Baker Mayfield still has an eye on Oklahoma, and the quarterback he sees now is one he clearly respects.
Back in Norman on Saturday for his Baker Mayfield Youth Football Camp, the former Sooners star spent the day working with children ages 7 through 14 and taking questions from local media before moving to the field. And when the conversation turned to John Mateer, Mayfield didn’t hesitate to say the current OU quarterback has the kind of edge that matters in that chair.
“From the first time I talked to John, I could tell he’s kind of built different,” Mayfield said. “That’s an important piece to have when you come in and play quarterback at this university.”
Mayfield, who went 33-6 as Oklahoma’s starter and won the Heisman Trophy in 2017, said he even reached out to Mateer while the quarterback was in the transfer portal after the 2024 season, hoping to help bring him to Norman. Mateer had started his college career at Washington State before landing at OU, where his first season brought both big moments and some rough stretches.
The early returns were strong. Oklahoma opened 4-0 with ranked wins over Michigan and Auburn, and Mateer piled up 1,215 passing yards, 11 total touchdowns and just three interceptions across those first four games.
Then came the injury. Mateer hurt his thumb against Auburn and needed surgery, missed the Kent State game, and still pushed to get back for the annual Red River Rivalry against Texas. Mayfield said he was stunned that Mateer was able to suit up.
“I thought he was insane when he came back to play against Texas,” Mayfield said.
The decision didn’t pay off on the scoreboard. Mateer went 20 of 38 for 202 yards with three interceptions in the loss, and Texas earned its second straight win over Oklahoma.
His final eight games were uneven as well. Mateer completed 59.4 percent of his passes for 1,670 yards, eight touchdowns and eight interceptions over that stretch. Even so, he did enough to help Oklahoma reach the College Football Playoff for the first time since 2019.
That late-season grind is part of why Mayfield is so high on him. The thumb injury, in his view, revealed something more important than numbers.
“I think he’s as tough as they come,” Mayfield said. “You’ve seen guys that can play with pinkies or some of the other fingers, but having a thumb injury, it’s difficult.
Just getting the ball, fielding the snap and then trying to grip the ball, throw it correctly, it’s hard. That speaks to his toughness and his will.”
Now Mateer is heading into his second season in Norman and his final college campaign, and Oklahoma has tried to make sure he has more around him. The Sooners added offensive transfers Parker Livingstone, Trell Harris, Rocky Beers, Hayden Hansen and Jack Dorselaer to bolster the passing game and give him more options.
Mateer also said after OU’s spring game on April 18 that his thumb was “almost” at 100 percent.
Mayfield likes what he sees in the quarterback’s makeup and believes that combination of leadership and toughness can carry Oklahoma.
“He’s there for his guys,” Mayfield said. “To me, that carries you a long way, and I think that’s going to take them farther this year.”
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Kip Lewis Is Already Fueling Buzz Around Two Oklahoma Transfers
After a 10-3 season that sent Oklahoma back to the College Football Playoff, the Sooners are already trying to turn a busy transfer haul into something more than offseason optimism. They brought in 16 newcomers this cycle, and defensive leader Kip Lewis has quickly pointed to two of them as early reasons for buzz: offensive lineman E'Marion Harris and receiver Trell Harris.
E'Marion Harris comes over from Arkansas with the look of a plug-and-play answer at right tackle, while Trell Harris arrived from Virginia with a chance to bolster the passing game once he settles in. For a team trying to follow one strong season with another, those are the kinds of additions that can shape a roster before September even arrives, even if the real payoff still has to be earned on the field. [Read more 🡒]
Brent Venables Is Closing In On Another Future Freak In The Secondary
Oklahomas 2027 recruiting momentum in the secondary keeps showing up in the same place: versatile defensive backs who can do a little of everything. Jaiden Fields fits that mold, and the highly ranked 2027 athlete has drawn plenty of attention because he can line up on offense as a wide receiver and still bring real value on defense at safety. He would join fellow multi-use defenders Bode Sparrow and Jaylen Scott in a class that already sits among the top groups in college football.
Fields also wrapped up a busy stretch of visits, with Oklahoma serving as his final stop after trips to SMU, Texas A&M, TCU and Stanford. His all-around production last season only adds to the appeal, with big numbers on offense and impact plays on defense showing why so many programs have stayed involved. For Brent Venables, the bigger question now is whether the Sooners can keep stacking these secondary pieces before the 2027 class really starts to take shape. [Read more 🡒]
John Mateer Just Started A Debate Sooners Fans Know Too Well
Summer workouts have a way of turning college quarterbacks into internet content, and John Mateer is the latest example. The Oklahoma transfer has already drawn plenty of attention for the way he looks after offseason training, which only adds to the buzz around a player Sooners fans are eager to see in their own colors after what he did last season through the air and on the ground.
The debate is hardly happening in a vacuum, either. Gunner Stockton has been pulling his own share of online praise, with Georgia keeping him in the fold on a new NIL deal for 2026 after a season that showed why he had plenty of leverage, and the contrast has fans splitting into familiar camps about body type, quarterback upside and what all of it might mean once the real games begin. [Read more 🡒]
