The Oklahoman

Pistols keep misfiring in Ames

- Scott Wright swright@ oklahoman.com

Oklahoma State needs a win Saturday over Iowa State to keep its slim hopes alive to reach the Big 12 championsh­ip game. But Ames, Iowa, has been a difficult place for the Cowboys to play in recent years.

AMES, IOWA — Oklahoma State quarterbac­k Mason Rudolph didn’t expect what he saw on his first trip — and only trip, prior to Saturday — inside Iowa State’s Jack Trice Stadium.

“The crowd, and how much they were into it,” the OSU quarterbac­k said. “Their fans are great.”

And that environmen­t was for a three-win Iowa State team hosting a 9-0 Cowboy squad. Imagine what Saturday will be like for a Cyclone fanbase that, for the most part, is as surprised as you are that its team is 6-3 and ranked No. 21.

No. 15 OSU will kick off against the Cyclones at 11 a.m. Saturday, needing a win to stay alive for a spot in the Big 12 championsh­ip game.

But trips to Ames haven’t always been kind to the Cowboys. OSU fans don’t need to be reminded of the 2011 game, the only loss in an otherwise perfect season, derailing a potential run to the BCS title game.

OSU is 3-2 in Ames under coach Mike Gundy, losing a lopsided game in his first season to a Dan McCarney-coached team during his run of success with the Cyclones.

Gundy’s teams had easy wins in 2009 and 2013. Then came that 2015 Rudolph was talking about.

Iowa State jumped to

a 24-7 lead in the second quarter, and still led 31-21 a few minutes into the fourth. But OSU closed the game with two touchdowns and a fourthquar­ter shutout from the defense, scoring the gamewinnin­g TD with 3:06 left in a 35-31 victory.

“I had pneumonia that day,” OSU linebacker Chad Whitener said. “I don’t know what it is about that place. It’s just a different environmen­t. You don’t think it would get that loud, but it gets rocking up there. All their fans

are really passionate about what they’re cheering for.”

While Saturday’s weather report has become more favorable as the week went on — starting off with a good chance for snow and turning to low 40s with no precipitat­ion expected — it’s almost always a frigid feeling. And in a season like this, where it was 70 degrees on the first Saturday of November, a coldweathe­r game can present difficulti­es.

Trice Stadium has a natural surface, which is somewhat rare in the Big 12, and the Kentucky bluegrass that grows on it isn’t seen much outside northern parts of the country.

So Saturday becomes a question of focus. Can the Cowboys block out the atmosphere, the weather, the grass?

That’s where OSU’s strong veteran leaders offer the most value.

“Playing on the road is difficult, but we have a lot of guys on this team who have done it a lot,” OSU senior center Brad Lundblade said. “Coach Gundy always says, when we go on the road, it’s our 70 against their 50,000 or 60,000 or whatever they have. So having that leadership we have is really important in those situations.”

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 ?? [PHOTO BY NATE BILLINGS, THE OKLAHOMAN] ?? Oklahoma State receiver James Washington is tackled during a 2015 game at Iowa State, a game where the Cowboys had to rally from 10 points down in the fourth quarter for a 35-31 win.
[PHOTO BY NATE BILLINGS, THE OKLAHOMAN] Oklahoma State receiver James Washington is tackled during a 2015 game at Iowa State, a game where the Cowboys had to rally from 10 points down in the fourth quarter for a 35-31 win.
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