As is the case in a significant number of games, the difference ususally comes down to one play. Last Saturday, it was the "interception that wasn't". The week before, at Auburn/Alabama it was a short kick on a field goal. You can cite examples till the cows come home.
To argue that Stoops or Gundy are directly responsible (most of the time) for bad calls is a poor answer for a problem that is largely out of their hands at that stage. Once on the field, winning and losing is largely a product of the player.
To argue that Stoops or Gundy are directly responsible (most of the time) for bad calls is a poor answer for a problem that is largely out of their hands at that stage. Once on the field, winning and losing is largely a product of the player.