Former Penn State DL Donovan Tonwley announces transfer commitment

Former Penn State DL Davon Townley is officially on the move after his second time in the transfer portal.

After jumping into the transfer portal for a second time since coming to Penn State, defensive lineman [autotag]Davon Townley[/autotag] is officially on the move out of Happy Valley. Townley announced a commitment to his new school out of the transfer portal on Sunday.

Townley announced he committed to Missouri State, an FCS program that will be making the move into Conference USA in 2025, with a post on his social media account.

Townley is a former four-star recruit of Penn State despite not having a ton of football playing experience coming into the college game. He had not found a hold on a solid playing spot on the defensive line as a bit of a work in progress for the Nittany Lions, but the potential was always thought to be there. The 6’6″, 277-pound defensive tackle will surely bring good size to the Missouri State defensive line, and he should be able to land a starting role more likely than it appeared he would not have had at Penn State. Townley has appeared in 10 games for Penn State and has combined for four tackles as a reserve lineman.

Missouri State announced it accepted an invitation to join Conference USA in 2025 earlier this month. That makes Townley one of the first players to commit to the program since the big announcement. Townley will have two years of eligibility to use at Missouri State, meaning he will play in the transition from one of the top FCS programs to a move up to the FBS and Conference USA.

Townley was one of three players still officially sitting in the transfer portal at the beginning of the month. The two remaining Nittany Lions sitting in the NCAA’s transfer portal are offensive lineman Golden Israel-Achumba and defensive lineman Jake Wilson. Wilson has mentioned an offer from Akron on his social media feed, but nothing official has been announced for either player on their next move from the portal.

Check out the 2024 transfer portal tracker to see who is coming and going for Penn State this year.

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Missouri State to make jump to FBS, Conference USA in 2025

Missouri State becomes the latest FCS school to jump to the FBS.

Another domino in college football realignment has fallen with the Missouri State Bears announcing a move from the Missouri Valley Conference. They will join the ranks of the FBS with Conference USA starting in 2025.

According to the Springfield News-Leader, the school will hold a news conference on Monday to reveal its transition plans.

This makes Missouri State the 12th member of the conference and that recently brought Jacksonville State and Sam Houston State up form the FCS ranks in 2023.

“We are so excited for the opportunities that CUSA membership will bring to our university, our student-athletes, our coaches and our fans,” Kyle Moats, Missouri State’s athletics director, said in a release. “This move represents a transition to a national brand and a platform that will help raise the profile of Missouri State University and the city of Springfield. The steps we have taken over the past 15 years to invest in a successful broad-based athletics program have prepared us for this long-awaited moment.”

The Bears will now participate in a conference that covers 11 states now that Missouri is in the fold. Only state with two teams is Texas with UTEP and Sam Houston State.

Conference realignment was sent into chaos mode when the Oklahoma Sooners and Texas Longhorns announced they would move to the SEC. Since that time the Pac-12 has all but folded with 10 of their members finding new homes just in time for the 2024 college football season.

OU Hockey announces new Head Coach

Peter Arvanitis will return as head coach for OU Hockey’s 2022-23 season.

After months of speculation from fans, the University of Oklahoma Ice Hockey Club has announced their new head coach for the 2022-23 season and has released a statement regarding the club’s circumstances moving forward.

After departing the club in 2018, Peter Arvanitis will return to OU Hockey as head coach.

The following release comes from OU Hockey:

Following an off-season of change, OU Hockey is returning to the rink this fall with a new look off the ice but a similar look on the ice.  As it opens its 20th season of excitement on the ice, the Sooners will be under the direction of a new Head Coach/ Director of Hockey Operations and will be playing their home games in a new rink.

Taking the reins back for Sooner Hockey is Coach Peter Arvanitis, a former Canadian and CHL player and coach of OU Hockey from 2011-2018.  

Arvanitis, a former Center, played in multiple leagues across Canada, then in 1996 moved to the United States, finishing his playing career with the Nashville Nighthawks and eventually the Oklahoma City Blazers of the CHL.  Following his playing career, Arvanitis joined the coaching ranks initially as an assistant with OU Hockey and the OKC Blazers and moved into the Head Coaching slot at the start of the 2011 season.  

As OU Hockey’s winningest head coach, Arvanitis amassed a record of 159 wins, 76 losses, and 27 shootout losses with a winning percentage of .658, guiding the Sooners to the ACHA National Tournament 6 of his 7 years at the helm.  During the 2013-14 season, the Sooners entered the National Tournament ranked #2, finishing in the final four after a heartbreaking overtime loss.  Under Arvanitis’ leadership, the Sooners were ranked in the top 10 ACHA Division 1 teams 6 of his 7 years.  Arvanitis also coached Paolo DeSousa who still plays professional hockey in Europe.  

Led by Senior Captain, Cameron Bickford, the Sooners will return a strong slate of players from the 2021-22 season and should be strong contenders to qualify for the 2022-23 ACHA Division 1 National Tournament next spring in Boston.

As Sooner Hockey prepares for the upcoming season, they will also be preparing to move to their new home game rink, Arctic Edge Ice Center in Edmond.  Over the summer, a new NAHL juniors team moved to Oklahoma City and will occupy the Sooners’ former space at Blazers Ice Centre resulting in the Sooners moving their games to Arctic Edge.  The Sooners will continue to practice at Blazers.

“While splitting time between the two rinks is not ideal, it is the situation we have to adjust to and we are planning lots of exciting events at our games this season,” commented new General Manager, Brad Bassett.  “The staff at both Arctic Edge and Blazers have been very supportive of OU Hockey during this transition, and we are looking forward to working with both rinks this coming season,” Bassett added.

The Sooners will hold their annual Training Camp at Blazers the week of August 22-26 followed by their Annual Red/White Scrimmage slated for 4 pm on Saturday, August 27. OU’s schedule includes their traditional WCHL rivalries between Colorado, Colorado State, Missouri State, Arizona State, and Central Oklahoma as well as a Bedlam series against OSU.  

For more information regarding the Sooner’s schedule, ticket information, and much more, fans should follow the OU Hockey website at ouhockey.net as well as the team’s Facebook and Instagram social media posts.

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.

Oklahoma advances in NIT, knocks off Missouri State 89-72

Oklahoma senior guard Umoja Gibson poured in 28 points as the Sooners knocked off Missouri State, 89-72, in the first round of the NIT.

How Oklahoma approached its NCAA Tournament snub was always going to be a big factor in how well the Sooners performed after earning a No. 1 seed in the NIT.

So far, so good. Oklahoma (19-15, 7-11 Big 12) looked engaged and motivated in dismantling Missouri State inside the Lloyd Noble Center, 89-72. Senior guard Umoja Gibson got it going early and finished 8-for-17 from the floor and 5-of-10 on 3-pointers as he scored 28 points.

Redshirt senior point guard Jordan Goldwire chipped in 15 points on 7-of-11 shooting and the Sooners shot 12-of-25 from 3-point range as a team. Redshirt senior forward Ethan Chargois, senior center Tanner Groves and junior forward Jalen Hill were all near double-figures for OU as well. Chargois and Groves each finished with nine points, while Hill added eight of his own.

Missouri State junior guard Isiaih Mosley enjoyed a big game as well, knocking down three 3-pointers and finishing 11-of-20 from the field to match Gibson’s 28 points. Senior forward Gaige Prim also added 14 points for the Bears, but Missouri State didn’t have enough outside of those two to hang with OU.

Oklahoma went on a 31-to-17 scoring run that began with Gibson’s layup just before halftime and culminated with Gibson canning a 3-pointer at the 10:05 mark of the second half to open up an 18-point advantage at 76-58. It was never in doubt for the Sooners from that point forward.

Oklahoma will now play the winner of Colorado (23-11) and Saint Bonaventure (20-9) on Sunday inside the Lloyd Noble Center in Norman. On the opposite end of Oklahoma’s portion of the NIT bracket, Mississippi State (18-15) plays Virginia (19-13) and North Texas (24-6) takes on Texas State (21-7).

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.

Oklahoma vs. Missouri State: stream, injury report, broadcast info for Monday

Oklahoma opens up play tonight in the NIT as a No. 1 seed versus Missouri State. Here’s how to watch.

After falling to Texas Tech 56-55 in the semifinals of the Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma (18-15, 7-11 Big 12) just missed out on making the NCAA Tournament. Now, the Sooners have to refocus and turn their attention on showing the tournament selection committee what it missed out on.

At least, that’s what Oklahoma head men’s basketball coach Porter Moser has imparted upon his team ahead of its opening-round matchup of the NIT against Missouri State (23-10, 13-5 Missouri Valley Conference) inside the Lloyd Noble Center.

“We got a lot to play for. It’s the postseason. There’s a lot of teams that are home. There’s 250 teams that are home, you know, and in our first year, yeah, I wanted to go. I want to go to the NCAA Tournament every year. But we’ve got a chance to play postseason. What’s our legacy? You can be mad at people for not being selected or you can prove them wrong. And I choose to prepare, to fight, to go into this tournament trying to prove people wrong. That’s how I’m choosing it. And I want the players to follow my lead, and we’re going to have this film session and practice and they’re going to follow our coaching staff’s lead,” Moser said.

OU earned a No. 1 seed in the NIT along with fellow No. 1 seeds Dayton, SMU and Texas A&M. If the Sooners beat Missouri State, they will host the winner of Colorado and Saint Bonaventure.

How to watch:

  • Date: March 15
  • Time: 6 p.m. CST
  • TV Channel: ESPN
  • Live Stream: fuboTV (watch here)
  • Radio: KRXO 107.7 FM The Franchise in Oklahoma City; KTBZ 1430 AM in Tulsa; Varsity Radio App

Missouri State at Oklahoma injury report:

Oklahoma:

  • Guard, Elijah Harkless: Harkless announced that he had suffered an unspecified season-ending injury on Feb. 18. Harkless averaged 10.0 points per game on 45.9 percent field goal shooting this season.

Missouri State:

  • Guard, Demarcus Sharp: According to the USA TODAY Sports injury database, Sharp has been out indefinitely after undergoing surgery to repair a lower-leg injury. Sharp last played on Jan. 5 in Missouri State’s 71-69 win over Bradley.

Players to watch:

Oklahoma:

  • Guard, Umoja Gibson: 12.5 points per game, 2.1 rebounds per game, 1.3 steals per game, 37.7 percent 3-point field goal shooting
  • Forward, Tanner Groves: 11.8 points per game, 5.6 rebounds per game, 53.9 percent field goal shooting, 37.9 percent 3-point field goal shooting
  • Point guard, Jordan Goldwire: 10.5 points per game, 3.4 assists per game, 1.5 steals per game, 44.5 percent field goal shooting
  • Forward, Jalen Hill: 9.1 points per game, 5.9 rebounds per game, 58.3 percent field goal shooting

Missouri State:

  • Guard, Isiaih Mosley: 20.1 points per game, 6.1 rebounds per game, 2.4 assists per game, 50.2 percent field goal shooting, 42.9 percent 3-point field goal shooting
  • Forward, Gaige Prim: 16.4 points per game, 8.0 rebounds per game, 1.2 blocks per game, 57.0 percent field goal shooting

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.

Blowouts and building blocks : Takeaways from Lincoln Riley’s four season openers

With week one of the college football season fast approaching, how has Lincoln Riley faired in season openers?

While Oklahoma didn’t punch its way into the College Football Playoffs in 2020, the COVID-altered campaign still provided some very positive takeaways for the Crimson and Cream.

In week five, the Sooners took down the Horned Frogs, 33-14 in Fort Worth. Quarterback Spencer Rattler dissected the TCU defense for 332 yards and a pair of touchdowns. More impressively, the young signal-caller proved he had learned a valuable lesson following his benching in the previous game versus Texas as he completed 13 of his 22 passes with no interceptions. Rattler would throw just two more picks that season as the Oklahoma offense became as efficient as it was explosive.

A 41-13 beatdown of Oklahoma State in week eight showcased to the nation that Alex Grinch’s defense would only improve from there. The Sooners bottlenecked now-Carolina Panthers running back Chubba Hubbard to 43 yards on the ground while tormenting Spencer Sanders into three sacks and an interception.

Last, but certainly not least is the 2020 Cotton Bowl. Where OU’s 55-20 blowout win over Florida cemented the Sooners’ beliefs that they could hang against SEC competition.

Each season brings unique opportunities and challenges in the world of college football. However, looking back at a program’s past can help predict future tendencies.

With Oklahoma’s season opener against Tulane just 14 days away, here’s how the Sooners have faired in week one during the Lincoln Riley era.

Thoughts, takeaways from Oklahoma-Missouri State (live blog)

No. 5 Oklahoma is set to kick off the 2020 season against Missouri State. Here are live thoughts and takeaways from Kegan Reneau.

The season opener is here. Oklahoma and Missouri State are minutes away from kickoff. The Sooners are welcoming in new royalty with Spencer Rattler and look to build off the improvements from Alex Grinch’s defense in year one. Oklahoma is going to be without 20 players from its two-deep due to suspensions, COVID-19 positive tests or contact tracing from COVID-19. Here are live thoughts and takeaways from Oklahoma’s game from Kegan Reneau who is covering the game live. 

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Oklahoma will reportedly be ‘significantly shorthanded’ for Missouri State game

After the debacle of Friday, word is now getting out about Oklahoma missing a significant amount of players for the season opener.

After the debacle of Friday, word is now getting out about Oklahoma missing a significant amount of players.

The Sooners were very close to having to postpone its season opener, even as late as Friday morning. It wasn’t until later in the day whenever it was confirmed that the game was still on and we would reach the start of the season Saturday.

SoonersWire expected many on Oklahoma’s depth chart released Wednesday to not be present for the game on Saturday. Now, Pete Thamel of Yahoo! Sports is reporting that the Sooners are going to be “significantly shorthanded” for their game against Missouri State.

Oklahoma and Missouri State are less than two hours out from kickoff off the season opener. The Sooners have yet to come out on the field to warmup.

Oklahoma and the Bears are scheduled to kickoff at 6 p.m CT from Norman, Oklahoma. The game is on pay-per-view. Details can be found here.

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After marathon of an offseason, Oklahoma and Missouri State cross the finish line

Oklahoma and Missouri State worked hand in hand all offseason. This was a marathon of epic proportions, but the finish line was crossed.

Kyle Moats was working at Kentucky whenever the Wildcats needed a new scoreboard in the mid-1990s.

They looked around, noticing Missouri had just put a new one up. It was different. Not traditional at all, and the athletic director, Joe Castiglione, was there to help with any questions and influenced the decision of which direction Kentucky was heading for its new scoreboard.

Now Moats is at Missouri State as the Bears’ athletic director. Castiglione is at Oklahoma. Moats has called and checked in with the Sooners ever since he got the gig at Missouri State in 2009 for an opening to play a game.

And after a rollercoaster ride of the last six months, the two will meet again Saturday night at Gaylord Family-Oklahoma Memorial Stadium.

“I don’t think there was any concern, at least I didn’t feel it or sense it in the phone call that we were not going to have it,” Moats told SoonersWire during a phone interview this week about the first conversation between he and Castiglione this offseason. “I think we were very realistic in terms of we don’t know for sure that the virus will dictate what happens. But in light of that, the conversation was more about, ‘Hey, look, we Missouri State, we’ll do whatever we need to do to, to meet your criteria.’ And at the time, I don’t think Joe (Castiglione) knew exactly what all that criteria was.

“But certainly we had an easy agreement that we knew things were going to be different and change throughout the course of the summer and that we would have to adapt whatever that may be. So that was a lot of maybe more 10,000-foot type things, but we indicated all along that that we would do whatever Oklahoma needed us to do. We both wanted to play the game. There was never a question about not playing the game as long as the virus allows us to play the game.”

The two had talked at least four or five times over the course of the last six months. Each conversation was long and about where the status of the game was at and what needed to be done.

Moats and Castiglione agreed that if things weren’t going well, were not going right for the student-athlete or that the proper COVID-19 testing couldn’t take place, that the game wouldn’t be played and that decision would have happened a long time ago. But it never got to that point, nor was Oklahoma ever looking for a new opponent.

When rumor that the Sooners were looking for a new opponent, Castiglione called Moats immediately.

“Contractually, it was never an issue,” Moats said. “You know, it was never that Oklahoma was trying to figure out they were going to go play somebody else. Joe (Castiglione) made that clear early on that that was never his intent. That we were going to play the game. That was how we both believed in that.

“And I never thought that he brought that up. I never brought that up. I think the media or maybe somebody, you know, question was asked to him about that and and I think he felt compelled that he had to tell me about it. I never worried about it one bit, never ever entered my mind on the money part in the contract part. I know Joe and that would have never been the case.”

Moats and Castiglione then got to work together on a waiver request to the NCAA to move the game from Sept. 5 to Aug. 29. That started a chain reaction that allowed every athletic director to apply for the same waiver.

The two have worked in stride with each other every step of the way.

“In the case of the working relationship that we have, it’s really been  everything one could hope for in the sense that we both understood our primary focus of safety, health, welfare of all of the people we serve,” Castiglione told SoonersWire during a phone interview on Wednesday.

The last six months haven’t been easy for either. Moats and Castiglione haven’t been able to meet with their staff in a natural setting. Everything has taken place over conference calls, phone calls or zoom calls. Neither, though, will take a compliment for themselves, but will each other and their staffs.

There’s a reason why Castiglione told SoonersWire he wasn’t getting any sleep this week during a phone interview on Wednesday. The game truly came down to the wire as late as Friday morning.

But that’s now over and when the ball is kicked Saturday night, Oklahoma’s athletic director will feel a weight lifted off his shoulder.

The finish line was crossed.

Football is being played, and Castiglione, as well as Moats, will be able to get some sleep Saturday night.

“I probably won’t feel (like we made it) specifically until we’re actually on the field kicking the ball go in the air,” Castiglione said. “I said we’re all where we are. And I think we got to accept and understand and appreciate the fact that when we do kick off on Saturday evening, that it has been a list of epic proportions to get to this point.”

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Oklahoma, Missouri State game was in ‘serious jeopardy’ as of Friday morning

The game can be played at last. As of Friday morning, Oklahoma and Missouri State was in “serious jeopardy”, but it will kick off Saturday.

The game can be played at last.

As of Thursday night, SoonersWire can confirm there were doubts about Oklahoma’s season opener against Missouri State being played. Those doubts carried over into Friday morning and afternoon before Eddie Radosevich of SoonerScoop.com was able to confirm the game was on and will be played.

Oklahoma head coach Lincoln Riley has decided not to release testing data, stating he didn’t want to give his team a ‘competitive disadvantage’ by the opponent knowing how many players may be out. Missouri State has been releasing data whenever asked, and on Friday, all 72 players who traveled to play Oklahoma had tested negative.

Which, according to Missouri State, can’t be said for the Sooners.

“Oklahoma cannot say the same thing,” said Missouri State president Clif Smart during a board of governor’s meeting. “The game was in serious jeopardy until we got final test results (Friday) morning and I better not say anything else because I don’t know who’s listening.”

Oklahoma has not released testing data since the week of Aug. 17 through Aug. 21. Riley has let the media know himself of how many players have tested positive for COVID-19, or returned to practice from recovering from the virus or contact tracing.

SoonersWire is expecting many players from the new depth chart to not participate in Saturday’s game due to COVID-19. More from contact tracing than testing positive for the virus.

Oklahoma and Missouri State is scheduled to kick off at 6 p.m. CT Saturday at home to start the 2020 season.

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