University of Kansas

Kansas defense tries to continue positive trend

Kansas’ Ben Goodman and Joe Dineen tackle Rutgers wide receiver Carlton Agudosi in September. The Jayhawks held Rutgers to 27 points that day, the fewest points KU has allowed this season.
Kansas’ Ben Goodman and Joe Dineen tackle Rutgers wide receiver Carlton Agudosi in September. The Jayhawks held Rutgers to 27 points that day, the fewest points KU has allowed this season. Associated Press

The meeting came on Monday, two days after Kansas’ 30-20 loss against Texas Tech. KU coach David Beaty sat down with his leadership council, a group of players who convene regularly to give voice to the roster and guidance to the young players in the program. Beaty addresses many subjects during these meetups, but this week, there was one issue that piqued his curiosity.

His defense.

In the Jayhawks’ first five games, the KU defense had been gashed for 45.4 points per game. Then came last Saturday afternoon, when the Jayhawks bowed up and held an offensive-centric Texas Tech to just 30 points. So what was the difference?

“Ben (Goodman) was kind of the one that stood up,” Beaty recalled, “and said … ‘You know, Coach, we just got tired of it.’ 

The answer was the kind of thing Beaty had been waiting to hear. Here was Goodman, a senior captain and defensive end, displaying some resolve during a season of rebuilding and hard losses.

“We've been talking about it for a long time now,” Beaty said. About (how) you're eventually just going to get tired of it, and something is going to change.”

As Kansas (0-6) prepares to travel to Oklahoma State (6-0) for a 2:30 p.m. Saturday kickoff, the defensive performance against Texas Tech serves to reinforce a unit’s shattered confidence. The hope comes at a good time. On Saturday in Stillwater, the Jayhawks will enter Boone Pickens Stadiu as a five-touchdown underdogs. They have lost 35 straight games away from Lawrence, a streak that hangs on the program like an anchor.

But here’s some reason for optimism: If the defense can duplicate its effort against Texas Tech, perhaps the Jayhawks can hang around in another Big 12 contest.

“It was one performance,” Beaty said Tuesday. “We'll see what happens this week.”

Yes, it was just one game. But it was so much better than recent weeks. The Jayhawks faced a Red Raiders offense averaging 52.6 points. They limited Texas Tech to 30 points on 576 yards while forcing two turnovers. This week, the challenge remains. The Jayhawks must stop an Oklahoma State offense that is tied for 19th in the country in scoring (37 points per game) and 17th in passing yards (325.5). On paper, this is a mismatch.

But the KU defense has fostered some confidence following its performance against Texas Tech. For the most part, the personnel has remained the same. They have been no magic solutions But in the days after last Saturday’s loss, Beaty saw a defensive group that was starting to fight back.

“I think we gotta get tired of (losing) in all areas,” Beaty said, “for us to start making the improvement that we need.”

Reach Rustin Dodd at rdodd@wichitaeagle.com. Follow him on Twitter: @rustindodd.

Kansas at No. 14 Oklahoma State

When: 2:30 p.m. Saturday

Where: Pickens Stadium, Stillwater

Records: KU 0-6, 0-3 Big 12; OSU 6-0. 3-0

Radio: KFH, 1240-AM, 98.7-FM

TV: FS1

Other story lines

Can Oklahoma State continue its recent dominance? Dating back to 1998, Kansas has defeated Oklahoma State just once in 11 tries. That victory came during the Jayhawks’ dream season in 2007. There have been some wild swings in the series. Before this recent trend, the Jayhawks won six straight against the Cowboys from 1990 to 1995.

Kansas receiving corps gains experience. The Jayhawks don’t have the best group of receivers in the nation, but they do have a lot of them getting playing time. KU has 15 wide-outs with at least two catches this year. The addition of freshman Jeremiah Booker, who was injured to start the season, has bolstered the unit. Booker has 10 catches in two games.

Will Ryan Willis continue to air it out? When Willis, a freshman quarterback, threw the ball 50 times last week, it was the most pass attempts by a KU quarterback since Todd Reesing threw it 55 times against Mizzou in 2009. Willis finished with 330 yards passing last week, and if the offensive line can give him protection, expect him to keep winging it around.

This story was originally published October 23, 2015 at 6:54 PM with the headline "Kansas defense tries to continue positive trend."

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