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Black 41 Flash Reverse

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Oklahoma vs. Nebraska, 2001
"Black 41 Flash Reverse"
1234 Total
Oklahoma 01000 10
Nebraska 01037 20
DateOctober 27, 2001
Season2001
StadiumMemorial Stadium
LocationLincoln, Nebraska
FavoriteNebraska by 4.5[1]
National anthemCornhusker Marching Band
RefereeSteve Usechek
Attendance78,031
United States TV coverage
NetworkABC
AnnouncersBrent Musburger (play–by–play)
Gary Danielson (color)
Jack Arute (sideline)

The 2001 Oklahoma vs. Nebraska football game was the eightieth edition of the Nebraska–Oklahoma rivalry, held on October 27, 2001 at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln, Nebraska. It featured the teams ranked first and second by the BCS and is remembered for Black 41 Flash Reverse, a fourth-quarter reverse pass that became the signature play of quarterback Eric Crouch's Heisman Trophy-winning season.

Background

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The Nebraska–Oklahoma rivalry was among college football's most significant throughout the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Nebraska dominated the decade following Barry Switzer's 1988 resignation, winning ten of eleven games in the series, a stretch that ended when OU hired Bob Stoops. Stoops led the Sooners to a national championship in 2000, including a win over No. 1 Nebraska in Norman.

Both teams were again among college football's elite in 2001, ranking in the top three of all major polls leading into their October 27 meeting in Lincoln. Fourth-year starting quarterback Eric Crouch had led Nebraska to an 8–0 start and was considered a frontrunner for the Heisman Trophy.[2] Oklahoma had won twenty consecutive games but entered as a slight underdog.[1] ESPN's College GameDay made its second visit to Lincoln of the season – Lee Corso selected Oklahoma, promising to ride a mechanical bull at a campus fraternity if Nebraska won.[3]

Game

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A scoreless opening quarter gave way to a chaotic second quarter, which began with OU starter Jason White tearing his ACL while completing a long pass in Nebraska territory.[4] Backup Nate Hybl played the rest of the game in relief of White, completing his first pass to tight end Trent Smith in the end zone to give OU a 7–0 lead. Nebraska had opened the game with six consecutive punts but responded quickly to the OU score, tying the game on a ten-play touchdown drive. NU added a field goal minutes later to take a 10–7 lead.

As the first half wound down, OU offensive coordinator Mark Mangino called a reverse pass to Hybl that strongly resembled the play Nebraska would successfully run two quarters later.[5] With a clear path to the end zone, Hybl tripped and the pass fell incomplete, forcing OU to settle for a field goal to tie the game at ten before halftime.[5]

Nebraska intercepted Hybl on the second play of the second half, and a long run by I-back Thunder Collins set up a field goal to take a 13–10 lead that stood into the fourth quarter.[6] With nine minutes left in regulation, an Oklahoma pooch punt pinned the Cornhuskers at their own four yard-line. NU moved the ball to the 32-yard line before Crouch was stopped in the backfield on third-and-two, but a facemask penalty gave Nebraska a first down. NU head coach Frank Solich called Black 41 Flash Reverse, to the surprise of his offense.[5][6]

Black 41 Flash Reverse

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Nebraska practiced Black 41 Flash Reverse leading up to the game, but according to Crouch it had gone poorly and was removed from the playbook before Saturday.[6] NU lined up in a formation it had used twice earlier, both resulting in an end-around to Collins. Oklahoma's safeties stepped forward to support against a run before Crouch again handed to Collins, who then pitched to split end Mike Stuntz, a true freshman who was a quarterback in high school but played sparingly at Nebraska.[6] Crouch rolled left and sprinted downfield as Stuntz threw him the ball, making the catch at the Oklahoma 40 and running untouched into the end zone.[5]

The teams traded punts, the tenth of the game for each team, and Nebraska ran out the clock on a 20–10 victory.[7]

Scoring summary

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Qtr Time Team Detail[7] OU NU
2 10:27 OU Trent Smith 4-yd pass from Nate Hybl (Tim Duncan kick) 7 0
5:58 NU Dahrran Diedrick 2-yd run (Josh Brown kick) 7 7
2:36 NU Brown 27-yd field goal 7 10
0:15 OU Duncan 20-yd field goal 10 10
3 11:31 NU Brown 26-yd field goal 10 13
4 6:17 NU Eric Crouch 63-yd pass from Mike Stuntz (Brown kick) 10 20

Team statistics

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Statistic[7] Oklahoma Nebraska
First downs 21 13
Rushes–yards 29–105 44–164
Comp.–att.–yards 22–50–234 11–19–165
Total offense 339 329
Turnovers 2 1
Punts–average 10–38.6 10–38.2
Penalties–yards 6–45 6–57
Time of possession 29:08 30:52

Aftermath

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Nebraska vaulted to No. 1 in the BCS rankings, while Oklahoma remained ahead of undefeated Miami (FL) for another week. The Sooners remained in contention for a second consecutive national title until a home loss to 3–7 Oklahoma State in late November.[8] NU lost its regular season finale 62–36 to Colorado, but was controversially selected to face Miami in the 2002 BCS National Championship Game despite not appearing in its own conference title game.[9] The Hurricanes won convincingly, prompting sweeping changes to the BCS selection process, including the elimination of margin-of-victory criteria and an increase in emphasis on human polling.[9]

Black 41 Flash Reverse is remembered as one of the most significant plays in Nebraska football history and, despite an otherwise underwhelming performance against a stout OU defense, pushed Crouch to the front of the Heisman Trophy race.[10] A month later, he became the first true option quarterback to win the award, edging out Florida's Rex Grossman and Miami's Ken Dorsey.[11] He was drafted by the St. Louis Rams as a wide receiver in the third round of the 2002 NFL draft, but never played an NFL game.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Oklahoma vs. Nebraska". The Oklahoman. October 27, 2001. Retrieved July 28, 2025.
  2. ^ Austin Murphy (November 5, 2001). "Back In a Flash". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on May 19, 2011. Retrieved April 24, 2008.
  3. ^ Dirk Chatelain (September 26, 2019). "The day ESPN's Lee Corso took on El Toro in Lincoln — and lived to tell about it". Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved July 29, 2025.
  4. ^ Jason Kersey (January 26, 2018). "Where are they now? Oklahoma's Jason White". The Athletic. Retrieved July 28, 2025.
  5. ^ a b c d Stewart Mandel. "Closer Look". CNN/SI. Archived from the original on February 13, 2002. Retrieved April 24, 2008.
  6. ^ a b c d Mitch Sherman (September 14, 2021). "The day No. 2 Nebraska surprised No. 1 Oklahoma with Black 41 Flash Reverse". The Athletic. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  7. ^ a b c "Oklahoma vs. Nebraska (Oct. 27, 2001)". HuskerMax. Retrieved July 28, 2025.
  8. ^ John Helsley (March 18, 2020). "Flashback: Bedlam 2001, or 16-13". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved July 28, 2025.
  9. ^ a b Jon Solomon (August 29, 2013). "BCS computers start farewell from a history filled with death threats, controversy and pride". AL.com. Retrieved July 28, 2025.
  10. ^ Andy Ketterson (September 1, 2022). "The 15 Greatest Husker Football Plays of All Time (After 1970)". Corn Nation. Retrieved July 29, 2025.
  11. ^ Jamie Suhr (December 10, 2001). "Crouch Makes Heisman History". The Daily Nebraskan. Retrieved July 28, 2025.