WACO, Texas — Don’t act like you haven’t heard an Oklahoma fan say it before.
Growing up in the state of Oklahoma or spending time around Sooners, the word ‘Sooner Magic’ is sprinkled throughout Oklahoma football lore.
As head coach Lincoln Riley entered the postgame press conference after his team put together the greatest comeback in the program’s storied history, the room became dead silent.
It stayed that way.
Then Riley looked up from the stats page in front of him.
“Well, that was fun. Where do you start?”
Where the hell do you start after overcoming a 28-3 deficit to beat Baylor 34-31 in its own stadium keep your dreams and hopes alive?
It’s easy, really.
Sooner Magic.
“You never know 100% that you’re going to be able to come back from something like that, but I think they all felt like we had a chance,” Riley said after the game. “I got to be honest, even at Kansas State when we got down in that third quarter, I think maybe about half of us really believed we had a chance to come back and win that thing. In this one, there was not one person on that sideline that didn’t believe it.”
Belief absolutely had to be there.
But Jalen Hurts becoming the best player in college football after looking like a player that could be replaced at halftime. A defense that was knocked around and then down turning into a dominant force. A slew of freshmen receivers having a coming out party.
None of it actually makes sense.
Ask Jalen Hurts, who acknowledged that the media in the postgame press conference probably didn’t think they’d win after halftime, which he was 100 percent right.
Not a single non-biased person who watched the first half of that game thought the Sooners could overcome it. That’s the magic in it, but this one may be the biggest trick the Oklahoma football team has pulled out of the hat yet.
“It’s a moment where you’ve got to embrace it,” Hurts said about heading to the Oklahoma fans in the standing room only section in McLane’s Stadium south end zone. “You’ve got to embrace it and enjoy. Coach Riley, man. Coming in here, I always say it’s a challenge. A challenge coming to play here, a challenge coming in and having to put your full and complete trust in a whole entire new group, something you’re not used to. But man when we have that trust, when we have that belief in one another, when we’re going out there and executing without any doubt, we’re pretty good.”
Since Riley got to Norman, Oklahoma, in 2015, the magic has been rampant.
Down 17 points in Knoxville, Tennessee, in one of the loudest environments in college football, some walk-on named Baker Mayfield illustrious Oklahoma career was born in a comeback 34-27 overtime win over Tennessee in which the Sooners scored 14 points in the fourth-quarter.
The Sooners erased a 45-24 with 21 unanswered in the fourth-quarter lead against Texas in OU-Texas part I in 2018 after the offense sputtered and the defense put up a performance its coordinator got fired for. Then, already once this year, Oklahoma about erased the first 25-point deficit of the season in the fourth-quarter against Kansas State after an abysmal performance by Alex Grinch’s defense and the first blemish on Jalen Hurts’ OU career.
This time around, Lincoln Riley ended up on the right side of the comeback—one that he will cherish and hopes it can spark this team in the right direction.
“As a coach, there’s a lot of great wins. We’ve been lucky to have a ton of them here. Coming back like we did, how it all played out, this one is up there for sure. I am beyond proud, also beyond excited about us continuing to grow. I think people still see we got a lot of things to continue to grow and get better. I think this can be a catalyst for that. I think it will be.
Our best ball is coming soon.”
The numbers won’t help anyone truly understand.
The film will to an extent, but it will still leave you questioning, ‘How?’
It’s unthinkable. It’s unimaginable. It’s inexplicable.
That’s the Sooner Magic, though. The same thing my grandpa told my dad about during his day. Then my dad told me during his.
I just had to see it happen for my own eyes to believe.
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