Oklahoma tops Texas to win fourth straight Big 12 title

Oklahoma quarterback Kyler Murray looks to pass as Texas linebacker Anthony Wheeler closes in during the first half of the Big 12 football championship game on Saturday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
Oklahoma quarterback Kyler Murray looks to pass as Texas linebacker Anthony Wheeler closes in during the first half of the Big 12 football championship game on Saturday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

ARLINGTON, Texas - Kyler Murray had another Heisman Trophy-worthy performance, Oklahoma's much-maligned defense made some big key plays and the fifth-ranked Sooners won yet another conference title.

Now the 12-time Big 12 champions wait to find out if all that is good enough to get back into the College Football Playoff.

"There's no doubt we have a playoff-worthy team, but I understand that there's other factors there too that we can't control," Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley said. "We've done all we can."

Murray was 25-of-34 passing for 379 yards and three touchdowns as the Sooners beat No. 9 Texas 39-27 in the Big 12 championship game Saturday at AT&T Stadium, avenging their only loss this season by topping their border rivals and making their case for their third playoff appearance in four years.

Two of Murray's touchdown throws were to Grant Calcaterra, who had an impressive one-handed grab for an 18-yard score on a third-and-10 play with two minutes left.

"That catch will live on in Oklahoma history forever," Riley said.

The Sooners (12-1), who were fifth in the most recent playoff rankings, won their seventh consecutive game to become the first Power Five team to win four outright conference titles in a row since Florida did so in the Southeastern Conference from 1993 to '96.

Sam Ehlinger was 23-of-36 passing for 349 yards with two touchdowns and also ran for two scores for Texas (9-4). But his final pass was picked off by Tre Norwood at the 1 in the final minute, and there was also a critical safety.

Two plays after Oklahoma's only turnover, when receiver CeeDee Lamb fumbled inside the 10 after a 54-yard catch-and-run with nine minutes left, the Sooners got points anyway. Cornerback Tre Brown blitzed and sacked Ehlinger in the end zone for a safety that made it 32-27.

Lamb caught the ball near midfield, cut inside, and spun around another defender toward the middle of the field when he was crushed from behind by linebacker Gary Johnson, knocking the ball loose. Lamb did have six catches for 167 yards, including a 28-yard touchdown in the first half.

"Our defense did a great job getting the ball back to us; offensively, we didn't take care of our part of the bargain," Ehlinger said. "That's on us, that's on me. I will make it my mission to never let this team or this school feel this disappointment again."

That was a huge play for a much-maligned Sooners defense that had allowed at least 40 points in each of the previous four games - three of those Oklahoma victories by a combined nine points.

Asked if the Sooners' defense is good enough to win a national title this season, Riley quickly answered in the affirmative.

"We beat everybody on our schedule. You've got to win by one point, these games, the last time I checked," Riley said. "We've had some of our best performances here the last couple of weeks, in huge, huge games, huge moments against dynamic offenses."

The 114th meeting between the Red River rivals was their first in a championship game - and the first time since 1903 they had played twice in the same season. Every game since 1929 had been played about 20 miles away at the State Fair of Texas, where the Longhorns beat Oklahoma 48-45 eight weeks before this meeting.

The Sooners never trailed again Saturday after Murray threw touchdowns on their last two drives before halftime for a 20-14 lead, taken on Calcaterra's 6-yard touchdown catch in the final minute, when the Sooners were out of timeouts but went 80 yards in five plays.

The Sooners were up 27-21 until Ehlinger threw a 5-yard touchdown to Lil'Jordan Humphrey with 2:44 left in the third quarter. The extra-point kick that would have put Texas ahead was partially blocked and bounced off the crossbar, no good.

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