’t have been more direct.

It came down to two plays.

Facing fourth-and-6 at its own 48, Stoops had OU fake a punt and darn if Mike Knall didn’t look like an old high school running back, but he came up a yard short and OU handed the ball over leading 28-27 3 minutes short of the fourth quarter.

Then, trailing 38-35, less than 7 minutes from the end and down to their last down at their own 46, the Sooners needed 2 yards to earn another four.

Knall entered the game. He punted.

Bad call.

Once, everything Stoops touched turned to gold.

Now, going back to an attempted onside kick against West Virginia at last season’s Fiesta Bowl, a decision every bit as ill-conceived in real time as in retrospect, in those moments a coach can roll the dice or play it safe, take the path more worn or the one less traveled, Stoops’ moment of truth has not only proven false, but wrong, too.

Trying to explain the fake punt, Stoops said he felt a chance to arrest momentum by maintaining possession and “you’re already without Ryan Reynolds.”

All true, but the Sooners still led and were in position to stick the Longhorns deep. Had they, Texas might have punted more than once the first 29 minutes of the second half. Instead, six plays later, Hunter Lawrence kicked a field goal and Texas led 30-28.

It only got worse.

If Stoops is excused for allowing Knall to relive his tailback days at Scottsdale’s Chaparral High, he can’t be 9 minutes later when all reason in the universe dictated OU’s chances of getting 2 yards on its next play and 52 more before running out of downs had to be better than keeping Texas from driving the field from any distance.

But Stoops’ choice was to put everything on an overworked and shorthanded defense he’d already given a vote of no-confidence to in the third quarter.

Did he think about going for it?

“Probably should have,” he said.

Had he, he would have given what was working for OU — Sam Bradford and the offense — a chance to write the story. Instead, this is the story.

It’s about a coach and a team that might still return to the Big 12 title game, maybe even a BCS title game, because stranger things have happened, even if a Mack Brown-coached underdog Texas team beating OU is plenty strange enough.

But it didn’t have to be this way.

Reynolds didn’t have to get hurt and McCoy didn’t have to make every play and the officials didn’t have to get so much wrong.

So much of it was out of Stoops’ hands.

But not all.

Clay Horning

366-3526

cfhorning@normantranscript.com

Text Only
OU Sports
  • It’s a recipe for success

    Oklahoma softball coach Patty Gasso was answering questions Saturday after her Sooners clinched another return to the Women’s College World Series when, without really meaning to, she began to make it clear her job has, sort of, become ...

    May 28, 2012

  • BIG 12 BASEBALL CHAMPIONSHIP Tigers deny Sooners’ Big 12 title hopes

    OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma wanted to win its first Big 12 tournament in 16 years on Sunday. Missouri needed to win it to get in the NCAA Tournament. Need topped desire at Bricktown Ballpark....

    May 28, 2012 1 Photo

  • 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....

    May 27, 2012

  • NCAA SUPER REGIONAL 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....

    May 27, 2012 1 Photo

  • BIG 12 BASEBALL CHAMPIONSHIP 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 ...

    May 27, 2012 1 Photo

  • 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....

    May 27, 2012

  • 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....

    May 26, 2012

  • 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 ...

    May 26, 2012

  • NCAA SUPER REGIONAL 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....

    May 26, 2012 1 Photo

  • 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 ...

    May 26, 2012

The Business Marquee
Facebook