Eric Morris Has Never Beaten a Ranked Team

Now He’s the Head Coach at Oklahoma State.


Eric Morris is one of the most exciting offensive minds in college football.

He developed quarterbacks who became first-round NFL picks. He coordinated top-10 offenses at three different programs. He took North Texas from a 5-7 afterthought to an 11-2 juggernaut averaging 503 yards per game—the best offense in the country. When Oklahoma State fired Mike Gundy mid-season and went looking for someone to resurrect a program that had gone 0-17 in Big 12 play over two years, Morris was the guy.

But there’s a number in his résumé that should concern every Cowboys fan.

Zero.

That’s how many ranked opponents Eric Morris has beaten as a head coach.


503 Yards Per Game. First in the Nation.

Let’s be clear about something: Morris can coach offense.

His 2025 North Texas team scored 30-plus points in every single game. They hung 50 on six opponents. They led the nation in total offense and turned Drew Mestemaker into the FBS passing leader. This wasn’t a fluke—Morris did the same thing at Incarnate Word, where he developed Cam Ward before Ward transferred to Washington State and became a Heisman finalist. His fingerprints are on Baker Mayfield’s early development at Texas Tech. Same with Patrick Mahomes.

The man knows how to build a quarterback and design an offense.

His system has evolved from pure Air Raid into something more balanced—a high-tempo spread that can actually run the football. At North Texas, he proved he could win the time-of-possession battle when he needed to. He proved he could close out games. He proved he could build a roster through the portal and develop mid-tier recruits into all-conference players.

None of that is in question.


0-4 Against Ranked Teams. 5-6 on the Road.

Here’s where it gets complicated.

Morris went 22-16 at North Texas. Solid record. But when you break it down by situation, patterns emerge that matter for a coach stepping into the Big 12.

Home vs. Road: Morris was 17-9 at home (.654) but just 5-6 on the road (.455). That’s a 20-point swing in win percentage. At Oklahoma State, he’ll need to win in Lubbock, Austin, Morgantown, and Provo just to stay competitive. The American Athletic Conference road environment is not the Big 12 road environment.

Ranked Opponents: 0-4. Morris has never beaten a ranked team as a head coach. Not once. North Texas played four ranked opponents during his tenure, and they lost all four. Oklahoma State will likely face 4-6 ranked teams per season in the new Big 12.

Late Season: 6-6 in November and December. When games tighten up and defenses have film, Morris’s teams have been a coin flip. That’s not a death sentence—plenty of good coaches hover around .500 in late-season play. But it’s not the mark of a program-builder who closes strong.

Bowls: 0-1. He left before North Texas’s bowl game in 2025, but his only previous bowl as a head coach was a loss.

Add it up and you get a coach who dominates at home against unranked opponents but hasn’t proven he can win the games that define seasons.


He Inherits a Team That Went 0-17 in Conference

Oklahoma State isn’t just a new job.

It’s a disaster.

Morris inherits a program that went 1-10 in 2025 after the university fired Mike Gundy, a coach with 170 wins and two decades of stability, mid-season. The Cowboys went 0-9 in Big 12 play last year. They went 0-8 the year before. That’s 0-17 against conference opponents over two seasons. The roster has been picked apart by the portal. The culture has cratered. The facilities, once a point of pride, now lag behind a conference that includes Texas, Arizona, Colorado, and Utah.

Morris will get time. Athletic director Chad Weiberg has already signaled that year one is about installing culture and identity, not wins.

But “time” in college football isn’t what it used to be.

The portal moves fast. Recruits make decisions fast. Fanbases lose patience fast. If Morris can’t show progress by year two—if he can’t win 5 or 6 games and beat a ranked opponent—the pressure will build quickly. Oklahoma State isn’t a sleeping giant. It’s a regional program that had one exceptional coach for 21 years, and now it has to prove it can win without him.


The Portal Will Decide Everything

Morris has already started bringing North Texas players through the portal.

That’s smart. Those players know the system, trust the coach, and can help install the offense quickly. If he hits on a quarterback, his specialty, Oklahoma State could have one of the more entertaining offenses in the Big 12 by September. The scheme will work. The tempo will be there. The points will come.

The questions are about everything else.

Can he build a defense that complements his offense instead of giving up everything he scores? Can he win in hostile road environments against teams with more talent? Can he beat a ranked opponent for the first time in his career – and then do it again, and again, against a conference full of them?

His ceiling is real. If he develops a star quarterback and nails the portal, Oklahoma State could be back in the Big 12 title conversation within three years.

His floor is equally real. Without defensive improvement and better results against quality opponents, this becomes a fun 6-6 era – entertaining offenses, close losses, and a fanbase that starts asking whether they hired the right guy.


High Pressure. Three Years to Prove It.

Eric Morris is a legitimately good offensive coach taking a legitimately hard job.

He’s never beaten a ranked opponent. He’s never won more than 55% of his road games. He’s never coached in a Power 4 conference. And now he’s walking into a program that just fired a legend, lost 17 straight conference games, and needs to rebuild from the foundation up – in a conference that includes four former Playoff participants.

The offense will be fine.

Everything else is an open question.

Pressure Level: High. Not because he’s on the hot seat – he’ll get at least three years. But the gap between his track record and his new reality is the widest of any first-year coach in the Big 12. He’s built for this on paper. Now he has to prove it against the best competition he’s ever faced.

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The Mike Gundy Era Is Over (Whether Oklahoma State Admits It Or Not)

Oklahoma State’s legendary coach has become a cautionary tale about staying too long at the party

Here’s what nobody wants to say out loud.

Mike Gundy is done. Not “struggling.” Not “going through a rough patch.” Not “needing time to adjust to the new landscape.” Done.

And the numbers don’t lie—even when the narrative tries to.

The Brutal Reality Check

Let me paint you a picture of just how far Oklahoma State has fallen.

172.3 passing yards per game. That’s it. That’s the offensive explosion Mike Gundy has engineered in 2025. For context, most high school teams throw for more than that. 0.3 passing touchdowns per game. You read that correctly. In three games, Oklahoma State has thrown ONE touchdown pass. Uno. A single aerial score. 426.7 yards allowed per game. The defense—if we can even call it that—is surrendering nearly 7 yards every time an opponent snaps the ball.

But here’s the number that should make every Oklahoma State administrator’s blood run cold.

When Legends Become Liabilities

Twenty years ago, Mike Gundy was the answer to Oklahoma State’s prayers.

He turned the Cowboys into a consistent winner. Eighteen straight winning seasons. Five major bowl appearances. 102 Big 12 wins—third in conference history. He made Oklahoma State a national presence. But success has an expiration date. And Gundy’s expired somewhere between his “I’m a man! I’m 40!” rant and losing to Tulsa at home for the first time since the Clinton administration.

The statistical evidence isn’t just bad—it’s historically catastrophic.

The $15 Million Question

Here’s where things get interesting (and expensive).

Oklahoma State owes Gundy $15 million if it fires him before 2027. That’s a lot of money for a school that’s already struggling with NIL funding and watching their coach publicly complain about Oregon’s “$40 million roster.” But you know what’s more expensive than $15 million? Irrelevance. Every game Gundy stays, every embarrassing loss, every empty seat in Boone Pickens Stadium—that’s the real cost.

That’s the price of watching a proud program become a punchline.

The Oregon Excuse Factory

Before Oklahoma State got boat-raced 69-3 by Oregon, Gundy spent his press conference whining about financial disadvantages.

He suggested teams like Oregon shouldn’t play teams with fewer resources. This is where we separate legends from losers. Great coaches find ways to win with what they have. Average coaches make excuses about what they don’t have. Guess which category Gundy has fallen into? Two weeks after complaining about Oregon’s spending, Tulsa—with a NIL budget smaller than most high school booster clubs—walked into Stillwater and won.

The excuses don’t work when you’re getting out-coached by teams that can’t even spell “NIL.”

The Statistical Smoking Gun

Let’s discuss what good coaching looks like versus what Oklahoma State is currently receiving.

Elite programs adapt. Oklahoma State’s passing game has gotten worse every year. Elite programs develop talent. The Cowboys have more transfers than touchdowns. Elite programs win games they should win. Oklahoma State can’t beat Tulsa at home. Elite programs prepare for the future. Gundy hired two coordinators who hadn’t called plays since 2021. This isn’t about NIL. This isn’t about the transfer portal. This isn’t about “the changing landscape of college football.”

This is about a coach who stopped evolving while the game passed him by.

The Uncomfortable Truth

Mike Gundy gave Oklahoma State twenty incredible years.

He deserves gratitude, respect, and a place in the school’s Hall of Fame. What he doesn’t deserve is another season to damage further the program he helped build. The fans know it—they booed at halftime against Tulsa and left early. The media knows it—even OSU’s own radio broadcast called it “the worst sore we’ve seen in a long time.” The administration knows it—they restructured his contract in December with a $1 million pay cut and modified buyout terms.

Everyone knows it except the man making $6.75 million to go 1-2 against teams like Tennessee-Martin, Oregon, and Tulsa.

The Way Forward

Oklahoma State has two choices.

Pay the $15 million and start rebuilding now. Watch their program become the laughingstock of the Big 12. The first option is expensive. The second option is fatal. Great organizations make difficult decisions before they become impossible ones. They cut ties with legends before legends become liabilities. Mike Gundy was the right coach for Oklahoma State for twenty years.

But the Mike Gundy Era is over.


The numbers don’t lie.

The results speak for themselves. And sometimes, the most brutal truth is that every great story has an ending. Mike Gundy’s story at Oklahoma State was beautiful.

But it’s time to write the final chapter.

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Oklahoma State Football Is At A Crossroads In 2025

Oklahoma State‘s 2024 season was one of the most disappointing in program history. The Cowboys finished 3-9 overall and went winless (0-9) in Big 12 conference play.

This collapse was especially shocking considering:

  • The Cowboys returned most of their production from a 10-win team
  • They had played in the Big 12 Championship Game just a year earlier
  • Many analysts had them as preseason Big 12 title contenders
  • Some even predicted a College Football Playoff appearance

Now, head coach Mike Gundy – after nearly two decades of remarkable stability and success – finds himself in unfamiliar territory: firmly on the hot seat.

The Complete Collapse: What The Hell Happened In 2024?

The 2024 season was disastrous for a program that had grown accustomed to bowl appearances and conference title contention.

After starting 3-0, the Cowboys:

  • Suffered a seven-game losing streak (longest in the Gundy era)
  • Finished the season with a humiliating 52-0 shutout loss at Colorado
  • Failed to win a single Big 12 conference game
  • Missed a bowl game for the first time since 2005

The statistics painted an even bleaker picture:

  • Defense allowed 500.6 yards per game (among the worst in FBS)
  • Surrendered 35.6 points per game (last in the Big 12)
  • Gave up 215 rushing yards per game (a defensive collapse)
  • Offensive line ranked 98th nationally in rushing yards before contact

Even with star running back Ollie Gordon II (who rushed for 880 yards and 13 TDs), the offense couldn’t overcome the defensive liabilities.

The Great Reset: Gundy’s All-In Coaching Overhaul

Mike Gundy has responded to the 2024 disaster with the most dramatic staff overhaul of his two-decade tenure.

Of his on-field assistants, only two remain in the same roles:

  • Sean Snyder (special teams coordinator)
  • Rob Glass (strength and conditioning)

The defensive staff has been completely rebuilt:

  • Todd Grantham (defensive coordinator/OLBs) – brings experience from Florida, Alabama, and the NFL
  • Ryan Osborn (defensive line) – previously Charlotte’s defensive coordinator
  • Kap Dede (linebackers) – from Western Kentucky
  • Greg Brown (safeties) – promoted from analyst
  • Jules Montinar (cornerbacks) – from East Carolina

The offensive makeover is equally dramatic:

  • Doug Meacham (offensive coordinator/inside WRs) – returns to OSU with a reputation for high-scoring offenses
  • Kevin Johns (quarterbacks) – previously with Oklahoma and Duke
  • Cory Patterson (running backs)
  • DJ Tialavea (tight ends) – formerly at Utah State
  • Theron Aych (wide receivers)
  • Cooper Bassett and Andrew Mitchell (offensive line)

This wholesale staff turnover acknowledges that the previous approach had failed catastrophically.

The Transfer Portal Frenzy: Rebuilding The Roster

Oklahoma State’s roster transformation for 2025 might be the most dramatic in college football.

The exodus was substantial, including:

  • Four NFL Draft picks: Collin Oliver (Packers), Ollie Gordon II (Dolphins), Korie Black (Giants), and Nick Martin (49ers)
  • Multiple transfers to conference rivals: Lyrik Rawls (Kansas), Kendal Daniels (Oklahoma)
  • Other key departures: Jason Brooks (Houston), Isaia Glass (Vanderbilt), De’Zhaun Stribling (Ole Miss)

In response, OSU assembled what many consider a top-10 transfer portal class:

  • Chandavian Bradley (EDGE, former five-star, Tennessee transfer) – expected difference-maker
  • JK Johnson (CB, LSU) and Jaylen Davies (CB, UCLA) – immediate secondary help
  • Hauss Hejny (QB, TCU) – will compete for the starting QB role
  • Shamar Rigby (WR, Purdue) and Jaylen Lloyd (WR, Nebraska) – adding speed and experience
  • Mordecai McDaniel (DB, Charlotte) – previously played for DC Todd Grantham at Florida

These newcomers will be supplemented by a 2025 recruiting class of around 21 commits, mostly three-star prospects focused on developmental depth.

The Schedule: A Path To Redemption?

Oklahoma State’s 2025 schedule offers both opportunity and challenge.

Non-Conference:

  • Aug. 28: UT Martin (Home)
  • Sept. 6: Oregon (Away)
  • Sept. 20: Tulsa (Home)

Key Conference Games:

  • Sept. 27: Baylor (Home)
  • Oct. 11: Houston (Home)
  • Oct. 18: Cincinnati (Home – Homecoming)
  • Nov. 15: Kansas State (Home)
  • Nov. 29: Iowa State (Home – Senior Day)

Brutal Road Tests:

  • Oct. 4: Arizona (Away)
  • Oct. 25: Texas Tech (Away)
  • Nov. 1: Kansas (Away)
  • Nov. 22: UCF (Away)

CBS Sports projects OSU to finish 5-7, predicting wins against UT Martin, Tulsa, Houston, Cincinnati, and Iowa State, while projecting losses in all road contests.

But the most optimistic analysts believe a 9-3 record is possible if the new staff and roster perform well.

Gundy’s Last Stand: The Ultimate Hot Seat

Mike Gundy’s job security has never been more precarious in his two decades at Oklahoma State.

The evidence is overwhelming:

  • He agreed to a pay cut and restructured buyout (now $15 million over three years, down from $25+ million)
  • His new contract requires him to assist in finding his replacement if fired
  • There’s growing “Gundy fatigue” among the fan base and donors
  • Another losing season would almost certainly end his tenure

Simply making a bowl game (6+ wins) is now considered the minimum threshold for Gundy to keep his job.

The 5 Critical Factors For 2025 Success

Oklahoma State’s ability to rebound will depend on five key factors:

  1. Defensive Resurrection – Grantham must immediately establish a more fundamentally sound unit to keep games competitive.
  2. Quarterback Stability – TCU transfer Hauss Hejny must provide the leadership and playmaking that was inconsistent in 2024.
  3. Offensive Line Improvement – The addition of dedicated O-line coaches Bassett and Mitchell must fix a unit that struggled mightily.
  4. Culture Reset – After such a disastrous campaign, rebuilding player confidence and establishing a winning mindset is crucial.
  5. Early Momentum – With winnable games early (UT Martin, Tulsa), building confidence quickly could create positive momentum.

The Bottom Line: A Program-Defining Season

The 2025 season represents the most pivotal moment of the Gundy era at Oklahoma State.

Most analysts project improvement from the 3-9 mark in 2024, with consensus expectations falling in the 5-7 to 7-5 range. Given the massive turnover in coaching staff and roster, significant uncertainty remains.

A reasonable expectation would be a return to bowl eligibility at 6-6 or 7-5, representing improvement enough to likely save Gundy’s job.

What’s abundantly clear is that Oklahoma State football stands at a crossroads.

The next few months will determine whether this proud program can recapture its winning ways under the coach who built it into a national contender, or whether a new chapter in Cowboy football will begin.

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