Twelve big questions

The 2007 Big 12 season sure was amazing, wasn’t it?

With a new commissioner watching, those kids we didn’t expect to come through sure surprised us – almost as much as the clubs that were supposed to be great and didn’t. Wow, hard to believe.

There were some great games every weekend, from the old rivalries to some new ones that might be brewing after what we just saw.

What’s that? We haven’t seen anything yet?

Oh yeah.

This is the time of year when fact and fiction are strictly TBD.

After all, who figured Colt McCoy would throw more touchdown passes as a freshman last season than Vince Young did when he led the Longhorns to the national title? Who figured Oklahoma State would be in a bowl game last year?

Who expected Colorado and Iowa State to struggle so badly? Who figured Kevin Weiberg would quit running the league?

So instead of prophesying, consider these 12 big questions about what might transpire between Thursday, Aug. 30, and Saturday, Dec. 1, when a champion is crowned in San Antonio:

Does Texas really have as many questions as coach Mack Brown insists?

Brown says the Longhorns “have a chance to be good.” He’s not willing to stake a bolder claim because he hasn’t seen enough from several guys who are going to have to play key roles, such as three new starters on the offensive line and three more in the secondary. Also, Duane Akina will be calling plays on the defense after apprenticing for three years.

Who will replace Adrian Peterson as Oklahoma’s featured running back?

Sooners coach Bob Stoops seems to think his club will be better off without Peterson. At least, that’s how he is spinning it.

“We average rushing the ball actually more yards per game without him than we did with him,” Stoops said. “I believe in the last two years we’ve had eight games without Adrian Peterson and we’ve won all eight games in the last two years.”

Well, someone will have to carry the ball. Look for it to be Allen Patrick, Chris Brown and DeMarco Murray.

Will Missouri’s dazzling offense carry the Tigers atop the North?

Record-setting quarterback Chase Daniel is the reason Mizzou fans think they have a chance at their first conference title since 1969. A leaky defense is the reason some fans are bracing for a 38th straight year without a conference title.

“What’s going to be critical for our defense is (if) our defense gets better every week,” coach Gary Pinkel said. “I think that’s going to be real important for us to achieve our goals.”

As for Daniel, Pinkel raves: “I’ve been fortunate to be around a lot of guys, several of which have played in the NFL, and I’ve never been around a guy like this guy.”

Should Texas A&M get a new travel agent?

The Aggies finally had a breakthrough year under coach Dennis Franchione that could’ve been even better. For their next trick, they’ll try matching last year’s 5-0 road record by going to Miami, Texas Tech, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Missouri.

Put another way, A&M will face four of its five toughest conference foes on the road, and be the opposition for the Hurricanes’ first prime-time game under their new coach.

Is Nebraska ready to be NEBRASKA again?

Coach Bill Callahan sure hopes so. With quality quarterbacks, a renewed commitment to the running game and a defense that should be solid, the Cornhuskers hope to return to being a Top 10 program. Doing so would mean traversing a schedule that includes September games against Wake Forest and Southern Cal.

“It’s going to be fun, and it’s going to be interesting to see how it all shakes out,” Callahan said.

Might this be the year Texas Tech finally endures a losing record?

The Red Raiders never have been worse than 4-4 in conference play all 11 years in the league. They’re the only team never to have a losing record.

Can Oklahoma State keep Boone Pickens smiling, spending?

The Cowboys were ahead of schedule last year, getting to a bowl for the fourth time in five years, and were close in nearly all their losses. That had to make uber-donor Pickens smile more often than frown.

More nail-biters might be in the forecast, with a stout offense and a defense that’s trying to replace two stars.

“Obviously we’re not as athletic defensively as we are on offense,” coach Mike Gundy said. “But that doesn’t mean our players won’t hit and run to the football. And they’ve accepted that challenge.”

How much better will Kansas State quarterback Josh Freeman be in his second year?

Freeman was the first freshman quarterback to start for K-State since 1976 and proved he deserved it. He threw for three touchdowns and ran for another in a victory over Texas. However, the kid had only three other TD passes all season. And he threw 15 interceptions.

Expect that ratio to change as the 6-foot-6 Freeman grows even more comfortable.

“I really felt that everything that he gave us a year ago was a bonus,” coach Ron Prince said. “But if you look at some of the games we had last year, it was fantastic, the plays that he made with his ability.”

Are the stars, and the schedule, aligned for Kansas?

The Jayhawks get to avoid playing Texas and Oklahoma, and get Nebraska at home. Coach Mark Mangino may never get another chance this good to claim the division … or at least finish in the top three, something the Jayhawks have yet to do.

“The enthusiasm that (players) have has rubbed off on everybody: on campus, on coaches, on the community,” Mangino said. “They really are a group of kids that want to succeed. And they will succeed.”

Did Colorado hire Dan Hawkins just to get his son to play quarterback?

Hopefully Buffaloes fans didn’t trash those “Hawk Love” signs they had last year for their new coach. They may get to break them out again for quarterback Cody Hawkins.

By which week will new Iowa State coach Gene Chizik wish he was back at Texas or Auburn?

Chizik has the dubious task of replacing the winningest coach in school history. But that guy needed 12 years to win 56 games. That’s less than five a year.

Chizik isn’t far removed from winning 29 straight games.

“I certainly didn’t come anywhere to lose,” Chizik said. “I’m not used to it. I don’t like it. I took this job because they had a vision on what it’s going to take to be a champion.”

Any chance this is the year Baylor finally breaks through?

Coach Guy Morriss is no longer talking about getting to a bowl game. Now he’s throwing out the hopes of being able to stomp non-conference foes like Texas State, Buffalo and Rice, while holding out hope of beating TCU.

“We need to come out of non-conference at the very worst 3-1, but we definitely feel like we can be 4-0,” Morriss said. “We’ll see what happens from there.”