Cowboys open as underdogs to Giants ahead of first road trip of 2022

A look at the opening numbers for the MNF matchup, as well as explainers to what each term means and how the Giants and Cowboys have fared thus far in 2022. | From @KDDrummondNFL

The Dallas Cowboys pulled off an impressive home victory without their signal caller on Sunday afternoon. Losing Dak Prescott to a thumb injury that required surgery was not the way the club planned to start defense of their NFC East championship. The mood within the walls of The Star exuded confidence, but surrounding the club there was a lot of doubt among the fans and the media. However the Cowboys raced out to an early lead against the defending AFC Champion Cincinnati Bengals and then kicked a winning field goal as time expired to win 20-17 and improve to 1-1 on the season.

Meanwhile the New York Giants are one of a few surprise teams in the NFL early in the season. After starting each of the last five seasons with a loss, the club is above .500 for the first time since 2016, which was the last time they started a season 2-0. They’ll try and make it 3-0 in head coach Brian Daboll’s initial season. For now, with Prescott out for at least a second game, the odds have the Giants as home favorites, but not by much.

Oklahoma Sooners, top 7 hold steady in the AP Top 25 after week 3

Despite their dominating performance over the Nebraska Cornhuskers, the Oklahoma Sooners held steady in the latest AP Top 25.

The Oklahoma Sooners are playing like a team that could be considered one of the nation’s best by the end of the season. Their 49-14 win over Nebraska is the latest evidence of a new beginning for the Oklahoma Sooners. It was their third 30-point win of the season.

The Sooners held steady at No. 6 in the AP Top 25, similarly to the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll. Unlike the coaches poll, the top seven held their ground this week, with zero movement among those teams.

Georgia remained No. 1, followed by Alabama, Ohio State, Michigan, Clemson and the Oklahoma Sooners.

USC follows the Sooners at No. 7, and Kentucky is at No. 8 following its win over Youngstown State, the home of Bob Stoops. The Oklahoma State Cowboys come in at No. 9, and Arkansas held on against Missouri State to remain in the top 10.

The Oklahoma Sooners welcome the Kansas State Wildcats to Norman for a prime-time matchup next Saturday night. Kansas State is coming off a disappointing loss to the Tulane Green Wave in Manhattan on Saturday.

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Oklahoma earns a statement road win with their domination of Nebraska

After an early deficit, the Sooners were dominant on both sides of the football in a statement road win over the Nebraska Cornhuskers.

Good teams don’t just win football games. They dominate their opponent. And that’s what happened on Saturday as the Oklahoma Sooners went into Lincoln and demolished the Nebraska Cornhuskers.

In the wake of Scott Frost’s firing, a contingent of analysts (Urban Meyer and Reggie Bush included) believed Nebraska might be able to go from the team that lost close game after close game to a team that could upset the Oklahoma Sooners.

In the early going, it looked as if Nebraska might have something. But that first five minutes awakened something in Brent Venables’ team. After Nebraska went up 7-0, the Sooners scored 49 unanswered points, dominating the first half and putting the game out of reach for the Cornhuskers.

Many believed this Nebraska team would contend for bowl eligibility, and they still might.

The Sooners went into a Big Ten road environment and beat a team that many expected to be much better than the three-win team they were a year ago.

In recent years, Saturday’s contest might have been a closer game. After Nebraska put the Sooners on their heels in the opening minutes, previous teams might have let the Cornhuskers hang around.

Not so this season. Not so under Brent Venables.

The offense responded to the early deficit with a big play from Dillon Gabriel, and the defense went into shutdown mode.

After the initial touchdown, the Sooners’ defense kept Nebraska from crossing the 50-yard line on 10 straight possessions. Nebraska went roughly 37 minutes of game-time without crossing the 50-yard line from their opening touchdown to about the 3:30 mark of the third quarter. That drive ended with Nebraska turning it over on downs. The next drive that cross the 50 ended with an interception. The Huskers finally scored again on their final drive of the game.

It was an impressive performance all the way around. In particular, the defense continued to show that they’re a different animal under Brent Venables after slowing down a Nebraska team that had been averaging nearly 500 yards of total offense and 36 points per game.

“Defense came out and got punched in the face and responded after that,” Brent Venables had to say after the game. “I think they had 77 yards in that first drive, and then 71 yards the rest of the half, and averaged just under two yards of play the rest of the half. So, I’m glad that happened because I believe that you develop a lot. Again, you develop an identity. You develop a mindset, and you develop through some failure and adversity. And that’s how you grow. And nobody likes that happen for you, for a coach, but you need that to happen.”

The Oklahoma Sooners are certainly developing a mindset. Venables is developing a team that is “tough, resilient, edgy, hungry, never satisfied.” The intensity is palpable when you watch this team. It’s not enough to simply win. They want to win big. And through three games, the Sooners have beaten their opponents by an average margin of 32 points.

At first glance, the Sooners dominating Nebraska on the road wouldn’t account for much notice, however the circumstances of the trip to Lincoln were less-than-ideal. Yeah, the Cornhuskers fired their coach six days before the game, but Oklahoma was walking into a hostile environment with a first-year coach taking his team for its initial road trip. And while Nebraska has been piling up losses, the vast majority of them were by one score. So after spotting the home team the early lead and with the crowd at a frenzy, the Sooners just methodically ground them down with a running game and uncharacteristic nasty defense. The mature performance is the latest sign that the Brent Venables era could be something special and even better than predecessor Lincoln Riley’s tenure. – Erick Smith, USA TODAY Sports

Oklahoma went into a hostile road environment and dominated a long-time rival with a fan base that was jacked up to welcome the Sooners into Memorial Stadium.

It was a statement win over an opponent that hadn’t been beaten by double-digits since November 2020.

The Sooners still have something to prove as they get set to host their first Big 12 game of the Brent Venables era against a tough Kansas State team, but if the first three weeks of the season are any indication, the 2022 season could end up being magical for Venables and the Oklahoma Sooners.

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No. 6 Oklahoma at Nebraska: Prediction, point spread, odds, best bet

The Oklahoma Sooners are double-digit favorites as the take their show on the road against the Nebraska Cornhuskers.

The No. 6 Oklahoma Sooners go on the road to play the Nebraska Cornhuskers on Saturday, and if you’re looking to do some last-minute betting research, you’re in luck! We’ll give you the latest point spread, money line odds and over/under number, as well as the information you’ll need to make the smartest bet at BetMGM.

The game starts at 11 a.m. central time and can be seen on Fox.

Through the first two weeks of the Brent Venables era, the Sooners are 1-1 against the spread, with a narrow miss in last week’s matchup vs. Kent State. They’ve been more than 30-point favorites each of the first two weeks and had a chance to cover late, but a failed fourth down attempt thwarted Oklahoma’s efforts.

The Sooners head to Lincoln to take on the Cornhuskers as double-digit favorites.

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The lines, courtesy of BetMGM

  • Point spread: Oklahoma -11
  • Money line: Oklahoma -410 / Nebraska +310
  • Over-under: 65.5

Click here to place your bets at BetMGM.

No. 6 Oklahoma at Nebraska injury report:

Nebraska

Travis Vokolek, TE: Questionable (Ankle)

Thomas Fidone, TE: Questionable (Knee)

Nouredin Noueli, OL: Out For Season (Suspension)

Oklahoma

Key Lawrence, S: Questionable (Undisclosed)

Wanya Morris, OL: Questionable (Personal)

T.D. Roof, LB: Out For Season (Elbow)

Advice and prediction

While last year’s game was a close ball game, this year’s Nebraska Cornhuskers are in a much different position. A season ago, it was their defense keeping them in ball games. This year it’s the offense, at least through the first three weeks.

The problem is Nebraska hasn’t faced a team as good as the Sooners yet in 2022. Oklahoma’s offense is going to be a nightmare for the Cornhuskers’ defense, which is allowing 492 yards per game and 31 points per game.

Rebounding from a slow start offensively a week ago, the Sooners jump out to an early lead. After a tightly contested first half, Oklahoma begins to pull away in the second for the big win.

Take Oklahoma minus the points and the under.

Prediction: Oklahoma 42-20

Record against the spread in 2022: 3-1.

Get more betting analysis and predictions at Sportsbook Wire.

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Behind Enemy Lines: Cornhuskers Wire previews No. 6 Oklahoma at Nebraska

To prepare for Oklahoma vs. Nebraska, we go Behind Enemy Lions with Cornhuskers Wire.

From 1921 to 1997, the Oklahoma Sooners and the Nebraska Cornhuskers met annually in a game that was once one of the better rivalries in college football.

When the Big 8 and members of the Southwest Conference merged to form the Big 12, the two teams would still play regularly until the Cornhuskers left for the Big Ten in 2012. After over a decade, OU and Nebraska renewed the rivalry in a defensive 23-16 win for the Sooners last season.

Now the Oklahoma Sooners will make their first road trip to Lincoln since their 10-3 loss in the 2009 season.

Sooners Wire had a chance to catch up with Cornhuskers Wire’s Evan Bredeson to get a little more up close and personal vantage point of the 2022 version of the Nebraska Cornhuskers!

By the Numbers: No. 6 Oklahoma Sooners at Nebraska Cornhuskers

How do the Oklahoma Sooners and the Nebraska Cornhuskers stack up statistically heading into their matchup in Lincoln?

The No. 6 Oklahoma Sooners travel to Lincoln to take on the Nebraska Cornhuskers in the second part of a home-and-home series. Last year’s matchup in Norman featured a hotly-contested defensive battle as the two teams worked to slow down Spencer Rattler, now with South Carolina and Adrian Martinez, now with Kansas State.

In the early part of this season, the contest has the makings of a much different football game.

Both teams have scored more than 36 points per game and averaged more than 461 yards of total offense per game. While the two teams look like they’ll put up a bunch of points in this game, the game will still be decided by which defense can make more stops.

Statistically, it appears Oklahoma has the edge, but it hasn’t played a team that has been as productive offensively as the Casey Thompson-led Nebraska Cornhuskers.

To get you ready for Saturday, let’s take a look at these two teams by the numbers.

Danny Stutsman among 3 defensive players to watch against Nebraska

Oklahoma heads north to take on old rival Nebraska. Defensively, they’ll be challenged. If these players show up, Oklahoma can win.

Oklahoma and Nebraska used to look each other eye to eye and have epic battles. That time has passed, and now the two programs couldn’t be in more different places.

Oklahoma is still a national name and, in some eyes, ascending under first-year head coach Brent Venables.

The Cornhuskers returned to Norman last year in the first matchup between the two teams since Nebraska left for the Big Ten. The Sooners went on to win that game 23-16. A year later, things look different on both sides.

Neither head coach from that game remains, as Scott Frost was fired this past weekend after underwhelming during his tenure at his alma mater. Lincoln Riley dipped out on Oklahoma for Southern California.

This will be their first road test under rookie head coach Brent Venables. While Venables is no newcomer to this rivalry and coaching against Nebraska, the Cornhuskers won’t let the Sooners come and get a win without some resistance. They have an opportunity to rally around interim head coach Mickey Joseph.

As the Sooners get set for their first trip to Lincoln since the Cornhuskers 10-3 win in 2009, let’s take a look at three key players for the Oklahoma defense.

Up Next: A new defensive leader emerges

Sooners OC Jeff Lebby believes a breakout day is coming for Jalil Farooq

Oklahoma Sooners offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby has no concerns about WR Jalil Farooq after a slow start for the speedy sophomore

Oklahoma Sooners wide receiver Jalil Farooq hasn’t had the start many expected. The speedy former four-star has one reception on five targets in Oklahoma’s first two games. He didn’t touch the ball at all in week 2 against Kent State.

Sooners’ offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby isn’t concerned, however. When a reporter mentioned Farooq, a big smile appeared on Lebby’s face.

“I think the biggest thing is that the ball hasn’t found him,” said Lebby. “That’s part of playing this game. I’m proud of him for being incredibly steady and playing as hard as he’s played.”

When the targets don’t come, it’s easy for a receiver to lose focus, but Lebby didn’t seem to be worried about that.

“Just keep doing exactly what you’re doing,” said Lebby of Farooq. “The ball is going to find you, and good things are going to happen… There’s going to be a moment in time where he’s going to have a breakout day, and it’s going to be a lot of fun for everybody.”

It hopefully won’t be very fun for opposing secondaries.

If Lebby is looking for a breakout for his sophomore wide receiver, the week three matchup with the Nebraska Cornhuskers may be just what Farooq needs.

The Cornhuskers’ defense ranks 13th in passing yards allowed per game in and 14th in rushing yards allowed per game in the Big Ten. They rank 113th nationally in passing yards allowed per game.

With the Sooners’ offensive line likely getting a much-needed piece back in Wanya Morris, Dillon Gabriel should have plenty of time to get the ball to Farooq and the rest of his weapons in the Oklahoma offense.

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Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. Let us know your thoughts, comment on this story below. Join the conversation today. You can also follow Ben on Twitter @bendackiw.