By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism.
Longtime powers to meet in conference game
spt ap Big12
Oklahoma tight end James Hanna, right, celebrates his touchdown with wide receiver Ryan Broyles, left, in the fourth quarter of Big 12 action against Oklahoma State in Stillwater, Okla., on Saturday. Oklahoma won 47-41. - photo by AP Photo

NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — No. 9 Oklahoma is headed back to the Big 12 championship game to face No. 13 Nebraska after winning a tiebreaker based on the Bowl Championship Series standings.
The Sooners were ninth in the standings released Sunday, with Oklahoma State 14th and Texas A&M 18th. The three teams finished the regular season tied atop the Big 12 South with 6-2 records in conference play, and the BCS standings were used to break the tie.
“It seems fitting that Oklahoma and Nebraska would meet in this game,” Sooners coach Bob Stoops said in a statement. “This has been a great rivalry for a long, long time and college football fans around the country will appreciate this game in particular.”
The “Battle of the Big Reds” determined the Big Eight conference champion 31 times in a 36-year span before being diminished as both teams went through down stretches following the creation of the Big 12. Saturday night’s meeting in Arlington, Texas, will mark the second time the rivals have met for the Big 12 title, and the last time before Nebraska heads to the Big Ten next season.
Oklahoma beat the Cornhuskers 21-7 in the 2006 title game for its fourth of a conference-leading six Big 12 championships.
“From our perspective, we’re proud to be in the championship game for an eighth time,” Stoops said. “Our players begin each season with specific goals and winning the Big 12 championship is near the top of that list.”
The Sooners are 6-1 in Big 12 title games. No other team has won more than three. Nebraska has won it twice — in 1997 and 1999 — and lost to Texas last year on a field goal as time expired, after one second had been put back on the clock.
“Part of coming to Oklahoma is you win championships. You want to win championships when you come here,” tight end James Hanna said. “We have that opportunity. That’s what it’s about.”
Perhaps no team has benefited more from the BCS system over time than Oklahoma.
The Sooners squeezed into the national championship game in back-to-back seasons by virtue of the computer rankings, and have now benefited from the BCS standings twice in three years to play for the Big 12 title.