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snuffy
03-03-2008, 10:04 PM
Sooners, Cowboys Stage Another One For The Ages

By Dan Wetzel; Feb. 14, 2002; SportsLine.com Senior Writer

From tip to court-storming they brought the Orange Thunder, that improbably loud wave of searing noise, emotion and energy that will loosen your earwax and make you acutely aware you are in Gallagher-Iba, smack dab in the middle of college basketball at its very best. When Oklahoma -- hated, fourth-ranked Oklahoma -- was finally toppled, 79-72 in overtime, the Oklahoma State students came flooding down the bleachers, the pep band broke into double time and Eddie Sutton looked up and thought back.

Forty-four years before he was the young player, not the old coach, and it was second-ranked Kansas, with Wilt Chamberlain, that went down in overtime, not OU. But everything else was the same. The thrill, the noise, the undergrads dancing on the Gallagher-Iba floor in lost emotion. Sutton's smile, Sutton's satisfaction, the hop in Sutton's step was the same. It was 1958 all over again. "You know what the chancellor did after that win?" Sutton asked. "He cancelled classes the next day. You won't see that any more. But tonight was a big thrill for me even though I've coached a long time. This was special. This was really special."

Things don't always change quickly in Oklahoma and for that reason it's a state that takes more than its share of cracks from around the country. But sometimes change isn't so welcome either and there is something wholly wonderful about a game like the one OU and OSU staged Wednesday night in this historic arena. It was the 200th time these two schools had matched up and it meant as much as the first. It didn't matter OU was ranked so high, or State was reeling so hard. It was of no concern the Cowboys were without their star (Maurice Baker) and the Sooners had an immovable, unstoppable post player in Aaron McGhee.

This is what they call bedlam out here among the pumping oil derricks, the flatlands and the cattle ranches. And when bedlam hits Stillwater, when the Orange Thunder rocks the plains, when maroon and orange stare each other down, it's the same as it ever was. And hopefully will forever be. "I've coached a lot of basketball games," said Sutton, who recorded his 698th victory. "But I don't think you'll ever see a game where two teams played any harder than that." This is a rivalry that isn't as hot as Carolina-Duke, isn't as famous as Louisville-Kentucky. Neither game this year was even broadcast nationally, which is too bad for the nation. But you can't play it harder, you can't play it better, you can't make it mean any more. This was college basketball perfection.

OU played the perfect villain for the Stillwater crowd -- too big, too fast, too talented for slumping Oklahoma State, minus its best player, to realistically beat. The Cowboys were ranked 16th, playing at home, the best arena in college basketball, and it was the Sooners that were the favorites. OU plays a physical style, but so does OSU. This was a game that featured three near bench-clearing brawls ... in overtime alone. But Oklahoma State is an emotional team, a streaky, surging group in every way. It can rattle off 13 consecutive victories to start the season and slide to 3-5 in its last 8. It can get pushed around by Texas Tech, then fire back from 15 down. "We have some very emotional players," Sutton said.

But emotion can go the right way, especially when 13,611 fans are screaming for you. Every time Oklahoma powered its way into the lead, the Cowboys surged back, riding a helter-skelter perimeter defense, a ton of double teams and its jet-quick point guard Victor Williams. "There is quick, then there is Victor Williams," said Sampson after, shaking his head.

Every time that crowd roared, hitting decibel levels that make a jet engine sound like Church music, the Cowboys' emotion rode right on with it. "When the crowd's emotion gets going like that, you go too," said guard Melvin Sanders, who harassed OU's swift Hollis Price into 2-of-11 shooting. In the end the Cowboys survived into overtime and surged one final time, got one final streak, ended up winning by seven. In a game they absolutely needed and their fans absolutely wanted, they brought it big at the most important times. "You can't describe the feeling," said sophomore Ivan McFarlin of his game-clinching open-court steal, sprint and dunk into a sea of Orange behind the basket. "I was about to cry."

He wasn't the only one. Tears of joy, tears of frustration where shed all over the state. That's bedlam. It might not be known everywhere, but it doesn't make it any less special, any less significant. Out here in this little town on the big plains, in an ancient arena that has seen so many great ones, they staged another. Oklahoma-Oklahoma State, same as it ever was:pete:

andyokstate
03-03-2008, 10:59 PM
Thanks for posting that. I love this series and can't wait for Wednesday to get here!

Ride 'em, Cowboys!

Gman
03-03-2008, 11:31 PM
I always love to read that. What a great, well-written piece.

OKState918
03-04-2008, 12:09 AM
God, I hate OU.


Bedlam More Than a Mere Game
By Michael Harris
Senior Sports Editor

There’s a thing in this great state the natives have named “Bedlam,” and every time Oklahoma State and Oklahoma meet to prove their athletic prowess, it erupts with an unbridled fury.

The rivalry might not be as renowned as Notre Dame/Southern Cal, as celebrated as Ohio State/Michigan, or as glorified as Duke/North Carolina, but to those whose allegiances lie with either the Cowboys or Sooners, Bedlam is everything.

It’s a date players, coaches and fans circle at the beginning of each season.

It causes hundreds of students to abandon the warmth of their dorm rooms in favor of a hodge-podge tent city, appropriately named “Camp Sutton.”

It’s been rumored to divide families.

It certainly divides our great state.

It’s about bragging rights, basketball superiority and, perhaps most importantly, school pride.

Simply put, it’s a rivalry as basic as those between brothers and sisters and heated as that between the Union and Confederacy, and it consumes Oklahoma like no wildfire can.

When talking about the bad-blood between the Cowboys and the Sooners, however, one must always delve much deeper.

Whether an inferiority complex or simple reality, OSU has long had the perception that it lives in the shadow of its in-state brother.

Oklahoma State has always been treated like OU’s little brother. We were always the university that sat at the kid’s table when company came to visit, and when Oklahoma unwrapped Heisman trophies and national championships on Christmas morning, we got a damn bunny suit.

So, is the Bedlam Series the product of an Oklahoma State inferiority complex?

Perhaps. But aren’t most great rivalries?

It can only be assumed then, that much of the animosity the Cowboy nation feels toward the Sooners stems from OU’s perceptions of our beloved university.

That said, much of what drives the Bedlam feud is not necessarily OSU’s contempt for the University of Oklahoma, but rather OSU’s contempt for how we are perceived in relation to the OU.

And since things don’t always change quickly here, where oil derricks and cattle ranches are as prevalent as two-story buildings, it’s one Cowboy fans have been fighting for generations.

It might be a fact that the Sooners have a slight advantage in Bedlam games, but the Pokes have always prided themselves for the rich tradition surrounding the Cowboy program.

Oklahoma is a football school.

Oklahoma State is a basketball school.

And even though that perception is one whose basis has been challenged in recent years, it makes the Sooners *— those hated, crimson and cream wearing Sooners — the perfect villain.

Call it “little brother syndrome,” call it a“feud,” call it “pure hate” — beating Oklahoma amounts to much more than another “W” in the Cowboys’ wins column.

A victory is an absolution for decades worth of bad-blood between the two universities; the careers of coaches and players have been defined by legendary Bedlam wins; and the outcome of tonight’s game will affect the fanbases of both universities long after the final horn sounds.

Sound crazy?

No.

It’s just Bedlam.

wickerbill
03-04-2008, 05:35 AM
Maybe we'll fill the arena up for the first time all year. I was extremely disapponted to see thousands of empty seats last Saturday. This team has definitely earned a full arena for the last game of the season. Maybe then, we can live up to the atmosphere described in that article above.

frankeaton
03-04-2008, 06:54 AM
"Forty-four years before he was the young player, not the old coach, and it was second-ranked Kansas, with Wilt Chamberlain, that went down in overtime"

I was in the 1st grade when this happened. My student teacher's husband was the one that stole the ball from Wilt and made the basket to win... yes I am old.

Exit 174
03-04-2008, 11:05 AM
Who is this "Michael Harris" character?? What a clown!! :pete:

OSUSTORM
03-04-2008, 02:15 PM
Who is this "Michael Harris" character?? What a clown!! :pete:

I don't know who he is. You'd think he had his head up a big plastic head all year long.

Verb
03-04-2008, 04:27 PM
Who is this "Michael Harris" character?? What a clown!! :pete:

I just wish he'd post around these parts a little more often.

Ahem, and you could, too.

:D

OKState918
03-04-2008, 06:01 PM
I'll try to make the rounds more often! Usually by the time I get done wading through the, ahem... "junk" on some other boards, I'm on the verge of ulcers and figure I should take it easy. It'd probably do my health good to come here first :)

Tell that daughter of yours we miss her at baseball games! It isn't the same without her there this year!

Verb
03-04-2008, 06:04 PM
We're hoping to catch the Pokes in San Diego this weekend! She's digging out all her Diamond Dolls gear.

(And yes--come here FIRST!)

MASONOKIE
03-05-2008, 05:06 PM
What channel is the game on? I can't find it on Direct Tv..

AnniePokely
03-05-2008, 05:24 PM
It'd probably do my health good to come here first :)




Ding ding ding! Tell em what he's won Johnny!


:D