In 1971,
offensive coordinatorBarry Switzer perfected the
wishbone offense as it led the nation in both scoring (45 points average) and total yards (563 total yards average), and set an
NCAA record by averaging over 472.4 (5196 in 11 games) rushing yards in a season.[4] The team holds the current school record with 7.07 yards per rushing attempt and 7.6 yards per play as well as the records for 469.6 rushing yards (5635 in 12 games counting bowl game) and 566.83 yards of
total offense per game. The team also holds the single-season rushing touchdowns record of 62 and rushing touchdowns per game record of 5.17. The team's records of 711 single-game rushing yards and 785 total yards stood for nine seasons.[5] Jack Mildren's single-season record for yards rushing by a quarterback of 1140 would be broken three seasons later by
Freddie Solomon.[6]
Greg Pruitt set the current national single-season record with 8.98 yards per attempt,[7] the school's single-game records of 294 rushing yards and 374
all-purpose yards. Meanwhile,
Jon Harrison set the single-season and career yards per
reception with 29.1 and 27.0.[8] His 2066 single-season all-purpose yards record stood until
Quentin Griffin broke it in 2002. Joe Wylie's
kickoff return average record of 28.5 stood for 27 years.[9]
The team was led by three All-Americans: Pruitt,[7]Tom Brahaney[10] and
Jack Mildren.[11] The team won its first nine games on a schedule that included five ranked opponents (In order, #17
USC, #3
Texas, #6
Colorado, #1
Nebraska and #5
Auburn). All five of these opponents finished the season ranked. The only loss was to Nebraska. They played Auburn in the
Sugar Bowl and won 40–22.[3]
The top three teams in the
final AP poll for the 1971 season were from the Big Eight: Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Colorado. The top two teams had never been from the same conference, and this year had three.[12]
Pruitt led the team in rushing with 1760 yards, Mildren led the team in passing yards for the third straight season with 889 yards and also in scoring with 12 points, Harrison led the team in receiving with 494 yards,
Mark Driscoll led the team in tackles with 134, and
John Shelly led the team in
interceptions with 5.[13]
Oklahoma and
Nebraska battled back and forth in the
Game of the Century in front of a sold-out crowd in
Norman and over 55 million viewers on
ABC on
Thanksgiving Day. Nebraska struck first with a 72-yard
Johnny Rodgers punt return, but Oklahoma pulled ahead by 3 by halftime. The Cornhuskers came back strong in the third quarter with two more touchdowns, but the Sooners responded with two of their own to retake the lead with only 7:10 remaining. Down by 3 points, the Huskers went on a final drive and with only 1:38 remaining,
Jeff Kinney scored his fourth touchdown of the day for the lead and the win.[20][21][22]
In 1971,
offensive coordinatorBarry Switzer perfected the
wishbone offense as it led the nation in both scoring (45 points average) and total yards (563 total yards average), and set an
NCAA record by averaging over 472.4 (5196 in 11 games) rushing yards in a season.[4] The team holds the current school record with 7.07 yards per rushing attempt and 7.6 yards per play as well as the records for 469.6 rushing yards (5635 in 12 games counting bowl game) and 566.83 yards of
total offense per game. The team also holds the single-season rushing touchdowns record of 62 and rushing touchdowns per game record of 5.17. The team's records of 711 single-game rushing yards and 785 total yards stood for nine seasons.[5] Jack Mildren's single-season record for yards rushing by a quarterback of 1140 would be broken three seasons later by
Freddie Solomon.[6]
Greg Pruitt set the current national single-season record with 8.98 yards per attempt,[7] the school's single-game records of 294 rushing yards and 374
all-purpose yards. Meanwhile,
Jon Harrison set the single-season and career yards per
reception with 29.1 and 27.0.[8] His 2066 single-season all-purpose yards record stood until
Quentin Griffin broke it in 2002. Joe Wylie's
kickoff return average record of 28.5 stood for 27 years.[9]
The team was led by three All-Americans: Pruitt,[7]Tom Brahaney[10] and
Jack Mildren.[11] The team won its first nine games on a schedule that included five ranked opponents (In order, #17
USC, #3
Texas, #6
Colorado, #1
Nebraska and #5
Auburn). All five of these opponents finished the season ranked. The only loss was to Nebraska. They played Auburn in the
Sugar Bowl and won 40–22.[3]
The top three teams in the
final AP poll for the 1971 season were from the Big Eight: Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Colorado. The top two teams had never been from the same conference, and this year had three.[12]
Pruitt led the team in rushing with 1760 yards, Mildren led the team in passing yards for the third straight season with 889 yards and also in scoring with 12 points, Harrison led the team in receiving with 494 yards,
Mark Driscoll led the team in tackles with 134, and
John Shelly led the team in
interceptions with 5.[13]
Oklahoma and
Nebraska battled back and forth in the
Game of the Century in front of a sold-out crowd in
Norman and over 55 million viewers on
ABC on
Thanksgiving Day. Nebraska struck first with a 72-yard
Johnny Rodgers punt return, but Oklahoma pulled ahead by 3 by halftime. The Cornhuskers came back strong in the third quarter with two more touchdowns, but the Sooners responded with two of their own to retake the lead with only 7:10 remaining. Down by 3 points, the Huskers went on a final drive and with only 1:38 remaining,
Jeff Kinney scored his fourth touchdown of the day for the lead and the win.[20][21][22]