74 Sports Kitchen & Cocktails is a full-service restaurant and bar in Midtown Oklahoma City that treats brunch as seriously as it does NFL broadcasts, pairing made-to-order breakfast dishes with craft cocktails and a sports-bar atmosphere that never feels aggressively loud during daylight hours.
Located on NW 23rd Street in the Midtown corridor, 74 Sports operates as a hybrid: part gastropub, part brunch destination, with high-definition screens throughout but positioned well enough that diners can eat without constant visual pressure. The space runs roughly 5,000 square feet with a full bar on one end, open kitchen, and booths plus high-top seating. Weekend brunch service (Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.) draws regulars and one-time visitors equally, many of whom treat it as a pre-game or post-game stop during football season.
Brunch entrees range from $14 to $26. Signature dishes include buttermilk pancakes with bourbon maple syrup and house-made whipped cream ($14), huevos rancheros with chorizo, black beans, and crispy tortillas ($16), and the smoked brisket hash with fried eggs and hollandaise ($18). Benedicts follow standard form (Canadian bacon, smoked salmon) at $15 to $16. The kitchen will execute off-menu requests within reason: ask about protein swaps or modifications to eggs and sides. Bloody Mary mixes are made in-house; cocktails run $12 to $15. Coffee is standard diner-style, not specialty third-wave. Alcoholic brunch drinks (mimosas, Bellinis) are $8 to $12. No cover charge; no reservation requirement on most Saturdays, though 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. draws waits of 15 to 25 minutes during fall football Sundays.
Ted's Cafe Escondido (NW 36th Street) emphasizes Mexican-style breakfast and lunch with lower prices ($8 to $14 for most entrees) and a family-friendly, no-alcohol focus. Cattlemen's Steakhouse (near the Stockyard) serves brunch Sundays only, noon to 5 p.m., with a heavy meat-and-egg orientation at mid-to-high price points ($18 to $28). Yelp House (Bricktown) runs a more casual, coffee-forward brunch with lighter fare and craft coffee. Choose 74 Sports if you want full bar service, a game on screen without apology, and plates that lean slightly upmarket; choose Ted's for speed and value; choose Cattlemen's if you're already in the Stockyard or want Western atmosphere.
74 Sports brunch works best for adults (with or without kids, though it quiets down before noon), groups watching games, and anyone comfortable in a bar setting during the day. The noise level rises sharply after 11:30 a.m., making it less ideal for quiet conversation or first dates. If you need a completely alcohol-free, family-picnic vibe, elsewhere serves better. If you're solo and want to read or work, a booth in the quieter section (ask the host) is manageable but not the intended use.
Arrive before 11:15 a.m. or after 1:30 p.m. to skip the wait. Host greets at the front; seating depends on the crowd and your preference (booth vs. high-top). Server appears within two minutes and will ask about drink preferences immediately. Coffee arrives automatically; order cocktails or juices upfront if you want them with food. Brunch menu is printed and extensive; most entrees arrive within 12 to 15 minutes. The kitchen times well: eggs cook to requested doneness, pancakes emerge hot, sides (hash browns, bacon, sausage) never arrive cold. No table rush; servers let you linger.
Brunch service runs Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dinner and bar service continue nightly from 5 p.m. to midnight (hours may shift with NFL schedules; confirm directly for holiday weekends). Parking is in an off-street lot shared with neighboring Midtown businesses; spaces typically available except during game-day peaks. The entrance is well-marked from NW 23rd. No outdoor patio seating for brunch.
74 Sports fills a specific gap in Oklahoma City's brunch landscape: it unapologetically merges daytime eating with bar culture, and executes both competently enough that neither feels like an afterthought. It's the right choice when brunch and distraction are equally important.
