Oklahoma
Oklahoma City is one of the windiest cities in the US: See where it falls in the ranking

High winds knock truck onto its side as it travels down highway
A truck was blown onto its side and slid down the highway as storms brought powerful winds to the Midwest.
So far this spring, Oklahoma has been staying true to an iconic lyric from the official state song.
Yes, Oklahoma is the place “where the wind comes sweeping down the plain,” especially the last two weeks as high winds brought fire weather and raging wildfires to the state.
And the state’s capital, Oklahoma City, is no stranger to the wind. But how does it stack up compared to cities across the U.S.?
Here’s what to know about where OKC falls among the windiest cities in the United States.
OKC is 7th windiest city in the U.S.
According to a ranking of the 10 windiest cities in the U.S. with a population of 100,000 or more by Redfin, a real-estate brokerage company, OKC lands at number seven.
Redfin ranked the cities based on the annual average wind speed, and in Oklahoma City, that is 11.3 miles per hour.
The company also noted that the Oklahoma City metro area holds the world’s unofficial highest wind speed, with the 1999 EF-5 Bridge Creek tornado clocking 301 miles per hour. However, this is just an estimate, give or take 20 miles per hour, and is not an official record.
Officially, the record highest wind speed in Oklahoma City is 151 miles per hour in 2011, according to Redfin.
Windiest cities in the U.S.
Redfin’s rankings of the windiest cities in the U.S. with a population of 100,000 or more are:
- Amarillo, Texas
- Rochester, Minnesota
- Lubbock, Texas
- Corpus Christi, Texas
- Wichita, Kansas
- Boston, Massachusetts
- Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
- Wichita Falls, Texas
- Fargo, North Dakota
- Abilene, Texas
The 10 least windy cities in the U.S.
Redfin’s rankings of the least windy cities in the U.S. with a population of 100,000 or more are:
- Los Angeles, CA: 1.9 mph
- Chattanooga, TN: 5.0 mph
- Tallahassee, FL: 5.5 mph
- Augusta, GA: 5.5 mph
- Long Beach, CA: 5.6 mph
- Montgomery, AL: 5.9 mph
- Macon, GA: 5.9 mph
- Gainesville, FL: 6.0 mph
- Columbus, GA: 6.0 mph
- Knoxville, TN: 6.0 mph

Oklahoma
Observations From Oklahoma’s Open Practice on Tuesday

Ryan is managing editor at Sooners On SI and covers a number of sports in and around Norman and Oklahoma City.
Working both as a journalist and a sports talk radio host, Ryan has covered the Oklahoma Sooners, the Oklahoma City Thunder, the United States Men’s National Soccer Team, the Oklahoma City Energy and more.
Since 2019, Ryan has simultaneously pursued a career as both a writer and a sports talk radio host, working for the Flagship for Oklahoma sports, 107.7 The Franchise, as well as AllSooners.com.
Ryan serves as a contributor to The Franchise’s website, TheFranchiseOK.com, which was recognized as having the “Best Website” in 2022 by the Oklahoma Association of Broadcasters.
Ryan holds an associate’s degree in Journalism from Oklahoma City Community College in Oklahoma City, OK.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma governor signs order directing state to prioritize religious freedom

CNA Staff, Apr 1, 2025 /
15:34 pm
Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt this week signed an executive order instructing state officials to ensure Oklahoma’s laws are “the most robust” in the nation at protecting religious freedom, with the governor also criticizing the state attorney general for attempting to block a proposed Catholic charter school there.
The order, announced on Monday, initiates a review of various state laws and policies to ensure they comply with religious freedom protections enshrined in both the U.S. Constitution and the Oklahoma Constitution.
The directive explicitly targets several state laws, including one requiring charter schools to be “nonsectarian” in their operations.
The order comes just weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court began considering a proposed Oklahoma school that could be the nation’s first publicly-funded religious charter school.
Oklahoma’s St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School was approved by the state charter school board to open in 2023, but state Attorney General Gentner Drummond filed a lawsuit against the charter school board, arguing the charter school’s existence would constitute state support of a religion.
The ongoing litigation has since reached the U.S. Supreme Court, where the landmark decision could reshape school choice and religious freedom in the U.S.
Drummond criticized the governor’s religious freedom order this week, citing concerns that taxpayers could be forced to support other religious institutions.
“Gov. Stitt has been clear that he supports our tax dollars funding radical Muslim schools teaching sharia law, and I couldn’t disagree with him more,” Drummond said in a March 31 statement.
“If a taxpayer-funded religious charter school is allowed to open in Oklahoma, it will only be a matter of time before taxpayers are funding schools dedicated to sharia law, Wicca indoctrination, scientology instruction — even the Church of Satan,” he alleged.
“As a devoted Christian and a strong supporter of religious liberty, I can tell you that the only way to protect religious liberty is for the state not to sponsor any religion at all — just like our Founding Fathers intended,” Drummond continued.
Stitt in his executive order explicitly criticized what he calls Drummond’s “apparent hostility to religious liberty.”
“By filing lawsuits seeking to prevent the nation’s first religious charter school [from] opening its doors, Oklahoma’s attorney general has fought against Oklahomans’ religious liberty with a zeal and aggressiveness that suggests animosity towards religion and religious liberty,” Stitt wrote.
Stitt’s executive order further requires that state officials not restrict access to public programs on the basis of a person’s or entity’s religious nature.
The executive order instructs “that no individual or entity shall be excluded from participation in, or denied access to, any public benefit, program, or funding solely on the basis of their religious character or affiliation or intended religious use of such benefits.”
“Religious freedom is foundational to our way of life in Oklahoma,” Stitt said this week. “It’s not a privilege handed out by the government — it’s a God-given right that the government must protect.”
“We will not stand by while faith-based organizations — including faith-based schools — are pushed to the sidelines by activist bureaucrats or hostile politicians,” he said.
(Story continues below)
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Oklahoma
Oklahoma City Thunder Make NBA History vs Chicago Bulls

The Chicago Bulls have been one of the hottest teams in the NBA recently, winning nine of their last 12 games heading into Monday night, but unfortunately ran into a brick wall.
The Bulls were matched up against the league’s top team, the Oklahoma City Thunder, and were certainly outmatched. Oklahoma City jumped out to a 33-point lead at halftime and even led by as many as 43, finishing with a dominant 145-117 home win.
The Thunder are now 63-12 on the season, an incredible mark for such a young team.
On top of having a league-best 63 wins on the season, the Thunder are also an absurd 34-5 at home, and now have a historic record against Eastern Conference opponents.
With Monday’s win over the Bulls, the Thunder have clinched the best single-season record by a West team against the East in NBA history at 28-1.
The Thunder have clinched the best single-season record by a West team vs. the East in NBA history:
2024-25 Thunder: 28-1
2015-16 Warriors: 27-3
2006-07 Mavs: 27-3
1999-00 Lakers: 27-3— Underdog NBA (@UnderdogNBA) April 1, 2025
Oklahoma City has been historically impressive this season, and setting a new benchmark for best record against Eastern Conference opponents as a West team is very impressive. Of course, the East is in somewhat of a down year outside of the Cleveland Cavaliers and Boston Celtics, but it stands as an impressive feat.
The Bulls suffering a 28-point loss amid a hot streak is certainly crushing, but nobody expected them to take on the powerhouse Thunder, and it resulted in a historic night for Oklahoma City.
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