Oklahoma
Oklahoma State Squanders 17-Point Lead to Lose to TCU 74-69
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The Cowboys will go at least another four days without a Big 12 win.
Oklahoma State lost to TCU 74-69 on Tuesday night in Gallagher-Iba Arena to extend its losing streak to six and leave the Cowboys still in search of their first conference win of the season as they dropped to 8-11. At 0-6, this is OSU’s worst start to league play since losing its first eight in the 2019-20 season. TCU, meanwhile, put the breaks on a streak after losing two straight last week.
That first Big 12 win was on the mind of everyone at GIA, though, when the Cowboys led by as many as 17 in the first half. Tied at six, OSU came out of a timeout scoring 12 unanswered and continued to build on that lead. Then things got uncomfortable. The Cowboys went as cold as the outside air, failing to make a field goal for the last 5:57 of the half and went to the locker room with only a 37-33 lead.
Then, just as OSU did to begin the game, TCU started the second half just as hot on a 9-2 run, and within 2:36, Mike Boynton was calling a timeout with his team down three after a 3-pointer from Emanuel Miller.
However, John-Michael Wright did come out of the timeout with back-to-back makes from beyond the arc for OSU’s first field goals since the 5:57 mark in the first half and gave his team the lead back. Wright’s 3s were part of an 8-0 run for OSU before TCU answered with a 7-0 run of its own as the two went back and forth like teams desperate to get back into the win column.
It wasn’t until there was 7:49 left in the game before a team obtained a lead it wouldn’t lose after TCU had a 7-0 run that was capped by a pair of free throws from Micah Peavy that gave his team a 61-59 lead. The Horned Frogs’ final five-point advantage was their largest lead of the game.
OSU was never out of it, but also could never really get back into it, as, just like the first half, the Cowboys once again didn’t hit a field goal the last 5:57 of the second half.
Wright’s 3-pointer was the Cowboys’ last field goal of the game before they only made five free throws the rest of the way. Making his second straight start, Wright led OSU with 16 points, going 3-for-6 from 3-point range. Javon Small was the only other OSU starter to reach double digits with 15. Eric Dailey Jr. and Jarius Hicklen came off the bench to score 13 and 12, respectively.
Former OSU guard Avery Anderson put up a season-high 15 in his return to GIA. Emanuel Miller led the Horned Frogs, though, with a 21-point, 11-rebound double-double.
The Cowboys will stay in Stillwater to host West Virginia at 1 p.m. Saturday. At 7-12, the Mountaineers are the only other team in the Big 12 with a losing record. Although, WVU does have a pair of conference wins.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma Mourns the Death of Football Legend Clendon Thomas
Clendon Thomas, one of the foundational pieces of Bud Wilkinson’s 1950s dynasty at Oklahoma and one of the most versatile players in the history of the program, died Monday night.
Thomas, 90, grew up in Oklahoma City and was a standout at Southeast High School, where he stood out with tremendous speed to go with unusual size.
“I got do do what I dreamed about doing,” Thomas told the National Football Foundation in 2011.
Wilkinson mined elite talent from all over the Sooner State while also establishing recruiting roots throughout north Texas, and he certainly didn’t hesitate to scoop up Thomas, who won two national championships, made the College Football Hall of Fame and plied his skills into an 11-year career in the NFL.
Thomas played three seasons at OU under Wilkinson (1955-57) and received All-Big Seven Conference honors as a halfback in 1956 and 1957. In 1957, he earned consensus first-team All-America honors.
In 2011, Thomas was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. He was the 19th overall pick in the second round of the 1958 NFL Draft.
Beyond all that, Thomas starred on offense, defense and special teams for the second half of Wilkinson’s NCAA record 47-game winning streak and was part of the group that broke the color barrier in Norman.
In Gary King’s 1988 book, “An Autumn Remembered; Bud Wilkinson’s Legendary ’56 Sooners,” King references the now infamous Sports Illustrated issue explaining “Why Oklahoma Is Unbeatable,” which quoted Thomas as proud of being part of the streak — and not wanting to be a part of the team that breaks it.
“You can’t pinpoint it (OU’s winning spirit),” Thomas said. “The guys way back started it. Then it rubs off on you. We go out and we win and we play to win. None of us wants to be on the team that ends this streak. I guess no matter what else you ever did, people would remember were on the team that lost the game that ended the streak.”
The following Saturday, Notre Dame ended the streak with a 7-0 victory in Norman.
Thomas was also teammates with fellow Oklahoma City native Prentice Gautt, who in 1957 became the first black scholarship football player at the University of Oklahoma. In a time when tensions might have run hot, Thomas was one of those who always kept a cool head.
Thomas told King, “If there were problems, there were very few. I was not aware of any. Basically, we had a whole team that accepted him. He was a good guy. They couldn’t have picked a better person to be the first black player because of his personality, his ability as a student and his ability as a player.”
Even now, 70 years after his college football career began, the 6-foot-2, 195-pound Thomas — unusually big for a halfback in the 1950s — still sits at No. 23 in OU history with 2,199 rushing yards despite playing in Wilkinson’s Split T offense that was famous for spreading the football to numerous players all over the field. In his career, Thomas averaged 6.81 yards per rush, which still ranks fourth all-time at the school among OU’s top 30 rushers.
Thomas also ranks No. 25 in program history with 37 total touchdowns, and his 1956 total of 18 TDs still ranks tied for 11th in OU annals.
His 3,303 all-purpose yards (2,199 rushing, 304 receiving, 405 on punt returns, 324 on punt returns and 71 on interceptions) still ranks No. 23 in the Oklahoma history books.
As a junior in 1956, Thomas led the nation in scoring with 108 total points (18 touchdowns). Thomas led the team with 1,225 all-purpose yards, which included 878 rushing, a team-high 241 receiving yards, 178 on kickoff returns and 115 on punt returns.
As a senior, he again led Wilkinson’s squad in total offense (968 yards) and scored 10 touchdowns. He also punted 41 times and led the Sooners with a 37-yard average.
Thomas led the Sooners in kickoff returns in both ’56 and ’57, averaging 24.8 yards per runback.
He achieved two other marks that still are among the best ever at OU: Thomas’ average of 17.7 yards on punt returns (212 yards) set during his sophomore year in 1955, is tied for third as the all-time single-season mark, and his career average of 20.3 yards per punt return ranks No. 2 among the Crimson and Cream.
Thomas played in the same backfield as Gautt (a two-time All-Big Seven back and eight-year pro), Jimmy Harris (the Sooners’ winningest quarterback with a 25-0 record as the starter) and Tommy McDonald (one of just two Sooners in both the pro and college halls of fame) — and he still stood out as one of Wilkinson’s most prolific and most accomplished players.
Among Thomas’ other exploits in Norman, he rushed 13 times for 123 yards in the Sooners’ 1956 victory over Texas and finished with six career 100-yard rushing games, including a career-high 162 in the 1957 victory over Oklahoma State and 101 (on just eight carries) in a win over Nebraska.
Still, Thomas’ teams at OU combined to win 31 games and lose just once.
Thomas played defensive back for 11 seasons in the NFL for the Rams (1958-61) and Steelers (1962-68) and finished his pro career with 27 interceptions for 244 return yards to go with 10 fumble recoveries and one touchdown.
A year after picking off seven passes in 1962, Thomas was recognized in 1963 for the Pro Bowl and earned second-team All-Pro honors as he brought down eight interceptions (for 122 yards).
Thomas also landed second-team All-Pro accolades in 1962, ’63, and ’66.
He remained versatile enough in the NFL to contribute on offense as well: he caught 60 passes for 1,046 yards and four touchdowns during his career, including a career-high 431 for the Steelers in 1965, and also added 63 yards receiving, 73 yards on punt returns and 552 yards on kickoff returns. He also served one game as the Rams’ punter in 1958, averaging 33.0 yards per punt.
Following his playing career, Thomas enjoyed several business ventures in Oklahoma City.
Oklahoma
Does Drew Mestemaker Have Path to Heisman at Oklahoma State?
Oklahoma State hasn’t had a Heisman winner since 1988, but it might have a candidate next season.
Throughout OSU football history, there have been some iconic players to roll through Stillwater and plenty more iconic college football seasons. Most recently, Ollie Gordon’s 2023 campaign sent shockwaves through the college football landscape as he broke out to become the nation’s leading rusher and led OSU to a Big 12 Championship appearance and a 10-win season.
Of course, that would be the final big season of the Mike Gundy era. After that 10-4 campaign that saw OSU reach heights no one could have expected, the Cowboys fell off a cliff, winning only four games since.
With Gundy now out at OSU, Eric Morris is looking to bring another era of success to Stillwater, and it might all start with a bang with Drew Mestemaker running the show under center in 2026. Last season, Mestemaker was the starting quarterback for Morris’ North Texas squad and established himself as one of the top passers in the country.
While OSU has seen guys like Brandon Weeden, Mason Rudolph and Zac Robinson over the years, it’s been a while since the Cowboys have had an elite gunslinger, which Mestemaker could soon be in Stillwater. With the Mean Green in 2025, Mestemaker finished with 4,379 yards, 34 touchdowns and nine interceptions, marks which would make him the talk of college football if he can repeat that against Big 12 competition.
Of course, any Heisman campaign for Mestemaker will be about much more than his impressive numbers on the field. OSU has managed to win only two games against FBS teams in the past two years and is riding a 19-game Big 12 losing streak.
Anything Mestemaker can do in the stat sheet is great, but his real impact that would catch Heisman-like attention is how his play changes the Cowboys’ fate. If OSU can climb back into the Big 12 title picture in just one season after a 1-11 record in 2025, Mestemaker will almost certainly be at the front of that story. After Fernando Mendoza’s Heisman run at Indiana, the stage is clearly set for players like Mestemaker to use immense team success to their advantage in the Heisman race.
Perhaps putting Mestemaker in any sort of Heisman talks is premature, but considering his year at North Texas and how quickly turnarounds can happen in this era of college football, don’t be shocked if a Cowboy is at the Heisman ceremony in December.
Oklahoma
Two arrested on murder complaints following fatal NW OKC sledding crash
Two people were arrested on murder complaints following a deadly sledding crash in northwest Oklahoma City Sunday night, according to police.
Police said the crash happened near Northwest 81st Street and Northwest Walker Avenue.
According to police, Makayla Mitchell, 31, was on a sled being pulled by a car driven by Angel Walzier, 22. Police said the rope connecting the sled to the car broke, and caused Mitchell to stop in the street.
Police said James Kirk, 24, was in a separate car and hit Mitchell.
Mitchell was pronounced dead on the scene, police said.
Kirk and Walzier were both evaluated by a Drug Recognition Officer, who believed they both showed signs of impairment.
Police said blood draw warrants were completed for Kirk and Walzier.
Kirk was arrested on multiple complaints, including murder II, aggravated DUI, child endangerment, and causing fatality collision w/o a license.
Walzier was arrested on complaints of murder II and aggravated DUI.
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