....to the Sooners.
http://oklahoma.rivals.com/viewprosp...1&pr_key=37738
Will this impact Murray's decision?
....to the Sooners.
http://oklahoma.rivals.com/viewprosp...1&pr_key=37738
Will this impact Murray's decision?
I doubt it. USC is the favorite for like 8 highly rated RBs, and Florida already has 2 or 3 good ones already committed.
looks like we want murray but will go with madu if murray goes elsewhere
has anyone looked at the picture of Brown? doesn't look like a kid like some of these other guys.
doubt it, two runnnig backs are graduating, we need one more.Originally Posted by Mjcpr
Originally Posted by Ground_Attack
He does look a little older than your average 17 year old. Take a look at this guy...
http://oklahoma.rivals.com/viewprosp...p?pr_key=36120
Needs about 10 more pounds of beef and he should be pretty good size for a RB. I'm sure Schmidt and crew will take care of that.
Hard work will defeat talent everytime talent doesn't work hard!!
Originally Posted by Harry Beanbag
Funny!!! hahaha But wrong guy.
Hard work will defeat talent everytime talent doesn't work hard!!
Guys, you are forgeting about RB Evan Royster. He is very good and the rumor is that OU is his #1. He could commit anytime.
As for Murray, he has always known that we would recruit 2-3 RB's in this class. He is better than all of them and we have all known Brown was a probable commitment. This doesnt affect his decision.
Originally Posted by OUGreg723
Maybe, but he's not OU's #1 so he'll have to get the okay if he wants to commit.
This is great news.. I have wanted Brown to be a Sooner since recruiting started this year. We will all be glad this young man is going to Norman!
He would make a good strong saftey! We need an Everage or a Williams back there that can hit and make plays-
Did Harris make an impact on Brown's choice in that Harris came from the same city?
Yes, it did.
"The choices we discern as having been made in the Constitutional Convention impose burdens on governmental proceses that often seem clumsy, inefficient, even unworkable, but those hard choices were consciously made by men who had lived under a form of government that permitted arbitrary governmental acts to go unchecked." INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919 (1983) (Burger, C.J.)