Oklahoma is one win away from the College Football Playoff and coach Brent Venables knows it.
Just don’t tell him that.
His Sooners managed a 17-6 win over Missouri on Saturday to hold serve ahead of next week’s season finale against LSU. Oklahoma entered the game against Mizzou with a spot in the latest CFP rankings and will either stay as the No. 8-ranked team or possibly move up, depending on the rest of the Week 11 results.
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Oklahoma scored 14 of its 17 points in the second quarter against the Tigers and had more yards in the frame it had the entire rest of the game. Their defense kept Missouri out of the end zone despite Mizzou getting into the red zone three times.
It was a bit of a closer call than the 11-point margin would suspect. Eventually, the Sooners’ offense will need to show up.
But for now, Venables could talk about another win, the team’s ninth of the season. Here’s what he had to say following the game.
Opening statement
I’m so thankful for the mindset, the grit, the toughness of this football team. They’re a grimey group. I say that with great, great respect. Relentless mindset. Passionate about one another. Love to compete. Never losing hope or belief. They played a really good team that’s been a really good team against everybody they’ve played. All the one-score games outside of the one game that really blew up in the third quarter after a fake punt and the back-up quarterback that played for them. The stats don’t really, there’s nothing to really brag about. Y’all love to pump up, everybody gets excited about a lot of offensive statistical things that should up. I know we had more yards per play, more yards per carry. We did what we needed to do to win. We tried to push the ball down the field, didn’t really go our way like we wanted it to, except we hit Sategna in the slant. Man, what a great play that was. Second half, I think they had nine rushes, went for zero yards. Defensively: punt, punt, interception, punt, punt, downs, interception. Second half was fantastic. … Just some amazing moments. I’m always fired up when we’re playing to our ability. Made a few slight adjustments in the second half defensively and really our guys, their will and their toughness were just fantastic. Offensively, hard to get into a really good rhythm. We’ve got to be better. There’s more there. We missed some opportunities to stay on-schedule. We’ll learn from those and told the team, we were 8-2 last week, we’re 9-2 this week. I’m proud of our guys for our body of work and a relentless commitment, but nobody’s handing out trophies. There’s no badge of honor other than playing the game a certain way. Physical. Took care of the ball. Plus-two again. Ten turnovers the last three games. That’s how you’ve got to go win. Really great work.
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On slant to Sategna
I think that’s fair. Really created a spark. We go up 7-3 there. Huge play against a defense the quality of Missouri, you can create an explosive play, hit a guy on a runner, make some guys miss and leaves an 80-yard touchdown. That’s a huge play in these kinds of games, absolutely. Created momentum and belief and all of those things. It takes those things. …
On slowing down Hardy
Right after the first drive (made adjustments). We were a little soft. Sometimes we’re playing coverage and a light box, see what we can get away with. You don’t always know until you get on gameday. You can’t just sit there and load the box every play, either. Sometimes it’s cat-and-mouse game. For them, their job is to try to keep us off-balance and our job is the same. Then you start figuring out where your matchups are and kind of what they’re leaning into from a DNA. You can tell what they believe by what they do and how they are attacking you. Our job is to identify that quickly and be better. I thought we got better. Told somebody, I spoke to the media-wise this week, a lot of their games early, teams have given up a lot of rushing yards to them early in the games because it’s hard to emulate. It’s kind of like a triple-option team. There’s not a whole lot of teams that do what they do and how they do it. The power of the running backs. They’re balance, their strength, their explosiveness, their center of gravity. It’s hard. Usually you see that. Thankfully we started knocking the pile backward a little bit more often and pushed the pile the right way and got things under control. … Having done this a long time and been on different teams that have different styles and different DNA, this is, we’ve got a really nice cadence and rhythm. I’ve been talking about that. I think that was a difference-maker today. More than anything, guys just grimey and winning a certain way.
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On running backs and tenacity
Brag on him, he showed up on Monday, got a sprained knee. Some guys might run to the sideline, the training room. He didn’t. He said put me in a branch and let me go on Monday. THat’s what guys from Carl Albert do. They show up. Even when it hurts. Talking to our players back in fall camp, talked about this is football. If you’re playing a role, you’re probably not going to feel 100% from here on out moving forward. You want to play this game at a high level, you want to be successful and someone that has value, then, man, you’re laying it on the line at 70, 75, 80%. THat’s the reality. We can’t have a bunch of race cars around here, a bunch of Lamborghinis, where everything’s got to be just right, the premium fuel, the lugnuts and all those got to be just right. This is football. I have a great appreciation for our team that share that vision and philosophy. Not going to miss this opportunity.
On Bowen brothers
Love those guys. They’re a joy to coach. They let you push them. They’re willing to have honest conversations. They take responsibility when it ain’t good. Two guys that represent everything we’re about the right way. They’re excellent playmakers. Great young men. Great teammates. Great family. Huge impact for what we’re doing on defense.
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On low-scoring games
You live and die on every conversion, every punt, every missed block or dropped ball. You really do. Comfortable maybe. Maybe reasonable. Still, we’ve got to get better. Things can be a little easier if we can’t get better.
On defensive stoutness
We’ve got great maturity there. We’re not worried about who is punting, who is getting first downs. We don’t have no opinion on that. That’s the mindset. You go do your job. You should relish the opportunity to go back out there and do it again and do it again and do it again and do it again. Whatever it takes. That’s your job. None of those guys need to be concerned about being an offensive coordinator. And they’re not. They’re a humble group of guys that have big expectations and high standards.
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On third quarter field-goal block chess match
That was a great moment in the second half. We just wanted to get a peek at what they were going to be in. We liked what we had called. Wanted to see as much of a glimpse. Make them go to the next best play. They had a play they loved there. Maybe saw it later when we stopped them on the fourth down. Big play. Let’s face it, the blocked kick. They’d been leaky in their coverage and leaky and inconsistent in how they’ve kicked field goals. Defense did a great job there of coming up with a huge stop, huge play.
Make or miss, is forcing the field goal there a win?
I’d rather they try the field goal. I don’t know. I’d rather them trot the field goal unit out there and there’s an opportunity to keep them out of the end zone.
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On Mateer
Really good. Hda to earn everything he was given. Two touchdowns, 175 yards. Missed a couple. Every single one of his yards were earned, hard-earned yards. Took care of the ball. That’s a winning formula. Good defense, good special teams, take care of the ball, win the margin, outrush them. That was the nation’s leader in rushing and the No. 1 team in the SEC when it comes to rushing per game and our guys outrushed them 3.2 to 2.0. Everything goes through the quarterback. We know that. One hundred percent in the red zone.
On Jacobe Johnson interception
That was right after Reggie had the targeting. The next play. We had an edge pressure. He did a great job. They came out with a formation. We hadn’t worked that exact route but he just played his fundamentals and technique within the scheme. Jacobe, that just shows his growth and maturity. Came here as a country cover-3 corner. Really a dynamic skill player on offense. That just, for me, that just showed this great maturity in his development. … It was a clinic play. And a huge play. Want to talk about a momentum killer. Everything today was going to be hard. When they got the automatic first down after getting a big stop. I call it a stop. To take that air right back out of their sideline, huge. Because they had some life. Huge play. One of probably the top four or five impactful plays in the game in my opinion.
This article originally appeared on Sooners Wire: What Brent Venables had to say following Oklahoma’s win over Missouri








