Oklahoma State Defense Is Sending A Message Amid All The Offensive Hype

Despite the spotlight on Oklahoma State's offense, their defense is ready to prove they can steal the show this season.

FRISCO, Texas - The buzz at Big 12 Media Days belonged to Oklahoma State’s offense, and the scene made that obvious before a single question was asked.

When the Cowboys’ players entered the main room Tuesday, linebacker Ethan Wesloski couldn’t help but notice where the attention was going. A wall of cameras had already formed around quarterback Drew Mestemaker and running back Caleb Hawkins, with reporters packed in tight to get a look at the two offensive headliners.

“Look where all the mics are,” Wesloski said to fellow defender Jaleel Johnson.

That kind of spotlight has followed Oklahoma State for months. Mestemaker is now the preseason Big 12 Newcomer of the Year.

Hawkins checks in as the No. 19 player in the entire transfer portal and the seventh-ranked running back in the nation in EA’s latest video game. Receiver Wyatt Young is the Cowboys’ lone selection on the All-Big 12 preseason team, and head coach Eric Morris carries the kind of reputation that naturally pulls eyes toward the offense.

But while the room crowded around the Cowboys’ skill players, Johnson and Wesloski saw something else: a defense that expects to matter.

“Oh, for sure, for sure, I feel like our defense is definitely getting slept on,” Johnson said. “But like you said, no disrespect to them guys, they deserve everything that they are getting right now. I’m not hating on that at all, but our defense is really, really solid as well, and I feel like y’all are going to see that this fall.”

Johnson said the extra attention on the offense has given the defense a chance to carve out its own identity.

“You want to prove to everybody that we’re the best as well, like we can compete with the best,” Johnson said.

Wesloski echoed that thought, saying the Cowboys are ready for people to notice what they bring once the games start piling up. He didn’t sound bothered by the praise being heaped on the other side of the ball. If anything, he seemed to welcome it.

“I’ve said it a couple times today, it’s a thing, right, they deserved everything they’ve gotten. … (but) we’re a really good defense, too,” Wesloski said. “It’s not that they don’t deserve everything they’ve got coming.

“But come November, late November, when we’re making a run for this thing. Everyone is going to look like we know they have a really, really good offense, but here’s this defense that’s really good in yards per game, pass yards, run yards, they’ve got a huge turnover margin.

They were really good scoring defense. So we’re going to play defense.

We know how to play and create a lot of chaos, and we’re going to get the ball back for those guys over there.”

Wesloski arrives in Stillwater after leading a UNT defense last season that finished fifth in turnovers gained and eighth in pass yards allowed per game, while also ranking 76th in scoring defense, 77th in total defense and 130th against the run. It was a mixed profile, though the Mean Green spent much of the year playing with big leads - they were ahead by 21 points or more entering the fourth quarter in seven games - which helped explain the emphasis on defending the pass.

Now that same defensive staff and several of those key players are in Oklahoma State, where Johnson says the group already feels connected.

“It feels like that 2023 season when we went to the Big 12 Championship,” Johnson said. “You can just tell that the guys are close, like we all got nicknames for each other, making fun of each other, laughing.”

For Morris, simply being in the conversation for a Big 12 Championship game appearance would be a solid start in his first season. The players, though, aren’t talking like they’re settling for a gradual build.

“I want to have dominant wins,” Johnson said. “I want to prove that we are the best team in this conference.”

And when asked how the Cowboys can do that, Johnson kept the answer pointed.

“Ultimately it come down to winning games,” he said. “Like defense wins games.

Yeah, offense can put up as many points as they want, but if we can’t get a stop, it don’t really matter. So, I feel like if we can put some stops together and make the offense look even better than what people are saying, that is a win in our book.”

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