Texarkana Gazette

Texas, OU set for unusual version of Red River rivalry

- By Schuyler Dixon

DALLAS — No. 22 Texas and Oklahoma will meet with both the Red River rivals not ranked in the top 20 for the first time in the 21st century, in a mostly empty Cotton Bowl without the masses of burnt orange and crimson divided at the 50-yard line.

A masked Big Tex will greet the smattering of visitors in his usual slow drawl today, but with the Texas Star ferris wheel and every other ride silent behind him. The pandemic shut down the state fair for the first time since World War II.

The five-time defending Big 12 champion Sooners (1-2, 0-2) have lost consecutiv­e games for the first time since 1999, the year Texas won under circumstan­ces similar to now in Bob Stoops’ first season at OU

when the No. 23 Longhorns rallied to beat the unranked Sooners.

Lincoln Riley sure isn’t used to this after taking Oklahoma to the College Football Playoff each of his first three years since replacing Stoops. He has an unranked team for the first time coming off losses to Kansas State and Iowa State.

Texas coach Tom Herman doesn’t think any of the above matters, nor does last week’s 33-31 loss to TCU that knocked the Longhorns (2-1, 1-1) out of the top 10.

“This is in my opinion the greatest rivalry in college football,” Herman said. “I know a lot is going to be different because of 2020, but this is still Oklahoma-Texas.”

Sam Ehlinger is set to be the fifth Texas quarterbac­k to start this rivalry four times, not counting the Big 12 championsh­ip game two years ago. He’s 1-2 in the Cotton Bowl, and also lost the 2018 title game to the Sooners at nearby AT&T Stadium, home of the Dallas Cowboys.

Talented Oklahoma freshman Spencer Rattler is trying to follow in the Heisman Trophy tradition of Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray, who became No. 1 NFL draft picks after leading the Sooners to the playoff under Riley.

Rattler’s first experience of running down the Cotton Bowl ramp won’t be nearly what it was for Ehlinger and so many others before him because capacity is being limited to 25,000 in the 90-yearold stadium that now seats

93,000.

“It’s hard to understand what it feels like to play this game,” Riley said. “Now this year, there’s definitely going to be some difference­s. It’s still gonna be a great football game. That’s not going to stop that.”

STRANGE DAY INDEED From the moment the buses reach the state fairground, it will feel different for players who have experience­d the game before. Normally, throngs of people enjoying the state fair line up to welcome — or jeer — the caravan.

“Just the bus ride in is always one of the, other than the game, is one of the coolest parts of this,” Riley said. “To pull into the fairground­s without anybody there will be a little eerie.”

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