Published November 15, 2006 11:09 pm -
Committed
Sooner receivers getting back into form
John Shinn
The Norman Transcript
Oklahoma receivers Malcolm Kelly, Juaquin Iglesias and Manuel Johnson are roommates, but they share more than a living room.
They all shared frustration after the Sooners’ 17-16 victory over Texas A&M two weeks ago. They caught one pass each and OU only put the ball in the air 12 times.
“I told a few of the other receivers, ‘I’m not going to settle for 39 passing yards.’ That’s ridiculous,” Kelly said. “We have to do something about that.”
Fingers were pointed, but not at coaches, only at themselves. They had been warned going half-speed in drills and dropping balls in practice was unacceptable.
And the fact the Sooners jumped out to a double-digit lead early and rushed for 224 yards made the decision to stick to the ground game a little easier.
No matter how subtle or direct, a message was sent.
“You have to practice at a tempo that gives our quarterback a simulation of what’s going to happen on Saturday,” receivers coach Kevin Sumlin said.
The message was received.
A week later, quarterback Paul Thompson threw for a career-high 309 yards in a 34-24 victory over Texas Tech.
Kelly was on the receiving end of 153 of those yards and set a career high with 11 catches. Johnson added career bests with six grabs and 87 yards before he was injured early in the fourth quarter. Iglesias added three more receptions for 22 yards.
All told, the 16th-ranked Sooners had their biggest passing night since Jason White launching balls to future NFL receivers Mark Clayton, Brandon Jones, Mark Bradley and Travis Wilson in 2004.
Thompson said it was matter of taking what was given.
“Going into last week’s game we were going to even it out a little bit,” Thompson said. “We felt comfortable in their defense and what they were giving us so we could take some shots and get some yards after the catch.”
Perhaps it was.
But Iglesias believes there was more to it.