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Potential derecho could rock Dallas area with 90 mph winds, 5-inch hail


Fast Facts:

  • Potential derecho could develop in portions of Texas and Oklahoma.
  • Destructive storms with 80-100 mph wind gusts and up to 5-inch hail expected in the southern Plains.
  • Tornadoes may be embedded within the main line of storms on Sunday.

DALLAS Millions of people in Texas and Oklahoma, including the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, will need to be on alert Sunday as the southern Plains braces for powerful storms packing destructive, hurricane-force wind gusts, massive hail and even some tornadoes.

In its latest update, NOAA‘s Storm Prediction Center (SPC) noted that there could be a “derecho potentially developing into this evening and overnight, especially across much of North Texas and southern Oklahoma.”

The SPC issued a Particularly Dangerous Situation Severe Thunderstorm (PDS) Watch for western and central Kansas, northwest Oklahoma and the Texas Panhandle. The NWS warns widespread damaging winds with gusts up to 90 mph are possible through Sunday night. 

A PDS Severe Thunderstorm Watch is extremely rare, according to the FOX Forecast Center. The NWS has only issued these severe warnings 25 times since 2006. 

A three-hour radar loop showing where showers and thunderstorms are ongoing. Severe Thunderstorm Warnings are indicated by a yellow box. Tornado Warnings are indicated in red boxes, while Tornado Warnings with a confirmed tornado are indicated in purple boxes. Flash Flood Warnings are indicated in green boxes, while Flash Flood Emergencies are indicated in pink boxes. Severe Thunderstorm Watches are indicated in yellow shading, while Tornado Watches are indicated in dark-red shading.
(FOX Weather)

 

The renewed threat comes after deadly storms barreled across portions of Mississippi and Georgia, and an apparent tornado left a trail of damage across McAlester, Oklahoma, on Saturday.

HOW TO WATCH FOX WEATHER

Now, the FOX Forecast Center said that Sunday has the chance to be a “very significant severe weather day.”

The SPC has upgraded the severe weather threat in portions of the south-central U.S. on Sunday to a Level 4 risk on its 5-point severe thunderstorm risk scale. 

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This graphic shows the severe weather threat on Sunday, June 8, 2025.
(FOX Weather)

 

This upgraded threat includes nearly 7.5 million people in cities like Dallas, Fort Worth, Arlington, Plano and Garland in Texas.

More than 4 million people in cities like Oklahoma City and Norman in Oklahoma, as well as Lubbock, Amarillo and Abilene in Texas are in a Level 3 out of 5 risk.

WATCH VS. WARNING: HERE ARE THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THESE WEATHER TERMS THAT COULD SAVE YOUR LIFE

This graphic shows the damaging wind threat on Sunday, June 8, 2025.
(FOX Weather)

 

The FOX Forecast Center said that while there is a tornado threat on Sunday, the bigger threat will be destructive wind gusts between 80 and 100 mph within the main line of the storms. That’s because strong winds aloft in the mid-levels of the atmosphere will exist.

A pocket of cooler air will also be in place, which will then help some of the significant wind gusts reach the surface. The dense, cooler air, along with torrential rain, will serve as the pathway for the winds to work toward the ground.

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In addition, the SPC said that hail up to 5 inches, which is larger than a grapefruit, is also possible.

The FOX Forecast Center said that the timeline for the storms to begin to fire up will likely be in the afternoon hours on Sunday, with storm activity peaking in the late afternoon and early evening.

Supercell thunderstorms are likely in Oklahoma and Texas, and the wide coverage of storms will then eventually form into a potentially intense mesoscale convective system (MCS).



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