TUSCALOOSA, Ala.— Going up against the No. 1 team doesn't leave a lot of room for error, and from the first rotation to the last, Alabama's night was riddled with mistakes.
In its first true road test of the season, the No. 1 Oklahoma women’s gymnastics team took down No. 10 Alabama, 197.550-196.300, Friday night inside Coleman Coliseum. The Sooners are now 8-0 on the year and 2-0 in SEC competition.
Oklahoma's gymnastics team will go for its first-ever SEC conference road win against No. 10 Alabama one week after beating Missouri.
Coach K.J. Kindler and the top-ranked OU women's gymnastics team defeated No. 10 Alabama on Friday night in the Sooners' first road meet in the SEC.
To start out on vault, freshman Lily Pederson led the Sooners with a strong 9.875. A 9.95 from Faith Torrez gave Oklahoma the edge over Alabama in vault, winning the event 49.300-49.075.
Brad Crawford, who writes for 247Sports, ranked the ten toughest schedules in college football for 2025. He ranked OU’s gauntlet as the hardest in the entire country. He projected that the Sooners will play a ridiculous eight ranked opponents in one season.
The Sooners' schedule is tough. It will be one of the more difficult slates in 2025. But there's no guarantee that the teams on their schedule will be as good as they were in 2024. Oklahoma, on the other hand, should be significantly improved as their offense gets much better under Arbuckle and Mateer.
With the contact period set to end on February 1, members of the Clemson coaching staff are out in full force this week. Cornerbacks coach Mike Reed was in Ohio visiting with 5-star CB Elbert Hill
Hurts’ winning percentage as a starter in the NFL is 68.9. Compare that to Dan Marino, who is considered by many to be the NFL’s greatest passer of all time and the best player never to win a Super Bowl. As a starter, Marino won 61.3 percent of his games and played in one Super Bowl.
Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer sent the Crimson Tide's quarterback a very strong message ahead of season without Jalen Milroe.
College basketball wouldn’t be what it is without its elite true freshman players. Just one year out of high school, the highest-rated players enter college basketball with high levels of anticipation.
No. 13 Texas A&M men’s basketball coupled a season-best free throw shooting performance with a dominant rebounding effort to take down Oklahoma, 75-68.