The will-he-or-won’t-he yo-yo of rumors this offseason for OSU football after a 7-6 season spilled out enough into the ether that it dominated headlines and discussions from after the bowl deep into the spring. Ultimately, though, Mike Gundy chose to mostly stand pat and not shake things up. Aside from having to replace Derek Mason with Bryan Nardo, Gundy effectively gave his staff a vote of confidence, as offensive coordinator Kasey Dunn framed it in an article that published Tuesday at The Athletic:
“He goes, ‘Listen, put all that stuff on the outside and just shelve it, because this is the same group of guys that won 12 games a year ago,’” Dunn told Max Olson.