Dave Campbell: Kyler Murray leads Oklahoma past Texas in Big 12 championship game

TexasFootball.com editor in chief Dave Campbell gives his perspective from the second Big 12 title game.

ARLINGTON -- I found myself inside that huge AT&T Stadium (often called JerryWorld because that’s where Jerry Jones’ Dallas Cowboys play their home football games), but where this particular Saturday is where the Texas Longhorns and Oklahoma Sooners were getting ready to start the game that would decide which team will represent the Big 12 Conference as football champion and enter the so-called Final Four playoff to decide this season’s national champion. Other than Oklahoma, the other three teams will be defending champion Alabama, Clemson and Notre Dame. And that’s exclusive company.

But first Oklahoma had to defeat Texas, something they could not do back in October when they first played that Red River Showdown. The Longhorns won that thriller, 48-45. History (and the Las Vegas odds-makers) say it is extremely difficult for one good team to beat another good team twice in the same season. That’s why Oklahoma was favored by about 4 points in the early betting but by early Saturday the betting line had gone up to 7 points.

Obviously those people who put their money on Texas were also aware that Oklahoma has a lousy defense. Didn’t have one when the Sooners played Texas, didn’t have one when they played Texas Tech, didn’t even have one when they played Kansas.

And they didn’t have what Oklahoma once had when they had the Selmon brothers at defensive tackle or maybe Brian Bosworth at linebacker for three seasons starting with 1986. But what they had on Dec. 1 of this year was just good enough. And of course they had some winners to head up the offense.

Oklahoma this season reminded me of that old saying, “Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, Jack jump over the candle stick. ” But Sooner quarterback Kyler Murray can do even better. He can lead his Sooner team to its greatest football victory of the season. That is what he did in that big AT&T Stadium this past Saturday before a record attendance of 83,114, the highest attendance figure any conference football championship has ever achieved (it beat even the 1992 SEC championship game of 83,091).

Can Murray do it in his next game? I doubt it. He will be playing in the Orange Bowl against defending national champion Alabama, and last Saturday, even with a two-touchdown lead and with Alabama’s starting quarterback and Heisman Trophy contender Tua Tagovailoa knocked out of action with an ankle injury, powerful Georgia couldn’t do it. And Georgia not only beat Oklahoma last year, Georgia was ranked higher and has a better defense than Oklahoma this year.

But who knows? Maybe nothing can stop Kyler Murray this season. I know he got my Heisman vote this past Sunday when all the Heisman votes had to be in.

(Yes, I have been the Heisman sectional representative in charge of choosing the state chairmen for Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Colorado and New Mexico since years ago when Field Scovell turned that assignment over to me). My wife, Reba, and I used to go annually, but not since we got on up in years – I am 93.

The most memorable of our trips to the Heisman ceremony came in 1977 when Earl Campbell won the Heisman and the Heisman committee decided Earl’s mother, Ann, needed to be there to see her son be awarded college football’s highest honor. So they got in touch with Ann back in Tyler and told her they were flying her to New York for the ceremony. They arranged for someone to meet her at the New York air terminal and bring her to the Downtown Marriott Hotel, where the Heisman Trophy is always presented. And knowing Ann Campbell would be feel lost seeing all the skyscrapers and all, they asked my wife if she would meet Ann when she arrived at the hotel and pin a rose on herae)p. And if you ever see a photo of Ann, Earl and Texas football coach Fred Akers at the Heisman ceremony, you will see the rose that my wife pinned on Ann Campbell that day.

But back to last Saturday’s game where Kyle Murray reached down deep and did things that reminded me of what his daddy (Kevin Murray) did to Baylor in the Baylor-Texas A&M game at Kyle Field on Oct. 18, 1986, before 74,739 fans, the seventh largest crowd ever to see a Baylor-A&M crowd on Kyle Field during the SWC years. I was there to cover the game and saw All-SWC quarterback Kevin Murray break the Baylor Nation’s collective hearts by leading the Aggies to a 31-30 victory. That game was later voted the best football game played in the SWC during the Decade of the Eighties.

As you can see, I’m trying to delay as possible the fact that the Longhorns lost last Saturday’s big showdown. But they did lose, 39-27, after breaking in front and leading until late in the second quarter and moving into a 27-27 tie with OU at the end of the third quarter. At that moment it was still either team’s ball game to win or lose.

Then the bottom fell out.

Oklahoma’s field goal kicker Austin Seibert booted a 31-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter to move the Sooners ahead, 30-27 and then Kyler Murray threw an 18-yard pass to tall (6-2, 221-pound sophomore) receiver Grant Calcaterra in the Texas end zone for the touchdown that nailed down the Sooner victory. Oklahoma had moved 65 yards in 11 plays to get the touchdown 

The odd part of it was that Calcaterra earlier had managed fewer than 325 receiving yards, and his catch in the UT end zone was a ONE-HANDED grab. That catch, experts tell us, will live on in Oklahoma history forever. “What a play,” Dallas News special contributor Spenser Davis quoted Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley as saying after the game. Incidentally, Riley is a Texan, from Muleshoe (pop 5,000, in far-out West Texas), so this state didn’t lose out entirely. If Murray should win the Heisman, Riley would be hitting 2-for-2. Oklahoma’s Baker Mayfield (another Texan, from the Austin area) won the Heisman last season in Riley’s first year as OU coach.

Actually, Texas quarterback Sam Ehlinger (6-3, 230, only a sophomore) played well enough for the Longhorns to win. He completed 23 of his 36 passes for a whopping 349 yards and 2 touchdowns and threw only one interception. But that one time he got sacked in his own end zone that resulted in OU getting a safety, that was the one that turned the game wrong-side out. And that wasn’t Sam’s fault. The Longhorn who failed to block OU sophomore cornerback Tre Brown when he came blitzing in on Ehlinger, tackling him for a safety, is the guy to blame.

And all those penalties also played a big role in the Longhorns’ downfall. Texas was flagged 13 times for 128 yards, tying a championship record for penalty yardage, and some of the flags were extremely costly – grabbing face masks and the like. “It’s hard to win a game when you’re going backwards that many times,” one senior Longhorn said after the game. And Texas coach Tom Herman said after the game: “We had some aggressive penalties that were called that hurt us.”

But Ehlinger said he will be back and with the mission to win the 2019 conference title, and he has good reason to think so. Texas looked to me as the team for next year, Oklahoma a team for this current season. The Sooners lose Murray and four other offensive starters (only one starter on defense, but the defense was OU’s main weakness this season); Texas keeps its quarterback and loses only 3 offensive starters but does lose 8 defensive starters. However, recruiting has long been a Longhorn strength.

As for the final team statistics, OU led in first downs, 39-27; in net rushing, 129 to UT’s 88; in net passing, 379 to UT’s 349 and in total offense, 74 plays for 508 yards to UT’s 69 plays for 437 yards. Texas was flagged 13 times for 128 yards, Oklahoma only 5 times for 60 yards. Texas threw no interceptions, Oklahoma only one for 5 yards. Oklahoma was the only team to lose a fumble.

In individual rushing, OU’s Trey Sermon had a net of 65 yards, Kyler Murray 39 yards and Kennedy Brooks 28 yards. Ehlinger also was Texas’ top rusher with a net of 42 yards but rushed for 2 touchdowns.

In passing, Murray completed 25 of his 34 passes for 379 yards and 3 touchdowns but was sacked twice. Ehlinger completed 23 of his 36 throws for 349 yards and 2 touchdowns but was sacked 3 times.

In receiving, CeeDee Lamb was the OU leader with 6 catches for 167 yards and one score. Marquise Brown caught 5 passes for 54 yards and Grant Calcaterra caught 3 for 38 yards and 2 touchdowns.For the Longhorns, Collin Johnson was the Longhorn’s and the game’s leader with 8 catches for 177 yards and one score, and Lil Jordan Humphrey caught 7 balls for 51 yards and a score. Devin Duvernay caught 3 passes for 56 yards.

On defense, linebacker Curtis Bolton was tops with 10 stops (3 solo) and cornerback Tre Brown had 7 (5 solo). For Texas, middle linebacker Anthony Wheeler had 12 stops (6 solo) and rover Gary Johnson had 11 (6 solo).

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