Drew Mestemaker Sounds Different About Oklahoma States New-Look Offense

Oklahoma State's quarterback Drew Mestemaker shares insights on the team's growing chemistry and their methodical approach to championship aspirations amidst a radically revamped roster.

FRISCO, Texas - Drew Mestemaker isn’t spending much time soaking in the preseason noise. The Oklahoma State quarterback made that clear during Big 12 Football Media Days, where the conversation kept circling back to the same themes: a roster with more than 80 newcomers, championship expectations and the Cowboys’ push to get everything pointed in the right direction for 2026.

For Mestemaker, the most memorable part of the day was a light one. Asked about his favorite moment, he pointed to the team’s appearance in uniform and the energy from his teammates on stage.

“Wow, we’ve got a lot going on today. But honestly, I think the funniest part was being up there in the uniforms and seeing Caleb and Jaleel and Ethan jump around and flex and scream into the cameras. I thought that was pretty funny.”

When asked whether he matched that kind of energy, Mestemaker said he tried.

“Yeah, I did my best. I don’t know how good it was compared to them, but I did my best.”

The bigger storyline around Oklahoma State this offseason has been roster turnover, and that was the question Mestemaker said he heard most often throughout media days. With so many new faces in the mix, the natural concern is how quickly the group can come together.

“I think it’s honestly just questions about how the team’s coming together because that’s a big question whenever you’ve got 80-something new guys coming together. But honestly, I think it’s been really good.”

That optimism lines up with the message Mestemaker said coach Eric Morris has delivered all offseason. Rather than leaning into lofty preseason proclamations, Morris has kept the focus on the day-to-day work.

“I feel like Coach Morris isn’t really a guy who’s hyping it up to be like we’re a College Football Playoff team and all this stuff because, at the end of the day, it’s good to have those sights set and talk about it a little bit, but the biggest thing is going week by week because you can’t reach that goal if you aren’t winning every week.

“I think his thing is more, ‘Win the day, win the week,’ and then at the end of the week, start over and win the next one.”

Still, Mestemaker didn’t shy away from the larger ambition. Oklahoma State, he said, wants to chase a championship.

“One hundred percent. I think we all want to bring a championship to Oklahoma State, whether that’s the Big 12 or the College Football Playoff. It’s in the talks for sure, and everyone knows it there, but we’ve got to take it week by week.”

One player drawing plenty of attention is Caleb Hawkins, who Morris said has added 22 pounds of muscle and gotten faster. Mestemaker has seen the difference firsthand.

“One hundred percent. I feel like it was the first play of one of our spring scrimmages, and he popped off a 70-yard run. Everyone was kind of like... because the defense runs by and does the ‘hoo-ha’ and says they tackled him, and it’s like, ‘No, you’ve actually got to tackle Caleb.’

“That was a good sight to see, and everyone was like, ‘All right, Caleb will be fine.’ He’s going to make people miss for sure.”

As for Mestemaker himself, the focus is simple. The preseason recognition as the Big 12 Preseason Newcomer of the Year is nice, but it is not where his mind is living.

“Yeah, a little bit. I mean, the goal is to make it postseason, too, so that’s really the most thinking I’m doing about it.”

Mostly, he just wants to get back on the field.

“Honestly, I think I’m just excited to get out there and compete again. There’s a lot of talking about it and a lot of saying you’ve got a lot of new guys and a lot of hype around some of the new guys we’ve got. Honestly, I’m just ready to go out there and compete and play football at the end of the day.”

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