Oklahoma State University Athletics

Honoring the 2015 Cowboys: A Decade Later
October 09, 2025 | Cowboy Football
The 2015 Cowboys finished 10-3 overall and 7-2 in Big 12 play, reaching as high as No. 4 in the AP Top 25 and earning a berth in the Allstate Sugar Bowl. It marked Oklahoma State's third 10-win season in a five-year span and solidified the Cowboys as a consistent contender on the national stage.
The 2015 squad was known for its offensive versatility and clutch performances in pressure situations. Mason Rudolph and J.W. Walsh combined at quarterback for 4,557 passing yards and 34 touchdowns, leading one of the Big 12's most explosive passing attacks. Wide receiver James Washington emerged as a breakout star, racking up over 1,000 yards for the first time in what ended up becoming a legendary career. Washington caught 53 passes for 1,087 yards and 10 touchdowns, while David Glidden and Marcell Ateman accrued 866 and 766 receiving yards, respectively, to round out one of the deepest receiving groups in the country.
Defensively, the Cowboys were anchored by Emmanuel Ogbah – the Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year – who finished with 13 sacks and 17.5 tackles for loss. Alongside Ogbah, key-contributors like Jimmy Bean, Jordan Sterns and Jordan Burton made the OSU defense one of the most opportunistic in the conference, recording 17 interceptions and forcing nine fumbles on the season.
The Cowboys' ability to win close games defined their season. In their 10-0 start, the Cowboys showed time and time again that they were never out of a game.
Perhaps the first instance of that mantra was in week four on the road against Texas. OSU trailed by three in the final two minutes of the game, but kicker Ben Grogan nailed two late field goals to tie and win the game to improve to 4-0. The very next game against Kansas State, Grogan did it again — nailing a game-winning field goal with 32 seconds remaining to make the score 36-34.
One of the defining moments of the year came on November 7, when the Cowboys — ranked No. 12 nationally — upset No. 5 TCU, 49-29, at Boone Pickens Stadium. Rudolph threw for 352 yards and five touchdowns, while Washington hauled in 184 receiving yards and found the end zone three times as the Cowboys jumped into the national playoff conversation. The Cowboy defense also came to play, intercepting TCU star quarterback Trevone Boykin four times.
A week later, OSU pulled off another remarkable comeback in Ames, Iowa, overcoming a 17-point deficit to beat Iowa State 35-31 and improve to 10-0, keeping their Big 12 title hopes alive. It was the program's best start since 2011.
Though the season ended with losses to Baylor, Oklahoma and Ole Miss in the Sugar Bowl, the 2015 team's impact went far beyond its final record. Their explosive offense, opportunistic defense and resilience in close games made them one of the most entertaining and successful teams of the Mike Gundy era.