Sunday, September 29, 2013

TWO & NINE NEVER FELT SO FINE

 

Sooners beat the Irish for the first time in 56 years
 
VS
 
OKLAHOMA 35
NOTRE DAME 21
 
 
SOONERS IN SOUTH BEND
 
A special thanks to Brian "Styx" Sanders & Kevin "KJ" Maguire for the pictures and feedback that they supplied via text and email from South Bend.  I went to South Bend when the Sooners played there in '99, but this was still a tough one to miss.  I appreciate you guys taking the time to share some of the atmosphere with The OAS on Saturday.  I thought I would pass some of that on today:
 
This from Maguire:
  • Lots of Sooner fans in Chicago on Friday night.
  • Great vibe at the tailgate. Several Irish fans remarked how well they were treated last year in Norman and that they wanted to return the favor to Sooner fans this year. 
  • Notre Dame Stadium looks 'old school cool' but it actually sucks.  Basically, they pack 80,000 into a 60,000 seat stadium.
  • Irish fans are down on Kelly.  Boos came out pretty early.
  • Late in game, Irish fans are more and more agitated.  Chants of '2 and 9' have started.
  • "Lots of drunken Irishmen...felt like a family reunion."

This from Styx:
  • (At halftime with Sooners leading 21-7) Text: Feels like we are up by an extra point.
  • 180% difference from last time (1999). Lots more going on around the stadium.
  • Stadium sucks, antiquated, no video board.  When he asked Irish fans about why there was no big video screen they claim it's an attempt to stay with tradition.   Styx then asked if the Ozzy Osbourne and Metallica that was blaring from speakers was also part of the tradition. Nothing like a little Quiet Riot to 'wake up the echoes!'
  • That aside, he did say that the pageantry and tradition that accompanies the game day there @ Notre Dame is very real.
  • Also mentioned the campus was more beautiful than he remembered it to be when we went back in '99.

STYX IS GETTING INTO THE 'SPIRIT'
OF THINGS BEFORE THE GAME
 
 WAKE UP THE ECHOES

The Sooners were obviously very impressive on Saturday.  There were so many positive things that could be pointed out, but I am going to focus on four.
 
1.  The Sooner Nation 
The general consensus is that there were roughly 20,000 Sooner fans inside Notre Dame Stadium on Saturday.  That is an impressive showing by the Sooner Nation.  I know there were at least 15,000 of us in Tuscaloosa in '03, but from all accounts there were a lot more than that in South Bend.  I'm sure it was some sort of optical allusion or maybe it was just the Sooner Homer in me...but when the NBC cameras would pan the stadium, I swear it looked like there were as many Sooner fans in the stands as there were Irish.
Regardless of the exact number, seeing all that red mixed in with the Irish green...made the stands at Notre Dame Stadium look like the set of a Bing Crosby Christmas Special.  Makes me proud to be a Sooner-

2.  The Running Game
Against the Irish last year in Norman, the Sooners rushed for a grand total of 45 feet.  To put that in perspective, if the Sooners started the game at home plate they would've still been a free throw short of the pitcher's mound at the final gun.  The Sooners longest run of the night last year was from the sideline to the huddle.

Holy cow, what a difference twelve months and a coaching change can make.  Bill Bedenbaugh was hired to be the new offensive line coach back in February.  Bedenbaugh quickly went to work on changing the unit's mentality from finesse to physical. All spring he reminded his offensive line about how they got pushed around by the Irish last September.  He also reworked the offseason conditioning regiment for the big-uglies...butting heads with strength and conditioning coach Smitty until he relented to less running and more lifting.  Bigger - stronger vs. lighter - faster.  The results so far have been impressive.

Saturday against the Irish and their vaunted defensive front, the Sooners ran for 212 yards on 42 carries...an average of five yards a snap.  Admittedly, the Sooners struggled on a couple of short yardage situations, but keep in mind; this is by far the best defensive front the Sooners will go up against all season.

The numbers from Saturday show what a football team can do when they have the ability to run the football:
  • Time of possession.  Despite starting off the game only having the ball for 4:31 of the first quarter because of a defensive score and a short drive, the Sooners won the time of possession 35:44 to 24:16.  The real eye opener was the second half where OU had the ball for 22:40 of the possible 30:00 minutes. 
  • First downs: OU 25 ND 12.  Thirteen of which came from running the football
  • Total Plays: OU 73 ND 54.  When you hold the opposition to only 54 plays, then your defense doesn't need Trapper John and an oxygen tent to keep them from keeling over.
  • Favorite point on running game: When Trevor Knight came in to replace Bell...the entire 80,000+ in the stadium knew the Sooners were going to run the football...and still they move the ball 58 yards on the ground, including a 30 yard run by TK.
Bottom line: 450 yards total offense.  212 rushing / 238 passing.  Balance even the flying Wallenda brothers would be proud of.

3.  It Takes a Village
 Love that the Sooners are getting contributions from so many people.  This team is finally showing off the depth that we had been told about.  Five different players carried the football.  Eight different players caught passes.  Even the back-up QB came in at a big moment and contributed.  In the recent past, you shut down Broyles...you put serious damper on the passing game. Then it was Stills that was the key.  It's hard to key on one guy, when so many are in the mix.   Makes sense that you can be more dangerous when you have more than one bullet in your gun.
 
4. Hit Me With Your Best Shot
 One of things that impressed me most about the Sooners on Saturday was the way they answered every time Notre Dame made a push.  As my friend Styx said, the lead seemed precarious at best even when we were up 14.  There are several great examples of OU responding to an Irish surge, but in the interest of time, I will focus on what I thought was one of the more critical moments of the game:

9:09/2nd Quarter. 
Oklahoma 14 Notre Dame 7. 
OU had just turned the ball over on downs at the Irish 43.  With the momentum, good field position and their fans no longer speed dialing Dr. Kevorkian, the Irish pick up consecutive first downs and find themselves at the OU 24 with 3:44 to go in the half.  

A touchdown on this drive would be absolutely huge for Notre Dame.  Going to the locker room tied after having been down 14 points before NBC could even run a Ford F-150 commercial...would be as uplifting for the Irish as it would be devastating for the Sooners.  The damage could be far reaching...

I am watching the game over at Scott McKnight's house.  Scott and his wife Allison have four McChildren...all ten years of age or younger...and all of them are within 15 yards of an over served OAS.  An Irish touchdown here and there is a good chance that all four McChildren will arrive at school on Monday armed with several new vocabulary words. 

But before you can say 'hooked on phonics'...Julian Wilson picks off Tommy Rees to stop the Irish drive.  Ten plays and 88 yards later, Blake Bell finds Lacoltan Bester in the back of the la-end zone

Instead of going to half with a tie score and several parent teacher conferences in the McKnight's near future...the score is 21-7 Sooners.  It's only halftime and I need a nap and a twelve-step program...but at least the children aren't using the f-word as a noun, verb and adjective in the same sentence.

Highlight Index
-Nelson INT for TD (1:58) - Frank Shannon INT (2:49) -D Williams TD run (3:44)
Bell TD Pass to Belster (6:28) - D Willimas 2nd Effort (7:42) - Knight run (9:35)
- Sterling Shepard TD (11:15)

Just the opinion of one mildly interested guy

The Overweight Armchair Sooner

Buddy Putty



 



 
 

 

Thursday, September 26, 2013

OKLAHOMA & NOTRE DAME ALL-TIME NAME TEAM



When you have two schools playing each other that are as rich in history and tradition as Oklahoma and Notre Dame, it is tough to talk about the present without mentioning the past.  So in sticking with that theme, I thought it would be interesting to list an All-Time team for the two schools. The criteria for making this list was not about success or awards, it was about one thing...their names.  I also decided that if it was close, then nicknames would count in the evaluation process.   Hey, what else would you expect from a guy named Buddy Putty? 

I would love to hear from anyone who has the name of a player they feel is better for the list than the one I chose.  If it is a close call for me, then I listed a runner-up...but by no means do I feel my list is beyond reproach.  At the bottom of the post, there is a place to comment, or you can e-mail me with your player names.  I will put out an adjusted list, should there so be a need, on Saturday morning. 

The Oklahoma & Notre Dame
All-Name Team:

Coaches:
Oklahoma:
Dewey "Snorter" Luster (1941-45)

Notre Dame:
Knute Rockne (1918-1930)

OFFENSE
 
Quarterback: (1)
Oklahoma:
Julius Ceasar Watts (1978-80)
Runner up: Bobby Warmack
  •  To me this was the easiest choice of all.  Great name...Great person
 
Notre Dame:
Daryl "the Mad Bomber" Lamonica (1960-62)
Runner up: Angelo "the Springfield Rifle" Bertelli
  • This was a tough call.  Several names could go here that would be hard to argue. Nickname was the tiebreaker.

Runningbacks: (2-3)
Oklahoma:
Elvis Peacock (1974-77), Joe Don Looney (1962), Horace Ivory (1975-76)
Runner up: Mossis Madu, Jermaine 'Gumbo' Fazande
  • This was the hardest Oklahoma position because there were so many great names. Kenyon Rasheed and Leon Crosswhite didn't even make runner-up status 
Notre Dame:
William Shakespeare (1935), Nick Pietrosante (1956-58), Rocky Bleier (1965-67)
Runner up: Elmer Angsman
  • William Shakespeare: I hear when a 'play' called for him to run the ball, it was like 'poetry' in motion

Wide Receivers: (2-3)
Oklahoma:
Tinker Owens (1972-75), Buster Rhymes (1980-84), Pop Ivy (1937-39)
Runner Up: Billy Brooks
  • Tinker, Buster & Pop...awesome 
Notre Dame:
Rahib 'Rocket' Ismail (1988-90), Lake Dawson (1990-93)


Tight End: (1)
Oklahoma:
Forrest Valora (1977-80)
Runner up: Joe John Finley

Notre Dame:

Mark Bavaro (1983-85)
Runner up: Dave Casper

Offensive Lineman: (5-6)

Oklahoma:
Silas Satepauhoodle (1983-84), Bubba Burcham (1997-00), Karl Baldeschwiler (1974-77), Roy “Soupy” Smoot (1918-21), Plato Andros (1941, 1946)

Runner up: Stocker McDougle, Red Conkright
  •  A Satepauhoodle, Baldeschweiler and a Smoot...sounds like three breeds of dogs at the Westminster Dog Show

Notre Dame:
Bronco Nagurski Jr., Bob Kuechenberg, Luke Petitgout, Dick Szymanski

Runner up: Phil Pozderac / Lou Rymkus 
  • Just as hard to spell as it is to get around or past

Place Kicker: (1)
Oklahoma:
Uwe von Schamann (1976-78)
  • Got a real 'kick' out of leading the band 
Notre Dame:
Paul Hornung (1953-56)
  • And oh by the way, he was a decent QB, RB & DB as well for the Irish.


DEFENSE

Defensive lineman: (4-5)
Oklahoma:
Jimbo Elrod (1973-75), Dusty Dvoracek (2001-05), Gilford 'Cactus Face' Duggan (1937-39), Granville Liggins (1965-67), Aubrey Beavers (1990-94)
Runner up: Jim Weatherall, Lucious Selmon

  • I'm thinking anybody nicknamed Cactus Face might not be the best looking guy in the world  
Notre Dame:
Nick Buoniconti (1958-61), Paul Grasmanis (1992-95), Chris Zorich (1987-90), Rudy Ruettiger (1986), Zygmont Czarobski (1942-44)
Runner Up: Renaldo Wynn / Bob Dove

  • Vanna White's head would explode from trying to figure out which letter went where if Zygmont Czarobski was on the board. 

Linebackers: (3-4)
Oklahoma:
Rocky Calmus (1998-01), Rufus Alexander (2002-06), Brian 'The Boz' Bozworth (1983-86)

  • A Rocky, a Rufus and a Renegade  

Notre Dame:
Mike Stonebreaker (1986-90), Rocky Boiman (1999-2002), Manti Te'o (2009-12), Myron Pottios (1957-60)
Runner Up: Demetrius DuBose

  •  Is there is a better name for a LB than Stonebreaker?

Defensive Backs: (4)
Oklahoma:
Chijioke Onyenegecha (2004-05), Steve O’Shaunghnessy (1969-71), Basil Banks (1977-80), Dewey 'Snorter' Luster (1917-20)
  • Pat, I would like to buy a vowel...

Notre Dame:
Tom Zbikowski (2003-07), Chinedum Ndukwe (2003-06), Chick Maggioli (1942-44), Frank 'Shag' Shaughnessy (1901-04)
  •  This list of names would've been a nightmare scenario for the late Bob Barry, Sr.  I can't even imagine what would have come out of his mouth had he tried to say Chinedum Ndukwe in the heat of the moment.

Punter: (1)
Oklahoma:
Wahoo McDaniel (1957-59)

Notre Dame:
Ben Turk (Current)
  • Our punter can out wrestle your punter

Just the opinion of one mildly interested guy

The Overweight Armchair Sooner

Buddy Putty

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

AN OAS SPECIAL EDITION: BEFORE THE BLOG

 
 
(CLICK ON VIDEO BOX TO SEE
HIGHLIGHTS OF 1999 OU - ND GAME)
 
The University of
Notre Dame
Fighting Irish
NOTRE DAME 34
OKLAHOMA 30
Notre Dame Stadium
South Bend, IN
October 2, 1999
 
AS OAS SPECIAL EDITION
BEFORE THE BLOG
A LOOK BACK AT OKLAHOMA vs NOTRE DAME 1999
 
Our Bob is Better Than Your Bob...
 
The first thing that jumps out at me when I think back to this game was the coaching situation for each program at that time.  These two schools would be a great case study for how monumentally important hiring the right head coach can be for your program.
 
Exhibit A:  Oklahoma Head Coach: Bob Stoops  
Stoops was in his 1st season as OU's head coach.  It had only been three games, but the entire Sooner Nation was excited and reenergized by what they had seen so far.  Bob Stoops' first staff would have three future Division I head coaches (Leach, Mike Stoops and Mangino).  Four other assistants Stoops hired over the next 10 years would eventually be head coaches as well (Long, Wilson, Sumlin and Pelini). 
 
The Oklahoma program since that game in 1999:
  • Same Head Coach
          Two x coach of the year           
          Three x Big 12 Coach of the year           
          Two x Walter Camp Coach of the year (2000, 2003)           
          Bobby Dodd Coach of the year award (2003)
  • 152 -37 record (.804 winning %)
  • 1 National Championship
  • 8 Big 12 Conference Titles
  • 4 title game appearances (most of any program)
  • 2 Heisman Trophy winners
  • 14 straight bowl games 
  • 8 BCS Bowl Games
  • 39 game home winning streak
  • 0 losing seasons
  • 1 Car Salesman QB who didn't ever go to work 
  • 1 QB w Porn Mustache
 
Exhibit B: Notre Dame Head Coach: Bob Davie  
The 1999 season was Davie's third year as head coach of the Irish.  Hired when Lou Holtz retired following the '96 season, Davie was about as popular with Irish fans as a 10 PM curfew at a frat house. Davie had a strange habit of referring to the traditions @ Texas A&M rather than those of the Irish, which is like tying chum to yourself and then going for a swim off the Great Barrier Reef.  It will probably get you noticed, but not in a good way. He would coach two more seasons (5 total) before being fired with a 35-25 record. 
 
The Irish program since that game in 1999:
  • 5 Different Head Coaches
             Bob Davie (35-25)          
         George O'Leary (never coached a game)          
         Tyrone Willingham (21-15)         
         Somebody named Kent Baer (0-1)          
        Charlie Weiss (35-27)         
        Brian Kelly (28-10)
  • 102-65 record (.610 winning percentage)
  • No National Titles
  • 4 BCS Bowl Games
  • 1 title game 
  • 5 losing seasons /
  • 2 .500 seasons
  • no Heisman winners 
  • 1 Inaccurate Resume
  • 1 Dead Fake Internet Girl Friend
 
 The Wishbone - No Longer an 'Option'
 
On the first offensive play of the Bob Stoops era, the Sooners came out and lined up in the wishbone formation.  It was Stoops way of tipping his cap to a style of offense that was as much a part of Oklahoma football as the words Boomer Sooner and the colors of Crimson and Cream.  
 
Then, as if saying goodbye, the OU offense shifted out of the 'bone and into the spread formation.  Just to make their point, the Sooners then proceeded to throw the football 6 straight times to begin the ballgame.  The times in the Sooner Nation....they were a changin'
 
Throwing the football at Oklahoma was like a brown shoe at a formal...it just didn't really seem appropriate.  In watching the highlights, the NBC television crew of Dick Enberg and Pat Haden helped point out just how much things had changed when they showed these two passing statistics during the game:
 
  • Here is a list of the how many passes OU completed during each of their 6 National Championship seasons prior to 1999:
1950: 69   1974: 33
1955: 46   1975: 22
1956: 50   1985: 54
 
In the Sooners first game under Bob Stoops and offensive coordinator Mike Leach, Josh Heupel completed more passes than Steve Davis did in each of the '74 and '75 seasons...and more than the 27 that Jamelle Holieway did the entire 1985 season (Aikman completed 27 as well in '85). 
 
  • Most touchdown passes in a season prior to 1999:
Cale Gundy ('93) 14        Bobby Warmack ('68) 11
Claude Arnold ('50) 13    Jack Mildren ('71) 10
 
Josh Heupel threw his 15th touchdown pass of the season before halftime of his 4th game. Heupel would throw for 33 touchdowns during the 1999 season.
 
Random Stuff... 
 
The Sooners would go on to finish 7-5 that year and play Ole Miss in the Independence Bowl.  The Irish would finish 5-7 and Bob Davie would spend the bowl season collecting 4-sale signs in his front yard.
 
In 1999, Mike Brown became the first African-American to be the Notre Dame mascot, Leprechaun.
"When I first became leprechaun, there was so much media attention drawn to it because of my race," he said.
"I tried to focus on being the 22nd leprechaun, not the first black leprechaun."

 
OU's leading rusher that day in South Bend you didn't ask? Somebody named Michael Thornton, who rushed for 56 yards on 8 carries.  Thornton was actually a captain for the Sooners that year...I would have guessed he was the captain of Captain and Tennille before I would have a team captain. Just don't remember Mr. Thornton.

Just the opinion of one mildly interested guy

The Overweight Armchair Sooner

Buddy Putty
 


Tuesday, September 24, 2013

A VISIT FROM BUD WILKINSON

Bud Wilkinson (Bud): “Hello, Bob”
Bob Stoops (Stoops): “Oh My God!”
Bud: (laughing) “No, No…despite what the good people of Oklahoma might have you believe…I’m not God – just Bud Wilkinson”
Stoops: “Well, I’ll be God dam…uh…I mean…wow…I can’t believe it’s you! What, uh… what are you doing here? How are you here? I didn’t know this kind of thing was possible?”
Bud: “What? Of course it is. Come on Bob, haven’t you seen the movie Ghost? Swayze isn’t the only one who gets out for a visit every now and then. We’re allowed a couple visits a year. I hear that we used to be able to come and go as we pleased until about 1977 when Elvis died. Evidently he was coming back so often people were claiming he was still alive. That boy is nothing but a ‘devil in disguise,’ if you ask me.”
Stoops: “That’s funny coach. So, you’re a uh, a ghost? Can anyone else see you?”
Bud:  “Bob, I’ve been dead almost 20 years…of course I’m a ghost….and don’t try and pretend you haven’t seen one before. You have four of them playing tight-end for you.  But to answer your question, no...just like your tight ends, no one can see me but you.”
Stoops: “Another good one. I had no idea you were such a comedian coach. Look coach, uh, I mean, Halloween is still over a month away. Is there another reason you are here today…or uh, did you just want to try out your new stand-up routine on the living.”
Bud: “My, my…aren’t you the touchy one. I guess after watching the way you deal with the media I shouldn’t be surprised. But yes, there is another reason I am here today. I wanted to talk to you about the game this Saturday against Notre Dame. Bob…I need to you win.”
Stoops: “Well, coach…Uh, we are certainly going to go up there and uh, give it our best shot.”
Bud: (sighing) First of all, you really need to work on removing the word uh, from you vocabulary. Secondly, I need more than ‘we’ll give it our best shot’… that’s not good enough. I need you to win damn it. I was going to have this talk with you before the game last year, but I didn’t think it was necessary. I never dreamed that you would let the Irish beat you at home like that last season. Bob, I want you to promise me you will beat Notre Dame!”
Stoops: "Coach, uh, damn...I mean, come on coach you know as well as I do, I can’t promise you that. Uh, I mean, damn it...now you have me all flustered. It’s bad enough that someone who’s been dead since Gary Gibbs was still losing Copper Bowls is standing in my office, but now you want me to guarantee that we will beat Norte Dame this Saturday?”
Bud:  "Bob, I need this win…and so do you for that matter. In fact the entire Sooner Nation needs this win.
Stoops: Look coach, I know the history that we here at Oklahoma when it comes to Notre Dame, so I want to win as bad as you do. I realize that this might have been personal for you while you were alive, but why is this bothering you so bad now?"
Bud: "Oh, Bob…it is so much worse now than it ever was back then. I’m telling you, those Catholics up there, they never let up on me."
Stoops: "Oh, come on coach...its Heaven, how bad could it really be?"
Bud: "Bob, I'm telling you...Heaven can be a real hell.  Especially after what happened when we lost last year."
Stoops:  "I'm scared to ask, but what happened coach?"
Bud: "Frank Leahy is in my Pilates class.  He is always riding me about my 1-5 record and how Notre Dame ended our streak.  So last year I made a bet with him on the game.  If Oklahoma won, he couldn't say another word to me about my record or the streak for all of eternity."
Stoops:  "I'm sorry coach.  I really thought we would win that game last year."
Bud:: "You should be sorry.  Do you know what it's like to have to wear a Leprechaun suit around every day for a month?"
Stoops: (laughing) "No, I'm sorry...I can't say that I do."
Bud: "Well, it sucks Bob."
(Stoops): "Coach, I'm not the one who made the bet.  You are, so don't be mad at me. This is not my fault."
Bud:  "Of course it's not your fault.  Your never wrong are you Bob?  Lord forbid anyone ever question Bob Stoops.  Have you gone for two lately Bob, or is your two point chart still down at McKinley Elementary School?"
Stoops: "Alright coach, I can see this is really personal for you.  This is just my opinion, but you really should try and just let it go." 
Bud: "Let it go?  Did you just say let it go? (Laughing now) I would like to see how well you would deal with it when some blue turf loving, spud eatin' Boise State bozo is calling you 'hook & ladder' to your face for the rest of eternity!"
Stoops:  "No, I guess I wouldn't like that very much." 
Bud:  "Besides, the Notre Dame people are already starting in on you as well." 
Stoops:  "What do you mean, what have I done?"
Bud: "It's more like what you haven't done.  You're already 0-2 against them and they think you have no chance to win on Saturday.  But that's not all they joke about it"
(Stoops): "Really?  What else?"
Bud: "Nick Pietrosante is in my bridge group.  He was the fullback for the Irish in 1957 and later an All-Pro with the Lions.  He asked me not to long ago if your middle initial was a C.  When I told him it wasn't, his response was, "good, cause if it was, he would never be able to get anything monogramed."
Stoops:  "I don't understand?"
Bud: "Neither did I, so I ask him why.  He said, "Because anything you had with BCS on it, you would probably lose."
Stoops:  "Sounds like Heaven is a regular comedy club."
Bud: "I guess you could say, a little slice of  heaven is."
Stoops:  "Look coach, I want to help you out, I really do.  But you know as well as I do that I can't guarantee victory on Saturday."
Bud:  "I know, I know.  I just get so frustrated.  Everywhere I go these days is a reminder of my shortcoming against the Irish.  I was over at JFK's house the other day.  He and Marilyn and Jackie were all out by the pool and..."
(Stoops): "Wait, wait...did you say Marilyn AND Jackie?  They were both there?"
Bud: "Yes, they all live there."
Stoops:  "You're kidding me, right?"
Bud: "Bob...did you forget where I live?  It's called Heaven for a reason.  But keep that under your hat if you don't mind, cause 'heaven only knows.'"
Stoops:  "What?  Heaven only knows what?  Oh...I get it."
Bud: "Anyway...I was over at JFK's and even he was giving me a hard time.  This was after he saw us play WVA...so he wanted to put a little wager on the OU-ND game." 
Stoops:  "You know we changed quarterbacks after that game, right?"
Bud: "That's what I hear.  I didn't get to see the Tulsa game, but I heard that Blaine Belton played really well."
(Stoops): "You mean Blake Bell?"
Bud: "His name isn't Blaine...oh, hell, never mind.  I should've known better than to ask Bob Berry about the kid.  When will I learn!"  (Laughing)
Stoops:  (also laughing) "Coach, all I can do is promise you that we will be focused and that we will play as hard as we can.  I like the way this team is progressing.  I feel like we match up better this year against the Irish than we did last, so I am optimistic we can win the game."
Bud:  "So the best you got for me is that you'll try hard and that you're optimistic?  I was wanting more than that.  After Saturday, the Irish aren't on the schedule for years, so if we don't beat them this year, no telling how long it will be before we get another chance." 
Stoops:  "I know coach, but the only thing I can promise is that we'll give it our best shot.  Any advice?"
Bud: "Yes.  Have the third string and redshirts eat the hotel meals first and make sure they don't get sick before you let your starters eat.  They've been known to try and poison the other team before."
Stoops:  "Seems extreme, but I will keep that in mind coach, anything else?"
(Bud): "Well, I was talking to Pat Summerall the other day"...
(Stoops): "Oh, yes...sorry to hear about Pat.  He played at Arkansas when you were coaching didn't he?"
Bud: "Yes, he played at Arkansas.  He played defensive end, kicker and tight end.  Tight end is a position that lines up next to the tackle and..." 
Stoops:  "Stop it.  I know what a tight end is...funny coach."
Bud:  "Anyway...Yes Summerall was a Razorback.  That's why he lives over in Hog Heaven.  It's just outside the city, not far from here.  Pat thought you should be on the lookout for trick plays and I agree.  That Brian Kelly is going to pull something...I can just feel it."
Stoops:  "I'll keep that in mind. Thanks coach."
Bud: "Might not be a bad idea if you had a little trick or two up your sleeve either.  Which reminds me, whatever happended to the riverboat gambling Big Game Bob that you used to be?"
Stoops:  "When you have talent, you don't need to take risks to win, you should know that."
Bud: "Well, times have changed Bob.  Takes more than talent to win these days...just ask Mack Brown."  Well, I guess that's all I got, I better be getting back.  Big Monday night football party over at Lee Roy Selmon's tonight."
Stoops:  "OK, coach.  Thanks for coming down.  Hey by the way, what is your wager with JFK?"
Bud: "If Oklahoma wins, I get a date with Marilyn and he has to let up on me about Notre Dame."
Stoops: "And if we don't?"
Bud: "I have to go to his house and stand next to the big screen for every Notre Dame game"
Stoops: "Why is that so bad?"
Bud: "Because I have to stand and dress like 'Touchdown Jesus' when I do."
Stoops: "Oh, my.  Lord help you if that happens."
Bud: "Already tried that with the Leprechaun thing.  He told me I was on my own.  Just win Bob.  Just win."

Just the opinion of one mildly interested guy

The Overweight Armchair Sooner

Buddy Putty

MORE THAN JUST A GAME...PART 1


AND THEN IT WAS OVER
Men, the only people who never lose are the ones who never play the game
Bud Wilkinson

Notre Dame Irish vs. Oklahoma Sooners
Owen Field
Norman, Oklahoma
November 16th, 1957

The year was 1957...

Dwight D. Eisenhower was in the White House. The Dodgers were still in Brooklyn. The Everly Brothers were trying to 'Wake up Little Suzie' and Jerry Lee Lewis had a 'Whole Lot of Shakin' Going On.' 

Carey Grant and Deborah Kerr were having an 'Affair to Remember,' there was 'The Bridge on the River Kwai' and sadly, Old Yeller was about to die. 

Ford was introducing the Edsel, Wham-O was introducing the Frisbee and Paul McCartney and John Lennon were introducing themselves to each other.

Earlier that week in 1957, the title on the cover of Sports Illustrated read: ‘Why Oklahoma is Unbeatable.’

That day in 1957, the 50th birthday of Oklahoma's statehood, was cloudy and windy. The stands at Owen Field were packed with 62,000 fans. Lindsey Nelson and Red Grange were in the broadcast booth to call the game for a nationally televised audience.  When the Sooners took the field to play the 18 point underdog Irish that day in 1957, they hadn’t lost a game in five years….but that was about to change.

On 4th and goal from the three yard line, Irish QB Bob Williams faked the dive play to FB Nick Pietrosante and then pitched the ball to halfback Dick Lynch. Lynch raced around the right end and strolled untouched into the end-zone. Three minutes and fifty seconds later, it was over.

It...Was college football’s longest unbeaten streak...and after 1,512 days and 47 games, it was over

 
 
THE STREAK:
47 Straight
"We want to build a university the football team can be proud of" - George Cross, University of Oklahoma President, addressing Congress in 1951

From 1953-1957, the Oklahoma Sooners won 47 straight football games, an unbeaten streak that many feel is the greatest team achievement in sports history. No school before or since has even come close to matching the accomplishment, the basis for why many consider the Sooners streak the most unbreakable record in sports.

When you look at the numbers during the winning streak, it shows that not only were the Sooners winning, they were dominating. The Sooners were:

-6-0 against ranked teams
-Outscored their opponents by an average of 34.5 to 5.9
-Shut-out their opponent an amazing 21 times
-Gave up less than 10 points 34 times
-Scored over 50 points 31 time, over 40 points 20 times
-Won by 20 or more points 31 time, by 40 or more 16 times
-Won 27 games on the road, won in 12 different states
-In 1956 they won 5 straight games outside of Oklahoma
-All 47 victories were against teams that were Division I


Longest NCAA Football Winning
Streaks in the Modern Era:
 School
 Win Streak
 Seasons
 Coach(es)
 1. Oklahoma
 47
 1953-1957
 Bud Wilkinson
 2. Toledo
 35
 1969-1971
 Frank Lauterbur, John A. Murphy
 3. Miami (Fla.)
 34
 2000-2003
 Butch Davis, Larry Coker
 4. Oklahoma
 31
 1948-1950
 Bud Wilkinson
 5. Texas
 30
 1968-1970
 Darrell Royal
 6. Miami (Fla.)
 29
 1990-1993
 Dennis Erickson
 7. Oklahoma
 28
 1973-1975
 Barry Switzer
     Alabama
 28
 1978-1980
 Paul "Bear" Bryant
     Michigan State
 28
 1950-1953
 Clarence Munn

To say that the Bud Wilkinson led Sooners were the dominant team of the late 1940s thru the decade of the 1950s is an understatement.  In addition to the 47 game winning streak, Wilkinson and the Sooners:

-Won National Titles in 1950, 1955 & 1956
-Won 31 consecutive games from 1948-1950
-Won 74 straight conference games (1947-1959)
-Won 13 straight conference titles (1947-1959)

But if the Bud Wilkinson and the Sooners had a kryptonite, it was the Notre Dame Irish.
 
VIDEO CLIPS FROM THE 1957 OU - NOTRE DAME GAME

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQeFKjrD7M8



Next....Part 2

Notre Dame the Evil Empire & The Sooner Nation
 Just the opinion of one mildly interested guy

The Overweight Armchair Sooner

Buddy Putty

This is a ticket stub from the 1957
OU-Notre Dame game that is part of
my OU Sooner memorabilia collection                

 
 

 

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