For the first time this season, Ryan Reynolds didn't need to be a hero on defense.
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A week after being exploited by Texas tight end Jermichael Finley, Reynolds found himself on the sideline watching Nic Harris and Lewis Baker chase Martin Rucker and Chase Coffman all over the field.
"I thought it worked out really well,” OU defensive coordinator Brent Venables said. "There were some issues in regards to matchups. We wanted to put guys in who could handle those matchups. Ryan understood.”
Reynolds, the Sooners' second-leading tackler, is the weakest of the OU linebackers in pass coverage. Venables told Reynolds last Sunday his role would be reduced.
"There are some things he needs to get better at, and he will,” Venables said. "But he also watches tape and that's where they attack you — where he was going to be at.”
Venables estimated Reynolds saw the field for 30 of Missouri's 79 offensive snaps. He finished the game with four tackles.
Coffman and Rucker combined for 137 yards and a touchdown on 16 catches.
• Return of the Mac: Missouri wideout Jeremy Maclin continued his reign as the NCAA leader in all-purpose yardage, rushing four times for 32 yards and two touchdowns, catching five passes for 53 yards and amassing 104 yards on three kick returns.
Sooner fans might remember Maclin as a former OU commit. The redshirt freshman originally picked Oklahoma in early 2005, but wavered on his commitment after a December visit to Columbia.
"He's very fast, very explosive,” said Venables, who earlier in the week predicted Maclin would end up an NFL first-round draft pick. "But we got plenty of good players, trust me. He's not the first guy to de-commit.”
• Perfect timing: Mother Nature played 12th Man for the Sooners late in the first quarter.
With 24-mph wind gusts at his back, Bob Stoops called a timeout to keep possession in the north end zone for Garrett Hartley's 28-yard field goal attempt. Hartley boomed it through with four seconds remaining.
"(The wind) was a big factor as far as kickoffs and punts,” Stoops said. "We scored with the wind and were able to kick a good number of (kickoffs) out.”
The thrifty use of game stoppage also allowed OU to kick off with the wind before the quarter expired.
"The only one we didn't kick out going that way was that one, so we wasted a timeout,” Stoops said. "Of course, they don't give you any points at the end of the game for having (timeouts left).”
• What might've been: Oklahoma went 0-for-3 on booth reviews, and each call proved costly for the Sooners.
Chris Brown had a first-quarter touchdown catch overturned after replay officials determined Brown's knee touched the ground at the Missouri 19-yard line.
In the second quarter, video review showed Malcolm Kelly bobbling a 17-yard reception as he fell out of bounds. OU also lost a challenge when replay confirmed Juaquin Iglesias fumbled as he was being tackled on a kick return late in the third quarter.
"I thought I still had the ball, and then when I got up I didn't have it,” Iglesias said.
• No Tony the Tiger: The Tigers were without tailback Tony Temple, their leading rusher (70.2 yards per game), who stayed in Columbia with an ankle injury.
• Possible rematch: Half the season remains before the Big 12 championship game in San Antonio, but a rematch between the Sooners and Tigers definitely is possible.
There's work to be done before then, however. The Tigers (5-1) have a huge contest at home against Texas Tech (6-1) next Saturday.
• Brahaney honored: Oklahoma honored former All-American center Tom Brahaney at halftime. Brahaney will be inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame on Dec. 4.
Brahaney anchored the OU offensive line during the heyday of the wishbone. He becomes the 18th Sooner enshrined in the hall. Oklahoma's last inductee wasJoe Washingtonin 2005.
Other notable 2007 inductees include Boston College quarterback Doug Flutie, Oregon wide receiver Ahmad Rashad and Penn State coach Joe Paterno.
By Blake Jackson, John Rohde
and Scott Wright
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I consider myself to be one of the biggest OU fans in the world and would love to see calls go our way, but each of the three calls I feel were the right calls. Brown did make contact with the ground, Kelly didn't have control and Iglesias lost the ball before touching the ground (he was too focusing on the guy hitting him from behind). Replay does take to long and gives the other team time to make adjustments while waiting for the replay. The play that should have been reviewed was the Rucker touchdown in the final seconds. That score may have affected the spread and potentially cost us points in some of the polls.
shirley someone at the ncaa reviews every review. if so, there are probably quite a few ex-review refs based on what i've seen. and it's not just ou that's getting the raw end of this deal, although i'd like to see how many ou plays have been reviewed compared to other schools. maybe they should replay they should put the "indisputable" evidence on the big screen, if the school has one. at least in my day a call was THE call. if you didn't like it you had about 25 seconds to get over it, it didn't interupt the game, it was just part of it. you could aways toss an orange toward the ref at the end of the game. if they can't get it right the ncaa should do away with it.
My question is, why does Stoops have to ask for a review on a questionable turnover, and lose a timeout when the refs questioned an OU pass play (no score - no turnover) without Missouri using their challange or timeout? I agree with Stoops - that is BS. It was a catch by the way.... and there was no way they had indisputable evidence to over-rule the call on the field. Is the guy from the Oregon game back?
drop the "review in the booth".I notice that the Sooners come out short on this so far, but so do a lot of other teams. It is a major waste of time, it has an affect on the players and slows the momentum of the game. The NCAA is wrong on this one.
Good points, Grant. Both calls you referred to were wrongly reversed. I agree that the review process needs to be scrapped, and not just because OU has been repeatedly victimized by it. It's a waste of time, and assuming the refs actually try to get the calls right - the Oregon game last year notwithstanding - blown calls don't occur that frequently.
I haven't seen them yet, but my brother (who is a very fair, even-keeled fan) called after both Chris Brown's "roll over the tackle" and Kelly's "bobble" reviews. He said both should have gone our way, especially if these ref's would abide by the "indisputable evidence" clause. I think when Bob demanded the Iglesias fumble review, what he was actually saying to the refs was, "Why are you only reviewing close plays that could go against us? I think you called this one right, but let's be fair here." We Sooners sure are snake-bit on the review issue. The list just keeps growing. I don't know about other fans, but when officiating is bad, it just feels lousy and unfair... for the whole sport. The guys in stripes need to be better. Review definitely needs to be better, or dropped. It takes tons of time and it doesn't get calls any more correct than the naked eye. Our players need to just execute despite that. Remember a few years ago, when the motto on t-shirts was "FINISH"? Our motto in the locker room ought to be "LEAVE NO DOUBT." We've got to be better than bad refs. We've got to be enough in command that a lucky play or a last second field goal doesn't matter. We weren't against Colorado (we didn't deserve to win anyway). Refs took away Oregon and Texas Tech 2005. OSU 2006 was too close cause we sat on it. Boise State was close enough to win on trickery. But, we were good enough last night. And that's all that matters this year.
OU will take this win, baby Forget about style... 10/14/2007 NORMAN — College football has become strikingly similar to the National Football League. Win by any means necessary; count your blessings; on to the next...
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