High-scoring Tulsa eyeing perfect season, BCS run
(from CBS Sorts.com) TULSA, Okla. -- Tulsa coach Todd Graham is keeping no secrets when it comes to his lofty goals for this season. Anything less than perfection will be a disappointment.
And after watching former WAC rivals Boise State and Hawaii reach the BCS the past two seasons, why shouldn't the Golden Hurricane dream of becoming the next team to crash the Bowl Championship Series party?
"Why wouldn't we have that goal? You look at what Boise State and Hawaii has done, that is definitely our goal," Graham said. "We haven't done anything to boast or brag or to be talked about in that manner. But on the same hand, if you ask me what our goals are, that's what they are."
Don't believe him? Well, neither did some of his players when the former defensive coordinator took over as head coach last season and set a goal of making Tulsa the nation's top offense.
Gus Malzahn unleashed the no-huddle scheme that he never got to use at Arkansas, and the Golden Hurricane averaged 544 yards as three relatively unknown receivers eclipsed 1,000 yards. The trigger man, Paul Smith, has moved on after a record-setting career but longtime understudy David Johnson and junior college transfer Jacob Bower are competing to replace him with every skill player back around them.
"I don't know how many people outside our locker room believe that we'll be in a BCS game but as long as the people inside the locker room do, we'll be fine," said Tarrion Adams, who ran for 1,225 yards last season.
A four-game midseason stretch will present the biggest hurdle for Tulsa. UTEP and defending Conference USA champion Central Florida come to town before a road game at Arkansas on Nov. 1. Two weeks later is a visit to 2006 C-USA champ Houston, where former Oklahoma receivers coach Kevin Sumlin has taken over for Art Briles.
And don't forget SMU, which could have life for the first time since its 1989 NCAA death penalty with the arrival of June Jones after he led Hawaii to the Sugar Bowl last season.
"It ain't easy. It don't make it any easier. You've got to be able to win them all," Graham said. "It's not easy for Oklahoma to win them all. It's pretty hard in college football to go undefeated."
The Golden Hurricane matched a school record with 10 wins last season, finishing in impressive fashion with a 63-7 GMAC Bowl victory against Bowling Green that went down as the biggest bowl blowout ever.
"We don't really feel like the underdogs this year. We feel like we have enough talent to match up with any team in the country," said receiver Brennan Marion, who caught 39 passes for 1,244 yards last season for an NCAA record 31.9 yards per reception. "We're just excited to play and get out there and shock the world."