The Oklahoman

OSU will need big plays from Presley

- Scott Wright The Oklahoman USA TODAY NETWORK

BOISE, Idaho — Brennan Presley zigged and zagged and ran around, refusing to be tackled, just like he’d done so many times at Bixby High School.

This time, it was a punt return against Missouri State that gained no yardage, despite Presley’s ability to dodge defenders for what seemed like a full minute.

When he returned to the Oklahoma State sideline, he had a reminder waiting for him.

“This isn’t high school,” they told him.

It was a reminder that it’s OK to not make an outstandin­g play every time Presley touches the ball. It wasn’t a suggestion that he stop trying to make them.

As the Cowboys head to Boise State on Saturday for an 8 p.m. game at Albertsons Stadium, the stagnating OSU offense needs Presley’s special playmaking ability more than ever.

reasons. Hard-nosed football. Success that includes three Fiesta Bowl victories in the last 15 years. And that blue turf.

OSU tailback LD Brown's eyes lit up last Saturday, when he was reminded where he'd be playing football a week later.

“Really looking forward to the uniform combinatio­n we're going to have,” Brown said. He began politickin­g OSU equipment coordinato­r Justin Williams for the flamboyantly fashioned Cowboys to wear black in Boise.

“Want to see what he's going to put us out there on the blue turf,” Brown said. “I want see what the black looks like on blue.”

Cowboy defensive Tyler Lacy's interest was more personaliz­ed.

“Wonder … if I look good on the blue turf ?” Lacy asked.

Football fans from all over stop by Albertsons Stadium throughout the year to check out the blue turf. Boise State's athletic hall of fame is built into the southwest corner of the stadium. Visitors can access the hall of fame from outside the stadium, then on the other side step onto a plaza that allows fans to look out over the blue turf.

Thursday afternoon, three middleaged men from Las Vegas were taking pictures of the blue turf. They said they were 20-year Boise State fans and had always wanted to see a game there. Saturday is the game.

“It's part of our identity,” Dickey said. “It differentiates us.”

No doubt about that. The blue turf has impacted football on every level.

A few other schools have gone to non-green turf — Eastern Washington's red, Central Arkansas' purple, Coastal Carolina's teal, Eastern Michigan's gray — and the National Football League instituted a rule against non-green turf. It's called the Boise Rule.

In 2011, the Mountain West ruled that the Broncos couldn't wear blue jerseys at home.

Cowboy quarterbac­k Spencer Sanders understand­s the rule.

"Yeah, that's one's going to be weird,” Sanders said. “If they're going to wear blue jerseys, that's going to be a pain in my tail.”

The Mountain West rescinded the rule after one year, as Boise State mounted a serious protest. Perhaps the Broncos pointed out that Mountain West members Colorado State and Hawaii have green as their primary colors, and last anybody looked, the Rams and the Rainbow Warriors play on green turf.

Dickey likens it to the scene in “Hoosiers,” when the Gene Hackman character walks into the historic fieldhouse with a tape measure and shows his team the rims are 10 feet off the ground. Same as back home.

The Boise State turf is the same as artificial surfaces all over America. Except its blue.

It's a lot of blue. Albertsons Stadium once had a track around the football field, so the sidelines are quite wide. Boise State expanded the blue turf to cover the entire grounds.

One myth to dispel: ducks do not crash into the turf, believing it to be water.

At least that's what the locals say, though former coach Chris Petersen once claimed to have found a dead duck on the field.

Around Boise, the stadium is simply called “The Blue.” It's a fit descriptio­n.

And Boise State — a relatively new university; it was a junior college until 1968 — has been lauded for its academic innovation. U.S. News & World Report a couple of years ago listed Boise State among the nation's most innovative schools.

Boise State's catchphras­e for that brand? Blue turf thinking.

A little innovation couldn't hurt the OSU offense, which has struggled through two games. The Cowboys trot onto the blue turf Saturday night, hopefully thinking not so much about how they'll look on the blue, but how they'll play.

Berry Tramel: Berry can be reached at 405-760-8080 or at btramel@oklahoman.com. He can be heard Monday through Friday from 4:40-5:20 p.m. on The Sports Animal radio network, including FM-98.1. Support his work and that of other Oklahoman journalist­s by purchasing a digital subscripti­on today.

 ?? NATE BILLINGS/FOR THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Oklahoma State’s Brennan Presley (80) gets away from a group of Missouri State defenders in the fourth quarter on Sept. 4.
NATE BILLINGS/FOR THE OKLAHOMAN Oklahoma State’s Brennan Presley (80) gets away from a group of Missouri State defenders in the fourth quarter on Sept. 4.
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 ?? BRIAN LOSNESS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Boise State Broncos bring the American flag onto the field prior to the game against UTEP at Albertsons Stadium on Sept. 10.
BRIAN LOSNESS/USA TODAY SPORTS The Boise State Broncos bring the American flag onto the field prior to the game against UTEP at Albertsons Stadium on Sept. 10.

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