[2] Youngstown was highly favored against Oklahoma City in the press, based on their undefeated record up to that point.
[4] Youngstown scored twice in the first quarter, both on connections between quarterback Jim Heber to end Pete Lanzi.
[6] Youngstown scored three more touchdowns in the fourth quarter as Glenn Dickson made it to the end zone again, this time on a 39-yard run.
[9] It would be the only matchup between the two schools, as Oklahoma City later de-emphasized athletics and dropped its football program after the Second World War.
The two areas do have a current connection between them: former Oklahoma Sooners head coach Bob Stoops is a Youngstown native.