Oklahoma State’s offensive line started the season with an all-time performance on the road against Oregon State. It set the bar of expectations high, perhaps unreasonably. In the games that have followed, Chuba Hubbard has run well (because Chuba Hubbard always runs well), but pass protection has struggled. As we evaluate the unit at the halfway mark of the season, it’s been a mixed bag of both good and bad.
140-Character Summary: I’m not a trained expert OL evaluator, but OSU allowing 2.17 sacks per game — in an offense that features a Heisman-contending running back and an extremely mobile quarterback — is not great.