I'm thankful that my career at Oklahoma was marked with consistent leadership in president David Boren and director of athletics Joe Castiglione.

Sometimes with these big long guys who are really athletic, you don't know when they're going to stop growing.

There has to be measures for players to know the consequences for their actions.

I've been with some great head coaches, but also some great assistant coaches, too.

I've just been around a lot of just quality coaches that I've learned from.

Coach Spurrier was just an amazing competitor. I felt I learned to really love the competition of it all from watching him and being around him. All his assistant coaches were great recruiters, very professional in how they handled their business. So as a young guy, I got to see that all the time.

Coach Snyder was just a determined guy. I was at the ground floor at Kansas State. I learned a lot from that experience.

I appreciate the history and tradition of Notre Dame. I also appreciate the history and tradition of Oklahoma, and I have been part of building that tradition here.

Team chemistry is what really matters, your team chemistry and team toughness.

I have been very fortunate to coach a lot of very good secondary players through the years.

I'm very fortunate to work with a great group of guys that are great coaches, great motivators, excited about what they do, have a lot of enthusiasm and are excellent coaches.

I love Jim Tressel. I think he's a fabulous guy. He's overall been a strong example for all coaches.

Our players are educated. They know. If you knowingly break the rules, we're going to move on. We'll find someone else to play quarterback.

It's impossible to know what everyone does behind closed doors. Even in families, you don't know sometimes what's going on.

At the end of the day, if someone tries to conceal something they will, and when you find out, you deal with it. That's it. We can't possibly know everything that happens.

Anytime you win 10 games, let's look around the world, the country, and there's not a lot that do it consistently.

No, I'm never pleased if we don't win some type of championship, meaning Big 12 or national.

It definitely gives you a boost away from home and being down and coming back.

You don't really want to play your brother. You want to play your brother in a championship game because not only does someone lose, someone's going to win a championship, too. To me, that's the only time you're really looking to do it.

Every now and then a little bit of change never hurts.

Surely, AP or the coaches are all aware everybody has agendas. Anybody who's on TV has one. You know, that's viewership and ratings and those kinds of things.

It's impossible to remove agendas.

If you keep hanging on to something, you've got an opportunity to keep getting hurt by it.

Carl Pendleton's the absolute best. He's everything you want in a student-athlete.

No matter how angry people on the outside were when you don't perform well, a coach is 10 times what anyone else is feeling. Nothing digs at you more. But that's part of our business.

This game we play is the ultimate total team game. Quarterback by himself isn't winning it. You got 11-12 coaches, you've got a lot of people that have a hand in it.

I'm not looking to coach in Chicago.

Everyone wants you to define your life until the end of your life.

In the end, everybody's life's different. Some things fit certain ways for people, and it's right, and maybe it isn't for others.

Football is all about repetition. The trick for a coach is to be innovative when you ask for it.

The characteristic that every college football coach should look for in a wife is independence.

I was an undersized, undertalented defensive back. I knocked myself out multiple times running into people. I ended my career without an anterior cruciate ligament. I still don't have one. At a certain point, you realize: I've used up all I've got.

I have this routine where on Fridays I sign balls that need to be autographed. One time, after my fortieth or fiftieth ball, I looked over at my secretary and said, 'Who is Bob Stoops, anyway?'

It's a life issue more than anything when you're dealing with racism anywhere... It's a life issue - bigger than sports, bigger than football.

Spend a day around my players, around my African-American players, my Hispanic players, my Polynesian players, and you'll see the true beauty of who they are.

The coaching life is like a relay race and I'm thankful for my turn and am confident as I pass the baton.

Sam Bradford was one of the most humble and grounded players I've ever been around; he got it. But I even told him, what makes you think those fans in the stands are wearing No.14 for you? Who says it's not an old Josh Heupel jersey?

Coaches around the country are influencing the next generation of men in a positive way.

I think all coaches look at it as a major part of our job: to build young men, not just ball players. To put the right things in front of them, and help them mature as men, not just as players.

Any time you experience adversity, whether you lose a game or maybe have an official who makes a poor call that costs you the game, you've gotta handle yourself properly. Just like in life, not everything will go your way.

It's very rewarding when you know you're affecting a young person in a positive way, when you know you're helping influence them in the right direction. Teaching them by example, giving them examples, showing humility and respect and love for your child and wife.

Yeah, I've never tailgated.

I love college football. I love the game.

I can't remember the last time I've been to a football game as a spectator.

I may have to buy an RV and learn how to tailgate and get the charcoal going.

Sometimes people want change just to change. It doesn't mean it's going to be better.

When people ask me where I'm from I say I'm from Oklahoma.

I have a very strong faith.

I know what really matters in my life.

Patty Gasso is the best. I think she's awesome.