Oklahoma
Deadly shooting overnight near NW 23rd and Portland in Oklahoma City
A man died after being shot late Tuesday night near NW 23rd Street and N Portland Avenue in Oklahoma City, according to police.
Police say the shooting happened around 10:45 p.m. Tuesday.
Officials say one male victim was shot and was pronounced dead at the scene.
No suspect information is available at this time.
Oklahoma
Ruby Meylan Claims Another Postseason Honor for Oklahoma State
The season didn’t end the way that Ruby Meylan and the Oklahoma State Cowgirls wanted, but she continues to get incredible recognition for her terrific senior season.
Earlier this week the Nebraska native was named a first team all American by D1 Softball. It’s another all-America honor to add to the list for the veteran, who is out of eligibility and expected to play in the AUSL this summer. She penned an emotional farewell to Cowgirl fans shortly after the season ended.
She was the only Oklahoma State player to make the first or second team. She was selected as one of the four first-team pitchers, including Alabama’s Jocelyn Briski, Belmont’s Maya Johnson and Tennessee’s Sage Mardjetko.
Ruby Meylan’s OSU Trophy Case
No doubt about it.
Ruby has been named a first team All-American by @D1Softball 🤠 #GoPokes | @rubymeylan pic.twitter.com/8Bni18YXFE
— OSU Cowgirl Softball (@cowgirlsb) May 26, 2026
So far this season, Meylan has been named a first-team all-America honor from Softball America. She was also named NFCA all-region first team earlier this month and is a Top 25 finalist for USA Softball player of the year. She was named to the all-Big 12 first-team and the league’s co-pitcher of the year.
As a junior at Oklahoma State last season, she was selected to the All-Big 12 first team and named a second team All-American from the NFCA, along with earning NFCA first team All-Region status.
In her first two years at the University of Washington, she was a 2023 NFCA third team All-American and two-time NFCA first team all-region honoree. She was also named two-time first-team All-Pac-12 in addition to being named to the 2023 All-Pac-12 Freshman Team. While with the Huskies she made her only Women’s College World Series appearance in her freshman year of 2023.
She helped the Cowgirls get back to super regionals after a one-year absence in her junior season. Oklahoma State fell to Nebraska in two games in the Lincoln super regional last weekend, keeping OSU out of the WCWS for the second straight year.
She just authored one of the best seasons in the circle in OSU history. She went 29-9 with a 2.43 ERA in 32 starts and 45 games. While she walked 57, she struck out 220 and during the super regional she passed 800 career strikeouts as a collegiate.
In her junior season at OSU, she went 21-10 with a 1.81 ERA and struck out 238. She set five different single-season career bests that season, including allowing opponents to bat just .201 against her. She was 10th in the country in strikeouts.
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Oklahoma
A MAGA Troll Almost Ran a Whole State’s Public School System Into the Ground. They Might Just Elect Another One.
This story about Oklahoma schools was produced by the Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for the Hechinger newsletter.
The most exciting thing about Lindel Fields, Oklahoma’s superintendent of public instruction, is how boring he is.
Sitting in a state education office conference room recently while his office was under renovation, Fields described his work as “building a foundation” for a strong public education system. “And the foundation of a house isn’t sexy, right?”
He hopes that once students’ literacy scores improve and school districts adequately support and retain teachers, people “will forget who built the foundation.”
It’s a sharp contrast to Ryan Walters, who stepped down as state superintendent last September after 33 months. Walters, who had a falling-out with Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt and riled state Board of Education members, left to lead the Teacher Freedom Alliance, formed by the conservative activist Freedom Foundation to challenge existing teachers unions. Stitt then appointed Fields. The new superintendent is finishing Walters’ term and not running for the position in November, an election considered key to Oklahoma’s educational future.
Walters’ MAGA-style edicts—calling for Bibles in classrooms, book bans, anti-diversity measures, and ideological tests for teachers coming from blue states—drew national attention, spurred lawsuits and protests, and plunged Oklahoma public education into chaos. (Through a spokesperson, Walters declined to be interviewed or respond to a list of detailed questions.)
Educators “still experience some PTSD,” said April Grace, a former school superintendent and member of the Choctaw Nation who in 2022 lost to Walters in the Republican primary for state superintendent. During Walters’ tenure, “there was a lot of fear,” said Grace, who is now the executive director of the nonprofit Oklahoma Public School Resource Center. “People were concerned about being targeted.”
The question now: How do you make public education normal again?
Around the country, schools have become ideological battlegrounds. Amid efforts to address foundering academic achievement, the deluge of extremist laws, orders, and policies, some say, distracts from actual learning.
“We needed to be about the business of literacy and math and career education,” said Grace, noting Oklahoma’s poor national test results. The state ranks near the bottom in national test scores for fourth and eighth graders in reading and math. “We just kind of wasted two and a half years,” she added. “And we didn’t have two and a half years to waste.”
There are educational costs to political turmoil, said John Rogers, director of the Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access at the University of California, Los Angeles. Rogers and colleagues tallied direct expenses of responding to “culturally divisive conflict,” including increased security, communications, and consultants, finding that it cost some $3.2 billion across the U.S. during the 2023–24 school year.
Oklahoma is not the only state where schools have been hit by political turbulence. State legislatures are still jammed with controversial bills that shape what students learn, what teachers can say, and what pronouns educators can use to address students.
Utah recently passed a law requiring Bible passages be taught in social studies starting in third grade. In Texas, the Board of Education moved to create a list of mandatory books all schools must teach beginning in 2030 that includes Bible materials. A U.S. appeals court recently ruled that Texas can require schools to display the Ten Commandments in classrooms; a similar law was upheld in Louisiana, but recently struck down in Arkansas.
This is not just a red-state matter. California, among others, has jumped into the political waters with laws preempting book bans and protecting students’ gender presentation. The Supreme Court recently blocked California’s law banning automatic parental notification if a student changes pronouns or gender expression at school. At the federal level, Congress continues to debate “parental rights” bills around student gender expression, and the U.S. Department of Education recently affirmed the “right to pray” in public school.
The political environment under Walters in Oklahoma became so disruptive that educators feared each state board meeting and what might transpire, said Kate C. White, whose firm provides counsel for the Oklahoma Education Association, the largest state teachers union. “It was chaos,” she said. “Paranoia is the perfect way to say it.”
Nick Oxford for The Hechinger Report
Regan Killackey, an English teacher at Edmond Memorial High School in Edmond, a suburban school district north of Oklahoma City, recalled that after the passage of a law forbidding instruction around “divisive concepts” on race and gender, his district told teachers “to refrain from or try to avoid using terms of diversity and white privilege in class.” The problem is, “that’s, like, half my curriculum in Advanced Placement Language and Composition,” he said. After all, Killackey urges students to consider “your own identity, your own hidden biases” to craft strong arguments. Now, under Fields, said White, “there’s an open line of communication. We can talk about the issues.”
Whether that continues come November is a question: Seven Republicans and two Democrats, representing a broad political spectrum, are running for the post, with primaries June 16. Given Republicans’ dominance in the state, the June election is likely to be decisive.
“It’s pretty consequential,” Deven Carlson, a professor of political science at the University of Oklahoma who studies education policy and politics, said of the vote. Part of the election, he said, is about the state’s poor academic performance, “and are we going to do anything about that?”
But Carlson said it is also about tone: “Do we want a combative Ryan Walters–esque kind of state leadership around public education, or do we want a more, you know, Lindel Fields, quieter, the kind of traditional state Department of Ed where if anyone knows the name of the state superintendent, it’s surprising?”
Like many Oklahomans, Fields is Republican and religious (he’s Catholic). But as a dad to a grade-schooler and as a retired superintendent-turned-education consultant, he struggled with Walters’ dictums. “I’m like, gosh, this doesn’t feel right,” he said of the state’s poor test scores and attacks on educators, particularly in Tulsa, where he lives.
His first moves as superintendent were undoing actions Walters had taken. Among them, Fields rescinded mandates for Bible instruction in schools and the requirement that there be a Bible in every classroom. The mandate originally favored two Bibles backed by Donald Trump and his family, who received fees for their endorsements, and Walters attempted to purchase 55,000 of them for the state until the criteria were changed. Walters had requested $3 million for Bible purchases, but Fields said the state spent $25,000. The Bibles now sit in a basement storage room.
While Fields recognizes that “Oklahomans love their Bibles,” he said there are plenty of opportunities to access religious instruction outside of the public schools.
Fields also halted Walters’ social studies curriculum; the state Supreme Court then struck down the standards and called for new ones. (Walters also created an Office of Religious Liberty and Patriotism to protect the right to pray in school. It still exists.)
But the biggest change was Fields’ drive to, he said, “set a tone of decorum.” He tells staff, “If you wouldn’t say it to your neighbor’s sixth grader, don’t say it, right?” and has shifted the Department of Education’s focus from compliance to, he said, declaring “that we are a customer service organization.”
This has contributed to what many Oklahoma educators describe as a reprieve from the fear, animosity, and surveillance state Walters fed as he sought to elevate his national profile. Teachers whose licenses were targeted for revocation felt the brunt of it. Summer Boismier, a high school English teacher in Norman, got national attention when the state revoked her license after she shared with her students a link to the Books Unbanned project at the Brooklyn Public Library. The state argued that Boismier violated H.B. 1775, the state law that restricts teaching about “divisive concepts” around race, gender, and history. She has filed a federal lawsuit.
The law, versions of which have been adopted by more than a dozen states, faces challenges. A U.S. district court in 2024 blocked some aspects of it, citing vague language. The Oklahoma Supreme Court last year ruled it did not apply to higher education. The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver heard arguments in March and is expected to rule soon.
Educators around Oklahoma may be taking a breath, but few are relaxing. With Fields not a candidate, there is uncertainty about what’s next. Pat McFerron, a prominent local Republican political consultant, released a poll on May 14 showing 61 percent of likely Republican voters were undecided a month before the primary—and no candidate had a meaningful lead. Speaking more than a week later, he said that little had changed.
“It is incredibly wide-open,” McFerron said. With so many statewide primaries, including for governor, he said, Republican superintendent campaigns “have not been able to cut through the clutter.” The two Democratic contenders? “Not relevant,” he said.
Among those running for state superintendent of public instruction is state Rep. Toni Hasenbeck, a Republican who recently sponsored a bill mandating time in school for prayer and reading religious texts. Hasenbeck has been playing hardball: She sought to disqualify another candidate, Republican Sen. Adam Pugh, contending that he was ineligible to run for technical reasons, but the Oklahoma Supreme Court ruled in April that Pugh could stay on the ballot.
Pugh, a former Air Force officer and chair of the state Senate Education Committee, is pitching “practical, student-focused education reform” and “NO DRAMA, ONLY SOLUTIONS.” Carlson said that Pugh is “more of a successor to Lindel Fields” while Hasenbeck “is probably more on the Ryan Walters side of things.”
Another candidate, John Cox, is a rural superintendent who previously ran twice as a Democrat, and then as a Republican in 2022 and this year. He is vowing to “Make Education Great Again” in the state. Robert Franklin, another Republican, is a veteran Tulsa educator whose tagline is “44 years in education. Not one day in politics.” Debra Herlihy, also a Republican, is a senior research analyst at Southern Nazarene University. William Crozier, a former teacher and U.S. Air Force security officer, ran in 2006 as a Republican, proposing then that students use thick textbooks as shields in school shootings. He made a video in which he and aides fired at math, language, and telephone books with weapons, including an AK-47 and a 9 mm pistol. James Taylor, another Republican candidate, is a teacher, senior pastor, and author, including of a 2015 book, It’s Biblical, Not Political!: How to Line Candidates Up Biblically.
“Some people think we can get back to normal because Ryan Walters is gone,” said Erika Wright, director of the Oklahoma Rural Schools Coalition and a community education organizer with the Oklahoma Appleseed Center for Law & Justice, a nonprofit legal group. But, she said, “we are in a very precarious time.”
Moderate Republicans need to go to the polls and independents “might want to rethink” being independent, because they are ineligible to vote in the Republican primary, she said, adding that low turnouts mean outcomes are decided by a few votes.
Carlson, the political science professor, predicted that “whoever wins June 16 will be the next superintendent.” He expects a strong voter turnout given that there is also the gubernatorial primary—Stitt is not eligible to seek another term—and a ballot measure seeking a $15 state minimum wage.
The stakes are high: Christian hard-right fundraisers who favor a Walters-style candidate remain involved. As Wright put it, “The people who got him elected are still here.”
Oklahoma
Sooner Legend Tries to Sway Blue-Chip In-State Prospect to Oklahoma
Gerald McCoy hasn’t played at Oklahoma in nearly two decades, but he’s doing his part in helping the Sooners stay atop the college football world.
McCoy, a two-time All-American defensive lineman at OU who later played 10 seasons in the NFL, posted an encouraging message to Class of 2027 4-star defensive back prospect Gabriel Osborne Jr. on X (formerly Twitter).
“A little birdie told me that the next possible Sooner great is right at home in Oklahoma,” McCoy said in his post. “You want historic and legacy? You want a chance to compete for championships? You want a chance to play at the next level at a high level? You know what to do youngin’.”
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Osborne is graded as a 4-star recruit by all major recruiting services. 247Sports ranks him as the No. 25 overall player and the No. 2 player from Oklahoma in the 2027 class.
During his junior season at Mustang High School, Osborne registered 65 tackles, three tackles for loss, two interceptions, two fumble recoveries and a forced fumble.
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Parker Thune of Rivals reported last week that Osborne had narrowed his list of schools down to five: OU, Alabama, Miami, Michigan and Ohio State.
Now, he is being persuaded by one of the most dominant defensive Sooners in recent memory. McCoy was a two-time First Team All-Big 12 pick and later made six Pro Bowl appearances while playing for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
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Time will tell if McCoy’s recruiting pitch leads Osborne to Norman. But a message from a Sooner legend certainly can’t hurt.
Sooners offer another 2028 QB
Oklahoma has now offered several quarterbacks from the Class of 2028, as Trey Wright announced an offer from the Sooners on Saturday.
A native of Frisco, TX, Wright stands 5-11 and weighs 180 pounds. He is a consensus 3-star recruit.
As a sophomore at Lone Star High School, Wright completed 67.4 percent of his passes for 4,042 yards, 38 touchdowns and seven interceptions. He also rushed for 1,764 yards and 16 touchdowns on 163 carries during his breakout campaign.
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Wright is the fifth signal caller from the 2028 class to pick up an OU offer, joining Trey Tagliaferri, Graham Simpson, Brady Quinn and Gavin Strang.
Other schools that have offered Wright include Missouri, Oklahoma State, Kansas State, Kansas and Baylor.
OU predicted to land highly touted athlete
Bode Sparrow has long been on the Sooners’ radar, and it seems like OU is gaining momentum in his recruitment.
Rivals’ Adam Gorney logged an expert prediction on Saturday for Sparrow, who plays both safety and wide receiver, to commit to Oklahoma.
Hailing from Kaysville, UT, Sparrow is ranked as a 4-star prospect by all major recruiting networks. He is the No. 69 overall recruit in 247Sports’ composite rankings for the 2027 class.
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Sparrow caught 83 passes for 1,218 yards and 16 touchdowns during his junior year at Davis (UT) High School. He also logged 71 tackles, seven interceptions, 6.5 tackles for loss, three pass breakups and two pick-sixes at safety.
Sparrow has an official visit scheduled to Oklahoma next weekend, and he also has visits to Oregon, Utah and BYU on his calendar.
This article was originally published on www.si.com/college/oklahoma as Sooner Legend Tries to Sway Blue-Chip In-State Prospect to Oklahoma.
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