Oklahoma
Quick Hits: Injury Update, Facing Ollie Gordon II, Oklahoma State Scout and more
The West Virginia Mountaineers (2-2, 1-0) will travel for their first Big 12 Conference road matchup Saturday against the Oklahoma State Cowboys (3-2, 0-2). Kickoff is set for 4:00 p.m. EST and the action will broadcast on ESPN2.
Injury Update
West Virginia is relatively healthy after its bye week. Cornerback TJ Crandall left the game against Kansas and is questionable heading into this week.
Receiver Justin Robinson is also questionable after missing the Kansas contest.
Safety Aubrey Burks is expected to return after leaving Mountaineer Field on a stretcher against the Jayhawks.
Linebacker Reid Carrico is expected to return to the field after his absence against Kansas and receiver Preston Fox is expected to be a full participant after he was limited to a couple of punt returns for a fair catch versus Kansas.
Oklahoma State’s 0-2 Big 12 start
They’re coming into this game off two losses, but if you look at what they did last year, playing in the Big 12 Conference Championship game, they had two losses in a row too. They lost to South Alabama and Iowa State, and they rebounded to get all they way to the conference championship game. And so, for coach (Mike) Gundy, and a lot of that staffs been together for a long time, they’ve dealt with adversity before, and they’ve come back. We fully expect to get their best.
Facing reigning Big 12 Player of the Year RB Ollie Gordon II
I think he got banged up a little bit, but he played really well early [last week] against Kansas State (72 yards on nine carries in the first quarter. Finished with 16 carries and 76 rushing yards)
Last year’s game, we did some really nice things defensively. What hurt us is we missed some tackles on third down, a couple of them on Pressley. In the fourth quarter, we tried to force the issue. We got behind after we had the error where we rant into our own punt returner and then we got in a game where we were playing a little bit of catch up and we had to gamble a little bit on defense and then we didn’t split the fit the split zone a couple of times and that’s what hit us. He hit three explosive runs and I think two of them were on split zone and we didn’t fit it very well. He’s a great player. He’s going to be an NFL Player. He’s got great size and speed. We got to make sure we get multiple hats to the ball. We can’t ask our guys to be in multiple one on one situations and always get him down.
He’s played well this season. I don’t think his numbers completely tell the story. He’s going to have breakout games – I just hope it’s not against us.
Oklahoma State defense
Theres some stats their struggling in but there’s some statistics theyre doing really well in too. Where they really stick out is takeaways, third downs and redzones. They’ve done a really good job in those three areas. Traditionally, regardless of who the defensive coordinator is at Oklahoma State, they’ve done a really good job in those three areas.
OSU QB Alan Bowman
He’s sneaky [athletic]. They’ve called some quarterback runs. He’s hurt people with quarterback draw. They ran some quarterback power last week. They have some plays for him.
The thing that he does that is unique is he gets the ball out of his hand really fast. They’ve only given up one sack all year and that’s as much credit to him, probably more credit to him than the offensive line and the offensive line has done a really good job in pass protection, but he gets the ball out of his hand. He makes it really difficult to get to him.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma opens applications for winter heating assistance
OKLA. — Oklahomans who need help paying their heating bills can now apply for winter energy assistance through Oklahoma Human Services.
State officials announced Tuesday that online applications are open for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP).
The federally funded program helps qualifying households cover the cost of their primary heating source during the winter months.
Applications can be submitted online at OKDHSlive.org.
LIHEAP is offered twice each year — once during the winter for heating costs and again in the summer to help with cooling expenses.
Oklahoma Human Services also operates the Energy Crisis Assistance Program, which opens in the spring, along with year-round help for life-threatening energy emergencies.
Some households already receiving benefits through Oklahoma Human Services may be automatically approved for winter assistance and do not need to apply.
Those households have already been notified. Others who receive state assistance but are not pre-approved are encouraged to apply online.
Eligible households may receive one LIHEAP payment per year for winter heating, which is applied directly to their main energy source.
A household is defined as anyone sharing the same utility meter or energy supply.
Native American households may apply through Oklahoma Human Services or their tribal nation, but not both for the same program during the same federal fiscal year.
Income limits vary by household size. For example, a single-person household may earn up to $1,696 per month, while a family of four may earn up to $3,483 per month.
Larger households have higher income thresholds.
Applicants will need their most recent heating bill, a photo ID, Social Security number and proof of income.
Officials stress that utility information must be entered exactly as it appears on the bill.
Oklahoma Human Services expects high demand during the enrollment period and encourages applicants to apply online for faster processing.
Households with shutoff notices are not given priority and are urged to continue making payments or work with their utility providers to avoid service interruptions.
Funding for the winter heating program is limited, and applications will close once funds are exhausted.
The state has also announced tentative enrollment dates for other energy assistance programs in 2026:
- Energy Crisis Assistance Program: April 14
- Summer Cooling Assistance: July 14
Oklahoma
Three Takeaways From OKC Thunder’s Blowout Loss to Hornets
The Oklahoma City Thunder were shocked by the Charlotte Hornets on Monday night in Paycom Center, losing 124-97. This is OKC’s second loss in as many days, losing last night in Phoenix to the Suns 108-105.
The Thunder’s record is now 30-7 and they are 6-6 in their last 12 games. The No. 1 seed in the Western Conference is playing its worst stretch of basketball in over two years.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 21 points on 7-of-21 shooting to keep his 20-point streak alive. OKC shot a rough 28.2% from three-point range and 66.7% from the charity stripe.
Here are three takeaways from the Thunder’s 27-point home loss.
1. Inability to Make Shots
The glaring struggle for the Thunder tonight was on offense, with the team shooting 36.6% from the floor and 28.2% from three-point range. It’s difficult for any team to win shooting that poorly in a game.
The Thunder found open look after open look across the perimeter, but were unable to convert at a high rate. The Hornets were able to consistently help off of perimeter shooters to bring more defensive attention around Gilgeous-Alexander and inside the paint.
Poor shooting creates poor spacing and poor spacing creates ugly offensive execution. Poor spacing and shooting defined OKC’s woes against Charlotte.
2. Young and Hungry Hornets
Charlotte was by far the more energetic team in its win, amped up on both ends from start to finish, flying in for every loose ball. The young team came in looking to send Loud City home unhappy and they succeeded.
The Thunder were on the back end of an away/home back-to-back, having to quickly fly in from Phoenix to prepare for the game. The Hornets smelt blood in the water early, taking the game from their very first run.
After the game was tied at 33 at the end of the first quarter, Charlotte blazed into a 23-7 run throughout a large part of the second quarter to grasp a firm control of the flow of the game. The Thunder’s struggling offense could not find any momentum to claw back into the hole they fell into.
Charlotte’s shooting performance was remarkable from distance. With a plethora of shots taken with great difficulty, the Hornets managed to shoot 51.4% from three-point range.
The Hornets came in hungry and caught the reigning champions by surprise.
3. Gilgeous-Alexander Keeps Streak Alive Amid Struggles
Gilgeous-Alexander scoring above 20 points, with 21, to keep his historic 20-point streak alive, is the lone positive from a rough loss. Despite struggling through constant full-court pressure and double teams from the Hornets, the reigning MVP was able to muster just enough to keep his hunt for the record alive.
Gilgeous-Alexander shot 7-of-21 from the floor and 1-of-6 from three in the loss, adding six assists to his totals. He was OKC’s only 20-point scorer on the night.
The Canadian’s streak of scoring 20-or-more points now sits at 108 games, 18 behind Wilt Chamberlain’s record of 126.
Oklahoma
Former Colorado State RB Lloyd Avant headed to Oklahoma
The Sooners have added reinforcement to their backfield for the 2026 season in the form of Colorado State transfer Lloyd Avant.
The rising junior has committed to Oklahoma, and will join the program with two years of eligibility remaining. He’ll add explosiveness and versatility to an OU running back corps headlined by returning workhorses Xavier Robinson and Tory Blaylock.
It’s a return to the Sooner State for Avant, who spent his freshman season at Tulsa in 2024. He signed with the Golden Hurricane out of high school as a three-star recruit. At the time, TU’s head coach was Kevin Wilson, who’s now on staff with Oklahoma as an offensive analyst.
Avant made an immediate impact at Tulsa as a true freshman, rushing for 259 yards and a TD and adding a kick return touchdown. But after Wilson’s dismissal, the 5-foot-10, 200-pounder elected to enter the transfer portal and eventually landed at CSU. There, he became a weapon in several facets for the program during his lone season with the Rams. He totaled over 900 all-purpose yards, 417 of which came on the ground and 261 of which came via pass reception. He scored six total TD’s and averaged nearly six yards per touch.
Upon Avant’s second portal entry, the Sooners quickly emerged as the team to watch in his recruitment. He visited campus Sunday and didn’t take long to lock in his decision.
A native of Humble, Texas, Avant gives Oklahoma six scholarship running backs heading into the new season. He joins Robinson, Blaylock, Andy Bass, and a pair of incoming freshmen in Jonathan Hatton and DeZephen Walker. It’ll also be of some intrigue to see whether OU offers him the chance to return kicks. As a team, the Sooners attempted just two kickoff returns in 2025, opting almost exclusively for fair catches. That philosophy could change with a proven special teams weapon like Avant in the stable.
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