Oklahoma Fans Just Got A Brutal CFP Dj Vu Prediction

Bill Bender's early CFP projections suggest that Oklahoma fans might have to brace themselves for another playoff disappointment despite a grueling schedule.

Oklahoma fans may have just gotten a preview of a very familiar kind of pain.

Sporting News’ Bill Bender rolled out his early College Football Playoff projections for the 2026 season on Tuesday, and he has the Sooners back in the field despite what he describes as maybe the toughest schedule in college football. That part will sound encouraging in Norman.

The rest of it? Not so much.

Bender’s bracket sends Oklahoma in as the No. 9 seed, which would set up a first-round trip to No. 8 Ole Miss.

In other words, another SEC rematch. And if that sounds uncomfortably close to what happened last season, that’s because it is.

Oklahoma hosted Alabama as the 8-seed a year ago, beat the Crimson Tide in the regular season, then got knocked out by Bama in the first round when the teams met again.

This time, the setup is different only in location. The Sooners would be on the road, and the matchup would come after the Rebels and Sooners are scheduled to meet on Nov. 14 in Norman in an afternoon game at Gaylord Family - Oklahoma Memorial Stadium. Bender’s projection assumes Ole Miss wins that first meeting, though the article notes that with home-field advantage and Lane Kiffin now at LSU, that outcome is hard to picture, even with Ole Miss quarterback Trinidad Chambliss in the Heisman Trophy conversation.

If the bracket does unfold the way Bender sees it, Oklahoma could actually turn that earlier loss into something useful in the playoff. The Sooners found out last year how difficult it is to beat a strong team twice in one season, and the same lesson could swing the other way against Ole Miss. Either way, OU fans would clearly take a CFP win over another regular-season SEC result.

“The Sooners have a first-round matchup against a league foe for the second straight season - this time on the road,” Bender wrote. “The Rebels do play at Oklahoma on Nov. 14 - but that happens in this format.

The quarterback matchup between John Mateer and Trinidad Chambliss is appealing. They combined for 75 pass attempts in a 34-26 shootout last season.”

Bender’s full projected field includes No. 1 Indiana, No.

2 Georgia, No. 3 Notre Dame, No.

4 Ohio State, No. 5 Texas, No.

6 Oregon, No. 7 Miami, No.

10 USC, No. 11 BYU and No.

12 Boise State. He has Indiana and Notre Dame meeting for the national title in Las Vegas, a rare in-state championship showdown.

There’s another reason Oklahoma’s path looks brutal: three teams on the Sooners’ schedule are in Bender’s field, with Georgia at No. 2, Texas at No. 5 and Ole Miss at No.

  1. That only sharpens the sense of how punishing the 2026 slate could be.

Based on the seeding, it would mean a three-loss Oklahoma team still sneaking into the playoff, with every defeat coming against a contender and two of them on the road.

CBS Sports’ Brad Crawford recently had Oklahoma finishing 8-4, though he also noted that a win over Ole Miss that would push the Sooners to 9-3 could be enough to get them back into the CFP ahead of the Rebels.

So the road ahead is long, and there’s some room for error early. But for Oklahoma fans, the nightmare scenario is obvious: another playoff berth, another SEC rematch, and another shot at a breakthrough that slips away again.

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The connection is more than just recruiting geography. Tagliaferri has built chemistry with Bergen Catholic receivers Bryan Porter and Austin Busso, and both have drawn Oklahomas attention while being committed elsewhere. Bussos production last season, in particular, showed what that kind of familiarity can look like on the field, while Porter has also put together a strong resume as one of the more intriguing receivers in his class. For Oklahoma, the question is whether landing its quarterback early can help turn a future opening at receiver into a much easier conversation. [Read more 🡒]