Latest Oregon Stories
Posted: Nov 9th 2009 1:14PM ET by Ray Holloman (RSS feed)
Filed under: Oregon
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'The Punch' wasn't a knockout after all.
Oregon reinstated running back
LeGarrette Blount Monday afternoon, just more than two months after he was suspended for punching Boise State defensive end
Byron Hout following the Ducks' Week 1 loss to the
Broncos in Idaho.
"I'm grateful to Coach Kelly that he cares enough to offer me this second chance," Blount said in a statement released by the school. "Now it is up to me to prove to people that their lasting impressions of me are not what they saw in Boise."
Blount's suspension was originally announced to be for the season, but on Oct. 2, roughly a month after the Sept. 3 incident, Oregon head coach Chip Kelly said that the running back might returning, pending the senior meeting several conditions.
Posted: Nov 7th 2009 10:05PM ET by Michelle Smith (RSS feed)
Filed under: Oregon, Stanford

STANFORD, Calif. -- What a difference a week makes for Oregon.
The
Ducks looked invincible and unbeatable a week ago, taking apart USC like they were ... Stanford?
They spent the week answering questions about letdowns and hangovers. No way. Not going to happen. Not us.
But by sunset at Stanford Stadium, the No. 7-ranked Ducks were walking off the field after a 51-42 defeat and there was no doubt they felt the letdown.
"We didn't focus on the past, didn't look to the future. We got beat by a better team," said Oregon coach Chip Kelly. "If you say that we got caught looking behind or ahead, it takes away from Stanford. Stanford is a heck of a football team."
Posted: Nov 7th 2009 7:27PM ET by FanHouse Newswire (RSS feed)
Filed under: Oregon, Stanford

STANFORD, Calif. (AP) --
Toby Gerhart bowled over the Oregon defense to make the
Cardinal bowl eligible for the first time in eight years.
Gerhart ran for a school-record 223 yards and three scores,
Andrew Luck threw for two touchdowns and Stanford held on to beat No. 7 Oregon 51-42 Saturday for its all-important sixth win of the season.
The loss by Oregon (7-2, 5-1 Pac-10) just a week after beating Southern California 47-20 opened up the conference race and cost the
Ducks any shot at a berth in the Bowl Championship Series title game.
Oregon rallied with two late touchdowns to cut a 20-point lead down to six, but Stanford (6-3, 5-2) recovered an onside kick with 2:38 to go and tacked on
Nate Whitaker's third field goal with 11 seconds left. The students rushed the field as the game ended.
Posted: Nov 3rd 2009 8:00PM ET by Clay Travis (RSS feed)
Filed under: Boise State, Florida, Oregon, Tennessee

One of the most frustrating cliches trotted out by college football's BCS defenders is this banal line: Every game counts. I hate this three-word cliche with the fury of a thousand blazing suns. I hate the smugness with which it's delivered, I hate the fact that no one points out the obvious -- name a sport where the games don't actually count-- but I hate the fact that it isn't even true the most.
In fact, this phrase is positively Orwellian because it leaves off the final part of the sentence. Every game counts ... except some games count more than others. How else to explain the fact that everyone can brush off Boise State's win over Oregon because it happened the first game of the season?
I understand we're dealing with a broken system, but right now Boise State is continuing to plummet as they win.
I wrote about the glass ceiling that Boise had reached a couple of weeks ago, but has it really reached the point where we just ignore the first week of the season?
Posted: Nov 3rd 2009 12:33PM ET by John Walters (RSS feed)
Filed under: Arizona State, Cincinnati, Florida, Louisville, New Mexico State, Ohio State, Oregon, Temple, Texas

Halloween in Eugene began with Oregon coach Chip Kelly disguised as the Duck mascot and ended with USC masquerading as Cal. Pete Carroll's
Trojans are not exactly immune from defeat in the Beaver State (0-4 since 2006) but they never lose to a fellow highly ranked Pac-10 foe and they most certainly never get waxed.
That's Jeff Tedford's domain.
Hands continue to wring in the Southland -- the
Orange County Register declared that "USC's complete dominance of the league, a dominance unmatched in conference history, is over" -- but I believe that Pete Carroll, much like Michael Myers, will haunt the Pac-10 for many Halloweens to come.
Also, I'd like to suggest a more salient reason for Troy's desultory play of late, one that has nothing to do with the freshman QB, the eight defensive starters lost, or the two new coordinators: jet lag (and that's not a Mark Sanchez reference).
Posted: Nov 1st 2009 12:32AM ET by Brian Grummell (RSS feed)
Filed under: Oregon, USC, Pac 10, General CFB Insanity

There's no other way to put it. Oregon's football program unequivocally demolished longtime Pac-10 overlord USC 47 to 20 on Saturday, effectively putting the brakes on two major, likely never to be repeated feats the Trojans had accomplished.
USC's record streak of seven Pac-10 championships is likely done, as is its even more impressive run of never losing by more than 11 points in the Pete Carroll era (and never by more than seven points once things really got rolling in 2002).
The Ducks finished with a 27-point winning margin and it easily could have been more. It was a two-sided wholesale destruction few outside of Autzen could have reasonably anticipated given the nature of USC's run these last few years. As a USC guy I knew it had to happen eventually, but I was thinking something like a 14-point loss, something reasonable.
Posted: Nov 1st 2009 12:08AM ET by FanHouse Newswire (RSS feed)
Filed under: Oregon, USC, Pac 10

EUGENE, Ore.(AP) --
Jeremiah Masoli threw for 222 yards and a touchdown and ran for 164 more yards with another score and the No. 10
Oregon Ducks ran past No. 4 USC 47-20 for the Trojans' worst loss since 1997.
Redshirt freshman
LaMichael James ran for 184 yards and a score as the Ducks (7-1, 5-0 Pacific-10) racked up 391 yards on the ground against the Trojans, who came into the game with the fifth-best rush defense in the nation, allowing an average of just 79.9 yards a game.
Southern California (6-2, 3-2) had not lost a game by more than a touchdown since a 27-16 loss to Notre Dame in 2001, Pete Carroll's first season as Trojans coach. It was USC's worst lost since a 35-7 defeat to Arizona State on Oct. 11, 1997 and the most points allowed by the Trojans in Carroll's tenure.
Posted: Oct 31st 2009 8:03PM ET by John Walters (RSS feed)
Filed under: Oregon, USC, Pac 10

EUGENE, Ore. -- Greetings from Autzen Stadium, where just moments ago I was "looking live at Brent Musberger" as we rode up the elevator together. Brent is 70 years young and he hasn't lost an ounce of energy. It's funny. Earlier today ESPN Classic aired a replay of the 1983 NCAA basketball final (Houston-N.C. State), for which Musberger did the play-by-play (on CBS).
That was 26 years ago. And Brent is still getting the primetime gigs. I am an unabashed, unapologetic Musberger fan.
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Follow John Walters' live blog after the jump. Posted: Oct 30th 2009 3:53PM ET by John Walters (RSS feed)
Filed under: Oregon, Pac 10

EUGENE, Ore. -- Those football coaches who at least make an attempt at opening a book whose primary letters are not X and O often reach for biographies. Famous military leaders are popular.
Earlier this season
Chip Kelly was reading, even committing to memory, a children's book. On the coffee table in his office here, the first-year Oregon coach kept a copy of "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day."
Certainly Kelly can relate. In his sideline debut Kelly, 45, had a terrible, horrible, no good, cable-news-channel-attention-getting, very, very bad day.
And he has not had one since. But we are getting ahead of the story.
Posted: Oct 15th 2009 11:00AM ET by Jim Henry (RSS feed)
Filed under: Oregon

PERRY, Fla. -- As LeGarrette Blount follows the corrective measures that may signal his return to the Oregon football team next month, residents in this small, coastal city off Highway 27 still don't understand what triggered The Punch. Mark Southerland, a local businessman, School Board member and Taylor County High School resident historian, waited two days after Blount's meltdown on national television before he telephoned.
Blount recognized the 850 area code and number and immediately answered. Southerland didn't want to know why. Never asked, in fact. Instead, Southerland, who played football with Blount's father Gary at Taylor County in the mid-1970s and considers himself a family friend, offered advice and support. A remorseful Blount, 2,357 miles from his Florida safety net in Eugene, Ore., quietly listened.
"I told him three things," Southerland, 49, said in an interview with FanHouse.