The more things change, the more they remain the same. Texas and Oklahoma’s spurning of the Big 12 ahead of the 2024 season spelled the end of a relationship which had lasted nearly two decades. That didn’t mean that their rivalry with one another had changed.
The Longhorns and Sooners are still in-conference adversaries. They just happen to share a different conference nowadays, taking their talents to the SEC in 2024 and beyond.
To that end, this year’s Red River Showdown between the two college football powerhouses should prove a compelling watch. Texas (5-0) is riding high, overcoming an injury to leading light Quinn Ewers to race to the top of the college football rankings. Arch Manning (55-of-78 passing, 901 yards, nine touchdowns, two interceptions) has impressed in relief β so much so that some in the Longhorns fanbase want him to retain his spot as starter, even after Ewers’ return.
MORE: Famed QB coach breaks down Manning vs. Ewers
Oklahoma (4-1) hasn’t quite reached the heights of its interstate foes. But Brent Venables’ side isn’t all that far behind, either; the Sooners have one of the best defenses in the land, spearheaded by star linebacker Danny Stutsman.
Ewers is expected to return to the fold on Saturday afternoon. When he does, he’ll be greeted by a host of plunderers in OU’s front seven, each hoping to leave him crumpled on the canvas when the opportunity arises.
Saturday’s contest is bound to be a hoot. The Sporting News is there, tracking updates from this year’s Red River Showdown between Oklahoma and Texas. Follow below for highlights, analysis, and more as two of college football’s most prominent programs duel for Red River supremacy at the Cotton Bowl.
MORE: Watch Oklahoma vs. Texas live with Fubo (free trial)
Texas vs. Oklahoma score
Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | F | |
Texas | 0 | 21 | 0 | x | x |
Oklahoma | 3 | 0 | 0 | x | x |
Texas vs. Oklahoma live updates, highlights from Red River Showdown
(All times Eastern)
6:05 p.m.: Things are still humming for the Longhorns as the third quarter rolls on. Another Sooners three-and-out has Texas own the prowl for that all-important death knell.
5:46 p.m.: We’re back in action from the Cotton Bowl. Oklahoma’s foibles continue, with the Sooners’ offense sputtering once more under Hawkins’ helm. Texas will get the ball back with a chance to turn this humble 18-point advantage into a gulf.
End of second quarter: Texas 21, Oklahoma 3
5:20 p.m.: Bert Auburn sees his effort stray wide as the quarter comes to a close.
5:15 p.m.: FUMBLE! Things go from bad to worse for Oklahoma, which sees yet another drive crumble after Taylor Tatum’s 13-yard scamper comes to an end at the hands of Derrick Williams Jr., who sent Tatum crashing into the turf with an impressive tackle. As Tatum dwindled towards earth, he lost grasp of the ball. The ensuing fumble landed in Texas hands. Because of course it did.
ANOTHER FUMBLEπππ
HOOK βEMπ€π»π₯
π₯: ABC pic.twitter.com/zOn9zdJtoh
β Inside Texas (@InsideTexas) October 12, 2024
5:10 p.m.: TOUCHDOWN! Wisner wasted no time making the Sooners pay for their indiscretion. He finds another hole, races through it and collects 43 yards on his way to pay dirt. It’s been a dream quarter for Texas and a nightmarish one for Oklahoma.
LOOK OUT HE’S LOOSE π pic.twitter.com/HpkcDJOPjx
β Texas Football (@TexasFootball) October 12, 2024
Texas 21, Oklahoma 3
5:08 p.m.: FUMBLE! The Longhorns wrestle the ball away from Hawkins, with Anthony Hill Jr. forcing the ball out after one of the Sooners’ patented QB run play designs.
TEXAS RECOVERED THE FUMBLE AND FOUND PAYDIRT ON THE VERY NEXT PLAY π± pic.twitter.com/4DDPWMfx3B
β ESPN (@espn) October 12, 2024
Their offense will be licking its chops here, handed an offering inside of Oklahoma territory.
4:59 p.m.: TOUCHDOWN! Texas adds to its lead in the most dramatic fashion imaginable.
Here’s the scene: Quintrevion Wisner rumbled down the pastures for 36 yards after mystifying a handful of burgundy-clad defenders. Just as he bore down on the goal line, he saw his parcel stripped away from him and sent twirling out of bounds. Just at the ball appeared destined to roll out of the back of the end zone β which would’ve resulted in a Oklahoma touchback β Silas Bolden springs to life, collecting the unruly sorceress and securing the score for the Longhorns.
π±π±π±π±@silasbolden_ pic.twitter.com/DYPlDpzSqF
β Texas Football (@TexasFootball) October 12, 2024
Sometimes, you’re good. Sometimes, you’re lucky. Texas happened to be both on that play.
Texas 14, Oklahoma 3
4:58 p.m.: Ewers connects with Ryan Wingo, who darts 44 yards down the sideline before being brought down deep in Oklahoma territory. Texas is beginning to exert its might in this contest, quiet as its kept.
4:57 p.m.: Edwards and Oklahoma’s offense produced some nice moments on their last escapade. However, the Sooners limped to the finish line, seeing their promising effort turn to ashes after Jovantae Barnes slipped on third-and-short. Back to the Longhorns we go!
4:52 p.m.: Progress isn’t always linear. Case in point: the Longhorns’ drive stalls out after tallying just three yards in three plays.
4:45 p.m.: Brent Venables’ side forced to punt once more after Barryn Sorrell bursts through the mire and brings Hawkins to the canvas on third-and-intermediate. The Longhorns’ defense has looked as imposing as ever through 20 or so minutes.
4:32 p.m.: Helm does it again! Sarkisian dials up the misdirection, which sees Ewers veer to the right before tossing a feather to Helm, who outmuscled a handful of his markers to find pay dirt. That’s more like it for Ewers and the Longhorns.
Diving into the end zone π€@gunnar_helm pic.twitter.com/FsKmgAcDKv
β Texas Football (@TexasFootball) October 12, 2024
Texas 7, Oklahoma 3
4:30 p.m.: Gunnar Helm retrieves Ewers’ bolt before thundering forward for 21 yards of his own. The moment was adorned with a leap over one of his adversaries, one which helped push Texas into the red zone.
Whatever it takes π«‘@gunnar_helm pic.twitter.com/V5N9L2G5Er
β Texas Football (@TexasFootball) October 12, 2024
4:28 p.m.: Ewers rifles an effort into DeAndre Moore Jr. on the sideline for 26 yards. That’s Texas’ first time moving the chains today. Now, the Longhorns are firmly in Sooners territory.
End of first quarter: Oklahoma 3, Texas 0
4:20 p.m.: FIELD GOAL! OU breaks open the scoring, with Tyler Keltner finding his mark from 42 yards out. This is the first time Texas has been losing a game at any point this season.
Oklahoma 3, Texas 0
4:18 p.m.: Oklahoma is finding a rhythm in its first offensive possession of the game. Hawkins and Co, make their way onto the cusp of the red zone courtesy of a barrage of short and intermediate runs and pass plays.
4:15 p.m.: The Longhorns’ drive stutters once more, with Ewers’ struggles looking more and more apparent. He had a pair of open options behind the first down marker on third-and-intermediate. However, he opted to run instead, not one of his go-to traits. Texas proceeds to send another punt hurtling into OU territory.
4:05 p.m.: Texas answers back with a stop of its own, taking advantage of Michael Taaffee’s crunching sack on Hawkins to force an OU punt of its own.
3:58 p.m.: Ewers & Co. took over at their own 30, and Ewers started the drive with a three-yard completion to Juan Davis. But he couldn’t find Isaiah Bond on third-and-3, resulting in a punt for the Longhorns.
3:53 p.m.: Oklahoma managed one first down before their offense stalled at the Texas 27-yard line β and then kicker Tyler Keltner missed the 44-yard field goal, ensuring Ewers’ early interception didn’t hurt the Longhorns too much.
3:48 p.m.: Ewers threw an interception on his first pass of the day. Facing third-and-14 after a sack and a short run, the Texas QB overthrew his receiver, and Oklahoma safety Billy Bowman Jr. grabbed it out of the air at the Longhorns’ 45-yard line.
Quinn Ewers throws an INT on his first drive π³
Will we see Arch Manning today? πpic.twitter.com/lF1xlBLJ5K
β DraftKings (@DraftKings) October 12, 2024
3:46 p.m.: Alabama kicked off to start the game, and Quinn Ewers and Texas will start on their own 25-yard line.
3:30 p.m.: Famous Texas grad Matthew McConaughey is ready to cheer on the Longhorns at the Red River Showdown.
Matthew McConaughey is feeling alright alright alright ahead of the Red River Rivalry π€ pic.twitter.com/x10hPG3GAX
β Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports) October 12, 2024
3:00 p.m.: If you needed any further evidence that it will be Quinn Ewers β not Arch Manning β here’s a look at his threads ahead of Saturday’s contest.
It’s all coming together π€ pic.twitter.com/NHrKCXTMRI
β Texas Football (@TexasFootball) October 12, 2024
2:50 p.m.: Both sides are out on the lawn. Not much longer now until two of the SEC’s greatest rivals lock horns with one another.
QB1 π«‘@QuinnEwers pic.twitter.com/qrScwnDwUk
β Texas Football (@TexasFootball) October 12, 2024
Calm before the storm.#OUDNA pic.twitter.com/wBJSVA5uKw
β Oklahoma Football (@OU_Football) October 12, 2024
2:30 p.m.: Check out Mike Hawkins Jr. and, more notably, his cowboy-inspired pre-game outfit while the Sooners strode into the Cotton Bowl.
Block out the noise π§#OUDNA pic.twitter.com/5VjmdwA79D
β Oklahoma Football (@OU_Football) October 12, 2024
2:20 p.m.: The Longhorns have an esteemed guest in their presence, with former national title winner Vince Young among cadre of luminaries set to watch on in the latest edition of the Red River Showdown.
Getting us going π@VinceYoung10 pic.twitter.com/MAI6NO3rVS
β Texas Football (@TexasFootball) October 12, 2024
How to watch Texas vs. Oklahoma
- Date: Saturday, October 10
- Time: 3:30 ET (2:30 p.m. local time)
- Location: Cotton Bowl
- TV channel: ABC
- Live stream: ESPN+, Fubo
MORE: Injury updates ahead of Red River Rivalry game
The Red River Showdown will be aired on ABC in Week 7. The network will broadcast the game from the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, beginning at 3:30 p.m. ET (2:30 p.m. local time).
Those seeking a streaming option can turn to ESPN+ or Fubo, which offers a free trial to new users.