Mayfield may have been the one to start the flag-planting tradition when he took the Sooners’ flag and put it into the ground in the middle of Ohio State’s field in 2017 after a win.
After a swath of fights over players trying to plant flags on their opponents’ fields, Mayfield defended players for the attempts.
“I’ll say this: OU-Texas does it every time they play,” Mayfield said after the Tampa Bay Buccaneers narrowly defeated the Carolina Panthers, 26-23, in overtime on Sunday. “It’s not anything special. You take your ‘L’ and you move on. I’ll leave it at that.”
Mayfield didn’t seem to agree that flag-planting should be banned either.
“College football’s meant to have rivalries. It’s like the Big 12 banning the ‘Horns down’ signal,” he said. “Let the boys play.”
Incidents took place Saturday following Michigan vs. Ohio State, Florida vs. Florida State, North Carolina vs. N.C. State and Arizona vs. Arizona State. Though the Arizona-Arizona State game involved the Sun Devils’ pitchfork and not a flag.
The Big Ten Conference levied the biggest discipline so far – $100,000 fines each against Michigan and Ohio State.
“As a result of these violations, the Big Ten Conference has issued an institutional fine to both the University of Michigan and The Ohio State University in the amount of $100,000 each,” the statement continued.
“The Big Ten Conference considers this matter concluded and will have no further comment.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.