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Oklahoma-Tulsa: What to Watch E-mail
Written by Allen Kenney   
Wednesday, 16 September 2009 13:54

Date: Sept. 19, 2009
Time: 8 p.m. EST
Venue: Gaylord Family Memorial Stadium (Norman, Okla.)
Vegas Line: OU -15

In 2005, TCU rolled into Norman as a 21-point underdog for the season opener against OU and left with a huge upset win. A week later, everyone expected the Sooners to pound out their frustrations on an undermanned Tulsa squad, but the scrappy Golden Hurricane gave OU all it could handle before succumbing in a 31-15 game that was much closer than the final score indicated.

The parallels between that game and this week's matchup should have Sooner Nation taking notice. After the stunning loss to BYU in week one, OU's scrimmage with Idaho State last week gave the team an opportunity to work out a few kinks. With all the problems that came to light during L'Affair Cougar, though, the Sooners still have plenty to sort out. Watch:

1. How TU attacks the middle of OU's defense

The tried-and-true formula for hurting the Sooner defense is capitalizing on the holes in the middle of the field left vacant by blitzing linebackers and safeties. BYU victimized OU repeatedly with shallow crosses, hooks and drag routes, picking up first downs and catching speedy receivers on the run for long gains. Lately, just about any offensive coordinator worth his salt has tried to hammer the Sooners in the center of the field, so expect Tulsa's Herb Hand to do the same.

2. The number of balls thrown to the tight ends

Jermaine Gresham's absence obviously leaves a huge hole in the OU lineup, and none of his understudies have shown enough chops yet to fill the void. It's asking way too much of one--or all--of them to replicate Gresham's

production. However, the group has one catch combined in the first two weeks of the season. The most accomplished of the remaining tight ends, Brody Eldrgide, is playing with a broken hand and is better known for his blocking prowess. If someone can't step up to at least give Landry Jones and Sam Bradford a reliable outlet in the passing game, the Sooners may have to re-evaluate their most basic offensive sets.

3. What defensive coordinator Brent Venables does to contain Tulsa quarterback G.J. Kinne

Mobile quarterbacks who can move around when plays break down are another big bugaboo for the OU D. Part of that is probably attributable to sloppy tackling, with aggressive Sooner defenders going for the kill, rather than focusing on just bringing the QB down. Whatever the cause may be, the Sooners are going to face a number of signal callers this season who can make plays with their feet, including Kinne. So far this season, the Texas transfer is averaging 5 yards per carry on 26 attempts. While Kinne presents a challenge on designed quarterback run plays, his scrambling ability outside the pocket should concern Venables even more.

4. OU's offensive tempo

Like the Sooners, Tulsa played at one of quickest tempos on offense in the country last season under departed offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn, averaging 22.82 seconds per play. The Golden Hurricane has slowed it down a bit through the first two weeks of 2009, but the hurry-up remains part of TU's offensive arsenal. The 2008 Oklahoma team probably would have loved the opportunity to push the pace with the 'Cane, but this is a different squad--one that doesn't seem as prepared for the helter skelter of the no-huddle. If Tulsa starts going light speed, will the Sooners try to keep up? Or, will they go the opposite way and try to work the clock?

5. DeMarco Murray's yards per carry

Is the Sooner speedster really back at full strength? Murray had an outstanding 2007, but he definitely showed some tentativeness last season. It showed up in his stats, as the Las Vegas native's average yards per carry dipped from 6.0 in '07 to 5.6 in '08. Murray appears to be running well so far in 2009, gaining a little more than 7 yards per carry. OU needs Murray and all of his explosiveness this year to offset some of the lost production in the passing game from last season.

6. The OU wide receivers' hands

The Sooners' new receiving corps is off to a disappointing start to the season. Last week, out of Oklahoma's 18 completions, only three went to receivers who are seeing their first significant action this season (DeJuan Miller, Brandon Caleb and Cameron Kenney). The new guys seem to be dropping catchable balls left and right. If the Sooners want to have any hope of winning another conference title, someone other than Ryan Broyles needs to step up and become a threat in the passing game. Just holding on to the rock would be a good start.

Comments (5)Add Comment
Two other concerns. . .
written by HiDesertSooner, September 16, 2009
Good analysis. I'd add TU blitzes and 3rd down conversions to your list.

We're into the 3rd week of the season and we're still unsettled at OL. I'm concerned about the time Landry will be given to go through his progressions. Because of their scheme, TU can and will come at us in ways BYU didn't.

As for 3rd down conversions, we had 4 of 13 last week. It was good enough to beat ISU because they were simply so bad but it will take better execution to beat TU.

The good news is that its a home game. We play at a different level at home.
uh
written by ouroger, September 17, 2009
OU was 27 point favorites against TCU
Re: Two other concerns
written by AK, September 17, 2009
Thanks for your feedback, HiDesert. Those are all excellent points. I skipped going through the o-line's issues, as that looks like it could be something that dogs the team all season. There's plenty of reason to expect things will get better, but watching our for how the line plays is a given right now.

Great points about TU's scheme. The 'Cane's scheme is the kind that has given OU plenty of trouble in the past.

As for third downs, consider that OU has had 10 yards or more to go on seven of 14 third down situations this year. Cut out the penalties and improve play on first and second down, and I bet you'd see the third-down conversions improve.

Thanks again, and look forward to hearing more from you.

AK
Re: uh
written by AK, September 17, 2009
Roger,

My bad. Phil Steele's info says OU was a 25-point fav against TCU in 2005. Thanks for pointing that out.

AK
Re: OL
written by HiDesertSooner, September 17, 2009
AK --

You're right about the OL. This could be an ongoing issue which could undermine our season as our schedule gets a lot tougher after Tulsa. I'm hopeful though.

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 16 September 2009 19:42
 

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