Oklahoma Sooners Quarterback John Mateer Looking To Return For Marquee Game
It’s Red River Rivalry week, and the biggest question floating around Dallas isn’t about the price of a corn dog at the State Fair—it’s about the right hand of Oklahoma Quarterback John Mateer. Will he or won’t he play? That’s the million-dollar question that has Sooner and Longhorn fans alike refreshing their feeds faster than a hiccup.
Sources close to the program are whispering that Mateer is pushing hard to get back on the field for the colossal showdown against Texas. This comes less than three weeks after he had surgery on a broken bone in his throwing hand. Let that sink in. Most of us would be milking a paper cut for a week, and this guy is trying to suit up for one of the most intense rivalries in college football just 17 days after a surgeon pieced his hand back together. It is the kind of grit that makes you question your own life choices.
The Mateer Effect On the Red River Rivalry
Before the injury, Mateer wasn’t just playing football; he was conducting a symphony of destruction. He’d firmly planted himself as the Heisman Trophy frontrunner and was arguably the most electric player in the nation. Through four games, he was a statistical marvel, completing over 67% of his passes for 1,215 yards and 6 touchdowns. But wait, there’s more! The man was also a terror on the ground, rushing for 190 yards and another five scores. He was a walking, talking highlight reel, a dual-threat dynamo that kept defensive coordinators up at night.
Then, disaster struck against Auburn on September 20. He got hurt in the first quarter, but, in a move that belongs in a football folklore book, he played the entire rest of the game, finishing with 271 yards. He then quietly flew to Los Angeles for surgery with a top hand specialist. Talk about tough.
Oklahoma’s Quarterback Quandary
With Mateer sidelined, true freshman Michael Hawkins Jr. stepped in against Kent State. The kid did his job, leading the Sooners to a comfortable 44-0 victory with 162 passing yards and three touchdowns. It was a solid performance, but let’s be honest, Kent State isn’t exactly the ’85 Bears. Facing Texas is a different beast entirely.
Even Texas Head Coach Steve Sarkisian isn’t buying the uncertainty. When asked about his game plan, he was blunt: “We’ll plan for Mateer, you have to.” Sarkisian knows that preparing for Hawkins and preparing for a healthy Mateer are two completely different universes. One is a manageable task; the other is like trying to solve a Rubik’s Cube in a hurricane.
While Oklahoma Head Coach Brent Venables is playing it coy, saying it’s “uncertain” when his star QB will return, the buzz is undeniable. Mateer has reacted well to the surgery, and the most optimistic timelines are suddenly looking plausible. Seeing him in uniform on the sideline last week, albeit with a brace, was enough to send Sooner Nation into a frenzy.
So, will the Heisman hopeful make a legendary return in the Cotton Bowl? The fate of the Golden Hat, and a massive leg up in the SEC race, could very well rest on the sturdiness of that recently repaired right hand.
