Some Tuesday morning thoughts as I finish taking in the Husky victory last weekend before fully turning my eyes towards Pullman and the ESPN GameDay hosting hysteria of this weekend.
1) Recruiting
Per Rivals.com, the Ducks currently sit third nationally for the 2019 recruiting cycle. After witnessing the “best college game I’ve ever been to,” No. 1 overall prospect Kayvon Thibodeaux announced that he would be moving up his commitment date.
While no guarantee, that’s a very good sign for the Ducks. Match that with the fact that the Oregon offense starts zero seniors, and the future looks bright.
2) Penalties
Halfway through this 2018 season, the Ducks are the least-penalized team in the Pac-12. Last year, the Ducks were the most-penalized team by a quite a margin. Oregon has not finished higher than 10th in penalties since 2010. Mario Cristobal has this team disciplined.
3) College Football Championship
The Ducks victory over the Huskies means the Pac-12 has a very slim chance to make the College Football Playoff. For Oregon to make it, they would not only need to win out, but also have a lot of other teams lose once, if not twice. The weak non-conference slate (thanks Texas A&M) is seriously working against the Ducks after the Stanford loss.
4) How To Win a Championship
Even in the spread, up-tempo era, controlling the line of scrimmage and playing good defense ultimately wins championships. And that’s what the Ducks did against the Huskies. They didn’t need to rely on an all-world effort from quarterback Justin Herbert. There have been Natty’s won with pedestrian quarterback play. Hell, Alabama pulled their ineffective starting quarterback late from the title game last year and still won it. Go figure.
Now if the Ducks can continue to get better in the trenches, continue to play better defense, and continue to produce top-notch quarterbacks, things will be adding up quite nicely in Oregon’s quest for a championship.
5) A Tight Game Between Bitter Rivals
Oregon and Washington exchanged the lead four times last Saturday. And just for good measure, the teams had to play more than 60 minutes to decide winner.
6) All Dogs Go To Heaven (joking)
Our foes are taking note:
“They’re buying into what they have over there,” UW center Nick Harris said after the Oregon game. “There aren’t really a lot of different guys. Those are the same dudes they had these last two years.”
“Their energy is just different,” Harris said. “They had a lot of stuff going on in the past two seasons with their coaches. I think they’re just buying in. They played a good game today. Hats off to them. They’re a good opponent to play.”
7) Running the Ball
CJ Verdell had a whopping 29 carries (my eyes bugged out when I read that stat) for 111 yards and two touchdowns. Travis Dye added 67 yards on 15 carries. Verdell likened the hole that opened up on his game-winning run to the parting of the Red Sea. No wonder him and Dye have nick-named the offensive line “Moses.”
8) Receiving Records
All this Dillon Mitchell talk got me thinking about single-season records.
The single-season record for receptions at Oregon is 77 (Samie Parker, 2003), while the single-season receiving yardage record is 1140 (Josh Huff, 2013). At the half-way point of the season, Mitchell has 35 receptions for 561 yards. While slightly behind pace, both records are within reach, particularly given how Mitchell has played since conference play started.
Consider that he had only had a total of six receptions for 98 yards in the first three games against absolute cream-puffs. In the last three games against Pac-12 foes he’s averaging 10 catches and 154 yards a game. Let’s hope that run of production continues
9) GameDay in Pullman
Some think it’s cool, other find it nauseating, but the Cougar faithful have had their flag at every ESPN GameDay for 15 years straight. Now, they finally get GameDay. With all eyes on Pullman there is no way they can handle the spotlight … they will “Coug-it.” Big-time.
10) Things Happen For a Reason (Beating a Dead Horse)
Before the time-out that occurred prior to the winning six-yard run, someone in the Oregon coaches box noticed the Huskies were dropping eight defenders in coverage. They were betting on the Ducks passing. That’s when Cristobal called time-out, and the Ducks made the call to run.
With Willie Taggart, that doesn’t happen (Charles Fischer touched on this in his article published after the game). His in-game adjustments and play calling was pedestrian at best.
When Slick Willie left, we were mad as a fan base. We were left with no choice but to buy into the “things happen for a reason” mantra. But, as we’ve been discovering the past several months, it was a good thing Taggart pulled a Slick Willie and bolted to Florida State. It gave us Mario Cristobal.
So, this got me thinking deeper about another thing that “happened for a reason.” That being the 2015 broken hand of Vernon Adams. Without that messed up hand, Adams most likely hits a wide open receiver against Michigan State to win that game. And no doubt the Ducks would have beaten Washington State that year, had Adams played. Had that happened, an immensely flawed Oregon team goes 11-1 and plays in Rose Bowl and possibly the College Football Playoff, where it no doubt gets destroyed by Alabama or Clemson.
Now had that happened, then no way would Mark Helfrich have been fired after just one bad season in 2016. Therefore, we don’t get Slick Willie, hence we don’t get Super Mario, hence we don’t get the Super Mario who doesn’t take a knee versus Stanford, which may well cost the Ducks a shot at this year’s CFP.
Which is maybe what keeps a certain sure-fire first round NFL caliber quarterback to stick around to lead an even better Oregon team in 2019, and finish what he started.
Remember … things happen for a reason.
Darren Perkins
Spokane, WA
Top photo credit: Kevin Cline
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Darren Perkins is a sales professional and 1997 Oregon graduate. After finishing school, he escaped the rain and moved to sunny Southern California where he studied screenwriting for two years at UCLA. Darren grew up in Eugene and in 1980, at the tender age of five, he attended his first Oregon football game. His lasting memory from that experience was an enthusiastic Don Essig announcing to the crowd: “Reggie Ogburn, completes a pass to… Reggie Ogburn.” Captivated by such a thrilling play, Darren’s been hooked on Oregon football ever since. Currently living in Spokane, Darren enjoys flaunting his yellow and green superiority complex over friends and family in Cougar country.