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Keith Jackson on two missed national titles, his favorite OU play
Published: 1/18/2013 9:07 AM
Last Modified: 1/18/2013 9:10 AM

Keith Jackson celebrated a national championship with the Oklahoma Sooners in 1985.

But it’s the two times that OU didn’t win a title that still stings the former tight end.

“I have more of a bitter taste in my mouth in losing two national championships than winning a national championship,” Jackson said.

OU was politicking for a share of the national championship with BYU if it defeated Washington in the 1985 Orange Bowl. The Huskies beat the Sooners 28-17 in a game marred by an illegal Sooner Schooner trip, which resulted in a 15-yard penalty and wiping three points off the board.

In Jackson’s final game, the Sooners lost 20-14 to Miami in the 1988 Orange Bowl. OU and Jackson lost in three consecutive seasons to the Hurricanes.

Losing to Miami “was a frustrating thing,” Jackson said. “”We felt we were just as good as they were. As I got older, I realized how much talent they had on their time.

“But we were in position to make plays and were in those games all the way.”

Jackson admitted he’s always been a fierce competitor that still hasn’t gotten over Little Rock Parkview's 9-6 loss to Fort Smith Southside in the state title game during his season season.

Jackson, who will be honored with the NCAA’s Silver Anniversary Award on Friday night, was a two-time All-America tight end with the Sooners. He had a knack for big plays playing in a wishbone offense that rarely threw the ball.

In Jackson’s final two seasons, he had a total of 41 catches, with nine going for touchdowns. He averaged 26.4 yards a reception in that span.

What was his favorite play as a Sooner? Two candidates were the one-handed, 41-yard catch in the final seconds of an improbable 20-17 victory at Nebraska in 1986. Then there was the 88-yard scoring run on a tight end reverse in a 27-7 win over Nebraska in 1985.

Jackson pointed to his 71-yard touchdown catch against Penn State in the 25-10 win over the Nittany Lions in the 1986 Orange Bowl as his favorite.

“Penn State had a really good football team,” Jackson said. “It was a nip-and-tuck battle with the defenses going hard. They called that play and it broke the game open. In the end, it helps you win a national championship.

“Tim Lasher kicked a lot of field goals (four) and Lydell Carr had a great run. But at the end of the day, I was able to catch a touchdown pass in the national championship game.”







Written by
Eric Bailey
Sports Writer



Reader Comments 1 Total

215567 (last month)
Man, for a tight end he could really run.
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OU Sports

Tulsa World Sports Writer Guerin Emig has covered University of Oklahoma football and men's basketball for the Tulsa World since 2004. He lives in Norman, where he keeps the fact that he is a University of Kansas graduate on the down low.

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Tulsa World Sports Writer Eric Bailey covered TU sports before coming over to the OU beat. He came to the Tulsa World in September 2004 after working eight years at the Springfield (Mo.) News-Leader. He attended Haskell Indian Nations University and the University of Kansas, where he was a 1996 Chips Quinn scholar, a national award given to minority journalism students.

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