A&M trying to forget 77-0 loss
Sooners looking to repeat '03 shutout against Big 12 rival
COLLEGE STATION, Texas To lose is one thing. To lose 77-0 is quite another.
Texas A&M has had a year to absorb that shocking outcome at Oklahoma against the then-No. 1 Sooners. There was humiliation among Aggie fans, sympathy from Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops and withering criticism that the Sooners ran up the score.
"I don't know how much value there is in rehashing those things," A&M coach Dennis Franchione said. "Those things are in your memory bank, and you draw from there, and you don't erase them. But for us to talk about them is a waste of time."
Much has changed for A&M since that cold November afternoon at Oklahoma Memorial Stadium.
The Aggies (6-2, 4-1 Big 12) have rebounded in a big way, becoming bowl eligible for the first time since 2001 and reclaiming some of the respect that eroded following their first losing season since 1982.
But now they find themselves recovering from a loss that hurt almost as much, an overtime defeat at Baylor last week that took much of the sizzle out of their rematch against No. 2 Oklahoma on Saturday night. The Sooners (8-0, 5-0), again on the fast track to the Big 12 title and the national championship game, will almost certainly have little pity for the reeling Aggies.
"You could say Baylor hurt worse," A&M offensive tackle Geoff Hangartner said, "because we're actually in contention and we're tied for first place. But in both cases, you have to move past it and move on."
Oklahoma linebacker Lance Mitchell didn't seem too surprised the Aggies stumbled against the Bears.
"My reaction?," Mitchell said. "Probably they were thinking about us too much."
How does a proud program recover from such a public debacle?
Oklahoma rolled up 639 yards of offense; A&M had 54. The Aggies had more penalty yards (63) than offensive yards (54) and more punts (12) than first downs (3), none in the second half. They didn't even cross their own 40 all game.
The score was 77-0 by the end of the third quarter. In the fourth, the Sooners' reserves ran plays into the heart of the line Oklahoma's offensive line all but fell to the ground to keep the clock running and the score from getting even more out of hand.
More than a few Oklahoma fans began to chant for the Sooners to shoot for 100. Had Stoops been less compassionate, Oklahoma probably could have done it.
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