NORMAN — Long before becoming the head coach at Navy, Brian Newberry was just a kid from Oklahoma.
A native of Moore, OK, Newberry fell in love with the Sooners in 1985.
That was the year that Newberry — still in grade school at the time — went to his first OU football game. He and his family were on hand as the Sooners beat Colorado, one of their 11 victories as OU won the national championship that season.
Football had long been a passion for Newberry. But watching OU legends Brian Bosworth and Jamelle Holieway in that game inspired him personally.
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“That’s when I decided that I wanted to play college football,” Newberry said.
After achieving that goal with a four-year playing career as a defensive back at Baylor and now having coached college football for 25 years, Newberry will square off against the team that instilled his love for the sport.
Newberry’s Midshipmen will play against Oklahoma in the Armed Forces Bowl in Fort Worth on Dec. 27.
“We have a big Sooner family, and I still root for the Sooners,” Newberry said Sunday during a media conference call. “We couldn’t ask for a better bowl selection and a better opponent.”
WATCH: Navy HC Brian Newberry Talks Armed Forces Bowl Matchup With Oklahoma
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Newberry hopped around the various ranks of college football before landing in Annapolis in 2019 as the Midshipmen’s defensive coordinator. He was promoted to head coach prior to the 2023 season, replacing longtime Middies coach Ken Niumatalolo.
His first season at the helm was one of growing pains, as Navy finished 5-7 and didn’t reach a bowl game. But Year 2 was a significant turnaround for Newberry’s group, with Navy winning its first six games of the 2024 season and are currently 8-3.
Navy will wrap up the much-improved campaign with two games that Newberry considers bowl games.
First, the Midshipmen will battle service-academy rival Army on Saturday at Northwest Stadium in Landover, MD. Then, just two weeks later, they’ll face the Sooners.
It’s an unconventional situation for Army and Navy, as both are bowl eligible this year. But Newberry thinks it’s one that could make his team better.
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“There’s one thing on our kids’ minds right now, and once that gets accomplished, we’ll get excited about playing in this bowl game,” Newberry said.
Like fellow service academies Army and Air Force, the Midshipmen run a version of the triple-option on offense.
With the service academy athletic department facing challenges — like prohibition of NIL for student-athletes and the inability to acquire athletes from the transfer portal — Newberry cited the “need to be different” in order for them to have success.
That starts with their offense and also affects how they play on defense.
“We have a unique system, and we want to be extremely hard to prepare for,” Newberry said. “What sets us apart (defensively) is how we do it with the intangibles and the fantastic young men in our program.”
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While Newberry still considers himself to be a Sooners fan, the coach admitted that he doesn’t get to follow OU sports as closely as he used to.
Still, Newberry has watched a handful of Brent Venables-led Oklahoma games throughout the years and even studied how Venables coaches.
“I’ve always admired how hard he has kids play,” Newberry said. “Him and I are alike in our philosophy. I’ve studied him in the past, the offseason. I have a ton of respect for them.”
Win or lose, Newberry sees so many positives about playing in the Armed Forces Bowl.
Navy has 30 players on its 2024 squad from Texas, where the bowl game will be held. The Midshipmen also have a history in the military-themed game, playing in it twice with a 1-1 record. And it’s a historic postseason game for the Midshipmen, as they haven’t played a bowl game against an SEC foe since the 1954 Sugar Bowl, when they beat Ole Miss.
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Between those things and Newberry’s history with — and love for — the Sooners, this game will be a highlight of his young head coaching career.
“No better place to go and no better team to do it against,” Newberry said. “To do it in Texas against a storied program like Oklahoma, it doesn’t get much better than that.”
The energy was off the charts in the Frost Bank Center even before opening tip for what many hoop fans are hoping is the next great NBA rivalry. Both the Spurs and Thunder the traded blows on the offensive and defensive end in an exhilarating display of basketball that included 12 lead changes and 11 ties. Oklahoma City took a slim 60-58 lead into the locker room at halftime. The second half played out in much the same fashion with extremely high-level basketball and neither team able to pull away, though San Antonio were the ones who took a 5 point lead heading into the 4th quarter. That chink in the Thunder armor though was enough to blow the game wide open to begin the final frame for the Spurs. They spent the vast majority of the 4th quarter just making life hell for the Thunder, who waved the white flag and pulled their starters with 3 minutes left in the game.
Led by huge performances from Stephon Castle, Harrison Barnes and a particularly special performance by Keldon Johnson off the bench, the win marks their second straight win over the defending champions and their 7th win in a row, the longest for the club since 2019. Tonight’s win sets the table for Thursday’s Christmas Day match-up in Oklahoma City pretty nicely, sending a message to anyone still doubting whether or not the Silver and Black are for real.
The rematch on Christmas Day starts at 1:30 CT on ABC and ESPN.
Christmas is nearly here, but are you done with Christmas shopping? You still have a few days left, and we know that so many people face the annual challenge of what to buy someone who has everything, or is hard to buy for.
News 9 spoke to Von Maur representative Mathew Burniga to learn how to wrap up your Christmas shopping.
NORMAN, Okla. — Derrion Reed scored 22 points, Xzayvier Brown finished with 18, and Oklahoma set the program’s single-game record for field-goal percentage on Monday night as the Sooners beat Stetson 107-54 on Monday night.
Oklahoma shot 67.8% (40 of 59) from the field and had its highest-scoring game since a 107-86 win over Arkansan-Pine Bluff on Nov. 30, 2023. The previous record was 66.1% (39 of 59) against Baylor on Feb. 26, 2005.
The Sooners made 12 of 24 from 3-point range, outrebounded Stetson 39-24, and outscored the Hatters 54-18 in the paint.
Mohamed Wague had 15 points and nine rebounds for Oklahoma and Tae Davis added 12 points and six assists. Kuol Atak and Nijel Pack each scored 11 points.
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Ethan Copeland, the only Stetson (4-9) player who scored in double figures, had 14 points.
Oklahoma (9-3) used runs of 15-3 and 10-2, the latter of which culminated with a Jadon Jones three-point play that gave the Sooners a 26-11 lead a little more than eight minutes into the game.
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