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Oregon Finally Wins a Pac-10 Game

It takes a lot of work, effort and luck to go winless for the year in a conference. It means dropping heated rivalry games. It means not being able to win at home. It means the team is beyond bad, but also unlucky. Oregon has been all of that this year. Finally, though, the Ducks broke through by beating Stanford 68-60.

This game was an immovable object meeting an irresistible force -- only not. Oregon had been winless in the Pac-10, while Stanford was winless on the road in the conference. Something had to give and in the end it was the Cardinal.

Trojan Gameday: Conquested Edition



So much for our plan to follow the fan experience as USC marched to the BCS Title Game in New Orleans. If the Trojans played as they did Saturday against Stanford, a Hawaii Bowl bid would be a lofty goal--but at least some Trojan fans will be profiting from selling Boo-Tees. Yet despite the loss, FanHouse remains committed to bringing you a sense of gameday on campus--even if the tailgating was as uninspired as the Trojan football team!

Stanford's Ostrander Out with Seizures

Just as UCLA quarterback Ben Olson sat out earlier this season with concussions, Stanford signal-caller T.C. Ostrander will be sidelined this Saturday for the Farm's game at Southern California after suffering seizures at a n area restaurant over the weekend.

Ostrander was watching his predecessor Trent Edwards play for the Buffalo Bills on Sunday when he suffered the attack and was hostpitalized. Tests later Sunday came back normal, but Ostrander will be sidelined as the Cardinal travel to Los Angeles. No promotions for the London 2012 Olympics were shown during the telecast.

In Ostrander's place, Stanford Head Coach Jim Harbaugh will be relying on backup Tavita Pritchard.

Pac Ten Football Preview '07: The Dregs

Dregs sounds like such a bottom of the barrel kind of thing. Last year the Pac-10 did have eight teams out of 10 finish with at least 6 wins, a bowl-minimum requirement. And even Washington finished at 5-7, just one win away from elbowing into the bowl discussion. Meanwhile, the Pac-10 has been dubbed the #2 conference behind the SEC in the discussion for best BCS conference in America. Many Pac-10 coaches and fans alike will tell you that there is rarely a cake-walk on a weekly basis once conference play begins. That said, here's a look at three teams in the Pac-10 this year that don't look like they'll be contenders, and more than likely will be left out of the holiday fun

Washington State University Cougars

Last year: 6-6 overall, 4-5 Pac 10

Why They'll Win: Offense, offense and more offense. Senior QB Alex Brink is poised to break almost every WSU career passing record imaginable. Even better, he's not only bulked up with 10 to 15 lbs of pure muscle this off-season, but he's cleaned up his mechanics in his delivery, reportedly showing improvement already in camp. The running game appears to be in good hands, as RB Dwight Tardy came on strong last year to lead the team in rushing as a red-shirt frosh, and sophomore Chris Ivory is a player on the rise in the program who will get the reps as Tardy's understudy. But the biggest advantage WSU will have this year is at WR. Brandon Gibson and Michael Bumpus are one of the most productive receiving tandems to return in '07, and combined with WR Charles Dillon and TE Jed Collins, the Cougars look like they'll be able to rack up yards in bunches.

Why They Won't: Defense, defense and more defense. Oh, where to begin? Best defensive end and team leader in all-conference selection Mkristo Bruce? Gone. Best linebacker in Scott Davis? See ya. Best defensive back in all-conference safety Eric Frampton? Buh-bye. The Cougar D had it's heart walk off the field after last year's season finale, and it won't be easy to rebuild. Further, the guys who are left are already experiencing injury issues. LB Andy Mattingly and safety Terry Mixon are both on the shelf for the time being, unsure if they will be ready to go in a couple or weeks. Finally, both starting corners from last year are gone, and the pool of available talent to replace them is shallow. Right now, the probable starters at corner are a true frosh (Chima Nwachukwa) and a JC transfer who didn't even play football last year (Devin Giles). Not what you look for when you want to contend in a conference that knows a thing or two on throwing the football.

Prognosis: The Cougars theme in 2006 was finish. 2005 was a year where several games turned out to be come-from-ahead losses, and for a while things improved last season. But it all fell apart late, and now, it's back to the drawing board in a lot of places. The schedule doesn't have many layups either. Opening at Wisconsin is a potential nightmare, and even San Diego State in Seattle the following week could be scary. Plus trips to Arizona and USC round out September. They'll be exciting to watch, and the aerial circus could be special, but too many holes on defense and the usual lack of depth will have the Cougars on the outside looking in when bowl invitations are handed out in December.

Stanford Band Back on the Field?

Announcers of football games for the Leland Stanford Junior University might soon be able to scream once again that the "band is out on the field!"

That's because the University has cleared the band's members of vandalism charges which led to the band's suspension in July.

According to news reports, "The university's Judicial Affairs panel exonerated the nine band members, ruling the students were under the impression the "Band Shak" was unsuitable for future use and was set to be destroyed, band president Adam Cohen said Monday.

"In that context, they believed that it would be OK to trash the place," he said.

There's no word, however, on whether the band will get to play at football games or if visiting fans will have to endure the pain of watching awards given out to science department professors in 2007.

Trent Edwards' Job Security: Safest in Bay Area

With the Oakland Raiders bringing back quarterback Jeff George, the 49ers dealing with Alex Smith's sucktitude, and the Cal Bears choosing between two bad options at quarterback, Stanford's Trent Edwards has established himself as the one quarterback in the San Francisco Bay Area who is secure in his job.

Of course, two factors are working in Edwards' favor in this regard: The Stanford Cardinal's best backup option is a redshirt freshman and The Farm returns 10 starters to their offense from the 2005 campaign. Too bad for Trent that the 2005 campaign didn't go so well.

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