Red River Rivalry returns as the name for the Texas-Oklahoma football matchup

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Red River Rivalry Texas-Oklahoma
FILE - Divided at the 50-yard line, Oklahoma fans in red and Texas fans in burnt orange fill the Cotton Bowl for the annual Red River Rivalry NCAA college football game Oct. 11, 2008, in Dallas. The Red River Rivalry is back! The name, that is. The game never went anywhere. Allstate was announced Monday, July 17, 2023, as the new title sponsor of the annual matchup played every year at the Cotton Bowl. And with it comes the return of the “Red River Rivalry” nickname, ditching the unpopular Red River Showdown used since 2014. (AP Photo/Ron Heflin, File)

DALLAS (AP) — The Red River Rivalry is back.

The name, that is. The game itself never went anywhere.

Allstate was announced Monday as the new title sponsor of the Texas-Oklahoma football matchup played every year at the Cotton Bowl amid the Texas State Fair in Dallas.

The Return of the Red River Rivalry

And with it comes the return of the “Red River Rivalry” nickname for the game, ditching the unpopular “Red River Showdown” used since 2014. The game was long known as the Red River Shootout before being changed to the Red River Rivalry in 2005.

Red River Rivalry Texas-Oklahoma

 

The rivalry dates to 1900 and this year’s meeting on Oct. 7 will be the 119th matchup between the Longhorns and Sooners. It will be the last for both schools as members of the Big 12. Texas and Oklahoma move to the Southeastern Conference starting in 2024.

This year’s Allstate Red River Rivalry will be broadcast on ABC. Texas lead the series 63-50-5.

“Our annual, iconic matchup with the Longhorns each October features more than a century of tradition between our two programs, so it’s fitting that we revive the ‘Rivalry’ name,” Oklahoma athletics director Joe Castiglione said.