Breaking
15 Jun 2025, Sun

So stupid: NCAA iconic guru publicly shares 4 foolish” reason why Brent venable should be pardon and considered without a sack letter” despite bringing terrible disgrace to the entire badge and fans of the sooners” here is his confused excuses..

So stupid: NCAA iconic guru publicly shares 4 foolish” reason why Brent venable should be pardon and considered without a sack letter” despite bringing terrible disgrace to the entire badge and fans of the sooners” here is his confused excuses..

Impulsive reactions and overreactions are common in daily life. That is frequently advanced to the next level in collegiate football. Every year when most teams finish their first week of play, they believe they are among the best and will qualify for the college football playoffs, and maybe even beyond, before they collapse and burn out once conference play begins.

The Oklahoma Sooners are just one of the several instances this season. Under head coach Brent Venables, the Sooners opened the 2024 season with a 51-3 victory over the American Conference’s Temple Owls at Norman.

Venables has been the Sooners’ head coach for three seasons. However, the Sooners collapsed after a 3-0 start, dropping four of their last five games and finishing 1-4 in the SEC for their inaugural league season.

The Sooners are, quite rightly, considered to be among the weakest teams in the SEC this season. It will be challenging to exceed their FanDuel-set preseason victory total of 7.5, as three of their final four games will be against ranked opponents.

As a result, the narrative has quickly changed to many blaming Venables and wondering if he is the best candidate for the position in Norman going ahead.

For these reasons, Brent Venables remains Oklahoma Football’s best bet going ahead. Venables has the courage to alter

Venables has the courage to alter It is uncommon to find head coaches with the courage to fire coordinators in the middle of the season, unlike many of his predecessors at Oklahoma and other universities.

But Venables isn’t one of those. Venables dismissed offensive coordinator Seth Littrell, who had been hired in the off-season, because the Sooners had not performed well offensively since entering league play.

Even though the Sooners started the season with redshirt freshman quarterback Jackson Arnold in charge, On3 claims that the former five-star quarterback was unable to work with Littrell at the controls in a way that would propel the team to the level of success needed in the SEC.

During his tenure at the University of Florida, Will Muschamp refused to fire offensive coordinator D.J. Durkin, and Brian Kelly of LSU refused to fire defensive coordinator Matt House. These are two instances of head coaches in the SEC who failed to fire a coordinator during the season that most likely should have been fired.

Both ultimately parted ways with their coordinators, but this was done at the end of the season. Venables should be commended for having the guts to do this not only in the middle of the season but also during the first year of the coordinators’ employment.

Rather, the coach is being shamed by the story.

Oklahoma’s injury rate has been low.

The Sooners have been severely injured, especially offensively, since before fall camp. The Sooners currently lack their top five wide outs and have a haphazard offensive line at best.

This past weekend against Lane Kiffin’s Ole Miss Rebels, the Sooners gave up 10 sacks, demonstrating the ailments under offensive line coach Bill Bedenbaugh perhaps more than at any other time this season.

Although there are injuries on every team, the Sooners have sadly had what seems to be worse luck than the others. In addition to having a lot, the most of them appear to be on the offensive end of the spectrum.

Venables’ season has ten victories. As said, overreaction and recency bias are genuine.

It’s also funny how easily viewers forget that the Sooners finished with a 10-win record in their final season in the Big 12.

The Sooners as a team made gradual progress in their second season under Venables on both sides of the ball in 2023, despite the counterargument that they were a part of the Big 12 and not the SEC. And that’s before all the wounds.

The Sooners defeated the rival Texas Longhorns, who were then rated third in the nation, during the 2023 season. It’s also important to note that, although Venables finished his second season with the Sooners 10-3, Steve Sarkisian, the perennially lauded coach at the opposite end of the rivalry, only finished 8-5 with the Longhorns.

Nick Saban has lost twice to Brent Venables. The only other head coach or coordinator in the SEC right now who can claim to have defeated Nick Saban twice is Hugh Freeze.

When Freeze was head coach of the Ole Miss Rebels, he twice defeated Saban, the seven-time national winner.

Although Venables did not succeed Saban as head coach, he did so in 2016 and 2018 while serving as defensive coordinator for the Clemson Tigers under Dabo Swinney.

One of the greatest losses in Saban’s time with the Tide occurred in 2018, when Venables assisted the Tigers in defeating the Tide 44-16.

Due to a diminished roster, the Sooners should continue to be the subject of all jokes for the rest of 2024.

However, given all of the injuries and Venables’s success history, you may anticipate that the program will recover by 2025. As a result, you should anticipate Venables being in Norman for a long time.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *