OU hillbilly talk fades away

formerfan

Banned
BY DIRK CHATELAIN

WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER

NORMAN, Okla. - Fans were launching oranges like footballs. Ruf/Neks were firing guns like cowboys. Oklahoma was scoring. Nebraska wasn't.

Husker coach Bill Callahan responded with an obscenity that raised eyebrows around the country and temporarily stained the famed Oklahoma-Nebraska rivalry.

"F- hillbillies," Callahan said walking off the field after a 30-3 Husker loss at OU last November.

A year later in the land of red dirt, Callahan's blast hardly raises a stir on the Oklahoma campus. More than a dozen OU fans and players were asked about the comment Monday; less than half even remembered it. The opinion is mixed among those who recall the hillbilly comment.

"A lot of people thought, 'Look who's talking,'" said University of Oklahoma student Jay Murdock.

The people who live and die with the crimson and cream aren't much different than those 400 miles up the road, one student said. Meanwhile, others laugh about it.

"I don't care. I think it's funny," said OU student Jason Lindsey, who, by the way, agrees with Callahan about the hillbillies.

But Callahan's jab demonstrated his lack of knowledge of the rivalry, according to Murdock. NU-OU isn't like Texas-Oklahoma, he said. The two Big Reds don't hate each other.

"It just showed everybody he knew nothing about the tradition of OU-Nebraska," said Murdock, a life-long Sooner fan, who said crowds on each side have been throwing oranges for decades.

Callahan's expletive culminated a testy final minute between powerhouse Oklahoma and ailing Nebraska.

OU, a four-touchdown favorite, led 30-0 after three quarters, but Sooner coach Bob Stoops had voters and computers on his mind. Stoops kept his starters in the game until the final minute in an effort to stay ahead of undefeated Auburn in the BCS poll.

Considering the imbalance on the scoreboard, Lindsey said, Callahan was understandably upset.

"They were getting beat up pretty good," he said.

On third-and-eight at the Nebraska 17 with less than a minute to play, OU quarterback Jason White threw a pass into the end zone.

The Huskers held, then moved quickly down the field, called time out and attempted a field goal in the waning seconds, ruining OU's shutout hopes.

As Callahan walked off the field, Sooner fans pelted the turf with oranges, just as NU and OU fans had done when the two rivals battled for Big Eight titles years ago.

A Daily Oklahoman reporter heard Callahan's comment and printed it.

Two days later, Callahan was asked about the incident and further criticized Oklahoma game management. His apology came in July at Big 12 Media Days when he said he didn't mean to offend Oklahomans.

The topic resurfaced Monday during the Big 12 coaches' teleconference. Callahan didn't bite.

"Let me just tell you this: I already addressed that topic down at the (Big 12) media day," he said. "And I addressed it clearly, clearly, at that time."

Stoops said after practice Monday that Callahan's dig, combined with other "unfortunate circumstances," were an aberration in an otherwise respectful rivalry. Before the 2004 game, Husker Darren DeLone had collided with a Sooner Ruf/Nek on the sideline, inciting criminal charges against the offensive lineman.

"Let's put it behind us," Stoops said. "It's two good programs here. Let's focus on what's been so good for so long."

Peterson says he will play

Oklahoma running back Adrian Peterson, who finished second in the Heisman Trophy race a year ago as a freshman, said Monday after practice he'll play Saturday at Nebraska.

The dynamic back injured an ankle Oct. 1 against Kansas State and was ineffective in sparse carries against Texas and Kansas. Peterson sat out Saturday in a double-overtime win over Baylor.

Link:

http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_pg=38&u_sid=2052075

 
"It just showed everybody he knew nothing about the tradition of OU-Nebraska," said Murdock, a life-long Sooner fan, who said crowds on each side have been throwing oranges for decades.
That makes it ok? I am sure they appreciated it when Cale Gundy got smacked with one in the helmet in the 90's.

 
That crowd was out for blood. They were similar to the Mizzou crowd. Although I wasn't at the Mizzou game, the similarities are very apparent. They knew that we were down and they made sure to kick us. The thing that I found amusing at the ou game last year. Thier was a guy two seats down from us.This dude looked like he was from a episode of the Beverly hillbillies. He couldn't have been 5' 6" and 140lbs dripping wet. Stoops came over the big screen and said," Please be respectful to the other Big 12 fans. Lets show them we have the best fans in the nation". The dude that looked like he climbed out of a gopher hole blurted out,"To hell with them.Lets kick their a$$". He directed this statement at my nephew sitting to my right. Well my nephew is 6'3" about 260lbs.

I thought that there was going to be a huge altercation. Instead of fighting about 500 rude fans .We opted to walk away. Several of them followed us all the way to our car chanting Nebraska sucks. It was a time that I will never be able to forgive or forget.

 
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