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Oklahoma State Cowboys football

The Oklahoma State Cowboys football program represents Oklahoma State University–Stillwater in college football. The team is a member of the Big 12 Conference and competes at the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision level. The Cowboys are led by Mike Gundy, who is in his 19th year as head coach. Oklahoma State plays its home games at Boone Pickens Stadium in Stillwater, Oklahoma.

Oklahoma State Cowboys football
First season1901 (122 years ago)
Athletic directorChad Weiberg
Head coachMike Gundy
20th season, 166–79 (.678)
StadiumBoone Pickens Stadium
(capacity: 55,509)
Field surfaceFieldTurf
LocationStillwater, Oklahoma
NCAA divisionDivision I FBS
ConferenceBig 12 Conference
Past conferencesSouthwest Conference
(1915–1924)
Missouri Valley
(1925–1956)
Big Eight
(1960–1995)
All-time record638–572–48 (.526)
Bowl record22–12 (.647)
Claimed national titles1 (1945)
Unclaimed national titles1 (2011)
Conference titles10
RivalriesOklahoma (rivalry)
Tulsa (rivalry)
Heisman winnersBarry Sanders – 1988
Consensus All-Americans20
Current uniform
ColorsOrange and black[1]
   
Fight songRide 'em Cowboys
MascotPistol Pete
Marching bandCowboy Marching Band
Websiteokstate.com

History edit

Early history (1900–1962) edit

The Oklahoma A&M Aggies (also referred to as the Tigers) played their first season of football in 1900 and joined their first conference for the start of the 1915 season, the Southwest Conference. In 1925, the Oklahoma A&M program joined the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association. In 1928, the MVIAA split into the Big Six Conference and the Missouri Valley Conference. A&M was the only large school that joined the smaller MVC. Jim Lookabaugh, an OSU alum who lettered in multiple sports, led the Aggies for eleven seasons, which included a 9–0 campaign and a national championship in 1945 which followed an 8–1 season the year before. In October 2016, Oklahoma State was retroactively awarded the 1945 national championship by a committee of the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), consisting of former Baylor coach Grant Teaff, Georgia's Vince Dooley, and Texas A&M's R.C. Slocum.[2] Lookabaugh stepped down after the 1949 season, finishing his tenure with a mark of 58–41–6.[3] From 1950 to 1954, Jennings B. Whitworth coached at Oklahoma A&M, and compiled a 22–27–1 record, which included only one winning season, a 7–3 campaign in 1953. Whitworth departed A&M to accept the head coaching position at Alabama following the 1954 season. In 1951, Oklahoma A&M players and coaches caused the Johnny Bright incident, a violent on-field assault against an African American player from Drake University, Johnny Bright; Oklahoma A&M administration would attempt to cover up and deny the incident for over half a century.[4]

Cliff Speegle took the reins of the Oklahoma A&M Cowboys. Under Speegle's tutelage, the Cowboys compiled a record of 36–42–3, which included three winning seasons from 1957 to 1959.[5] The losing record, combined with an 0–8 mark against rival Oklahoma, resulted in Speegle's firing following the 1962 season. In 1956, A&M announced it was joining (or rejoining, depending on one's view) what had become the Big Seven for the 1958–59 academic year. As part of a transition period, the Cowboys went independent for two years. On May 15, 1957, Oklahoma A&M changed its name to Oklahoma State University. They officially became a part of the renamed Big Eight Conference in 1958.

Phil Cutchin era (1963–1968) edit

Longtime Bear Bryant assistant Phil Cutchin led Oklahoma State to its first win over Oklahoma in 20 years, but failed to bring success to Stillwater, compiling a mark of 19–38–2. Cutchin was replaced by the OSU administration eager to see a winning product on the field.[6]

Floyd Gass era (1969–1971) edit

Oklahoma State continued to struggle under head coach Floyd Gass, an OSU alum, who led the Cowboy football program for three seasons. During his tenure, he led the team to three straight losing seasons. Fan and administration support became increasingly hard to come by as the on-field production slipped. Despite the lack of football success, Gass would serve in multiple capacities at OSU, including athletics director for several years after his resignation as football coach.[7]

Dave Smith era (1972) edit

The Cowboys were finally able to enjoy a winning season —their first in nine years—in 1974 under the leadership of head coach Dave Smith. However, Smith wouldn't stick around, as he departed for the head coaching position at SMU after just one season in Stillwater.[8]

Jim Stanley era (1973–1978) edit

Jim Stanley, a two-time defensive coordinator at OSU, returned to Stillwater to become the head coach of the Cowboys in 1973. He coached them from 1973 to 1978, amassing a career record of 35–31–2. Stanley's Cowboys earned a Fiesta Bowl victory in 1974 and his 1976 team ended the season 9–3 finishing as a Big Eight co-champions on their way to a Tangerine Bowl victory.[9] His success at Oklahoma State earned him many accolades, including being invited to coach three collegiate all-star games: the 1973 East–West Shrine Game, the 1977 Hula Bowl, and the 1977 Japan Bowl.

In 1978, the Big Eight Conference initiated an investigation into the OSU football program in response to allegations of violations of several NCAA rules and regulations while Stanley was head coach. Stanley successfully filed suit against the conference to require them to provide various due process protections in their final hearing on the charges.

Jimmy Johnson era (1979–1983) edit

In 1979, Jimmy Johnson got the head coaching job at Oklahoma State. Johnson's successful rebuilding of the inconsistent Cowboys football program is a hallmark in the long history of Cowboy football. In his final season, he led the Cowboys to an 8–4 record and a 24–14 victory over 20th-ranked Baylor in the Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl. The season included a season opening romp over then No. 12 ranked Arizona State in Tempe, and a Bedlam matchup between the No. 2 ranked Oklahoma Sooners and the No. 3-ranked Cowboys on November 24, 1984. A game in which the Cowboys ultimately lost, 24–14.[10]

In 1984, when he was offered the head coaching job at Miami, Jimmy Johnson was unsure if he wanted to leave Stillwater. His good friend Larry Lacewell told Johnson that if he wanted to win a national championship and eventually coach in the NFL he had to take the Miami job. Johnson soon after accepted the head coaching job at Miami.[11] Jimmy Johnson left OSU with an overall record of 29–25–3.[12]

Pat Jones era (1984–1994) edit

Pat Jones was promoted from assistant coach to head coach following Johnson's departure. He served as head coach of the Oklahoma State Cowboys from 1984 to 1994 after five years as an assistant under Jimmy Johnson. During his 11 years at Oklahoma State, he compiled a 62–60–3 record, including a 3–1 bowl game record. Jones was named Big Eight Coach of the Year in both 1984 and 1992. From 1984 to 1988, Jones led the Cowboys to the most successful period in school history at the time. With a talented roster that included running backs Barry Sanders and Thurman Thomas, wide receiver Hart Lee Dykes and quarterback Mike Gundy, they went 44–15 over this five-year stretch, including the school's first three-year stretch of ten-win seasons.

Running back Barry Sanders played for the Cowboys from 1986 to 1988. During his first two seasons at Oklahoma State, he backed up All-American Thurman Thomas. In 1987, Sanders led the nation in yards per kickoff return (31.6), while also rushing for over 600 yards and scoring 8 touchdowns. Thomas moved on to the NFL, and Sanders became the starter for his junior year.

In 1988, in what has been called the greatest individual season in college football history,[13] Sanders led the nation by averaging 7.6 yards per carry and over 200 yards per game, including rushing for over 300 yards in four games. Despite his massive workload of 344 carries, Sanders was still used as the team's punt and kickoff returner, adding another 516 yards on special teams. He set college football season records with 2,628 yards rushing, 3,248 total yards, 234 points, 39 touchdowns, 37 rushing touchdowns, 5 consecutive 200 yard games, scored at least 2 touchdowns in 11 consecutive games, and 9 times he scored at least 3 touchdowns.[14] Sanders also ran for 222 yards and scored 5 touchdowns in his three quarters of action in the 1988 Holiday Bowl, a game that is not included in the official NCAA season statistics.[15] Sanders learned of his Heisman Trophy win while he was with the team in Tokyo, Japan, preparing to face Texas Tech in the Coca-Cola Classic.[16] He chose to leave Oklahoma State before his senior season to enter the NFL draft.

Days after the 1988 season, Oklahoma State and the NCAA released the results of an unusual joint investigation into the football program. The investigation revealed several major violations dating prior to Johnson's tenure, principally involvement in a "bidding war" for Dykes out of high school. The Cowboys were banned from bowl games for three years and from live television for two years, and they were also limited to 20 scholarships from 1989 to 1992. Jones was not directly implicated in any wrongdoing; indeed, the investigation found that no violations had taken place in two years. He was unable to put together another winning team due to the sanctions, and left OSU after the 1994 season. In Jones' last six years, the Cowboys won only seven games in Big Eight play, including three seasons of winless conference records. Oklahoma State would need almost the entire decade of the 1990s to recover; with only one winning season coming between 1989 and 2001.

Bob Simmons era (1995–2000) edit

Bob Simmons came to OSU from his post as defensive line coach at Colorado to replace Jones. Simmons' teams were largely unsuccessful, and Simmons resigned under pressure following the 2000 season. His final record in Stillwater was 30–38 with just one winning campaign, an 8–4 season in 1997 that culminated in a loss in the Alamo Bowl.[17] In 1996, OSU joined with the other Big Eight schools and four schools from the old Southwest Conference to form the Big 12 Conference.

Les Miles era (2001–2004) edit

After Simmons' resignation, a coaching search produced Dirk Koetter as the new head coach. Hours after accepting the job, Koetter reneged on his offer in order to coach at Arizona State.[18]

The next two candidates were Les Miles, a former OSU offensive coordinator, and Mike Gundy, a former OSU player and coach. Miles was hired as head coach while Gundy was brought on as offensive coordinator. In his first year as head coach, Miles would achieve a 4–7 record. In the 2001 regular season finale, the underdog Cowboys would defeat the reigning national champion Oklahoma Sooners in Norman 16–13. In 2002, Miles would post a 7–5 regular season record. The Cowboys again defeated the Oklahoma Sooners, this time in Stillwater. The team would go on to three straight bowl games in Miles's last three years as head coach ('02,'03,'04). Miles left after the 2004 season to take the head coaching position at LSU.[19]

Mike Gundy era (2005–present) edit

 
Coach Mike Gundy

Mike Gundy was promoted from offensive coordinator and named immediately as Miles' successor and the 22nd head coach at Oklahoma State.[20] Gundy is one of three head football coaches at Oklahoma State to have played for Oklahoma State, along with Jim Lookabaugh and Floyd Gass. His first season saw the expulsion of 11 players from the team and the Cowboys struggled to a 4–7 record winning only one Big 12 conference game. In his second season, the Cowboy offense began to click and the Cowboys would finish 7–6 including a victory over the Alabama Crimson Tide in the Independence Bowl. In 2007, the Cowboys again posted a 6–6 regular season record and a bowl win over the Indiana Hoosiers in the Insight Bowl. After their second straight bowl appearance, Gundy was rewarded with a contract extension through the 2013 season.

After posting a 9–3 regular season record in 2008, Coach Gundy received a new seven-year contract worth $15.7 million.[21][22] The contract, which extends through the 2015 season, was taken into effect on January 1, 2009.[23] Gundy's tenure as head coach of the Cowboys has seen the rise and expansion of not only his football program, but the football facilities as well. The Cowboys began the 2009 season ranked No. 9 in the country in the AP Top 25, but the dreams of a miracle season were crushed when the Pokes lost 45–35 to the unranked Houston Cougars at home the following week, and later finding out that star wide receiver Dez Bryant was ruled ineligible for the remainder of the season, for lying to the NCAA about having contact with 8-time pro bowler Deion Sanders, which wasn't an NCAA violation in the first place. The following year, Oklahoma State hired offensive coordinator Dana Holgorsen from the University of Houston. In 2010 coach Gundy recorded the first ever 11-win season in Oklahoma State history. What was supposed to be a rebuilding year turned into the best in school history.[24]

Under Gundy there have been a series of NFL quality wide receivers to come through Boone Pickens Stadium. These include Adarius Bowman, Dez Bryant, Justin Blackmon, James Washington, and Tylan Wallace. On December 3, 2011, the Cowboys won their first Big 12 Championship in school history with a 44–10 victory over rival Oklahoma in the Bedlam Series. The nationally third-ranked Cowboys eventually went on to win the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl by beating fourth-ranked Stanford in overtime, 41–38, on January 2, 2012. Early in the 2012 season, he notched his 63rd win as head coach, passing Jones as the winningest coach in school history. On October 29, 2016, Mike Gundy recorded his 100th victory as a head coach with a 37–20 win over # 10 West Virginia. In the process, notching his sixth victory over a top 10 ranked school. Gundy is the only Oklahoma State football coach to record 100 victories, and only the 6th coach to reach such a milestone with his current school.[25] Oklahoma State beat Oklahoma in Bedlam on November 27, 2021, to reach 5th place in the AP poll coming into championship weekend where they were defeated by Baylor, 21–16, in the Big 12 Championship.

Conference affiliations edit

Championships edit

National championships edit

OSU has two national championships. The 2011 team was selected by NCAA-designated major selector Colley Matrix, though the Cowboys do not claim this title.[26] In 2016, the AFCA committee (which conducts the Coaches Poll) retroactively selected the 1945 team.[27][28] Oklahoma State claims the 1945 championship.[29]

Season Coach Selectors Record Bowl Result
1945 Jim Lookabaugh AFCA 9–0 Sugar W 33–13

Conference championships edit

The Cowboys have won ten conference championships, six outright and four shared.

Season Coach Conference Overall Record Conference Record
1926 John Maulbetsch Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 3–4–1 3–0–1
1930 Lynn O. Waldorf Missouri Valley Conference 7–2–1 2–0
1932 9–1–2 3–0
1933 6–2–1 2–0
1944 Jim Lookabaugh 8–1 1–0
1945 9–0 1–0
1948 6–4 2–0
1953 J.B. Whitworth 7–3 3–1
1976 Jim Stanley Big Eight Conference 9–3 5–2
2011 Mike Gundy Big 12 Conference 12–1 8–1

† Co-champions

Division championships edit

The Cowboys have won one division championship.[30]

Season Coach Division Overall Record Conference Record Opponent CG result
2010 Mike Gundy Big 12 South 11–2 6–2 N/A lost tie-breaker to Oklahoma

† Co-champions

Head coaches edit

Oklahoma State has had 22 head coaches since the 1901 inaugural season.[31]

No. Coach Seasons Tenure Record Pct.
None 4 1901, 1903–1905 3–13–4 .238
1 Boyd Hill 1 1906 1–4–2 .286
2 Ed Parry 2 1907–1908 5–6–1 .458
3 Paul J. Davis 6 1909–1914 29–16–1 .641
4 John G. Griffith 2 1915–1916 8–9–1 .472
5 Earl A. Pritchard 2 1917–1918 8–7 .533
6 Jim Pixlee 2 1919–1920 3–10–3 .281
7 John Maulbetsch 8 1921–1928 27–37–6 .429
8 Pappy Waldorf 5 1929–1933 34–10–7 .735
9 Albert Exendine 2 1934–1935 7–12–1 .375
10 Ted Cox 3 1936–1938 7–23 .233
11 Jim Lookabaugh 11 1939–1949 58–41–6 .581
12 Jennings B. Whitworth 5 1950–1954 22–27–2 .451
13 Cliff Speegle 8 1955–1962 36–42–3 .463
14 Phil Cutchin 6 1963–1968 19–38–2 .339
15 Floyd Gass 3 1969–1971 13–18–1 .422
16 Dave Smith 1 1972 7–4 .636
17 Jim Stanley 6 1973–1978 35–31–2 .529
18 Jimmy Johnson 5 1979–1983 30–25–2 .544
19 Pat Jones 11 1984–1994 62–60–3 .508
20 Bob Simmons 6 1995–2000 30–38 .441
21 Les Miles 4 2001–2004 28–21 .571
22 Mike Gundy 18 2005–present 166–79 .678

Bowl games edit

The Cowboys have played in 34 bowl games, garnering a record of 22–12.[32] They are 5–4 in the six major bowl games (Rose, Peach, Cotton Bowl Classic, Sugar, Fiesta & Orange), with their biggest win being over Stanford in the 2012 Fiesta Bowl, with the win making them finish 3rd in the final poll, the highest ever finish for a Cowboy team.

No. Season Bowl Opponent Result
1 1944 Cotton Bowl Classic TCU W 34–0
2 1945 Sugar Bowl St. Mary's W 33–13
3 1948 Delta Bowl William & Mary L 0–20
4 1958 Bluegrass Bowl Florida State W 15–6
5 1974 Fiesta Bowl BYU W 16–6
6 1976 Tangerine Bowl BYU W 49–21
7 1981 Independence Bowl Texas A&M L 16–33
8 1983 Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl Baylor W 24–14
9 1984 Gator Bowl South Carolina W 21–14
10 1985 Gator Bowl Florida State L 23–34
11 1987 Sun Bowl West Virginia W 35–33
12 1988 Holiday Wyoming W 62–14
13 1997 Alamo Bowl Purdue L 20–33
14 2002 Houston Bowl Southern Miss W 33–23
15 2003 Cotton Bowl Classic Ole Miss L 28–31
16 2004 Alamo Bowl Ohio State L 7–33
17 2006 Independence Bowl Alabama W 34–31
18 2007 Insight Indiana W 49–33
19 2008 Holiday Bowl Oregon L 31–42
20 2009 Cotton Bowl Classic Ole Miss L 7–21
21 2010 Alamo Bowl Arizona W 36–10
22 2011 Fiesta Bowl Stanford W 41–38OT
23 2012 Heart Of Dallas Bowl Purdue W 58–14
24 2013 Cotton Bowl Classic Missouri L 31–41
25 2014 Cactus Bowl Washington W 30–22
26 2015 Sugar Bowl Ole Miss L 20–48
27 2016 Alamo Bowl Colorado W 38–8
28 2017 Camping World Bowl Virginia Tech W 30–21
29 2018 Liberty Bowl Missouri W 38–33
30 2019 Texas Bowl Texas A&M L 21–24
31 2020 Cheez-It Bowl Miami W 37–34
32 2021 Fiesta Bowl Notre Dame W 37–35
33 2022 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Wisconsin L 17–24
34 2023 Texas Bowl Texas A&M W 31–23

Rivalries edit

Oklahoma edit

The first Bedlam game was held at Island Park in Guthrie, Oklahoma. It was a cold, and very windy day with the temperatures well below the freezing mark. At one moment in the game when the Oklahoma A&M Aggies were punting, the wind carried the ball backwards behind the kicker. If the Oklahoma A&M squad recovered the ball it would be a touchback and if the University of Oklahoma squad recovered it, it would be a touchdown. The ball kept going backwards and rolled down a hill into the half-frozen creek. Since a touchdown was at stake, members of both teams dove into the icy waters to recover the ball. A member of the OU team came out with the ball and downed it for a touchdown, eventually winning the game 75–0.[2] Thus was the beginning of Bedlam.

Author Steve Budin, whose father was a New York bookie, has recently publicized the claim that the 1954 "Bedlam" game against rival OU was fixed by mobsters in his book Bets, Drugs, and Rock & Roll (ISBN 1-60239-099-1).[33] Allegedly, the mobsters threatened and paid off a cook to slip laxatives into a soup eaten by many OU Sooner starting players, causing them to fall violently ill in the days leading up to the game. OU was victorious in the end, but their 14–0 win did not cover the 20-point spread they had in their favor. However, many people involved in the 1954 contest do not recall any incident like the one purported by Budin to have occurred.[34]

Tulsa edit

The Cowboys also have a rivalry with Tulsa. Oklahoma State leads Tulsa in the all-time series 43–28–5, winning the most recent match up in 2020, 16–7.[35] Since 1990 Tulsa is 3–10 versus Oklahoma State with the Cowboys scoring at least 36 points in four of the last five contests. The Cowboys have a twenty-game home winning streak against Tulsa. The last time Tulsa won in Stillwater was 1951.[36]

Facilities edit

Oklahoma State plays in Boone Pickens Stadium in Stillwater, Oklahoma. The original football field was inaugurated in 1913, and the first stand was built in 1920. At that time the field was repositioned from a north–south to an east–west configuration to avoid the strong prevailing winds of Northern Oklahoma. From 1914 until 2004, the stadium was named Lewis Field, named after popular professor and dean Laymon Lowery Lewis. Even though a stadium would not be built for six years after the field's inception, the students felt obliged to name their alma mater's field after their beloved "Dr. Lew".[37]

By 1930 the capacity had risen to 13,000 and increased again in 1947. Major additions, including the first press box, brought the capacity to 30,000. In 1950 again seats were added and the total capacity increased to 39,000. The next renovations came in 1972 and for the next three decades the capacity hovered around 50,000.

In 2003, alumnus T. Boone Pickens made a historic donation to the university for improvements to its athletic facilities, and it was announced that the stadium would be renamed in his honor. The announcement of the renovation came after two consecutive victories over the Oklahoma Sooners in the Bedlam Series. To this day, Boone Pickens Stadium is one of a very few major college football stadiums with an east–west configuration. The latest renovation of the football stadium was completed in 2009, with the capacity at 60,218. In 2017, Oklahoma State renumbered and expanded the current seats, leaving the new capacity at 56,790 in an effort to increase seat width and improve the fan experience. In 2018, Oklahoma State installed a 6,160 square foot video board on the façade of Gallagher-Iba Arena in the stadium's east end zone. The jumbotron will be one of the ten largest in the country, placing it ahead of USC's jumbotron at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

In 2007, plans to build the Sherman E. Smith Training Center were unveiled. The 92,000 square foot indoor practice facility was completed in 2013.[38]

Allegations of misconduct by Sports Illustrated edit

On September 10, 2013, Sports Illustrated published the first of 5 stories alleging misconduct during Les Miles tenure and extending into the Mike Gundy era. Writers Thayer Evans and George Dohrmann reportedly engaged in a 10-month-long investigation into wrongdoing throughout the early-mid 2000s of the Oklahoma State football program. The first installment "The Money" made allegations of illicit gifts, overzealous boosters, no-show jobs, and a bounty system in place.[39] The second installment, "The Academics" alleged academic fraud, steering athletes into easy pass or no-show classes, and grade tampering. The third installment, "The Drugs" painted a picture of a drug culture, in which the players were selling drugs, and the school did little to curtail drug usage. The fourth installment, "The Sex" was heavily edited by all accounts, considering its late online release time. This installment revealed a hostess program where the head coaches oversaw the application process, and writers implied the hostesses were expected to have sex with recruits. The final installment "The Fallout" told the tale of Artrell Woods, who had left school after a horrific accident from which he had recovered.

While at first shocking to fans and media, Oklahoma State immediately pledged transparency. Athletic Director Mike Holder held a press conference the day before the release and apologized for the bad publicity, and promised to investigate the claims. OSU then hired independent investigator, Charles Smrt to conduct a thorough investigation into the allegations. ESPN later debunked several of the claims in the story by simply calling OSU's registrar and obtaining a transcript from Tatum Bell that proved he was not in school during stated timelines. Further controversy began to surround the Sports Illustrated article when Jason Whitlock, a former colleague of Evans, claimed that he was a huge fan of the University of Oklahoma.[40] Dohrmann went on national syndicated radio with Doug Gottlieb and stated that Fath' Carter had two degrees from OSU.[41] When questioned by ESPN's Brett McMurphy, the registrars' office later stated that Fath' Carter had never graduated.[42] Brandon Weeden also was able to point to unprofessional behavior from Evans displayed during a press conference.[43] DeadSpin also found out that many crucial professors and tutors never were interviewed for the story.[44]

In June 2014, John Talley, a spokesperson for the FCA chapter at Oklahoma State had filed a lawsuit against Dohrmann, Time Inc., and Evans for false-light accusations which painted him as an overzealous booster.[45] In his lawsuit, Talley is seeking damages of $75,000. In July 2014, OSU confirmed that the NCAA had been investigating the allegations.[46]

On October 21, 2014, the NCAA and The Compliance Group, an independent investigation firm led by Charles Smrt, jointly released a statement that the allegations contained in the Sports Illustrated story were "fundamentally unfounded". The NCAA and the investigator had pored over 50,000 emails and had unfettered access to all areas of the compliance department and re-interviewed those who were quoted in the story. The report stated "Overall, several interviewees indicated that they reported to SI general information or incidents about college football but that the SI reporter indicated that the incident occurred at OSU." During the joint investigation, however, three lesser allegations – not related to the Sports Illustrated claims, and labeled as Level II violations – were uncovered:

"During the period of fall 2007 through the spring of 2013, approximately 1,572 drug tests occurred of football players. There were 94 positives involving approximately 60 student-athletes per the policy. (According to the company used by the University to conduct its drug testing program, this positive rate per total number of tests is slightly less than the national average).

The institution examined the application of the policy in those 94 situations and believes that on four occasions, the applicable penalty per the policy was not applied and reported this information to the Enforcement Staff."[47]

Also, it was deemed that the Orange Pride spirit program was chartered under the football program, but a recent NCAA policy change in 2007 required spirit clubs to form under the admissions department. Because of these two minor violations, OSU was cited for a failure to monitor in these two instances. The total cost for the independent investigation amounted to $221,055.18.[48]

On January 22, 2015, Burns Hargis and other OSU officials visited the NCAA offices in Indianapolis to appeal to the NCAA. Even as Level II allegations, OSU officials considered them harsh and sought to have them reduced further. Hargis stated OSU's intent on having those Level II allegations reconsidered, possibly as Level III.

On April 24, 2015, the NCAA announced the sanctions against Oklahoma State would include an $8,500 fine and one-year probation to avoid further citings. The university self-imposed limits on the number of recruiting visits, off-campus evaluations, and the number of evaluation days in the fall and spring recruiting periods all of which will expire in 2016. The university is also not allowed to use the Orange Pride program to assist with recruiting visits for four years (2019–2020 season).[49] No scholarships were reduced and no postseason bans were put into place.[50]

Logos and uniforms edit

Throughout the 2000s, the Cowboys had four main uniform combinations. For the 2011 football season, it was revealed that Nike had created new uniforms for the Cowboys, offering three different helmet options in either gray, black, or white. New jerseys and pants consisting of black, orange, grey and white also came aboard, allowing for up to 48 different variations. The Cowboys debuted their new gray uniforms for the first game of the 2011 season. In a 2012 home game against Iowa State, the Cowboys debuted the new orange helmets, along with a new Pistol Pete decal. This would bring the different uniform combinations up to 64.[51]

The uniform combinations are chosen before the season by a committee of players and the Cowboys equipment manager, Wes Edwards. A few patterns have evolved since the origination of the multiple uniform era. Thursday night games during 2009, 2010, 2011, and in 2014 have involved black uniforms. Another trend has the Cowboys reverting to the traditional White Helmet/Traditional Brand Logo/Orange Jersey/White Pants for the home opener in 2012, 2013, and 2014. Bowl games for the 2012 Fiesta Bowl, the 2013 Heart of Dallas Bowl, and the high-profile 2014 season opener in the Cowboys Classic featured Oklahoma State wearing all black.

During the 2012 season, fans saw the addition of the orange helmet, and the addition of new decals. For the first time since 1979, the Cowboys took the field in "All Orange" against Iowa State for Homecoming. Also during the 2012 season, new carbon fiber gray helmets replaced the matte gray that had been used in 2011. The Cowboys helmet logos include a Pistol Pete logo, as well as what fans refer to as "Phantom Pete". The "OSU" Branded logo was now featured in different variants, to reflect the helmet being worn. During 2013, OSU began incorporating a stripe down the center of their helmets for different variations. In 2014, OSU revealed two new helmet choices- a "classic Aggie" which paid homage to the bucking Aggie logo used in the 1940s and 1950s when the school was still called Oklahoma A&M Aggies. The other helmet was an Orange-Chrome with an oversized, off-center Pistol Pete. This was worn in a Thursday night victory over Texas Tech.

Past uniforms edit

Paddle people edit

The student section has a tradition of hitting orange paddles on the sideline and end zone walls at home games. This tradition apparently started in the early 1990s, and has since become an official group within the university. The orange paddles have the word "pokes" in bold letters written on them.

Individual honors edit

Barry Sanders, 1988
Mason Rudolph, 2017
Matt Fodge, 2008
Justin Blackmon, 2010 & 2011
James Washington, 2017
Dan Bailey, 2010
Ollie Gordon II, 2023

Retired numbers edit

No. Player Position Career Ref.
21 Barry Sanders RB 1986–1988 [53]
34 Thurman Thomas 1984–1987
43 Terry Miller 1974–1977
55 Bob Fenimore HB 1943–1946 [54]

Cowboys in the NFL edit

As of November 29, 2023.

Future non-conference opponents edit

Announced schedules as of November 13, 2019.[61]

References edit

  1. ^ Oklahoma State University Athletics Official Athletics Branding Manual (PDF). November 20, 2019. Retrieved March 24, 2020.
  2. ^ Marshall, Kendrick (October 18, 2016). Written at Stillwater, Oklahoma. . Tulsa World. Tulsa, Oklahoma. Archived from the original on December 30, 2021. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  3. ^ "Jim Lookabaugh Coaching Record". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  4. ^ "A dirty hit, a broken jaw and the day Drake and Oklahoma A&M changed college football forever". The Des Moines Register.
  5. ^ "Cliff Speegle Coaching Record". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  6. ^ "Oklahoma State football: Phil Cutchin's Cowboys still share bond". 4 September 2012. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  7. ^ . www.cstv.com. Archived from the original on May 24, 2011.
  8. ^ "Former SMU Coach Dave Smith Passes Away". Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  9. ^ "Jim Stanley Coaching Record". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  10. ^ "Oklahoma vs. Oklahoma State, The Historical: High Stakes Bedlam". 4 December 2011. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on February 4, 2017. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  12. ^ "Jimmy Johnson Coaching Record". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  13. ^ Merron, Jeff. "Best individual college football seasons". ESPN. Retrieved 2007-08-12. Marron wrote, The only serious questions when composing this list was "Who's No. 2?
  14. ^ "Barry Sanders College Stats". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  15. ^ "1988 Holiday Bowl Summary". from the original on 21 December 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-29.
  16. ^ Trotter, Jake (August 8, 2014). "Sanders' 1988 season stands alone". ESPN. Retrieved August 8, 2014.
  17. ^ "Bob Simmons Coaching Record". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  18. ^ "Oklahoma State got their men when Dirk Koetter changed his mind". News OK. 2011-07-10. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  19. ^ "LSU hires Les Miles". Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  20. ^ "Cowboys Replace Miles with Gundy".
  21. ^ "Gundy set to make $1.55M in final year at OSU". 11 February 2008.
  22. ^ "OSU Rewards Football Coach Mike Gundy with Pay Increase, Seven-Year Contract".
  23. ^ "Gundy given new deal".
  24. ^ . wikiblammo. Archived from the original on 2011-12-28. Retrieved 2011-11-20.
  25. ^ "Mike Gundy Trying To Join Six Other Coaches With 100 Wins At Current School – Pistols Firing". 25 October 2016. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  26. ^ 2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association. August 2018. p. 111. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
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External links edit

  • Official website  

oklahoma, state, cowboys, football, program, represents, oklahoma, state, university, stillwater, college, football, team, member, conference, competes, ncaa, division, football, bowl, subdivision, level, cowboys, mike, gundy, 19th, year, head, coach, oklahoma. The Oklahoma State Cowboys football program represents Oklahoma State University Stillwater in college football The team is a member of the Big 12 Conference and competes at the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision level The Cowboys are led by Mike Gundy who is in his 19th year as head coach Oklahoma State plays its home games at Boone Pickens Stadium in Stillwater Oklahoma Oklahoma State Cowboys football2024 Oklahoma State Cowboys football teamFirst season1901 122 years ago Athletic directorChad WeibergHead coachMike Gundy 20th season 166 79 678 StadiumBoone Pickens Stadium capacity 55 509 Field surfaceFieldTurfLocationStillwater OklahomaNCAA divisionDivision I FBSConferenceBig 12 ConferencePast conferencesSouthwest Conference 1915 1924 Missouri Valley 1925 1956 Big Eight 1960 1995 All time record638 572 48 526 Bowl record22 12 647 Claimed national titles1 1945 Unclaimed national titles1 2011 Conference titles10RivalriesOklahoma rivalry Tulsa rivalry Heisman winnersBarry Sanders 1988Consensus All Americans20Current uniformColorsOrange and black 1 Fight songRide em CowboysMascotPistol PeteMarching bandCowboy Marching BandWebsiteokstate com Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1900 1962 1 2 Phil Cutchin era 1963 1968 1 3 Floyd Gass era 1969 1971 1 4 Dave Smith era 1972 1 5 Jim Stanley era 1973 1978 1 6 Jimmy Johnson era 1979 1983 1 7 Pat Jones era 1984 1994 1 8 Bob Simmons era 1995 2000 1 9 Les Miles era 2001 2004 1 10 Mike Gundy era 2005 present 2 Conference affiliations 3 Championships 3 1 National championships 3 2 Conference championships 3 3 Division championships 4 Head coaches 5 Bowl games 6 Rivalries 6 1 Oklahoma 6 2 Tulsa 7 Facilities 8 Allegations of misconduct by Sports Illustrated 9 Logos and uniforms 9 1 Past uniforms 10 Paddle people 11 Individual honors 11 1 Retired numbers 11 2 Cowboys in the NFL 12 Future non conference opponents 13 References 14 External linksHistory editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also List of Oklahoma State Cowboys football seasons Early history 1900 1962 edit The Oklahoma A amp M Aggies also referred to as the Tigers played their first season of football in 1900 and joined their first conference for the start of the 1915 season the Southwest Conference In 1925 the Oklahoma A amp M program joined the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association In 1928 the MVIAA split into the Big Six Conference and the Missouri Valley Conference A amp M was the only large school that joined the smaller MVC Jim Lookabaugh an OSU alum who lettered in multiple sports led the Aggies for eleven seasons which included a 9 0 campaign and a national championship in 1945 which followed an 8 1 season the year before In October 2016 Oklahoma State was retroactively awarded the 1945 national championship by a committee of the American Football Coaches Association AFCA consisting of former Baylor coach Grant Teaff Georgia s Vince Dooley and Texas A amp M s R C Slocum 2 Lookabaugh stepped down after the 1949 season finishing his tenure with a mark of 58 41 6 3 From 1950 to 1954 Jennings B Whitworth coached at Oklahoma A amp M and compiled a 22 27 1 record which included only one winning season a 7 3 campaign in 1953 Whitworth departed A amp M to accept the head coaching position at Alabama following the 1954 season In 1951 Oklahoma A amp M players and coaches caused the Johnny Bright incident a violent on field assault against an African American player from Drake University Johnny Bright Oklahoma A amp M administration would attempt to cover up and deny the incident for over half a century 4 Cliff Speegle took the reins of the Oklahoma A amp M Cowboys Under Speegle s tutelage the Cowboys compiled a record of 36 42 3 which included three winning seasons from 1957 to 1959 5 The losing record combined with an 0 8 mark against rival Oklahoma resulted in Speegle s firing following the 1962 season In 1956 A amp M announced it was joining or rejoining depending on one s view what had become the Big Seven for the 1958 59 academic year As part of a transition period the Cowboys went independent for two years On May 15 1957 Oklahoma A amp M changed its name to Oklahoma State University They officially became a part of the renamed Big Eight Conference in 1958 Phil Cutchin era 1963 1968 edit Longtime Bear Bryant assistant Phil Cutchin led Oklahoma State to its first win over Oklahoma in 20 years but failed to bring success to Stillwater compiling a mark of 19 38 2 Cutchin was replaced by the OSU administration eager to see a winning product on the field 6 Floyd Gass era 1969 1971 edit Oklahoma State continued to struggle under head coach Floyd Gass an OSU alum who led the Cowboy football program for three seasons During his tenure he led the team to three straight losing seasons Fan and administration support became increasingly hard to come by as the on field production slipped Despite the lack of football success Gass would serve in multiple capacities at OSU including athletics director for several years after his resignation as football coach 7 Dave Smith era 1972 edit The Cowboys were finally able to enjoy a winning season their first in nine years in 1974 under the leadership of head coach Dave Smith However Smith wouldn t stick around as he departed for the head coaching position at SMU after just one season in Stillwater 8 Jim Stanley era 1973 1978 edit Jim Stanley a two time defensive coordinator at OSU returned to Stillwater to become the head coach of the Cowboys in 1973 He coached them from 1973 to 1978 amassing a career record of 35 31 2 Stanley s Cowboys earned a Fiesta Bowl victory in 1974 and his 1976 team ended the season 9 3 finishing as a Big Eight co champions on their way to a Tangerine Bowl victory 9 His success at Oklahoma State earned him many accolades including being invited to coach three collegiate all star games the 1973 East West Shrine Game the 1977 Hula Bowl and the 1977 Japan Bowl In 1978 the Big Eight Conference initiated an investigation into the OSU football program in response to allegations of violations of several NCAA rules and regulations while Stanley was head coach Stanley successfully filed suit against the conference to require them to provide various due process protections in their final hearing on the charges Jimmy Johnson era 1979 1983 edit In 1979 Jimmy Johnson got the head coaching job at Oklahoma State Johnson s successful rebuilding of the inconsistent Cowboys football program is a hallmark in the long history of Cowboy football In his final season he led the Cowboys to an 8 4 record and a 24 14 victory over 20th ranked Baylor in the Astro Bluebonnet Bowl The season included a season opening romp over then No 12 ranked Arizona State in Tempe and a Bedlam matchup between the No 2 ranked Oklahoma Sooners and the No 3 ranked Cowboys on November 24 1984 A game in which the Cowboys ultimately lost 24 14 10 In 1984 when he was offered the head coaching job at Miami Jimmy Johnson was unsure if he wanted to leave Stillwater His good friend Larry Lacewell told Johnson that if he wanted to win a national championship and eventually coach in the NFL he had to take the Miami job Johnson soon after accepted the head coaching job at Miami 11 Jimmy Johnson left OSU with an overall record of 29 25 3 12 Pat Jones era 1984 1994 edit Pat Jones was promoted from assistant coach to head coach following Johnson s departure He served as head coach of the Oklahoma State Cowboys from 1984 to 1994 after five years as an assistant under Jimmy Johnson During his 11 years at Oklahoma State he compiled a 62 60 3 record including a 3 1 bowl game record Jones was named Big Eight Coach of the Year in both 1984 and 1992 From 1984 to 1988 Jones led the Cowboys to the most successful period in school history at the time With a talented roster that included running backs Barry Sanders and Thurman Thomas wide receiver Hart Lee Dykes and quarterback Mike Gundy they went 44 15 over this five year stretch including the school s first three year stretch of ten win seasons Running back Barry Sanders played for the Cowboys from 1986 to 1988 During his first two seasons at Oklahoma State he backed up All American Thurman Thomas In 1987 Sanders led the nation in yards per kickoff return 31 6 while also rushing for over 600 yards and scoring 8 touchdowns Thomas moved on to the NFL and Sanders became the starter for his junior year In 1988 in what has been called the greatest individual season in college football history 13 Sanders led the nation by averaging 7 6 yards per carry and over 200 yards per game including rushing for over 300 yards in four games Despite his massive workload of 344 carries Sanders was still used as the team s punt and kickoff returner adding another 516 yards on special teams He set college football season records with 2 628 yards rushing 3 248 total yards 234 points 39 touchdowns 37 rushing touchdowns 5 consecutive 200 yard games scored at least 2 touchdowns in 11 consecutive games and 9 times he scored at least 3 touchdowns 14 Sanders also ran for 222 yards and scored 5 touchdowns in his three quarters of action in the 1988 Holiday Bowl a game that is not included in the official NCAA season statistics 15 Sanders learned of his Heisman Trophy win while he was with the team in Tokyo Japan preparing to face Texas Tech in the Coca Cola Classic 16 He chose to leave Oklahoma State before his senior season to enter the NFL draft Days after the 1988 season Oklahoma State and the NCAA released the results of an unusual joint investigation into the football program The investigation revealed several major violations dating prior to Johnson s tenure principally involvement in a bidding war for Dykes out of high school The Cowboys were banned from bowl games for three years and from live television for two years and they were also limited to 20 scholarships from 1989 to 1992 Jones was not directly implicated in any wrongdoing indeed the investigation found that no violations had taken place in two years He was unable to put together another winning team due to the sanctions and left OSU after the 1994 season In Jones last six years the Cowboys won only seven games in Big Eight play including three seasons of winless conference records Oklahoma State would need almost the entire decade of the 1990s to recover with only one winning season coming between 1989 and 2001 Bob Simmons era 1995 2000 edit Bob Simmons came to OSU from his post as defensive line coach at Colorado to replace Jones Simmons teams were largely unsuccessful and Simmons resigned under pressure following the 2000 season His final record in Stillwater was 30 38 with just one winning campaign an 8 4 season in 1997 that culminated in a loss in the Alamo Bowl 17 In 1996 OSU joined with the other Big Eight schools and four schools from the old Southwest Conference to form the Big 12 Conference Les Miles era 2001 2004 edit After Simmons resignation a coaching search produced Dirk Koetter as the new head coach Hours after accepting the job Koetter reneged on his offer in order to coach at Arizona State 18 The next two candidates were Les Miles a former OSU offensive coordinator and Mike Gundy a former OSU player and coach Miles was hired as head coach while Gundy was brought on as offensive coordinator In his first year as head coach Miles would achieve a 4 7 record In the 2001 regular season finale the underdog Cowboys would defeat the reigning national champion Oklahoma Sooners in Norman 16 13 In 2002 Miles would post a 7 5 regular season record The Cowboys again defeated the Oklahoma Sooners this time in Stillwater The team would go on to three straight bowl games in Miles s last three years as head coach 02 03 04 Miles left after the 2004 season to take the head coaching position at LSU 19 Mike Gundy era 2005 present edit nbsp Coach Mike GundyMike Gundy was promoted from offensive coordinator and named immediately as Miles successor and the 22nd head coach at Oklahoma State 20 Gundy is one of three head football coaches at Oklahoma State to have played for Oklahoma State along with Jim Lookabaugh and Floyd Gass His first season saw the expulsion of 11 players from the team and the Cowboys struggled to a 4 7 record winning only one Big 12 conference game In his second season the Cowboy offense began to click and the Cowboys would finish 7 6 including a victory over the Alabama Crimson Tide in the Independence Bowl In 2007 the Cowboys again posted a 6 6 regular season record and a bowl win over the Indiana Hoosiers in the Insight Bowl After their second straight bowl appearance Gundy was rewarded with a contract extension through the 2013 season After posting a 9 3 regular season record in 2008 Coach Gundy received a new seven year contract worth 15 7 million 21 22 The contract which extends through the 2015 season was taken into effect on January 1 2009 23 Gundy s tenure as head coach of the Cowboys has seen the rise and expansion of not only his football program but the football facilities as well The Cowboys began the 2009 season ranked No 9 in the country in the AP Top 25 but the dreams of a miracle season were crushed when the Pokes lost 45 35 to the unranked Houston Cougars at home the following week and later finding out that star wide receiver Dez Bryant was ruled ineligible for the remainder of the season for lying to the NCAA about having contact with 8 time pro bowler Deion Sanders which wasn t an NCAA violation in the first place The following year Oklahoma State hired offensive coordinator Dana Holgorsen from the University of Houston In 2010 coach Gundy recorded the first ever 11 win season in Oklahoma State history What was supposed to be a rebuilding year turned into the best in school history 24 Under Gundy there have been a series of NFL quality wide receivers to come through Boone Pickens Stadium These include Adarius Bowman Dez Bryant Justin Blackmon James Washington and Tylan Wallace On December 3 2011 the Cowboys won their first Big 12 Championship in school history with a 44 10 victory over rival Oklahoma in the Bedlam Series The nationally third ranked Cowboys eventually went on to win the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl by beating fourth ranked Stanford in overtime 41 38 on January 2 2012 Early in the 2012 season he notched his 63rd win as head coach passing Jones as the winningest coach in school history On October 29 2016 Mike Gundy recorded his 100th victory as a head coach with a 37 20 win over 10 West Virginia In the process notching his sixth victory over a top 10 ranked school Gundy is the only Oklahoma State football coach to record 100 victories and only the 6th coach to reach such a milestone with his current school 25 Oklahoma State beat Oklahoma in Bedlam on November 27 2021 to reach 5th place in the AP poll coming into championship weekend where they were defeated by Baylor 21 16 in the Big 12 Championship Conference affiliations editIndependent 1901 1914 1957 1959 Southwest Conference 1915 1924 Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1925 1927 Missouri Valley Conference 1926 1956 Big Eight Conference 1960 1995 Big 12 Conference 1996 present Championships editNational championships edit OSU has two national championships The 2011 team was selected by NCAA designated major selector Colley Matrix though the Cowboys do not claim this title 26 In 2016 the AFCA committee which conducts the Coaches Poll retroactively selected the 1945 team 27 28 Oklahoma State claims the 1945 championship 29 Season Coach Selectors Record Bowl Result1945 Jim Lookabaugh AFCA 9 0 Sugar W 33 13Conference championships edit The Cowboys have won ten conference championships six outright and four shared Season Coach Conference Overall Record Conference Record1926 John Maulbetsch Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 3 4 1 3 0 11930 Lynn O Waldorf Missouri Valley Conference 7 2 1 2 01932 9 1 2 3 01933 6 2 1 2 01944 Jim Lookabaugh 8 1 1 01945 9 0 1 01948 6 4 2 01953 J B Whitworth 7 3 3 11976 Jim Stanley Big Eight Conference 9 3 5 22011 Mike Gundy Big 12 Conference 12 1 8 1 Co champions Division championships edit The Cowboys have won one division championship 30 Season Coach Division Overall Record Conference Record Opponent CG result2010 Mike Gundy Big 12 South 11 2 6 2 N A lost tie breaker to Oklahoma Co championsHead coaches editOklahoma State has had 22 head coaches since the 1901 inaugural season 31 No Coach Seasons Tenure Record Pct None 4 1901 1903 1905 3 13 4 2381 Boyd Hill 1 1906 1 4 2 2862 Ed Parry 2 1907 1908 5 6 1 4583 Paul J Davis 6 1909 1914 29 16 1 6414 John G Griffith 2 1915 1916 8 9 1 4725 Earl A Pritchard 2 1917 1918 8 7 5336 Jim Pixlee 2 1919 1920 3 10 3 2817 John Maulbetsch 8 1921 1928 27 37 6 4298 Pappy Waldorf 5 1929 1933 34 10 7 7359 Albert Exendine 2 1934 1935 7 12 1 37510 Ted Cox 3 1936 1938 7 23 23311 Jim Lookabaugh 11 1939 1949 58 41 6 58112 Jennings B Whitworth 5 1950 1954 22 27 2 45113 Cliff Speegle 8 1955 1962 36 42 3 46314 Phil Cutchin 6 1963 1968 19 38 2 33915 Floyd Gass 3 1969 1971 13 18 1 42216 Dave Smith 1 1972 7 4 63617 Jim Stanley 6 1973 1978 35 31 2 52918 Jimmy Johnson 5 1979 1983 30 25 2 54419 Pat Jones 11 1984 1994 62 60 3 50820 Bob Simmons 6 1995 2000 30 38 44121 Les Miles 4 2001 2004 28 21 57122 Mike Gundy 18 2005 present 166 79 678Bowl games editThe Cowboys have played in 34 bowl games garnering a record of 22 12 32 They are 5 4 in the six major bowl games Rose Peach Cotton Bowl Classic Sugar Fiesta amp Orange with their biggest win being over Stanford in the 2012 Fiesta Bowl with the win making them finish 3rd in the final poll the highest ever finish for a Cowboy team No Season Bowl Opponent Result1 1944 Cotton Bowl Classic TCU W 34 02 1945 Sugar Bowl St Mary s W 33 133 1948 Delta Bowl William amp Mary L 0 204 1958 Bluegrass Bowl Florida State W 15 65 1974 Fiesta Bowl BYU W 16 66 1976 Tangerine Bowl BYU W 49 217 1981 Independence Bowl Texas A amp M L 16 338 1983 Astro Bluebonnet Bowl Baylor W 24 149 1984 Gator Bowl South Carolina W 21 1410 1985 Gator Bowl Florida State L 23 3411 1987 Sun Bowl West Virginia W 35 3312 1988 Holiday Wyoming W 62 1413 1997 Alamo Bowl Purdue L 20 3314 2002 Houston Bowl Southern Miss W 33 2315 2003 Cotton Bowl Classic Ole Miss L 28 3116 2004 Alamo Bowl Ohio State L 7 3317 2006 Independence Bowl Alabama W 34 3118 2007 Insight Indiana W 49 3319 2008 Holiday Bowl Oregon L 31 4220 2009 Cotton Bowl Classic Ole Miss L 7 2121 2010 Alamo Bowl Arizona W 36 1022 2011 Fiesta Bowl Stanford W 41 38OT23 2012 Heart Of Dallas Bowl Purdue W 58 1424 2013 Cotton Bowl Classic Missouri L 31 4125 2014 Cactus Bowl Washington W 30 2226 2015 Sugar Bowl Ole Miss L 20 4827 2016 Alamo Bowl Colorado W 38 828 2017 Camping World Bowl Virginia Tech W 30 2129 2018 Liberty Bowl Missouri W 38 3330 2019 Texas Bowl Texas A amp M L 21 2431 2020 Cheez It Bowl Miami W 37 3432 2021 Fiesta Bowl Notre Dame W 37 3533 2022 Guaranteed Rate Bowl Wisconsin L 17 2434 2023 Texas Bowl Texas A amp M W 31 23Rivalries editOklahoma edit Main article Bedlam Series The first Bedlam game was held at Island Park in Guthrie Oklahoma It was a cold and very windy day with the temperatures well below the freezing mark At one moment in the game when the Oklahoma A amp M Aggies were punting the wind carried the ball backwards behind the kicker If the Oklahoma A amp M squad recovered the ball it would be a touchback and if the University of Oklahoma squad recovered it it would be a touchdown The ball kept going backwards and rolled down a hill into the half frozen creek Since a touchdown was at stake members of both teams dove into the icy waters to recover the ball A member of the OU team came out with the ball and downed it for a touchdown eventually winning the game 75 0 2 Thus was the beginning of Bedlam Author Steve Budin whose father was a New York bookie has recently publicized the claim that the 1954 Bedlam game against rival OU was fixed by mobsters in his book Bets Drugs and Rock amp Roll ISBN 1 60239 099 1 33 Allegedly the mobsters threatened and paid off a cook to slip laxatives into a soup eaten by many OU Sooner starting players causing them to fall violently ill in the days leading up to the game OU was victorious in the end but their 14 0 win did not cover the 20 point spread they had in their favor However many people involved in the 1954 contest do not recall any incident like the one purported by Budin to have occurred 34 Tulsa edit Main article Oklahoma State Tulsa football rivalry The Cowboys also have a rivalry with Tulsa Oklahoma State leads Tulsa in the all time series 43 28 5 winning the most recent match up in 2020 16 7 35 Since 1990 Tulsa is 3 10 versus Oklahoma State with the Cowboys scoring at least 36 points in four of the last five contests The Cowboys have a twenty game home winning streak against Tulsa The last time Tulsa won in Stillwater was 1951 36 Facilities editOklahoma State plays in Boone Pickens Stadium in Stillwater Oklahoma The original football field was inaugurated in 1913 and the first stand was built in 1920 At that time the field was repositioned from a north south to an east west configuration to avoid the strong prevailing winds of Northern Oklahoma From 1914 until 2004 the stadium was named Lewis Field named after popular professor and dean Laymon Lowery Lewis Even though a stadium would not be built for six years after the field s inception the students felt obliged to name their alma mater s field after their beloved Dr Lew 37 By 1930 the capacity had risen to 13 000 and increased again in 1947 Major additions including the first press box brought the capacity to 30 000 In 1950 again seats were added and the total capacity increased to 39 000 The next renovations came in 1972 and for the next three decades the capacity hovered around 50 000 In 2003 alumnus T Boone Pickens made a historic donation to the university for improvements to its athletic facilities and it was announced that the stadium would be renamed in his honor The announcement of the renovation came after two consecutive victories over the Oklahoma Sooners in the Bedlam Series To this day Boone Pickens Stadium is one of a very few major college football stadiums with an east west configuration The latest renovation of the football stadium was completed in 2009 with the capacity at 60 218 In 2017 Oklahoma State renumbered and expanded the current seats leaving the new capacity at 56 790 in an effort to increase seat width and improve the fan experience In 2018 Oklahoma State installed a 6 160 square foot video board on the facade of Gallagher Iba Arena in the stadium s east end zone The jumbotron will be one of the ten largest in the country placing it ahead of USC s jumbotron at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum In 2007 plans to build the Sherman E Smith Training Center were unveiled The 92 000 square foot indoor practice facility was completed in 2013 38 Allegations of misconduct by Sports Illustrated editIt has been suggested that this section be split out into another article titled Oklahoma State Cowboys football whatever Discuss August 2018 On September 10 2013 Sports Illustrated published the first of 5 stories alleging misconduct during Les Miles tenure and extending into the Mike Gundy era Writers Thayer Evans and George Dohrmann reportedly engaged in a 10 month long investigation into wrongdoing throughout the early mid 2000s of the Oklahoma State football program The first installment The Money made allegations of illicit gifts overzealous boosters no show jobs and a bounty system in place 39 The second installment The Academics alleged academic fraud steering athletes into easy pass or no show classes and grade tampering The third installment The Drugs painted a picture of a drug culture in which the players were selling drugs and the school did little to curtail drug usage The fourth installment The Sex was heavily edited by all accounts considering its late online release time This installment revealed a hostess program where the head coaches oversaw the application process and writers implied the hostesses were expected to have sex with recruits The final installment The Fallout told the tale of Artrell Woods who had left school after a horrific accident from which he had recovered While at first shocking to fans and media Oklahoma State immediately pledged transparency Athletic Director Mike Holder held a press conference the day before the release and apologized for the bad publicity and promised to investigate the claims OSU then hired independent investigator Charles Smrt to conduct a thorough investigation into the allegations ESPN later debunked several of the claims in the story by simply calling OSU s registrar and obtaining a transcript from Tatum Bell that proved he was not in school during stated timelines Further controversy began to surround the Sports Illustrated article when Jason Whitlock a former colleague of Evans claimed that he was a huge fan of the University of Oklahoma 40 Dohrmann went on national syndicated radio with Doug Gottlieb and stated that Fath Carter had two degrees from OSU 41 When questioned by ESPN s Brett McMurphy the registrars office later stated that Fath Carter had never graduated 42 Brandon Weeden also was able to point to unprofessional behavior from Evans displayed during a press conference 43 DeadSpin also found out that many crucial professors and tutors never were interviewed for the story 44 In June 2014 John Talley a spokesperson for the FCA chapter at Oklahoma State had filed a lawsuit against Dohrmann Time Inc and Evans for false light accusations which painted him as an overzealous booster 45 In his lawsuit Talley is seeking damages of 75 000 In July 2014 OSU confirmed that the NCAA had been investigating the allegations 46 On October 21 2014 the NCAA and The Compliance Group an independent investigation firm led by Charles Smrt jointly released a statement that the allegations contained in the Sports Illustrated story were fundamentally unfounded The NCAA and the investigator had pored over 50 000 emails and had unfettered access to all areas of the compliance department and re interviewed those who were quoted in the story The report stated Overall several interviewees indicated that they reported to SI general information or incidents about college football but that the SI reporter indicated that the incident occurred at OSU During the joint investigation however three lesser allegations not related to the Sports Illustrated claims and labeled as Level II violations were uncovered During the period of fall 2007 through the spring of 2013 approximately 1 572 drug tests occurred of football players There were 94 positives involving approximately 60 student athletes per the policy According to the company used by the University to conduct its drug testing program this positive rate per total number of tests is slightly less than the national average The institution examined the application of the policy in those 94 situations and believes that on four occasions the applicable penalty per the policy was not applied and reported this information to the Enforcement Staff 47 Also it was deemed that the Orange Pride spirit program was chartered under the football program but a recent NCAA policy change in 2007 required spirit clubs to form under the admissions department Because of these two minor violations OSU was cited for a failure to monitor in these two instances The total cost for the independent investigation amounted to 221 055 18 48 On January 22 2015 Burns Hargis and other OSU officials visited the NCAA offices in Indianapolis to appeal to the NCAA Even as Level II allegations OSU officials considered them harsh and sought to have them reduced further Hargis stated OSU s intent on having those Level II allegations reconsidered possibly as Level III On April 24 2015 the NCAA announced the sanctions against Oklahoma State would include an 8 500 fine and one year probation to avoid further citings The university self imposed limits on the number of recruiting visits off campus evaluations and the number of evaluation days in the fall and spring recruiting periods all of which will expire in 2016 The university is also not allowed to use the Orange Pride program to assist with recruiting visits for four years 2019 2020 season 49 No scholarships were reduced and no postseason bans were put into place 50 Logos and uniforms editThroughout the 2000s the Cowboys had four main uniform combinations For the 2011 football season it was revealed that Nike had created new uniforms for the Cowboys offering three different helmet options in either gray black or white New jerseys and pants consisting of black orange grey and white also came aboard allowing for up to 48 different variations The Cowboys debuted their new gray uniforms for the first game of the 2011 season In a 2012 home game against Iowa State the Cowboys debuted the new orange helmets along with a new Pistol Pete decal This would bring the different uniform combinations up to 64 51 The uniform combinations are chosen before the season by a committee of players and the Cowboys equipment manager Wes Edwards A few patterns have evolved since the origination of the multiple uniform era Thursday night games during 2009 2010 2011 and in 2014 have involved black uniforms Another trend has the Cowboys reverting to the traditional White Helmet Traditional Brand Logo Orange Jersey White Pants for the home opener in 2012 2013 and 2014 Bowl games for the 2012 Fiesta Bowl the 2013 Heart of Dallas Bowl and the high profile 2014 season opener in the Cowboys Classic featured Oklahoma State wearing all black During the 2012 season fans saw the addition of the orange helmet and the addition of new decals For the first time since 1979 the Cowboys took the field in All Orange against Iowa State for Homecoming Also during the 2012 season new carbon fiber gray helmets replaced the matte gray that had been used in 2011 The Cowboys helmet logos include a Pistol Pete logo as well as what fans refer to as Phantom Pete The OSU Branded logo was now featured in different variants to reflect the helmet being worn During 2013 OSU began incorporating a stripe down the center of their helmets for different variations In 2014 OSU revealed two new helmet choices a classic Aggie which paid homage to the bucking Aggie logo used in the 1940s and 1950s when the school was still called Oklahoma A amp M Aggies The other helmet was an Orange Chrome with an oversized off center Pistol Pete This was worn in a Thursday night victory over Texas Tech Past uniforms edit nbsp 2011 vs Kansas State nbsp Carbon Fiber Helmet nbsp 2012 Oklahoma State Uniform nbsp 2013 Oklahoma State Uniform nbsp 2014 Bucking Aggie Logo nbsp 2014 Orange Chrome PetePaddle people editThe student section has a tradition of hitting orange paddles on the sideline and end zone walls at home games This tradition apparently started in the early 1990s and has since become an official group within the university The orange paddles have the word pokes in bold letters written on them Individual honors editSee also Oklahoma State Cowboys football statistical leaders Heisman Trophy Maxwell Award Walter Camp AwardBarry Sanders 1988Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award 52 Bobby Bowden FCA AwardMason Rudolph 2017Ray Guy AwardMatt Fodge 2008Fred Biletnikoff AwardJustin Blackmon 2010 amp 2011 James Washington 2017Lou Groza AwardDan Bailey 2010Doak Walker AwardOllie Gordon II 2023Retired numbers edit Main article List of NCAA football retired numbers No Player Position Career Ref 21 Barry Sanders RB 1986 1988 53 34 Thurman Thomas 1984 198743 Terry Miller 1974 197755 Bob Fenimore HB 1943 1946 54 Cowboys in the NFL edit As of November 29 2023 Dan Bailey K Free Agent Dez Bryant WR Free Agent Tre Flowers CB Cincinnati Bengals A J Green CB Cleveland Browns Devin Harper LB Dallas Cowboys 55 Justice Hill RB Baltimore Ravens Tyreek Hill WR Miami Dolphins Christian Holmes CB Washington Commanders Chuba Hubbard RB Carolina Panthers Michael Hunter CB Free Agent Blake Jarwin TE Free Agent Teven Jenkins OT Chicago Bears Tyron Johnson WR Las Vegas Raiders Ashton Lampkin CB Free Agent Emmanuel Ogbah DE Miami Dolphins 56 Amen Ogbongbemiga LB Los Angeles Chargers Russell Okung OT Free Agent Tyler Patmon CB Free Agent 57 Kevin Peterson CB Free Agent Lenzy Pipkins CB Free Agent 58 Mason Rudolph QB Pittsburgh Steelers 59 Malcolm Rodriguez LB Detroit Lions 60 Josh Sills OT Philadelphia Eagles Jordan Sterns FS Free Agent Lane Taylor G Free Agent Vincent Taylor DT Atlanta Falcons Tylan Wallace WR Baltimore Ravens Jaylen Warren RB Pittsburgh Steelers James Washington WR Dallas Cowboys Rodarius Williams CB New York GiantsFuture non conference opponents editAnnounced schedules as of November 13 2019 61 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037South Dakota State UT Martin at Tulsa Western Illinois Southeastern Louisiana at Alabama at Tulsa Tulsa Arkansas at Arkansas at Nebraska Nebraska Colorado at ColoradoArkansas at Oregon Oregon at Arkansas at Tulsa Tulsaat Tulsa Tulsa Murray State Tulsa AlabamaReferences edit Oklahoma State University Athletics Official Athletics Branding Manual PDF November 20 2019 Retrieved March 24 2020 Marshall Kendrick October 18 2016 Written at Stillwater Oklahoma AFCA member explains why OSU awarded 1945 national championship Tulsa World Tulsa Oklahoma Archived from the original on December 30 2021 Retrieved March 24 2023 Jim Lookabaugh Coaching Record College Football at Sports Reference com A dirty hit a broken jaw and the day Drake and Oklahoma A amp M changed college football forever The Des Moines Register Cliff Speegle Coaching Record College Football at Sports Reference com Oklahoma State football Phil Cutchin s Cowboys still share bond 4 September 2012 Retrieved July 25 2019 Former OSU Football Coach Athletic Director Floyd Gass Dead at 79 Gass served as Oklahoma State Athletic Director until 1978 www cstv com Archived from the original on May 24 2011 Former SMU Coach Dave Smith Passes Away Retrieved July 25 2019 Jim Stanley Coaching Record College Football at Sports Reference com Oklahoma vs Oklahoma State The Historical High Stakes Bedlam 4 December 2011 Retrieved July 25 2019 Hall of Fame Hurricanes Jimmy Johnson Archived from the original on February 4 2017 Retrieved July 25 2019 Jimmy Johnson Coaching Record College Football at Sports Reference com Merron Jeff Best individual college football seasons ESPN Retrieved 2007 08 12 Marron wrote The only serious questions when composing this list was Who s No 2 Barry Sanders College Stats College Football at Sports Reference com 1988 Holiday Bowl Summary Archived from the original on 21 December 2007 Retrieved 2007 12 29 Trotter Jake August 8 2014 Sanders 1988 season stands alone ESPN Retrieved August 8 2014 Bob Simmons Coaching Record College Football at Sports Reference com Oklahoma State got their men when Dirk Koetter changed his mind News OK 2011 07 10 Retrieved 2013 04 22 LSU hires Les Miles Retrieved July 25 2019 Cowboys Replace Miles with Gundy Gundy set to make 1 55M in final year at OSU 11 February 2008 OSU Rewards Football Coach Mike Gundy with Pay Increase Seven Year Contract Gundy given new deal Oklahoma State University Cowboys Football wikiblammo Archived from the original on 2011 12 28 Retrieved 2011 11 20 Mike Gundy Trying To Join Six Other Coaches With 100 Wins At Current School Pistols Firing 25 October 2016 Retrieved July 25 2019 2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records PDF National Collegiate Athletic Association August 2018 p 111 Retrieved December 13 2018 Fleming Thomas October 13 2016 Oklahoma State 1945 Football Team Awarded National Championship by AFCA Pistols Firing AFCA retroactively awards its 1945 national title to Oklahoma State CollegeFootballTalk 2016 10 13 Retrieved 2017 12 30 AFCA Recognizes Oklahoma State as 1945 National Champion Archived from the original on December 6 2016 Retrieved November 15 2016 Sooners Win Tiebreaker For Big 12 Title Game CBS News November 28 2010 No 9 Oklahoma is headed back to the Big 12 championship game to face No 13 Nebraska after winning a tiebreaker based on the Bowl Championship Series standings The Sooners were ninth in the standings released Sunday with Oklahoma State 14th and Texas A amp M 18th The three teams finished the regular season tied atop the Big 12 South with 6 2 records in conference play and the BCS standings were used to break the tie 2018 Media Guide PDF okstate com Oklahoma State Athletics p 143 Retrieved August 22 2018 Oklahoma State Cowboys Bowls College Football at Sports Reference com College Football at Sports Reference com Retrieved 3 October 2018 Budin Steve Schaller Bob 2007 Bets Drugs and Rock amp Roll The Rise and Fall of the World s First Offshore Sports Gambling Empire Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1 60239 099 7 Book claims 54 Bedlam Game was fixed by mob ESPN 30 September 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 02 Oklahoma State Tulsa 2019 Game Summary okstate com Retrieved 2019 11 27 CincyJoe 2010 09 16 Is Oklahoma State vs Tulsa a rivalry Cowboys Ride For Free Retrieved 2013 04 22 Who Was Laymon Lowery Lewis NewsOK com 2003 09 02 Retrieved 2018 06 26 Oklahoma State football Cowboys can finally head indoors 16 July 2013 Retrieved July 25 2019 Special Report on Oklahoma State Football Part 1 The Money SI com ESPN Unhappy with Jason Whitlock s Comments About Sports Illustrated s Thayer Evans The Big Lead 12 September 2013 Sports Illustrated writer George Dohrmann defends his investigative report of Oklahoma State Oklahoman com September 10 2013 McMurphy Brett September 12 2013 Fath Carter story questioned ESPN Retrieved November 28 2015 Brandon Weeden rips into Sports Illustrated writer report on Oklahoma State football cleveland com 11 September 2013 Dom Cosentino 24 September 2013 Why SI s Oklahoma State Series Sucked The Inside Story Deadspin Sports Illustrated s Dirty Game articles spark false light lawsuit NewsOK com Oklahoma State football under investigation ESPN 14 July 2014 OSU OSU Response okstate edu Archived from the original on 2014 10 22 Retrieved 2014 10 22 Charges fundamentally unfounded ABC7 San Francisco 21 October 2014 NCAA announces infractions penalties for Oklahoma State football program 24 April 2015 Retrieved July 25 2019 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 12 22 Retrieved 2017 09 07 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Bob S 2012 10 24 Uni Tracker Orange helmets added to Cowboys possible looks OSU Cowboys Blog newsok com Archived from the original on 2012 10 28 Retrieved 2013 04 22 Past Winners Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Educational Foundation Archived from the original on December 18 2006 Retrieved December 21 2006 Hall of Honor okstate com Fenimore s Induction into Ring of Honor Extra Special to Our Family pokesreport com April 27 2022 Dallas Cowboys NFL draft picks 2022 Analysis for every selection 30 April 2022 Cabot Mary Kay April 29 2016 Emmanuel Ogbah drafted by the Cleveland Browns at No 32 The Plain Dealer Retrieved August 28 2016 Tyler Patmon kffl com Archived from the original on December 4 2014 Retrieved September 8 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Packers sign five draft picks 15 rookie free agents Packers com May 5 2017 Archived from the original on October 20 2017 Retrieved October 19 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 2018 NFL Draft Results Pittsburgh Steelers trade up to select QB Mason Rudolph with third round pick Behind The Steel Curtain April 27 2018 Retrieved July 4 2018 Detroit Lions NFL draft picks 2022 Analysis for every selection 30 April 2022 Oklahoma State Cowboys Football Future Schedules FBSchedules com Retrieved November 13 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oklahoma State Cowboys football Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oklahoma State Cowboys football amp oldid 1201031047, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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