
Linebacker Beau Jandreau commits to the Oklahoma Sooners
The Arizona native is considered the No. 37 linebacker in the class by Rivals and the No. 7 player in the state of Arizona. A fast and physical linebacker, Jandreau chose Oklahoma over offers from USC, Texas, Tennessee, Oregon, Washington, Arizona, Cal, Kansas State, Missouri, Minnesota, Nebraska, and Notre Dame.
Over the last month, Jandreau took trips to Oregon State, Texas, and Oregon before culminating his series of official visits with the Sooners for ChampU BBQ. In Norman, the Sooners hit the high notes, and Jandreau was impressed by Brent Venables' plan for Oklahoma's defense.
Beau Jandreau is quick to diagnose what the offense is doing in front of him and gets downhill in a hurry. He plays with great speed and arrives to the ball carrier with force.
Jandreau is the 11th player committed to the Oklahoma Sooners in the cycle and the second linebacker, along with Arkansas native Jakore Smith. The Sooners are putting together a fast and physical group of defenders in the cycle, and Jandreau is the latest difference maker added by Brent Venables, Jim Nagy, Nate Dreiling, Wes Goodwin, and the Oklahoma Sooners.
Beau Jandreau's Recruiting Profile
Watch Beau Jandreau's highlights on Hudl
Vitals
Ratings
Offers
Per 247Sports
Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes and opinions. You can also follow John on X @john9williams.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
16 hours ago
- USA Today
WATCH: Rookie linebacker Danny Stutsman picks off Saints QB Spencer Rattler
Stutsman picks off Rattler Here's another throw at New Orleans Saints training camp that Spencer Rattler would like back. Both of the Saints' rookie fourth-round draft picks have now intercepted him in practice, with linebacker Danny Stutsman picking off Rattler in the end zone just days after cornerback Quincy Riley snatched an errant pass away in a similar situation. Stutsman and Rattler were college teammates at Oklahoma back in 2021. Now, we shouldn't blow this out of proportion. Training camp is when you want guys taking risks and testing the limits of what they can get away with against NFL defenders. But this was a poor decision no matter what time of year it is. See it for yourself right here. Rattler was leading the first-string offense in 7-on-9 drills against the first-team defense; Stutsman was bumped up the depth chart with Demario Davis absent from practice. The second-year QB tried a throw to wide receiver Cedrick Wilson Jr. running a crossing route through the middle of the end zone, but he was covered. Stutsman read the play as it developed and dropped back to leap the route. Even if the rookie hadn't been there, free safety Justin Reid was closing on Wilson fast, and it would've been a contested-catch situation at best. Again, this was one play. Jake Haener was intercepted at this same practice session, too, when he gambled on a deep shot to wide receiver Chris Tyree (this time, safety Julian Blackmon picked him off). But one of the big concerns with Rattler's rookie-year game tape was his decision making. He threw five interceptions and, according to Pro Football Focus charting, had 14 turnover-worthy plays on his grading sheet. He needs to show better judgment if he's going to fend off Haener and Tyler Shough in this summer's training camp competition. Hopefully this ends up being a learning moment for him.


USA Today
21 hours ago
- USA Today
USA TODAY Sports analyst's 'crazy' prediction for which team will win 2025 SEC title
The consensus among the various sportswriters and media members who cover the Southeastern Conference is that the two frontrunners to meet in the 2025 SEC Championship Game are the Texas Longhorns and Georgia Bulldogs. In the preseason SEC football media poll following SEC media days in Atlanta, Texas received 96 votes to win the conference championship in 2025, followed by Georgia with 44 votes. The Alabama Crimson Tide placed a distant third with 29 votes. But this is still the offseason and thus a time when media and non-media alike can make some outside-the-box predictions heading into a new year. With regard to the former, one longtime college football writer has a "crazy" prediction for who will win the SEC in 2025. Veteran columnist Matt Hayes of USA TODAY Sports believes the Oklahoma Sooners will take home the conference crown on Dec. 6 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Hayes told the hosts of "That SEC Podcast" recently: "I know many people here told me that I'm crazy, but I said I think Oklahoma is going to win the SEC. I think (John) Mateer is going to play really well, and that defense will be as good as any defense in the league. They're going to shock some people this year." Sound like a stretch? Oklahoma went 6-6 during the regular season in their first year in the SEC. The Sooners memorably stunned Alabama in a 24-3 upset in Norman but finished just 2-6 in conference play. They fell to Navy in a bowl game, and head coach Brent Venables enters 2025 on the hot seat. Oklahoma brought Mateer in from Washington State via the transfer portal along with his offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Ben Arbuckle. Entering his junior season, Mateer is coming off a banner year in Pullman after throwing for 3,139 yards and 29 touchdowns to seven interceptions. He also rushed for 826 yards and 15 touchdowns on 178 carries (4.6 AVG). The Sooners were picked to finish in the middle of the pack in the preseason SEC media poll. That doesn't matter to Hayes, who added: "I think Mateer is a lot better than people think he is. He's a very good player, number one. Number two, I think he is going to have that type of impact (where) it's not just on the field, it's also in the locker room. I think you're going to see that, I really do. I may be way out there, and you guys in three months may say, 'Remember when you said Oklahoma was going to win the SEC and they finished such and such?' Yeah, I think they're going to win it." It's been a while since the SEC had a truly unexpected conference champion. The last team to come out of nowhere and win the league title was Gus Malzahn's first Auburn team in 2013. The Tigers were picked to finish 10th in the preseason, but they made it all the way to the national championship game off the backs of Alabama's agony in that year's Iron Bowl. The Crimson Tide will host Oklahoma on Nov. 15 at Bryant-Denny Stadium, a week after Alabama's annual showdown with LSU. Time will tell if Hayes' pick has any merit or if it's just another in a long line of wild offseason predictions that pop up every year. Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama Crimson Tide news, notes and opinions.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
OKC Thunder jersey history No. 34 - Josh Huestis (2014-18)
The Oklahoma City Thunder (and the Seattle Supersonics before them) have 51 jersey numbers worn by the players who have suited up for the franchise since its founding at the start of the 1967-68 season. To commemorate the players who wore those numbers, Thunder Wire is covering the entire history of jersey numbers and the players who sported them since the founding of the team. And while those Supersonics jerseys may not remain part of the franchise history should a new team be established in Seattle as was the case with the return of the Charlotte Hornets, they are part of the Thunder's history today. For this article, we continue with the 34th jersey number in the series, jersey No. 34, with 17 players in total having donned the jersey in the history of the franchise. The 15th of those players did so in the Oklahoma City Thunder era, forward alum Josh Huestis. After ending his college career at Stanford, Huestis was picked up with the 29th overall selection of the 2014 NBA Draft by the Thunder. He played all three seasons of his NBA career with OKC, leaving the league as a player in 2018. During his time suiting up for the Thunder, Huestis wore only jersey No. 34 and put up 2.5 points and 2.4 rebounds per game. All stats and data courtesy of Basketball Reference. This article originally appeared on OKC Thunder Wire: Thunder jersey history No. 34 - Josh Huestis (2014-18)