The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Red River rematch: Texas-OU away from fair for Big 12 title

- By Stephen Hawkins

ARLINGTON, TEXAS >> Former Texas defensive end Cory Redding would have loved to have another shot at Oklahoma in his college career, especially in 2001 when the only loss for the Longhorns before the Big 12 championsh­ip game was to their Red River rival.

But back then, the Big 12 still had 12 teams and two divisions. There was never the chance for a rematch.

On Saturday, for the first time in 115 years, the fifthranke­d Sooners (11-1) and ninth-ranked Longhorns (93) will face each other for the second time in the same season. Texas won 48-45 eight weeks ago at the State Fair of Texas, where every game between the two teams has been played since 1929.

“Regardless of where you put them, even if it’s on a playground, it’s going to be the same — a bloodbath,” Redding said. “It’s just going to be the nature of that game. Nothing gets better than when those teams meet.”

Instead of Cotton Bowl Stadium, where passionate fans clad in crimson or burnt orange are split 5050 for the regular-season games always played on the first or second Saturday in October, the Big 12 championsh­ip game will be decided about 20 miles away at the home of the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys.

“You’re playing for a championsh­ip. To me, that trumps any of this,” Sooners coach Lincoln Riley said. “I do think how important of a game it is is maybe going to overshadow the fact that it is OU-Texas a little bit.”

Or maybe having a championsh­ip on the line (and for the three-time defending Big 12 champion Sooners the chance to avenge their only loss and maybe get into the College Football Playoff again) will only add to the bitter rivalry first played in 1900.

“Deep pride. It’s just a lot of that tradition, the Sooners don’t like Texas and the Longhorns don’t like Oklahoma,” said Redding, who was part of a win over the Sooners as a freshman in 1999 that was followed by three consecutiv­e losses in the series before his 13-season NFL career.

Baker Mayfield, the No. 1 overall pick by the NFL’s Cleveland Browns after winning the Heisman Trophy last season as the Sooners quarterbac­k, won his last two meetings against Texas.

“It will be interestin­g to see it in the Big 12 championsh­ip,” Mayfield said after flashing a downward “hook ‘em horns” hand signal in the Browns locker room this week. “I’m excited to watch it, I’ll just say that.”

Colt McCoy, the Longhorns’ quarterbac­k for their last Big 12 title in 2009, used the terms “unbelievab­le” and “amazing” when talking about the rematch. He said as a player he would “just be completely stoked” to be part of such a rematch.

“That tradition at the Cotton Bowl will never change. It’s one of the best venues in football, best game in football. I think that you look at this in a different way,” said McCoy, now the Washington Redskins quarterbac­k. “This is an opportunit­y to actually go win the Big 12 championsh­ip, and it’s against a team that’s one of your biggest rivals. I think that’s how each team will approach it.”

 ?? COOPER NEILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Texas tight end Andrew Beck (47) wears the Golden Hat and celebrates with fans after defeating Oklahoma 48-45 at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas.
COOPER NEILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Texas tight end Andrew Beck (47) wears the Golden Hat and celebrates with fans after defeating Oklahoma 48-45 at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas.

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