- Final01ORE
CAL15
1315
13 - Final1
2UGA
AUB31
4931
49 - Final2
3SDSU
TCU35
4035
40 - Final3
5ULM
LSU0
510
51 - Final46STAN
ASU17
1317
13 - Final5
7IND
WIS20
8320
83 - Final6
8KU
NEB3
203
20 - Final7
9PSU
OSU14
3814
38 - Final810OKST
TEX33
1633
16 - Final919
12MSST
ALA10
3010
30 - Final1013IOWA
NW17
2117
21 - Final1114UTAH
ND3
283
28 - Final12
15UTEP
ARK21
5821
58 - Final13
16TTU
OKLA7
457
45 - Final1424
17KSU
MIZZ28
3828
38 - Final15
18USC
ARIZ24
2124
21 - Final1620VT
UNC26
1026
10 - Final1721NEV
FRES35
3435
34 - Final1823
22SCAR
FLA36
1436
14 - Final19
25USM
UCF31
2131
21 - Final2025TA&M
BAY42
3042
30 - Final214BSU
IDHO52
1452
14
Final

Texas Tech 7
(5-5, 3-5 Big 12)

(16) Oklahoma 45
(8-2, 4-2 Big 12)
Coverage: ABC
3:30 PM ET, November 13, 2010
Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, NORMAN, OK
Top Performers
Passing: L. Jones (OKLA) - 317 YDS, 5 TD
Rushing: R. Finch (OKLA) - 12 CAR, 67 YDS, 1 TD
Receiving: R. Broyles (OKLA) - 8 REC, 119 YDS, 3 TD
NORMAN, Okla. -- One record at a time, Ryan Broyles is cementing his spot as the greatest receiver ever to play for Oklahoma.
Broyles caught three of Landry Jones' five touchdown passes and broke a few more school records, leading the Sooners (No. 16 BCS, No. 19 AP) to a 45-7 victory against Texas Tech on Saturday.
Fast Facts
• Landry Jones passed for 328 yards and a season-high five TDs as Oklahoma rebounded from last week's loss.
• Oklahoma scored 24 points in the first quarter and led 38-7 at the half, improving to 8-2.
• Ryan Broyles caught three TDs and now has 32 TD receptions in his career, most in school history.
• The Sooners have won 36 consecutive home games, the longest active streak in the nation.
• The Red Raiders finished 3-5 in the Big 12, their first losing conference record since 2000.
-- ESPN Stats & Information
Broyles caught eight passes for 119 yards and broke Mark Clayton's career records for receptions and touchdown catches at Oklahoma (8-2, 4-2 Big 12). He also eclipsed his own mark for catches in a season and now holds almost every significant receiving record at the school.
"That's a good feeling," Broyles said. "It feels even better to win on top of that."
Broyles had the biggest receiving day in Oklahoma history in his previous game on Owen Field, and on Saturday -- in addition to the new marks he set -- matched Clayton's career records with eight 100-yard games in a season and 15 in a career.
"I've said everything you can say about Ryan," coach Bob Stoops said. "He's a great player. I love his competitiveness, his toughness. He just has a knack for adjusting to the football like nobody I've ever seen, finding the ball and turning for it, and he's got the surest hands of anybody I've been around. He just has a great knack for making big plays and consistent, tough plays."
Broyles tumbled backward into the end zone after an acrobatic 29-yard catch in the second quarter and later added an 18-yard touchdown reception and a leaping 8-yard TD grab on a fade route as the Sooners scored 38 unanswered points after trading touchdowns early.
Texas Tech (5-5, 3-5) finished its opening possession by scoring on Detron Lewis' touchdown pass to fellow receiver Darrin Moore out of the wildcat formation, then got shut out the rest of the way. The Red Raiders were stopped on fourth-and-1 in Oklahoma territory twice in the first 18 minutes and then lost all their offensive momentum.
"Offensively, we were horrible on third and fourth down. That's what killed us," said Baron Batch, who led Tech with 91 yards rushing. "We didn't ever sustain a real drive. We'd have big plays but had a hard time stringing together big drives."
Big 12 blog
ESPN.com's David Ubben writes about all things involving the Big 12 in the conference blog.
More:
• Blog network: College Football Nation
Jones surpassed 300 yards passing for the seventh time this season, completing 22 of 29 for 317 yards. He also had a 12-yard touchdown pass to DeMarco Murray on Oklahoma's first possession and a 59-yard score on a deep ball to Kenny Stills.
After relying largely on bubble screens that got stuffed in a 33-19 loss at Texas A&M, the Sooners went more vertical in their passing game against the Red Raiders.
"I was excited that we were going to take more shots down the field this week, and to see us doing those things and actually hit one was really good for our offense," Jones said.
Texas Tech's defense allowed season-best 95 yards passing by Blaine Gabbert in an upset of then-No. 14 Missouri last week, but couldn't do it again. Jones threw for 276 yards and four touchdowns in the first half against the defense that ranks third-to-last in the nation against the pass, guiding the Sooners to a 38-7 advantage.
It was the third straight blowout by the home team in the series. The Sooners came up with a memorable 65-21 rout against the No. 2 Red Raiders two years ago, derailing Tech's bid at perfection in the next-to-last game of the regular season.
The Red Raiders got a measure of revenge last season with a 41-13 victory in the rematch, celebrating to the same song -- House of Pain's "Jump Around" -- that the Sooners jubilantly bounced to in 2008.
The stakes weren't nearly so high in this one. Oklahoma bounced back from its fourth straight conference road loss to stretch the nation's longest home winning streak to 36, in the process keeping alive its chances of winning the Big 12 South title.
"It's pretty special," said Jeremy Beal, one of 19 Oklahoma seniors who played their last game on Owen Field. "I've never lost at home and it's a great feeling to go through that."
Tech, which has been eligible for a bowl game each of the last 16 years, remained one win shy of bowl eligibility with only nonconference home games against Weber State and Houston left on the schedule.
"That was our last conference game and we go 3-5," first-year coach Tommy Tuberville said. "I thought we had a chance to win four or five if we played well and stayed injury-free."
The Sooners got a scare when Murray went to the locker room in the second quarter with bruised ribs. He returned briefly in the second half and Stoops said he should be able to play moving forward. He had protective padding under his shirt during postgame interviews.
Starting defensive tackle Adrian Taylor was lost for the season when he tore his right Achilles tendon and had to be wheeled off the field in the second quarter. Taylor had come back from a gruesome-looking left ankle dislocation sustained in the Sun Bowl in December.
Stoops said Oklahoma's other starting defensive tackle, Casey Walker, may be able to return next week after missing the last six games.
SPONSORED HEADLINES
Top 25 Overview
It was over when... Oklahoma raced to a 24-7 lead and scored 38 unanswered points to rout the Red Raiders.
Gameball goes to... Landry Jones, who threw five touchdown passes, three of which went to Ryan Broyles.
Stat of the game... 1-8. Texas Tech is 1-8 in Norman all-time and last won there in 1996.
Team Stat Comparison
| TTU | OKLA | |
|---|---|---|
| 1st Downs | 15 | 26 |
| Total Yards | 326 | 562 |
| Passing | 144 | 316 |
| Rushing | 182 | 246 |
| Penalties | 9-115 | 5-63 |
| 3rd Down Conversions | 6-18 | 5-15 |
| 4th Down Conversions | 0-2 | 2-2 |
| Turnovers | 2 | 1 |
| Possession | 30:52 | 29:08 |
Scoring Summary
| FIRST QUARTER | TTU | OKLA | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | TD | 12:31 | DeMarco Murray 12 Yd Pass From Landry Jones (Jimmy Stevens Kick) | 0 | 7 |
![]() | TD | 10:03 | Darrin Moore 3 Yd Pass From Detron Lewis (Matt Williams Kick) | 7 | 7 |
![]() | FG | 07:53 | Jimmy Stevens 34 Yd | 7 | 10 |
![]() | TD | 05:01 | Kenny Stills 59 Yd Pass From Landry Jones (Jimmy Stevens Kick) | 7 | 17 |
![]() | TD | 00:26 | Jordan Finch 29 Yd Run (Jimmy Stevens Kick) | 7 | 24 |
| SECOND QUARTER | TTU | OKLA | |||
![]() | TD | 10:15 | Ryan Broyles 29 Yd Pass From Landry Jones (Jimmy Stevens Kick) | 7 | 31 |
![]() | TD | 00:27 | Ryan Broyles 18 Yd Pass From Landry Jones (Jimmy Stevens Kick) | 7 | 38 |
| THIRD QUARTER | TTU | OKLA | |||
![]() | TD | 05:53 | Ryan Broyles 8 Yd Pass From Landry Jones (Jimmy Stevens Kick) | 7 | 45 |




