The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Westbrook makes it all look so easy

Oklahoma receiver displays grace, great control of body.

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Dede Westbrook looked like a contortion­ist at the end of his 29-yard touchdown grab against Baylor.

Oklahoma’s breakout star caught the ball around the Bears 12-yard line and appeared headed out of bounds. He slipped before reaching the sideline, balanced on his left hand twice to inch closer to the end zone, then managed to reach the ball over the plane of the goal line with two hands as he fell out of bounds.

He said that body control came from his younger days in the country, where his cousin made a game of sending him across the highway to get mail.

“It comes from dodging rocks at my grand momma’s house,” Westbrook said. “When you’re in the country, you just do all kinds of crazy things.”

Crazy isn’t what you get on first impression with the speedster from Cameron, Texas, population roughly 5,400. He comes across as a quiet, polite young man with big dreams.

Don’t let it fool you. When he’s away from the glare of the camera, the Heisman finalist is the life of the party.

“He’s fun and energetic,” said Oklahoma quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield, also a Heisman finalist. “You can always hear him talking, laughing, giving somebody crap. He brightens the room whenever he walks in. That’s just the type of guy he is, and it makes him a good leader.”

As for his speed — in 12 games, he has 12 touchdowns from scrimmage of 40 or more yards. The school says that’s the most of any FBS player since 1996.

“He does everything fast,” offensive lineman Orlando Brown said with a laugh. “Walking. Talking. Not sure if you guys have ever talked to him. He does everything fast.”

He’s also very confident. His goal this year was to be the best receiver in the country, and he won the Biletnikof­f Award.

“It’s still very overwhelmi­ng,” he said. “I still haven’t wrapped my head around it. I try not to get caught up in the media or the numbers that I’m putting up. At the end of the day, I’m just a kid that’s wanting to play football.”

In his final year at Blinn Community College (Texas), he finished second in the nation with 76 receptions and led the junior college ranks with 1,487 yards and 13 touchdowns in only eight games.

When high expectatio­ns met him at Oklahoma, he simply got to work.

“He didn’t come in with ego or anything like that, so he worked hard and they respected him on the field,” Oklahoma offensive coordinato­r Lincoln Riley said. “He’s likable and he gets along with a lot of people, and he fit in very well very quickly.”

As a junior at Oklahoma last season, he caught 46 passes for 743 yards and four touchdowns while playing second fiddle to Sterling Shepard, who now plays for the New York Giants. Westbrook said he listened and learned while Shepard was around.

“Everything I do is an imitation of what he’s already done,” Westbrook said. “I added my own game to it, so that’s what’s caused me to elevate the way that I have.”

Even with that mentorship, Westbrook didn’t look like a contender for major postseason awards early in the season. He had just 154 yards receiving in his first three games while working through a hamstring pull.

He burst onto the scene in October. In five games that month, he caught 40 passes for 881 yards and 11 touchdowns, helping the Sooners win all five games.

He gives credit to Mayfield and the hours they spent building chemistry the past two years.

 ?? BRETT DEERING / GETTY IMAGES ?? Sooners wide receiver Dede Westbrook, renowned for his speed, is a candidate for the Heisman Trophy.
BRETT DEERING / GETTY IMAGES Sooners wide receiver Dede Westbrook, renowned for his speed, is a candidate for the Heisman Trophy.

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