On the fox sports show, replacing urban Meyer. bet bob still has nightmares about that 55-19 drubbing. the good ole days, several Sooner fans in my section had to relocate after the trojans Took control. Thank God, the fawkers were unbearable pre game and after they scored the first TD of the game. Good times!
top of page
To test this feature, visit your live site.
4 Comments
bottom of page
Pretty much all we have left...memories of games almost 20 years ago.
Aside from Sam’s heroics vs State Penn, it’s been shit for over a decade.
I remember in the game when USC punted....as the ball was bouncing around by the OU sideline around the 6 yardline....a Trojan player, on USC's Punt Coverage team running downfield in front of the OU Bench yelled out"Pick It Up!!!"to the OU returner......that OU Player (Mark Bradley) picked it up....was hit and fumbled it away to USC who scored 2 plays later.
.....JAN. 5, 2005 12 AM PT
DAVIE, Fla. — The only “Dynasty” playing in Norman will have to be repeats on television. Talk of an Oklahoma juggernaut and a string of national titles stretching deep into the 21st century was mauled over and muted Tuesday night after the Sooners’ 55-19, five-turnover defeat to USC in the bowl championship series national-title game at the Orange Bowl. Oklahoma has played in three BCS national-title games in the last five seasons -- the upside -- and now has lost two -- the downside. Amazing as it sounds, things might have been OK for Oklahoma early in the game had the Sooners not completely lost possession of their football faculties. It was a 7-7 score in the first quarter when a USC punt dribbled deep into Oklahoma territory. Mark Bradley inexplicably picked up the ball, then coughed it up, with USC recovering his fumble at the six. It was like handing a burglar the keys to your house. USC took the gift and scored. “I have no idea why Mark would have done that,” Oklahoma Coach Bob Stoops said. “I was as shocked as anyone in the stadium. How do you explain that? I don’t know. That goes back to Pop Warner football. Mark should have made a better decision. I’m not going to sit here and go any further in front of the whole media, but it’s as bad a play as there is.” Bradley, a senior, sat in the interview room afterward and tried to explain what happened. “Just a bonehead mistake on my part,” he said. “Before I even knew what was going on, I saw the ref pointing in SC’s direction. I have to live with it, but I’m not going to let it crush me to the point where I can’t function. Things happen. You’ve got to move forward.” There was plenty of blame to spread. On the possession after Bradley’s muff, Jason White inexplicably heaved a pass into quadruple coverage that was not inexplicably intercepted by Jason Leach. That mistake led to another Trojan touchdown. “A horrible decision on my part,” White said. “I just should have thrown the ball away, but I didn’t. It was stupid on my part.” Then, a couple of minutes later, White did it again, throwing a lollipop pass that USC cornerback Justin Wyatt gobbled up like a snack. What in the name of Bud Wilkinson was going on here? It was not as if White just fell off the hay truck. He won the Heisman Trophy last year and is a two-time winner of the Davey O’Brien Award. Yet, in two consecutive national-title games, White has looked harried and flustered. In last year’s title-game loss to Louisiana State, White completed 13 of 37 passes with two interceptions. Against USC, he completed 24 of 36 passes for 244 yards with three interceptions and two touchdowns. Tuesday, White threw two interceptions that led to Trojan touchdowns ... in the first half. A Kejuan Jones fumble late in the first half led to the Ryan Killeen field goal that made it 38-10. Oklahoma committed a season-high five turnovers -- almost unfathomable for a school that went 12-0 and prides itself on discipline and efficiency. Oklahoma was going to be in a rough game no matter what. USC basically nullified freshman tailback Adrian Peterson (82 yards in 25 carries), but, if you eliminated the blunders, Oklahoma might have been able to compete in a game of ball control and clock management. The Sooners’ never gave themselves a chance. “When you turn the ball over four times in the first half you make it pretty difficult to win,” Stoops said. Stoops is considered one of the game’s top minds. He was defensive coordinator on Florida’s 1996 national-title team and led Oklahoma to a national title in 2000, his second season in Norman. In the 2001 Orange Bowl, Stoops’ defense pitched a shutout in a 13-2 win over Florida State. No coach, though, not even Vince Lombardi, could have drawn up a game plan to counter Tuesday’s Sooner self-destruction. There’s nothing for Oklahoma to do now except assess the damage and high-tail it back to Norman. All talk of dynasty has been humbly deferred. White looked shell-shocked when he walked off the field. “I’m disappointed, embarrassed, you name it,” he said later. Oklahoma lost a game and 16 seniors, who played their last game. The power in college football took a dramatic shift, from Mid-west to West. It’s hard to imagine things changing any time soon.
One of my favorite television moments of that Okla. game was the camera's panning the OK. sideline and their players facial and body language was so illustratively disgusting...that they'd totally given up and definitely didn't want to even be there anymore! hahahaha