Texarkana Gazette

Big 12 takes hit from shoddy defenses of Oklahoma, Texas

- By Cliff Brunt

Oklahoma and Texas are struggling on defense again, and it has cost both programs and the Big 12 Conference.

The league’s two marquee teams started off with national title hopes. Less than a month into the season, neither are where they expected to be as they prepare to meet Saturday at the Cotton Bowl. Texas is barely ranked at No. 22 and Oklahoma is out of the Top 25 for the first time since 2016.

Oklahoma probably has no shot at the College Football Playoff after getting there the past three years, and Texas likely would be out of the running with a loss. It’s not a good look for a conference that has become known for Oklahoma’s failure to stop elite teams in big games and Texas’

tendency to underachie­ve.

No. 10 Oklahoma State at 3-0 is the Big 12’s only unbeaten team, featuring one of the nation’s top defenses in a bit of a twist, and currently the league’s best hope to make a run at a playoff spot.

The Sooners appeared to be moving in the right direction on defense last season before giving up 63 points in the national semifinal against LSU. This season, the Sooners were outscored 17-0 in the fourth quarter of a 38-35 loss to Kansas State and squandered a 30-23 lead in the fourth quarter of a 37-30 loss to Iowa State.

Oklahoma defensive coordinato­r Alex Grinch gets no breather this weekend: The Longhorns, led by quarterbac­k Sam Ehlinger, have the nation’s No. 1-ranked scoring offense with 51 points per game. Ehlinger leads the nation with 14 touchdown passes.

“Collective­ly now, we’ve got to play four quality quarters of football and find a way to win in the end,” Grinch said. “We’ve done the exact opposite the last two weeks, which is obviously us as coaches not doing a good enough job of getting guys to play four quarters.”

The Sooners have forced just two turnovers this season. Coach Lincoln Riley said the Sooners are leaving themselves vulnerable while trying to make big plays rather than making tackles.

“Guys have got to understand where the turnovers come from,” Riley said. “Yeah, if you come in there just full speed out of control, every now and then, you end up putting your helmet on a ball and the ball pops out. And that’s great, but I don’t know if that’s worth the number of missed tackles that you’re probably going to have there, too.”

Texas fired defensive coordinato­r Todd Orlando as part of coach Tom Herman’s house cleaning and staff rebuild after a 7-5 regular season finish in 2019. Herman then hired Chris Ash, an old friend who was an assistant with him first at Iowa State and again when they were part of the staff for Ohio State’s 2014 national championsh­ip. Ash was free because he’d been fired as head coach at Rutgers early in the 2019 season.

Texas allowed 56 points against Texas Tech but won in overtime thanks to two late scoring drives and an opportunis­tic onside kick that helped keep the defense off the field.

In last week’s 33-31 loss to unranked TCU, Texas’ tackling was much improved, but the Longhorns struggled to contain mobile quarterbac­k Max Duggan, who burned them for several long throws and the game-winning 26-yard touchdown run.

 ?? AP Photo/Eric Gay ?? ■ TCU quarterbac­k Max Duggan (15) runs against Texas during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday in Austin.
AP Photo/Eric Gay ■ TCU quarterbac­k Max Duggan (15) runs against Texas during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday in Austin.

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