Most Disappointing Sooner Season . . . ?

It’s tempting to ask “most disappointing season ever?” but that would be tough to analyze. Let’s stick with the question of most disappointing season of the Stoop’s era? I submit to you that yes, it was indeed the most disappointing . . . but it’s close.

This was only the 4th season in Bob Stoop’s tenure of 13 seasons where he has not won 11 games. One of the 4 was his first year as head coach so he definitely gets a pass. Let’s take a closer look at the other 3.

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2005 was definitely a bad year. They lost 2 of the first 3 games including a home loss to TCU. They were pounded by Texas and a late season loss to Tech sealed a disappointing season. And yet, they won 6 of their last 7. They won their bowl game and finished strong with an 8-4 record. It was a bad year but not totally unexpected as we were breaking in a new quarterback and we had lost a lot of seniors. No one expected much from the Sooners. They started off at #7 but most people agreed it was a rebuilding year.

2009 is the only other season to rival 2012 in disappointment. In fact, it was similar in a number of ways. It started with very high expectations with Sam Bradford choosing to come back for one more year. The Sooners were ranked #3 in the pre-season. But the injuries bit them early and hurt. All-American TE Jermaine Gresham went down before the season started and Bradford went down in the first half of the first game. The Sooners went on to start the season at 3-3 including heartbreaking losses to BYU, Miami, and Texas by a combined FIVE points! A loss to Nebraska was painful and then came the OU nemesis, Texas Tech, to bite them again. This gave Stoops only his second 5 loss team during his tenure. The Sooners did finish by beating OSU and winning their bowl game but they only won one game on the road that year. This was a very disappointing season . . . without a doubt. But losing a quarterback that would go on to become the #1 overall pick in the NFL draft gave a plausible reason for this disappointment.

The 2012 season started with a pre-season ranking at #1 and talk by Stoops and the players that this was the year for National Title #8. The team was featured on ESPNU All-Access and they came across as tough and confident. Little did we know at that time that they talked a lot better than they played. The Sooners got off to a decent start winning 6 in a row with the high point being a dominating victory over Texas. Everyone could see that OU was not quite as dominant as had been expected. What was wrong? They were still winning right? And yet something was there. And then came the shocking loss to Tech . . . at home . . . snapping the longest home winning streak in the nation. This is the same Tech team that would not win another game the rest of the year, losing the next 5 in a row. This one game seemed to spell doom for both teams in an odd way. The Sooners bounced back with 2 impressive victories over a good K-State team and a decent A&M squad. Injuries once again hit the Sooners hard taking down their starting RB and arguably the best receiver in college football. The loss of Broyles probably had a bigger impact than any as Landry didn’t throw another TD pass the rest of the season. And then the defense let their guard down again against a Baylor team that had never beaten the Sooners before. Another embarrassing loss left the Sooners reeling. And then we know what happened in Stillwater. The worst loss by the Sooners in bedlam history since 1945.

If the Sooners win their bowl game against a very beatable Iowa team then they will end up 10-3 and salvage a little dignity. But they have to win the bowl game to most likely avoid ending up as the lowest ranked AP pre-season #1 in history. As it is, even with a win, they will most likely be the lowest ranked in 50 years.

Is this the worst year in the Stoop’s era? Probably not.

But there is good reason to call it the most disappointing.

The reason? Expectations.

By who? By Stoops himself. 

Sooners Season Recap: Fool’s Gold

Where to start?  The coaches?  The defense?  The wide receivers?  Landry?  The list is too long and almost too daunting to even take to task, but I've had a couple of nights to sleep on it and am ready to unleash.

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First off, while the season may not technically be over yet, it is already a huge failure.  From the preseason #1 ranking to the defensive "sharks" the players hyped themselves as, they are nothing more than fool's gold.  Try to digest this little nugget: the Sooners finished behind Baylor in the Big 12 standings.  Yes, the same Baylor team who had never beaten the Sooners in their entire history finished ahead of them in the Big 12.  Not only will they end the season no where near their preseason projections, but they will finish in a humbling 4th place in their own conference which they have dominated over the past decade and didn't even require a conference championship game for the first time this season.

The real kicker?  All the Sooners had to do was beat OSU and they would have lucked into yet another Big 12 title and right into the Fiesta bowl.  Instead, they get slaughtered in Stillwater and drop down to 4th place in the Big 12 and a comfortable spot in the ole Insight.com Bowl.  I half wish Stoops would decline the invite and just take us into the offseason. This season is over and a 100-0 win over Iowa isn't going to make it any better.

So where does the blunt of the blame lie?  Well it's hard to pinpoint one specific place to lay all the blame when so many contributing factors were at play.  Let's break it down piece by piece shall we.

The coaches.  The sooner coaching staff failed this team in so many ways that it's hard to fit them all in one paragraph.  They allowed this team to feel a sense of entitlement and never brought them back down to reality throughout the course of the season.  Venables has failed to make the necessary changes in the secondary, be it different schemes or players, and has allowed them to continually get burned over and over by the same plays.  Heupel has failed to really get a grasp on the play calling and never even attempted to give the run game a chance, especially in Stillwater.  Stoops has failed to do anything about repeated special teams issues and instead of recognizing his assistant coaches failing and doing something about it he has let them get away with murder.

The Secondary.  The defensive unit as whole has not be horrible this season, but there is one glaring weakness.  The secondary.  The secondary unit has cost the Sooners time and time again and after a certain point of blaming the coaches, you have to look at the players and hold them accountable.  What was once thought to be one of the strong points on the team has done a 180 and turned into one of the biggest weaknesses.  OSU has one of the most high powered offenses in the nation.  They are going to score points.  I get that.  What I don't get is how Texas Tech and Baylor were allowed to shred our secondary and then here we are the very last game of the regular season with the exact same problems.  That's just plain unacceptable.

The offense.  After going off and proclaiming that Mr. Jones, for all his faults, has stepped up for the Sooners in big games…he falls flat on his face.  Perhaps one of Landry Jones' worst games to date, he single handedly gave the opposition more points than he earned for his own team.  The wide receivers weren't much help either.  Landry had a pitiful game, but on the rare occasion he did make a good pass, it seemed like the ball was slipping right through the hands of every receiver on the field.  Clearly Ryan Broyles presence was missed, but even a healthy Broyles wouldn't have saved this broken group of receivers.  Going up against one of the worst defenses in not only the Big 12, but the entire nation, and the Sooners could manage only a banked in FG before half and a Belldozer TD during cleanup duty.  That is simply embarrassing.  We knew the defense was broken, but who knew the offense was broken as well?

All this leads to quite a bit of frustration in Sooner land and I, for one, am not nearly as optimistic for next years outlook as I was before.  Landry Jones has done some great things in his career at OU, but I pray every night that he chooses to enter the NFL draft next year.  For all his great qualities, he just doesn't have that "it" factor that gives you supreme confidence in him when the game is on the line.  Sure, he has delivered on a few occasions, but he's also flopped on numerous occasions too and that instability drives me insane.  

Bring on the Blake Bell era.  This is the University of Oklahoma, people.  Why are we still running a gimmicky high paced, spread offense and throwing the ball 100 times a game?  Let's get our big boys in the trenches and take a page from the almighty SEC and run the ball.  The spread has worked against other inferior Big 12 opponents, but it never works against great defenses.  It's time for a change of philosophy in Norman.  It's time to start recruiting defensive players first and focusing on establishing a solid run game.  Let Blake Bell and Dom Whaley pound the rock and let our superior athletes do what they were recruited to do.  Schools with lesser talent run the gimmicky spread offense because they have to.  Oklahoma does not have to.

It's time for a change, Bob.  You can no longer say "Well we won the Big 12."  You didn't win anything this year and you haven't done much more than beat up on the other Big 12 schools in the recent past either.  Get out of your hard headed ways and admit it's time for a change.  Change up the offense.  Change up the defense.  We need some change or we will be stuck with this same good but not great team every single year no matter how many 5 star recruits you bring in.  The Belldozer formation was creative and worked wonders.  We need more thinking outside the box like that if hope for #8 in the near future is to be had.  I am tired of the high preseason hype for the Sooners and the eventual let down at some point during every season.  Bob, I'm pleading with you, make some changes.

OU “Poked” out of the stadium, OSU – Big 12 Champs!

Honestly, did anyone in their right mind think it would be that bad? I'd be willing to lay down the farm that most people thought Bedlam 2011 was going to be similar to 2010, 2008, 2006, 2004, etc. A classic shootout. There were plenty of fireworks. Only this time, the Sooners were the fuse and the Cowboys were the matches. From the opening kickoff, you could sense Boone Pickens Stadium was ready to erupt. It didn't take long. Mistake after mistake and coaching woe after coaching woe sent OU down in a laugher.

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Early on, Josh Heupel drew up an unusual offensive game plan. He came out throwing every down. The first run play was an end-around to Trey Franks that picked up two or three yards. No Roy Finch, no Brandon Williams and no Belldozer (more on this in a bit) the entire first quarter basically. Meanwhile, Weeden and company marched methodically down the field over and over putting up 10 quick points and led after one quarter, 10-0. The Pokes did whatever they wanted. Randle and Smith ran wild. Blackmon made his plays. The defense did what they've done all year and forced 5 takeaways. In a word, the Cowboys ROLLED! The Sooners would never get it any closer as OSU routed OU 44-10, and it could have been a lot worse.

What happened last night made a statement to the world. OSU isn't a one hit wonder. They are for real and will compete in the Big 12 and perhaps the national stage for many moons. Mike Gundy has this program on the straight and narrow. There's visible discipline, ball security, heart and determination in every player on the sidelines. The Cowboys have fun playing. They don't care what the spread is, who the opponent is, or what has happened in the past. Gundy has preached the "here and now" all year, and minus one second half collapse, the Pokes have been perfect this year. Still, with 1 loss, up until about an hour and a half ago, 77% of the country thought OSU should be playing in the National Championship game vs LSU including me.

When it was announced there will be a rematch of LSU vs Alabama in the title game, twitter, facebook and multiple other social media outlets flooded with hate toward the BCS. I agree folks, it's a complete mess and a joke. Sure, the Iowa State loss was terrible and Alabama's lone loss came at the hands of LSU….in Tuscaloosa….at night….in front of a national audience. I agree with Mike Gundy. "They've had their shot, give us ours". It's a quirky situation, but a rematch of maybe the most boring game of century is not something I'm fired up about watching. Saban said it himself in 2003. "Any team that doesn't win their Conference Championship has no business in the National Championship". Well, Nick, what say you now? OSU's loss came on the night the team found out their university had a national tragedy. No way were they of sound mind and body. Alabama played Penn St on the road and won. Big whoop. OSU has had the better schedule, beat more ranked teams, and would bring way more excitement to the table in New Orleans. Mark May, Craig James and numerous others are SEC bias. They want the rematch and they are morons. Yes, defense wins championships. Ever think that maybe SEC offenses just suck that bad? I think that's the main reason the defenses look so good. I will say this, LSU's defense this year is stacked.

All that said, great season for OSU. Be proud of your team. You are Big 12 Champions outright. No ties. Please, do us all a favor. Throw those Big 12 South Co-Champion rings away. That's not good. Now you have a real one. A matchup with Andrew Luck and the Stanford Cardinal await. After I dissect this matchup more, I'll update with an article. That's all for now. I just have have to come up with more hate adjectives to come up with the BCS.