Author Archives | Kenny Jacoby

Four-star quarterback flips commitment to Oregon

Although Oregon still have the Alamo Bowl to play, the quarterback competition for the 2016 season is already heating up.

Four-star quarterback Tristen Wallace of DeSoto (Texas) High School flipped his commitment from the Ohio State Buckeyes to the Ducks on Sunday. At 6-foot-3, 230 pounds, Wallace is rated the No. 7 dual-threat quarterback in the nation by ESPN and the No. 4 athlete in the nation by 247Sports.

Wallace is the third quarterback commitment in Oregon’s 2016 recruiting class. Four-star dual-threat quarterback Terry Wilson signed a financial aid agreement with Oregon on Dec. 4 and plans to be ready for spring practices. Sheldon High School pro-style quarterback Justin Herbert confirmed he’s “solid as ever” to join the Ducks despite the departure of former offensive coordinator Scott Frost.

Oregon had another 2016 commitment from four-star quarterback Seth Green, but Green officially flipped to Minnesota on Sunday after months of speculation. Surprisingly, however, Green cited Frost’s decision to become Central Florida’s head coach as his reason to return to Minnesota, where he grew up and played three prep seasons.

Wallace was one of several prospects Oregon hosted over the weekend. Three-star wide receiver Eddie McDoom and three-star offensive lineman Samuelu Poutasi, brother of Tennessee Titans offensive tackle Jeremiah Poutasi, both committed following their official visits. Four-star safety Lamar Jackson visited and named Oregon among his top five schools.

Also visiting was Montana State dual-threat quarterback Dakota Prukop, a potential graduate transfer from the same conference in which current Ducks quarterback Vernon Adams played three seasons for Eastern Washington. FOX reported Prukop will decide between Oregon and Alabama on Monday.

Oregon already received a commitment from four-star pro-style quarterback Ryan Kelley for the 2017 season. Kelley, ESPN’s No. 35 player in the country and Oregon’s highest rated commitment ever, confirmed he’s “still fully committed” after Frost’s exit.

Freshman dual-threat quarterback Travis Jonsen, who’s redshirting this season due to injury, was expected to take over the starting job next season, but now that’s not so clear. Also in the mix are redshirt freshman Morgan Mahalak, redshirt sophomore Taylor Alie, and redshirt junior Jeff Lockie.

In total, Oregon is set to have seven quarterbacks competing for the starting position next season. If Prukop chooses Oregon, make it eight.

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Three Ducks named to AP All-America Team

Three Oregon Ducks were named to the 2015 Associated Press All-America Team on Sunday, adding to their long list of accolades from this football season.

Defensive end DeForest Buckner earned a second team selection, and running back Royce Freeman and kicker Aidan Schneider earned third team selections from the AP All-America Selection Panel, which consists of sports journalists from around the country.

Buckner and Freeman, as well as five other Ducks, were both named to the all-conference first teams following the Pac-12 regular season.

Freeman didn’t receive votes for the Heisman Trophy, although his numbers suggest he should have. His 1,706 rushing yards rank fourth nationally and are 99 yards shy of breaking LaMike James’s Oregon single-season rushing record.

Buckner was also named Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year after finishing the season with 76 tackles, 9.5 sacks and 16 tackles for loss.

Schneider also won the 2015 Vlade Award, given to college football’s most accurate kicker. Schneider converted 91 percent of his field goal attempts and all 62 PAT attempts, and finished second in the nation in kick scoring with 122 points.

No. 15 Oregon (9-3) will take on No. 11 TCU (10-2) in the Alamo Bowl in San Antonio on Jan. 2, 2016.

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Freeman for Heisman: Where is the love?

Before every football game, Oregon Ducks quarterback Vernon Adams Jr. tells running back Royce Freeman he’s the best running back in the country.

The country, apparently, disagrees.

Alabama running back Derrick Henry was awarded the Heisman Trophy on Saturday and Stanford running back Christian McCaffrey finished second in the voting.

Following a Heisman-caliber season, the only thing more insulting than being snubbed from the Heisman ceremony in New York is being snubbed from Heisman-snub lists, which is exactly what happened to Freeman.

Few running backs in college football history have been as efficient toting the rock as Freeman has been in his sophomore year. In the past 20 years, running backs have cracked the top three in Heisman voting a total of 16 times. Of those 16, only Reggie Bush in 2005 (8.7 ypc), Larry Johnson in 2002 (7.7 npc) and Melvin Gordon in 2014 (7.5 ypc) gained more yards per carry than Freeman (6.6 ypc) in 2015.

“He’s probably the most underrated back in the nation,” Adams said.

With the Alamo Bowl still to play, Freeman leads the Pac-12 with 142.2 rushing yards per game and 6.6 yards per carry (min. 100 attempts). His 1,706 rushing yards rank fourth nationally and are 99 yards shy of breaking LaMike James’s Oregon single-season rushing record.

Freeman has shown his reliability through the air as well as on the ground. His 169.3 all-purpose yards per game rank sixth nationally and fourth among players who haven’t returned a kick.

But you’re telling me he doesn’t belong in the Heisman conversation?

Unfortunately, even though the Heisman is supposed to be awarded to the “most outstanding player in college football,” wins and losses matter far more than individual feats. Over the past 20 years, the Heisman Trophy winner’s average team record is better than 11-1 when the votes are cast. The Ducks, however, are 9-3, and only three players have won the Heisman with three losses under their belts during that span.

“I don’t think Royce has got as much attention as he deserves because of our early season stumbles, but we can count on him for 100 yards,” former Oregon offensive coordinator Scott Frost said. “Really everything else that’s working in the offense, including Vernon passing, gets started when we’re able to run the ball.”

After a 3-3 start, the nation wrote off Oregon as a legitimate team, and thus Freeman as a worthy Heisman candidate. But if not for Freeman, Oregon could have done a lot worse than 3-3 with Adams sidelined with a broken finger. In those six games, Oregon ran the the ball 78 percent more often than it passed, and Freeman accumulated 859 yards and nine touchdowns on 123 carries — that’s 20.5 carries, 143.2 yards and 1.5 touchdowns per game.

And he hasn’t slowed down since. Freeman is currently riding on eight straight games with more than 100 yards on the ground, including a season-high 246 against Washington State.

Henry and McCaffrey are deserving Heisman candidates, as are running backs Dalvin Cook of Florida State, Leonard Fournette of LSU and Ezekiel Elliot of Ohio State. But moreso than any of his counterparts, Freeman’s monster year was truly lost in the whirlwind that was Oregon’s season.

Freeman has repeatedly said individual accolades don’t matter to him, but I have to believe this royal snubbing will leave a chip on his shoulder come next season.

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Oregon to take on Alabama, Notre Dame in 2016 baseball season

Coming off a season that fell short of high expectations, Oregon baseball will have at least 56 chances to redeem itself in 2016.

On Tuesday the team announced its schedule for the upcoming season, which features 27 home games and 24 games against teams that also qualified for the NCAA Tournament last year.

The Ducks will open their non-conference slate with a road series against San Diego State from Feb. 19 – 21. Then they’ll return home for a seven-game homestand against Illinois State and UC Santa Barbara beginning on Feb. 25. Oregon took two out of three against UCSB in Goleta last year, outscoring the Gauchos 16-4.

Oregon will head south to take on Alabama on March 10, followed by a three-game series against Mississippi State over the weekend.

When they return home from Starkville, the Ducks will open Pac-12 play with a three-game series against Utah. Cal, USC, Washington State and Arizona will also play three-game series in Eugene.

Additionally, Oregon will play a game against Notre Dame in South Bend on March 31 before taking on Michigan State for a three-game series starting April 1. The Spartans swept the Ducks in three games in Eugene last year.

At least 20 of Oregon’s games will be televised, 17 of which by the Pac-12 Networks.

The Ducks finished 38-26, 16-14 in the Pac-12 and lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament last year. They’ll return 13 position players, as well as a rotation of tall, hard-throwing left-handed pitchers, Cole Irvin, Matt Krook and David Peterson, and closer Stephen Nogosek.

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Oregon headed to Alamo Bowl to take on No. 11 TCU

The Ducks are headed to the 2016 Valero Alamo Bowl for the second time in three years.

No. 15 Oregon will take on No. 11 TCU of the Big-12 conference on Jan. 2 at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas. The Alamo Bowl typically features the second-choice team from the Pac-12 and the third-choice team from the Big-12.

The Ducks had a chance to make the Rose Bowl, but needed a loss from either Clemson or Alabama on Saturday for Stanford to sneak into the College Football Playoff. Both the Tigers and the Crimson Tide won their match-ups.

The Ducks played the 2015 National Championship Game at AT&T Stadium last season and lost to Ohio State 42-20. They won the 2013 Alamo Bowl the season prior 30-7 over Texas.

UCLA won the 2014 Alamo Bowl last season 40-35 over Kansas State.

The Ducks ended the season ranked No. 16 by the College Football Playoff committee.

 

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AP Poll: Three Pac-12 teams remain ranked including Oregon at No. 15

Michigan State moved up to No. 3 in the latest AP Top 25 rankings with a last-minute 16-13 win over Iowa to clinch the Big Ten title. The Spartans bumped Oklahoma to No. 5 and Iowa to No. 6.

Clemson stayed on top at No. 1 with 51 first-place votes. No. 2 Alabama received nine first-place votes and Michigan State received one.

Stanford moved up two spots to No. 5 with its dominant 42-22 victory over USC in the Pac-12 Championship Game. USC was ousted from the poll, leaving Stanford, No. 15 Oregon and No. 20 Utah to represent the conference.

Baylor fell from No. 12 to No. 18 with a loss to unranked Texas to end its season, setting up a matchup between No. 11 TCU and Oregon in the Alamo Bowl.

Here are the full rankings:

1. Clemson

 2. Alabama

3. Michigan State

4. Oklahoma

5. Stanford

6. Iowa

7. Ohio State

8. Notre Dame

9. Florida State

10. North Carolina

11. TCU

12. Northwestern

13. Oklahoma State

14. Houston

15. Oregon

16. Ole Miss

17. Michigan

18. Baylor

19. Florida

20. Utah

21. Navy

22. LSU

23. Wisconsin

24. Temple

25. Western Kentucky

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Redeeming his name: Darren Carrington’s road back to the football field

Oregon wide receiver Darren Carrington burst into national stardom after Oregon’s 59-20 win over the Florida State Seminoles in the 2015 Rose Bowl, when he caught seven of Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota’s passes for 165 yards and two touchdowns.

Carrington figured to play a key role in the Ducks’ game against Ohio State in the inaugural College Football Playoff National Championship.

But a week after his Rose Bowl performance, Carrington made national headlines again – only this time because he’d be forced to miss the biggest game of his life.

Carrington tested positive for marijuana on an NCAA-administered random drug test. He had been tested numerous times before, and said that he hadn’t thought much of it. But when Oregon head coach Mark Helfrich informed him he’d failed the test and been suspended, Carrington broke into tears.

“I wanted to play in the national championship and play with Marcus one more game,” Carrington said. “Honestly, I was just sad because I hurt my family more than anything; I hurt my family name.”

Carrington’s suspension caused him to miss the first half of the 2015 season. He spent several months after the national championship in his house, reading his Bible, praying and keeping to himself to avoid confrontation with others. People he’d never met and some he knew and cared about saw him and said things to provoke a reaction from and anger him. People gave him looks when he walked on campus and went to the store.

“People talked about how dumb I am,” Carrington said. “Honestly, it was just sad to see how people react.”

Oregon wide receiver Darren Carrington (87) skips towards the end zone during the second half. The No. 2 Oregon Ducks play the No. 3 Florida State Seminoles at the Rose Bowl Stadium in Pasadena, California on January 1, 2015. (Ryan Kang/Emerald)

Oregon wide receiver Darren Carrington (87) skips towards the end zone during the second half. The No. 2 Oregon Ducks play the No. 3 Florida State Seminoles at the Rose Bowl Stadium in Pasadena, California on January 1, 2015. (Ryan Kang/Emerald)

***

Carrington’s high school highlight tape opens with him making a one-handed, Odell Beckham Jr.-esque catch for a long gain. Later, he hurdles a cornerback on a QB keeper and returns a punt 90 yards for a touchdown on a lateral. Carrington watches this highlight reel, set to the tune of Kirk Franklin’s “I Smile,” the night before every game.

“It just reminds me of what I’m capable of doing,” he said.

This football season, Carrington has tried to act more like he did in high school, when he was “a lot more loose and having more fun.” It seems to be working: he’s caught 25 passes for 502 yards and five touchdowns in his six games.

His first game back in action came against Washington on Oct. 17, and his first catch of the season was a 36-yard touchdown from quarterback Vernon Adams Jr. on the game’s opening drive. He finished with five catches for 125 yards and two scores.

After the game, Carrington addressed the media for the first time since the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1. He answered every question, including the awkward ones about the elephant in the room, with a smile on his face.

“I almost shed a tear, but it was just all smiles,” Carrington said after the game. “You never know how fast it can be gone.”

Carrington later said he always wants to look positive, because no one ever knows what’s behind a smile.

“Some of the people hurting the most just keep a smile on their face to get them through the day,” Carrington said. “And when people see your smile, sometimes it brightens up their day.”

Carrington was raised in San Diego by a family of athletes. His father, also named Darren, was an NFL safety for eight seasons and played in two Super Bowls. His mother, Vickie, ran track and competed in bodybuilding. They met at Northern Arizona University, where they both played collegiately. His two sisters, DiArra and DiJonai, play NCAA Division I women’s basketball, for University of New Orleans and Stanford, respectively.

Since he was 10 years old, Carrington played football and basketball against Oregon defensive back Tyree Robinson and his twin brother Tyrell Robinson, a former Oregon linebacker. Carrington’s father coached his youth teams, while Tyree and Tyrell’s uncle coached theirs.

Oregon recruited all three of them while they were in high school, and Carrington committed early, in his junior year. Carrington had grown up watching his godbrother Jairus Byrd, a first-team all-Pac-10 and three-time Pro Bowl defensive back, play for Oregon, so he always wanted to wear green and yellow.

Carrington and the Robinsons’ mutual family friend, Todd Doxey, also a San Diego-native, played defensive back for Oregon in 2007. Doxey was a star player for nearby Herbert Hoover High School, where his No. 9 football jersey is now retired. When Carrington was in elementary school, he spent hours at his home watching highlights of Doxey on a local TV show called Prep Pigskin Report. Doxey played his freshman year on Oregon’s scout team before his death in a tragic swimming accident in Eugene’s McKenzie River on July 14, 2008.

Carrington, Tyree and Tyrell Robinson came to Oregon as a tribute to Doxey.

“We’re all from San Diego and he didn’t get to finish what he started,” Carrington said. “We were hoping to finish strong for him.”

“We just figured, why not bring the old Lincoln and Horizon talent together and become something special here at Oregon?” Tyree said. “We wanted to come and finish off what [Doxey] wanted to do.”

Carrington, Tyree and Tyrell redshirted their freshman years, but Tyrell left after one season. Tyree and Carrington — the “third” Robinson brother — decided to stay.

“Things changed with my brother’s situation, but me and Darren stuck it out, and everything’s paying off,” Tyree said.

Carrington and Tyree started contributing in regular season games as redshirt freshmen in 2014. In 10 games, Carrington hauled in 37 balls for 704 yards and four touchdowns. But after the Rose Bowl, Carrington didn’t play in a game for 10 months because of his suspension, which stimulated controversy over the NCAA’s marijuana testing policies.

Carrington’s sample barely exceeded the NCAA limit of 5 nanograms (ng) of THC, marijuana’s primary ingredient. By comparison, the National Football League’s threshold is 35 ng, Major League Baseball’s is 50 ng, and World Anti-Doping Agency’s is 150 ng.

Mason Tvert, the director of communications for the Marijuana Policy Project, called the NCAA’s levels “very, very low,” and told Sports Illustrated, “Someone could fail even if they last used days or possibly weeks ago.”

***

During the offseason, Carrington mostly talked to his old friends from high school, trying to remember the good times. He got used to blocking out the noise and learned not to let one part of his life take control. People still make comments about the failed test to him, but Carrington just smiles back.

“If you don’t have haters, you’re not doing something right,” he laughed.

Since his return, Carrington leads the team in receiving yards and Oregon has gone 6-0, outscoring its opponents by 10 points per game on average. Coming off a 52-42 Civil War victory on Friday, the Ducks are hopeful for a spot in a New Year’s Six bowl game. They’re 16-0 in games in which Carrington catches a pass.

“I’ve been really happy with his attitude and effort,” wide receivers coach Matt Lubick told the Register-Guard. Lubick said it’s natural for players who know they won’t be taking the field each week to put less effort in during practice, but that Carrington was “the exact opposite” during his suspension.

Although the suspension was a low point, Carrington said it was also a high point because it made him stronger as a person and hungrier on the field. He’s embarrassed, but not ashamed.

“When you fall, you can get back up,” Carrington said. “You’ve just got to stay focused.”

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AP Poll: Oregon moves up to No. 15; win over No. 7 Stanford looking better

Oklahoma moved up two spots to No. 3 in Sunday’s AP Top 25 Poll rankings, after its  58-23 win over Oklahoma State to clinch the Big 12 title and essentially punch its ticket to the College Football Playoff.

The Sooners bumped Iowa down a spot to No. 4, with Michigan State looming at No. 5 after a win over Penn State. They’ll square off in the Big Ten Championship on Saturday Dec. 5, and the winner will almost certainly secure a berth in the CFP.

Clemson and Alabama remained at No. 1 and No. 2, and Ohio State jumped up to No. 6 from No. 6 with a win over Michigan, who fell from No. 12 to No. 19.

Stanford climbed six spots to No. 7, where it stood before its loss to Oregon, with a last-second win over Notre Dame.

Stanford’s win helped Oregon’s chance at being selected for a New Year’s Six bowl. Stanford is in line for either a spot in the CFP or a Rose Bowl appearance, so long as it overcomes No. 24 USC in the Pac-12 Championship game. The Ducks jumped three spots up to No. 15 with a 52-42 Civil War victory and losses by now No. 18 Florida, No. 19 Michigan, and No. 22 Navy.

Here are the full rankings:

1. Clemson (first place votes — 53)

2. Alabama (8)

3. Oklahoma

4. Iowa

5. Michigan State

6. Ohio State

7. Stanford

8. North Carolina

9. Notre Dame

10. Florida State

11. TCU

12. Baylor

13. Northwestern

14. Oklahoma State

15. Oregon

16. Ole Miss

17. Houston

18. Florida

19. Michigan

20. Temple

21. Utah

22. Navy

23. LSU

24. USC

25. Wisconsin

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After Civil War win, Oregon left to ponder what could have been

For a team vying for a New Year’s Six bowl bid, Oregon didn’t pass the eye test on Friday in the Civil War battle. Although the first half showed promise, the Ducks didn’t finish close to covering the 34.5-point spread by which they were favored — over a team that didn’t win a conference game all season.

The Ducks (9-3, 7-2) looked to have the game in the bag after the first half, when they entered the locker room with a 31-7 lead. Oregon State (2-10, 0-9), however, stormed back for five touchdowns in the second half, and cut the deficit to three twice, before ultimately falling 52-42.

It was a bittersweet send-off for the Oregon seniors who played its final game at Autzen Stadium in Friday’s Civil War.

“We did not play anywhere close to our standard as a defense,” senior linebacker Tyson Coleman said. “We ran out of gas a bit at halftime and came out flat. We were out of our gaps, we weren’t doing our jobs — we can’t let that happen.”

Oregon conceded 174 yards on the ground to Beavers running back Ryan Nall and three rushing touchdowns to quarterback Seth Collins. Collins and starting quarterback Marcus McMaryion, though, only managed 199 passing yards and an interception on 13 of 25 completions.

Oregon’s offense did its part. Vernon Adams Jr. shined once again, completing 28 of 38 pass attempts for 366 yards, three touchdowns and no picks. All three passing touchdowns landed in the hands of Bralon Addison, who caught eight balls for 106 yards and ran for 24 yards and another score. The Ducks collectively ran for 308 yards and four touchdowns, led by running back Royce Freeman, who finished with 167 yards and two touchdowns on 27 carries.

“We got the win,” Addison said. “That’s the most important thing, but there are obviously some things we could have done better.”

Addison, a redshirt junior, said he hadn’t thought about whether he’d return to Oregon for his senior season.

Freeman acknowledged the game didn’t go the way the players leaving the program had hoped.

“I know they were disappointed with the way they went out, but it’s football,” Freeman said. “Sometimes it be like that out there.”

Of course, the Ducks have been all but eliminated from College Football Playoff (CFP) contention since midway through the season, when they went 3-3 for the first time since 2004. Many fans thought the reign of Oregon dominance was over after its loss to Washington State; chatter of the Ducks failing to be bowl-eligible by the season’s end circulated as as the sky seemed to be falling in Eugene.

No one knew exactly how the Ducks would fare in the first year of post-Mariota, but few expected such an implosion.

Of course, they proved the naysayers wrong by finishing the season on a six-game win streak, which included wins over No. 7 Stanford and No. 22 USC.

“Being able to turn the whole season around after being 3-3 early on — it’s a good feeling,” senior defensive end DeForest Buckner said. “I’m proud of all the guys who made that happen.”

The Ducks’ eighth straight Civil War victory is unlikely to significantly boost their resumé in the eyes of the CFP selection committee; in fact, the final score being much closer than forecasted may actually weaken it in terms of perceived body of work.

Nevertheless, the Ducks still have an outside shot of making the Rose or Fiesta Bowl, although the likelier scenarios are a berth in the Alamo or Holiday Bowl.

Stanford (9-2, 8-1) will be Oregon’s best friend the next two weeks. If the No. 13 Cardinal manage to take out No. 4 Notre Dame on its home turf then beat the winner of UCLA-USC for the Pac-12 title, it would have a legitimate shot at a top-four ranking. Because Washington crushed Washington State in the Apple Cup, Oregon finished with the second-best record in the Pac-12, and thus is a strong candidate for a second consecutive Rose Bowl appearance.

What can’t be forgotten during the selection process is two of Oregon’s three losses could have been decided by a coin flip, and had quarterback Vernon Adams Jr. been healthy, those two outcomes could have been entirely different. Winning or losing a close game is not necessarily a good predictor of the next game’s outcome, which makes those two losses easy to overrate.

Adams played the entire game when Oregon lost to Michigan State 31-28 in East Lansing, but the Ducks would have won had his lob pass to wide receiver Byron Marshall not sailed a foot over his outstretched fingertips. Later we learned Adams had suffered a broken index finger on his throwing hand in the season-opener against Eastern Washington, the FCS team he quarterbacked the three years prior.

No one knows exactly how or when Adams broke his finger because Oregon’s policy about discussing injuries is that it won’t, in any capacity. For all we know, Adams could have smashed his finger in his car door after the game. But the play in the fourth quarter, in which Adams’s former teammate John Kreifels targeted him as he went into a slide, comes to mind first and foremost. Kreifels was subsequently ejected for the late hit, and he taunted the booing Autzen crowd as he headed into the locker room. Adams, meanwhile, stumbled off the field with both arms limp.

If that was indeed the play on which Adams’s index finger broke, that cheap shot will go down karmically as the true turning point of Oregon’s season. Adams and fans alike will forever wonder what could have been had he been at full health for the Michigan State showdown, the Utah debacle and the Washington State heartbreaker.

Offensive coordinator Scott Frost said himself that Adams had trouble throwing downfield prior to facing the Spartans; perhaps his pass to Marshall doesn’t sail a foot too far if he has a strong, intact index finger to guide the pigskin out of his hand and into a spiral. Perhaps he’d also have played complete games against Utah and Washington State, instead of handing the reins to back-ups Jeff Lockie and Taylor Alie.

But these are all hypotheticals and it does no good to dwell on what could have been.

“It’s just disappointing how it ended up,” head coach Mark Helfrich said. “We played spectacularly at times; we played okay at times. It’s one of those days.”

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Q&A: Mark Helfrich discusses preparation for Oregon State, recruiting of Vernon Adams Jr.

The Oregon Ducks (8-3, 6-2) are riding a five-game win streak heading into the Civil War matchup against the Oregon State (2-9, 0-8) on Friday. After practice on Tuesday, head coach Mark Helfrich discussed the team’s preparation for the Beavers on a short week.

Oregon State is going through a similar quarterback rotation and uncertainty that you went through earlier in the year. What is that like for you, as a coach, and for the players?

When you have one guy who’s playing really well and is a great practice player at quarterback, that affects everybody. That makes everyone have a little bit more of an edge — your special teams are better, your back-ups linebackers are better, all those things — that’s contagious. If you’re finding your way through things and you have to have a distinct package for each guy… that could inhibit the growth rate and efficiency of things. At the same time, that can happen instantly sometimes, as well, so it just depends on the situation.

This is a short week, maybe even shorter by the holiday. What adjustments do you have to make schedule-wise, as coaches, and how do you get the guys to regain their focus at the appropriate times?

We try to keep it as similar as we can to a normal week. We basically mashed Sunday and Monday into Sunday. Our biggest thing is, when we watch a film or have a team meeting, that week is done. Whether that’s USC or Stanford or whoever we just played, you turn the page toward correcting what you did wrong and building on what you did do well, and start game-planning. Playing a Friday game is not that drastic of an adjustment… Two days is significant. One day you can hybridize pretty easily.

Mike Riley was the face of Oregon State for a long time. What’s it like preparing for a Beavers team that doesn’t have him on the sideline and for a new coaching staff?

There’s a lot of familiarity with their staff, even with Coach (Gary) Anderson being new: the sort of Utah component with Coach (Kalani) Sitake and the defense and Coach (Dave) Baldwin and the offense. There’s enough similarity from a schematic standpoint that we know about. But with Gary Campbell and Steve Greatwood and some of these guys who have had 30-plus Civil Wars, there’s been a few other guys on that sideline. You’re so much more concerned with what you’re doing and not who’s on that sideline. Who’s between the white lines? That’s more of a concern.

You said in the past Vernon Adams Jr.’s game against Oregon State in 2013 was the first time you really took notice of him. When you were recruiting, what led you to believe you could do that kind of stuff week and in and week out, like he’s been doing these last four or five weeks?

I don’t know if we really did know that necessarily. It’s easy when things are going great and they keep working, but when things aren’t great how do they respond? Or maybe if things are going well, how do they continue to do that? If there was any insider knowledge, it was from a couple guys on our staff who have a relationship with his high school coach. At the time he was coming out, he was selling Vernon. Every high school coach does that, but all those kind of things — the competitive things, the intangible things — were very positive.

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