The Norman Transcript

OU Sports

November 19, 2012

OU looking for a better defensive outing against OSU

MORGANTOWN, W.V. — The statistics sheet was just below Oklahoma defensive coordinator Mike Stoops, but he fought the temptation to look down. He knew how inept his unit played in Saturday night’s 50-49 victory over West Virginia. Seeing the final numbers would only add another lash on a night the Sooners took a lot of them.

“Do I have to look at the them?” he said. “I don’t want to see them.”

If he ever glimpsed down, he was going to see the Sooners gave up 778 yards of total offense — the most in the school’s history. His eyes were going to pick up that West Virginia’s Tavon Austin rushed for 344 yards and averaged 16.4 yards per carry. He would see the Sooners allowed six touchdowns drives that were more than 75 yards.

Stoops was going to see that the Sooners improved to 8-2 and 6-1 in the Big 12 and did it in spite of their defense.

“Tough night in a lot of ways,” he said. “Very disappointed in our containment of the football and our ability to tackle in space and come up with a play virtually the whole second half. The second half was a fiasco.”

It was in every sense. The Mountaineers (5-5, 2-5 Big 12) only punted three times all night, and none of them were in the second half.

In seven second-half possessions, OU gave up five touchdowns, forced a turnover on downs late in the third quarter and managed to bat down a Hail Mary pass from West Virginia that was two yards short of the end zone on the final play. The rest was like watching a train wreck at full speed over and over again.

But OU’s defense cannot simply remove the memory of what happened Saturday night. The 14th-ranked Sooners face No. 22 Oklahoma State (7-3, 5-2) at 2:30 p.m. Saturday.

The personnel is different, but the Cowboys and Mountaineers run virtually identical offenses. Receivers spread from sideline to sideline with a quarterback who can find them, a running back that can find creases and a really good offense.

What will OU do to match up with this in Bedlam? It was evident the plan against West Virginia wasn’t good enough.

The only wrinkle the Mountaineers threw at the Sooners was using Austin at running back instead of wide receiver. That one wrinkle hit the Sooners like a tsunami. They continually put seven defensive backs on the field, and Austin was deep into the secondary before any one laid a hand on him.

“Obviously, we weren’t ready for it,” OU head coach Bob Stoops said. “It did really mess us up in what we were doing and how we needed to play. It’s something we’ll have to dissect (Sunday) and see what our answers could be to make improvement.”

They better be good because OU is jumping out of the frying pan and into the fire. The Mountaineers have the ninth best offense in college football. The Cowboys have the third.

“Something has to change. We have to come in on Monday with a new attitude,” OU defensive end David King said. “We’re happy that we won. I won’t take that away. But defensive-wise, it’s embarrassing. It’s poor. It’s not how we want to be remembered, especially with next week being the last game for a bunch of seniors.

“We have to come Monday with a whole new attitude about everything. You take the coaching, and you know they’re going to get us pretty harsh. It was embarrassing. I thank the offense for saving our butts today.”

If OU doesn’t get some serious issues corrected by Saturday, the embarrassment will continue. The winning, however, won’t.

John ShinnFollow me @john_shinnjshinn@normantranscript.com

 

For local news and more, subscribe to The Norman Transcript Smart Edition, or our print edition.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
OU Sports
  • Even under immense scrutiny, Sooners not in do-or-die mode

    A mesh sign down the right-field line spells out Oklahoma’s baseball tradition in years. The two national champions are at the top, the three NCAA tournament super regional appearances are in the middle. At the bottom are the 35 NCAA ...

    May 23, 2013

  • 20130522_SB_Turang_1 Turang sparks squad from bottom of batting order

    Oklahoma coach Patty Gasso has talked repeatedly about how important the bottom of the lineup is to the Sooners. She credits it for carrying the team when the top of the order isn’t performing, and there have been several game-winning ...

    May 23, 2013 1 Photo

  • Aggies lend hand to storm victims

    Getting ready to head to Oklahoma for this weekend’s Super Regional, Texas A&M was already prepared to help. The Aggies had organized a donation among the program for the residents of West, Texas, who were rocked by an explosion last ...

    May 23, 2013

  • Gray will start against Baylor

    The decision to delay the start of the Big 12 tournament until today allowed Oklahoma coach Sunny Golloway to alter his pitching rotation....

    May 23, 2013

  • Big 12 tourney put on hold

    The start of the Big 12 Conference baseball tournament has been delayed until Thursday and the format has been changed to pool play....

    May 22, 2013

  • NCAA Regional Baylor Texas A M Softball Aggies offer quite a story on small diamond

    If ever a softball team figured itself destined to land a colossal upset, Texas A&M may be that team....

    May 22, 2013 1 Photo

  • Ellenberg will play for her country

    When Oklahoma women’s basketball coach Sherri Coale brings her Team USA squad to the World University Games, set to begin July 8 in Kazan, Russia, she will have one of her own in tow....

    May 22, 2013

  • Golloway finds time to serve

    The sun came out Tuesday afternoon and Oklahoma could have practiced at L. Dale Mitchell Park. Its collective mind, however, was still a few miles to the north and the tornado damage in Moore....

    May 22, 2013

  • Sooners receive Big 12 honors

    The Big 12 tournament was pushed a back a day, but the conference announced its All-Big 12 team Tuesday. Oklahoma had six players honored....

    May 22, 2013

  • OU baseball Key factors have left Sooners’ NCAA hopes in serious jeopardy

    It’s been years since Oklahoma felt like it had to win the Big 12 tournament to prolong its season. It missed the NCAA tournament in 2007, but that year, OU was No. 33 in the Ratings Percentage Index. Leaving it out was a stunning ...

    May 21, 2013 1 Photo

The Business Marquee
Facebook