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Watch: Undefeated Oklahoma Survives Massive Scare Against Army

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Oklahoma’s College Football Playoff hopes were dangerously close to becoming bleak less than a month into the season.

Kyler Murray threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to CeeDee Lamb in overtime, and Parnell Motley intercepted Kelvin Hopkins’ fourth-down pass to help the fifth-ranked Sooners escape with a 28-21 victory over Army on Saturday night.

“Our guys hung in there,” Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley said. “They trusted that it was going to be a challenge. If there’s a couple plays that game that you don’t make, it’s going to be a close game against them. Those couple plays that we had a chance to separate, we didn’t do it.”

Army had the ball for more than 44 minutes and ran 87 plays to Oklahoma’s 40. It was the third-fewest offensive plays for Oklahoma in school history and the fewest since running 38 against Colorado in 1960.

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Army coach Jeff Monken said the Black Knights would have gone for two and the win if they had scored a touchdown on their overtime possession. The Black Knights were 4 for 4 on fourth-down conversions until Motley’s interception.

Oklahoma’s fans gave the Black Knights a standing ovation after the game.

“To be part of a football team, to come in here tonight and about pull off a victory against a great football program,” Monken said. “I’m just incredibly proud to be part of this football team. I’m proud of our players, it’s just a privilege to be part of a group of people who just care so much. It’s fun to be part of something like that.”

Kyler Murray passed for 165 yards and three touchdowns and ran for 71 yards and another score, and Trey Sermon added 119 yards on 18 carries for Oklahoma. Kenneth Murray had a school-record 28 tackles and Curtis Bolton had 23 for the Sooners (4-0). Murray’s total is a Football Bowl Subdivision record, though the NCAA only has kept track since 2000.

Should Oklahoma fans be worried after this game?

Hopkins ran Army’s triple-option offense to near perfection for most of the game. He ran for 102 yards and a touchdown while constantly fooling the Sooners with his ball handling, but he threw two critical late interceptions.

“This Army team, them boys were tough,” Bolton said. “You can say what you want. It’s a little outdated, the triple option. But at the end of the day, them boys are out there trying to win a football game. They did a good job. They played a hell of a football game. I’m glad we came out with the W.”

Oklahoma led 21-14 at halftime after Army had 16-play, 75-yard touchdown drives on its first two possessions.  Murray passed for 123 yards and two touchdowns and ran for 40 yards and another score before the break.

Hopkins ran for 55 yards in the first half, including a nifty 5-yard touchdown run. Army (2-2) ran 39 times for 183 yards in the first half and had the ball for 22:01 of the first 30 minutes. Oklahoma only had the ball for 20 plays in the first half.

Army picked off Murray’s pass and made the Sooners pay. Andy Davidson scored from 3 yards out, and the Black Knights tied the game at 21 with 1:51 remaining in the third quarter. It was a 19-play, 85-yard drive that took 10:47 off the clock.

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Oklahoma drove to the Army 1, but the Black Knights got the stop on fourth-and-goal and took over with 12:23 to go.

Army drove for the win, but Oklahoma’s Mark Jackson pressured Hopkins, and defensive end Kenneth Mann caught a deflection to give the Sooners the ball at their 38-yard line. The Black Knights took 10:06 off the clock before turning the ball over.

Murray ripped runs of 18 and 10 yards to get the Sooners into field-goal range. An option pitch to Sermon for 11 yards and an 8-yard run by Murray moved it even closer. The Sooners then took a knee to set up the field goal try, but Austin Seibert missed from 33 yards out as time expired to force overtime.

The Western Journal has reviewed this Associated Press story and may have altered it prior to publication to ensure that it meets our editorial standards.

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