The Denver Post

Sooners’ Mayfield, despite critics, says he’s not changing

- By Cliff Brunt Ron Jenkins, The Associated Press

NORMAN, OKLA.» Part of Oklahoma quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield embraces being the bad guy.

He told Baylor’s players during warmups that they “forgot who daddy is” and that he was going to have to spank them. Before playing Texas Tech — the school he left before walking on at Oklahoma — he wore a shirt with ‘TRAITOR’ across the front, then beat the Red Raiders again. And of course, he planted a crimson OU flag in the middle of the field at Ohio State after a win over the Buckeyes early in the season.

It’s obvious opponents pay attention to Mayfield’s antics — Iowa State planted a flag on Oklahoma’s field after an upset win, and Kansas’ captains refused to shake hands with him.

It all comes with the territory for perhaps the most polarizing figure in college football.

“If people love it, or if some people don’t love it, he’s OK with that,” Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley said. “He’s secure with who he is. His goal is not to try to please everybody in the world. His goal is he’s going to be true to himself.”

Mayfield doesn’t mind jousting with fans on social media, either. Yet, for all the shenanigan­s, he’s all business between the lines. He has passed for 4,340 yards with 41 touchdown passes and five intercepti­ons this season, and he has rushed for 310 yards and five more scores.

He will be the first quarterbac­k to finish in the top four of the Heisman Trophy balloting three times, and he’s favored to claim the award Saturday. He has blazed a winding, record-setting trail littered with big wins, emotional outbursts, awards and apologies, and he has done it all his way.

“I’ve had people trying to give me advice through all this, but the thing that I’ve realized is the person I am is the reason I’m here today,” Mayfield said. “I’ve had success because I’m confident and been enthusiast­ic and passionate about what I’m doing.”

Mayfield has crossed the line at times. He was arrested in February and charged with disorderly conduct, public intoxicati­on and resisting arrest. After Kansas wouldn’t shake his hand, he later was caught on camera grabbing his crotch and swearing at the Kansas sideline. As punishment, he was stripped of his captaincy for his final home game against West Virginia and did not start.

Still, his teammates love him as is — so much that when he was stripped of his captain status, the remaining captains took his jersey with them to midfield for the coin toss for the West Virginia game.

They know that the edge that gets him into trouble and riles opponents has led the Sooners to the College Football Playoff two of the past three years and to three consecutiv­e Big 12 titles.

“Bake’s a personalit­y guy, and we love him and we rally behind him,” Oklahoma left tackle Orlando Brown said. “What he does — we understand, people make mistakes. We understand that it’s wrong. But we rally behind him. We’re going to support each other no matter what.”

That’s because they see what many don’t. Beyond the outbursts is a man who has painstakin­gly transforme­d himself from undiscipli­ned gunslinger as a walk-on at Texas Tech to perhaps the most efficient quarterbac­k in college football history. He’s on track to break the single-season efficiency record he set last season.

“He’s going to work hard,” Riley said. “He knows what he wants to accomplish. He knows where he wants to go. He doesn’t let much stand in his way. He’s still a work in progress — we’ve all admitted it, and all seen it. He’s progressin­g in the right way.”

Mayfield’s decision-making and ability to work the ball into tight windows are appealing.

His ability to improvise without taking unnecessar­y risks is rare, and he can make the throws.

He has worked himself into being a likely first-round pick.

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