Showing posts with label oregon ducks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oregon ducks. Show all posts

Oregon: 2026 Orange Bowl Champions


 

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — With the chance to start 2026 off on a high, Texas Tech seemingly left its high-powered offense in 2025.


The Red Raiders’ College Football Playoff debut came to a rapid end, as No. 5 Oregon (13-1) beat No. 4 Tech (12-2) 23-0 in the Orange Bowl at Hard Rock Stadium Thursday afternoon.


Tech’s offense, which ranked top-five in the nation in yards and points per game this season, was sluggish from the start, and a valiant effort from the Red Raiders defense wasn’t enough to knock off the Ducks.


Here are five thoughts from the Orange Bowl.

Oregon: 2023-24 Pac-12 Men's Basketball Champions


 

LAS VEGAS – N'Faly Dante, playing with a bruised tailbone, made all 12 of his shots and scored 25 points, and Oregon secured an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament by defeating Colorado 75-68 on Saturday night in the conference tournament title game to end the Pac-12 basketball era.


By winning the conference tournament, fourth-seeded Oregon (23-11) extended its postseason because the Ducks weren't projected to receive an at-large invitation to the 68-team field. This was the Ducks' sixth Pac-12 Tournament championship and first since 2019.


Third-seeded Colorado (23-10) is expected to receive an at-large bid. The Buffaloes' eight-game winning streak ended.


Dante, who was injured in Friday's semifinal victory over Arizona, also had nine rebounds and three steals and was named the tournament's most outstanding player. Also for Oregon, Jackson Shelstad scored 17 points and Jermaine Couisnard finished with 14.


KJ Simpson led the Buffaloes with 23 points, and Luke O'Brien had 11.


The score was tied at 62 when Shelstad made two free throws and Jadrian Tracey a layup to put the Ducks ahead by four points with 2:41 left. They never trailed again.


The atmosphere wasn't quite what might be expected of a historical conference playing, for now at least, its final basketball game. When sixth-ranked Arizona bowed out Friday night, so did nearly all of its rabid fans who flocked to what has become known as McKale North. The fans who did show up Saturday, filling maybe half of T-Mobile Arena, were high in energy — if not numbers.


Oregon once again was part of a final Pac-12 event, having also played in the football championship in December. The Ducks and three of their brethren will be headed to the Big Ten Conference in the coming months.


Colorado and three other Pac-12 teams will soon call the Big 12 Conference home, and California and Stanford will play in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Only Oregon State and Washington State remain behind, determined to preserve the Pac-12 in some way, even naming Teresa Gould as league commissioner for the next two years.


Whether those two schools find a way to keep the conference alive remains to be seen, and in the meantime they will align with the Mountain West in football and West Coast Conference in other sports. A full merger at some point is a possibility.


Gone for certain is the Pac-12 as it's long been known, the so-called Conference of Champions with a rich basketball history, with Saturday night's championship game the last notable event in that sport.

Oregon: 2024 Fiesta Bowl Champions






 

Oregon QB Bo Nix set the single-season completion percentage record in the No. 8 Ducks’ overwhelming 45-6 win over No. 23 Liberty on Monday.


Nix entered the game less than two-tenths of a percentage point behind Alabama QB Mac Jones for the best completion percentage in a college football season. Jones finished the 2020 season 311-of-402 passing for 4,500 yards and 41 TDs to just four interceptions and broke former Texas QB Colt McCoy’s 2008 record of 76.7% with a completion percentage of 77.36%.


Monday, the Heisman finalist from Oregon was 28-of-35 passing for 363 yards and five touchdowns before leaving the game just after the start of the fourth quarter. The six incompletions mean Nix finishes the 2023 season 364-of-470 passing for 4,504 yards with 45 touchdowns, three interceptions and a completion percentage of 77.44%.


Four of Nix’s five TD throws came in the second quarter after Liberty had a moment of hope to start the game. The Flames opened the game with the ball and promptly went 75 yards on a possession capped off by a 17-yard TD pass from Kaidon Salter to Bentley Hanshaw. Oregon (11-2) responded with a field goal and Liberty led 6-3 after the first quarter.


It got ugly from there.


Nix found four different receivers for those TD throws in the second period as Oregon made it a laugher by halftime. Liberty’s defense was no match for the Ducks’ offense and Oregon’s defense quickly shut down Liberty’s offense. The Flames punted on each of their next four drives after their opening TD and ran just 18 plays on those possessions. Their sixth possession ended in an interception that was turned into an Oregon touchdown with 3 seconds to go before halftime and a 31-6 lead for the Ducks.


Bo Nix's career renaissance

Nix came to Oregon ahead of the 2022 season after spending the first three seasons of his career at Auburn. He was the Tigers’ starting quarterback in all three of his seasons there, but had thrown just 23 TDs over the last two seasons of his career and averaged less than seven yards an attempt with the Tigers.


He arrived in Eugene with head coach Dan Lanning and offensive coordinator Kenny Dillingham (now the head coach at Arizona State) and immediately had the best season of his career. A season ago, Nix completed nearly 72% of his passes for almost 3,600 yards and threw 29 TDs and seven interceptions.


He was even better in 2023 as Oregon made a run at the Pac-12 title. Undefeated Washington was the only team to beat Oregon over the course of the season as the Ducks outscored their opponents by over 27 points per game.


Nix’s stellar years at Oregon could make him a first-round pick in the 2024 NFL Draft.


Liberty's first New Year's Six game

The previously undefeated Flames (13-1) snuck into their first New Year’s Six bowl game thanks to SMU’s win over Tulane in the AAC title game.


The Green Wave were ahead of the Flames entering conference championship weekend but lost at home to the two-loss Mustangs. The win without starting QB Preston Stone wasn’t good enough for SMU to jump ahead of undefeated Liberty, and the Flames ended the season as the highest-ranked Group of Five team.


There were reasons to be suspicious of Liberty’s chances against the Ducks, however. The Flames had the weakest schedule in the country and didn’t play a single Power Five team. Liberty allowed nearly 23 points per game during the regular season and gave up at least 25 points in seven of its 13 wins.


But Monday’s blowout also doesn’t diminish the growth of the football program. Liberty joined the top level of college football in 2018 and has posted a winning season in all six of its years at the FBS level. The school’s ability to spend money on its football program was a big reason why it lured former Coastal Carolina coach Jamey Chadwell to Lynchburg to replace Hugh Freeze after the 2022 season.


With those vast resources and a relatively weak Conference USA around it, Liberty has a real chance to be a part of the 12-team playoff in 2024 with another undefeated season.

Oregon: 2022 Holiday Bowl Champions



We were live from Petco Park for tonight’s game between No. 15 Oregon and North Carolina. The Ducks rallied to win 28-27.


Oregon (10-3) was a 13-point favorite, according to VegasInsider.com.


The Tar Heels (9-5) lost their final four games.


Below are live updates from tonight’s game.


FINAL: OREGON 28, NORTH CAROLINA 27


-- UNC ball at own 33. Drake Maye for Kobe Paysour for 10 yards, plus illegal substitution for 5 yards. UNC at own 42, Maye to Paysour for 12. 1 second left, incomplete deep ball.


-- Bucky Irving return to UO 21. Bo Nix to Noah Whittington for 5. Nix to Whittington for 11. Nix to Terrance Ferguson, who spins out of a tackle for 28. Nix to Ferguson for 6. Nix to Franklin, defensive pass interference, ball at UNC 14. Nix runs for 6. Nix incomplete for Franklin. Third and 4 (0:31) at UNC 8, Whittington 2. Fourth and 2 at UNC 6 (0:24) Nix touchdown to Chase Cota. PAT goes of the upright and in. Oregon 28, North Carolina 27 - 0:19


-- Long return wiped out by holding. Incomplete. Eliah Green for 7 plus a face mask on Jahlil Florence. Drake Maye to Andre Greene Jr. for 13. Green for 7 and 2. Third and 1, Maye stopped for no gain. Maye for 2 on fourth and 1. Mase Funa stop for loss. Incomplete. Third and 12, incomplete. Noah Burnette 44-yard field goal is good. North Carolina 27, Oregon 21 - 2:29


-- Bucky Irving return to UO 39. Bo Nix to Chase Cota for 6. Nix deep for Troy Franklin, pass interference. Nix to Cota for 30 yards. Irving for 4. Nix 6-yard touchdown to Kris Hutson wiped out by ineligibile man downfield on Marcus Harper II. Nix to Hutson for 5. Nix 6-yard touchdown to Franklin. Oregon 21, North Carolina 24 - 6:58


-- Omarion Hampton gains 4. Drake Maye to Kobe Paysour for 3.. Third and 3, incomplete broken up by Casey Rogers. Fourth and 3, Maye to Bryson Nesbit for 16. Maye rolls and finds D.J. Jones for 10. Jones for 1. Incomplete. Third and 9, Maye scrambles and Casey Rogers gets him down at the 2. Review confirms Noah Burnette 19-yard field goal. North Carolna 24, Oregon 14 - 9:13


-- Third and 5, incomplete for Terrance Ferguson. Adam Barry punt to UNC 48, return 5 yards.


End 3rd QUARTER: OREGON 14, NORTH CAROLINA 21


-- Ryan Walk at center. Noah Whittington for 2. Bo Nix to Patrick Herbert for 7. Whittington loses 2 on stop by Cedric Gray. Punt to UNC 35 with illegal substitution for a player who didn’t report a number change and Oregon gets a first down. Incomplete. Bucky Irving for 5. End quarter.


-- Drake Maye to John Copenhaver for 8. Elijah Green for no gain and 4. Maye to Copenhaver for 5, incredible one-handed catch. Incomplete deep ball. Third and 5, Maye loses 2 with Brandon Dorlus and Mase Funa on stop. Punt to UO 1.


-- Bucky Irving for 10, 2, 8 and 5. Noah Whittington for no gain. Bo Nix to Troy Franklin for 5. Whittington for no gain and 4. Third and 6, Jordan James for 8. Nix to Cam McCormick for 2, he goes down with left hand injury and gets taped. Nix to Whittington for no gain. Third and 8, Nix runs for 1. Fourth and 7, Nix incomplete. Alex Forsyth went to locker room.


-- Elijah Green for 1. Drake Maye incomplete. Third and 9, incomplete. Punt to UO 32, Kris Hutson loses 4 yards.


-- Touchback. Bucky Irving loses 2. Bo Nix to Troy Franklin for no gain. Incomplete. Adam Barry punt to UNC 30.


HALFTIME: OREGON 14, NORTH CAROLINA 21


-- Touchback. Bo Nix 23-yard strike to Troy Franklin wiped out by holding on Terrance Ferguson. Bucky Irving for 10. Halftime.


-- Drake Maye 49-yard touchdown to Kobe Paysour. North Carolina 21, Oregon 14 - 0:26


-- Touchback. Bo Nix to Terrance Ferguson for 11. Nix to Kris Hutson for 5. Nix for 2. Nix to Ferguson for 25. Nix for 3. Noah Whittington for 2. Third and 5, Nix to Troy Franklin for 6. Pitch to Whittington for 5. Nix intercepted by Power Echols on a pass for Ferguson that was tipped and off the foot of Echols.


-- George Pettaway runs for 4. Elijah Green for 7 and 2. Drake Maye to Kobe Paysour for 7. Maye for 4, illegal substitution on UO is enforced. Maye for 24. Incomplete. Maye to John Copenhaver for 11. Maye for 1. Incomplete. Third and 9, Maye 14-yard touchdown to Bryson Nesbitt. Oregon 14, North Carolina 14 - 4:34


-- Noah Whittington for 8, 3 and 3. Bucky Irving breaks free for 66-yard touchdown, cut back from left to right. Oregon 14, North Carolina 7 - 9:13


-- Elijah Green for 7. Drake Maye runs for 20. Green for 4. Incomplete. Third and 6, incomplete. Fourth and 6, Maye to J.J. Jones for 11. Jeff Bassa sack loss of 8. D.J. Jones for 8. Third and 10, incomplete. Noah Burnette 34-yard field goal is no good.


End 1st QUARTER: OREGON 7, NORTH CAROLINA 7


-- Elijah Green no gain, stop by Micah Roth and Daymon David. Drake Maye to Kobe Paysour for 7. Third and 3, Maye scrambles for 5.


-- Bucky Irving return to UO 30. Jordan James for 13 yards. Bo Nix to Noah Whittington for 11. James for 6. Nix sacked, loses 6. Oregon timeout - 2:13. Nix to Troy Franklin for 7. Third and 9 incomplete, bobbled by Chase Cota. Fourth and 9, Camden Lewis 47-yard field goal is wide left.


-- Kickoff returned 57 yards by George Pettaway. Elijah Green runs for 2. Drake Maye to Kobe Paysour for 11. Green for 17 wiped out by holding penalty. Maye runs for 10. Green for 2. Maye to Andre Greene Jr. for 7. Fourth and 1 from UO 22, Maye scrambles for 3. Green for 4. Incomplete pass to the end zone with Dontae Manning in coverage. Third and 6, Maye to Bryson Nesbit for 7. Green for 2. Incomplete pass, broken up by Trikweze Bridges. Maye 6-yard touchdown to Andre Greene Jr. Oregon 7, North Carolina 7 - 4:37


-- Bucky Irving for 9. Bo Nix pass to Irving loses a yard. Nix to Terrance Ferguson for 14. Irving for 7 then 23. Irving 2-yard touchdown. Oregon 7, North Carolina 0 - 11:05


-- Kickoff for touchback. Incomplete pass for Drake Maye. Elijah Green runs for 2. Third and 8, Mase Funa sacks Maye. Fourth and 21, punt to UO 46.


-- Oregon wins toss and defers. UNC to receive to 1st base side.


PREGAME


-- Keith Brown and Jake Shipley with first team defense. Anthony Jones and Emarrion Winston with second team.


-- All scholarship players are accounted for


-- Jeff Bassa and Bennett Williams with kick returners for the first time. Bassa has his left hand wraped.


-- Christian Gonzalez is here in a jersey to support Oregon from sideline

Oregon: 2020 Rose Bowl Champions



Oregon football owns Southern California.

The truth was as startling as the screaming Ducks who danced around a green-confetti-strewn Pasadena field early Wednesday night as if it was their backyard.

For many, it was.

Oregon just won the Rose Bowl with a roster including more than 30 players who grew up within 70 miles of that Rose Bowl.

Oregon just used kids from South Los Angeles to Norco to Rancho Cucamonga to Mission Viejo to defeat a bunch of behemoths from Wisconsin 28-27 in a game that held one bit of consolation for the Badgers.

The real losers here were USC and UCLA.

A program from an adjoining state just won what is annually their season’s most important game on their turf with many of their kids. Yeah, this actually might have been their worst loss of the season.

As the local programs struggle, the Ducks are soaring. As the locals’ recruiting rankings stall or drop, the Ducks continue to take players from underneath their out-of-joint nose, building that rare Pac-12 Conference team that could actually outmuscle a Big Ten Conference hulk.

With about one-third Southern California kids, they beat Wisconsin despite being outgained 322 yards to 204 because they stole the ball four times and shut down the Badgers in crunch time.

With Southern California kids, Oregon won by playing the sort of toughness that USC used to have, with the sort of resilience that UCLA’s Chip Kelly used to engender, thanks to the kind of recruiting that neither place is doing.

This ownership of the local football landscape won’t last forever, it might not even last until USC gets a new coach. But it’s real right now, as real as all those screaming Ducks fans who stuck around the Rose Bowl into Wednesday night as if they owned the place.

Check out the smile on the face of the Calabasas High kid who caught a 12-yard pass to set the tone for Oregon’s game-sealing drive.

“We run L.A.,” receiver Mycah Pittman said.

Now check out the wardrobe of his older brother, Michael Jr., a USC receiver who was spotted after the game wearing — wait for it — an Oregon jersey.

“We’ve got all these SoCal recruits because, if you want to win, you come to Oregon, that’s all there is to it,” Pittman said.

The message was as plain as the sweaty smile on the face of Thomas Graham Jr., the former USC commit from Rancho Cucamonga who intercepted a pass that led to Oregon’s second touchdown, then later offered an Oregon pitch to his Southland buddies.

“We’re taking over,” he said. “Get away from home, get out of trouble, get away from all the distractions, grow as a player and a man, become a Duck, and I promise you won’t regret your decision.”

Graham was part of a second-quarter sequence where Southern California kids were everywhere.

With 8 minutes 37 seconds remaining in the first half, Troy Dye from Norco High ripped the ball from the hands of powerful Badgers running back Jonathan Taylor and Deommodore Lenoir from Los Angeles Salesian High recovered it.

After Oregon failed on a fourth-down run, Wisconsin regained possession only long enough to lose it to another Southern California kid, this time on an interception by Graham with pressure applied on quarterback Jack Coan by Westlake Village Oaks Christian’s Kayvon Thibodeaux.

Two plays later, running back CJ Verdell from Chula Vista carried 13 yards to the Wisconsin five, from where Oregon-grown quarterback Justin Herbert carried it in for one of his three rushing touchdowns to give Oregon a 14-10 lead.

In all, two of three Ducks who carried the ball were from Southern California, one of the four receivers who caught passes were locals, and five of their top nine tacklers were from the Southland.

It all fits into coach Mario Cristobal’s eye-opening answer when he was asked this week about recruiting in Southern California.

“For us, this is home state,” he said of the Southland. “That’s what it is. We’ve made it a priority ... so every opportunity to be in a big game like the Rose Bowl, I think it certainly helps recruiting.”

In winning this game, Oregon backed up the fun yet furious culture that it has been selling. The Ducks wore the flashy dark green and silver uniforms, yet played old-school smashmouth football, then partied like a bunch of crazy kids, dancing in the locker room while puffing on cigars.

“You see the fun we’re having, the way we’re celebrating right now, the way coach Cristobal leads us, there’s no reason not to come here right now,” guard Shane Lemieux said.

It is a culture that has resulted in a 20-6 record over the last two seasons, including two bowl victories.

During that same time, USC is 13-12 with no bowl victories and UCLA is 7-17 with no bowl appearances.

It is also an atmosphere that attracted the 18th-ranked recruiting class in the country this winter, second in the Pac-12. Meanwhile, UCLA was 28th nationally and fourth in the Pac-12, and USC, normally a recruiting powerhouse, ranked 79th overall and last in the conference.

The Ducks, in particular, stole two of the country’s top-ranked defensive forces from the locals, Thibodeaux last year and Upland’s Justin Flowe this year.

Indeed, a large number of Southern California parents crowded a Rose Bowl concourse near the Oregon locker room Wednesday. Mark Dye, whose sons Troy and Travis left Norco to play for the Ducks, offered one theory about the defections.

“The local schools are still well respected, but some of that traditional luster has kind of gone away a little bit,” he said.

“The current age group, when Reggie Bush and Matt Leinart were playing ... those kids were 9 and 10 years old. The rich tradition of both of those schools has started to fade.”

Oregon is clearly the trendy spot, the cool spot, the Rose Bowl’s traditional sounds of “Conquest” replaced Wednesday night by the noise of Ducks fans singing and dancing to their own melody of “Shout.”

The final message of the night came from Troy Dye, delivered to his Southern California neighbors as he sat in a smoky, dizzying Ducks locker room, a statement that served as Wednesday’s true final score.

“I know you grew up watching the Rose Bowl, I know you want to shoot for playing in the Rose Bowl, I know you want to win the Rose Bowl,” Dye said. “If you want to do that, you come to Oregon.”

Oregon: 2018-19 Pac-12 Men's Basketball Champions



Payton Pritchard posted 20 points, seven assists, six rebounds and four steals as sixth-seeded Oregon beat top-seeded Washington 68-48 in the Pac-12 men's basketball championship game on Saturday at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Louis King added 15 points for the 23-12 Ducks, who won their fourth Pac-12 tournament championship game in school history. Paul White added 14 points.

Jaylen Nowell scored a team-leading eight points for the 26-8 Huskies, who shot 33.3 percent from the field and 5-of-23 from three-point range. Washington only scored two points over the first 10 minutes of the second half.

             

What's Next?

Both teams will wait to hear their names on Sunday during the NCAA tournament selection show, which begins at 6 p.m. ET on CBS.

===

LAS VEGAS — After trailing by just two points at half, the Washington men’s basketball team went on the wrong end of a big run that ultimately cost them in a 68-48 loss to Oregon in the Pac-12 championship game.

The offensive struggles against the Ducks continued today for the Huskies, who shot just 33.3 percent from the field and a measly 5-of-23 from distance.

Now, all the Huskies can do is sit and wait for the fates come Selection Sunday, where a loss casts some doubt on if the Dawgs will hear their names called. 

The first half featured a mostly back-and-forth contest before the Ducks began to generate a sliver of separation near the midway point. Oregon Guard Victor Bailey Jr. knocked down a heavily-contested three-point shot from the right wing to take the UO lead to four with 7:10 to go in the half.

After a series of back-and-forth buckets between the two teams, Matisse Thybulle scored on a tough floater to close out the half for the Huskies and trim the deficit to just two at the break.

It was a tough offensive start for leading UW scorer Jaylen Nowell, as he scored his first points of the game at the 4:17 mark in the opening frame and was shooting 2-of-5 from the field with a turnover at the half.

The second half didn’t start any better for the Huskies, who through nine and a half minutes had only scored two points and suddenly found themselves trailing by 16.

Finally, a Noah Dickerson layup in the post broke an over seven-minute scoreless streak midway through the second half. 

But the Ducks kept the pressure on. Led by Payton Pritchard, Louis King, and Paul White, who each scored in double figures, Oregon put on enough points to secure the upset and win yet another Pac-12 tournament championship.  

No Washington player scored in double figures.

The CBS selection show will air at 3 p.m. on Sunday, where the Huskies are hoping for their first tournament appearance since 2011.

Oregon: 2018 Redbox Bowl Champions



SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- Justin Herbert did just enough to keep his streak intact for consecutive games with a touchdown pass. Make it an impressive 28 and counting for Oregon's quarterback, the longest active streak in the nation among FBS schools.

That it turned out to be the Ducks lone score in their 7-6 win over Michigan State in the Redbox Bowl only emphasized why coach Mario Cristobal was smiling after Herbert's decision earlier this month to bypass the NFL draft.

Herbert shook off a sluggish day and threw a 28-yard touchdown pass to Dillon Mitchell in the fourth quarter, and Oregon held on after Michigan State botched a field goal attempt for a 7-6 victory in the Redbox Bowl on Monday.

"We felt like it was going to be that kind of game just watching them on defense," Cristobal said. "We kept battling and battling. You take a victory whether it be one point, two points or 50 points. These guys found a way to get it done."

Herbert passed for 166 yards and extended his streak on a day when the Ducks' offense mostly sputtered.

"We kind of just shot ourselves in the foot the first few drives, and guys kind of settled down and making plays," Herbert said.

Oregon (9-4) crossed midfield only three times and couldn't get into the end zone until Herbert found Mitchell in the right front of the end zone for the deciding score. The Ducks' defense held up from there but got some help from Michigan State's special teams.

The Spartans were lined up for a 50-yard field goal attempt when quarterback Brian Lewerke, who doubles as the holder, bobbled the snap, then attempted to run before hurriedly throwing an incompletion near the sideline.

"It's one that I have to come up with," Lewerke said. "The ball kind of hit my hand on top of the ball. I tried to make something happen. That's what happens."

After Michigan State's defense forced a three-and-out on the following possession, the Spartans took over at their own 42, but Lewerke's long pass on 4th-and-12 was knocked down by Oregon cornerback Thomas Graham.

Lewerke completed 22 of 40 passes for 172 yards with one interception. It's the third time in four games that Michigan State (7-6) has failed to score a touchdown.

Running back LJ Scott ran for 84 yards on 24 carries, ending his injury-riddled season with the Spartans on a high note after being limited to five games. The senior running back declined to redshirt this year and declared for the NFL draft in early December.

Matt Goghlin kicked a pair of 34-yard field goals but he also missed one from 50.

"We never got that bust-out play," Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio said. "You're not going to win many games scoring six points."

It was Oregon's first bowl victory since beating Florida State in the 2015 Rose Bowl.

THE TAKEAWAY

Michigan State: The Spartans had more than enough on defense but as has been the case all season, the offense simply couldn't hold up its end of the bargain. Lewerke tried to get the passing game going and took several deep shots, but it was his scrambling that was most effective. The memory of the mistake on the field goal try in the fourth quarter will linger, but the Spartans' inability to get a sustained attack on offense was what ultimately did in Dantonio's team.

Oregon: Getting Cristobal a bowl win in his first season was big and should be a nice lift for the Ducks program. That they won when their offense was held to 25 points below its scoring average is also big. The victory is Oregon's third straight, which should build some momentum heading into the offseason.

DON'T GO HOME WITHOUT IT

Cristobal was forced to stop celebrating his team's win over Michigan State in the Redbox Bowl when he noticed that his left hand was bare.

That started a frantic search that ultimately was unsuccessful -- almost.

"This is embarrassing," Cristobal said with a smile. "I thought I lost my wedding ring. It was in the locker room the whole time."

MITCHELL'S RECORD

Mitchell got off to a slow start before breaking out in the second half and finished with six catches for 70 yards. That was enough to set Oregon single-season record with 1,184 receiving yards. Josh Huff set the previous record of 1,140 yards in 2013.

"It was a goal of mine once it was brought to my attention," Mitchell said. "But I don't really think about it like that. I enjoyed the win more than anything."

WILLEKES BREAKS LEG

Michigan State played most of the second half without defensive end Kenny Willekes, who suffered a broken left fibula in the third quarter. Willekes led the Spartans with 8 1/2 sacks this season.

UP NEXT

Michigan State: The Spartans will have to find someone to take over for Scott, who went into the day 10th in school history for rushing yards. The good news is that a majority of the starters on both sides are returning, including Lewerke. Michigan State begins 2019 with a home game against Tulsa on Aug. 31.

Oregon: In addition to Herbert, nearly the entire defense is coming back next season as well, so the foundation is set for the Ducks, who open next season at Auburn on Aug. 31.

Oregon Ducks: 2015-16 Pac-12 Men's Basketball Champions



LAS VEGAS -- The Pac-12 championship got its marquee matchup, pitting the top two teams from the regular season against each other in the electric atmosphere of MGM Grand Garden Arena.

Oregon turned it into a Duck dynasty.

Tyler Dorsey scored 23 points, Dillon Brooks added 18 and No. 8 Oregon made it an early rout, rolling over No. 12 Utah 88-57 on Saturday night.

"It was just our night," Oregon coach Dana Altman said. "Not the game we anticipated, but we just got on a roll and that happens."

Oregon (28-6) won the regular-season title and Utah (26-8) was right behind. They held up through the conference tournament, setting up a matchup worthy of a neon marquee on the Strip.

The Ducks turned it into a flyaway, putting on a defensive show to sweep conference regular-season and tournament titles for the first time.

Harassing the Utes across the court and jumping into passing lanes, the Ducks had 13 steals and scored 28 points off the Utes' 20 turnovers.

Oregon was just as good on offense, shooting 52 percent while making 11 of 22 from 3-point range in its eighth straight win. Chris Boucher had 15 points and tournament MVP Elgin Cook added 11 with six assists.

The Ducks also scored 23 points off 17 offensive rebounds and had 16 assists with seven turnovers to win their fourth Pac-12 title in the second-most lopsided game in tournament history.

The dominating performance gave Oregon its best record after 34 games since 1938-39 and put it in position for a potential No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

"I wouldn't want to play them. I know that," Utah coach Larry Krystkowiak said.

After a surprising run to last year's title game, the Ducks have become the Pac-12's dominant force, their flock of beat-you-off-the-dribble high-flyers causing matchup problems for anyone who tries to stop them.

The Utes are the conference's rising stars, led by one of the nation's most unstoppable forces, 7-footer Jakob Poeltl.

To become kings of the Pac-12 Tournament, Utah would have to find a way to solve Oregon.

The Ducks won the two regular-season meetings easily, including a 10-point victory in Salt Lake City. Brooks was the orchestrator for Oregon, scoring 51 combined points, while Poeltl was kept quiet, scoring 20 combined points on just nine shots.

Oregon was at its passing-lane-jumping disruptive best in the first half of the title game, flustering the Utes into a string of mistakes.

The Ducks scored 19 points of Utah's 13 turnovers and converted nine offensive rebounds into 11 more points. Oregon had nine steals in the half -- several of those on weak passes by the Utes -- and took 20 more shots (35-15) to lead 38-21 at halftime.

"We lost this game basically in the first half," said Poeltl, who had 13 points. "We just didn't have the energy or the focus to come back from those easy baskets that we gave them."

Little changed in the second half.

Oregon kept jumping in passing lanes for steals and hounding the Utes into mistakes, stretching the lead to 21 in the first 2 minutes to continue the rout.

"We picked up our intensity in the second half and never let them get going," Dorsey said.

LIMITING POELTL

Poeltl has been a tough matchup for every team, but Oregon has found a way to limit his effectiveness.

The Ducks made it difficult for the Utes to even find him in the post and swarmed him pretty much every time he touched the ball.

Poeltl hit 4 of 6 shots, but was limited to four rebounds and had five turnovers.

"If we were going to throw the ball into the post, it was open for a split second," Utah guard Brandon Taylor said. "If we held the ball too long, they covered him and got back in front of him."

TIP INS

Utah: Poeltl had 11 points at halftime. ... The Utes had won nine straight. ... The most lopsided game in tournament history was Arizona's 32-point win over Utah in 2014 and UCLA over Oregon State by the same margin in 2006.

Oregon: The Ducks played in consecutive tournament championship games for the first time in program history. .... Oregon also won Pac-12 titles in 2003, 2007 and 2013.

WHAT'S NEXT

Utah will play in the NCAA Tournament.

Oregon will be a high seed in the NCAA Tournament next week.

Tail Red is all right with representing Southern Oregon!?



PASADENA, Calif. – We may never know the full extent of what we missed all these years. How many rightful national champions of college football’s highest level never even had a chance to play for the title? It took one day of the College Football Playoff to reinforce how fickle, how faux-certain, the Bowl Championship Series was for its entire existence.
If the BCS still existed, Alabama and Florida State would have finished No. 1 and No. 2 and played for the national championship. Oregon and Ohio State would have played one another in a consolation game, muttering about the unfairness of a system that rewards pedigree over performance. The undefeated defending champs and the Southeastern Conference champion would have been the pairing. The two best teams in the country would have played in the Rose Bowl and wondered.
The best part about the new kind of national championship game may be the lack of ambivalence when Ohio State and Oregon meet on Jan. 12. We know they are the two best teams, because we just saw them prove it on New Year’s Day (Okay, okay. Objection sustained, TCU). They did not make it to AT&T Stadium because of perception and guesswork. They made it because they earned it.
In Oregon’s locker room after their 59-20 trouncing of Florida State, as players danced and sang along to hip-hop, the Sugar Bowl played on televisions in the corners of the room. Some players stole glances. Others preferred to embrace the moment.
“I’m just going to enjoy this,” Oregon center Hronnis Grasu said with a chuckle. “I’ll watch plenty of film tomorrow.”
A victory would mean different things to each team. Ohio State could further reclaim pride for both itself and its maligned conference. In 2006 and ’07, the Buckeyes made the title in consecutive seasons and lost to Florida (which Meyer coached) and LSU by a combined 41 points, the tipping point in college football’s prevailing narrative: No conference was equipped to compete with the SEC, least of all the slow-footed Big Ten.He will watch the stunning manner in which Ohio State toppled Alabama. The Buckeyes blitzed Alabama for 28 consecutive points, moved ahead by two touchdowns with less than four minutes to play and then held on for dear life. Cardale Jones proved Ohio State has enough quarterbacks to loan them out, like a Rent-A-Center. Urban Meyer outmaneuvered Nick Saban, again asserting himself as perhaps the best coach in America. The Buckeyes looked every bit as big and athletic as the champion from the mighty SEC.
In the intervening years, Ohio State landed on probation, lost Coach Jim Tressel and went 6-7 under interim coach Luke Fickell. Meyer took over in 2012, when Ohio State remained on probation. The Buckeyes have gone 37-3 in three years since.
Oregon can culminate its ascension to the sport’s highest tier, the rise that began under Mike Bellotti, soared under Chip Kelly and has continued under Mark Helfrich. Oregon has won 60 games in the past five years, more than any school in the country. The Ducks have won the Pacific-12 four times since 2009. They won the Rose Bowl in 2012. They played for the national championship in 2011 and led until the final snap, Auburn’s game-winning field goal. They have done it all except win it all.
Oregon is a powerhouse, a trend-setter in every way, but one victory will move it to a different echelon.
“I think it will,” said Oregon running backs coach Gary Campbell, who has been in the program for 32 years. “We came up short. The last three seconds of the game, one play, and we’re in it then. If we can go on win one more now, it will change things tremendously for us.”
Oregon will become the first team to win a Rose Bowl and then play again, the same dynamic Ohio State has with the Sugar Bowl. The Ducks could celebrate, but they had to temper their excitement with an eye on AT&T Stadium. They also had another worry – Oregon linebacker Torrodney Prevot pointed out that classes resume Monday.
“When we won the last Rose Bowl, it was a little different,” Grasu said. “It was the last game. All you had to worry about was the offseason. Now we got to worry about getting better for the next game. It’s a pretty big game.”
It’s the biggest game. And, like never before, we don’t have to worry about the right teams playing in it.

Oregon: 2015 Rose Bowl Champions


PASADENA, Calif. -- Touchdown. Turnover. Touchdown. Turnover. Touchdown.
And on it went for Oregon.
Marcus Mariota and the Ducks are built for speed, and in a flash they turned the first College Football Playoff semifinal game into a rout.
The Ducks dusted Florida State 59-20 on Thursday, and now it's on to Texas to try to win their first national championship.
"It's incredible. I'm so proud of these guys right here," Mariota said. "We've got one more to take care of."
The second-seeded Ducks (13-1) scored six straight times they touched the ball in the second half, with five of the touchdowns covering at least 21 yards and the last four coming after Florida State turnovers.
In a span of 12:54 on the game clock, the score went from 25-20 to 59-20.
"A lot of fun," Oregon coach Mark Helfrich said of the Ducks' run, "but at the same time, these guys were able to retain a tremendous focus."
In the matchup of Heisman Trophy winners, Jameis Winston matched Mariota's numbers, but the Seminoles were no match for the Ducks in the Rose Bowl Game presented by Northwestern Mutual. The Pac-12 champions will play Allstate Sugar Bowl winner Ohio State on Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas, for the national title. The Buckeyes beat Alabama on Thursday night, 42-35.
Third-seeded Florida State's winning streak ends at 29. In Winston's first loss as a college starter, and maybe his last game in college, he threw for 348 yards and turned the ball over twice.
"I think what he did as a competitor and what he does with his teammates, he's one of the great players in not only college football, but college football history to me," Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher said. "It was a tough day out there."
Mariota was mostly brilliant again. Directing the Ducks' warp-speed, hurry-up offense -- Oregon averaged 20.2 seconds per play, the fastest Florida State has faced this season, according to ESPN Stats & Information -- the junior passed for 338 yards and two touchdowns. When he sprinted for a 23-yard touchdown with 13:56 left in the fourth quarter, it made the score 52-20 and made the Ducks the first team to reach 50 points in Rose Bowl history. This was game No. 101.
"The longer you go, the stronger you get," said Ducks safety Erick Dargan, who forced a fumble and intercepted a pass. "We went longer and we stayed stronger. Everyone kept demanding more out of each other."
The Ducks' fans spent much of the final quarter mockingly doing the Seminoles' chant and tomahawk chop. After it was over, the players sported T-shirts that read "WON NOT DONE."
The first playoff game at college football's highest level, the type of postseason game fans have longed for, looked like it would be a classic for about two and a half quarters.
Under a cloudless sky, on a chilly day in Pasadena, the Rose Bowl featured the third matchup of Heisman Trophy winners and a couple of quarterbacks who could be vying to be the first overall pick in April's NFL draft.
On the same field where Florida State erased an 18-point deficit against Auburn to win the national title last year, the Seminoles trailed at halftime for the sixth time this season.
And then the hole got deeper.
Seminoles freshman Dalvin Cook was stripped byDerrick Malone Jr. with Florida State in Oregon territory. The Ducks quickly flipped the field, andRoyce Freeman scored his second touchdown of the day from 3 yards out to make it 25-13.
Helfrich had called the Seminoles "unflappable" during the week leading up to the Rose Bowl -- and they showed it on the next drive.
Winston threw an 18-yard touchdown pass to freshman Travis Rudolph to make it 25-20 Oregon with 8:07 left in the third.
Then the Ducks took off.
Mariota zipped a pass to Darren Carrington for a 56-yard touchdown pass.
Then another fumble by Cook, and the wave of big plays and points the Ducks do better than any other team in the country started rumbling.
Mariota hit Carrington for a 30-yard touchdown, and the Rose Bowl, filled mostly with green and yellow, was rumbling, too.
With the sun just about set behind the San Gabriel mountains, the Ducks put the Noles away.
On fourth-and-5 in Oregon territory, Winston had lots of time but couldn't find a receiver. He was flushed from the pocket, and as he loaded to throw, his foot slipped and the ball popped out of his hands.
"It kind of looked like he slipped on a banana, like in cartoons," Oregon linebacker Torrodney Prevot said.
The fumble bounced into Tony Washington's arms, and the defensive end went 58 yards for a score.
"It was just a crazy play," Winston said.
The wave had washed over Florida State.
Florida State had not lost since Nov. 24, 2012, to Florida. Winston had never lost a college start in 26 tries.
Turnovers were a problem all season for the Seminoles, who came into the game 84th in the nation in turnover margin (minus-3), and in the playoff, that was ultimately what doomed them.
"We beat ourselves," Winston said. "We were never stopped at all."
Winston, whose two years at Florida State have been filled with spectacular play on the field and controversy off, still has two years of eligibility left.
Mariota and the Ducks are moving on, with a chance to add the biggest prize of all -- the only significant one missing -- to their trophy case.

Marcus Mariota: 2014 Heisman Trophy Winner

(pro-tip: Mariota's the tall dude on the right.)

NEW YORK  Alabama's Amari Cooper fell short in the Heisman Trophy voting as Marcus Mariota became Oregon's first winner.
It was the second-largest margin of victory in Heisman history. Cooper did the best in the south as he received the second-most votes (256) behind Mariota's 426. The Oregon quarterback won all five regions and Cooper was third in all but the south.
Jameis Winston, the 2013 winner, was sixth in the 2014 voting with 51 total points. Trevone Boykin was the fourth followed by Ohio State quarterback J.T. Barrett.
Mississippi State quarterback Dak Prescott was among the midseason contenders, but the Bulldog passers finished eighth eighth 42 points. Arizona linebacker Schooby Wright was the only defensive player in the top 10 with an eighth-place finish. 
Here's a look at the full voting for the 80th Heisman Trophy from the 929 ballots counted:
Name ............... 1st ... 2nd ... 3rd ...Total
1. Marcus Mariota 788 ... 74 ... 22 ... 2,534
2. Melvin Gordon 37 .... 432 ... 275 ...1,250
3. Amari Cooper  49 ... 280 ....316 ....1,023
4. Trevone Boykin 7 ....45.... 104 ....218
5. J.T. Barrett 0 ... 19 ... 40 ... 78
6. Jameis Winston 4 ... 10 ...19 .. 51
7. Tevin Coleman 2 ... 8 ... 22 ... 44
8. Dak Prescott 2 ... 4 ... 13 ... 21
9. Scooby Wright 0 ... 4 ... 13 ... 21
10. Bryce Petty 1 ... 3 ... 4 ... 13 


Oregon: 2013 Alamo Bowl Champions


SAN ANTONIO — Mack Brown's finish at Texas was somehow fitting. The end came mercifully, with his overmatched Texas team beaten soundly – but not embarrassed – by Oregon, 30-7 Alamo Bowl.
A 16-year tenure fizzled in the last few years in large part because of a dearth of good quarterback play. Monday night, it was more of the same – right from the start. On the third play, Case McCoy's pass bounced off a receiver's hands, was intercepted by safety Avery Patterson, who returned it 37 yards for a touchdown.
And although Oregon didn't quite steamroll the Longhorns. the Ducks were in control most of the way from that point. Midway through the fourth quarter, another McCoy interception was returned for a touchdown, stretching the Ducks' lead to 30-7.
Fans wore burnt orange shirts with the message "THANKS MACK." As it played "One Day More" from Les Miserables, the Texas marching band spelled out "MACK BROWN." Even Bevo, the mascot, wore "MACK" on his halter.
New Texas athletic director Steve Patterson, while deflecting questions about his search for Brown's replacement – except to say he wanted a hire by the time recruiting reopens Jan. 15 – praised Brown and said he hoped for a nice ending.
"Mack's had a great 16-year career here," Patterson said before the game. "He brought a national championship. He's operated with class – no issues in terms of recruiting or academics or ethics. We'd all love to see him go out with a win."
None of it mattered. As 65,918 watched at the Alamodome, Texas fell to 8-5. Since losing to Alabama in the 2010 BCS national championship game, the Longhorns' cumulative record is 30-21 in the last four seasons. Texas is 4-16 in its past 20 games against Top 25 opponents.
Oregon (11-2) wasn't as smooth as it can be. But sophomore quarterback Marcus Mariota appeared to have recovered from a knee injury that hampered him and the Ducks' offense in November. He rushed for 134 yards on 15 carries and was 18 of 26 for 253 yards and a touchdown. In the first half, he accounted for 262 of Oregon's 296 total yards; the Ducks led 20-7.

Oregon: 2012-13 Pac-12 Champions


LAS VEGAS — The Ducks are dancing once again.
Johnathan Loyd and Carlos Emory sparked Oregon off the bench, and the third-seeded Ducks held on to beat top-seeded UCLA 78-69 to claim the Pac-12 Conference tournament championship and earn the league's automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament late Saturday at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.
Oregon (26-8) has its first NCAA berth since 2008 and its first conference tournament title since 2007.
Emory had a game-high 20 points and Loyd finished with a season-high 19 points for the Ducks.
It was a sloppy start for both teams. Oregon had seven turnovers in the first 5-1/2 minutes and trailed 12-4 before getting a big spark from Loyd off the bench.
Carlos Emory sank a three and Loyd added another on the next possession as part of a 19-6 run to give the Ducks a 23-18 lead.
UCLA coach Ben Howland was issued a technical foul when he tossed his jacket like a discus into the stands after Emory took charge on Muhammad. Dotson made both free throws to push Oregon's lead to 27-19.
Dotson his third three-pointer of the half two minutes later, and Emory added another in the final minute of the half to help the Ducks to a 41-32 halftime lead.
The Ducks were 7 of 9 on three-point attempts in the first half and matched their season high of 41 first-half points against a Pac-12 opponent. Oregon ranked No. 11 in the Pac-12 in three-point shooting at 31.8 percent during the regular season.
Emory and Loyd each had 12 first-half points and Dotson had 11.
UCLA's standout freshman, Shabazz Muhammad, sat for an extended stretch in the first half with two fouls. But he finally got going early in the second to pull the Bruins within 49-46 with 15:36 remaining.
Larry Drew II hit a three to cut the Bruins' defict to 54-52 at the 12:04 mark.
E.J. Singler capped a quick 8-0 run for the Ducks with a floater in the lane and Loyd added a 15-foot jumper to push the Ducks' lead to 66-58.
Dotson swished a three-pointer with 2:32 left to push the lead to 71-62, and Loyd added an up-and-under layup to make it 76-66 with 1:02 left.
UCLA played without one of its standout freshman, Jordan Adams, who broke his foot during the final play of the Bruins' semifinal victory over Arizona on Friday.


Oregon: 2013 Fiesta Bowl Champions


Oregon defeated Kansas State 35-17 in the Fiesta Bowl tonight in Glendale, Ariz., to finish with a 12-1 record and seal their second consecutive season that ends with a victory in a BCS bowl. It marked the Ducks' third consecutive season - and third time in UO history - to win 12 games.
As the clock wound down inside University of Phoenix Stadium, Oregon fans chanted, "We want Chip!" and "One more year!" 
Top performance: Oregon redshirt freshman quarterback Marcus Mariota completed 12 of 24 passes for 166 yards and two touchdowns en route to being named the game's offensive most valuable player. De’Anthony Thomas returned the opening kickoff 94 yards for a touchdown and caught a two-yard touchdown pass from Mariota in the third quarter.
Key contributors: Oregon running back Kenjon Barner rushed for 142 yards on 29 carries. Michael Clay was named the game's defensive most valuable player.
Key sequence: Kansas State went on a strong drive near the end of the first half while down 15-10 only to miss a 40-yard field goal with about a minute remaining. Oregon,which had struggled on offense to that point, then drove 77 yards on five plays in 46 seconds and scored on a 24-yard pass from Mariota to Barner to make the score 22-10.
It was over when: Oregon drove 61 yards in seven plays, scoring on a two-yard run by Mariota to make the score 32-10 following a blocked extra point recovered by KSU and then run into its end zone for a rare PAT, one-point safety.
They said it: "If for some reason some teams want to talk to me it's because of those players over there," Chip Kelly in an on-field interview after the game when asked about whether he has interest in NFL head coaching jobs. 


2010 BCS National Championship: Auburn 22, Oregon 19

al.com

It's a final: Auburn wins national championship on Wes Byrum's kick as time expires

Published: Monday, January 10, 2011, 11:14 PM     Updated: Monday, January 10, 2011, 11:14 PM
Charles Goldberg/Auburn Bureau, The Birmingham News, Press-Register, and The Huntsville Times By Charles Goldberg/Auburn Bureau, The Birmingham News, Press-Register, and The Huntsville Times 
KodiBurnsBCS1ToddVan.JPGKodi Burns finished his Auburn career on a high note with a national championship and this 35-yard touchdown catch (Todd Van Emst photo)
GLENDALE, Ariz. - A quarterback with skills like none other this season, the school's all-time leading scorer and a defense that had just enough presented Auburn the ultimate prize in college football Monday night in the Arizona desert.

Wes Byrum kicked at the game-winning field goal as time expired to give Auburn a 22-19 victory in the BCS national championship game.

Thiller.

Cam Newton threw two touchdown passes and the Tigers' defense came up with big plays to lead Auburn to titl over Oregon in University of Phoenix Stadium in the thriller.

Oregon tied Auburn 19-19 late on a touchdown and 2-point conversion, but big runs from Mike Dyer put Auburn in a position to win it all.

Dyer rolled over a would-be tackler, got up and ran away from Oregon to the Ducks' 23-yard line to set up the winning score.

Neither snow nor rain in the South could prevent a stadium-record crowd of 78,603 from watching Auburn's win.

The Tigers finished their historic season at 14-0, the most wins in school history. It's Auburn's first national title since 1957, and helped ease the pain from the 2004 team that went 13-0 but just missed playing in the BCS title game.

The 2010 team was deserving of the BCS, leaving the game just as it entered it as the No. 1 team in the nation.

Newton threw touchdown passes to Kodi Burns and Emory Blake. Auburn also got a field goal from Wes Byrum. And the Tigers' sometimes-maligned defense stepped up and to stop Oregon's big-play, fast-paced offense. Auburn defensive tackle Mike Blanc dropped the nation's leading rusher, LaMichael James, for a safety late in the second quarter to jump start the Tigers and speed them to victory.

The Tigers quickly followed up the safety with the go-ahead touchdown pass from Newton to Blake.

Leading 19-11 late in the third quarter, Auburn turned back Oregon with a goal line stand. The Ducks had a first down at the Auburn 3. They were turned away when Auburn stopped them on fourth-and-1 from the 1.
 Sure-first-round pick Nick Fairley disrupted Oregon's offense throughout.

The Tigers started slowly, but Auburn ran 36 plays in the second quarter, and helped carry the Tigers to a 16-11  halftime lead.



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