STILLWATER β Mike Gundy kept mum Saturday at Oklahoma State media day on the Cowboysβ quarterback battle, giving un-Gundy-like terse answers to the first handful of questions β all of which were an attempt to get Gundy to elaborate on which of Zane Flores or Hauss Hejny will emerge as QB1.
As for the man coaching the quarterbacks? Gundy was effusive in talking about Kevin Johns, who won a quarterback battle of his own to land the gig.
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βThere were very few guys out there at that position that I felt like were capable of coaching these guys and doing it the right way,β Gundy said. βVery few. It was hard. That was one of the hardest positions to find in this last search. We were very fortunate that he was available.β
In a move thatβs not so taboo post-conference realignment, Johns joined OSUβs staff after most recently serving as OUβs co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach β positions he was elevated to on an interim basis after OUβs mid-season firing of former offensive coordinator Seth Littrell. Johns had been working as an offensive analyst for the Sooners before that.
After Gundy fired his entire offensive and defensive staffs following a disastrous 2024, an opportunity arose in Stillwater for Johns, who replaced Tim Rattay as quarterbacks coach.
βCoach is very mature,β Gundy said. βHe comes from a good background. He comes in very highly regarded from people that I trust and understand.β
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Gaining Gundyβs trust, especially when it comes to mentoring quarterbacks, is apparently no small thing.
βNot very many of them out there that I trust,β Gundy said. βMaybe because I know more about that position than I know about linebacker or defensive line. That could very well be the answer to that question. There just werenβt very many guys that when I started calling and asking around asking about. There were two or three that I thought could be capable of doing it.β
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Johns grew up in Piqua, Ohio, and played quarterback at Dayton, where he threw for more than 3,500 yards. He got his first college coaching gig in 1999 as a graduate assistant at Northwestern. After two years at Richmond, Johns returned to Northwestern, serving in various offensive roles from 2004-10.
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Heβs since served as offensive coordinator at Indiana (2011-16), Western Michigan (2017), Texas Tech (2018), Memphis (2019-21) and Duke (2022-23).
Under new offensive coordinator Doug Meacham, Johns will purely be a position coach for the first time in almost two decades.
βHe expects a lot from us,β Hejny said Saturday. βI really respect that, and it drives me to be a better quarterback every day. The mental part of the game is something he really focuses on. He prides himself on preparing quarterbacks for everything, so Iβve learned a lot about football in the past seven months that I havenβt learned in the past, you know, 16 years.
βHeβs so smart, and Iβve only gotten smarter from learning from him.β
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Hejny transferred to OSU from TCU β following Meacham from Fort Worth to Stillwater. But he also has a past with Johns, who recruited Hejny at Duke. Hejny committed to the Blue Devils before flipping to the Horned Frogs.
Hejnyβs connections to Meacham and Johns could help Hejny win the starting job, but Flores, entering Year 3 at OSU, is seen as the better passer (although neither has attempted a college pass).
Flores, after operating under Rattay and former offensive coordinator Kasey Dunn, is learning an all-new system.
βCoach Johns has been awesome,β Flores said. βHeβs helped me grow a lot mentally as a player. He does a good job of motivating us, making sure weβre always trying to get better every day.β
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Gundy said Saturday that Flores and Hejny are splitting reps. As for the timeline of naming a starter?
βCanβt put a timeline on it until I know when it will happen,β Gundy said. βI donβt know that. We could very well end up playing two in the first game.β
βWeβre learning about them as much as theyβre learning the system,β Gundy added. βI think theyβre well-coached and theyβre performing and competing. Itβs unfair for me to say after four practices which direction we would go.β
So while weβre no closer to learning which Cowboy will field the first snap three weeks from now, we did get some insight on Johns and why Gundy chose him to be the Cowboysβ new quarterback whisperer.
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Joe Mussatto is a sports columnist for The Oklahoman. Have a story idea for Joe? Email him at jmussatto@oklahoman.com. Support Joe’s work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today at subscribe.oklahoman.com.
This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Why Oklahoma State football’s Mike Gundy hired QB coach Kevin Johns