Oklahoma
Central Oklahoma Seizes Lead At NCAA Division 2 Wrestling Championships – FloWrestling
Top-ranked Central Oklahoma won 15 of its 18 matches Friday to seize the lead in the team race after Day 1 of the NCAA Division II Championships.
Six Bronchos advanced to Saturday’s semifinals and seven secured All-America honors as Central Oklahoma finished the day with 59.5 points. The Bronchos are in pursuit of their second straight D2 national title.
Lander is second with 54.5 points, followed by St. Cloud State (47), McKendree (42.5) and Nebraska-Kearney (40).
Click here for full brackets.
Lander secured six podium spots and advanced four wrestlers to the semifinals, including #1 seeds James Joplin (125) and David Hunsberger (165).
All seven returning 2023 champions — Glenville State’s Gavin Quiocho (133), Tiffin’s Zack Donathan (141), St. Cloud State’s Nick Novak (157), Upper Iowa’s Chase Luensman (165), West Liberty’s Ty McGeary (184), Central Oklahoma’s Dalton Abney (197) and Shawn Streck (285) — advanced to the semifinals.
Oklahoma
New QB Bowe Bentley Experiencing the ‘Dream’ of Playing at Oklahoma
NORMAN — Even big time college football players had the same dreams fans do when they were growing up.
For Bowe Bentley, prepping for his first Oklahoma Spring Game as a true freshman, the experience feels “surreal.” He described the shift: “… being in the stands watching all the games but being actually able to play on this field in front of a crowd is going to be pretty incredible.”
With spring practice wrapping up — the Sooners have four more sessions scheduled, with the Spring Game sandwiched between them — Bentley has already grabbed the attention of his coaches in a positive way.
Now, he’s focused on putting on a good show for Sooner fans when he gets his number called on Saturday.
“Just be efficient and move the ball, I think that’s the biggest thing,” Bentley said on Monday. “Just being able to operate an offense out here in front of the fans, just show my athletic ability. I think that’s the biggest thing.”
That’s the answer Brent Venables and Ben Arbuckle want to hear. What about the former high school hot shot who daydreamed about wearing the Crimson and Cream? Especially one who left high school early to earn valuable opportunities in spring as an early enrollee.
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“It’s been a dream. I mean, you kind of think about it during the fall. Obviously, graduating early, you’re gonna kind of roll into it. Kind of get prepared through January, February. But once it hits, it’s rolling,” he said.
Typically, when freshmen arrive for their first run of practices, the game feels like it’s going a thousand miles an hour. Everyone on the field was the best player on their high school teams.
Going from a high school playbook to a division-one playbook might be akin to going from reading a Harry Potter book to The Silmarillion.
Bentley, the Celina High School star, was no different in his adjustments to this new speed.
“I think just going from high school to college, understanding the playbook,” Bentley said. “It’s a lot more than what I’m used to, so it also helps me slow down the game. Understand why we run something. See the defense, it makes my checks easier, my reads easier. So I think that’s the biggest thing is just the speed.”
Of course, it doesn’t hurt the young quarterback’s development that he is going against a Venables-led defense every day.
“It kind of humbled me a little bit to be honest. I don’t think I’ve played a defense like that ever. So you’ve kind of got to settle in. I mean they’re the best defense in the SEC, so being able to go against them helps a lot.”
Bentley’s progress as a backup — maybe the backup — has been and will continue to be something to watch. John Mateer is the entrenched starter and Bentley has already learned so much from him. But competition keeps everyone sharp.
Oklahoma
Stecklein: Oklahoma Republicans want to honor Trump in kids physical test
Over the years, America has been blessed with visionaries in fitness who have reshaped how we exercise. Including one who hails from the great state of Oklahoma.
There is Arnold Schwarzenegger, who pushed bodybuilding into the mainstream. Jack LaLanne, known as the “Godfather of Fitness,” who invented exercise machines and opened one of the first gyms. Jane Fonda made aerobics accessible through her home exercise videos.
And then there’s Chuck Norris, born in Ryan, Oklahoma, who became a world-renown martial artist and rose to greater fame starting in the 1990s on the TV show “Walker, Texas Ranger.” The Oklahoma Legislature honored him after his death last month at 86.
But they passed over this epitome of strength and instead want to add President Donald Trump to the illustrious list of fitness paragons.
Oklahoma senators decided the 79-year-old should be our school-aged children’s fitness role model.
Because when asked if there wasn’t a better example of fitness, the bill’s author, Republican Sen. Dana Prieto, said he could think of no better archetype than the 75-inch tall president who, according to the White House, weighed in at 224 pounds at his physical last year. (According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calculator, that gives him a body mass index that puts him in the overweight category.)
“In Oklahoma we have MOHA. We wouldn’t have MOHA unless there was a MAHA. And we wouldn’t have the MAHA unless there was a MAGA,” Prieto said. “So I believe he’s a great example.”
I actually found myself pretty impressed that Prieto managed to spout off that mouthful of Trumpy-acronyms without once stuttering. I wondered how long he’d practiced that line as he prepared to defend his plan to name the Legislature’s proposed new physical fitness test for children as the President Donald J. Trump Physical Fitness Act.
If you’re trying to wade through those acronyms too, I’ll save you some time. MOHA is short for Make Oklahoma Healthy Again, the Oklahoma take on Robert F Kennedy Jr.’s Make America Healthy Again, or MAHA, movement. MAGA, of course, is Make America Great Again.
Prieto said his plan to name the fitness test that lawmakers want all public schools to administer to school children is “a big beautiful amendment, the likes of which you’ve never seen.”
No truer words have ever been spoken on the floor of the Oklahoma Senate.
But maybe not for the reason Prieto said.
In fact, the entire concept of naming this bill after Trump is so ridiculous that some state senators were openly grinning and even chuckling, struggling to take themselves seriously as they discussed the merits of naming this after Trump instead of a physically fit Oklahoman, like say, Norris, or Erica Whitelock, an Oklahoman who was a finalist in the Ms. Health and Fitness Competition.
Based on her television interview in 2020, it looked like her fitness acumen would shame even the fittest senator.
But Prieto said he woke up at 2 a.m. one morning and decided that naming this after Trump “would be a great amendment.”
Republican Sen. Casey Murdock said that Trump deserves to have the test named after him because he plays golf regularly at 79, and is “a very active 80-year-old man.” (For the record, Trump won’t be 80 until July.)
While the details of the Trump administration’s fitness plan are still being worked out, I suspect someone whose only exercise is playing golf probably wouldn’t be able to pass the screening. The guidelines are expected to include pull-ups or push-ups, V-ups (a modified version of a sit up), a 1-mile run, and some sort of stretching component to measure how far you can reach beyond your toes.
Prieto then rattled off some random trivia about the fact that Trump sleeps only four hours a night. (That, by the way, is not considered healthy either. The National Institute on Aging recommends seven to nine hours a night for older adults, but it might explain why some people have noticed that Trump seems to be nodding off during meetings.)
Trump is a prime example of health, Prieto said, because his administration’s Make America Health Again movement has resulted in the first changes to the food pyramid in over 20 years. The Trump administration made controversial changes that shift in importance the intake of daily protein, including meat, beans, dairy, soy and nuts. Those are now included alongside fruits and vegetables in the most critical section. Grains are now the smallest portion.
When Democrat Sen. Regina Goodwin pointed out that Trump eats Big Macs and fatty foods that are far from healthy, supporters metaphorically shrugged their shoulders.
“Would you believe every once in a while we have to get over our carrot and celery diets and have a Big Mac once in a while to have a good time?” Republican Sen. Randy Grellner asked to grins from fellow senators.
But our health isn’t really a laughing matter. If this ridiculous debate highlights anything, it’s that lawmakers clearly aren’t taking it very seriously either – or have lost touch with how to measure it.
As Republican Sen. Jonathan Wingard said during discussion on the health test component, nearly 70% of Oklahoma students can’t meet the military standards to enlist, which means we’ve created a generation of children unable to defend this country, serve as firefighters, in law enforcement or in other careers that require fitness. A recently retired veteran, he supports the fitness test and voted to name it after Trump.
According to a Trump administration website, half of Americans are either diabetic or pre-diabetic. About 75% have one chronic condition, and the bulk of health care spending is used to treat those chronic diseases, which is related to “diet and lifestyle.”
But the even scarier thing is that changing the name of a program to pay homage to anyone could make the state ineligible for grant money in the future. Maybe a future administration wouldn’t be so keen on a Trump-named test. Could they try to penalize us for it by withholding funding?
Republican Sen. Kristin Thompson tried to drive that point home with her colleagues who were obsessed with paying homage to Trump.
Of the $237 million, Oklahoma is slated to receive from the Rural Health Transformation Program, which was created through Congress’ One Big Beautiful Bill Act, to offset expected Medicaid losses, about $4 million will pay for this fitness test to be administered.
“Listen, I love my cheeseburgers, I love my French fries. I love my chocolate shakes, but when we’re talking about something that is kind of meant to be something silly, we could actually affect something that is very very important,” she warned.
When Trump is no longer in office, it might not be so funny if the state loses access to this health funding.
Lawmakers in the Republican-run Senate, of course, weren’t deterred and passed the bill anyway.
Because there’s obviously no better model of health to them than a 79-year-old Florida man who loves golf.
Janelle Stecklein is editor of Oklahoma Voice.
Oklahoma
Texas Softball Avoids the Sweep vs. Oklahoma in Walk-Off Fashion
The Texas Longhorns headed into Sunday looking for anything with the Red River Rivalry series already lost, as the No. 2 Oklahoma Sooners headed to Austin and took the first two games of the series.
The Longhorns would be shut out for the first time since 2024, dropping the first game of the series on Friday, 3-0, and dropping the series in a frustrating 4-3 loss on Saturday. Looking to avoid the sweep, headed to the diamond looking to beat both the rain and Oklahoma to salvage some momentum.
And Texas would get exactly what it needed on Sunday, getting one back on Oklahoma, taking game three in a back-and-forth 8-6 affair.
Texas Comes Up with the Clutch Hits when Needed
The Longhorns, while dropping back-to-back series this season, have put an end to a four-game losing streak.
“We lost the series, but anytime you beat an Oklahoma team, you’ve done something,” head coach Mike White said. “I think, look at the volume of the work in the three games over the weekend, I thought we played very well.”
For the second straight day, the Longhorns would strike first against the Sooners, with Texas this time flexing its power as junior Kayden Henry got the day started for the Longhorns with a three-run home run, giving Texas its biggest lead of the series.
However, the Sooners would not go away quietly as they looked to sweep their rival on their home field, with Oklahoma battling throughout the middle innings, making the Longhorns lead 3-0 to a minimal 3-2 in the top of the fifth inning.
The Longhorns hung onto a lead through the back half of the game until the seventh inning, in which Texas held a 5-3 lead. However, needing just three outs to steal the win, the lead would evaporate quickly with Oklahoma blasting a two-run home run to even things out at five, forcing extra innings.
In extras, the Sooners would flip the script of the ballgame, scoring a run and taking their first lead of the game. The Sooners are forcing the Longhorns to respond, trailing 6-5 and down to their last three outs.
And in a weekend when the Longhorns were unable to come up with the big hit, they found them on Sunday. As the rain threatened to pour down in Austin, the home runs poured at Red and Charline McCombs Field with Texas winning a slugfest that featured seven home runs, five of which came from batters in burnt orange.
“I thought that our resiliency today, after two tough losses,” White said. “It could’ve been easy just to say you know we were close, but we couldn’t have done it.”
In that eighth inning, Texas found two home runs to steal game three of the series. The first homer was brought by freshman Hannah Wells, who came into the ballgame as a pinch hitter in the crucial moment and managed to get a ball to fall right over the left field fence to even up the game at six.
Making herself the hero of the game was junior Katie Stewart. She settled into the batter’s box with a runner on base and on the third pitch of the at-bat crushed a pitch for the walk-off two-run bomb to seal the ballgame.
“I just knew it off the bat,” Stewart said. “And so knowing that the game was over and that we had won, just like a wave of emotions came over.”
The Longhorns will head back on the road, making their way up to Athens to take on the Georgia Bulldogs in their next action. The three-game tilt is set to start on Saturday April, 18 at 3:00 p.m. CT.
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