NORMAN —
Christmas presents were opened around the world this morning. In college football, there’s one stocking stuffer every team is trying to acquire: the mobile quarterback who can not only throw the football but run with it, too.
Oklahoma will face the best of the lot from the 2012 season when it meets Texas A&M in the Cotton Bowl at Cowboys Stadium on Jan. 4 in Arlington, Texas. Aggie quarterback Johnny Manziel threw for 3,419 yards this year and ran for another 1,181. He won the Heisman Trophy, too.
“He’s phenomenal with the football, and he can create so many issues,” OU defensive coordinator Mike Stoops said. “He can run you ragged. I’ve never seen anyone improvise and create like he can. Anytime you lead the Southeastern Conference in yards and points in your first year, what more do you really need to say about the guy?”
The same thing OU’s said about mobile quarterbacks all season: they’re a defensive nightmare.
Defenses are designed to do many things, but most are based on having more people around the ball than can be blocked. A running quarterback drops that advantage from two to one.
It’s something the Sooners haven’t utilized on an every-down basis. Quarterback Landry Jones, who makes his 50th and final career start next month, has never finished a season with positive rushing yards.
Jones, who rushed for negative 103 yards this season, joined Kansas quarterback Dayne Christ as the only Big 12 signal-callers to lead their teams in passing and not finish the season with positive rushing yards.
Historically, Jones and Christ are not unique. The last OU quarterback to finish a season with positive rushing yards was Sam Bradford, who rushed with 47 yards in 2008. He finished his career with 35 career rushing yards.
That could be the biggest change to OU’s offense heading into next season.
OU coach Bob Stoops has thus far declined to name Blake Bell OU’s quarterback heading into the 2013 season. There’s still a quarterback competition he must go through with Drew Allen, Kendal Thompson and Trevor Knight. The ability to throw the ball will be the deciding factor.
“I think for a long time here we’ve wanted a guy that can make decisions, push the ball down the field and get the ball to the skill players. That’s never going to change here,” offensive coordinator Josh Heupel said. “Having a guy that has the ability to extend plays with his feet is something that we put a value on as well. That doesn’t mean he’s a ‘dual-threat guy’ at all.”
However, Heupel recruits OU’s quarterbacks. The four he has on campus all have a trait Jones lacks.
“All of them can run,” Stoops said.
It doesn’t mean OU’s offense will drastically change after the Cotton Bowl. Blake Bell has rushed for 24 touchdowns the past two seasons, but OU’s not going to spend entire games with its short-yardage personnel on the field.
When plays break down, having a quarterback who can leave the pocket and turn into a running threat is an element the Sooners have lacked.
“If there’s a guy that has athleticism with that, then that’s obviously an added bonus,” Heupel said.
Despite all the enormous offensive totals the Sooners have put up since 2007, the running quarterback hasn’t been part of the equation.
That will change after the Cotton Bowl.
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A running QB will be part of OU's future
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Workman's blasts cranks UCO's engine; Bronchos cruise to 5-2 win
Nicole Workman’s solo home run gave Central Oklahoma a lead it would never relinquish and the No. 19-ranked Bronchos went on to topple Winona State 5-2 in the first game of the NCAA Division II Central Super Regional Friday night at the Edmond North High School Softball Complex.
Workman blasted her 14th homer of the season to lead off the second inning, with UCO adding three runs in the third and one more in the fifth to take a commanding 5-0 lead before the Warriors created some anxious moments in their final at bat.
WSU scored two runs and had runners on second and third on with just one out in the top of the seventh, but Kalynn Shrock got the final two batters to close out her fourth straight complete-game outing of the postseason and put the Bronchos in control of the best-of-three series. -
Richters rip competition at KickingBird
The KickingBird 2-man scramble was won by Jeff and Josh Richter, finishing with a 57.9 on May 11.
Jeff Jester and Kevin Wright wrapped up second-place honors with a 59.9 and Rick Morales and Ronnie Roberts placed third (60.1).
In the second flight, the top score was 60.4 by Jerry Bernhardt and Ted Carter. Picking up silver was the tandem of Jerry Fuller and Ramona Jacobi (61.2) and the third-place squad was Dyke Hoppe and Mark VanSickle at 62.0.
Morales was closest to the pin on No. 6 and Jeff Richter landed a dart on hole 14. -
Eagles' season finished; Lopez earns national honor
Southeastern, Fla. eliminated Oklahoma Christian 4-0 om the National Christian College Athletic Association World Series in Mason, Ohio today to advance to the tournament semifinals, while OC closes at 26-26.
OC would have advanced to the semifinals with a win, but completed a terrific turnaround from an 8-34 season in 2012. The Eagles made only the second national-tournament appearance in the program's history, with the other coming in 1972, when OC finished third in the NAIA World Series. -
Multiple baseball camps offered in Edmond
Edmond Schools baseball coaches Kyle Roberts (Edmond Memorial), Jeff Shafer (Edmond Santa Fe) and Karl King (Edmond North) will instruct the Edmond All-Star Baseball Camps starting May 28 at Edmond North High School.
A pair of all-skills camps will take place for kids ages 5 and older from May 28-31 and June 3-6. Times are the same, 9 a.m.-2 p.m.
On June 7, a pitcher/catcher camp will be offered for ages 8 and older with the identical time frame. Cost is $35 for the pitcher/catcher camp and $125 for the all-skills camp.
For further inquiries, contact Karl King at 863-3570. -
Arthur Hills eating up Bronchos
Central Oklahoma’s struggles continued at the NCAA Division II Women’s Golf Championships in Daytona Beach, Fla. Friday.
The Bronchos made 10 double bogeys and two triple bogeys en route to a season-high 329 score on the rugged 6,228-yard, par-72 Arthur Hills Legends Course at LPGA International, leaving UCO in 10th place with a three-round total of 975.
Nova Southeastern has an 881 total heading into Saturday’s final round, giving the four-time defending champion Sharks a one-shot lead over second-place Lynn. -
Bronchos will make 12th appearance in national golf championship Monday
No. 18-ranked Central Oklahoma will make its 12th appearance in the NCAA Division II Men’s Golf Championships in Hershey, Pa. next week.
The 54-hole stroke play portion of the tournament runs Monday-Wednesday at the 7,061-yard, par-71 Hershey Country Club East Course, with the top-eight teams from the 20-team field advancing to match play. -
Online registration for 2013 UCO Endeavor Games now open
Registration is now open online for athletes and volunteers for the 2013 University of Central Oklahoma Endeavor Games, June 6-9, the nation’s largest multi-sport event for athletes with physical disabilities.
Athletes of all ages or sporting experience are invited to register for the event. Community members are also encouraged to register to volunteer with more than 300 volunteer opportunities available.
Similar to the summer Paralympic Games, athletes may register for multiple adaptive sports, which include cycling, indoor archery, outdoor archery, powerlifting, sitting volleyball, shooting, table tennis, track and field, wheelchair basketball, and, for the first time at the UCO Endeavor Games, paratriathlon. The paratriathlon will be limited to athletes over the age of 16 with previous paratriathlon experience. -
Deer Creek drops Carl Albert again for state title
They did it again.
The Deer Creek girls soccer team knocked off rival Carl Albert in the Class 5A state soccer title game for the second consecutive season.
The Lady Antlers, led by freshman Lauren Haivala’s two goals, topped the Titans 2-1 May 10 at Noble High School.
On May 7, Deer Creek blanked Tulsa Edison 2-zip in the semifinals for a chance to play for its fourth state championship in girls soccer. -
UCO to host US women's sitting volleyball team's exhibition matches against Russia
The University of Central Oklahoma will host five exhibition matches of the U.S. Women’s Sitting Volleyball Team versus the Russian National Women Sitting Volleyball Team beginning tonight at 10. Matches continue on Saturday at 5 p.m. and 10 p.m. and a single match on Sunday at 9 a.m.
This will be the first time the Paralympic silver medaling Team USA has faced Russia since 2011. According to Head Coach Bill Hamiter, these matches will serve as preparation for the Sitting Volleyball World Championships in 2014.
Team USA will be available after each match to meet with fans and sign autographs.
All exhibition matches are free and open to the public. -
Impact-making Graves inks with OBU
When a basketball team goes 80-3 over the years a player was there, that athlete has made a profound impact on that particular program.
Not only did she/he leave a legacy athletically to have that type of success in Class 6A, but left a mark in a leadership capacity as well.
Cameerah Graves, Edmond Santa Fe’s standout guard who led 6A in assists her senior season with 129, signed a letter of intent with Oklahoma Baptist University last week. - More Sports Headlines
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