Oklahoma
No. 6 Longhorns vs. Oklahoma State: Live In-Game Updates
The No. 6 ranked Texas Longhorns journey to Stillwater to face a gifted Oklahoma State Cowboy squad.
Texas (12-2) misplaced a humiliating sport at residence to Kansas State Tuesday 116-103. Oklahoma State (9-5) is coming off a powerful win on Monday night time over the Mountaineers of West Virginia 67-60.
Each groups enter this heavy-weight tilt needing a victory on this stacked Huge 12 convention. The Longhorns hope to amend a velocity bump in in any other case an amazing begin to their season. Oklahoma State appears to be like to string high quality wins collectively in hopes of incomes an at massive bid.
The Cowboys are led by guards Bryce Thompson and Avery Anderson III who common 12.6 and 11.5 factors per sport respectively. In Monday’s victory over West Virginia Thompson and Anderson scored 28 factors mixed.
Texas guards Marcus Carr and Tyrese Hunter might be examined offensively in opposition to an elite defensive staff within the Cowboys.
Reside updates will seem under at tip-off.
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The Longhorns maintain the early lead of 9-7 on the first media timeout. 4 completely different Texas gamers have scored in a really bodily opening minutes.Marcus Carr has the lone three pointer for Texas up to now.
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Christian Bishop is making his influence felt. He has 4 factors and three rebounds within the early going. The Longhorns preserve their small benefit by a rating of 13-10. Texas dominating the rebounding margin up 9-4 by the primary eight minutes.
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Texas has come out with a variety of defensive depth early in Stillwater. Longhorns maintain a 22-17 lead on the underneath eight timeout. Dylan Disu leads Texas with 5 factors.
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Longhorns are exploiting Oklahoma State’s inconsistent offense and stretched the result in eight factors. Up 32-24 Texas has matched their largest lead of the sport. Texas getting a real steadiness of scoring with eight gamers having no less than two factors up to now.
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Halftime: Texas 32, Oklahoma State 24
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The sport has become a road struggle. Texas leads 35-29 within the final defensive battle. Texas bigs proceed to shine particularly on the boards with Timmy Allen, Dylan Disu, and Dillion Mitchell making impacts.
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Caleb Asberry’s three pointer has minimize the Cowboys deficit again to a two possession sport. Longhorns maintain the small benefit 40-36 because the offense has been shaky at finest. Marcus Carr hit an enormous three pointer through the stretch.
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Oklahoma State has fully flipped the momentum of this sport. The rating is all tied up at 44 a bit. Brock Cunningham hit a monster three, however Texas continues to wrestle from the sector taking pictures underneath 28 %. Going to be an fascinating last eight minutes in Stillwater.
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Longhorns scratching and clawing to outlive on the street. Marcus Carr hits clutch fade-away jumper to place the Longhorns up three. 48-45 underneath 4 minutes to play in Stillwater. Can Texas execute down the stretch and shut this one out?
You may observe Adam Glick on Twitter @adamglick39
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Oklahoma
How to Watch Oklahoma State vs. Utah: Kickoff Time, TV, Streaming and Odds
Oklahoma State’s season is in full swing, with its biggest matchup on the horizon.
On Saturday, No. 14 OSU will host No. 12 Utah in a matchup of two of the Big 12’s favorites to open conference play. With each team entering unbeaten, the winner could catapult into the top 10 and become the favorite to win the Big 12.
With uncertainty surrounding Utah quarterback Cam Rising’s status, the Cowboys could have the upper hand. Considering OSU’s home-field advantage, Boone Pickens Stadium could provide Utah a welcome to the Big 12 moment.
As both teams vie for a signature win that could boost their playoff resumes, Saturday’s game could be the most important conference matchup this season.
Game Information: No. 14 Oklahoma State (3-0) vs. No. 12 Utah (3-0)
Date/Time: Saturday, Sept. 21 at 3 p.m. CT
Where: Boone Pickens Stadium – Stillwater, OK
TV/Streaming: Fox
Commentators: Jason Benetti, Brock Huard and Allison Williams
Radio: Cowboy Radio Network
Spread: Oklahoma State -2.5
Total Points: Over/Under 52.5
Moneyline: Oklahoma State -137, Utah +115
READ MORE: Game Preview: Oklahoma State and Utah Set For Top 15 Showdown
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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
Joel Klatt believes Oklahoma, Missouri schedule strengths are 'not in the same hemisphere'
Sooners Football: Paul Finebaum talks Oklahoma defense
Scheduling has not been the SEC’s strength since expanding by two teams. Not just long-term, where there still has not been a decision made about playing eight or nine conference games per season. But for the next two years, schedules are not viewed as equal, at least from the outside.
For FOX’s Joel Klatt, the difference between Missouri and Oklahoma might be the most egregious. He does not view them “in the same hemisphere” over the course of eight games. Klatt sees an easier path to success for Eli Drinkwitz than the coaching staff in Norman.
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“If you’re Brent Venables, and anybody from OU, how do you look at your schedule and then you look at Missouri’s schedule and you’re like ‘Time out. Are we in the same league? What is going on?’ Look at those two schedules. They’re not in the same hemisphere. One might as well be a Group of Five schedule vs. an NFL schedule. They’re miles apart,” Klatt said.
Oklahoma kicks off SEC play on Saturday against Tennessee, the current No. 6 ranked team per the AP poll. Texas (ranked No. 1), Alabama (4), Ole Miss (5), Missouri (7), and LSU (16) will face the Sooners at one point this season.
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For comparison, the only current ranked matchups for Missouri outside of Oklahoma are Alabama and Texas A&M (currently No. 25). Quite a difference, at least on paper, heading into Week 4 of the season.
This could lead Missouri to have a bit of an inflated record, one potentially good enough to get into the College Football Playoff. On the flip, Oklahoma facing such a number of high-quality teams might lead to a few more losses than what Venables’ squad deserves in their first-ever SEC season.
“Missouri’s record is going to be better than their team,” Klatt said. “Meanwhile, Oklahoma’s record is going to be worse than their team.”
Next season might not be any better with the same scheduling playing out and the venues just flipped. A balance should come to the SEC beginning in 2026 once deciding the long-term future, setting permanent opponents, and making sure teams play each other every other year.
For now, Venables has quite the hill to climb against quality foes over eight games. Tennessee might wind up being one of the tougher challenges for his team, hoping to start their time in the SEC off with a statement victory.
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