Oklahoma
Oklahoma OC Ben Arbuckle to Prioritize Getting Veteran Wideout More Opportunities
The No. 18 Oklahoma Sooners have plenty of opportunities before them to make their losses to Mississippi and Texas feel like distant memories. A road matchup with the No. 14-ranked Tennessee Volunteers provides a great platform for a potential strong OU run to end their regular season.
In order to make that happen, Oklahoma must correct issues that seem simple in theory but have proven elusive in several games. Namely, get players like Deion Burks the ball.
It’s something that Ben Arbuckle wants to do.
“Deion’s a talented kid,” Arbuckle said during his Tuesday press conference. “Finding ways to get him the ball in space, he has the ability with his quick twitch and speed. Just have to keep working with him.”
Against the Michigan Wolverines in Week 2, Burks revealed the game-breaking ability that followed him from Purdue when he transferred to Norman during the 2024 offseason. Burks had seven catches for 101 yards and a touchdown.
Since then? 22 catches for 201 yards and no touchdowns. His back-to-back seven catch games in Oklahoma’s first two games have yet to show themselves since.
By now, Sooner fans are familiar with dozens of isolated plays over the last three weeks showcasing open receivers downfield — that Mateer either missed on throws or simply never looked their way. Burks has been a frequent star in those examples
Burks is looking at his lack of impact in the right way.
“Just know it’s football, man,” Burks said on Monday when asked about if he’s frustrated when he doesn’t get the ball. “Just know there’s more than me on the field. Never know really what’s going on behind the play. But no. Just next-play mentality. Just trying to get open again if I’m missed or anything like that.”
While Burks has been quiet, Isaiah Sategna III has blossomed. Since the Michigan game, Sategna has snagged 37 catches for 564 yards and five scores. If Oklahoma wants to have success on the road in the SEC, they cannot only rely on Sategna. They have to get Burks the ball to ensure the offense can hit its ceiling and reward its capable defense for stops.
Arbuckle knows how important Burks is to what the Sooners want to do.
“Just gotta keep working with him,” Arbuckle said. “There were times in that game where the ball should have found him.”
Both Arbuckle and Burks stressed that John Mateer cannot be expected to make every play, especially against great conference competition. “It’s not all on John,” Arbuckle relayed. But there’s no doubt that Oklahoma is leaving potential greatness on the field instead of on the scoreboard.
“John’s a leader,” Burks said. “He wants to be great so of course he’s in and out of this facility and we have our conversations but no conversation where it’s down in a sense. Just trying to bring each other up and how can we continue to get better each and every week.”
Arbuckle has been encouraged by Burks’ work ethic since the loss in the Cotton Bowl. That encouragement makes Arbuckle all the more hungry for getting Burks more involved to piggyback off of Sategna’s last month of play and to help his struggling quarterback.
“Dion’s a talented kid who honestly has had the best two weeks of practice from a technical standpoint and a straining to win standpoint,” Arbuckle said. “I’m really proud of the way he’s attacking practice.”
Oklahoma
Severe weather threat increasing for Oklahoma tonight
OKLAHOMA CITY (KOKH) — Severe weather is still expected tonight across much of our area. In fact, the threats have increased since this morning due to more clearing skies in western Oklahoma. More sunshine means more instability to work with.
SPC Severe Weather Outlook. (KOKH)
Due to this, the Storm Prediction Center has increased all hazards for our part of Oklahoma. The strongest storms could produce winds up to 80 mph, baseball size hail, and a few tornadoes. This would be from essentially now until early Wednesday morning.
SPC Tornado Outlook. (KOKH)
The tornadic potential has increased across much of the area generally along and east of I-44/I-35.
The general thinking is that discrete supercells will form in western North Texas in the 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM window and begin to make their way towards southwest Oklahoma. These storms will then quickly go from being individual cells to more clusters of storms. This would increase the wind potential and make it possible for brief spinup tornadoes to form. These QLCS (quasi-linear convective systems) tornadoes can form and develop quickly.
Once the storms are generally east of I-35, there won’t be any more cells anymore and we’d be looking at a larger squall line. Check out the below model images for a look at the evolution of the storms tonight:
There is also the potential for very heavy rain with these storms too.
A cold front will sweep the storms away to the east tonight. After the front, strong northerly winds are possible. Due to this, there is a Wind Advisory Wednesday for parts of our area.
Wednesday Wind Gusts. (KOKH)
These strong winds will increase the fire danger Wednesday afternoon.
To stay up to date with the latest forecast, be sure to download the Fox 25 Weather App.
Download the Fox 25 First Warning Weather App. (KOKH)
Stay with Fox 25, we’ve got your back.
Oklahoma
‘I cannot stay silent’ Oklahoma City moves to dismiss former attorneys claims seized cash
A legal fight is escalating between former Oklahoma City municipal attorney Orval Jones and the city over how the Oklahoma City Police Department handled cash seized during arrests.
The city has filed a motion asking a judge to strike Jones’ claims, arguing he has no legal standing and calling the criminal-case process a “restitution scheme.”
Jones says he spent eight years “cleaning up” the OKCPD property return process from 2017 to March 2025 until he resigned “due to duress” in September.
He filed an affidavit claiming OKCPD seized more than $400,000 in cash from arrests and deposited it into the city’s bank account.
In his audit, Jones made lists of seized cash amounts, including amounts under $250, from $250 up to $500, and more than $500.
In its motion, the city argues Jones is no longer an attorney for the city or the district attorney’s office, is not an owner of any of the property “properly disposed of,” and has not suffered an injury.
The city also alleges Jones filed his motion with “half-truths” and without support or proof.
Jones responded in a rebuttal affidavit that the issue involves injury to the state, the county, other counties, crime victims, and property owners who received no notice. Jones said, “I had a professional duty to tell the court that these filings were legally defective and potentially fraudulent. I cannot stay silent.”
In an email in April 2025, OKCPD Chief Ron Bacy said the department had 288,000 overdue property and currency claims needing a disposition update, and that many investigators assigned to those cases are no longer employed with the department. Bacy said the department developed programs to assist the Property Management Unit.
Court documents show more than 350,000 pieces of property held in the Property Management Unit, more than $2.5 million in the unit’s bank account, and that 80% of the property and money are due for disposition.
If a judge agrees with Jones, the funds may be returned to the owners.
If the judge agrees with the city, the case will be dropped.
The city and OKCPD had not responded to open records requests submitted Feb. 10.
When asked whether the city conducted or requested an internal review into the allegations, the city said it does not comment on pending litigation.
A hearing has been set later this month.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma AG Drummond backs Trump EPA bid to rescind 2009 greenhouse gas finding
OKLA. — Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond is seeking to join a federal court fight over the Environmental Protection Agency’s move to roll back a key climate change finding that has underpinned vehicle emissions regulations for more than a decade.
Drummond filed a motion to intervene with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit on March 9, 2026, backing the Trump administration’s efforts to eliminate what his office called “radical regulations of carbon emissions.”
The dispute centers on the EPA’s decision to rescind the 2009 Greenhouse Gas Endangerment Finding.
In a Final Rule issued earlier this year, the EPA concluded it lacked statutory authority to establish the Endangerment Finding, which had been used to justify vehicle emission restrictions under the Clean Air Act.
Drummond joined a coalition of 24 attorneys general seeking to support the EPA after “a gaggle of special-interest groups” petitioned the D.C. Circuit to review the Final Rule.
“Thankfully, the Trump Administration is correcting the outrageous overreach that was the hallmark of the Obama-Biden Administration,” Drummond said. “Oklahoma’s energy industry, and that of our nation, should not be hobbled by unnecessary regulations born from a radical climate agenda. A panoply of would-be vehicle emission standards would be disastrous for a robust oil and gas industry, adversely impact our economy, hurt the reliability of our electrical grids and undermine national security.”
Drummond’s office said that since taking office he has filed more than 25 legal actions opposing environmental regulations, including tailpipe emission standards and efforts aimed at eliminating gas-powered vehicles.
In addition to Oklahoma, the states joining the motion to intervene are Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and Wyoming.
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