NORMAN, Okla. — Not much surprised the Sooners about their game-defining plays.
Missouri football suffered its fourth loss of the season on Saturday, struggling to find consistent offense and wasting chances in scoring position in a 17-6 loss to Oklahoma on the road.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementThe Tigers (7-4, 3-4 SEC) have lost all four of the games they have played against top-25 teams this season.
Oklahoma (9-2, 5-2) is likely one win away from reaching the College Football Playoff.
From getting the Tigers to back off a fourth-down try to major special teams plays, what the Sooners said about the game’s critical plays and moments against Mizzou:
What OU said about Missouri football backing off fourth-down try
With a 3-0 lead in the middle of the second quarter, Mizzou reached the Oklahoma red zone with a chance to take a two-score lead with a touchdown. The Tigers wound up in fourth-and-3 and put the offense on the field.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementOklahoma coach Brent Venables called a timeout. When the Tigers returned, they brought the field goal unit out.
Robert Meyer’s kick was blocked and the game changed. Oklahoma was in the end zone three plays later and had a 7-3 lead.
Why did Venables call the timeout there?
“We just wanted to get a peek at what they were going to be in,” Venables said. “And we liked what we had called but wanted to (get) as much of a glimpse to make them go to the next-best play. You know, they probably had one play they loved there. Maybe we saw it later when they went for it and we stopped them on the fourth down. But, yeah, big play.”
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementHe’s right. Mizzou ran the same play on fourth down in the fourth quarter, but Kevin Coleman Jr. dropped Beau Pribula’s pass by the goal line.
Mizzou coach Eli Drinkwitz said he thought they had shown the play too much before backing off the first fourth-down call, so they tried to put points on the board. Tried, being the key word.
More: Eli Drinkwitz explains why Missouri football kicked twice on red zone 4th downs
Venables was asked if he considered it a win getting MU to change plans.
“I'd rather them trot the field goal unit out there, you know, and then there's a opportunity to keep them out of the end zone. So our guys did a great job there.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementMizzou special teams issues at-large
Peyton Bowen, who blocked Robert Meyer’s kick, had seen the protection already on a mishit Meyer field goal in the first quarter that knuckled over the crossbar.
Bowen was also surprised by how easy it was to get there.
“It kind of took me by surprise that, like, how, like, easy it was to be able to be able to block it,” Bowen told OU reporters after the game. “And then he (Meyer) kicked it pretty bad. Everyone thought I did block it, but I did not touch it at all on the first one. And, so, then the second one, it was the same alignment. I was like, ‘maybe they'll block out to me.’ And they didn't. And so I took a better angle at it that time.”
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementBowen rushed from the right side of the Mizzou, where the bulk of protection was. But, MU tight end Jordon Harris, the outermost player in the protection unit and presumably responsible for picking up a rusher, didn’t seem to notice Bowen was rushing the edge.
Harris held his spot and Bowen got through completely free.
Missouri’s special teams have been a major issue. From field goals since Blake Craig was injured to punting to punt protection, Mizzou has been subpar. The Tigers ranked No. 113 among 136 FBS programs on special teams on ESPN’s SP+ metric entering Saturday.
Oklahoma noticed.
“Let's face it, the blocked kick,” Venables said, “they've been leaking in their coverage; leaky and inconsistent in how they've kicked field goals. … Our coaches did a great job having — that was a very defined plan. You know, how we were going to attack them, their protection.”
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementMore: Missouri football report card. Who passed in woeful day at Oklahoma?
Defensive adjustments win out
Venables likened Mizzou’s side-to-side movement in the stretch run game to a triple option offense. He said it’s hard to simulate in practice and he was wary that most of Mizzou’s opponents had allowed a big run early.
There was a lot he liked about how the Sooners defended star MU running back Ahmad Hardy and Jamal Roberts, who finished with a season-low 71 rushing yards between them on 2.6 yards per carry. OU managed to start “knocking the pile back” up front and “got things under control.”
But the best part for Venables, he said, was a topic worth discussing concerning the sputtering Mizzou offense.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementAfter the Tigers managed to move the ball effectively in their first few drives, reaching scoring position twice, he felt his Sooners adjusted to the game best.
Hardy only rushed for nine yards and Roberts didn’t get a carry in the second half.
Missouri punted four times and was turned over three times as it went scoreless after halftime.
“Sometimes it's a cat-and-mouse game. For them, their job is to try to keep us off balance, and our job is to do the same,” Venables said. “And then you start figuring out where your matchups are and kind of what they're leaning into from (their) DNA. And you can tell what they believe by what they do and how they're attacking you.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement“So, our job is to identify that quickly and be better. And I thought we got better.”
This article originally appeared on Columbia Daily Tribune: What Oklahoma coach, players said about Missouri football after game
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