Oklahoma, Hugh Freeze and Auburn
Digest more
In the opening statement of his postgame news conference, head coach Hugh Freeze said the team proved it can play with the talented teams in the SEC. That sentiment was shared by the players who spoke with reporters postgame, including upperclassmen and captains who have the most influence in the locker room.
Hugh Freeze was livid with the Southeastern Conference after Oklahoma was allowed to score a touchdown on a deceitful play against Auburn on Saturday. The
The Auburn Tigers traveled to Norman to take on the Oklahoma Sooners on Saturday for quarterback Jackson Arnold‘s homecoming. Coming out of the game, however, Arnold wasn’t the major story. It was a poorly officiated trick play that led to an Oklahoma touchdown and gave Auburn head coach Hugh Freeze his first loss of the season.
Freeze said being in third-and-longs throughout the game hurt the offense, making it hard to sustain drives. Freeze said he thought Auburn got a timeout off with three seconds on the play clock prior to Oklahoma’s first touchdown.
USA TODAY College Sports Wire on MSN
What Auburn coach Hugh Freeze said after Tigers fell to Oklahoma
Auburn coach Hugh Freeze lifted his visor up and rubbed the top of his forehead as he sat down to his post-game press conference following the Tigers' loss to Oklahoma on Saturday. He knew his team was close.
Oklahoma scored a controversial touchdown when receiver Isaiah Sategna acted like he was subbing out of the game.
Hugh Freeze is far from happy with the way his team performed in their first loss of the season against the Oklahoma Sooners.
Hugh Freeze was not pleased with officials following a controversial early touchdown by Oklahoma. The Auburn coach held his tongue postgame.
From a called-back touchdown to an Oklahoma score that was described as illegal, several calls didn't go Auburn football's way against Sooners. Here's what Hugh Freeze said about it.
Starting Monday, Gilman Playground, Laurelhurst Playfield, and Mount Baker Park will be open from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. on weekdays and 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. on weekends and city-observed holidays. Locks will be put on the courts for the first month. The locks could become permanent if people repeatedly ignore the new hours.