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Sooners’ Riley now pulling top prep QBs

- By Cliff Brunt

OKLAHOMA CITY — On his official visit, Caleb Williams was scheduled to chat with Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley for 20 minutes.

The conversati­on lasted two hours.

“I was very comfortabl­e, very peaceful,” Williams said. “I guess you could say, like, chill.”

Williams has since committed to the Sooners. The No. 1 quarterbac­k in the 247Sports Class of 2021 and ESPN’s No. 1 dual-threat quarterbac­k for that class recently was named MVP of the prestigiou­s Elite 11 camp. His nickname is “Superman.”

Riley already has coached Heisman Trophy winners Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray along with Heisman runnerup Jalen Hurts. Now, he is hoping to build a new tradition at Oklahoma — pulling top quarterbac­ks to Oklahoma from the high school ranks. Mayfield, Murray and Hurts started at other colleges. But now Spencer Rattler, the No. 1 high school quarterbac­k of the 2019 class, came to Norman out of high school and will compete for the starting job this season.

“It’s already called QB U,” Williams said. “Just carry that on, hopefully.”

Part of the 36-year-old Riley’s success comes from being both an offensive mastermind and a down-home guy from tiny Muleshoe, Texas. He remains approachab­le and easy to talk to, even with having reached the College Football Playoff in all three of his seasons as head coach.

“He’s not an old, old guy who walks around hunched over a bag, play sheet in his hand and hat on all the time,” said Williams, who starred for Gonzaga High in Washington, D.C. “He’s a young coach, which is nice. It’s really just a connection between me and him.”

Williams was impressed with how Riley elevated Hurts, who wasn’t known as an elite passer at Alabama but turned in one of the most efficient seasons in NCAA history last season. Hurts was drafted in the second round of the NFL draft in April.

“Jalen Hurts was supposedly a runner at Alabama, then he comes to Oklahoma and does what he does,” Williams said.

Riley still calls offensive plays for the Sooners. Williams said Riley’s system remains a step ahead of the competitio­n.

“His system is so quarterbac­k friendly,” Williams said. “As coach Riley would say, it doesn’t matter — he’s going to adjust. He’s going to find the best plays, best players on the field at one time to go try and win the game.”

Riley said the system is strong because of continuity on his staff.

“We’ve got a creative room,” Riley said. “We’re not scared to throw new things up there, even if nobody’s ever done them. We’re not scared to tell each other when we think we’re wrong.”

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Lincoln Riley

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