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| Wednesday, December 13 Stoops earns AP coaching honor Associated Press | |||
| NEW YORK -- Bob Stoops didn't need long to prove he could
turn awful into awesome at Oklahoma.
In just his second season as a head coach, Stoops guided the
Sooners (12-0) to the No. 1 ranking, a perfect regular season and a
shot at their first national championship since 1985 when they play
Florida State in the Orange Bowl on Jan. 3.
"I feel a sense of pride for the way these players have
worked," Stoops said, "and for the guys who have been around for
a few years who were told they weren't very good. We are now a
confident bunch."
On Tuesday, the 40-year-old Stoops was chosen as The Associated
Press College Coach of the Year in balloting by AP member
newspapers, TV and radio stations.
Stoops, who brought a wide-open passing attack to a school known
for its wishbone and option running game, received 41 of the 91
votes in the AP balloting. South Carolina's Lou Holtz was second
with 19 votes, and Oregon State's Dennis Erickson was third with 16
votes.
"It's a great honor for Oklahoma," Stoops said. "It's an
award that every assistant coach has a piece of and it reflects on
the players and their attitude about working together, about the
way they won. The trophy will go in the coaches' hallway, not in my
house."
Last week, Oklahoma quarterback Josh Heupel was selected the
AP's College Player of the Year.
Stoops, a highly regarded defensive coordinator under Kansas
State's Bill Snyder and then Florida's Steve Spurrier, accepted the
challenge of returning Oklahoma to its winning ways. A school with
six national titles had fallen on hard times under John Blake,
losing 22 of 34 games from 1996-98.
On the day he took over, Dec. 1, 1998, Stoops said "there
should be great expectations here. It's a program with the
championships that should expect championships. I know we'll
operate with no excuses. There are no excuses. You succeed or you
don't."
Success arrived quickly. In 1999, Stoops unveiled his passing
game directed by Heupel, a star at Snow Junior College in Utah but
unknown just about everywhere else. The Sooners went 7-5, Heupel
broke a bunch of school passing records and OU played in its first
bowl game since 1994.
This season, Stoops said his players were better prepared and
more disciplined. Even with a three-game run against Big 12
Conference powers Texas, Kansas State and Nebraska, Stoops knew his
team would not be intimidated.
"People were looking at a piece of paper saying 'they can win
this one, they can't win that one,"' Stoops said. "We see our
kids every day. They pushed themselves hard in the off-season and
earned the right to be confident. Last year, we were not good
enough to hold leads, we were not disciplined enough to finish off
games. We knew we would be better."
No. 19 in the preseason poll, the Sooners moved up to No. 10
with easy wins over Texas-El Paso, Arkansas State, Rice and Kansas.
Next up, a No. 11 Texas, followed by a No. 2 Kansas State, then a
showdown against No. 1 Nebraska.
No problem. The Sooner magic of the 1970s and '80 returned. OU
toppled the Longhorns 63-14 in Dallas; won at Kansas State 41-31;
returned home to dominate the Cornhuskers 31-14; and took over the
No. 1 ranking.
In those games, Heupel threw for 949 yards, four TDs and just
one interception as he became a top Heisman Trophy contender. He
finished second to Florida State's Chris Weinke.
Before the Nebraska game, Stoops showed his team films of the
classic OU-NU games from the 1970s and '80s. "The kids didn't
really know what it was all about," Stoops said. "We wanted them
to know."
The Sooners had a shaky finish -- a comeback 35-31 win at Texas
A&M followed by closer-than-expected calls against Texas Tech and
Oklahoma State. Then it was on to the Big 12 title game, with
K-State waiting for revenge. Heupel overcame three interceptions
with two TDs passing and one rushing for a 27-24 win and a berth in
the BCS' title game in Miami.
Stoops says the win over Texas may have been the turning point.
"As much as anything else, I remember them not being in awe
against Texas," Stoops said. "We told them, `You are one of the
elite teams. You are Oklahoma.' We have won a lot of big games at
Oklahoma. We fully expected to win, and the way we did we knew the
next two games that we ought to be able to get 'em."
| ALSO SEE
FSU, Miami each have three players on AP All-America team | ||
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