The Texas Longhorns extended their winning streak at Lloyd Noble Center to seven games with Saturday’s 79-69 victory over the Oklahoma Sooners in the Red River Rivalry after overcoming a 14-point deficit in the first half by shooting 75 percent after halftime.
Oklahoma
Spending bill fails, Oklahoma delegates divided on next steps
Last Updated on September 19, 2024, 9:13 PM | Published: September 19, 2024
WASHINGTON – Representatives of Oklahoma’s five-member delegation are split over how a new spending bill should be shaped following the defeat of the plan pushed by House Speaker Mike Johnson.
As the budget deadline looms, the need for a spending bill to extend government funding increases. A spending bill would keep the government open. If a spending bill does not pass by September 30, the government will shut down until one is passed.
Earlier this week, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) told reporters it would be politically beyond stupid to shut down the government before an election, saying Republicans would get the blame.
Johnson’s spending bill failed with three Democrats voting for the continuing resolution and opposition from some Republicans, with 14 voting against the bill and two voting present.
All five members of the Oklahoma House delegation voted in favor of the bill. House Appropriations Committee Chairman Rep. Tom Cole spoke on the floor in support of the bill before the roll call vote.
“It’s clear we are unable to complete the full appropriations process by September 30,” Cole said. “That means that a continuing resolution is needed. The bill before us (H.R. 9494) extends government funding through March 28, 2025, ensuring that the government remains open and providing critical services for our constituents.”
With the six-month spending bill failing on Wednesday, it is unclear how Johnson will shape the next iteration of the bill.
On Wednesday night, Cole told reporters Johnson had not shared his plan to reshape the spending bill with him. Cole (R, Moore) reiterated that Johnson had hoped his continuing resolution proposal (H.R. 9494) would pass.
But Rep. Josh Brecheen supports the position of the House Freedom Caucus, of which he is a member. In August, the House Freedom Caucus released a statement urging House Republican leadership to pass a six-month spending bill that includes the SAVE Act, a proposal that mirrors other laws but gives Republicans a campaign talking point.
The spending bill that failed Wednesday reflects the House Freedom Caucuses’ wishes.
Rep. Frank Lucas (R-Cheyenne) said he needs to see what the spending bill looks like after the weekend before settling on a position.
“You have to fund the troops, you have to fund security, you have to fund all the things at USDA,” Lucas said. “I would have preferred to have passed the package this week and had leverage to get a better deal.”
“But my friends decided not to do that, so let’s see what they offer us.”
Johnson’s spending bill ultimately failed due to controversy about the length of the funding and the addition of the SAVE Act.
Representatives on both sides of the aisle have called for a three-month spending bill. The House is expected to propose a bipartisan spending bill early next week, Roll Call reported.
Cole has helped lead the effort to reduce the length of the continuing resolution to three months. On September 10, Cole told reporters he believes lawmakers need to focus on finishing their funding work and getting it done quickly so the new Congress and President can begin with a clean slate.
“I personally think it’s not a good thing to give a new president—and we’re going to have a new president—an immediate fiscal crisis,” Cole said.
The top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, Rep. Rose DeLauro (D-Connecticut.), voiced her opposition to a six-month spending bill and said it is time for both parties to work together to get a spending bill passed and finish their work on a full-year spending bill before the end of the 118th Congress on January 3, 2025.
House Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-New York) called the addition of the SAVE Act a “nonstarter” for Democrats and said that the party would oppose any funding bill that includes policy riders pushed by Trump.
The SAVE Act, or Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, requires individuals to provide proof of US citizenship when registering to vote in federal elections. The bill also requires states to remove noncitizens from voting rolls.
It is already illegal under federal law for noncitizens to vote in elections.
Additionally, the act would enable individuals to sue state election officials if they register someone to vote without proper presentation of U.S. citizenship. It would also establish criminal penalties for the same offense.
On August 18, in a post on Truth Social, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump said Republicans should not accept a spending bill without the SAVE Act attached, indicating he would rather the government shutdown.
“If Republicans don’t get the SAVE Act and every ounce of it, they should not agree to a Continuing Resolution in any way, shape, or form. Democrats are registering illegal voters by the TENS OF THOUSANDS, as we speak—they will be voting in the 2024 President Election, and they shouldn’t be allowed to,” Trump wrote.
There is no evidence backing Trump’s claims on Truth Social. Studies have shown that noncitizen voting in federal and state elections is rare. In fact, in May, Johnson said he knows “intuitively” that it is happening without being able to provide evidence.
Republished in collaboration with Gaylord News, a reporting project of the University of Oklahoma Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication. For more stories by Gaylord News go to GaylordNews.net.

Kevin Eagleson is reporting from Gaylord News’ Washington bureau fall of 2024 as part of an OU Daily scholarship.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma high school football coaching news: Bridge Creek hires John Boogaard
John Boogaard was named the new head football coach at Bridge Creek, the school announced Jan. 28.
Boogaard arrives from Norman North, where he coached the offensive line, and replaces Larry Spangler, who went 10-30 at Bridge Creek after taking over in 2022.
A Colorado native, Boogaard played college football at Western Colorado and Rocky Mountain College in Billings, Montana.
He was named an assistant at Southwestern Oklahoma State in 2019 before making several stops and was selected to the Oklahoma Football Coaches Association’s “35 under 35” in 2023 when he was at Edmond North.
Coming off a one-season stint at Norman North, Boogaard will take over a struggling Bridge Creek program.
The Class 4A Bobcats went 1-9 this past season and have won just 22 games since 2013.
Nick Sardis covers high school sports for The Oklahoman. Have a story idea for Nick? He can be reached at nsardis@oklahoman.com or on Twitter at@nicksardis. Sign up forThe Varsity Club newsletter to access more high school coverage. Support Nick’s work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing adigital subscription today at subscribe.oklahoman.com.
Oklahoma
Texas overcomes early deficit for 79-69 win at Oklahoma
Junior wing Dailyn Swain scored 11 of his team-high 20 points over the final 10 minutes as the Longhorns closed the game on a 9-2 run and four other Texas players reached double figures, led by junior forward Cam Heide, who hit three big threes and finished 5-of-6 shooting.
Head coach Sean Miller also received a boost off the bench from junior guard Simeon Wilcher, whose 10 points on 4-of-7 shooting marked his first double-digit scoring performance since scoring 10 points in the blowout loss to Tennessee. The St. John’s transfer had only scored nine combined points in the six games since that defeat, including back-to-back scoreless outings.
With eight points from senior guard Chendall Weaver, Texas had a rare advantage in bench points in addition to a 42-28 edge in points in the paint.
The foul virus didn’t plague Texas to start the game, but other defensive issues did as Miller was forced to call a timeout before the stoppage for the under-16 timeout because the Longhorns had already fallen behind 13-4 thanks to 1-of-5 shooting and two turnovers and allowing the Sooners to get off to a hot start by hitting 5-of-7 shots, including three triples, and going on an 8-0 run over 1:34.
Texas wasn’t able to bounce back immediately, falling behind 23-9 because of a 1-of-9 shooting stretch, but Oklahoma did finally start to cool off before the under-eight timeout, missing four straight shots as the Horns found some footing offensively with the help of Weaver off the bench. Weaver hit two push shots in the lane and then made his eighth three of the season. Combined with a layup by sophomore center Matas Vokietaitis off a short roll, Texas was suddenly in the midst of a 4-of-5 shooting stretch to cut the deficit to seven points.
Despite six straight made shots by the Horns heading into the final media timeout of the half, the momentum had stalled because of two straight turnovers and an open three given up to Nijel Pack when Swain went for a steal he didn’t come up with after Texas failed to come up with a loose ball on a missed shot.
Out of the timeout, however, the Longhorns quickly cut the deficit to a single point when Wilcher scored in the lane on a drive and Heide got a slam from the dunker’s spot and then hit a three in transition. An airballed three by graduate guard Tramon Mark with a little more than a minute remaining in the half ended the streak of nine straight made baskets by Texas.
A late three by Oklahoma gave the Sooners a 33-30 lead at halftime, the fifth made three of the half for the home team as the Horns went 2-of-10 shooting from beyond the arc over the opening 20 minutes.
Both teams traded threes to open the second half, including another three by Heide on a good skip pass out of a double team by Vokietaitis, who hit a layup on the next Texas possession by sealing the fronting defender. In a rare instance of Heide using his shot credibility to produce a drive, the Purdue transfer hung in the air for a nice finish at the rim.
The game settled into a close affair by the under-16 timeout, although the Longhorns hadn’t been able to push through for their first lead of the game despite 4-of-5 shooting to open the half. It finally happened when Swain converted a trip to the free-throw line, but the Sooners quickly responded with a corner three to regain the edge.
A critical stretch came close to midway through the first half when Weaver was called for a questionable flagrant foul when he jumped early trying to block a shot and landed on the Oklahoma player. The Sooners were’t able to capitalize at the line, but hit a jumper on the extra possession afforded by the call, then made two more to take a six-point lead when Miller called a timeout with 10:12 remaining hoping to keep the game from getting out of reach.
Another important call happened after the timeout when Swain banked in a shot and got a questionable block call in a three-point swing. Shortly thereafter, a bounce went in favor of Oklahoma when a loose ball was swatted away from the basket and into the hands of Xzayvier Brown, who drained the three to extend the lead back to six points at the under-six timeout.
The game remained back-and-forth out of the timeout when a skip pass from Swain found Heide for an open three and Wilcher drove for a bank shot from the left side, cutting the deficit to one point and forcing a timeout by Porter Moser, suddenly worried about his team’s momentum and propensity for making losing plays.
When play resumed, Heide had to go to the bench with his first foul for dumping an Oklahoma playing trying to box out, but Texas gained a rare lead when Swain capped a 7-0 run with a driving dunk, a surge ended when a steal turned into a put back by the Sooners. Wilcher put the Horns back into the lead by rattling home a corner three with 5:34 remaining on another assist by Swain, whose surge continued with a subsequent hesitation move and left-handed finish. When a good screen by graduate forward Lassina Traore freed senior guard Jordan Pope for an open three, the five-point lead was the largest of the game for the Horns, prompting another timeout by Moser.
In the type of play that Texas tends to make, Dalton Forsythe fouled Pope on a made three, although the Oregon State transfer couldn’t complete the four-point play at the line. On the other end, good on-ball defense by Wilcher forced back-to-back airballed threes by Pack. Working in the paint, Swain absorbed contact to hit a short jumper to extend the lead to seven points with 1:32 remaining.
Oklahoma responded with two made free throws and when the Sooners sent Wilcher to the line, Traore was called for a lane violation on the first three throw, a make by the 95-percent shooter. The Sooners missed two more threes in the midst of a three-minute scoring drought with Swain finally converting at the line to make it an eight-point game.
By that point, the outcome was sealed as the Longhorns picked up a critical Quad 1 victory and the team’s first road win in three weeks.
Texas returns to the Moody Center on Tuesday to face South Carolina in the most winnable game left on the regular-season schedule.
Oklahoma
Denver and Oklahoma City match up in battle of top offenses
Oklahoma City Thunder (38-11, first in the Western Conference) vs. Denver Nuggets (33-16, third in the Western Conference)
Denver; Sunday, 9:30 p.m. EST
BOTTOM LINE: The Denver Nuggets and the Oklahoma City Thunder face off in a matchup between the NBA’s top two offenses.
The Nuggets are 4-1 in division games. Denver is eighth in the Western Conference in team defense, allowing just 115.6 points while holding opponents to 46.8% shooting.
The Thunder are 7-3 against the rest of their division. Oklahoma City scores 120.3 points while outscoring opponents by 12.3 points per game.
The Nuggets make 49.6% of their shots from the field this season, which is 6.4 percentage points higher than the Thunder have allowed to their opponents (43.2%). The Thunder average 13.2 made 3-pointers per game this season, 0.2 more makes per game than the Nuggets allow.
TOP PERFORMERS: Nikola Jokic is averaging 29.7 points, 12.2 rebounds and 10.8 assists for the Nuggets. Jamal Murray is averaging 24.9 points and 6.3 assists over the past 10 games.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is averaging 32 points and 6.2 assists for the Thunder. Chet Holmgren is averaging 16.5 points over the last 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Nuggets: 7-3, averaging 110.0 points, 39.5 rebounds, 24.9 assists, 6.6 steals and 4.6 blocks per game while shooting 47.0% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 108.3 points per game.
Thunder: 6-4, averaging 116.2 points, 42.6 rebounds, 24.4 assists, 7.8 steals and 7.0 blocks per game while shooting 49.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 106.7 points.
INJURIES: Nuggets: Cameron Johnson: out (knee), Tamar Bates: out (foot), Aaron Gordon: out (hamstring), Christian Braun: out (ankle).
Thunder: Ajay Mitchell: day to day (hip), Nikola Topic: out (groin), Jalen Williams: out (thigh), Alex Caruso: day to day (adductor), Thomas Sorber: out for season (knee).
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
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