The Norman Transcript

Sports

November 30, 2009

NEW: Strong finish · Sooners wait until the regular season's final game to play their best

It may have taken 12 games, but Oklahoma finally got the marquee victory it had sought all season.

Saturday's 27-0 victory Oklahoma State felt like something that should be savored after a difficult regular season.

"It's a good way to go out. We still have one more game, but to win this Bedlam game, definitely ends us on a high note," wide receiver Ryan Broyles said.

The game that remains is the bowl game. The Sooners' streak of three consecutive BCS bowl appearances is over. The Alamo Bowl or the Sun Bowl are the two most likely postseason destinations for the Sooners.

Both games had executives at Owen Field Saturday, and both expressed a desire to see OU at either El Paso, Texas Dec. 31 or San Antonio Jan. 2.

"The last time Oklahoma was even in our picture was 1999," Alamo Bowl president Derrick Fox said Saturday. It's a very prestigious program that has a great administration with (OU athletic director) Joe and coach (Bob) Stoops."

"We've had the Sooners twice in our bowl and they're great people, friendly people, great tradition -- you couldn't have anybody any better," Sun Bowl chairman emeritus Jimmy Rogers said.

Those decisions won't be made until after this Saturday's conference championship games and the release of the final BCS standings.

OU hasn't been ranked in those in several weeks, but a couple more performances like the one against Oklahoma State would have kept it in there.

Every question that sprouted up after the 41-13 loss to Texas Tech the previous week was answered in the regular-season finale.

OU's defense was in peak form and OU's offense managed to run the ball even with a patched-together offensive line that didn't include left tackle Trent Williams, who missed the game with a concussion.

"The offensive line just got an attitude about running the ball. They did a great job. Every single guy stepped up for us," quarterback Landry Jones said.

The defensive performance was the capstone for what has, statistically at least, been one of the best units of the Stoops era.

Saturday's shutout was the Sooners' third of the season and 10th time they held a team to 21 points or less.

"I think from a timing stand point, I am so happy that our guys can enjoy a good quality win," defensive coordinator Brent Venables said. "It was a good performance and our guys deserve it because it has been a really emotional year."

The emotion of it even caught up to Stoops following the game. There were no tears, but it was the last home game for a senior class that had won three straight Big 12 championships and suffered the brunt of the season-ending injuries that plagued OU this season.

Defensive end Auston English, offensive linemen Brody Eldridge and Williams and tight end Jermaine Gresham weren't in uniform Saturday. Middle linebacker Ryan Reynolds suited up but didn't play due to a hamstring injury.

"Not being able to play some of them is what has really bothered me the most. That has been so unusual and different," Stoops said. "They have a really strong legacy here. I told them on Thursday and Friday that regardless, though we have fought through a tough year, they still are a part of teams that won three straight Big 12 championships over the last four years. In the league no one else has won but two, that is pretty special. They were a big part of that and I wanted them to know how much we still appreciate that and know what they have done here for a long period of time."

For the next 13 days, the Sooners sit in limbo. Coaches hit the road recruiting and players will be focused on upcoming finals and healing up for the bowl game.

Despite everything that's occurred with injuries and nail-biting losses, OU heads into the postseason with a positive frame of mind.

John Shinn

366-3536

jshinn@normantranscript.com

Text Only
Sports
  • Perhaps it is time to believe in Landry

    IRVING, Texas — Sometimes, maybe most times, it’s not about what they say but how they say it. So one pays attention amongst the monotony that is Big 12 football media days, in some ways more a people watching event than a gridiron primer....

    July 29, 2010

  • Upping the stakes

    Since Jasmin Ouschan joined the Women’s Professional Billiards Association (WPBA) in 2007, the Austrian-born player has become one of the tour’s biggest stars. She has also been listed among the top 10 women in the annual prize money ...

    July 29, 2010

  • Thirteen inning marathon in New York

    NEW YORK — Albert Pujols drove in the go-ahead run with two outs in the 13th inning, and the St. Louis Cardinals survived a frantic comeback to beat the New York Mets 8-7 on Wednesday night....

    July 29, 2010

  • Former OSU football star dead

    OKLAHOMA CITY — Bob Fenimore, a two-time All-American who became the top pick in the 1947 NFL draft, died Wednesday in Stillwater after a fight with cancer. He was 84....

    July 29, 2010

  • Sooners putting the past behind

    IRVING, Texas — Neither Bob Stoops nor any of his players said it Wednesday, but Oklahoma believes whatever hasn’t killed them will make them stronger....

    July 29, 2010

  • Childress team making comeback from last year

    INDIANAPOLIS — If anybody needed more evidence to confirm that Richard Childress Racing is back as a NASCAR power broker, Sunday’s organization-wide romp at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway could be Exhibit A....

    July 29, 2010

  • Different town hall meeting

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The top team owners in NASCAR set their individual agendas aside for a unified brainstorming session on how to cut costs and help revive the auto racing industry....

    July 29, 2010

  • health coming back

    IRVING, Texas — The best news Oklahoma had Wednesday was on the health of defensive tackle Adrian Taylor. He is expected to be back on the field and fully recovered from the gruesome lower leg injury he suffered in the Sun Bowl....

    July 29, 2010

  • Judge’s ruling causes stir in cheerleading

    U.S. District Judge Stefan Underhill ruled July 21 that Quinnipiac University in Connecticut could not replace its women’s volleyball team with a competitive cheering squad. His reasoning was that cheerleading doesn’t fit the ...

    July 29, 2010

  • Goodbye to a legend

    OKLAHOMA CITY — Monday night, Jennie Finch, who has been the face of Team USA softball for a decade, took her final bow at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium after the Americans won the World Cup for the fourth straight time....

    July 28, 2010

The Business Marquee
Blogs
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com