Bailey will be OSU's starting kicker
Cowboys find their big foot
Bailey will be OSU's starting kicker
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By Andrea Cohen
Published: August 28, 2008
STILLWATER — Dan Bailey was many things at Southwest Covenant High School, a tiny private Christian school in Yukon. He was class valedictorian, an individual state champion in golf, a member of the National Honor Society and an All-State and all-conference kicker for the football team.
Out of necessity, he also did a little building on the side. See, at Southwest Covenant High School, which has fewer than 300 students from kindergarten through 12th grade, there's no football stadium. The eight-man football team plays in other schools' stadiums. That was no big deal, Bailey said. The problem for the aspiring kicker was the absence of uprights. "So we had to make goal posts ourselves,” Bailey said. "We just got some pipe and welded it together and put some cement in the ground and stuck it down. I think it was my junior year when we finally made some.” When Oklahoma State kicks off its season at Washington State on Saturday, Bailey will be the starter on kickoffs and field goals. That's no small feat considering he had to compete for the job against freshman Quinn Sharp, a Texan who rivals.com listed as the top kicker in the class of 2008. "Quinn's really talented, and we've been competing back and forth pretty hard,” Bailey said. "He's been pushing me every day. The offseason went really well.” Special teams coordinator Joe DeForest said that's an understatement. "He's made the biggest improvement from one season to another than any kicker I've ever been around,” DeForest said. "His elevation on his ball has been tremendous. He's really worked hard. It's a credit to him — he wanted to win the job. He knew we signed the No. 1 kicker in the country coming in, and he's performed so well he's won the job going into the first game.” Bailey was the backup most of last season, stepping in when, as DeForest put it, "(Starter Jason) Ricks sort of took a dive.” Bailey took over after the Texas game and converted 2-of-4 field goal attempts against Baylor and Oklahoma. He made both attempts inside the 30-yard line and missed the two attempts that were beyond the 40. Bailey, who DeForest described as extremely level-headed, said the key to handling one of football's most pressure-packed positions is to relax, focus and not think too much. "I've been doing it so long now that it's pretty natural,” Bailey said. "You just go through the motions and do what you do in practice.”
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