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Oklahoma Sooners men's basketball

The Oklahoma Sooners men's basketball team represents the University of Oklahoma in men's NCAA Division I basketball. The Sooners play in the Big 12 Conference.

Oklahoma Sooners
UniversityUniversity of Oklahoma
First season1908
All-time record1,715–1,107 (.608)
Head coachPorter Moser (2nd season)
ConferenceBig 12
LocationNorman, Oklahoma
ArenaLloyd Noble Center
(Capacity: 11,562)
NicknameSooners
Student sectionBoom Squad[1]
ColorsCrimson and cream[2]
   
Uniforms
Home
Away


NCAA Tournament Runner-up
1947, 1988
NCAA Tournament Final Four
1939, 1947, 1988, 2002, 2016
NCAA Tournament Elite Eight
1939, 1943, 1947, 1985, 1988, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2016
NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen
1979, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2015, 2016
NCAA Tournament Round of 32
1979, 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2008, 2009, 2015, 2016, 2019, 2021
NCAA Tournament Appearances
1939, 1943, 1947, 1979, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2021
Conference Tournament Champions
1979, 1985, 1988, 1990, 2001, 2002, 2003
Conference Regular Season Champions
1928, 1929, 1939, 1940, 1942, 1944, 1947, 1949, 1979, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1989, 2005

History

1908–80

The Sooners enjoyed moderate success on the court during this era, posting just 16 losing records in their first 72 seasons. They were led by 9 different coaches during this period, beginning with Bennie Owen (who also coached the football team) and ending with Dave Bliss in 1980. The Sooners participated in the very first Final Four in 1939. OU made a second appearance in the championship game in 1947, losing 47–58 to Holy Cross.

1981–1994 (the Billy Tubbs era)

The program gained national prominence under Billy Tubbs when he took over in 1981. Star players Wayman Tisdale, Mookie Blaylock, and Stacey King guided the Sooners to several deep runs in the NCAA Tournament. In 1988, the Sooners reached the NCAA title game in Kansas City, where they fell four points shy of their first national title to the 11-loss Kansas Jayhawks, a team which they had beaten twice in regular season play.

Tubbs resigned on April 10, 1994, indicating that "he did not feel appreciated enough working at a football school" (he later reconciled with the administration and enjoyed a healthy relationship with the school up until his death from leukemia in 2020). Tubbs' base salary at Oklahoma in his final season was $107,000 annually. Tubbs, 59 years old at the time, left to take over the struggling Texas Christian University basketball program, signing a 5-year contract worth between $200,000 and $400,000 per season.

Tubbs' record at OU was 333–132 (0.716) overall, 126–70 (0.643) conference, with 10 NCAA Tournament appearances, one Final Four appearance, and one National Title Game appearance. Tubbs finished with 5 Big 8 regular season titles and 2 Conference tournament titles.

Tubbs averaged 24 wins per season (24–9) and 9 conference wins per season (9–5).

1995–2006 (the Kelvin Sampson era)

Kelvin Sampson became the 11th head coach at the University of Oklahoma on April 25, 1994. Sampson was named national coach of the year in 1995 (his first year at OU) by the Associated Press, United States Basketball Writers Association and Basketball Weekly after guiding the Sooners to 23–9 overall and 15–0 home marks. It was the second-best overall record posted by a first-year coach in Big 8 history. Sampson possesses the highest winning percentage in Oklahoma history (.719). He guided OU to nine consecutive 20-win seasons. He averaged 24.4 wins over those nine campaigns. He directed the Sooners to postseason tournament berths in each of his 12 seasons (11 NCAA Tournaments), with a Sweet 16 showing in 1999, a Final Four appearance in 2002 and an Elite Eight appearance in 2003. His teams also played in the Big 12 Tournament title game on five occasions during the 10 seasons he coached in the Big 12. In 2001, 2002, and 2003 the Sooners won that tournament. Sampson finished with a Big 12 Tournament record of 17–7. Standouts Eduardo Nájera and Hollis Price helped the Sooners maintain a streak of 25 straight post season appearances, the longest in the nation. Sampson left OU in 2006 to take a head job at Indiana.

Sampson's record at OU was 279–109 (0.719) overall, 128–60 (0.681) conference, with 11 NCAA Tournament Appearances, including one Final Four appearance. In the Big 12, Sampson had 3 Conference tournament Titles and 1 Conference regular season Title. During his final season at OU, Sampson's salary was approximately $900,000 annually, not including bonuses. Sampson left OU in 2006 to become the head basketball coach at Indiana University, signing a 7-year, $10.5 million contract, at $1.5 million per season.

Under Sampson's watch, Oklahoma was placed under a three-year investigation by the NCAA for recruiting violations. At the end of their investigation, the NCAA issued a report citing more than 550 illegal calls made by Sampson and his staff to 17 different recruits. The NCAA barred Sampson from recruiting off campus and making phone calls for one year, ending May 24, 2007.

Sampson averaged 23 wins per season (23–9) and 11 conference wins per season (11–5).

2006–2011 (the Jeff Capel era)

On April 11, 2006, Jeff Capel was named the 12th head basketball coach at Oklahoma, succeeding Kelvin Sampson. Though the Sooner Nation as a whole greeted Capel's hiring with optimism,[citation needed] one notable downside of the coaching change emerged—Sampson's departure caused three of the players who had signed with OU (once considered a top-five recruiting class) to rethink each's decision to attend OU. Scottie Reynolds went on to Villanova, and Damion James to Texas. Capel was originally signed to a four-year, $3 million contract, at $750,000 annually.

In his first year, after going 8–4 in non-conference games, with losses to Memphis, Purdue, Villanova, and Alabama, the Sooners started 6–3 in conference play, before losing their final 7 conference games. After winning only one game in the Big 12 Conference tournament, losing to eventual conference tournament champion Kansas, the Sooners missed any form of postseason play, which snapped the nation's longest streak of 25 consecutive years in the postseason, starting with Billy Tubbs' second year in 1982 and ending with Kelvin Sampson's final year in 2006.

In his second year, after signing McDonald's All-American Forward Blake Griffin, the Sooners finished 30–1 during the regular season (16–0 in Big 12 play) earning them a No. 4 seed in the Big 12 Tournament, where they won one game before losing to Texas in the semi-finals. They received a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament, where they defeated St. Joseph's in the first round before losing to No. 3 seed Louisville in the second round, finishing the season at 23–12, an improvement of 7 wins over the previous season. After this successful second season, Capel's name began to surface among many head coaching vacancies.[citation needed] In an effort to keep Capel, OU Athletic Director Joe Castiglione and the OU Board of Regents extended Capel's contract through 2014, and increased his salary to $1.05 million per year.

Player of the Year Candidate Blake Griffin announced he would be returning for his sophomore season, forgoing a possible lottery-pick status in the NBA draft. Coupled with the signing of another McDonald's All-American guard in Willie Warren, the 2008–2009 season looked to be promising.

The team experienced one of the best starts in school history at 25–1, until Griffin was sidelined with a concussion during the first half of the OU–Texas game on February 21, 2009. The Sooners went on to lose consecutive games for the first time all season, to Texas by 5 in Austin and Kansas by 9 in Norman. Without their star player, the Sooners fell short. Griffin returned to the lineup on February 28, 2009, and the Sooners returned to their winning ways defeating Texas Tech by 15 in Lubbock on 2/28/09, before losing on the road to Missouri, who was undefeated at home, and finishing the regular season by sweeping in-state rival Oklahoma State, who had won 7 of their previous 8 games. After a first-round bye in the Big 12 Tournament, the 2nd-seeded Sooners lost to the 7th-seeded Cowboys by 1 point during the final seconds of the game.

Capel's Sooners were granted a No. 2 seed for the NCAA tournament, and easily beat No. 15 seed Morgan State in the first round, #10 seed Michigan in the second round, and #3 seed Syracuse in the Sweet 16, whose vaunted 2–3 zone defense did nothing to slow down the Sooners' hot shooting from the perimeter. However, after hitting nine three-pointers during the previous game with Syracuse, the Sooner guards went 0/15 from beyond the arc during the first 35 minutes of their Elite 8 game against North Carolina, before finishing 2–19 in the game. This ultimately led to their demise by the Tar Heels on March 29, losing 60–72. Unanimous All-American Forward and Player of the Year Blake Griffin finished the tournament with 114 points and 60 rebounds, becoming the first player to accomplish such a feat in over 40 years. Griffin, who gave up his final two years of eligibility to enter the NBA draft, and was the #1 pick. The Sooners finished Capel's third season at 34–2, the school's first 30+ win season since 2002, and 2th overall. This was again an improvement of 7 wins over the previous season.

Even with the loss of starters Austin Johnson, Taylor Griffin, and Blake Griffin, the Sooners had two incoming McDonald's All-American recruits in point guard Tommy Mason-Griffin and center Keith "Tiny" Gallon. Paired with returning McDonald's All-American guard Willie Warren, guard Tony Crocker, and former reserve forward Ryan Wright, the Sooners had a chance to post yet another successful season and were poised make another deep run into the NCAA Tournament. This was the first time in the school's history where they had three McDonald's All-Americans on the roster at the same time.

Despite high hopes and a preseason ranking of No. 16, Jeff Capel and his Sooners proved to be one of the most overrated teams in the 2009–2010 season.[citation needed] After a mediocre 13–9 start, their season slipped away as they lost their last nine games of the season, including a first-round loss to Oklahoma State in the Big 12 tournament, leaving them with a 13–18 record to cap off the season. Those wins were vacated in November 2011 after various violations that included improper benefits and ineligible players.[3]

Capel's record at OU was 83–69 (0.546) overall, 33–43 (0.463) in conference (with 13 total wins and 4 conference wins having been vacated), with 2 NCAA Tournament Appearances, and one Elite Eight appearance. In the Big 12, Capel did not win a Conference tournament title or regular season title.

Capel finished 2010–11 with a 14–18 record and a loss to the Texas Longhorns in the 2011 Big 12 Tournament. On March 14, 2011, he was fired as head coach of the Sooners.

In November 2011, the NCAA punished Oklahoma with three years probation, a $15,000 fine, reductions in recruiting, the loss of a scholarship, and vacation of all wins for the 2009–10 season.

2011–2021 (the Lon Kruger era)

Lon Kruger was hired by OU to replace Jeff Capel as head coach prior to the 2011–12 season. Kruger had previously coached at Kansas State, Florida, Illinois and UNLV. In his first season at helm, the Sooners finished 15–16, improving on their 2010–11 finish.

The 2012–13 season yielded a surprising 20–12 (11–7 Big 12, 4th) finish and resulted in the program's first NCAA tournament bid since Blake Griffin led the school to the Elite 8 in 2009. However, the Sooners were defeated in the second round of the NCAA tournament by San Diego State.

The 2013–14 season continued this trend of improvement, as the Sooners finished 23–10 overall (12–6 Big 12, 2nd). However, they were again upset in the second round of the NCAA tournament, falling to North Dakota State.

4 of the 5 starters from the 2013–14 team returned for the 2014–15 season. Guard Buddy Hield was Big 12 player of the year as OU made it to the Big 12 tournament semifinals before Iowa State bounced them out. Oklahoma received a #3 seed in the East region of the NCAA tournament, made it to the Sweet Sixteen by beating little regarded Albany and Dayton, but couldn't advance to the regional final (Elite Eight) as Michigan State held on 62–58.

In the 2015–2016 season, Oklahoma finished 24–6 in the regular season, and despite losing to West Virginia in the Big 12 Tournament's second round, received a #2 seed in the NCAA tournament. Oklahoma easily beat Cal State Bakersfield in the first round, but struggled to finish off VCU in the second round despite an early 21–7 lead. Oklahoma then went on to defeat Texas A&M 77–63 to advance to the west regional final where the Sooners defeated top-seed Oregon 80–68 to advance to the Final Four. Their Final Four opponent was Villanova, also a number two seed who upset Big 12 rival and number one seed Kansas to reach the Final Four. Oklahoma lost to Villanova 95–51 in the national semifinal game.

Lon Kruger is the first coach in history to take 5 different schools to the Sweet Sixteen. He is also the only coach to win a game in the NCAA Tournament with 5 different schools.

Kruger retired from coaching on March 25, 2021.

2021–present (the Porter Moser era)

On April 3, 2021, the Sooners announced the hiring of Porter Moser, the coach who brought Loyola Chicago to the Final Four in 2018 and had recently coached the Ramblers to a Sweet 16.

Conference affiliations

Oklahoma has been affiliated with the following conferences:

Conference Years Reason left
Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1920–1928 Conference dissolved
Big Six/Seven/Eight Conference 1928–1996 Conference dissolved
Big 12 Conference 1996–2024 Joined SEC
Southeastern Conference 2024–future

Coaching staff

As of March 19, 2023:

Name Position coached Consecutive season at
Oklahoma in current position
Porter Moser Head coach 2nd
Emanuel Dildy Assistant coach 2nd
Ryan Humphrey Assistant coach 1st
Tad Gilbert Director of Basketball Operations 1st
Matt Gordon Special Assistant to the Head Coach and Director of Recruiting 2nd
Clayton Custer Director of Video Operations and Player Development 2nd
Bryce Daub Director of Strength and Performance 7th
Dylan Mihalke Director of Analytics and Assistant Dir. of Video Operations
Doc Sadler Special Advisor to the Head Coach 1st
Reference:[4]

Championships

Conference regular season

Season Coach Conference Overall Record Conference Record
1927–28 Hugh McDermott Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 18–0 18–0
1928–29 Hugh McDermott Big Six Conference 13–2 10–0
1938–39§ Bruce Drake Big Six Conference 12–9 7–3
1939–40§ Bruce Drake Big Six Conference 12–7 8–2
1941–42§ Bruce Drake Big Six Conference 11–7 8–2
1943–44§ Bruce Drake Big Six Conference 15–8 9–1
1946–47 Bruce Drake Big Six Conference 24–7 8–2
1948–49§ Bruce Drake Big Seven Conference 14–10 9–3
1978–79 Dave Bliss Big Eight Conference 21–10 10–4
1983–84 Billy Tubbs Big Eight Conference 24–9 13–1
1984–85 Billy Tubbs Big Eight Conference 31–6 13–1
1987–88 Billy Tubbs Big Eight Conference 35–4 12–2
1988–89 Billy Tubbs Big Eight Conference 30–6 12–2
2004–05§ Kelvin Sampson Big 12 Conference 30–6 12–2
Conference regular season championships 14

§ – Conference co-champions

Conference tournament championships

Year Coach Opponent Score Site Conference Overall Record Conference Record
1979 Dave Bliss Kansas 80–65 Kansas City, Missouri Big Eight 21–10 10–4
1985 Billy Tubbs Iowa State 73–71 Kansas City, Missouri Big Eight 31–6 13–1
1988 Billy Tubbs Kansas State 73–71 Kansas City, Missouri Big Eight 35–4 12–2
1990 Billy Tubbs Colorado 73–71 Kansas City, Missouri Big Eight 27–5 11–3
2000 Kelvin Sampson Texas 54–45 Kansas City, Missouri Big 12 26–7 12–4
2001 Kelvin Sampson Kansas 64–55 Kansas City, Missouri Big 12 31–5 13–3
2002 Kelvin Sampson Missouri 49–47 Dallas, Texas Big 12 27–7 12–4
Conference tournament championships 7


Records

Career Points:

Player Seasons Points
1 Wayman Tisdale 1982–1985 2,661
2 Buddy Hield 2012–16 2,291
3 Jeff Webster 1991–94 2,281
4 Tim McCalister 1984–87 2,275
5 Darryl Kennedy 1984–87 2,097
6 Stacey King 1986–89 2,008
7 Ryan Minor 1993–96 1,946
8 Hollis Price 2000–03 1,821
9 Alvan Adams 1973–75 1,707
10 Eduardo Nájera 1997–2000 1,646

Record vs. Big 12 opponents

Oklahoma
vs.
Overall Record at Norman at Opponent's
Venue
at Neutral Site Last 5 Meetings Last 10 Meetings Current Streak Since Beginning
of Big 12
Baylor OU, 45–20 OU, 23–7 OU, 19–11 OU, 3–2 BU, 5–0 BU, 8–2 L 6 OU, 35–9
Iowa State OU, 115–87 OU, 64–23 ISU, 51–37 OU, 14–13 ISU, 3–2 ISU, 6–4 L 1 OU, 17–15
Kansas KU, 145–66 KU, 50–42 KU, 74–16 KU, 21–8 KU, 4–1 KU, 8–2 W 1 KU, 24–6
Kansas State OU, 106–98 OU, 61–27 KSU, 60–36 KSU, 11–9 KSU, 4–1 KSU, 7–3 L 2 OU, 14–13
Oklahoma State OU, 136–97 OU, 84–27 OSU, 63–45 Tied, 7–7 OU, 3–2 OU, 7–3 L 2 OU, 26–20
Texas OU, 54–37 OU, 28–12 UT, 21–18 OU, 8–5 UT, 3–2 TIE, 5–5 L 2 UT, 25–26
Texas Christian OU, 18–3 OU, 9–0 OU, 8–2 Tied, 1–1 OU, 4–1 OU, 8–2 W 1 OU, 7–2
Texas Tech OU, 38–23 OU, 23–7 TTU, 15–13 OU, 2–1 OU, 3–2 OU, 7–3 L 1 OU, 29–15
West Virginia OU, 9–5 OU, 4–1 OU, 4–2 WVU, 2–1 OU, 3–2 OU, 6–4 L 1 OU, 8–4
*Through games of Thursday, April 11, 2021.[5]

From 1996 (the inception of the Big 12) to 2016 OU has recorded 1 First place finish in league play, 7 Second place finishes, 4 Third place finishes, 2 Fourth place finishes, 1 Fifth place finish, 2 Seventh place finishes, 1 Eighth place finish, 1 Ninth place finish, and 1 Tenth place finish

Postseason

NCAA tournament results

The Sooners have appeared in the NCAA tournament 33 times. Their combined record is 42–33. They have appeared in the Final Four of the tournament 5 times, tied with The University of Illinois for second-most appearances without winning a national championship.

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1939 Elite Eight
Final Four
Utah State
Oregon
W 50–39
L 37–55
1943 Elite Eight
Regional 3rd Place Game
Wyoming
Washington
L 50–53
W 48–43
1947 Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
Oregon State
Texas
Holy Cross
W 56–54
W 55–54
L 47–58
1979 (5) Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
(4) Texas
(1) Indiana State
W 90–76
L 72–93
1983 (7) First Round
Second Round
(10) UAB
(2) Indiana
W 71–63
L 49–63
1984 (2) Second Round (10) Dayton L 85–89
1985 (1) First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
(16) North Carolina A&T
(9) Illinois State
(5) Louisiana Tech
(2) Memphis State
W 96–83
W 75–69
W 86–84OT
L 61–63
1986 (4) First Round
Second Round
(13) Northeastern
(12) DePaul
W 80–74
L 69–74
1987 (6) First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
(11) Tulsa
(3) Pittsburgh
(2) Iowa
W 74–69
W 96–93
L 91–93OT
1988 (1) First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
(16) UT Chattanooga
(8) Auburn
(5) Louisville
(6) Villanova
(1) Arizona
(6) Kansas
W 94–66
W 107–87
W 108–98
W 78–59
W 86–79
L 79–83
1989 (1) First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
(16) East Tennessee State
(9) Louisiana Tech
(5) Virginia
W 72–71
W 124–81
L 80–86
1990 (1) First Round
Second Round
(16) Towson State
(8) North Carolina
W 77–68
L 77–79
1992 (4) First Round (13) Southwestern Louisiana L 83–87
1995 (4) First Round (13) Manhattan L 67–77
1996 (10) First Round (7) Temple L 43–61
1997 (11) First Round (6) Stanford L 67–80
1998 (10) First Round (7) Indiana L 87–94OT
1999 (13) First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
(4) Arizona
(5) UNC Charlotte
(1) Michigan State
W 61–60
W 85–72
L 46–54
2000 (3) First Round
Second Round
(14) Winthrop
(6) Purdue
W 74–50
L 62–66
2001 (4) First Round (13) Indiana State L 68–70OT
2002 (2) First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
(15) UIC
(7) Xavier
(3) Arizona
(12) Missouri
(5) Indiana
W 71–63
W 78–65
W 88–67
W 81–75
L 64–73
2003 (1) First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
(16) South Carolina State
(8) California
(12) Butler
(3) Syracuse
W 71–54
W 74–65
W 65–54
L 47–63
2005 (3) First Round
Second Round
(14) Niagara
(6) Utah
W 84–67
L 58–67
2006 (6) First Round (11) Milwaukee L 74–82
2008 (6) First Round
Second Round
(11) Saint Joseph's
(3) Louisville
W 72–64
L 48–78
2009 (2) First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
(15) Morgan State
(10) Michigan
(3) Syracuse
(1) North Carolina
W 82–54
W 73–63
W 84–71
L 60–72
2013 (10) First Round (7) San Diego State L 55–70
2014 (5) First Round (12) North Dakota State L 75–80OT
2015 (3) Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
(14) Albany
(11) Dayton
(7) Michigan State
W 69–60
W 72–66
L 58–62
2016 (2) First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
(15) Cal State Bakersfield
(10) VCU
(3) Texas A&M
(1) Oregon
(2) Villanova
W 82–68
W 85–81
W 77–63
W 80–68
L 51–95
2018 (10) First Round (7) Rhode Island L 78–83OT
2019 (9) First Round
Second Round
(8) Ole Miss
(1) Virginia
W 95–72
L 51–63
2021 (8) First Round
Second Round
(9) Missouri
(1) Gonzaga
W 72–68
L 71–87

NCAA tournament seeding history

The NCAA began seeding the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament with the 1979 edition.[6] The 64-team field started in 1985, which guaranteed that a championship team had to win six games.[7]

Years → '79 '83 '84 '85 '86 '87 '88 '89 '90 '92 '95 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03 '05 '06 '08 '09 '13 '14 '15 '16 '18 '19 '21
Seeds → 5 7 2 1 4 6 1 1 1 4 4 10 11 10 13 3 4 2 1 3 6 6 2 10 5 3 2 10 9 8

NIT results

The Sooners have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) eight times. Their combined record is 11–8.

Year Round Opponent Result
1970 First Round
Quarterfinals
Louisville
LSU
W 74–73
L 94–97
1971 First Round Hawaiʻi L 86–87
1982 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Oral Roberts
UC Irvine
Dayton
Bradley
W 81–73
W 80–77
W 91–82
L 68–84
1991 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Tulsa
Cincinnati
Providence
Colorado
Stanford
W 111–86
W 89–81
W 83–74
W 88–78
L 72–78
1993 First Round
Second Round
Michigan State
Minnesota
W 88–86
L 72–86
1994 First Round Vanderbilt L 67–77
2004 First Round
Second Round
LSU
Michigan
W 70–61
L 52–63
2022 First Round
Second Round
Missouri State
St. Bonaventure
W 89–72
L 68–70

Honored players and coaches

Retired jerseys

Oklahoma has honored five jersey numbers.

Oklahoma Sooners honored jerseys
No. Player Position Career Year of Retirement
10 Mookie Blaylock PG 1987–1989 2001
23 Wayman Tisdale PF 1982–1985 1997
23 Blake Griffin PF 2007–2009 2016
33 Alvan Adams PF 1972–1975 1998
33 Stacey King PF 1985–1989 2008

See also

References

  1. ^ Conover, Brayden (October 24, 2019). "Oklahoma announces revamped student section for basketball season". USA Today. Retrieved April 2, 2023.
  2. ^ "Colors – OU Brand Guide". April 20, 2018. Retrieved July 11, 2018.
  3. ^ NCAA finds major violations in Sooners basketball
  4. ^ "2022–23 Men's Basketball Coaching Staff". soonersports.com. University of Oklahoma. Retrieved March 19, 2023.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on March 6, 2009. Retrieved March 1, 2009.
  6. ^ "NCAA tournament:All-timeAll-time No. 1 seeds, teams, history". ncaa.com. Retrieved March 19, 2023.
  7. ^ Shelton, Harold, Nick Loucks and Chris Fallica (July 21, 2008). "Counting down the most prestigious programs since 1984–85". ESPN. Retrieved March 19, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links

  • Official website  

oklahoma, sooners, basketball, team, represents, university, oklahoma, ncaa, division, basketball, sooners, play, conference, oklahoma, sooners2022, teamuniversityuniversity, oklahomafirst, season1908all, time, record1, head, coachporter, moser, season, confer. The Oklahoma Sooners men s basketball team represents the University of Oklahoma in men s NCAA Division I basketball The Sooners play in the Big 12 Conference Oklahoma Sooners2022 23 Oklahoma Sooners men s basketball teamUniversityUniversity of OklahomaFirst season1908All time record1 715 1 107 608 Head coachPorter Moser 2nd season ConferenceBig 12LocationNorman OklahomaArenaLloyd Noble Center Capacity 11 562 NicknameSoonersStudent sectionBoom Squad 1 ColorsCrimson and cream 2 UniformsHome AwayNCAA Tournament Runner up1947 1988NCAA Tournament Final Four1939 1947 1988 2002 2016NCAA Tournament Elite Eight1939 1943 1947 1985 1988 2002 2003 2009 2016NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen1979 1985 1987 1988 1989 1999 2002 2003 2009 2015 2016NCAA Tournament Round of 321979 1983 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1999 2000 2002 2003 2005 2008 2009 2015 2016 2019 2021NCAA Tournament Appearances1939 1943 1947 1979 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1992 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2005 2006 2008 2009 2013 2014 2015 2016 2018 2019 2021Conference Tournament Champions1979 1985 1988 1990 2001 2002 2003Conference Regular Season Champions1928 1929 1939 1940 1942 1944 1947 1949 1979 1984 1985 1988 1989 2005 Contents 1 History 1 1 1908 80 1 2 1981 1994 the Billy Tubbs era 1 3 1995 2006 the Kelvin Sampson era 1 4 2006 2011 the Jeff Capel era 1 5 2011 2021 the Lon Kruger era 1 6 2021 present the Porter Moser era 2 Conference affiliations 3 Coaching staff 4 Championships 4 1 Conference regular season 4 2 Conference tournament championships 5 Records 6 Record vs Big 12 opponents 7 Postseason 7 1 NCAA tournament results 7 2 NCAA tournament seeding history 7 3 NIT results 8 Honored players and coaches 8 1 Retired jerseys 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditSee also List of Oklahoma Sooners men s basketball seasons 1908 80 Edit The Sooners enjoyed moderate success on the court during this era posting just 16 losing records in their first 72 seasons They were led by 9 different coaches during this period beginning with Bennie Owen who also coached the football team and ending with Dave Bliss in 1980 The Sooners participated in the very first Final Four in 1939 OU made a second appearance in the championship game in 1947 losing 47 58 to Holy Cross 1981 1994 the Billy Tubbs era Edit The program gained national prominence under Billy Tubbs when he took over in 1981 Star players Wayman Tisdale Mookie Blaylock and Stacey King guided the Sooners to several deep runs in the NCAA Tournament In 1988 the Sooners reached the NCAA title game in Kansas City where they fell four points shy of their first national title to the 11 loss Kansas Jayhawks a team which they had beaten twice in regular season play Tubbs resigned on April 10 1994 indicating that he did not feel appreciated enough working at a football school he later reconciled with the administration and enjoyed a healthy relationship with the school up until his death from leukemia in 2020 Tubbs base salary at Oklahoma in his final season was 107 000 annually Tubbs 59 years old at the time left to take over the struggling Texas Christian University basketball program signing a 5 year contract worth between 200 000 and 400 000 per season Tubbs record at OU was 333 132 0 716 overall 126 70 0 643 conference with 10 NCAA Tournament appearances one Final Four appearance and one National Title Game appearance Tubbs finished with 5 Big 8 regular season titles and 2 Conference tournament titles Tubbs averaged 24 wins per season 24 9 and 9 conference wins per season 9 5 1995 2006 the Kelvin Sampson era Edit Kelvin Sampson became the 11th head coach at the University of Oklahoma on April 25 1994 Sampson was named national coach of the year in 1995 his first year at OU by the Associated Press United States Basketball Writers Association and Basketball Weekly after guiding the Sooners to 23 9 overall and 15 0 home marks It was the second best overall record posted by a first year coach in Big 8 history Sampson possesses the highest winning percentage in Oklahoma history 719 He guided OU to nine consecutive 20 win seasons He averaged 24 4 wins over those nine campaigns He directed the Sooners to postseason tournament berths in each of his 12 seasons 11 NCAA Tournaments with a Sweet 16 showing in 1999 a Final Four appearance in 2002 and an Elite Eight appearance in 2003 His teams also played in the Big 12 Tournament title game on five occasions during the 10 seasons he coached in the Big 12 In 2001 2002 and 2003 the Sooners won that tournament Sampson finished with a Big 12 Tournament record of 17 7 Standouts Eduardo Najera and Hollis Price helped the Sooners maintain a streak of 25 straight post season appearances the longest in the nation Sampson left OU in 2006 to take a head job at Indiana Sampson s record at OU was 279 109 0 719 overall 128 60 0 681 conference with 11 NCAA Tournament Appearances including one Final Four appearance In the Big 12 Sampson had 3 Conference tournament Titles and 1 Conference regular season Title During his final season at OU Sampson s salary was approximately 900 000 annually not including bonuses Sampson left OU in 2006 to become the head basketball coach at Indiana University signing a 7 year 10 5 million contract at 1 5 million per season Under Sampson s watch Oklahoma was placed under a three year investigation by the NCAA for recruiting violations At the end of their investigation the NCAA issued a report citing more than 550 illegal calls made by Sampson and his staff to 17 different recruits The NCAA barred Sampson from recruiting off campus and making phone calls for one year ending May 24 2007 Sampson averaged 23 wins per season 23 9 and 11 conference wins per season 11 5 2006 2011 the Jeff Capel era Edit On April 11 2006 Jeff Capel was named the 12th head basketball coach at Oklahoma succeeding Kelvin Sampson Though the Sooner Nation as a whole greeted Capel s hiring with optimism citation needed one notable downside of the coaching change emerged Sampson s departure caused three of the players who had signed with OU once considered a top five recruiting class to rethink each s decision to attend OU Scottie Reynolds went on to Villanova and Damion James to Texas Capel was originally signed to a four year 3 million contract at 750 000 annually In his first year after going 8 4 in non conference games with losses to Memphis Purdue Villanova and Alabama the Sooners started 6 3 in conference play before losing their final 7 conference games After winning only one game in the Big 12 Conference tournament losing to eventual conference tournament champion Kansas the Sooners missed any form of postseason play which snapped the nation s longest streak of 25 consecutive years in the postseason starting with Billy Tubbs second year in 1982 and ending with Kelvin Sampson s final year in 2006 In his second year after signing McDonald s All American Forward Blake Griffin the Sooners finished 30 1 during the regular season 16 0 in Big 12 play earning them a No 4 seed in the Big 12 Tournament where they won one game before losing to Texas in the semi finals They received a No 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament where they defeated St Joseph s in the first round before losing to No 3 seed Louisville in the second round finishing the season at 23 12 an improvement of 7 wins over the previous season After this successful second season Capel s name began to surface among many head coaching vacancies citation needed In an effort to keep Capel OU Athletic Director Joe Castiglione and the OU Board of Regents extended Capel s contract through 2014 and increased his salary to 1 05 million per year Player of the Year Candidate Blake Griffin announced he would be returning for his sophomore season forgoing a possible lottery pick status in the NBA draft Coupled with the signing of another McDonald s All American guard in Willie Warren the 2008 2009 season looked to be promising The team experienced one of the best starts in school history at 25 1 until Griffin was sidelined with a concussion during the first half of the OU Texas game on February 21 2009 The Sooners went on to lose consecutive games for the first time all season to Texas by 5 in Austin and Kansas by 9 in Norman Without their star player the Sooners fell short Griffin returned to the lineup on February 28 2009 and the Sooners returned to their winning ways defeating Texas Tech by 15 in Lubbock on 2 28 09 before losing on the road to Missouri who was undefeated at home and finishing the regular season by sweeping in state rival Oklahoma State who had won 7 of their previous 8 games After a first round bye in the Big 12 Tournament the 2nd seeded Sooners lost to the 7th seeded Cowboys by 1 point during the final seconds of the game Capel s Sooners were granted a No 2 seed for the NCAA tournament and easily beat No 15 seed Morgan State in the first round 10 seed Michigan in the second round and 3 seed Syracuse in the Sweet 16 whose vaunted 2 3 zone defense did nothing to slow down the Sooners hot shooting from the perimeter However after hitting nine three pointers during the previous game with Syracuse the Sooner guards went 0 15 from beyond the arc during the first 35 minutes of their Elite 8 game against North Carolina before finishing 2 19 in the game This ultimately led to their demise by the Tar Heels on March 29 losing 60 72 Unanimous All American Forward and Player of the Year Blake Griffin finished the tournament with 114 points and 60 rebounds becoming the first player to accomplish such a feat in over 40 years Griffin who gave up his final two years of eligibility to enter the NBA draft and was the 1 pick The Sooners finished Capel s third season at 34 2 the school s first 30 win season since 2002 and 2th overall This was again an improvement of 7 wins over the previous season Even with the loss of starters Austin Johnson Taylor Griffin and Blake Griffin the Sooners had two incoming McDonald s All American recruits in point guard Tommy Mason Griffin and center Keith Tiny Gallon Paired with returning McDonald s All American guard Willie Warren guard Tony Crocker and former reserve forward Ryan Wright the Sooners had a chance to post yet another successful season and were poised make another deep run into the NCAA Tournament This was the first time in the school s history where they had three McDonald s All Americans on the roster at the same time Despite high hopes and a preseason ranking of No 16 Jeff Capel and his Sooners proved to be one of the most overrated teams in the 2009 2010 season citation needed After a mediocre 13 9 start their season slipped away as they lost their last nine games of the season including a first round loss to Oklahoma State in the Big 12 tournament leaving them with a 13 18 record to cap off the season Those wins were vacated in November 2011 after various violations that included improper benefits and ineligible players 3 Capel s record at OU was 83 69 0 546 overall 33 43 0 463 in conference with 13 total wins and 4 conference wins having been vacated with 2 NCAA Tournament Appearances and one Elite Eight appearance In the Big 12 Capel did not win a Conference tournament title or regular season title Capel finished 2010 11 with a 14 18 record and a loss to the Texas Longhorns in the 2011 Big 12 Tournament On March 14 2011 he was fired as head coach of the Sooners In November 2011 the NCAA punished Oklahoma with three years probation a 15 000 fine reductions in recruiting the loss of a scholarship and vacation of all wins for the 2009 10 season 2011 2021 the Lon Kruger era Edit Kristian Doolittle Lon Kruger was hired by OU to replace Jeff Capel as head coach prior to the 2011 12 season Kruger had previously coached at Kansas State Florida Illinois and UNLV In his first season at helm the Sooners finished 15 16 improving on their 2010 11 finish The 2012 13 season yielded a surprising 20 12 11 7 Big 12 4th finish and resulted in the program s first NCAA tournament bid since Blake Griffin led the school to the Elite 8 in 2009 However the Sooners were defeated in the second round of the NCAA tournament by San Diego State The 2013 14 season continued this trend of improvement as the Sooners finished 23 10 overall 12 6 Big 12 2nd However they were again upset in the second round of the NCAA tournament falling to North Dakota State 4 of the 5 starters from the 2013 14 team returned for the 2014 15 season Guard Buddy Hield was Big 12 player of the year as OU made it to the Big 12 tournament semifinals before Iowa State bounced them out Oklahoma received a 3 seed in the East region of the NCAA tournament made it to the Sweet Sixteen by beating little regarded Albany and Dayton but couldn t advance to the regional final Elite Eight as Michigan State held on 62 58 In the 2015 2016 season Oklahoma finished 24 6 in the regular season and despite losing to West Virginia in the Big 12 Tournament s second round received a 2 seed in the NCAA tournament Oklahoma easily beat Cal State Bakersfield in the first round but struggled to finish off VCU in the second round despite an early 21 7 lead Oklahoma then went on to defeat Texas A amp M 77 63 to advance to the west regional final where the Sooners defeated top seed Oregon 80 68 to advance to the Final Four Their Final Four opponent was Villanova also a number two seed who upset Big 12 rival and number one seed Kansas to reach the Final Four Oklahoma lost to Villanova 95 51 in the national semifinal game Lon Kruger is the first coach in history to take 5 different schools to the Sweet Sixteen He is also the only coach to win a game in the NCAA Tournament with 5 different schools Kruger retired from coaching on March 25 2021 2021 present the Porter Moser era Edit On April 3 2021 the Sooners announced the hiring of Porter Moser the coach who brought Loyola Chicago to the Final Four in 2018 and had recently coached the Ramblers to a Sweet 16 Conference affiliations EditOklahoma has been affiliated with the following conferences Conference Years Reason leftMissouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1920 1928 Conference dissolvedBig Six Seven Eight Conference 1928 1996 Conference dissolvedBig 12 Conference 1996 2024 Joined SECSoutheastern Conference 2024 futureCoaching staff EditAs of March 19 2023 Name Position coached Consecutive season atOklahoma in current positionPorter Moser Head coach 2ndEmanuel Dildy Assistant coach 2ndRyan Humphrey Assistant coach 1stTad Gilbert Director of Basketball Operations 1stMatt Gordon Special Assistant to the Head Coach and Director of Recruiting 2ndClayton Custer Director of Video Operations and Player Development 2ndBryce Daub Director of Strength and Performance 7thDylan Mihalke Director of Analytics and Assistant Dir of Video OperationsDoc Sadler Special Advisor to the Head Coach 1stReference 4 Championships EditConference regular season Edit Season Coach Conference Overall Record Conference Record1927 28 Hugh McDermott Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 18 0 18 01928 29 Hugh McDermott Big Six Conference 13 2 10 01938 39 Bruce Drake Big Six Conference 12 9 7 31939 40 Bruce Drake Big Six Conference 12 7 8 21941 42 Bruce Drake Big Six Conference 11 7 8 21943 44 Bruce Drake Big Six Conference 15 8 9 11946 47 Bruce Drake Big Six Conference 24 7 8 21948 49 Bruce Drake Big Seven Conference 14 10 9 31978 79 Dave Bliss Big Eight Conference 21 10 10 41983 84 Billy Tubbs Big Eight Conference 24 9 13 11984 85 Billy Tubbs Big Eight Conference 31 6 13 11987 88 Billy Tubbs Big Eight Conference 35 4 12 21988 89 Billy Tubbs Big Eight Conference 30 6 12 22004 05 Kelvin Sampson Big 12 Conference 30 6 12 2Conference regular season championships 14 Conference co champions Conference tournament championships Edit Year Coach Opponent Score Site Conference Overall Record Conference Record1979 Dave Bliss Kansas 80 65 Kansas City Missouri Big Eight 21 10 10 41985 Billy Tubbs Iowa State 73 71 Kansas City Missouri Big Eight 31 6 13 11988 Billy Tubbs Kansas State 73 71 Kansas City Missouri Big Eight 35 4 12 21990 Billy Tubbs Colorado 73 71 Kansas City Missouri Big Eight 27 5 11 32000 Kelvin Sampson Texas 54 45 Kansas City Missouri Big 12 26 7 12 42001 Kelvin Sampson Kansas 64 55 Kansas City Missouri Big 12 31 5 13 32002 Kelvin Sampson Missouri 49 47 Dallas Texas Big 12 27 7 12 4Conference tournament championships 7Records EditSee also Oklahoma Sooners men s basketball statistical leaders Career Points Player Seasons Points1 Wayman Tisdale 1982 1985 2 6612 Buddy Hield 2012 16 2 2913 Jeff Webster 1991 94 2 2814 Tim McCalister 1984 87 2 2755 Darryl Kennedy 1984 87 2 0976 Stacey King 1986 89 2 0087 Ryan Minor 1993 96 1 9468 Hollis Price 2000 03 1 8219 Alvan Adams 1973 75 1 70710 Eduardo Najera 1997 2000 1 646Record vs Big 12 opponents EditOklahomavs Overall Record at Norman at Opponent s Venue at Neutral Site Last 5 Meetings Last 10 Meetings Current Streak Since Beginningof Big 12Baylor OU 45 20 OU 23 7 OU 19 11 OU 3 2 BU 5 0 BU 8 2 L 6 OU 35 9Iowa State OU 115 87 OU 64 23 ISU 51 37 OU 14 13 ISU 3 2 ISU 6 4 L 1 OU 17 15Kansas KU 145 66 KU 50 42 KU 74 16 KU 21 8 KU 4 1 KU 8 2 W 1 KU 24 6Kansas State OU 106 98 OU 61 27 KSU 60 36 KSU 11 9 KSU 4 1 KSU 7 3 L 2 OU 14 13Oklahoma State OU 136 97 OU 84 27 OSU 63 45 Tied 7 7 OU 3 2 OU 7 3 L 2 OU 26 20Texas OU 54 37 OU 28 12 UT 21 18 OU 8 5 UT 3 2 TIE 5 5 L 2 UT 25 26Texas Christian OU 18 3 OU 9 0 OU 8 2 Tied 1 1 OU 4 1 OU 8 2 W 1 OU 7 2Texas Tech OU 38 23 OU 23 7 TTU 15 13 OU 2 1 OU 3 2 OU 7 3 L 1 OU 29 15West Virginia OU 9 5 OU 4 1 OU 4 2 WVU 2 1 OU 3 2 OU 6 4 L 1 OU 8 4 Through games of Thursday April 11 2021 5 From 1996 the inception of the Big 12 to 2016 OU has recorded 1 First place finish in league play 7 Second place finishes 4 Third place finishes 2 Fourth place finishes 1 Fifth place finish 2 Seventh place finishes 1 Eighth place finish 1 Ninth place finish and 1 Tenth place finishPostseason EditNCAA tournament results Edit The Sooners have appeared in the NCAA tournament 33 times Their combined record is 42 33 They have appeared in the Final Four of the tournament 5 times tied with The University of Illinois for second most appearances without winning a national championship Year Seed Round Opponent Result1939 Elite EightFinal Four Utah StateOregon W 50 39L 37 551943 Elite EightRegional 3rd Place Game WyomingWashington L 50 53W 48 431947 Elite EightFinal FourNational Championship Oregon StateTexasHoly Cross W 56 54W 55 54L 47 581979 5 Second RoundSweet Sixteen 4 Texas 1 Indiana State W 90 76L 72 931983 7 First RoundSecond Round 10 UAB 2 Indiana W 71 63L 49 631984 2 Second Round 10 Dayton L 85 891985 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight 16 North Carolina A amp T 9 Illinois State 5 Louisiana Tech 2 Memphis State W 96 83W 75 69W 86 84OTL 61 631986 4 First RoundSecond Round 13 Northeastern 12 DePaul W 80 74L 69 741987 6 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 11 Tulsa 3 Pittsburgh 2 Iowa W 74 69W 96 93L 91 93OT1988 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship 16 UT Chattanooga 8 Auburn 5 Louisville 6 Villanova 1 Arizona 6 Kansas W 94 66W 107 87W 108 98W 78 59W 86 79L 79 831989 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 16 East Tennessee State 9 Louisiana Tech 5 Virginia W 72 71W 124 81L 80 861990 1 First RoundSecond Round 16 Towson State 8 North Carolina W 77 68L 77 791992 4 First Round 13 Southwestern Louisiana L 83 871995 4 First Round 13 Manhattan L 67 771996 10 First Round 7 Temple L 43 611997 11 First Round 6 Stanford L 67 801998 10 First Round 7 Indiana L 87 94OT1999 13 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 4 Arizona 5 UNC Charlotte 1 Michigan State W 61 60W 85 72L 46 542000 3 First RoundSecond Round 14 Winthrop 6 Purdue W 74 50L 62 662001 4 First Round 13 Indiana State L 68 70OT2002 2 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal Four 15 UIC 7 Xavier 3 Arizona 12 Missouri 5 Indiana W 71 63W 78 65W 88 67W 81 75L 64 732003 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight 16 South Carolina State 8 California 12 Butler 3 Syracuse W 71 54W 74 65W 65 54L 47 632005 3 First RoundSecond Round 14 Niagara 6 Utah W 84 67L 58 672006 6 First Round 11 Milwaukee L 74 822008 6 First RoundSecond Round 11 Saint Joseph s 3 Louisville W 72 64L 48 782009 2 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight 15 Morgan State 10 Michigan 3 Syracuse 1 North Carolina W 82 54W 73 63W 84 71L 60 722013 10 First Round 7 San Diego State L 55 702014 5 First Round 12 North Dakota State L 75 80OT2015 3 Second RoundThird RoundSweet Sixteen 14 Albany 11 Dayton 7 Michigan State W 69 60W 72 66L 58 622016 2 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal Four 15 Cal State Bakersfield 10 VCU 3 Texas A amp M 1 Oregon 2 Villanova W 82 68W 85 81W 77 63W 80 68L 51 952018 10 First Round 7 Rhode Island L 78 83OT2019 9 First RoundSecond Round 8 Ole Miss 1 Virginia W 95 72L 51 632021 8 First RoundSecond Round 9 Missouri 1 Gonzaga W 72 68L 71 87NCAA tournament seeding history Edit The NCAA began seeding the NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament with the 1979 edition 6 The 64 team field started in 1985 which guaranteed that a championship team had to win six games 7 Years 79 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 92 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 05 06 08 09 13 14 15 16 18 19 21Seeds 5 7 2 1 4 6 1 1 1 4 4 10 11 10 13 3 4 2 1 3 6 6 2 10 5 3 2 10 9 8NIT results Edit The Sooners have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament NIT eight times Their combined record is 11 8 Year Round Opponent Result1970 First RoundQuarterfinals LouisvilleLSU W 74 73L 94 971971 First Round Hawaiʻi L 86 871982 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals Oral RobertsUC IrvineDaytonBradley W 81 73W 80 77W 91 82L 68 841991 First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal TulsaCincinnatiProvidenceColoradoStanford W 111 86W 89 81W 83 74W 88 78L 72 781993 First RoundSecond Round Michigan StateMinnesota W 88 86L 72 861994 First Round Vanderbilt L 67 772004 First RoundSecond Round LSUMichigan W 70 61L 52 632022 First RoundSecond Round Missouri StateSt Bonaventure W 89 72L 68 70Honored players and coaches EditRetired jerseys Edit Oklahoma has honored five jersey numbers Oklahoma Sooners honored jerseysNo Player Position Career Year of Retirement10 Mookie Blaylock PG 1987 1989 200123 Wayman Tisdale PF 1982 1985 199723 Blake Griffin PF 2007 2009 201633 Alvan Adams PF 1972 1975 199833 Stacey King PF 1985 1989 2008See also EditOklahoma Sooners women s basketballReferences Edit Conover Brayden October 24 2019 Oklahoma announces revamped student section for basketball season USA Today Retrieved April 2 2023 Colors OU Brand Guide April 20 2018 Retrieved July 11 2018 NCAA finds major violations in Sooners basketball 2022 23 Men s Basketball Coaching Staff soonersports com University of Oklahoma Retrieved March 19 2023 Oklahoma Sooners Official Athletic Site Men s Basketball Archived from the original on March 6 2009 Retrieved March 1 2009 NCAA tournament All timeAll time No 1 seeds teams history ncaa com Retrieved March 19 2023 Shelton Harold Nick Loucks and Chris Fallica July 21 2008 Counting down the most prestigious programs since 1984 85 ESPN Retrieved March 19 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oklahoma Sooners men 27s basketball amp oldid 1151818298, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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