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K-State's Collin Klein inspired OU's Belldozer

Written By Sepatu on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 22.49

Sooners cooked up formation with Blake Bell after seeing Wildcats' success

Updated: September 20, 2012, 1:27 AM ET

By Jake Trotter | SoonerNation

NORMAN, Okla. -- Kansas State quarterback Collin Klein always was suspicious.

Oklahoma's short-yardage "Belldozer" package featuring power-running backup quarterback Blake Bell sure resembled Kansas State's own offense.

After bumping into Bob Stoops at Big 12 media days over the summer, Klein's suspicions were confirmed.

[+] EnlargeBlake Bell

Mark D. Smith/US PresswireAfter debuting the Belldozer formation vs. Kansas State last season, Blake Bell went on to rush for 13 touchdowns.

"I saw you running all those plays, and I got a guy just like that or bigger," the OU coach confessed. "So we started running all your plays."

Ironically, the Sooners debuted the Belldozer at Kansas State last season to a rousing success. Bell ran for one touchdown and two first downs out of the formation, and OU hammered the Wildcats, 58-17. Instantly, the Sooners went from having one of the worst short-yardage offenses in the country to one of the best, and Bell went on to finish with a team-high 13 rushing touchdowns.

"Blake has that physical presence, and obviously Collin has that, too," said offensive coordinator Josh Heupel. "Some of the stuff they've done with their quarterbacks in the past, that obviously had influences on what we wanted to do in that package."

Saturday night, the sixth-ranked Sooners and No. 15 Wildcats meet again in the biggest Big 12 game so far this season.

The No. 1 focus of the OU defense will be containing Klein, who remains one of college football's top dual-threat quarterbacks.

"Their quarterback run game is very extensive, very detailed," said Sooners defensive coordinator Mike Stoops. "One of the best rushing teams in the country, year in, year out. A lot of that is predicated on their quarterback. Collin Klein is a tremendous player with his hands on the ball."

The Sooners, however, have their own Collin Klein in Bell, who during the preseason won the No. 2 quarterback battle over Drew Allen. Even though OU has shown improvement in getting short yardage out of its base offense, the Sooners continue to feature Bell out of the Belldozer.

"If your quarterback can run the ball, then you add one to yourself, so you got enough to block their people and that is the advantage of it," Kansas State coach Bill Snyder said this week. "When you take a guy like Blake or Collin who is big, strong and physical, that is advantageous."

The genesis of the Belldozer dates back to the 2011 preseason. All through the spring and two-a-days, the OU offense kept struggling to convert short-yardage situations.

After watching what the Wildcats were doing with Klein, Stoops and Heupel thought their short-yardage ailments might be cured by utilizing the 6-foot-6, 260-pound Bell in a similar fashion. After bouncing the idea off director of football operations Merv Johnson -- Barry Switzer's offensive coordinator during OU's Wishbone heyday -- the Belldozer was born.

"We didn't know what would happen with it," Heupel said. "It started with the quarterback power and went from there."

The Sooners kept an eye on Kansas State throughout the season. Whenever the Wildcats unveiled a new play, OU experimented with it out of the Belldozer. As the season waned, one of Kansas State's bread-and-butter plays, the quarterback counter, also became a Belldozer staple.

"We're always paying attention to what they were doing offensively," said Sooners co-offensive coordinator Jay Norvell, "because Blake certainly can do some of those same things."

As effective as the Belldozer has been, it would seem natural that the Sooners would adopt Kansas State's offense full-time in 2013, when Bell likely will succeed Landry Jones as OU's starting quarterback.

Bob Stoops, however, says don't count it.

"You get your quarterback hurt," he said. "Then, as soon as you get them hurt, you better have another one. If you don't, you have a whole new offense to start. [Quarterbacks like Bell and Klein] are fairly hard to find."

Bell's running prowess has been a godsend, but the Sooners recruited the Wichita, Kan., native because of his rocket arm. Bell, who has declined interview requests this year, threw for almost 6,000 and 70 touchdowns his final two seasons at Bishop Carroll High School, and ESPN rated him the No. 3 quarterback recruit in the country.

Bell will always be a threat to run. But the Sooners are banking on him becoming OU's next great passer, too.

"Blake has some skills as a thrower that he hasn't had an opportunity to show yet," Norvell said. "Those were the things we saw in him when we recruited him. I think he'll continue to grow and develop the more opportunities he gets to play."

Jake Trotter 20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://espn.go.com/colleges/oklahoma/football/story/_/id/8400281/oklahoma-sooners-inspired-kansas-state-wildcats-collin-klein-created-belldozer-blake-bell
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LB Corey Nelson ready to 'bow up' for Sooners

Written By Sepatu on Selasa, 18 September 2012 | 22.19

Oklahoma junior linebacker ready to 'bow up' vs. Wildcats' run-heavy offense

NORMAN, Okla. -- Corey Nelson can't wait for Saturday.

The Oklahoma linebacker knows the Sooners' game against Kansas State will challenge him unlike any game this season. The Wildcats promise to be physical and run the football right at OU when the two teams meet on Owen Field.

[+] EnlargeCorey Nelson

Cal Sport Media via AP ImagesCorey Nelson and Oklahoma's linebackers know they face a different offense in Kansas State.

"It's very exciting," Nelson said. "It's downhill run game, whoever is more physical ... that's what it comes down to. This is a game for linebackers, it's fit for linebackers, fit for guys like us to be able to go out, get downhill and see who's the strongest."

And that puts Nelson in the spotlight.

Listed at 6-foot-1, 219 pounds, Nelson faces a serious size disadvantage against a K-State offensive line that averages 6-4, 297 pounds. He'll be counted on to make plays on Saturday if OU hopes to slow quarterback Collin Klein and running back John Hubert.

"We have to bow up," Nelson said. "Their offensive line is powerful. We have to come big and come physical, that's what it's all about, it's going to be a physical battle."

Nelson accepted the challenge as a sophomore last season, finishing with six tackles and two sacks in the Sooners' 58-17 win at K-State in 2011.

But this season, Nelson's role has changed. He's no longer a jack-of-all trades, moving around the defense to utilize his talent and allow him to make plays. The junior is the starting weakside linebacker alongside middle linebacker Tom Wort, meaning he'll need to count on his athletic ability to keep from being overwhelmed against the Wildcats.

Fortunately for the Sooners, Nelson has the physical skills to do it.

"He's very smart, and his athleticism really sets him apart from a lot of linebackers," cornerback Demontre Hurst said. "He's always having fun out there; he's high energy and loves to play the game."

Said Nelson: "If you have the speed and you have the strength to get off linemen, it's so much easier for you. On some plays, they may have an angle at you, but if you're fast enough you can put a move on them and get around them easily."

It will be his energy and quickness that likely will determine his success on Saturday. And his success could determine the Sooners' fate. During his first two years in crimson and cream, Nelson proved he had the ability to create havoc for opposing offenses, particularly as a pass rusher, so the Sooners are confident he can and will impact the game.

"He's a guy that's going to fly around and throw his body in there whenever he has to," defensive end David King said. "That's the kind of linebacker you want."

Starting in the spot vacated by four-year starter Travis Lewis, Nelson has been solid in OU's first two games, with seven tackles, one quarterback hurry and one pass broken up.

Yet those nonconference games against UTEP and Florida A&M didn't sit atop his priority list when he looked at the schedule before the season began.

"This is the game I've been waiting on, to play teams like this," Nelson said. "I've been foaming at the mouth to play a team like this, and I'm ready for it. This is like a once-in-a-lifetime dream to play a physical team like this and see who's the strongest.

"Memories will be made. It will be fun to see how it unfolds."

Brandon Chatmon 19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://espn.go.com/colleges/oklahoma/football/story/_/id/8396685/corey-nelson-spotlight-oklahoma-sooners-vs-kansas-state-wildcats
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NCAA policy chief: Drop "student-athlete" term

While presenting a unified front publicly and in the courts that athletes are being fairly treated, NCAA leaders privately agonized over the growing use of athlete images in commercial products, with one senior executive proposing to drop the term "student athlete" after a half century of official use.

The philosophical divide emerges in depositions and frank emails unsealed this week in a class-action lawsuit by former UCLA basketball star Ed O'Bannon and other players who challenge the NCAA's licensing of their images to video games manufacturers and other third parties.

In one internal email sent after the lawsuit was filed in 2009, University of Nebraska Chancellor Harvey Perlman wrote to then-Big 12 commissioner Dan Beebe that he disagrees with the NCAA's legal defense that it can sell publicity rights without any compensation to the players.

"This whole area of name and likeness and the NCAA is a disaster leading to catastrophe as far as I can tell," wrote Perlman, a former member of the NCAA Board of Directors and law professor specializing in intellectual property. "I'm still trying to figure out by what authority the NCAA licenses these rights to the game makers and others. I looked at what our student athletes sign by way of waiver and it doesn't come close."

Objecting strongly to Perlman was Chris Plonsky, a longtime University of Texas administrator who oversees women's sports for the Longhorns. She wrote that athletes "voluntarily" sign the standard release waiver that is required for participation in NCAA sports.

"

Maybe we don't call them student-athletes any longer and just refer to them as students.

" -- NCAA senior policy advisor Wallace Renfro

"We're like a version of the Army," Plonsky wrote. "We have certain things we have to do a certain way to raise funds and pay for the scholarships and other things s-a's (student athletes) and their parents expect."

In a separate exchange, Wallace Renfro, NCAA senior policy advisor, wrote a memo to new president Mark Emmert after Emmert was hired to run the organization in 2010. Lawyers for the plaintiffs cited the memo, an analysis of issues confronting the NCAA titled "Looking Forward," in deposition of Renfro on June 26.

"Maybe we don't call them student-athletes any longer and just refer to them as students," Renfro wrote.

In the email to Emmert, Renfro, who has worked at the NCAA since the 1970s, notes that the term student-athlete is one "that Walter Byers created to counter the criticism that we are paying college athletes when we began providing grants-in-aid." Byers was the first executive director of the NCAA, retiring in 1988 after 37 years, and a grant-in-aid is the term of art used by the NCAA to describe an athletic scholarship.

The lawsuit claims the NCAA violates anti-trust laws by preventing universities from allowing athletes to be compensated above the value of a grant-in aid room, board, books and fees. The discovery submitted to the court represents a small fraction of the documents collected in what has become a landmark test of the NCAA's governance and notions about college athletes.

"I'd rather not comment on the evidence itself," said Michael Hausfeld, lead attorney for the plaintiffs, when contacted Tuesday by ESPN. "But I will say the documents expose how the principle of amateurism was not a bedrock against the NCAA's commercialization of college sports."

An NCAA spokesman did not respond to an ESPN request for comment on the legal disclosures, and how they might affect the viability of the NCAA defending itself in the case. The O'Bannon case is scheduled to go to trial in early 2014, pending a judge's ruling on class certification.

A stalwart of the NCAA's economic model that redistributes money from revenue sports to other parts of the athletic department and university, Renfro proposed a re-focusing of sports on the educational mission of universities. At the same time, he conceded that the philosophy underpinning the model has become antiquated -- and even posed whether the time has come to allow athletes to hire agents.

"We have always had a cradle-to-grave approach to amateurism," Renfro wrote. "You are born an amateur, but like innocence once lost, it cannot be regained. But our commitment to amateurism and the commitment of our public's has often been based on something other than how we define amateurism in our own constitution. In the most romantic sense we think of amateurism as playing sports for the love of the game, for the camaraderie among competitors, for the pride of victory for school or colors, and then we use this romanticized sense of amateurism to define the entire enterprise of collegiate athletics."

Renfro said that Emmert never responded to his memo. When pressed by lawyers in the deposition, he characterized his ideas in the memo as discussion points, not endorsements.

In one note, Plonsky disparaged football and men's basketball players for bringing the lawsuit. Plaintiffs include former Arizona State quarterback Sam Keller, and basketball stars Oscar Robertson, Bill Russell and Tate George, whose lawyers have proposed to the court that athletes receive a cut of licensing and broadcast contracts with monies going into a fund that can be accessed after their college careers.

"

This whole area of name and likeness and the NCAA is a disaster leading to catastrophe as far as I can tell.

" -- Nebraska Chancellor Harvey Perlman

"I view these cases as being the result of the entitlement attitude we've created in our revenue sports," Plonsky wrote. "We now have threatening s-a's -- many of whom, based on grad rates of the 80s and 90s, sucked a whole lot off the college athletics pipe -- and now want to buckle the system at the knees of the expense of today's s-a's."

Perlman, after reading her note, pushed back. "I am very much opposed to her suggestion," he wrote, "I have yet to have anyone define for me the 'values of higher education' in a way that is consistent with commercial exploitation of a student athletes name or likeness. & As soon as it becomes commercialtied to selling a product -- I don't think we should be doing it."

The NCAA and Electronic Arts, which produces a video game on college football, argues that the avatars depicted in the game are not based on the likenesses of actual players. The plaintiffs counter that the characteristics of individual players are so similar to those shown in the video game that there must be a direct connection.

Correspondence released Monday appears to support that athletes' contention. In one email exchange from July 2007, an executive with the Collegiate Licensing Company (CLC), which represents the NCAA and its member schools, noted that EA Sports was using real player names to develop the latest game internally, with plans to strip them out before release to the public.

"Just a heads up, in case schools ask you this all of EA's latest 2008 March Madness basketball submissions have current players names on the jerseys in the game," wrote Wendy Harmon, a CLC marketing coordinator. "I have called Gina Ferranti at EA about this (she submits all of these basketball ones) and she assured me that they will not be using those in the final version. She said they have to put the players names in so it will calculate the correct stats but then they take them off. Just don't want the schools to freak out she said a few have already commented on it in their approval."

An hour later, CLC senior vice president and managing director Derek Eiler forwarded the email, notifying other top executives. He wrote, "Just an FYI on this in case word reaches the NCAA. This is exactly the type of thing that could submarine the game if it got into the media."

CLC is the nation's leading trademark licensing and marketing company, representing more than 200 universities and colleges, bowl games and athletic conferences, as well as the NCAA. In that capacity, according to the CLC website, the company helps institutions protect, manage and develop their brands.

Despite that relationship with the NCAA and its members schools, the CLC explored the possibility of representing players after the Keller-O'Bannon lawsuits were filed, according to documents. At a company retreat in September 2009, senior leadership introduced the idea of organizing former players into an entity called the "College Vault Players Association," whose purpose, according to an email by one CLC executive, would be to "do whatever is necessary to assure that the licensing and marketing rights of former collegiate student athletes are protected and revenue opportunities are pursued."

The CLC's proposed 16 founding members of the CVPA would include Michael Jordan, Brian Bosworth, Dick Butkus, Joe Montana, John Elway, Deion Sanders and the Manning brothers. It is unclear from the document whether those players had been contacted or were on board with the plan to negotiate with their schools. The CVPA would pursue deals with companies in a range of sectors, including trading cards, games, videos, jerseys, books, photographs and collectibles.

One of CLC's top executives was intrigued enough with the idea that he wondered if the group should expand beyond former players. On December 30, 2009, senior vice president Cory Z. Moss asked, "Should we really begin work on a formal College Student Athlete Players Association (current and former) to be ready depending on the results of the EA lawsuits?"

While CLC was moving fast to capitalize on new revenue opportunities related to athlete images, so was the NCAA under former president Myles Brand -- until the lawsuit was filed. In 2007, a CLC executive reported that the NCAA, with the aid of former senior executive Greg Shaheen, had begun to embrace the potential of its relationship with the EA Sports games.

"The NCAA now (finally) sees EA as an important tool to allow them to reach young people with the values associated with intercollegiate athletics," wrote Pat Battle, a CLC manager. "As a result of all this, Greg has gotten me in front of & Myles, and they are now viewing what they do on our behalf as mission critical. It has been pretty cool to watch.

"The primary purpose of this meeting was to lobby for the rights to use rosters in video games, including the names of players on jerseys within the game. While it will still take some time (probably 12-18 months) to go through the NCAA legislative process, Greg is now confident that we will get this done. That will be a huge win for us and EA."

The NCAA did not move forward with the proposal through its legislative process. However, gamers later did gain the ability to use a backdoor to attaching names to the avatars, through software available on the internet that was compatible with the EA Sports game.

In his interview with ESPN, Hausfeld characterized the documents released by his legal team as insightful into the NCAA's business model, as a trade organization for member colleges.

"For the first time, we are getting behind the veil of the so-called principle of amateurism," he said. "The principle is being tested by what was known by the NCAA and what they did to address its challenges."

Bob Przybylo 19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://espn.go.com/espn/otl/story/_/id/8396753/ncaa-policy-chief-proposes-dropping-student-athlete-term
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Three game defining stretch begins for Sooners

Written By Sepatu on Senin, 17 September 2012 | 23.21

Is Oklahoma a contender or pretender? Next three games will determine its status

Updated: September 18, 2012, 1:19 AM ET

By Jake Trotter | SoonerNation

NORMAN, Okla. -- When Oklahoma's new Big 12 schedule first came out, most everyone pointed to the rigid November stretch when the Sooners would play West Virginia, Oklahoma State and TCU back-to-back-to-back.

But in reality, the three-game stretch that will determine whether the Sooners are contenders or pretenders in the national championship chase begins this weekend with 15th-ranked Kansas State. After that and an open week, the Sooners go on to road to Texas Tech before the Red River Rivalry in Dallas.

[+] EnlargeTom Wort

AP Photo/Orlin WagnerTom Wort and the Oklahoma defense played well vs. Kansas State last year when the Sooners won 58-17.

"These next three games are going to be big, and it starts with this next one," said middle linebacker Tom Wort. "That pretty much nails it on the head. These first two games haven't really proved anything from us. These next three games are really going to prove what we're about, and it starts this weekend."

OU began the year ranked fourth in the preseason polls. But after a lackluster opener at UTEP and a blowout of FCS opponent Florida A&M, the Sooners have since fallen two spots.

The players, however, realize the opportunity to make a statement -- similar to the one top-ranked Alabama has -- is before them.

"We all saw the schedule, we all know what's going to be happening the next couple weeks," said defensive end R.J. Washington. "K-State is a great team. Texas Tech beat us at home last year. Then there's Texas, which is always going to be tough because it's such a rivalry. We've got to go to work."

Kansas State sputtered in wins over Missouri State and North Texas. But few teams have a more impressive nonconference victory than the Wildcats, who throttled Miami (Fla.) 52-13 two weeks ago.

"They're an excellent team, so the preparation for them is always complicated,'' coach Bob Stoops said. "They're doing an excellent job of running the football, like always, and using the quarterback to run it. It'll be a challenge.''

The Sooners hammered K-State 58-17 in Manhattan last season. But the Wildcats appear to feature a more balanced attack with quarterback Collin Klein, who so far is throwing the ball far more efficiently than he did last season. Klein completed just 57 percent of his passes in 2011. This season, his completion percentage is almost 73 percent.

"He's throwing the ball real good," Wort said. "That's something we didn't really face last year against him. It makes you have to play them straight."

The Sooners haven't lost to K-State since the 2003 Big 12 championship game. But they haven't won in Lubbock since 2003, either. Texas Tech has knocked off the Sooners three straight times in Lubbock, and also snapped OU's 39-game home winning streak last season, which at the time was the longest in the country. The Red Raiders jumped to a 31-7 third-quarter lead, then held on for the stunning 41-38 upset.

"There's definitely a revenge factor with Texas Tech," said Wort, who sat out the game with multiple injuries. "Watching how they came into our place. & it was just sad."

If the Sooners can get through the next two games unscathed, it could set up the biggest Red River showdown since 2008. Not since then have both OU and Texas entered the game ranked inside the top 10.

The last two years, the Longhorns have endured quarterback woes, and committed five turnovers that led to three OU defensive touchdowns and an easy 55-17 Sooners win last season.

But Texas is 3-0 and coming off an impressive 35-point win at Ole Miss, in which David Ash threw for a career-high 326 yards and four touchdowns to earn Davey O'Brien Quarterback of the Week honors.

The next three weeks "are going to be about heart, who has the heart to fight," said Sooners strong safety Javon Harris. "Are we going to be able to fight through adversity?

"We've got to play hard, we've got to play like champions like (the sign) we touch before every game. To do that, we've got to get through this stretch."

Bob Przybylo 18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://espn.go.com/colleges/oklahoma/football/story/_/id/8393345/oklahoma-sooners-defining-stretch-begins-week-vs-kansas-state-wildcats
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Bill Snyder does more than OK in Oklahoma

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Wildcats' Snyder does more than OK in Oklahoma, eschewing star system

Bob Przybylo 18 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://insider.espn.go.com/colleges/oklahoma/football/recruiting/story/_/id/8391111/kansas-state-wildcats-found-success-recruiting-football-players-oklahoma
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{Article}

Written By Sepatu on Minggu, 16 September 2012 | 11.33

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

16 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/rss/recruiting/oklahoma/news
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Alabama, LSU back as No. 1-No. 2 in Top 25

Updated: September 16, 2012, 11:58 AM ET

Associated Press

NEW YORK -- Alabama and LSU are back atop The Associated Press college football poll, holding down Nos. 1 and 2 the way they did most of last season.

The Crimson Tide is No. 1 for the third straight week, and it was almost unanimous. Alabama received 58 of 60 first-place votes. LSU got the other two.

The Southeastern Conference rivals were ranked first and second for eight weeks during last season before eventually meeting in the BCS title game. The difference last year was LSU was first and Alabama second -- until the Tide won the national championship game.

LSU moved up to No. 2 this week after Southern California's first loss of the season. USC slipped 11 spots to 13th after losing 21-14 at Stanford.

Stanford jumped from 21st to ninth.


Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press

Brandon Chatmon 16 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/8387061/alabama-crimson-tide-lsu-tigers-back-no-1-no-2-ap-top-25
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Sooners guard Adam Shead finds comfort zone

Sophomore has quickly developed into one of the Sooners' best linemen

NORMAN, Okla. -- As he prepared for his first action as a Sooner, Adam Shead was filled with uncertainty.

The Oklahoma guard, then a redshirt freshman, had a feeling he might play against Tulsa in the Sooners' 2011 season opener.

"I remember before the game I was like, 'Ah, crap, I might play tonight,'" Shead said. "We get down to it and (interior line coach James Patton) throws me in and I'm like, 'I'm not ready for this.' I didn't say that, but I'm thinking it in my head. Then I get out there and I'm thinking, 'Just don't get beat.'"

[+] EnlargeAdam Shead

Jerome Miron/US PresswireAdam Shead has the potential to be Oklahoma's best offensive lineman. As a sophomore, he's growing more comfortable in his spot.

Shead saw the first action of his Sooner career in OU's 47-14 win over the Golden Hurricane. After the initial shock of being in the game, he got more comfortable.

"My first time going out there against Tulsa, I'll never forget, after three plays I threw up on the field," Shead said. "That was kind of like an icebreaker, it really helped me to stay composed."

A year later, Shead is one of the core members of the Sooners offensive line and has the upside to join a long line of Sooners linemen who earned All-Big 12 or even All-American honors.

After overcoming the uncertainty of his first action, Shead discovered things just came naturally between the white lines.

"I get out there and it's just natural," he said. "Now that I'm in there, I know what to expect, so there aren't as many jitters as my first time against Tulsa."

He earned time in OU's rotation during the first few games last season, then started five games after center Ben Habern was injured and guard Gabe Ikard moved over to center.

"He has a chance to be a pretty good player," Patton said. "He showed it in practice (first). When he showed it in practice, we ended up putting him in the game."

Shead played in 10 games in 2011 and finished the season with 62 knockdowns, including a career-high 14 against Baylor.

"As a young guy, I think he knows he's talented," offensive coordinator Josh Heupel said. "I don't think he knew how he would respond when given the situation. I think week after week he got more experienced and continued to play at a higher level."

The year of learning proved invaluable for the 6-foot-4, 307-pound Texas native.

"I learned to just play your game," he said. "I can't worry about things, once you worry about things you get beat."

This season, Shead has used his feet, which are unusually quick for a man his size, along with his mean streak to help the Sooners average 7.1 yards per rushing attempt and 277 rushing yards per game.

"That's a natural thing," Shead said of his mean streak. "I've always been mean on the field. (But) I'm a nice guy off-the-field, I wouldn't hurt a fly."

Even though he has made a major impact early in his career, Shead still has work to do and goals to achieve.

"When you come to places like Oklahoma, that's one of the things you're sold on," he said. "You see the trophies, the All-Americans and you want to be better. It's only natural that anyone would think 'I can be on that wall one day.' "

But he won't get there if he becomes satisfied with his initial contributions.

"He's a guy that can play at an extremely high level here if he continues to push himself and comes with that approach every single day," Heupel said. "We need him to play at that type of level on the left side."

Said Patton: "He continues to get better and works hard. That's one thing he needs to be motivated by, keep working hard and pushing himself to a higher level."

Brandon Chatmon 13 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://espn.go.com/colleges/oklahoma/football/story/_/id/8371081/oklahoma-sooners-guard-adam-shead-flashes-upside-gets-comfortable
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