COLUMN: Soccer team's losing season should not be considered a failure

Ross Stracke , The Oklahoma Daily 6:53 p.m. November 7, 2012

Senior forward Renae Cuellar waits for the ball to come down in a game against TCU on Oct. 14. Cuellar led the Sooners in scoring this season with 12 of the team's 23 total points.

The OU women’s soccer season came to an end with a disappointing lopsided 3-0 loss to rival Texas in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Conference Championship.

The game marked just another of Oklahoma’s many games this season that have been plagued by an all too familiar problem, inconsistency. An inconsistency that takes place mainly on the offensive end.

The Sooners were outshot 309-235 by opponents this season, and 88 of Oklahoma’s shots were taken by one person, senior forward Renae Cuellar.

Cuellar was the only real bright spot for the Sooner offense this season. She scored 12 of OU’s 23 goals, and the next closest to her total on the team were junior midfielder Sam Howell and sophomore forward Kelly Price — they had two goals each.

Cuellar’s offensive prowess did not go unnoticed, though, as she won Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year. This made Sooner history as Cuellar was the first player in the program ever to win this award.

Unfortunately, Cuellar graduates this year, and there is no clear standout to replace her.

While all of this may seem negative, mostly because it is, there are plenty of positives OU can take from this season.

The biggest positive is hands-down the Sooners’ defense. Early this season, the team was practically piggybacked through games by senior goalkeeper Kelsey Devonshire and the scrappy Oklahoma defenders.

Devonshire broke OU’s career saves record this year. This might not be a record a team wants its goalie to have to break because of the correlation saves has with wins, but regardless, it’s a testament to Devonshire’s ability as a goalkeeper.

And that ability was much need this year to help the Sooners stay close in games in which they were heavily outshot. Most notably the Baylor game, in which despite getting outshot 23-4, OU still managed to salvage a 1-1 tie thanks to Devonshire and the unrelenting Sooner defense.

A few things to consider before you start thinking of this 2012 season as an offensive failure and a defensive juggernaut. Coach Matt Potter is in his first year at Oklahoma, and while his defense was a smooth transition, his offense took some time.

OK, his offense took a lot of time to adjust, but once it did, it was efficient. The Sooners won three of their last four regular season games and outscored opponents 7-3 during that stretch.

Looking back at this season, it can’t be deemed a success or a disappointment.

A 7-9-4 record was a dissapointment, considering the Sooners lost to UNLV and Oral Roberts — a game that was painful to watch — two of their four ties should have been wins, and the LSU game was blown in the last few minutes of the second overtime.

So, at best, the Sooners could have had a 10-win season and maybe a better chance at an NCAA berth. The real success here is the intensity and potential Oklahoma showed against teams who were supposed to kill them.

Outside of West Virginia and Virginia Tech, the Sooners gave every higher-ranked team a run for their money or just flat out beat them like they did when Oklahoma State was ranked third in the country.

When it comes down to it, just chalk up this year as Potter’s transition season and realize he did far and away better than any previous coach had in his or her first season.

And he’ll do better than any before him have from this year forward.

Ross Stracke is a journalism sophomore. Follow him on Twitter at @RossStracke.

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About the author

Ross Stracke

Ross is a former staff member of The Oklahoma Daily who worked as Sports Reporter.

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