Completed Event: Football versus Illinois State on August 30, 2025 , Win , 35, to, 3

September 10, 2008 | Football
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The Coaches
Oklahoma: Bob Stoops (Iowa '83) is 99-22 in his
10th season with the Sooners. He is 65-13 vs. the Big
12, 35-9 vs. the Big 12 South, 28-4 vs. the Big 12
North, 5-1 in the Big 12 title game, 34-9 vs. non-conference
opponents, 56-2 at home, 27-11 on the road, 16-9 on
neutral fields, 28-11 vs. ranked opponents, 4-5 in
bowls, 3-5 in January Bowls and 2-4 in BCS games. He
is 1-0 vs. Washington.
Washington: Tyrone Willingham (Michigan State '77)
is 11-27 in his fourth year at Washington, 76-78-1
in 14 seasons as a college head coach. He is 0-1 vs.
Oklahoma.
The Program
Oklahoma's all-time
record stands at 781-295-53.
The Sooners own seven
national championships (1950, 1955, 1956, 1974, 1975,
1985, 2000).
OU
has 41 bowl appearances (No. 7 nationally) with 24
victories (No. 4 nationally).
Oklahoma has won 41 conference titles.
Since
WWII, Oklahoma is the most successful college football
program with 547 victories.
Some 144 All-Americans
and four Heisman Trophy winners have come from the
Oklahoma program.
OU leads the nation in 10-win seasons with 30 overall.
Oklahoma
Football History & Tradition
This Week's Opponent
Washington is 0-2 after a 44-10 loss at Oregon and
a 28-27 setback to BYU. This is the second of three
straight home games for UW.
• The Huskies dropped a heartbreaker last week. QB
Jake Locker scored a touchdown with two seconds remaining
against No. 15 BYU, but was flagged for excessive celebration.
The ensuing 35-yard extra point was blocked and the
Cougars escaped with the win.
• Locker has accounted for 426 of UW's 579 total
offense yards. With 119 yards he is the team's
leading rusher by 86 yards.
Ties With This Week's Opponent
OU head coach Bob Stoops was a safety on the
Iowa team that dropped the 1982 Rose Bowl to Washington,
28-0.
• Darrell Royal, who went on to a 19 years as head
coach at Texas, coached Washington to a 5-5 mark in
1956. He was an OU letterman from 1946-49. Royal was
succeeded at UW by one of his Oklahoma teammates, Jim
Owens, who led the Huskies to a 99-82-6 mark from 1957-74.
Owens also played at OU from 1949-46.
Conclusion of this Series
This is the conclusion of a two-game series between
these two schools. The first game was played in 2006
when OU posted a 37-20 victory in Norman. Nineteen
of the players that were listed on the depth chart
heading into that game still play for the Sooners.
Six of those are offensive linemen.
• This is Oklahoma's first game in the state
of Washington.
Oklahoma and the Pac 10
Oklahoma holds an all-time mark of 22-14-1 against
the Pac-10 and has played at least one game against
each of the 10 members. Only Conference USA, with 44
games, exceeds the Pac-10's 37 for most non-conference
games for Oklahoma. The ACC is next at 32.
• Former OU defensive coordinator (1999-2003) Mike
Stoops, brother of Bob Stoops, is in his fifth season
as head coach at Arizona.
• Oklahoma's last visit to a Pac-10 venue resulted
in a series of officiating mistakes over the waning
minutes that led to the acknowledgement of errors from
the conference office, the suspension of crew members
and extensive national media coverage. The outcome
was a 34-33 loss at Oregon on Sept. 16, 2006. OU finished
11-3.
The 2006 Oklahoma-Washington Meeting
• OU scored the first 24 points of the second half
to break a 13-13 tie and take a 37-13 lead.
• Adrian Peterson had 32 carries, 165 yards and two
TDs. He also caught two passes for six yards.
• QB Paul Thompson completed 21-of-33 passes for 272
yards with two TDs and one interception.
• Malcolm Kelly caught six passes for a career-high
121 yards and two TDs.
• FS Darien Williams topped the defense with 13 tackles.
LB Rufus Alexander had 11 with one TFL and two PBU.
• Washington rushed for 201 yards, including 54 on
its first scoring drive.
Oklahoma's Most Recent Game
Oklahoma blasted Cincinnati in Norman last Saturday,
52-26. It was a Bearcat squad that went 10-3 in 2007,
was ranked No. 17 in the final 2007 AP poll and trotted
out 16 returning starters, including nine seniors on
defense ...
• Oklahoma scored on its first two possessions and
never trailed.
• Sam Bradford completed 28-of-39 passes for 395 yards
and five touchdowns with two interceptions. His completions
and yardage figures were career bests, while his touchdown
total tied his best. One of Bradford's interceptions
first glanced off a Sooner receiver.
• WR Ryan Broyles enjoyed the best debut game ever
for an Oklahoma receiver in both catches and yards.
The redshirt freshman caught seven passes for 141 yards
and one touchdown.
• RS freshman linebacker Travis Lewis, playing in just
his second game, registered a team-high 12 tackles
to go with 2.5 tackles for 16 yards in losses and a
pair of sacks for -14.
• OU's defense played better than the final score
might indicate. The Bearcats scored one touchdown on
a kickoff return and another on the game's final
play. UC managed just 87 yards on 29 rushing attempts.
The Sooners Briefly
OU was No. 4 in both of preseason polls. It marked
the 10th straight season that was ranked in the first
AP poll.
• Oklahoma was tabbed for a first-place finish in the
Big 12's South Division in a preseason polling
of league media. Defensive end Auston English was named
the league's preseason defensive player of the year.
• There are 27 players on this team with previous starting
experience. There were 34 in 2007, 10 in 2006.
• Last season, OU was 11-3 overall, 6-2 in the Big
12. The Sooners won their fifth Big 12 crown, second
straight and 41st league title overall before advancing
to the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl.
• Three players from the '07 team left early
for the NFL: WR Malcolm Kelly, LB Curtis Lofton and
DB Reggie Smith.
Decade of Dominance
Oklahoma's best-ever decade, in terms of total
victories, came in the 1970's when the Sooners
were 102-13-3 (.877). In the 2000's, OU is 92-17-0
(844).
New Video Board in Debut Season
The board measures 113.5 feet wide by 32.5 feet
tall (3,689 square feet). The previous video board
space on the south end board was 36X21 (756 square
feet). It is thought that the new board is the fourth-largest
in the nation.
The board is 16mm High Definition.
Cost of the new board was $4.5 million.
The project included a new sound system, the
extension of the ribbon boards on the upper decks and
a new Sooner Vision high definition control room, which
carried a price tag of $2 million.
Home Field Honchos
Bob Stoops' teams are 56-2 at Gaylord Family
- Oklahoma Memorial Stadium and have won their last
20 in a row there, and 40 of their last 41. The current
winning streak is the longest under Stoops, who twice
had coached the Sooners to 19 straight wins at home.
The current streak is tied for third-longest in school
history. The top mark was 25, a string that ended in
1953. A streak of 21 ended in 1975 and another of 20
ended in 1957.
Notable Rule Changes
The 40-second play clock begins when the ball
is dead from the previous play.
The first two sideline penalties are five yards.
Subsequent penalties for the offense are 15 yards.
The horse-collar tackle now results in a 15-yard
unnecessary roughness penalty.
If a coach's challenge is upheld, the
coach retains the challenge.
Kickoffs that go out of bounds are penalized
30 yards from the spot of the kick.
Grasping or twisting of the facemask is a 15-yard
penalty. Incidental contact is no longer penalized.
Stoops Era Yielding Record Attendance
Oklahoma has drawn 4,668,225 fans for Bob Stops' 58
home games (started in 1999)...
All 58 have been sold out and the Sooners have prevailed
56 times.
Last year's average home attendance of
84,858 was the largest in school history. The top eight
seasons for OU home attendance have come on Stoops'
watch.
The crowd of 85,357 for the `07 Miami
game was the largest to see a sporting event in the
state of Oklahoma.
OU has exceeded its listed capacity of 82,112
in 32 consecutive games.
Oklahoma has played before sellout crowds in 102
of Stoops' 121 games. A total of 8,953,033, or
an average of 73,992, has seen those games.
Oklahoma Sets Attendance Records at Memorial Stadium
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About the Offense |
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About the Defense |
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About the Special Teams |
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Oklahoma Head Coach Bob Stoops |
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Such dramatics are lost on Bob Stoops. The Sooner head coach befriended the would-be albatross of OU's successful past from his first day on campus and remains steadfastly focused on tomorrow and the championship it holds.
It falls then to the observers and experts of the game to define Stoops' impact. Rarely have the pundits had it so easy.
Under Stoops, Oklahoma has won 99 games (99-22), nine bowl games, six of the BCS variety, had one string of 88 consecutive appearances in the AP poll and captured five Big 12 crowns (the next highest total in the league is two). His 2000 team won the national championship. On a playing field leveled by scholarship limits and parity, this era stares down the Oklahoma standard and does not blink.
The achievement dulls the memory of what Stoops inherited. When he arrived in Norman, the proud Sooner program was five years removed from a winning record, four from bowl play. Those atypical days of angst are so forgotten now that they might as well be mentioned with the land rush and dust bowl.
Stoop, born Sept. 9, 1960, has been characterized as a grounded family man, brilliant big-game coach, relentless recruiter, disciplined leader and a person with uncommon perspective.
His success emanates from a disciplined style true to his roots in the Steel Valley of Ohio, but he is far from inflexible. The principles to which he holds are the tried and true axioms of the sport … mixed with cutting edge strategy and an appreciation for the calculated risk.
During his time, OU has produced record–setting passers and receivers, five 1,000-yard rushers, suffocating defense and special teams units that rank among the most dynamic in the land. Every facet has been impacted.
His players have snagged 16 national awards, including the 2003 Heisman Trophy won by Jason White. There have been more than 60 academic honorees, 62 All-Big 12 players, 24 All-Americans and 36 NFL draft choices.
Stoops has won a total of 10 national coach of the year awards and has been Big 12 Coach of the year three times.
This is one of the finest coaches in the history of one of college football's most storied traditions.
The son of a coach, Stoops was a four-year starter at Iowa. He began his coaching career in 1983 as a volunteer in the Hawkeye program under Hayden Fry. He worked through the ranks until he became co-defensive coordinator at Kansas State (1991-95) during Bill Snyder's rein.
With the Wildcats, he played a key role in an impressive turnaround. During his final four seasons there, K-State was 35-12 with three bowl appearances. Eventually, he left for Florida and a three-year stint as Steve Spurrier's defensive coordinator. In 1996, he was part of a national championship team. It was with the Gators that the spotlight found Stoops and made him one of the hottest names in the profession.
Stoops, who is widely known for countless hours
of charitable work, most of which is directed towards
children, graduated from Iowa in 1983 with a degree
in marketing. He and his wife, Carol, have three children:
daughter, Mackenzie, and twin sons, Drake and Isaac.
Head
Coach Bob Stoops | OU
Coaching Staff
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Notes on the Sooners |
LB Austin Box: Missed opener with arthroscopic surgery on left knee, then played vs. UC.
QB Sam Bradford: See notes on offense's page.
OT Branndon Braxton: Used primarily at right tackle, but also spent part of the preseason working at guard..
RB Chris Brown: Three touchdowns in the opener ... nearly one-third (30%) of his career rushes have resulted in a touchdown or first down -- 245 carries with 58 first downs, 16 touchdowns.
WR Quentin Chaney: Over the last two bowl games, he combined for eight receptions for 166 yards and two TDs.
FB Matt Clapp: A player to watch after a very good redshirt season ... in the best condition of his playing career.
LB Keenan Clayton: Has converted from strong safety to strong side linebacker.
C Jon Cooper: His 31 career starts lead the team ... anchors a veteran offensive line.
TE Brody Eldridge: All-Big 12 fullback last season despite the fact that he had no carries.
DE Auston English: Had 4.0 tackles for loss and 2.5 sacks in the opener.
CB Dominique Franks: Knocked down three passes in the opener, the second start of his career ... INT vs. Cincy.
DT DeMarcus Granger: Led OU's defensive tackles with 3.5 sacks last season.
TE Jermaine Gresham: His 11 TD receptions last season were the most ever by a Sooner TE.
QB Joey Halzle: Hit 21-of-41 for 291 yards in a back-up role at Texas Tech last season, 14-of-16 in '08 opener.
DB Nic Harris: Six career interceptions and 15 deflections.
DB Lendy Holmes: Worked at both secondary position in August before settling at safety ... INT vs. Cincy.
WR Juaquin Iglesias: See notes on offense and special teams pages.
WR Manuel Johnson: Only current Sooner receiver who has a career reception, rush and pass completion.
P Mike Knall: Was one punt shy of the 25 points necessary to count officially, but had it counted, his 43.7-yard average would have rated as the second-best in school history.
OT Phil Loadholt: Thirteen pounds lighter than last season -- 350 to 337.
LB Travis Lewis: Tied for or had the outright lead in tackles in each of the first two games.
RB Mossis Madu: Will play more this season, but impressed in 2007 with 5.8-yard rushing average.
DT Gerald McCoy: Quick tackle looking to parlay Freshman All-America status into more national honors.
RB DeMarco Murray: Carried 15 times for 124 yards (8.3/carry) and two touchdowns in opener.
LB Ryan Reynolds: Only Sooner who had started an OU game at linebacker prior to the season opener ... eight tackles vs. Cincinnati.
OG Duke Robinson: Consensus All-American last season.
OG Brandon Walker: Had the highest overall grade of all OU offensive lineman last season (80%).
OT Trent Williams: Started opener at left tackle, second game at right tackle.