The Pryor Times

Sports

December 26, 2012

Much to be gained for OU against A&M

PRYOR — CNHI News Service



There’s a school of thought abound that says Oklahoma can’t win. That it can beat Texas A&M at the Cotton Bowl, but still not strike a blow for hearts and minds.

If that’s really true, it’s an indictment of an idiotic college football nation much more than a descriptions of the fix the Sooners will find themselves in Jan. 4 at Cowboys Stadium.

Indeed, this is very much the bowl game OU has been waiting for. Really. If the prospect of beating the Aggies — who took the SEC by storm in their inaugural trip through the alleged greatest conference on earth — carries no weight, than what exactly have other recent bowls done for OU?

Did it do much to see the Sooners beat a mediocre Iowa team at the Insight Bowl? Did it do anybody any favors when OU finally broke its BCS losing streak against a bad Connecticut team that backed into the Fiesta Bowl?

The year before, after a trying season that included four losses, the Sooner Nation finally finished a season victoriously when OU beat Stanford at the Sun Bowl, but what did the Cardinal or the venue do for anybody?

Two and three years before that, OU really couldn’t win. The Sooners played heavy favorites in consecutive Fiesta Bowls, against Boise State and West Virginia, a pair of games in which winning only amounted to breaking even. Losing both remain the greatest bowl disappointments of the Stoops era.

This is not that.

Iowa, UConn, Stanford, West Virginia nor Boise State upset the No. 1 team in the nation on the No. 1 team’s home field, as A&M has, before taking on OU. Nor did the Hawkeyes, Cardinal, Mountaineers or Broncos roll out a Heisman Trophy winner to lead their offense.

The only thing the Aggies aren’t is exotic. A Big 12 conference foe for so many seasons, it can be difficult to get your head around the idea of a Big 12-SEC Cotton Bowl matchup when the two teams doing the representing have been playing every season forever.

“It’s a little strange,” OU quarterback Landry Jones said.

Still, if A&M is not quite Notre Dame , Alabama, Florida, Oregon, Georgia nor LSU, neither does any other opponent OU might face stack up to the Aggies.

Think about this.

When was the last time OU failed to be favored in its bowl game? Against Stanford, maybe? Before that, what? LSU for the ‘03 national championship, or do you have to go all the way back to Florida State for the ‘00 title game, when the Sooners were 13-point dogs?

Anyway, it doesn’t happen very often and right now A&M is a 4 1/2 point favorite.

That’s hardly all.

Have we forgotten that the biggest name in college football is Johnny Manziel? Or that he’s leading just the kind of potent offense a Mike Stoops’ defense could make up for all past failings against.

Recall that defense remained a near-unquestioned strength of this team until Baylor ran wild, West Virginia ran wilder and Oklahoma State did everything pretty well against the Sooner defense but win.

That redemption back-in-Norman-again defensive coordinator Mike Stoops talked about all the way back on media day, for himself and for his unit, remains available.

“Any time you can knock off somebody that was on the Heisman, that legitimizes your defense,” Sooner defensive end R.J. Washington said. “We would love to go out … and show what kind of defense we really are.”

“Cotton Bowl, what a great game it is,” Stoops said, doing his best to shill for the game, as though the pedigree of the organizers is what it’s all about.

 

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Sports
  • IMG_1998©KRISTYTROYER.jpg Tigers to co-host league tournament

    Pryor and Claremore will co-host the Three Rivers League summer baseball championship tournament beginning Wednesday.

    June 17, 2013 1 Photo

  • LG product Houser set to play in New York

    Former Locust Grove pitcher Adrian Houser will begin his 2013 season playing for the Tri-City Valleycats June 17.

    June 17, 2013

  • LG pirtle.jpg Pirate goes national

    Whether it's playing football, racing four-wheelers or just washing dishes, Jason Pirtle will try to win at it.

    June 13, 2013 1 Photo

  • Fishing tournament draws hundreds

    The fish were biting at the Lake Hudson Kids Fishing Tournament at Snowdale Park in Salina June 8.

    June 12, 2013

  • The Porter Report

    The OU softball team congratulating a player despite being called out at third was just one of many things that made the 2013 WCWS amazing.

    June 5, 2013

  • Sooner than later

    Callie Parsons knows a thing or two about hard work, and she is being rewarded on college softball's biggest stage.

    June 4, 2013

  • Life on the Bench

    Any place can be a big-league ballpark, if you're in the right frame of mind, writes Kenny Bowyer.

    May 30, 2013

  • The Porter Report

    Fishing requires plenty of caution and patience. And time.

    May 28, 2013

  • Shock, Tigers start hoops partnership

    The WNBA's Tulsa Shock and Pryor Public Schools will be teaming up in several ways this summer and into the fall to help the Pryor basketball program.

    May 27, 2013

  • Pickleball league picks up speed

    Dozens of people in Pryor are finding out how much fun “ping-pong on steroids” can be.

    May 23, 2013

Local Highlights
Parade
AP Video
RAW: NSA Director Says 50 Plots Foiled Boeing, Airbus Battle for Sales Supremacy NYC 911 Call Lasts for 8 Hours Obama: US Has Helped Syrian Rebels Afghan Forces Take Afghanistan Security Lead Raw: 100K Protesters Flood Brazilian Streets California Cops Cruise on Stand-up Paddle Patrol Transgender Candidate Running in NYC Obama: NSA Secret Data Gathering 'Transparent' Man Who Disrupted Flight Ranted About CIA Feds: 7-Eleven Stores Exploited Immigrants Fla. Teen Catches Ride With Whale Shark Iran's Rowhani Urges 'Path of Moderation' Investigators Probe Origin of Colo. Wildfire Ex-NFL Star Chad Johnson Out of Jail Family Tweets Say Kim Kardashian Gives Birth
Stocks
Poll

Do you think it is more important for the government’s data collection programs to be revealed to the public or for government employees to keep secrets?

Reveal programs
Keep secrets
     View Results