If that doesn't say enough about Murray, he literally saved a stranger's life last year, too.

One random day, driving home from church with his girlfriend, Murray witnessed an accident that left a woman lying on the ground unconscious and bleeding from her head.

He rushed over, started CPR – which he learned working as a counselor at a community center for less fortunate kids that was affiliated with his father's church – and "got between 70 to 80 pumps in, finally got her revived, got her back to breathing, and then the paramedics arrived."

As a star linebacker on one of the best college football teams in the country, Murray actually tried to slip away from the scene to not draw attention to himself, but a fellow student who happened to work on the school newspaper saw him and followed up a couple of days later.

"For me, it wasn't about the recognition," he said. "I happened to be in the right place at the right time to help somebody in need."

He's fine with the recognition that comes his way on the football field, and there's been plenty of it. The third-team Associated Press All-America selection became an instant starter for the Sooners as a true freshman and started all 42 games over the last three years.

The 6-foot-2, 241-pounder racked up 335 total tackles in that time, including 37 tackles for loss and nine sacks. Two seasons ago, he played alongside Curtis Bolton, one of the Packers top undrafted rookies from 2019 who was headed for a roster spot until tearing an ACL in the preseason. He calls Bolton, who will make another run at getting his NFL career started in 2020, a player with "a natural nose for the ball."

Murray is an ever-present defender who plays with a "hunter's mentality," to use his phrase. He never watches TV during the football season because he's studying five or six hours of game film daily, arriving at the team facility at 5:45 a.m. to start his routine.

"I try to pattern my game after guys like Luke Kuechly, and seeing how smart he is, how much time he puts into the film room, I think that's extremely critical for being a really good linebacker," Murray said. "Seeing all those plays, getting my little hints and stuff before the game, being able to put my teammates in better position to make plays is definitely the type of guy I am."

One part of his game he thinks is overlooked is his smarts. He's been Oklahoma's defensive signal-caller since he arrived and believes he can step right into the NFL to assume the same role.

He's using the interviews at the combine – his first of several formal ones was with the Packers – to emphasize that aspect of his abilities.

"Making calls, making checks, being a leader is something I'm good at, something I'm naturally born to do," he said. "Just be a general of the defense."

He'll be that sooner than later (pun intended) in the NFL, and any team like the Packers with a significant need at inside linebacker would likely have a hard time passing on him come April's first round.

Any teams targeting him will wonder how long he'll last. His story answers any other questions they might have.