Samaje Perine’s record-setting day last season on minds of Kansas football team
Kansas coach David Beaty knows what awaits on Saturday. He has seen the film from that record-setting day. He knows that Oklahoma’s diesel truck of a running back is gassing up for another run. And he knows that this latest Oklahoma-Kansas game at Memorial Stadium could come down to the simplest of football battles: One team will run the football downhill, and Beaty’s team must stiffen up and try to stop it.
“We obviously have some things that we’ve really got to do,” Beaty said this week.
Saturday afternoon, No. 14 Oklahoma (6-1) will unleash running back Samaje Perine on the premises. That’s the same Perine who, just one year ago, was seen rushing for an NCAA-record 427 yards in a 44-7 victory over KU in Norman, Okla.; The same Perine who appears to be heating up after rushing for a season-high 201 yards in a victory over Texas Tech last week. In other words: Good luck, Kansas.
“He’s talented,” Beaty said this week. “He is really good. He is a good back. He’s as good a back as I’ve seen all year.”
Beaty compares Perine to LSU’s Leonard Fournette, a sophomore Heisman contender who leads the Football Bowl Subdivision with 1,352 rushing yards. Fournette could one day be a top pick in the NFL Draft, and Beaty believes that Perine measures up quite well. His blend of sheer size (5-foot-10, 230 pounds) and sprinter’s speed can terrorize opposing defenses. And after ripping through defenses for 1,713 yards last season as a freshman, he returned as a more seasoned version of himself this year.
After seven games, Perine has recorded a more modest 621 yards on 116 carries while splitting time with redshirt freshman Joe Mixon, another former top recruit. Mixon missed all of last season after being charged with a misdemeanor assault charge involving a female student. And his return had added another layer to the backfield.
“They’ve done a good job of amassing talent,” Beaty said.
For the moment, though, Beaty, stressed that this is a new season, with new rosters and new regimes. Perine did the same this week.
“We watched film on (KU) a little bit, because they do some of the same stuff, but I try not to think much about what I did last year, because it’s a new year,” Perine told reporters this week in Norman. “They have some new players. I have to go out there and take it one play at a time and hope to do my assignments as best as I can. I guess I did a good job.”
Modesty aside, Perine’s dominance against Kansas was astonishing — even a year later. On a rain-soaked November afternoon, Perine averaged 12.6 yards per carry and scored five touchdowns. He shattered the NCAA record of 408 yards, set one week earlier by Wisconsin’s Melvin Gordon.
“I just ran,” Perine said. “I didn’t have to do much. Those holes were huge.”
Perhaps Kansas (0-7) can start there, by limiting the holes. A year ago, facing a KU squad guided by interim coach Clint Bowen, Perine ripped off a 49-yard touchdown run on his first carry and the dam appeared to break. During the next three quarters, Perine added touchdown runs of 33, 34, 66 and 27 yards.
“I remember watching the game,” said Beaty, who was then an assistant at Texas A&M. “ … What he did last year was something that doesn’t happen very often. But as we went back and looked at the tape, we contributed to that a little bit. Hopefully, we can make the proper adjustments this week, and we can try to limit him.”
Reach Rustin Dodd at rdodd@wichitaeagle.com. Follow him on Twitter: @rustindodd.
No. 14 Oklahoma at Kansas
When: 2:30 p.m. Saturday
Where: Memorial Stadium, Lawrence
Records: OU 6-1, 3-1 Big 12; KU 0-7, 0-4
Radio: KFH, 1240-AM, 98.7-FM
TV: FS1
Three things about Oklahoma
1. OU quarterback Baker Mayfield is in his first year as the starter after transferring from Texas Tech, where he began his career as a walk-on. He's been a playmaker. Mayfield ranks 12th in the country in total offense (324.1 yards per contest).
2. Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops is 10-0 against Kansas, with every victory being decided by at least 15 points. The Sooners have won those 10 games by an average margin of 27 points.
3. Even after a loss to Texas in Dallas, the Sooners (6-1) control their own destiny in the Big 12 race. Oklahoma will close the Big 12 schedule with games against Baylor, TCU and Oklahoma State in November.
Key matchup
Oklahoma’s running game vs. Kansas’ defense: The Jayhawks know they must stop the run, but it’s not just Samaje Perine. Oklahoma also features freshman running back Joe Mixon, a former top recruit who had 154 rushing yards and two touchdowns last week against Texas Tech. In all, the Sooners are coming off a 405-yard performance on the ground last week. If Oklahoma is so inclined, it could come close to that total on Saturday.
Rustin Dodd’s pick: Oklahoma, 52-10
The unforgiving Big 12 grind continues. At the very least, the Jayhawks are back at home, where they were competitive with Texas Tech on Oct. 17. Oklahoma, though, is not Texas Tech.
This story was originally published October 29, 2015 at 4:26 PM with the headline "Samaje Perine’s record-setting day last season on minds of Kansas football team."