One-52 is a mid-sized sports bar in Oklahoma City with enough screens to catch multiple games at once and a kitchen that extends beyond the standard fried appetizer menu, positioning it between the casual dive-bar crowd and the high-energy nightclub scene that defines the city's nightlife.
Located in Bricktown, One-52 functions as a full-service sports bar with a significant food program. The space handles both casual single-game viewers and larger groups gathering for major events like Thunder games or college football Saturday. Unlike Bricktown's warehouse-conversion nightclubs that prioritize music and dancing, One-52 keeps the focus on screens and seating. The bar does not position itself as upscale, but the kitchen quality and plating suggest it takes food seriously for a sports venue.
Entrees at One-52 range from $12 to $24, with wings, burgers, and sandwiches anchoring the lower end and items like steaks or seafood hitting the higher tier. Wings come in multiple sauces; the restaurant sources bone-in birds rather than boneless, which affects both texture and price point. Appetizer-style items (sliders, nachos, fried cheese curds) typically run $8 to $14. Bar wells are standard for Oklahoma City sports bars, with domestic beers at draft and a straightforward spirits selection. Food arrives quickly enough that ordering during the first quarter of a game still yields results before halftime.
One-52 separates itself from competitors like Pint & Pitchfork (which emphasizes craft beer selection and a narrower food scope) by offering a more traditional full menu alongside the sports infrastructure. If you want 30 taps of rotating craft beer, Pint & Pitchfork is the choice. If you want to watch a game without settling for frozen chicken wings, One-52 delivers better plating and flavor depth.
Bricktown Entertainment District houses at least four other sports bars within a few blocks. One-52 differs from Toby Keith's Bricktown restaurant in tone and price: Toby Keith's leans toward country music, celebrity memorabilia, and higher entree costs ($18 to $35), making it feel more like a themed restaurant that happens to show games. One-52 feels more like a bar that respects sports and food equally.
Coach's Sports Bar, located elsewhere in the city, operates at a lower price point ($8 to $16 entrees) but with a more stripped-down kitchen and higher TV density focused purely on game-watching. Choose Coach's if you want noise and all screens, all the time. Choose One-52 if you're bringing someone who cares about eating well alongside the game.
The Loaded Bowl (Oklahoma City fast-casual) and Panang (sit-down Thai) both occupy higher price points and different meal occasions entirely; they are not sports-bar alternatives.
One-52 works well for Thunder fans gathering before or after games, for weeknight work groups that want to watch a game without the deafening volume of a full nightclub, and for people who treat sports-bar food seriously. The bar absorbs large groups on game days without requiring reservations for most attendance, though parties of 12 or more should call ahead.
This is not the spot for a quiet date night, even during off-peak hours. Audio is high, and the clientele shifts from professional happy-hour types in early evening to college-age crowds after 9 p.m. on weekends. If you are seeking a sports bar with full alcohol licensing but primarily want dinner and conversation, the atmosphere competes with your goals.
Arrive 15 to 20 minutes before game time to secure seating with a view. The bar seats about 8, and the dining area fills fastest near screens. A server will greet you within a few minutes. Order food immediately if eating; kitchen times range from 8 to 15 minutes depending on order complexity and volume. Drinks arrive faster. Payment is split easily, and the bar accepts both cash and card. Parking is street parking or nearby Bricktown lots; no dedicated lot exists.
One-52 operates daily; hours generally run 11 a.m. to midnight on weekdays and until 2 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. Verify current hours before visits, as restaurant hours fluctuate seasonally and with event schedules. Street parking on Bricktown's main thoroughfares is free and usually available, though game-day parking fills faster after 6 p.m. Some nearby lots charge $5 for extended stays.
One-52 gives Oklahoma City sports fans a middle ground between the dive bar's minimalist approach and the nightclub's music-first energy, making it a reliable option when the Thunder play or when a major college football game coincides with dinner plans.
