Last spring, an Austin American-Statesman beat writer used her cell phone to stealthily snap a photo of the Wall of Champions inside Texas' training facility. There, listed right alongside the Longhorns' 1996 and 2005 Big 12 titles, was a new addition: 2008, asterisk and all.
The real 2008 title, of course, belongs to Oklahoma.
A quick refresher: The 'Horns beat the Sooners by 10 points last season, but Texas' loss to Texas Tech created a three-way tie in the Big 12 South. Mack Brown pleaded his team's case during the nationally televised Oklahoma-Oklahoma State game, and Texas fans and boosters paid for a banner pulled by a plane that read "45-35, settled on the field." But despite their efforts, the Sooners wound up playing for -- and winning -- the Big 12 title.
Brown, though, isn't using the tiebreaker fiasco as motivation.
"[Last season] came down to outside sources that made that decision, not the two teams, the two schools or the two coaches," he said. "That shouldn't have anything to do with us at all and even if it [did], we've talked about revenge a lot. What you want to do is get excited about playing in this game; you don't have to be mad."
1. Texas' season rides on this game, too. Oklahoma's two loses have almost certainly eliminated the Sooners from the national title race. The Big 12 title, though, remains in reach. If the Sooners hope to stay in the conference hunt, they can't leave the Cotton Bowl with a third loss. "A win would kind of make our season at this point," said Oklahoma offensive tackle Trent Williams
But while this year's Red River Rivalry game could go a long way toward salvaging Oklahoma's disappointing opening stretch, it might be even more important for Texas and its national title hopes. Texas may rank second in the coaches poll and third in the AP, but the latest simulated BCS standings (by BCSGuru.com) place Texas fourth behind Florida, Alabama and Virginia Tech. A loss against the Sooners, who BCSGuru currently ranks 20th, could seriously jeopardize the Longhorns' chances of jumping the Hokies, Trojans or a one-loss SEC team down the road.
Texas may have enjoyed seeing the Sooners suffer two early losses, but those struggles have made the most marquee game on Texas' schedule a little less so.
2. Jordan Shipley will be the most important offensive player in the Cotton Bowl. Last year's Heisman winner and runner-up haven't put together the seasons we expected. Sam Bradford missed three-plus games with a shoulder injury. Colt McCoy has already thrown six interceptions. Their duel is an interesting storyline, but McCoy's roommate and fishing buddy Shipley could overshadow it.
Shipley's deceptive speed makes him a headache for opponents, both as a punt returner -- he's already scored two touchdowns this season, including a 74-yarder against Colorado last week -- and receiver (he's on pace for a school-record 113 receptions). "What you notice on film is [Shipley's] running by guys," said Wyoming secondary coach Alex Grinch, who saw Shipley in Week 2. "It's on the short throws, and his ability to do something with it or his ability to run by DBs. He scares you from that standpoint."