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Oklahoma beat Auburn 24-17 on Saturday night in what looked like a classic SEC dogfight. But underneath the Sooners’ gritty win lies a controversy that’s now going through every corner of college football. The play in question is Isaiah Sategna’s 24-yard second-quarter TD catch that should not have been a touchdown at all. And here’s where the story takes a hard left. 

On September 21, OU insider Toby Rowland reported on X that the Sooners actually asked officials of the game about the legality of that very play. According to a source, in its regular pregame meeting with game officials, the OU staff brought up the planned play (Sategna TD) and sought confirmation it was legal, he wrote. If that’s true, it’s a premeditated move straight from Brent Venables’ playbook. 

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That adds gasoline to Auburn fans’ outrage. Because on the ABC broadcast, ESPN rules analyst Matt Austin wasted no time hammering Oklahoma, saying Isaiah Sategna simulated a substitution and therefore should have been flagged. To anyone who watched live, it looked like Sategna was jogging off toward the sideline, only to slam the brakes, run a route, and pop wide open for six. Auburn’s secondary, thinking he was out of the play, never had a chance.

For Hugh Freeze, the whole mess only deepened the sting of losing. He fumed after the game, claiming he tried to call a timeout before the snap but wasn’t granted one. “I guarantee you, well, I’d better be quiet,” he muttered, his frustration bubbling. The NCAA rulebook isn’t vague about this either. In Rule 9-2, Article 2, paragraph B, it flat-out bans any “simulated replacements or substitutions” designed to confuse opponents. In other words, exactly what Oklahoma pulled off. 

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The SEC eventually issued its statement through its officiating account. “The officiating crew did not properly interpret the action as a hideout tactic,” it admitted. “If properly officiated, the second-down play should have resulted in a team unsportsmanlike conduct penalty of 15 yards assessed from the previous spot. Appropriate accountability will be applied without additional comment.” That’s about as close as you’ll ever see the league admit a full-blown blunder. But once the dust settled and the SEC’s official statement hit the airwaves, the debate shifted from blown calls to something far larger.

The bigger question: Win or Sin?

This is where Oklahoma’s win gets messy. Brent Venables’ squad looked far tougher than the 6-7 version from last year, and Jackson Arnold’s revenge narrative against Auburn was the headline before the officiating gaffe hijacked the storyline. But does a win count the same when it comes gift-wrapped in controversy? Sure, it’ll go down as 24-17 in the record books, but ask Auburn fans and they’ll tell you it feels more like 17-17 with a ref-assisted asterisk.

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Adding spice to the drama, former OU coach Bob Stoops suggested on Sooner Sports Radio Network that the play was indeed planned. Teddy Lehman added that Deion Burks was the decoy, jawing with Auburn’s defense to pull eyes away while Isaiah Sategna was making his move. So, was Oklahoma brilliant or brazen? 

What’s your perspective on:

Did Oklahoma's controversial play show genius strategy or blatant disregard for fair play?

Have an interesting take?

The SEC has admitted fault, Hugh Freeze is seething, and analysts are torching the crew that swallowed the whistle. But at the end of the day, the Sooners walk away 4-0,  and Auburn’s win streak is dead. This controversy may linger long after the box score fades.

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Did Oklahoma's controversial play show genius strategy or blatant disregard for fair play?

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