NORMAN — Deion Burkswas lured to Norman with the promise of playing Drake Stoops’ old position. The 5-foot-9 Purdue transfer could become a greater vertical threat than his predecessor was.
“Coming in, I just knew I pretty much wanted to play the slot position,” Burks said after a spring practice on April 12. “Honestly, what caught my eyes was what Drake Stoops did in this spot, man. He’s a great athlete, man, he gets open in space. I’m like, ‘Man, if I can replicate my game after him and just pick up after his game and do what he did, I feel like that could be a great thing to see.”
The former Boilermaker turned heads when he caught five passes for 174 yards — an average of 34.8 yards per haul — and two touchdowns in the Red-White Spring Game on April 22. Early in the first quarter, Burks burst past the white team’s secondary on a seam and climbed to meet a 65-yard connection from sophomore QB1 Jackson Arnoldin stride as he raced to the end zone.
“Deion is a special player,” Arnold said after the game. “He’s one of the fastest kids I’ve thrown to. He knows how to get open, great route runner. He showed that ability today and I’m proud of him.”
“A lot of people go deep. It’s great that I got to put it on film. I hope to definitely keep playing that role of going deep,” Burks said.
It’s not just the ability to stretch the field that will help Burks succeed with the Sooners this year. His route-running and ability to create separation in short-yardage situations is equally impressive.
“The ability to throw both underneath and deep, your coverages are affected,” head coach Brent Venables said after the spring game. “Who you’re matching things up with, whether it’s a quarter safety or a spin-down safety or it’s additional corner or whoever that additional defender is — your star, your fifth DB. . . It makes the matchups a little more difficult when you’ve got somebody [Burks] that can challenge you vertically as well as underneath.”
Stoops, who finished his career as a top-15 all-time Sooner in receiving yards and recently signed as an undrafted free agent to the Los Angeles Rams, was a savant when it came to finding open field and was undoubtedly one of the best interior receivers to come through Norman in the past decade. He was named an All-Big 12 First-Team selection after catching 84 passes for 962 yards and 10 touchdowns.
“Again, Drake was a high-producing receiver. It didn’t matter what you asked that guy to do, whether that was beat someone on an over route, get open on an underneath crosser, something like that,” Venables said. “Drake would make all the competitive plays. We’ll need to continue to have that kind of production out of that position in order for us to be successful systematically.”