NORMAN, Okla. -- Oranges were scattered all over Owen Field, and the
bright yellow goal post at the south end of the stadium lay in pieces in a
corner of the end zone.
Translation?
Oklahoma is back all right, thanks to a dominating 31-14 victory over No. 1
Nebraska on Saturday, a win that is expected to send the third-ranked Sooners
to the top spot when the AP poll is released Sunday.
The Sooners were last No. 1 at the end of the 1987 season -- after beating
Nebraska.
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| Eric Crouch can't get out of the Sooners' sights after the first quarter.(AP) | |
"I've said all along that I had a good feeling about who we are and what
we've done," second-year coach Bob Stoops said. "I think we've more than
proven who we are."
Josh Heupel passed for 300 yards and a touchdown, Derrick Strait returned an
interception 32 yards for a score and the Cornhuskers went scoreless over the
final 51:49.
"I don't know if you'll see a stronger defensive performance against
them," Stoops said. "I haven't seen one in a long time."
The Sooners (7-0, 4-0 Big 12) are in control of the national championship
race, while the Huskers (7-1, 4-1) have a chance to get back in the chase if
they make it to the Big 12 title game for a probable rematch with Oklahoma.
The Bowl Championship Series standings are released Monday, and the Sooners
should move from second to first place. The BCS standings decide which teams
play in a national title game -- this season it's the Orange Bowl on Jan. 3.
In ending the Huskers' 13-game winning streak -- longest among major colleges
-- the Sooners became just the third team to beat the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in
consecutive games. Two weeks ago, Oklahoma beat then-No. 2 Kansas State 41-31.
The others schools to beat the top two teams in consecutive games were Notre
Dame in 1988 and Southern California in 1964.
"We played well at times," said Huskers coach Frank Solich, whose team
took a 14-0 lead just 6:49 into the game. "We put bits and pieces together but
we really didn't get it done."
In the renewal of this great rivalry after a two-year absence, the Sooners
ended an embarrassing seven-game losing streak against the Huskers, who
outscored Oklahoma 265-61 during that span which included a 73-21 loss in '96
at Norman. During the 1970s and 1980s, the Huskers under Tom Osborne and
Sooners under Barry Switzer won or shared 16 consecutive Big Eight crowns.
This time it was the Sooners who dominated a Nebraska team that was second
nationally in scoring at 46.3 points per game and first in rushing at 379.7
yards. After the Huskers gained 169 yards on their first two possessions, the
Sooners held them to 159 the rest of the way while scoring the final 31 points.
Oklahoma, which entered game as the nation's top scoring team at 46.7 points
per game, finished with 418 total yards.
"The biggest thing was our offense. If you stop us from executing, you'll
get the job done," said Huskers quarterback and Heisman contender Eric Crouch,
who threw for 133 yards and a TD and ran for 103 yards and a score. "They
played a great game and deserve to win. But like the Texas we lost last year,
it's almost a feeling of we beat ourselves"
Ahead 24-14 starting the third quarter, the Sooners put the game away with
authority. Strait intercepted a pass by Crouch and ran 32 yards untouched into
the end zone to break the Huskers' spirit. When Strait hit the end zone, the
first wave of oranges came flying out of the stands, as the crowd of 75,989
began celebrating early.
Heupel boosted his Heisman chances by completing 20 of 34 passes for his 300
yards and running eight times for 46 yards. The only downside? His streak of
consecutive passes without an interception ended at 145 after he was picked off
by Troy Watchorn in the third quarter.
"Luckily enough, our defense did a great job," Heupel said. "After the
first quarter, we picked things up and luckily we were able to do enough
offensively to get things done." With Oklahoma up by 17 points, Crouch tried to lead the Huskers back, but
the Sooners wouldn't let up.
In the fourth quarter, wide receiver Matt Davison fumbled and the Sooners'
Brandon Everage recovered. The fumble was forced by Strait. Later on, the
Huskers were called for running into the punter and Oklahoma retained
possession. And when time expired, the Sooners had shut out Nebraska over the
final 51 minutes, 49 seconds for their first win against a No. 1 team at home
in six tries.
As the clock ticked down, the fans began chanting "We're No. 1! We're No.
1!" and then they rushed the field to celebrate the Sooners' biggest win in
more than a decade.
Nebraska's loss marked the first time a No. 1 team was beaten during the
regular season since Michigan State beat Ohio State 28-24 on Nov. 7, 1998.
Trailing 14-0 after the first quarter, Oklahoma regained its composure and
Heupel brought the Sooners back after Crouch had thrown a 39-yard TD pass and
ran 37 yards for another score on the Huskers' first two possessions.
First, the left-hander hit Curtis Fagan for 19 yards to the 1, and fullback
Quentin Griffin scored on the next play. Heupel then threw a 34-yard touchdown
pass to Fagan on a third-and-14 play to tie it at 14.
The Sooners shot to the lead 17-14 thanks to a blocked punt by Josh Norman,
who broke through the middle of the line and smothered Dan Hadenfeldt's attempt
from the 20. Woolfolk picked up the ball at the 7 and was tackled at the
Huskers' 3. Nebraska kept Oklahoma out of the end zone, but Tim Duncan kicked a
19-yard field goal with 6:06 left in the half.
Oklahoma extended its lead to 10 points a few minutes later on Norman's
8-yard TD run, a play set up on Heupel's 37-yard pass to Antwone Savage, who
made the catch despite blanket coverage by cornerback DeJuan Gorce.
Crouch threw his 39-yard TD pass to Davison 2:58 into the game. On his
scoring run, he slipped a tackle just past the line of scrimmage, outran three
defenders and finally dragged safety Roy Williams just across the goal line.
But that was all the Huskers could muster in losing by 17 points -- their
largest margin of defeat since a 19-0 loss to Arizona State in 1996.
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