Oklahoma
What TV channel is Oklahoma Sooners football on today?How to watch streaming on demand

The Oklahoma Sooners host the Maine Black Bears in late-season non-conference action. Kickoff is slated for 9 a.m. PT/12 p.m. ET on Saturday, November 2 with a live TV broadcast exclusively on ESPN Plus.
• WATCH: Oklahoma vs. Maine football is streaming live only on ESPN+
Oklahoma plays host to FCS opponent Maine this morning, with both teams coming in with 4-4 records. Oklahoma has dropped four of their last five games, putting them near the bottom of the SEC standings. A win here won’t change that, but this team clearly needs a momentum shift heading into a showdown with Missouri next weekend. Senior QB Carter Peevy leads the Black Bears, who have won three of their last five.
What TV channel is Oklahoma vs. Maine football on today?
When: Kickoff is set for 9 a.m. PT/12 p.m. ET (11 a.m. CT) on Saturday, November 2
Where: Memorial Stadium | Norman, OK
TV channel: SEC Network Plus on ESPN+ (Not available on traditional broadcast TV, only streaming on ESPN’s live sports streaming platform. Here’s a look at how you can watch ESPN+ live on your TV.)
Watch live stream online: You can watch a live stream of this game for less than $12 on ESPN+ (It’s just $11.99/month or $119.99/full year subscription, and you can cancel anytime.)
What TV channel is SEC Network Plus on?
SEC Network Plus or SECN+ is not a TV channel. It is basically it’s on division within ESPN Plus for SEC games that are not airing on TV, but are SEC games airing exclusively on the ESPN+ streaming platform.
What does SEC Network Plus cost? What does an SECN+ subscription include? SEC Network Plus is a part of ESPN Plus, so as long as you are signed up for ESPN Plus, you will see every SECN+ game available to stream on the watch ESPN app when you sign in or sign up for the ESPN+ service. ESPN+ costs just $11.99/month and you can cancel anytime.
Oklahoma vs. Maine spread, latest betting odds
Spread: OU: -34.5 | MAINE: +34.5
Over/Under: 46

Oklahoma
Hurt feelings: How Texas Tech softball ended the Oklahoma dynasty in the Women’s College World Series

Hailey Toney on Texas Tech softball’s ability to play in the clutch
Hailey Toney on Texas Tech softball’s ability to play in the clutch
- Texas Tech defeated Oklahoma 3-2 in the Women’s College World Series semifinals, ending the Sooners’ four-year title streak.
- Former Louisiana Ragin’ Cajuns players, now at Texas Tech, played key roles in the victory against their former teammate and Oklahoma pitcher, Sam Landry.
- The win sends Texas Tech to the championship series of the Women’s College World Series.
OKLAHOMA CITY — “No hard feelings” was not the way Monday night’s semifinals of the 2025 Women’s College World Series were going to end. It would’ve been impossible.
Too much was at stake at Devon Park, so much on the line for two programs in very different positions less than a year ago. Before Gerry Glasco took over the Texas Tech softball team, landed NiJaree Canady through the transfer portal and altered the course of Red Raider history, he was leading the Louisiana Ragin’ Cajuns, an emerging mid-major powerhouse with Division I-level talent dotting the roster.
When he left Lafayette, he took a number of players with him to Lubbock but urged his ace pitcher, Sam Landry, to go to Oklahoma. There wouldn’t have been enough innings for Landry with Canady in the fold, and her best chance at success laid with the Sooners.
Landry made the most of her year in the SEC, being drafted No. 1 in the Athletes Unlimited Softball League and guiding the Sooners to regular-season and co-tournament champion status with a mostly young roster. Glasco has spoken glowingly about his former player throughout the year, even in the lead-up to the WCWS last week.
Landry owns one of Glasco’s dogs. The name of his late daughter, Geri Ann, is written in her glove. When Oklahoma didn’t have her usual No. 12 available as a jersey number, she chose No. 21 to honor Geri Ann. Several of her former Louisiana teammates make up the bulk of Texas Tech’s starting lineup.
Somebody was getting their feelings hurt on Monday. It just wound up being Landry, and the Sooners.
Mihyia Davis’s one-out single, chopped over the head of Landry into center field, started the Texas Tech rally in the bottom of the seventh. Hailey Toney followed with a double to put Davis at third, then Lauren Allred hit a fly ball to right field, deep enough for the speedster Davis to slide in for the game-winning run, sending Texas Tech to the championship series of the Women’s College World Series with a 3-2 win, and ending the Sooners’ reign atop the college softball world after four consecutive national titles.
Two former Ragin’ Cajuns teamed up to end their former Louisiana teammates’ season, and career.
“Sam is a great pitcher,” Allred said of the game-winning at-bat. “Going against her, I knew it wasn’t going to be easy, especially with the history we have playing with each other.
“And going to my bat, Coach Hunter (Veach) always says, ‘Doing something really hard, really well, is really fun.’ It reminded me to have fun and just go up there with confidence and trust in all the preparation and training that I had. And I knew Mihyia Davis was probably one of the fastest players in the country, would make something happen as long as I got the ball in play.”
Davis, Texas Tech’s best hitter throughout the season, was hitless in the first two games of the WCWS. She wound up striking out in her first two at-bats against former teammate Landry. Assistant coach Tara Archibald, though, knew Davis was due.
“We kept telling her all week long, ‘Mihyia, you’re going to show up when we need you the most and we know that,’” Archibald said, “and, man, did she ever.”
The Red Raiders didn’t have much time to regroup after the Sooners tied the game in the top of the seventh. Abigale Dayton took an 0-2 offering from Canady for a two-run home run to tie the game. At that point, Canady had appeared to be cruising to another shutout before Sooner Magic took over again.
The best way to combat Sooner Magic, it seems, is with some Raider Power. Toney’s double continued a string of hits the freshman has collected after Canady’s had a (rare) tough inning. She did it in the Lubbock Regional (twice), and again against UCLA with home runs. On Monday, it was her double that put Davis into position for the win.
“That’s the whole team,” Toney said. “We all have each other’s backs no matter what. And she has had our back for the whole season and we’re just trying to have hers.”
Somebody had to leave Devon Park with an L, and Texas Tech made sure it wasn’t them. That didn’t make ending their old friend’s career any easier to swallow.
“Definitely strange,” Alexa Langeliers, another former Louisiana player, said. “I’m used to being on the same field behind her, but she gave it her all. She’s a great pitcher. She’s a great person, and tough end of the season. My heart goes out to her, but it is what it is. I love her to death and she’s just an amazing person.”
Langeleiers called it “surreal,” the whole game and the circumstances leading to Tech’s triumph. The senior second baseman admitted she didn’t think getting to the WCWS finals was going to happen, though the feeling is electric all the same.
That’s especially true for the players who followed Glasco to Texas Tech. Davis and Allred both said that the head coach believed in them, and they trusted him with their careers.
“Coach Glasco always had faith in me,” Allred said, “and I knew that he helped me get to the position I was going to be in, and I wanted to stay by him no matter what.”
Oklahoma
How to watch Oklahoma vs Texas Tech today: Time, TV channel in WCWS

The Oklahoma Sooners rebounded from their loss to Texas with a strong 4-1 win on Sunday evening over the Oregon Ducks. Isabela Emerling snapped out of her slump with a solo shot, and Cydney Sanders hit two home runs to power the Sooners to the semifinals.
Now, they’ll face Texas Tech and Red Raiders ace NiJaree Canady. Canady leads the nation in ERA at 0.86. She’s 32-5 this season. In the Women’s College World Series, Canady shut out Ole Miss and allowed just one run to the UCLA Bruins.
The Oklahoma Sooners will have to win two games on Monday to advance to the Women’s College Series finals. They’ll need an extraordinary effort from the Sooners lineup and the pitching staff to go toe-to-toe with Canady, a finalist for several National Player of the Year awards and a first-team All-American is a force.
But the Sooners have a lineup to be reckoned with. They’ll need to be at their best when they take on the Texas Tech Red Raiders. Here’s how you can tune into the game on Monday night.
Watch Oklahoma vs. Texas Tech live on Fubo
What channel is Oklahoma-Texas Tech on today?
TV Channel: ESPN
Livestream: Fubo, ESPN+
Watch Oklahoma vs. Texas Tech live on ESPN+
Oklahoma-Texas Tech time today
Date: Monday, June 2, 2025
Start time: 6 p.m. CT. Game two at 9:30 p.m. CT if OU wins first game.
Oklahoma Softball Schedule 2025
Date | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|
Feb. 6 | Cal State Northridge | W, 7-2 |
Feb. 6 | at San Diego State | W, 11-6 (9 inn.) |
Feb. 7 | California Baptist | W, 8-0 (5 inn.) |
Feb. 7 | Cal State Fullerton | W, 13-3 |
Feb. 8 | Loyola Marymount | W, 9-0 |
Feb. 9 | at Long Beach State | W, 2-0 (11 inn.) |
Feb. 15 | Hofstra | W, 8-0 (5 inn.) |
Feb. 15 | at No. 23/24 Baylor | W, 9-1 (5 inn.) |
Feb. 16 | Hofstra | W, 11-3 (5 inn.) |
Feb. 16 | at No. 23/24 Baylor | W, 8-0 (5 inn.) |
Feb. 22 | Tulsa | W, 8-0 (5 inn.) |
Feb. 23 | Wichita State | W, 8-1 |
Feb. 24 | Bowling Green | W, 8-5 (8 inn.) |
Feb. 24 | Abilene Christian | W, 9-1 (5 inn.) |
Feb. 28 | Marshall | W, 9-1 (5 inn.) |
Feb. 28 | Kansas | W, 9-1 (6 inn.) |
March 1 | Kansas | W, 8-0 (5 inn.) |
March 1 | Marshall | W, 11-0 (5 inn.) |
March 2 | Kansas City | W, 17-1 (5 inn.) |
March 7 | No. 10/11 South Carolina | W, 10-9 |
March 9 | No. 10/11 South Carolina | W, 10-9 |
March 9 | No. 10/11 South Carolina | W, 2-1 |
March 12 | at Tulsa | W, 10-2 (6 inn.) |
March 15 | at No. 15/12 Arkansas | W, 7-0 |
March 15 | at No. 15/12 Arkansas | W, 6-4 |
March 16 | at No. 15/12 Arkansas | W, 10-7 |
March 19 | East Texas A&M | W, 8-0 (5 inn.) |
March 21 | at Missouri | W, 8-0 (5 inn.) |
March 22 | at Missouri | L, 3-1 |
March 23 | at Missouri | W, 5-1 |
March 26 | at Wichita State | W, 19-16 |
March 28 | No. 10/9 Tennessee | L, 5-2 |
March 29 | No. 10/9 Tennessee | W, 4-1 |
March 30 | No. 10/9 Tennessee | L, 5-3 |
April 1 | at UT-Arlington | W, 13-2 (5 inn.) |
April 4 | St. Thomas | W, 12-4 (5 inn.) |
April 4 | UCF | W, 6-0 |
April 5 | UCF | Cancelled |
April 9 | Oklahoma State (Devon Park, OKC) | W, 11-3 (5 inn.) |
April 12 | at Alabama | W, 5-1 |
April 13 | at Alabama | L, 6-1 |
April 14 | at Alabama | L, 2-1 |
April 18 | Mississippi State (Devon Park, OKC) | W, 4-0 |
April 19 | Mississippi State (Devon Park, OKC) | W, 6-5 |
April 20 | Mississippi State (Devon Park, OKC) | W, 9-6 |
April 25 | Texas Longhorns | W, 7-6 |
April 26 | Texas Longhorns | W, 7-2 |
April 27 | Texas Longhorns | W, 9-8 |
May 1 | at Florida | W, 6-5 |
May 2 | at Florida | L, 9-4 |
May 3 | at Florida | L, 6-4 |
May 6-10 | SEC Tournament | Athens, Ga. |
May 8 | vs. LSU | W, 4-1 |
May 9 | vs. Arkansas | W, 8-6 |
May 10 | vs. Texas A&M | Canceled |
May 16-18 | NCAA Regionals | Norman, Okla. |
May 16 | vs. Boston | W, 8-0 (5 inn.) |
May 17 | vs. Cal | W, 11-2 (5 inn.) |
May 18 | vs. Cal | W, 12-1 (5 inn.) |
May 23-25 | NCAA Super Regionals | Norman, Okla. |
May 23 | vs. Alabama | W, 3-0 |
May 24 | vs. Alabama | W, 13-2 (5 inn.) |
May 29-June 6 | Women’s College World Series | Oklahoma City, Okla. |
May 29 | vs. Tennessee | W, 4-3 |
May 31 | vs. Texas | L, 4-2 |
June 1 | vs. Oregon | W, 4-1 |
June 2 | vs. Texas Tech | 6 p.m. CT |
June 2 | *vs Texas Tech | 9:30 p.m. CT |
*denotes if necessary
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Oklahoma
Oklahoma vs Oregon softball: How to watch today’s WCWS elimination game

Oklahoma and Oregon softball will meet today at 7 p.m. in the Women’s College World Series.
Fans can watch the game on ESPN2 or stream it on FuboTV, Sling or DirecTV.
Streaming Options
Streaming Options | Price/Month | Free Trial? | Deal |
---|---|---|---|
FuboTV | $84.99 | Yes | $20 off the first month |
Sling | $45.99 | N/A | N/A |
DirecTV | $79.99 | Yes | $20 off the first month |
DirecTV and FuboTV both offer free trials and $20 off the first month of your subscription. Sling Orange plans which include ESPN and ESPN2 are $45.99 per month.
Oregon defeated Ole Miss, 6-5 on Friday and Oklahoma was defeated by Texas, 4-2 on Saturday.
The winner of today’s game will advance to play Texas Tech, while the loser will be eliminated from the tournament.
The WCWS best-of-three championship finals will begin on June 5.
WOMEN’S COLLEGE WORLD SERIES
No. 2 Oklahoma vs. No. 16 Oregon
When: Sunday, June 1
Time: 7 p.m. ET
Where: Oklahoma City
Channel: ESPN2
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