Peterson healthy again

John Shinn
The Norman Transcript

October 30, 2005 01:39 am

LINCOLN, Neb. — Oklahoma had a swagger it hadn’t possessed in four weeks when it walked into Nebraska’s Memorial Stadium Saturday.
The reason for the confidence was simple.
“We have our stallion back,” OU running back Kejuan Jones said while glancing toward backfield mate Adrian Peterson.
The Sooners truly did and they rode him to a 31-24 victory over Nebraska.
Peterson carried the ball 24 times for 146 yards. Both were his second highest totals of the season. It was the type of performance OU thought it could count on from Peterson every game. He mass produced during his freshmen season when he went from top recruit to runner-up in the Heisman Trophy balloting.
During OU’s first win of the season, Sept. 10 against Tulsa, Peterson ran wild for 220 yards and carried the Sooner offense on his broad shoulders.
However, a severe ankle sprain two games later against Kansas State put him on the shelf for the last three games.
He played against Texas and Kansas, but was hardly in top form, carrying the ball eight times in those games for just five yards.
But after sitting out last week’s game against Baylor, the ankle had healed to the point he could make a difference.
A huge difference.
“You can’t put what he means to us in words,” OU fullback J.D. Runnels said. “You can tell the difference between Adrian with the ankle (injury) and plain old Adrian.”
Plain old Adrian is the type of player capable of breaking big runs on any play. The Sooners had been without it in their previous three games.
They’d also lacked the ability to wear down a defense. Peterson brought that to the table Saturday, too.
“He’s a hard man to take down,” Nebraska defensive lineman Jay Moore said. “I had him a couple times and he’s strong. He’s a heck of a back, you know. He’s by far the best we’ve played so far.”
That was obvious the first time Peterson touched the ball.
On his first carry, a second-and-10 from the Husker 36, he darted up the middle through a gapping hole, made one defender miss and carried Nebraska cornerback Zackary Bowman the final 5 yards for a touchdown.
“On that run, I was determined to get into the end zone,” Peterson said.
He added a 2-yard dash early in the second quarter that paced OU to a 14-0 lead.
He spent the rest of the game battering at the Nebraska defense. He was held was in check in the second half. All but 25 of Peterson’s yards came in the first half.
But by then, he had already carried the Sooners most of the way to Saturday’s win.
It was a big game and one in which OU needed its stars to come out. Peterson shined brighter than any Saturday.
After the game, he grinned as reporters and autograph seekers engulfed him. He gave a notice to OU’s remaining foes.
“Hopefully, with a week off, I’ll be back to 100 percent.”

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Photos


Oklahoma defated Nebraska Saturday. Phillip Laizure/The Norman (Okla.) Transcript