Reviews are in for Oklahoma's first Crimson Combine

Yay or nay from Sooner Nation for the new Crimson Combine?
SARAH PHIPPS/THE OKLAHOMAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

There was football on Saturday at Gaylord Family - Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, but it certainly wasn't a game being played.

Oklahoma debuted the new Crimson Combine that replaced the annual spring game. The Sooners followed the latest college football trend and canceled their spring game mainly because of injury concerns before supplementing it with this new idea.

The Crimson Combine started with OU players participating in a glorified practice while local radio commentated alongside new general manager Jim Nagy and various OU coaches. Afterward, fans got opportunities to get autographs from and pictures with players.

After Sooner Nation finally got to experience the reality of this new concept, many shared their reviews on social media, including both pros and cons. At the end of the day, it wasn't a football game, and that's what fans desperately want. However, fans did get more opportunity to interact with OU players and coaches during the event.

Sooners host inaugural Crimson Combine

First, some of the cons of the Crimson Combine.

I definitely could have made this a lot longer with bad reviews. Good thing the Crimson Combine doesn't have a page on Yelp.

OU announced that attendance for the Crimson Combine at a rather empty Oklahoma Memrorial Stadium was 16,316. A reminder that only three years ago, Sooner Nation set a spring game attendance record of 75,360. Last year's attendance was 45,861.

It wasn't all bad, though. But mostly.

However, the bad drastically outweighed the good. So the consensus from Sooner Nation on the Crimson Combine: fail.

Regardless, with the current state of college football, it's still likely the closest thing we'll get to OU football during the spring.

Schedule

Schedule