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NORMAN, Oklahoma (Ticker) -- Josh Heupel threw for three touchdowns and ran for three more as Oklahoma dealt No. 10 Texas A&M its worst loss in 98 years with a 51-6 Big 12 Conference South victory. Heupel completed 31-of-50 passes for 372 yards as he continues to rewrite the Sooners' record book. His three rushing TDs came in the first half, when Oklahoma scored on its first six possessions and built a 34-6 lead. The lefthander threw an eight-yard scoring pass to Curtis Fagan in the first quarter and added TD tosses in the third period of 22 yards to Trent Smith and 26 yards to Brandon Daniels. "It was a good win and we played strong in the second half, which has been a major focus for us the past two weeks," Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops said. It was the second-worst loss in Texas A&M's storied history. The Aggies absorbed a 46-0 loss to Baylor in 1901. The Sooners (4-2, 2-1 Big 12) had lost the last four meetings with the Aggies by a combined 149-37. They turned the tables with the biggest win in series history, gaining revenge for a 51-7 home loss to Texas A&M in 1997. "You have to give them some credit; they had a good game plan and executed it," Texas A&M coach R.C. Slocum said. "They had the hot hand tonight. I can remember two years ago when we came up here and it worked just the opposite." More important, Oklahoma kept pace in the South. The Sooners, Texas and Texas Tech each have one loss, with the division winner gaining a berth in the conference title game. Reggie Skinner ran for 106 yards on 15 carries for Oklahoma, which piled up 550 total yards, including 165 on the ground. Fourteen different players caught at least one pass for the Sooners, led by Michael Thornton's six catches for 62 yards. "If we continue to improve our running game, we'll have a more balanced offensive attack," Stoops said. "It was good to see Reggie come out and have a good game." "It's really good when we're versatile," Skinner said. "We can pass the ball, we've got great receivers and running backs. We can mix it up." A fake field goal kept alive Oklahoma's first drive, which ended with Heupel's one-yard keeper. Texas A&M went three-and-out and Heupel found Fagan with a seven-yard scoring toss, making it 14-0 less than seven minutes into the contest. The Aggies managed one first down before punting again and were ambushed by another fake kick. On 4th-and-2, the punt snap went to Seth Littrell, who raced 41 yards to the 28. Eight plays later, Tim Duncan kicked a 19-yard field goal with 1:02 to go in the first quarter. "Every time we tried to get back into it, they would convert a fake field goal or punt," said Aggies quarterback Randy McCown, who suffered a slightly separated shoulder. "They played a great game." Heupel had another one-yard TD run to complete an 83-yard march and the Sooners recovered a fumble on the ensuing kickoff to set up Duncan's 27-yarder for a 27-0 advantage with 7:24 to go in the second quarter. The Aggies finally scored when McCown threw a 37-yard TD pass to Chris Taylor. Oklahoma answered with a 77-yard drive, again capped by a one-yard TD run by Heupel with 3:34 remaining in the first half. The Sooners blew second-half leads in losses to Notre Dame and Texas in their previous two games but made sure that did not happen again. They scored on three straight possessions, with Heupel throwing two TD passes before Duncan kicked a 27-yarder with 11:48 to play. McCown was 9-of-21 for 131 yards and an interception. Mark Farris and and Vance Smith also saw action. Bethel Johnson had five catches for 64 yards for the Aggies, who were limited to 230 yards.
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