Oklahoma Sooners
SOONER SCHOONER
Perhaps the most famous form of transportation in college football is
OU’s Sooner Schooner. Introduced in 1964, the schooner is a small
covered wagon that represents the mode of travel the pioneers used when
they settled into Oklahoma. The Schooner is powered by matching small
white ponies named Boomer and Sooner, and plays a vital role in OU game
day activities. The Schooner making a triumphant victory ride onto
Owens field celebrates Oklahoma scores.
“There’s nothing like riding the Schooner,” said Corey Lapinsky, who has
served as a member of the university’s spirit group known as the Ruf-Necks.
“You’re in front of 80,000 cheering fans. You drive out and hit the
25-yard line, turn around and the crowd goes crazy.”
Fellow Ruf-Nek member Kevin Wolf added, “It gets hairy in the Schooner
when its going fast and you make a quick turn.”
The Schooner’s ride to glory has made it well recognized by football
fans across the country. However, the wagon mascot has taken the wrong
fork in the road on more than one occasion. During a wild rush across
Owens field one year the Schooner tipped over, spilling the riders and
ponies. Initially, a hush filled the stadium as the fans feared the
possibility of serious injuries. However, OU spirits were lifted when
the wagon team was O.K. and rolling again.
Perhaps the biggest impact on a football game by the Sooner Schooner was
the 1985 Orange Bowl loss to Washington. Following a 22-yard, fourth
quarter Sooner field goal that split the uprights, the wagon burst onto
the field to celebrate what appeared to be a late 17-14 OU lead.
However, the Schooner crew had failed to notice that the Sooners had
been penalized for an illegal formation. With the wagon on the field at
a premature time, a referee’s yellow flag that flew through the air
further subdued the crimson cheers. OU was penalized an additional 15
yards for unsportsmanlike conduct, forcing what would be a failed
42-yard kick.
“The penalty really affected the outcome of the game,” said longtime OU
fan Bob Jackson. “The officials didn’t want the Boomer Schooner on the
field because they considered it a delay of the game.”
The Sooners never recovered from the penalties that led to the blocked
field goal as the Huskies rode the momentum to a 28-17 victory. When the
Sooners returned to the Orange Bowl the following year the Schooner was
in no danger of being ticketed. OU sports officials ordered the wagon to
stay in a parked position in hopes of avoiding a repeat. Although the
Boomer Schooner has a long tradition dating back to 1964, OU has been
represented by other mascots. A dog named Mex served the school from
1915 to 1928. The beloved mascot was first discovered in Mexico by a
U.S. Army medic who would later bring the abandoned pup with him to
college at OU. Mex became a regular on the Sooner sidelines, wearing a
red sweater with a big red letter “O” on the side. One of the
responsibilities that Mex had was to keep stray dogs from wandering onto
the field because access was much easier than it is now. The mascot
enjoyed a lifestyle much more elaborate than the strays he chased away,
since he resided in the Kappa Sigma fraternity house.
Mex encountered many adventures and even survived being poisoned by
non-Sooner fans. The beloved mascot finally subsumed to old age and died
in 1928, after 13 years of faithful service. He was so popular that the
university closed for his funeral and procession. Mex was laid to rest
in a small casket somewhere under the existing stadium.
An Indian dancer named Little Red once supported the Sooners on the
Owens field sidelines. Little Red first danced in Sooner delight in the
1940s and was part of OU game tradition until he was banished by the
school president in 1970.
SOONERS
As a fan interested in collegiate nicknames, you figured that ‘sooner’or
later you’d find out what an Oklahoma Sooner is. The nickname is tied to
Oklahoma being know as the “ Sooner State.” Since the word is associated
with state pride, it was natural for the University of Oklahoma to adopt
Sooners as its nickname.
The term derived from the Land Run of 1889 when the Oklahoma territory
opened. Settlers from around the world converged in hopes of gaining
free land and staking new lives for themselves. One of the few rules to
claiming a lot of land was that all participants were to start at the
same time, on the boom of a cannon. These settlers became known as
“Boomers” and the ones who started too soon were dubbed “Sooners.”
“BOOMER SOONER”
With the rich tradition that OU forged through many years of football
excellence, “Boomer Sooner” has been one of the most recognizable
college fight songs in the country. The source of OU pride was written
in 1905 by Arthur M. Alden, a student studying history and physiology.
The song’s tune was borrowed from Yale University’s “Boola Boola.” One
year later an addition to the song was made from North Carolina’s “I’m a
Tarheel Born.” Besides packing great energy, Oklahoma’s fight song is
one of the easiest to remember.
“Boomer Sooner, Boomer Sooner,
Boomer Sooner, Boomer Sooner,
Boomer Sooner, Boomer Sooner,
Boomer Sooner, O-K-U!
Oklahoma, Oklahoma
Oklahoma, Oklahoma
Oklahoma, Oklahoma,
Oklahoma, O-K-U
I’m a Sooner born
And a Sooner bred,
And when I die
I’ll be Sooner dead.
Rah, Oklahoma! Rah, Oklahoma!
Rah, Oklahoma! O-K-U!”
Oklahoma Sooners love to break out the
Oklahoma
Sooners Merchandise for the big games on Saturdays. I cannot imagine
a better way to spend a Saturday afternoon than to spend it with family
and friends at a Sooners tailgating party.
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