Houston Chronicle Sunday

DALLAS DUSTUP

Sooners stun Horns on late TD pass to claim 53-45 four-OT thriller

- By Nick Moyle STAFF WRITER nmoyle@express-news.net twitter.com/NRMoyle

DALLAS— A couple years ago at AT&T Stadium, in the numbing aftermath of a Big 12 championsh­ip loss to Oklahoma, Sam Ehlinger sat and fielded questions and searched for the right answers— at least the ones that felt right.

Along the way he establishe­d what felt like a Texas Longhorn presidenti­al platform: “I will make it my mission to never let this team or this school feel this disappoint­ment again.”

Saturday afternoon, about 20miles east of where Ehlinger made that vow, No. 22 Texas and Oklahoma met again as they do every October, at the Cotton Bowl. Despite Ehlinger’s otherworld­ly comeback effort, the Longhorns (2-2, 1-2 Big 12) again failed to keep that promise, falling to the Sooners (2-2, 1-2 Big 12) 53-45 in an anarchic quadruple-overtime battle that seesawed for almost five hours.

“I have a lot of emotions right now, and I don’t know which one best pinpoints how I’m feeling,” Ehlinger said. “We showed the football team we are there at the end when we stay out of our own way.”

Discipline was Texas’ big talking point this week. The lack of it, the need to better drill and instill it.

After all, the Longhorns were still adjusting to a pair of new coordinato­rs, four new assistants and a slew of new starters following a shortened offseason. The penalties would stop, the slop on special teams would be cleaned up, the defense would start covering and tackling and the Ehlingerle­d offense would continue to find its footing.

But the samesort of problems that plagued Texas in a narrow overtime win over Texas Tech and a loss toTCU wreaked havoc on the Horns yet again. UT received 11 penalties for 101 yards, committed three turnovers and allowed six sacks.

“A lot of them are self-inflicted wounds,” Texas coach Tom Herman said. “And I’m disappoint­ed. Again, it’s my job to make sure they don’t happen.”

Texas had its opening drive wiped out by junior tailback Keaontay Ingram’s fumble, an ominous sight after his goal-line fumble in the loss to TCU. Soon after that, a busted coverage allowed freshman receiver Marvin Mims to break free and stroll in for a 30-yard touchdown reception. Even linebacker DeMarvion Overshown’s early intercepti­on of OU redshirt freshman Spencer Rattler wasn’t fully taken advantage of — senior center Derek Kerstetter’s unnecessar­y roughness penalty on fourth-and-1 turned a potential Ehlinger plunge into a 34-yard field goal.

Oklahoma also blocked Ryan Bujcevski’s punt in the second quarter. More accurately: Bujcevski ran directly into sophomore David Ugwoegbu, who smothered the kick and recovered at the UT 5. A handful of plays later, junior running back T. J. Pledger darted through a hole for a 5-yard touchdown to put Oklahoma ahead 17-10.

But Texas never wilted. And Oklahoma never went for the throat.

“Really proud of our guys for their resiliency and execution down the stretch,” Herman said. “But we have to improve on the penalties and we have to improve our special teams play and we certainly have to improve our gap integrity defensivel­y. And we have to find ways to defeat-man-to-man-coverage offensivel­y.

“Butwe have an opportunit­y to still have a really, really good season.”

Texas almost had an unbelievab­le win, too.

UT’s defense looked gassed heading into the fourth quarter following the Sooners’ run-heavy 17-play, 87-yard scoring drive that lasted eight minutes and sent droves of fans out of the boiling stadium.

Then Ehlinger, who accounted for 399 yards of total offense and six touchdowns, conjured some more magic.

He found receiver Joshua Moore for a 9-yard touchdown to cut UT’s deficit to 31-24. Texas didn’t have any timeouts remaining, but caught a game-changing break when Rattler’s incomplete third-down pass stopped the clock and forced a punt with two minutes left.

Ehlinger broke loose for two long runs, then flipped a 2-yard touchdown pass to Ingram with 14 seconds left to force overtime.

He opened the first extra period with a 3-yard touchdown rush. Oklahoma tight end Austin Stogner responded by winning a jump ball over Chris Adimora in the end zone. Rattler plunged across the goal line from a yard out, and Ehlinger galloped through the entire OU defense for his 25yard score.

The third overtime period featured Oklahoma blocking Cameron Dicker’s field goal, which was followed by Sooner kicker Gabe Brkic — 20-for-21 before this try — shanking a game-winner.

The backbreake­r came on OU’s second play of the fourth overtime. Rattler sped forward through the pocket and rifled a 25-yard touchdown pass to Drake Stoops, son of Bob, who got behind the defense.

Ehlinger’s final pass, on second-and-goal from the OU 19, fluttered over the head of receiver Tarik Black — senior corner Tre Brown flewin to grab it and seal the win, the Sooners’ fourth in five years in this series.

“We have the talent; that’s not the issue,” Ehlinger said. “We have the schemes, that’s not the issue. We always seem to be tripping ourselves up, getting in our own way, making mistakes in crucial times. The best teams don’t do that. It’s unfortunat­e, but I can’t change the past.”

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 ?? Michael Ainsworth / Associated Press ?? Oklahoma wide receiver Drake Stoops, right, scores the winning TD in the fourth overtime past UT defensive back Chris Brown.
Michael Ainsworth / Associated Press Oklahoma wide receiver Drake Stoops, right, scores the winning TD in the fourth overtime past UT defensive back Chris Brown.
 ?? Michael Ainsworth / Associated Press ?? Oklahoma linebacker David Ugwoegbu blocks a punt by UT punter Ryan Bujcevski in the second quarter.
Michael Ainsworth / Associated Press Oklahoma linebacker David Ugwoegbu blocks a punt by UT punter Ryan Bujcevski in the second quarter.

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