The Norman Transcript

Sports

March 13, 2013

Sooners can no longer afford to let the tight games slip

NORMAN — The Big 12 tournament could feature the most tightly compacted field it has ever showcased. The 10-team tournament, which begins tonight at Sprint Center in Kansas City, Mo., will feature a field where the last-place team (TCU) beat the regular-season champion (Kansas), and only five teams finished with records above .500 in the league.

“You go into this one with a lot of balance,” Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger said. “The scoring through the year and the league race makes it so a lot of teams feel like they have a chance to compete for a title.”

The odds are long that No. 10 seed TCU, ninth-seeded Texas Tech, eighth-seeded Texas or seventh-seeded West Virginia can get that done. However, all of them have wins over teams that finished in the top half of the league.

The fourth-seeded Sooners (20-10, 11-7 Big 12) have a first-round bye. They open play against fifth-seeded Iowa State (21-10, 11-7) at 11:30 a.m. Thursday.

The one thing that seems like a guarantee as those teams converge is that success is going to require winning close games. The nature of postseason conference tournaments makes it necessary. Every game will feature teams meeting for the third time this season. All the secrets are long gone. Defenders will be calling out plays as soon as point guards signal them. A handful of plays usually decides who wins and advances.

Lately, the Sooners are coming up on the short end of those kinds of games. Their last six losses were all by six points or less, including the stunning 70-67 loss to TCU in Saturday’s regular-season finale. OU’s loss came on the heels of an overtime loss at Texas Feb. 27.

The last time the Sooners won a game by less than double figures was the Feb. 9 victory against league champion Kansas at Lloyd Noble Center.

It wasn’t always that way. Six of OU’s nine non-conference wins were in the single digits — five of them in November were by seven points or less.

“I don’t think anything has changed. The competition has picked up a lot. We’re playing in the Big 12 against really tough competition and sometimes things don’t fall your way down the stretch,” said OU senior Romero Osby. “You have to dive on the floor for balls and take charges and things like that. They’re the things most people don’t look at, but they’re magnified in March.

“We just have to make sure we keep it tight and stay together. We’ll be able to win those games when it’s time to.”

The two regular-season meetings between the Sooners and the Cyclones played out in similar fashions. The home team rolled to a lopsided victory in each.

“They did what they wanted to in Ames and we did what we wanted to here,” Kruger said. “I would imagine a neutral site with two pretty even teams, I would imagine it turns into a pretty even battle.”

It means OU better be able to win a razor tight game if it wants to advance.

John Shinn

Follow me @john_shinn

jshinn@normantranscript.com

For local news and more, subscribe to The Norman Transcript Smart Edition, or our print edition.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Sports
  • Gray2 Gray lifts Sooners to victory in Big 12 opener

    OKLAHOMA CITY — The last two times Jonathan Gray took the mound, Oklahoma lost. Gray made sure there wouldn’t be a three-peat Thursday in the first game of the Big 12 tournament at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark....

    May 24, 2013 1 Photo

  • Sooners’ super regional opener postponed until today

    Oklahoma coach Patty Gasso wanted this weekend’s NCAA super regional to be a distraction for those affected by the week’s severe weather. But another round of storms on Thursday means that fans had to wait one more day for it....

    May 24, 2013

  • Now more than ever, sport is more than distraction

    OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma baseball coach Sunny Golloway said he woke up Thursday morning at 6:15 a.m., heard the rain on the window and felt sick to his stomach. “How are they going to continue to clean up,” he said....

    May 24, 2013

  • Sooners slip to ninth place at nationals

    ATHENS, Ga. — The Oklahoma women can still put together a top five finish, yet the dream of winning a national championship ended Thursday....

    May 24, 2013

  • Coded goal: RG3 still aiming for Redskins’ opener

    ASHBURN, Va. — Robert Griffin III’s rehab started with a “cry festival.” Then came a special new passcode for his cellphone and a chance to hash things out with coach Mike Shanahan....

    May 24, 2013

  • Good day for Kansas squads

    OKLAHOMA CITY — Tucker Tharp and Michael Suiter each had two hits and two RBIs, leading Kansas to a 7-2 victory over third-seeded West Virginia at the Big 12 tournament Thursday night....

    May 24, 2013

  • Still on the bubble?

    OU has the pressure of trying to secure an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament if it comes up short of winning the Big 12 tournament....

    May 24, 2013

  • Seeing yourself as the world sees you

    Ever try seeing yourself as others see you, or your piece of the world as others see your piece of the world? You know, if you could get others to see you, or if you could get other parts of the world to see your part of it? Narcissism ...

    May 23, 2013

  • LeBron hits buzzer-beating lay-up to give Miami early advantage in series

    MIAMI — LeBron James made a layup as time expired in overtime, and the Miami Heat found a way to beat the Indiana Pacers 103-102 in a wild Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals Wednesday night....

    May 23, 2013

  • Even under immense scrutiny, Sooners not in do-or-die mode

    A mesh sign down the right-field line spells out Oklahoma’s baseball tradition in years. The two national champions are at the top, the three NCAA tournament super regional appearances are in the middle. At the bottom are the 35 NCAA ...

    May 23, 2013

The Business Marquee
Facebook