Oklahoma Can Make The SEC Championship in 2025. Here’s Why

Oklahoma coach Brent Venables stands on the sideline during a college football game between the University of Oklahoma Sooners (OU) and the Tennessee Volunteers at Gaylord Family - Oklahoma Memorial Stadium in Norman, Okla., Saturday, Sept. 21, 2024.

Oklahoma is closer to playing in the SEC Championship than you might think.

Last night I was scrolling through X and found this tweet from the “Boomer Backfield Podcast”:

I initially thought it was crazy when they claimed OU could make the SEC Championship in 2025. But after watching their podcast and doing a deep dive into the season, I’ve come to a surprising conclusion: their argument holds up.

I’m convinced the Sooners could have played in the SEC Championship THIS year, and here’s why:

Let’s look at Oklahoma’s 2024 season. The team finished 6-6 (2-6 in SEC), filtered through 2 quarterbacks, had severe injuries across the entire offense, fired their OC in the middle of the season, and just had their starting QB and best wide receiver enter the transfer portal.

From an outside perspective, Oklahoma is imploding. From an objective perspective, the Sooners could have played in the SEC Championship this year, and here’s why.

Tennessee:

On September 21, the Sooners hosted Tennessee in Norman for their first SEC conference game. The result? A 25-15 loss.

In the first half, Jackson Arnold made costly mistakes:

  • An interception.
  • A fumble at the 5-yard line.
  • A backward pass that Tennessee recovered, leading to a touchdown on the subsequent drive.

Those mistakes alone accounted for 10 points for Tennessee—the exact margin of defeat.

In the second half, Michael Hawkins stepped in and performed impressively, posting numbers nearly identical to Tennessee’s quarterback, Nico Iamaleava. Hawkins went 11/18 for 132 yards and 1 touchdown, compared to Iamaleava’s 13/21 for 194 yards and 1 touchdown.

You can never say that one person is responsible for a loss, but it makes you wonder: if Michael Hawkins started that game, does he make the same mistakes? And if he doesn’t, do the Sooners beat Tennessee? I believe they do. I also believe, unfortunately, Jackson Arnold’s mistakes cost the Sooners that game.

South Carolina:

Against South Carolina, the roles reversed. This time, Michael Hawkins struggled, committing three turnovers in the first three drives:

  • Two interceptions (one returned for a touchdown).
  • A fumble (returned for a touchdown).

South Carolina scored just 14 points on possessions where they actually had to drive the ball down the field.

The crowd was out of the game within the first 5 minutes, the team visibly looked defeated, and South Carolina had so much momentum from the turnovers that it was hard to stop.

Opposite the Tennessee game, if Michael Hawkins does not commit those mistakes, do the Sooners lose to South Carolina? South Carolina turned out to be a great team this year. However, I do think it would have been a lot closer, and I do think the Sooners would have won.

Ole Miss:

Seth Littrell was fired the previous week. The Sooners went into halftime with a 14-10 lead, looking sharp on offense. Jackson Arnold was throwing with confidence, Jovantae Barnes powered the run game, and the team seemed to be in rhythm.

However, the second half was a disaster:

  • The offense lost momentum and couldn’t put together a single scoring drive.
  • The defense collapsed.
  • The offensive line allowed a school-record 10 sacks.
  • Arnold and Taylor Tatum both fumbled, leading to turnovers.

Ole Miss capitalized, scoring 16 unanswered points, while the Sooners were shut out in the second half. The final score: Ole Miss 26, Oklahoma 14.

This game was within reach for the Sooners if they had just avoided critical mistakes and stayed focused. Yet, even with those mistakes, Oklahoma was still in the game heading into the fourth quarter.

Mizzou:

Arguably the most winnable loss of the season for the Sooners.

The offense struggled all night, managing just one miracle play. Meanwhile, the defense held strong until Mizzou’s final drive. Special teams were a bright spot, with Zach Schmidt delivering a standout performance that kept Oklahoma in the game.

Then came the heartbreak. With 22 seconds left, Jackson Arnold fumbled, and Mizzou scooped it up for a game-winning touchdown. Final score: 30-23 Mizzou.

What if?

Let’s just say that in all of those games I mentioned, the Sooners don’t have costly fumbles, turn over the ball, or allow school records in sacks. It’s not crazy to believe Oklahoma probably would have won all of those games.

The Sooners could have finished 10-2, hosted a playoff game in Norman, and potentially reached the SEC Championship if momentum had swung their way in that LSU game.

Injuries did not kill Oklahoma’s season, critical mistakes did.

Brent Venables always says the Sooners are close to winning and being who Oklahoma is meant to be.

If the Sooners can clean up these mistakes over the offseason and develop some consistency, he might not be wrong.

If you’re interested in diving deeper into this discussion, check out the Boomer Backfield podcast here. Give it a watch and form your own opinion, you might just get some hope for next season.