i didn't click all links to see if this had been posted or not, but here's the article:
Reid is still the most talented signal-caller, but attitude is reason for change
     By Jenni Carlson   
  The Oklahoman   
  
STILLWATER - Bobby Reid stood near the team charters last Friday night, using his cell phone, eating his boxed meal. 
 It would've been normal post-game activity but for one thing.
  
     
His mother was feeding him chicken.     
    
    
        
        Don't see the connection?
    
        Let me explain. Cowboy coaches have gone full-speed ahead with the 
Zac Attack, opting to start Robinson over 
Reid a week ago, then sticking with him against 
Texas Tech   today even after an embarrassing loss at Troy. Weren't we being told just last week that 
Reid was still the guy? All the weight with which Cowboy coaches were   backing 
Reid has totally   shifted to Robinson.
     
        The change seems sudden.
    
        Thing is, it may not be as abrupt as it looks. If you believe the rumors and the rumblings, 
Reid has been pushing coaches that way for quite some   time.
     
        Tile up the back stories told on the sly over the past few years, and you see a pattern that hasn't always been pretty.
    
        Word is that 
Reid has considered transferring a couple different times, the first as   early as 2005. 
Reid, then a   redshirt freshman, was facing competition from returner 
Donovan Woods, and apparently, 
Reid considered leaving 
OSU just because he had to compete for   the spot.
     
        Reid's nerves have also been an issue. Earlier this year, he told   our 
Andrea Cohen about his game-day   emotions.
     
        "I get sweaty palms. I get the butterflies in my stomach. I sweat lot," he said then. "I've been playing this game for 15 years. And I can honestly say every game I've played in, I've been nervous. It's not so much me being scared; I just get to a point where I start worrying about a lot of things I can't control."
    
        A lot of guys get nervous, some even puke before games. How you handle the nerves is important, though, and 
Reid hasn't always managed them   well. He has gotten off to some extremely slow starts, putting the 
Cowboys in some holes. Some, they dug out of, with   
Reid often wielding the   biggest shovel, and some, they couldn't.
     
        Then, there have been the injuries. No doubt some of 
Reid's ailments have been severe, including an injured shoulder that   required surgery and forced him to redshirt. Other times, though, 
Reid has been nicked in games and sat it out instead of gutting it   out.
     
        Injuries are tricky, of course. You don't want a guy to put himself in harm's way if he's really hurt, and yet,   football is one of those sports in which everyone plays hurt. Aches and pains, bumps and bruises are part of the gig.
    
        Reid's injury against 
Florida Atlantic - whatever it was - appeared   minor but just might have been the thing that pushed Cowboy coaches over the edge. Even though 
Mike Gundy said last week that Robinson got the nod because he had the   better week of practice, insiders say that the coaches decided to bench 
Reid early in the week. The bottom line: The switch is less about   Robinson's play and more about 
Reid's attitude.
     
        "The coaches made a decision," 
Reid told our 
Mike Baldwin after the Troy game. "I just have to go with it, get   better and get back on the field."
     
        There's something to be said for not being a malcontent, but you can almost see 
Reid shrugging his shoulders as he says those words. Does he have the   fire in his belly?
     
        Or does he want to be coddled, babied, perhaps even fed chicken?
    
        That scene in the parking lot last week had no bearing on the 
Cowboys changing quarterbacks, and yet, it said so   much about 
Reid. A 21-year-old letting his mother feed him in public? Most college kids, much less college football players, would just as soon be seen running naked across campus.
     
        And what of the scene television cameras captured earlier that evening of 
Reid on the sidelines laughing with assistant strength coach 
Trumain Carroll? The same cameras showed him throwing his cap in disgust after a missed play earlier, but to be laughing in the final minutes of an embarrassing loss is bad form.
     
        Reid is the most talented quarterback in 
Payne County, but he hasn't proven that he's the   toughest. If you listen to the rumblings and the rumors, Cowboy coaches simply grew weary of it.
     
        Who knows? There might come a day when they grow tired of something Robinson does, but for now, they appear willing to sacrifice   a bit of talent for a lot of grit.