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Dave: Let’s end the ‘what if’ game

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I have an idea.  Let’s have instant replay after every play. 

Have the booth review every camera angle of every part of every snap.  Make sure there are no rule infractions, and everything is fair and square and by the book. 

On average there are 180 total plays in a college football game.  The average review takes two minutes.  However, that is only looking at a specific aspect of a play.  If they had to review all the camera angles just looking for infractions from every player, it would take considerably longer. 

For sake of argument, let’s just double the average time to four minutes per review.  Doing the math, that would be 12 hours of replay review.  Add that to the average length of a college football game, which is about 3 hours and 30 minutes, we get a game that lasts 15 hours and 30 minutes. 

Talk about let’s make a day of it. 

I wonder if that would satisfy Auburn fans after the wailing and gnashing of teeth they did following their loss to the Sooners?

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Auburn colors don’t cut it in Norman

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Good day, my Fellow Fashionistas!  Fear not.  It is truly I, your beloved Sooner Stylist Supreme, this week. 

After a very lively discussion, including a firing, many tears and then a grudging re-hiring, we are back on track.  Brock has agreed to stay out of the laptop if he is allowed a brief statement at the end. 

Though I promised he’ll get said statement, will he actually?  We shall see, shan’t we.  I do so like to watch him clean my pool.

Back on topic, dears.  This week the primly perfumed pussies (I mean this as in kitties –keep your mind from the gutters my darling Soonerlings) of Auburn are coming Normanside to once again try and make orange a viable color within our city li

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The Sooners’ wins and losses in 2025

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Consider this year two in the SEC experiment of re-shaping the expectations of Oklahoma football fans. The question is, will this be Brent Venables’ last year as the king lab rat?

There is little doubt the Oklahoma Sooners will be better than last year. That 2024 offensive line, those bandaged wide receivers watching from the sideline, and an inexperienced but heralded quarterback who became afraid of his shadow, torpedoed any chance of success last year. 

A healthy and more experienced O-Line, a wide receiver corps and running back room bolstered by good transfers and a QB (John Mateer) that some have already placed on a Heisman watch list, should change things in 2025. 

But the same murder’s row schedule for Oklahoma means they could lose four football games and still be good – maybe good enough to sneak into a playoff. Maybe.

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