Published October 25, 2008 11:55 pm - MANHATTAN, Kan. — Oklahoma made a bunch of plays and scored a ton of points and exploded at precisely the right time Saturday afternoon, at the very moment Kansas State had people thinking it might just threaten to win the ballgame.
So none of what transpired at Bill Snyder Family Stadium, where the Sooners upended the Wildcats 58-35, should relocate OU any further away from its still-out-there national championship dreams.
Victory not what it ought to be
Commentary
Clay Horning
The Norman Transcript
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Oklahoma made a bunch of plays and scored a ton of points and exploded at precisely the right time Saturday afternoon, at the very moment Kansas State had people thinking it might just threaten to win the ballgame.
So none of what transpired at Bill Snyder Family Stadium, where the Sooners upended the Wildcats 58-35, should relocate OU any further away from its still-out-there national championship dreams.
But is playing even a remotely clean game too much to ask?
Ryan Reynolds’ absence has left the defense in a fix, but it’s hard to make that the reason Kansas State quarterback Josh Freeman threw for more than 300 yards by the half.
How many yards did Sooner receivers cost Sam Bradford with absolute drops and how many penalties is too many when all you’re really trying to do is run out the clock and, for crying out loud, is there a guy on campus who can hit all his PATs or average 40 yards a punt?
If his mood as viewed through binoculars was any indication, at least in those moments one expected consternation, Bob Stoops took full notice of his team’s misdeeds … but a different tact afterwards.
“I don’t know if winning by 23 points is good or not but I’ll take it,” he said. “Being up more than three possessions at the end of the game is pretty good.”
You have to give him that and his team this:
Bradford completed less than half his passes for just the second time since becoming a Sooner, but still lobbed a trio of touchdown tosses; and the running game took great advantage of a porous Wildcat defense, one that allowed Chris Brown (124 yards) and DeMarco Murray (104) both to run wild; and the defense couldn’t have been more timely, intercepting three passes and pouncing on a pair of fumbles.
But this team must still play much better.
Deon Murphy didn’t bring a kickoff all the way back, only 75 yards, which led to Kansas State’s first touchdown.
For a while there, the Wildcats didn’t look like the best offense in the stadium, but the best offense in America, using a string of 13 plays to move the ball 251 yards and score 21 points, tying the game 28-28 in the second quarter.
How does that happen?
The week before OU allowed 491 yards to Kansas. The Wildcats picked up 550.
The Sooners weren’t as charitable as their coach.