OU vs Missouri Pregame Notes >>> Soonersports

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Saturday, Feb. 12 at 12:47 p.m. CT
TV: Big 12 Network
KOCB Ch. 34 in Oklahoma City
KJRH Ch. 2 in Tulsa
ESPN Full Court
Radio: Sooner Radio Network
KRXO FM 107.7 in Oklahoma City
KTBZ AM 1430 in Tulsa

Webcast: ESPN3.com

SATURDAY'S GAME BASICS
Two of four teams tied for fifth place in the Big 12, Oklahoma (12-11, 4-5) and No. 19/20 Missouri (18-6, 4-5) meet Saturday in Columbia, Mo., at 12:30 p.m. CT. OU has lost two in a row following a four-game winning streak, while the Tigers have dropped three of their last four after a 3-2 league start. Saturday’s game will air on the Sooner Radio Network (KRXO 107.7 FM in Oklahoma City; KTBZ 1430 AM in Tulsa) with Bob Barry Sr. and Mike Houck announcing. It will be televised by the Big 12 Network (KOCB Ch. 34 in OKC; KJRH Ch. 2 in Tulsa; ESPN Full Court) with Dave Armstrong and Jon Sundvold calling the action.

NOTEWORTHY
• Oklahoma holds a 112-94 series lead against Missouri but trails 59-29 in games played in Columbia (the Sooners have lost the last four there). OU posted a 66-61 win last season in Norman.
• The Sooners are 11-2 at home this year and 1-9 away from Lloyd Noble Center. Their lone road win came Jan. 29 at Iowa State (82-76 in overtime).
• Starters have accounted for 391 of Oklahoma’s 432 points (91 percent) over the last six games (four wins). Each of the five starters is averaging double figures in scoring during the stretch.
• Starters are also averaging 34.7 minutes per game over the last six.
• A big key for OU in its wins this year has been its positive assist-to-turnover ratio. In 12 victories, the Sooners have 189 assists to 167 turnovers. In its 11 losses, Oklahoma has accumulated 112 assists and 152 turnovers (49 and 61 in Big 12 defeats).
• The Sooners committed more turnovers than their opponent in 10 of their first 17 games. That trend has reversed itself the last six games, however, as OU has totaled fewer turnovers than each of its last six foes. It is averaging just 10.5 turnovers over the last four outings.
• Freshmen and sophomores have accounted for 72 percent of OU’s points this year (1,119 of 1,553) and 77 percent of its points during the team’s recent four-game winning streak. The Sooners have one senior in Cade Davis.
• Sophomore guard Steven Pledger, who turned in a career-high 38-point performance Jan. 29 at Iowa State, has scored in double figures in 10 of OU’s 12 wins and is averaging a team-high 16.2 points in the team’s victories (compared to 8.1 in losses). He is shooting .415 from 3-point range in wins (.260 in defeats).
• After averaging 15.0 points and 6.0 rebounds during OU’s four-game winning streak, freshman Cameron Clark is averaging 1.0 point and 3.5 boards over the last two outings (both losses). Clark was held scoreless last Saturday at Oklahoma State and tallied two points Wednesday against Texas. He has played at least 40 minutes six times over the last 15 games, including four times in the last eight outings.
• In OU’s 12 wins, point guard Carl Blair has totaled 57 assists and 27 turnovers. In the team’s 11 losses, Blair has 34 assists and 41 turnovers. The sophomore went 16-for-26 (.615) from the free throw line over his first 15 games, but is 40-for-49 (.816) over the last six outings.

Sooner to Watch


Andrew Fitzgerald | So. | Forward
• Leads Oklahoma in scoring (13.8 ppg) and rebounding (5.3 rpg) on the year
• Has led team in scoring in each of last two games (18 and 16 points)
• Has scored at least 16 points 10 times on the season and at least 20 four times
• Ranks sixth in the Big 12 Conference with his .515 field goal percentage


PLAYERS UPDATE
• Sophomore forward Andrew Fitzgerald has scored at least 16 points 10 times this season, including five times in OU’s nine conference games. He leads the team with his 13.8 points and 5.3 rebounds per game on the year, and ranks sixth in the Big 12 with his .515 season field goal percentage. His free throw percentage (.727) is up significantly from last year (.638). Fitzgerald has led the Sooners in scoring in each of the last two games, scoring 18 at Oklahoma State and 16 versus Texas.
• A career .332 3-point shooter entering the year, senior guard Cade Davis is shooting a career-best .359 from behind the arc this season and is averaging 2.1 treys per game (ranks 10th in the Big 12). Going back to last year, he has made 77 treys over his last 34 games. Davis ranks eighth on OU’s career 3-point field goals list with 163 and needs four to tie Brent Price for seventh place.
• The 6-foot-5 Davis has been effective on the boards over his last nine games, leading the team on the glass in six of those outings.
• Sophomore guard Steven Pledger has scored in double figures in five of the last six games and is averaging 15.8 in those six. Included was a career-high 38-point effort at Iowa State on Jan. 29 in which he registered career highs in field goals (12), 3-point field goals (7) and free throw makes (7). Pledger scored 17 of OU’s final 21 points of the game, including the team’s first 10 in overtime.
• Freshman Cameron Clark’s top seven scoring games have all come over the last 15 outings. Clark, who finished with a career-high 26 points Dec. 30 against Central Arkansas, also netted 25 versus Baylor last week, 17 against Oral Roberts, 16 at Baylor, 14 against Maryland Eastern Shore and 13 versus Gardner-Webb and Colorado. In OU’s wins, he is averaging 13.2 points while shooting .549 from the field and .457 from 3-point range (16-for-35). In losses, he’s averaging 5.6 points while shooting .386 from the field and .176 from deep (3-for-17).
• Sophomore point guard Carl Blair has rebounded nicely from a slow start to the year by averaging 9.3 points, 3.1 rebounds and 5.1 assists over the last 15 games. In his first six games, Blair averaged 4.0 points, 0.8 rebounds and 2.5 assists. He ranks fifth in the Big 12 with his 4.3 assists per contest (third in league games at 4.7) and has led OU in the category in 11 of the last 15 outings.
• OU’s first player off the bench, junior forward C.J. Washington is shooting .700 from the field (14-for-20) over the last 11 games. On the year, Washington leads OU in rebounds per minute (averaging 12.0 per 40 minutes).
• Freshman forward Tyler Neal has provided a spark off the bench the last two games, averaging 6.0 points and 5.5 rebounds in 16.0 minutes per contest against Oklahoma State and Texas. His 40-minute projected averages of 14.8 points and 9.5 rebounds per game rank third and second on the team, respectively, this season.

PREVIEWING MISSOURI
• Ranked No. 19 in the AP poll and No. 20 in the ESPN/USA Today version, Missouri owns an 18-6 overall record and a 4-5 Big 12 mark. The Tigers are 14-0 at home this year (they’ve won those games by an average of 23.8 points) and have won 49 of their last 51 at Mizzou Arena. After starting Big 12 play with a 3-2 record, MU has lost three of its last four. Its average home victory margin in four Big 12 games against Nebraska, Kansas State, Iowa State and Colorado is 18.3 points.
• In Big 12 play, Missouri is shooting .440 from the field (ranks fourth in the Big 12), .350 from 3-point range (ranks seventh) and .731 from the free throw line (ranks sixth). Its -4.7 rebounding margin ranks ninth in the league.
• The Tigers lead the Big 12 in conference play with their 8.8 steals per game and their +3.7 average turnover margin.
• Junior guard Marcus Denmon leads five Tigers who average double figures in scoring on the year. Denmon ranks seventh in the Big 12 with his 16.5 points per game, second in steals per contest (2.2), third in 3-point field goal percentage (.452) and sixth in 3-pointers per game (2.4). He also contributes 3.8 rebounds and 1.7 assists an outing.
• Junior forward Ricardo Ratliffe averages 11.8 points and a team-high 6.6 rebounds per game while ranking second in the Big 12 with his .598 field goal percentage. The two-time junior college All-American has scored in double figures in eight of nine league games and is shooting a conference-best .662 from the floor against Big 12 competition.
• Junior forward Laurence Bowers scored a team-high 19 points on 8-for-11 shooting in a 103-86 loss at Kansas on Monday and averages 11.0 points, 5.7 rebounds and a team-high 2.1 blocks per game.
• Mike Anderson is in his fifth year as Missouri’s head coach and owns a 106-52 record there.

OU-MISSOURI SERIES HISTORY
Oklahoma holds a 112-94 series lead against Missouri but trails 59-29 in games played in Columbia. The Sooners, who are 13-8 against the Tigers since the formation of the Big 12 Conference, have lost six of the last 10 in the series after winning nine straight. Missouri has won six of the last eight regular season meetings, including the last four in Columbia (OU’s last win there came in 2001 on Jameel Heywood’s buzzer-beater at the Hearnes Center). Since the start of the Big 12 in 1996-97, OU is 13-8 against Missouri (2-5 in Columbia). Jeff Capel is 2-2 against the Tigers as OU’s head coach. The Sooners lost 72-68 in Columbia in 2007 and 73-64 in 2009. Seven of the last nine overall meetings and 10 of the last 15 have been decided by five or fewer points.

LAST YEAR AGAINST THE TIGERS
• Despite not scoring for the game’s first six minutes (it fell behind 10-0), Oklahoma posted a 66-61 Jan. 16 home win over Missouri last year.
• The Sooners used a 12-2 run to tie the game at 14-14, but trailed 32-27 at halftime. Still behind 44-38 midway through the second half, OU outscored Missouri 28-17 the rest of the game. A Willie Warren free throw on a 3-point play with 6:59 left put OU ahead for good.
• Despite receiving IV treatment before the game and at halftime due to being ill, junior guard Cade Davis recorded his first career double-double with 15 points and a career-high 11 rebounds. His previous rebound high was five.
• Warren was 3-for-7 from 3-point range and 8-for-8 from the free throw line en route to 21 points.
• Steven Pledger played 38 minutes and finished with 10 points and five rebounds.
• OU committed a season-high 20 turnovers compared to Missouri’s 10, but the Sooners scored nine points off turnovers to MU’s seven.
• The Sooners won despite the fact their second- and third-leading scorers on the year (Tony Crocker and Tiny Gallon) were held scoreless. Crocker turned his ankle two-and-a-half minutes into the game and played just five minutes.
• Laurence Bowers was the only Missouri player to score in double figures (15 points). OU held the Tigers to .359 field goal and .238 (5-for-21) 3-point shooting.

WEDNESDAY’S TEXAS RECAP
• Oklahoma shot a season-low 32.1 percent from the field and lost for just the second time at home this year as No. 3 Texas posted a 68-52 win at Lloyd Noble Center on Wednesday.
• OU suffered its worst defeat in six games despite committing a season-low-tying eight turnovers. It was OU’s lowest total in 17 games.
• Starters scored all 68 points for Texas and each finished in double figures. The quintet combined to shoot 62.5 percent from the field.
• With 16 points, forward Andrew Fitzgerald led OU in scoring for the eighth time this year. He added five rebounds in 38 minutes.
• Guard Steven Pledger was the only other Sooner in double figures in scoring with his 13 points. He was 3-for-4 from 3-point range to up his team-high trey total to 50 on the year. Pledger was held scoreless in the first meeting on Jan. 15 in Austin.
• Freshman forward Tyler Neal came off the bench to register six points and a career-high seven boards. His 20 minutes of playing time were his most since seeing 24 minutes vs. Virginia on Nov. 23.
• Texas posted a 38-27 rebounding advantage and outscored the Sooners 28-14 in the paint.

UP NEXT
Oklahoma returns home to host Nebraska on Wednesday at 8 p.m. CT. The game will be nationally televised by ESPNU.
 
We are 3-23 in our last 26 road games.

For comparative purposes, KS was 16-17 in his last three years.

That reveals a couple of things. 1) It's darn tough to win on the road 2) Not much separates good from bad (although 3 just looks awful)
 
For comparative purposes, KS was 16-17 in his last three years.

That reveals a couple of things. 1) It's darn tough to win on the road 2) Not much separates good from bad (although 3 just looks awful)

there is a big difference in 16-17 (almost .500) and 3-26
 
there is a big difference in 16-17 (almost .500) and 3-26

No, I agree, but those last three teams didn't have the issues the last two have had either...I just found under .500 for those teams (because they were good) to be shocking...
 
In addition, we were 15-19 in JC's first 3 years on the road.
 
For comparative purposes, KS was 16-17 in his last three years.

That reveals a couple of things. 1) It's darn tough to win on the road 2) Not much separates good from bad (although 3 just looks awful)

Bad post.

In addition, we were 15-19 in JC's first 3 years on the road.

Good post.
 
Bad post.



Good post.

Bad post for pointing out that 12 games over 3 years was the difference in being good as opposed to bad? I never said it was good, just that the "good standard" is not that high. That was my only point.

Of course (and without looking), I'm sure KU/Duke/UNC all have a different "good standard" for winning road games...
 
BTW, what my last post also points out that the standard varies for teams, so should it not also vary for the quality of each team (no matter the program) from year to year? In other words, if this year's team were to win 4 road games it would be a major miracle. For reference...see UNC the past two years...they are a combined 8-11...NOT GOOD by THEIR standards...fairly good by ours...
 
BTW, what my last post also points out that the standard varies for teams, so should it not also vary for the quality of each team (no matter the program) from year to year? In other words, if this year's team were to win 4 road games it would be a major miracle. For reference...see UNC the past two years...they are a combined 8-11...NOT GOOD by THEIR standards...fairly good by ours...

Understatement.
 
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