Oklahoma State Is Already Being Picked For A Massive 2026 Statement

Predicting a potential upset, former athlete David Cone points to the Oregon Ducks' challenging non-conference schedule in 2026, particularly highlighting a road game against a revitalized Oklahoma State.

College football chatter around Oregon has already zeroed in on the obvious heavyweight tests in 2026, but the Ducks may have another trap waiting before the Big Ten grind even really starts.

Former collegiate athlete David Cone, speaking on the Crain & Cone college football show, tabbed Oregon’s road trip to Oklahoma State as one of his five upset picks for the season. That game lands on Sept. 12, right in the middle of the Ducks’ three-game non-conference slate, and Cone made it clear he sees plenty of uncertainty around it.

“Before you get into the meat of this Oregon schedule, at Oklahoma State, a lot of unknowns,” Cone said. “First year coach, Drew Mestemaker - maybe he goes out there and throws 400 yards.

I don’t know. Maybe it’s a shootout.

Maybe they’re in the game late in the fourth. Watch out for that one.”

Oregon opens 2026 with Boise State at Autzen Stadium on Sept. 5, then heads to Oklahoma State before wrapping up non-conference play against Portland State at home on Sept. 18.

The Broncos are not the same group the Ducks edged 37-34 in 2024 without former Heisman Trophy finalist Ashton Jeanty, while the Vikings were handled 81-7 by Oregon in 2023. Even if the Portland State margin is smaller this time, it still looks like a game the Ducks should control.

The Oklahoma State matchup is the only non-conference game on the road, and that’s what gives it a little extra bite. Oregon beat the Cowboys 69-3 at Autzen Stadium last season, but this is a different Oklahoma State team now. Mike Gundy is out, and Drew Mestemaker is in at quarterback.

A Cowboys upset at home still looks like a long shot, but the change in personnel is enough to keep Oregon from treating it like a routine trip.

The bigger picture for the Ducks is a Big Ten schedule that does not offer much breathing room. Oregon gets only one bye week between a road game at USC late in September and a home date with UCLA at Autzen Stadium on Oct.

  1. That stretch makes rest and recovery a major issue if the Ducks want to stay healthy and keep their postseason hopes on track.

The schedule also features two marquee matchups that will shape how Oregon is viewed nationally: a road game against Ohio State and a home game against Michigan. Those are the obvious headline games, but the stretch around them could matter just as much.

Northwestern comes before that two-week run against the Buckeyes and Wolverines, and Michigan State follows it. If Oregon spends too much energy on the bigger names, those games can turn tricky fast, especially with the Spartans meeting coming on the road in the Ducks’ first trip to East Lansing since joining the Big Ten.

There’s also a trip to Champaign, Illinois, on Oct. 24, two weeks before Oregon heads to Columbus. That one deserves attention too. Oregon has played in Champaign only twice before, and both games were close, with the series there sitting at 1-1.

Illinois enters the season ranked No. 39 in the ESPN Football Power Index, which projects 6.7 wins. The Illini have posted nine-plus wins in each of the last two seasons, and with home-field advantage in play, they could present another uncomfortable test for Oregon.

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Mike Boynton Jr. has been back in the coaching conversation for a while, but the latest chapter is a reminder of how quickly a rsum can look different once a coach gets another shot. After seven seasons at Oklahoma State, Boynton spent the past stretch working in a new role and helping steady a program through change, the kind of behind-the-scenes work that does not always get the same attention as the job itself.

What has stood out is the trust he earned while keeping Michigans incoming class intact and helping the transition feel seamless. For Oklahoma State fans, it is a familiar kind of validation: the coach who once carried the Cowboys through a long run in Stillwater is suddenly being talked about again for the very things the program valued most, even as the full story of what comes next is still unfolding. [Read more 🡒]

Oklahoma State Faces A Real Test Of Its Rebuilt Front

When Oklahoma State lines up for its 2026 meeting with Iowa State, the game will say plenty about how far both programs have come under new head coaches and how quickly their rebuilt rosters can settle in. The front-seven and the trenches are the obvious starting point, but so much of the matchup also comes down to whether each side can trust its new pieces in the right spots, especially with player continuity and transfer additions shaping both depth charts.

For the Cowboys, the attention naturally turns to how well their offensive line can keep Drew Mestemaker upright and give their passing game a chance to breathe. On the other side, Iowa State has its own protection concerns and a secondary that will be asked to sort out a dangerous receiver group, making the wideout-versus-defensive back battles just as important as anything happening at the line of scrimmage. [Read more 🡒]