The University of Oklahoma features 17 varsity sports teams. Both men's and women's teams are called the Sooners
, a nickname given to the early participants in the land rushes which initially opened the Oklahoma Indian Territory to non-native settlement. They participate in the NCAA's Division I-A, in the South Division of the Big 12 Conference. The University's current athletic director is Joe Castiglione.
In 2002, The University of Oklahoma was ranked as the 3rd best college sports program in America by Sports Illustrated. [1] When combined with Blake Griffin's John Wooden Award and Sam Bradford's Heisman Trophy, Oklahoma became the first school to have a top winner in both basketball and football in the same year, 2009.
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OKLAHOMA SOONERS TICKETS
EVENT | DATE | AVAILABILITY |
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Louisville Cardinals Women's Basketball vs. Oklahoma Sooners Tickets 12/4 | Dec 04, 2024 Wed, 5:00 PM | | NCAA Women's Volleyball Tournament: First Round - Oklahoma vs. UTEP & Pittsburgh vs. Morehead St. Tickets 12/6 | Dec 06, 2024 Fri, 4:00 PM | | NCAA Women's Volleyball Tournament: Second Round Tickets 12/7 | Dec 07, 2024 Sat, 7:00 PM | | Oklahoma Sooners Women's Basketball vs. Alabama State Hornets Tickets 12/8 | Dec 08, 2024 Sun, 1:30 PM | | Oklahoma Sooners vs. Oklahoma State Cowboys Tickets 12/14 | Dec 14, 2024 Sat, 7:00 PM | |
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Varsity sports
The University of Oklahoma was a charter member of the
Southwest Athletic Conference (SWC) during its formation in 1914. Five years later, in 1919, OU left the SWC and joined the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association. In 1928, this conference split, and OU remained aligned with the teams that formed the
Big Six Conference. Over the next 31 years, more schools were added and the conference underwent several name changes, incrementing the number each time up to the
Big Eight Conference where it remained until 1996. Four more universities were added then and the name was changed one more time to its current form: the
Big 12 Conference.
Football
The Sooners have been participating in
college football since 1895. Calling
Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium at
Owen Field home, the team has won numerous bowl games, 41 conference championships (including every
Big Seven championship awarded), and seven
Associated Press National Championships, making the Sooners football program the most decorated in the
Big 12.
Oklahoma has scored the most points in Division I-A football history despite the fact they have played over 60 fewer games than the second place school on that list.
[2] OU also has the highest winning percentage of any team since the start of the AP poll in 1936.
[3]
The Sooners possess seven national championships in football, with the 1950, 1955, 1956, 1974, 1975, 1985, and 2000 seasons featuring the top team in the
Associated Press final poll, and the 2000
Bowl Championship Series National Championship as well. This ties
Alabama for the
most national titles of any Division I college football team after the end of
World War II (which is commonly used as the division between eras in college football).
[4] [5]
In addition to these seven acknowledged national championships there are also nine additional years in which the NCAA's official record book recognizes the Sooners as national champions: 1949, 1953, 1957, 1967, 1973, 1978, 1980, 1986, 2003.
[6] The
University of Oklahoma does not acknowledge these additional "championships", as they were not awarded by the
Associated Press,
United Press International (UPI),
USA Today Coaches Poll, or the
Bowl Championship Series (BCS).
Individual success is also a major part of Oklahoma football; five
Heisman Trophy winners (
Billy Vessels,
Steve Owens,
Billy Sims,
Jason White and
Sam Bradford) are surrounded by many other award winners, including
Joe Washington,
Brian Bosworth, Tony Casillas,
Greg Pruitt,
Josh Heupel,
Jerry Tubbs, Rocky Calmus,
Granville Liggins,
Teddy Lehman,
Lee Roy Selmon,
Roy Williams,
Tommy McDonald,
Mark Clayton,
Tommie Harris,
J.C. Watts,
Keith Jackson and
Jammal Brown. More than a dozen Sooner players have been inducted into the
College Football Hall of Fame. Oklahoma has more Butkus award winners than any other school.
Legendary coaches
Bennie Owen,
Bud Wilkinson, and
Barry Switzer have passed through the gameday tunnel for the Sooners, each on their way to the College Football Hall of Fame. Owen was the first highly successful coach at OU and was a major advocate of the forward pass, which at the turn of the century was not popular. The playing surface at Oklahoma's
Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium is popularly known as
Owen Field in honor of his long tenure and devotion to the university. Wilkinson left many imprints on the game, such as the
5-2 defense with five linemen and two linebackers; the perfection of the
Split-T, an early option offense; three national championships; and his teams set the NCAA Division 1 record for consecutive wins at 47. The record of 47 straight wins is widely regarded as one of the great achievements in sports, and a streak that is unlikely to be broken (started October 10, 1953 vs. Texas and ended in 1957 with a loss to Notre Dame 7-0). Switzer won three national championships (The National Championship of 1975 is highly controversial, Arizona State went 12-0 that season while Oklahoma was 11-1) and forged arguably the fiercest rushing offense ever, the Oklahoma
wishbone formation, throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Though the end of Switzer's tenure at Oklahoma was marked by controversy and poor player behavior, he is generally well-regarded by both his past players and Sooner fans. During his 16 years as the Sooner's head coach, Switzer led his team to 12 conference championships and never lost more than two games in a row. His winning percentage of .837 stands as the fourth highest in the history of 1-A football. Other Hall of Fame coaches whose tenure included stints at the University of Oklahoma are
Lawrence "Biff" Jones and Jim Tatum.
2006 football season
After the previous year's 8–4 season, the Sooners largely returned to form in 2006. While the Sooners were considered a top five team by many season preview magazines, on 2 August 2006, starting
quarterback Rhett Bomar and
Offensive Lineman J.D. Quinn were dismissed from the team by the university for violating
NCAA regulations (the school was originally forced to vacate all wins from this season, but that decision was overturned on appeal).
[7] However, the Sooners rebounded strongly behind quarterback
Paul Thompson and finished the regular season at 11–2. The Sooners defeated Oklahoma State 27–21 to claim the Big 12 South title. The Sooners defeated Nebraska 21–7 to claim the Big 12 Championship. On January 1, OU was defeated by
Boise State University in overtime in the
2007 Fiesta Bowl by the score of 43–42.
2007 football season
The Oklahoma Sooners opened the 2007 with a 79–10 win over North Texas.
[8] The Sooners continued their offensive performances and strong defensive performances with wins over Miami (51–13), Utah State (54–3), and Tulsa (62–21). The Sooners lost only two games in the regular season—to the Colorado Buffaloes (24–27) and Texas Tech (27–34). The remaining Sooner victories were over Texas (28–21), Missouri (41–31), Iowa State (17–7), Texas A&M (42–14), Baylor (52–21), and Oklahoma State (49–17). The Sooners played against the Missouri Tigers in the Big 12 championship game and came away with a 38–17 win over the then #1 ranked Tigers. The Sooners played in the Fiesta Bowl game against the
West Virginia Mountaineers. The Sooners lost, 28–48, to end the season with 11 wins and 3 losses. Curtis Lofton (
linebacker), Malcolm Kelly (
wide receiver), and Reggie Smith (
defensive back) left Oklahoma early to declare for the
2008 NFL Draft.
Men's basketball
The men's
basketball team is highly successful and rose to national prominence since the early
80’s with head coach
Billy Tubbs and three time All-American power forward
Wayman Tisdale. It currently plays in the
Lloyd Noble Center, which came to be known as the house
Alvan Adams built and Tisdale filled. While the team has never won a national championship, it ranks second in most tournament wins without a championship behind
Illinois. The team played in the 1988 national championship game but lost to
Kansas, despite having beaten the Jayhawks three times earlier in the season, including the Big 8 Championship Game in Kansas City. The program has won a combined twenty regular-season and tournament conference championships.
The Sooners headed into the 2005-06 season ranked #5 in the
AP preseason poll, led by
Taj Gray,
Kevin Bookout,
Terrell Everett, and
David Godbold, but had a disappointing early season. After the emergence of
Michael Neal as a potential star, the Sooners salvaged a #3 seed in the Big 12 Conference Tournament but lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
On March 29, 2006,
Kelvin Sampson left the University of Oklahoma to become the head basketball coach at
Indiana University. 13 days later, on April 11, 2006, Oklahoma Athletic Director Joe Castiglione named
Jeff Capel III the new head coach. Capel encountered trouble in his first few months as several players who had been recruited by Sampson backed out of their commitments. Also, under Sampson's watch, Oklahoma was placed under a three-year investigation by the NCAA for recruiting violations. At the end of the their investigation, the NCAA issued a report citing more than 550 illegal calls made by Sampson and his staff to 17 different recruits. The NCAA barred Sampson from recruiting off campus and making phone calls for one year, ending
May 24,
2007.
[9] The Sooners looked to continue a streak of 12 consecutive postseason tournament appearances in 2006-2007, but were disappointed when they did not receive a bid for either the NCAA Tournament or the NIT.
Men's gymnastics
The men's gymnastics program at OU is headed by coach
Mark Williams. It has won five of the last seven
NCAA Men's Gymnastics championships, winning the title in 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006 and 2008 (they finished second behind
Penn State in 2004 and 2007). Only Oklahoma and Penn State have won the NCAA title since 2000, with the exception of
Ohio State in 2001. They won the 2006 title with very little experience on the team as 50% of the members were freshmen and just 21% were upperclassmen (seven freshmen, four sophomores, one junior, and two seniors). Teams from OU also won national championships in 1977, 1978, and 1991.
Gymnastics began at the school in 1902. The program folded in 1917 when the original coach left. The program was revived in 1965 with the new coach,
Russ Porterfield having to beg students to join the squad. Within 6 years, OU had its first winning season. OU's next coach,
Paul Ziert, turned the program into one of national prominence. He led OU to two national championships in 1977 and 1978. One of Ziert's athletes,
Greg Buwick, would replace him as head coach in 1980 and would lead the team to its third national title in 1991. Buwick's assistant of 12 years, Mark Williams, took over the head coaching position in 2000 and has continued OU's tradition of gymnastics excellence. OU has produced more
Nissen Award winners than any other university and is the only school to have back-to-back Nissen Award winners.
[10]
Baseball
The Oklahoma Baseball tradition is long, proud and storied, with two National Championships in 1951 and 1994, along with numerous All-Americans. Their home field is
L. Dale Mitchell Baseball Park, named after famed player
Dale Mitchell. The current coach is
Sunny Golloway. The baseball program was a source of recent controversy when the head coach,
Larry Cochell, resigned after making racially insensitive remarks about one of the players on the team.
During the 2005-2006 season, the Sooners were given a home regional at L. Dale Mitchell Park and were named the #1 seed. They beat the
University of Houston,
Texas Christian University, and
Wichita State University to win the regional and advanced to a Super Regional where they were defeated by
Rice University in a best-of-three series.
Oregon State University went on to win the
College World Series that year.
Prior to 2006, the Sooners hosted regionals at minor league parks in Oklahoma City, first
All Sports Stadium and then
AT&T Bricktown Ballpark. Scheduling conflicts with the
Oklahoma Redhawks, the Class AAA affiliate of the
Texas Rangers, led OU to bid for future regionals at its on-campus stadium.
Women's basketball
OU Women's Basketball began during the 1974-75 academic year. It wasn't until 1996 when OU hired local high school basketball coach,
Sherri Coale, that the team became something Sooners would be proud of. At one time the team drew an average of 65 people per game, now the Sooner are one of the nation's leaders in attendance. In 2002, Oklahoma advanced to the National Title game before losing to the
Connecticut Huskies.
Wrestling
The wrestling program is the fourth most decorated in college wrestling, having won seven national championships in 1936, 1951, 1952, 1957, 1960, 1963 and 1974. They are led by their coach,
Jack Spates. The Sooners are considered a power in their own right and
Bedlam matches draw an enormous crowd.
Women's rowing
On May 10, 2007 the University announced the addition of women's rowing to the intercollegiate athletics program started by well respected rower Candie Garrett.
[11] A rowing facility will be built on the
Oklahoma River near downtown
Oklahoma City and is expected to be completed in 2009. The addition of the program was made possible by large donations from
Aubrey McClendon and
Clayton Bennett. A coach and staff will be hired during the 2007/08 academic year with recruitment beginning after that.
This is the first sport added since women's soccer was added in 1996.
Rivalries
University of Texas
The
University of Texas is considered the primary rival of the Sooners. Inverted versions of the
Longhorn mascot can be seen on automobiles all over the Norman campus, and many T-shirts referring to the rivalry present the word "Texas" in mirror image, upside-down, or possibly surrounded by obscenities. A reminder of the rivalry shared by these two schools was painted on the South Oval of the OU campus for many years, and was recently replicated near the Library clock tower due to construction at its original site.
The annual game between the schools at the
Cotton Bowl in
Dallas,
Texas, known as the
Red River Rivalry, is a game that draws attention from the college football world. 2005 marked the 100th "
Red River Rivalry" which took place on October 8 in the
Cotton Bowl, alongside the
State Fair of Texas. Oklahoma was defeated by eventual
national champion Texas, 45-12; this was the first loss for OU in the series since 1999. The 2008 game featured two teams in the top 5. Prior to the game, Oklahoma was favored by 6 1/2 points.
[12] Texas won the game, 45–35.
ESPN analyst Ivan Maisel called the game "one of the best college football games of this or any season" and said "If you went to see your team play Saturday, if you didn't have the good fortune of wearing burnt orange or crimson in Fair Park on a sunlit fall Saturday, if you made the mistake of watching some other game, get thee to YouTube. Buy, cheat or steal your way to a copy and watch No. 5 Texas beat No. 1 Oklahoma 45-35."
[13]
Austin American-Statesman sportswriter Kirk Bohls said "The win is the third-biggest of Brown's 11-year stint at Texas, trailing only the landmark victories over
Ohio State and the unbeatable
USC Trojans in the magical 2005 season."
[14] Sportswriter Cedric Golden, writing for the same paper, said UT's offensive coordinator
Greg Davis called the best game plan of his career. Golden said Davis' plan for this game was even better than the game plan in the
2006 Rose Bowl, in which Texas won the national championship.
[15]It was the highest scoring event in the history of the rivalry, and it was seen by the most fans - a record 92,182.
[16]
As of the 2008 season, Texas still holds a sizeable lead over the Sooners with a 58–40–5 head-to-head record.
University of Nebraska
A traditional college football rivalry with the
University of Nebraska has been less intense over the past several years (although recent off-the-field incidents have heightened the animosity between the two programs and their respective fanbases). This is mainly due to the split-division nature of the Big 12 that now only allows the teams to play each other twice every four years. Prior to this, these teams were involved in several historic match-ups, including the
Game of the Century and the so-called Game of the New Century where the teams have come in to the game ranked one and two in the
Associated Press Poll, making the games of great importance in deciding the national championship. Historically, the rivalry's most distinguishing quality has been the grudging respect and appreciation between the two tradition-rich programs. Also of note is the game's former status as the premier
Thanksgiving Day game for the middle of the country. The
Sooners and
Cornhuskers went head-to-head in the 2006
Big 12 Championship Game, with Oklahoma winning the conference title by the score of 21–7.
Oklahoma State University
Oklahoma's other rivalry is with an intrastate team, the
Oklahoma State Cowboys, and is often referred to as the "
Bedlam Series." It is normally played as a home-and-home series with games alternating between
Norman and
Stillwater, with the exception of the baseball teams, who often play at
AT&T Bricktown Ballpark in
Oklahoma City or
Drillers Stadium in
Tulsa.
Traditions
The "fight song" of the University of Oklahoma is "
Boomer Sooner", a version of "Boola Boola", the fight song of
Yale University. "Boomer Sooner" was written by Arthur M. Alden in 1905. Other songs played at athletic events by
The Pride of Oklahoma Marching Band are a version of
Rodgers and Hammerstein's "
Oklahoma!", "OK Oklahoma", played after extra points, and the "
OU Chant." At home games, The Pride of Oklahoma Marching Band plays that visiting team's "fight song" while facing their fans.
The Mascot present at all football games is the
Sooner Schooner, a
Conestoga wagon, pulled by two crème white ponies, Boomer and Sooner. The caretakers of the wagon are the spirit group called the
RUF/NEKS, who shoot off modified shotguns in celebration of scores by the home team. The group was launched in 1915 when an elderly female spectator at an OU-Oklahoma A&M basketball game chided the group for raising hell ("Sit down and be quiet, you roughnecks!")
[17]
Recently, in time for the 2005 football season, two new mascots, based on the ponies who pull the Schooner, were created, named appropriately,
Boomer and Sooner. They are costumes of two identical (except for eye color) crème white ponies. The costumes were changed in 2008 to both represented with Blue eye color. Before, the Boomer and Sooner costume mascots, OU was also represented by Top Dawg. Top Dawg did some appearances at football games, but was primarily used at wrestling and basketball events.
The official school colors are
Crimson and
Cream, with red and white sometimes used as substitutes for simplicity.
[18] The school logo is an interlocking OU design and was first used on football helmets in 1967.
National Championships
- Men's
- *Baseball: 1951, 1994
- *Football: 1950, 1955, 1956, 1974, 1975, 1985, 2000
- *Golf: 1989
- *Gymnastics: 1977, 1978, 1991, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008
- *Wrestling: 1936, 1951, 1952, 1957, 1960, 1963, 1974
- Women's
- *Softball: 2000