Oklahoma
Live Updates: Severe Storms Bring Hail, Damaging Winds To Oklahoma
Strong to severe thunderstorms are developing across most of southcentral to eastern Oklahoma. Large hail and damaging winds will be the primary threat, there have been tornado warnings issued for some areas.
Related Story: Hail, Cloud Images From Storms In Oklahoma
Live Updates:
Severe Thunderstorm Warnings in Oklahoma:
- LeFlore, Sequoyah, Hughes County until 6:30 p.m.
- Pittsburg, Haskell, counties until 6:15 p.m.
- Adair County until 5:45 p.m.
A few storms may develop by late morning near the Arbuckles and quickly spread east to northeast. The main window for severe storm formation occurs from 1pm Thursday through 9pm. A cold front will clear the area later Thursday night bringing drier air and taking the threat of severe storms out of the area.
Highs Thursday afternoon will reach the upper 70s and a few lower 80s with strong south winds from 20 to 30 mph shifting to the northwest later tonight behind the frontal boundary.
A weak system may brush the southern OK area Friday evening into early Saturday morning with a few showers, but most of the weekend will be rain free.
A second cold arrives Sunday with gusty north winds and cooler weather into Monday with a possibility of near freezing temps Monday morning.
What is the severe weather outlook for Oklahoma on Thursday, March 14?
A surface area of low pressure is now located across the Midwest with a trailing cold front slicing through the central U.S. extending southward into central Kansas and northwestern OK. A dry line is located west of I-35 Thursday morning and will slide eastward during the morning to midday hours.
Surface instability and convective potential energy will increase along and southeast of I-44 by midday. A few scattered showers or storms will be possible Thursday morning along I-40 and move ENE into east-central OK. Higher chances will arrive later, around the 11am to noon hour, when a few scattered storms will attempt to develop across southcentral OK and quickly move northeast.
This development may initially be south of the Tulsa metro. Additional scattered storms will form along Highway 69 by early afternoon and continue moving east to northeast. Large hail and damaging winds will be the main threat but a few tornado warnings will be possible.
By late afternoon, a few clusters of storms will develop in these same areas. The surface cold front will move southeast later Thursday afternoon, overtaking the dry line, and entering northern OK shortly before sunset.
Additional storms, mostly linear in fashion, will be likely as the front drops southeast with some additional severe weather threats, mostly hail and wind. By 10pm to midnight, the surface front should be far enough south to take most of the storms out of our immediate areas of concern.
What will the weather be like in Oklahoma on Friday, March 15?
Friday morning lows will start in the 40s with gusty north winds through day and afternoon highs reaching the lower 60s.
A minor rebound in daytime highs Saturday will bring highs into the mid-60s with a north wind from 10 to 15 mph as a weak wave passes mostly south of the area.
Sunday’s highs will reach the lower 60s but with gusty north winds by midday and afternoon as a second cold front arrives through the afternoon.
A weak surface ridge of high pressure settles near the area allowing near freezing temps early Monday morning with afternoon highs only reaching the lower to mid-50s.
The Alan Crone morning weather podcast link from Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/episode/5j0ovActG8BZCOTqZQzrfU
The Alan Crone morning weather podcast link from Apple:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/weather-out-the-door/id1499556141?i=1000646589555
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Oklahoma
Oklahoma Duo Captures SEC Weekly Awards
A pair of Patty Gasso’s Sooners earned recognition for clutch performances against Ole Miss over the weekend.
Veteran Isabela Emerling was named SEC Co-Player of the Week after her clutch grand slam powered Oklahoma past the Rebels on Monday, and sophomore Audrey Lowry earned SEC Pitcher of the Week after two outstanding appearances.
Emerling, a redshirt senior, needed just one pitch to change Monday’s series finale.
She stepped in to pinch hit for freshman Allyssa Parker in the sixth inning and ruined Kyra Aycock’s outing.
Emerling connected with the first pitch she saw and parked a grand slam deep beyond the fence in left field to put OU on top 5-2.
It was Emerling’s 11th homer of the year, which is three shy of her career-high, and it was the seventh grand slam of her career.
She also homered in the Sooners’ mid-week triumph over Memphis and hit .545 for the week with a 1.091 slugging percentage.
Lowry pitched 7 2/3 total innings across two appearances against the Rebels and allowed zero runs.
She got the start in Saturday’s opener, then stepped in for Sydney Berzon with OU down 2-1 and shut the Rebels out to earn the victory in relief.
Lowry accounted for five strikeouts and gave up four free passes (two walks and two hit batters) in the pair of appearances.
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For the season, she’s now 15-1, which ranks third nationally in wins, and has a 2.08 ERA with a 52-9 strikeout to walk ratio across 67 1/3 innings of action.
Emerling and Lowry became the second OU duo to capture recognition in the same week, and it was the first time both have been honored individually by the SEC this season.
The No. 5 Sooners will be back on the road this weekend to take on No. 20 LSU.
The series will serve as a reunion for Avery Hodge and Paytn Monticelli, who are both former Sooners, as well as Berzon, who spent the first three years of her collegiate career in Baton Rouge.
Hodge transferred to LSU following the 2024 season, and Monitcelli departed Norman this past offseason.
Berzon is coming off her longest outing as a Sooner, where she threw 57 pitches and allowed zero earned runs on Monday against Ole Miss.
The series opener is scheduled to get underway at 6 p.m. on Friday.
Oklahoma
UCLA vs. Oklahoma State – Second round NCAA tournament extended highlights
Women’s Basketball
March 24, 2026
UCLA vs. Oklahoma State – Second round NCAA tournament extended highlights
March 24, 2026
Watch the highlights from No. 1 UCLA and No. 8 Oklahoma State’s matchup in the second round of the 2026 women’s NCAA tournament.
Oklahoma
Fire in Oklahoma City scrapyard produces massive smoke plume visible from downtown
Oklahoma firefighters battle wildfire in Arapaho in March outbreak
Firefighters with the Hydro Fire Department responded to a grass fire in Arapaho, Oklahoma, on Sunday, March 15, 2026.
Provided, Hydro Fire Department
A fire at a scrapyard near the OKC Fairgrounds has produced a massive plume of smoke visible in downtown Oklahoma City, officials report.
Oklahoma City Fire Department Assistant PIO John Chenoweth told The Oklahoman that the fire started at the scrapyard building near Northwest 10th Street and May Avenue, northeast of the OKC Fairgrounds.
The fire has been marked as “basically contained” as the Oklahoma City Fire Department is currently shifting to defensive methods. There are some active rubbish fires surrounding the metal building.
Chenoweth states there are no injuries, and all inside the building have been evacuated.
The cause of the fire and the extent of damage are unknown.
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Oklahoma fire map: See smoke, wildfires across state, red flag warnings
Track the latest wildfire and smoke information in Oklahoma with data that is updated frequently based on input from several incident and intelligence sources.
If you can’t see the map below, please click here.
How to prevent wildfires
While severely warm weather can worsen a wildfire spread, most are the result of human behavior. In fact, nearly 85% of wildfires in the U.S. are caused by humans, according to the National Park Service.
With its wide acres, rural areas and inconsistent weather patterns, Oklahoma is prone to grass fires. Forestry and safety experts offer several guidelines for residents on how to avoid starting a fire, which can often breakout from just one wrong spark.
- Avoid using welding equipment.
- Never drive on a flat tire.
- Extinguish cigarettes completely before properly disposing of them, and never throw them outside of a window while driving.
- Avoid parking on dry grass or dragging chains behind your car.
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