NORMAN, Okla. – The midway lights of the State Fair of Texas will shine brighter this weekend as the sixth-ranked Oklahoma Sooners prepare to face the Texas Longhorns in the annual Red River Rivalry. Kickoff is set for 2:30 p.m. inside Cotton Bowl Stadium in Dallas, Tx. The game will be nationally televised on ABC.
The Sooners (5-0, 1-0) enter the week ranked No. 6 in the latest AP poll following an emphatic 44-0 win over the Kent State Golden Flashes this past weekend, Oklahoma’s first shutout win since the 2023 season opener vs. Arkansas State.
Oklahoma’s No. 6 AP ranking this week is its highest when facing Texas since 2021, when the No. 6 Sooners posted a 55-48 victory over the No. 21 Longhorns. OU is 17-9-2 all-time against Texas when the Sooners are ranked in the AP top 10.
OU enters the Red River Rivalry with the top-ranked defense in college football, leading the nation and SEC in several key categories including total defense (193 yards allowed per game), sacks per game (4.2), opponent yards per play (3.5), 3rd down conversion percentage (17.4) and takles for loss per game (10). Offensively, OU is averaging 415.2 yards per game and 33.8 points per game.
The Longhorns (3-2, 0-1) are now unranked after falling to the Florida Gators 21-29 over the weekend. Texas ranks in the top 20 in several defensive categories including total defense, (260.2 yards allowed per game), 3rd down conversion percentage (29) and scoring defense (12 points per game allowed).
OU owns a 30-22-3 series lead over Texas since 1970 and a 17-9 record against the Longhorns since the start of the 2000 season. For more on the history between the two teams, visit soonersports.com.
About the University of Oklahoma
Founded in 1890, the University of Oklahoma is a public research university located in Norman, Oklahoma. As the state’s flagship university, OU serves the educational, cultural, economic and health care needs of the state, region and nation. For more information about the university, visit www.ou.edu.
Ian F. Dunn, M.D., executive dean of the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine and chief physician executive for OU Health, the university’s health care partner, has been named to a one-year term with the Council of Deans Administrative Board with the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC).
The Hudson Fellows in Public Health Program – a select group of doctoral students at the University of Oklahoma Hudson College of Public Health – will observe its 10th anniversary on April 9 with the annual Hudson Fellows Symposium. The event will feature a noontime lecture by health innovation leader Vivian S. Lee, M.D., Ph.D., MBA.
New research from University of Oklahoma researchers, published in Cell Reports, reveals that a hormone that reverses obesity in mice appears to work by signaling to a brain region involved in metabolism and appetite regulation, the same area targeted by the popular GLP-1 drugs.