heres OU im not to sure bout this no huddle thing stoops got going on
Oklahoma
The no-huddle and Sam Bradford: Bradford led the nation in passing efficiency last season and only threw eight interceptions. That's why his three-interception performance in the spring game opened a few eyes, and might get fans wondering if the new no-huddle offense will hurt what was an already effective air attack. Whatever. Call it working the kinks out as the offense clicked throughout spring ball and should make the already great Bradford even more of a Heisman candidate. Backup Joey Halzle had an up-and-down spring throwing for 177 yards in one scrimmage and completing 1 of 13 passes in another. Keith Nichol was also inconsistent, but overall he was fine.
Who will Bradford throw to? Jermaine Gresham, Jermaine Gresham and Jermaine Gresham. Wisconsin's Travis Beckum will have a lot to say about it, but Gresham might be the favorite for the Mackey Award. The 6-5, 265-pound junior caught 37 passes last season, with 11 going for scores, highlighted by a four-touchdown day against Texas A&M. He caught a 51-yard touchdown pass in the spring game and should be the go-to target, even though Juaquin Iglesias is back and ready to be a No. 1 receiver. The secondary will be a problem, right? Wrong. Reggie Smith, D.J. Wolfe, and Marcus Walker are gone and Nic Harris was out this spring with a shoulder problem ... and the secondary looked better than ever. Granted, the offense was trying to work the kinks out of the new no-huddle attack, but the defensive backs dominated at times. With Harris and senior Lendy Holmes, the secondary isn't starting from scratch. Sophomore Dominique Franks emerged as OU's next superstar corner with three picks in the spring game coming after a great spring session. Sam Proctor should grow into the rotation at one of the safety spots, and corner Brian Jackson had some big moments.