‘Pride of Oklahoma’ steps in to help Oregon Marching band short members due to snow in Eugene

In a sign of camaraderie, members of the “Pride of Oklahoma” marching band volunteered to support Oregon’s band short members due to snow.

If you’ve ever been around marching band at any level, you understand that it’s a community that extends beyond your school. That was on display during the River Rally in San Antonio ahead of the Valero Alamo Bowl.

With members of the Oregon marching band stranded in Eugene, Oregon after heavy snowfall the last couple of days, the “Pride of Oklahoma” Marching Band volunteered to step in and support the Ducks during the pep rally.

University of Oklahoma athletic director Joe Castiglione called it “college athletics at its finest.” In the video he posted to his Twitter account, you can hear people exclaim, “that’s cool” and “and that’s great.”

Though the Oklahoma Sooners and Oregon Ducks will be competitors come Wednesday night, the Sooners showed kindness by backing up the Ducks members that were present.

This is what the marching band community is all about. My three siblings each were in their high school’s marching band and what remains in their minds from their time is the relationships built and the support received during their time in the marching band.

From Barry Switzer presenting the “Pride” with the game ball after the Sooners stormed back in the 1983 Bedlam matchup to supporting their fellow man, the “Pride of Oklahoma” continues to give Oklahoma alumni and fans a lot to be proud about.

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Big 12 Conference, schools agree to not send spirit squads, bands on road

Big 12 schools have agreed that bands and spirit groups will not accompany their teams on road games this season

The 2020 college football season, should it transpire at all, has already lost a bit of its luster.

As any number of potential changes hang in the balance, the Big 12 made one official on Tuesday.

Big 12 schools have agreed that bands and spirit groups will not accompany their teams on road games this season, the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal reported Tuesday.

“I just think all the schools agreed, for safety and social distancing and everything, it would make the most sense.” Texas Tech senior associate athletics director Robert Giovannetti told the Avalanche-Journal.

It is unclear at this time how this decision will affect neutral site games, such as the Big 12 Championship Game. But there is reason to believe that the Big 12’s most historic neutral site matchup will not be affected.

The Austin-American Statesman’s Brian Davis reports that both Oklahoma and Texas are still likely to bring their bands and spirit squads to October 10th’s Red River Showdown.

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