Author Archives | Maverick Pallack

Quick Hits: Two Oregon softball players to transfer, No. 12 Oregon football travels to Pullman

The No. 12 Oregon football team will travel north to Pullman for a top-25 matchup against the No. 25 Washington State Cougars. The Ducks will be playing without freshman standout left tackle Penei Sewell, who is sidelined approximately six weeks with an ankle injury.

Oregon soccer lost a hard fought, 2-1 battle to No. 9 UCLA. Jazmin Jackmon scored the lone goal for the depleted Oregon offense, which was without leading goal scorer Marissa Everett.

Oregon softball utility player Lauren Burke and pitcher Miranda Elish are leaving the program, after the two announced that they are transferring Thursday on Twitter.

After choosing to stay for his last year of eligibility, senior edge rusher Justin Hollins is in the midst of his best season as a Duck. Meanwhile, the offensive line is in familiar territory as it adjusts to life without the injured Penei Sewell.

No. 16 Oregon volleyball will host Cal on Friday before taking on No. 2 Stanford on Sunday.

Follow Maverick Pallack on Twitter @mavpallack

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No. 17 Oregon upsets No. 7 Washington in redemption-filled overtime thriller

Three weeks after a devastating loss, when it seemed every card was against them, the No. 17 Oregon Ducks made all the right moves to upset the No. 7 Washington Huskies 30-27 in overtime, walking off with a 6-yard rushing touchdown by redshirt freshman CJ Verdell.

There were three seconds left on the clock. Washington kicker Peyton Henry took aim for a potential 37-yard game-winning field goal. Oregon head coach Mario Cristobal chose to use both his timeouts to ice Henry. After the first kick was pushed right and the second was good, Henry was given his third and final attempt to end the game.

If Henry made it, the Huskies would win. If he missed, the game would head into overtime. The sideline and crowd did their best to get in Henry’s head, but all anyone in green and yellow could really do was hope and pray.

“It’s really not fun,” Cristobal said. “It’s something you’ve watched since you were a kid. … You always ask, ‘Why do you ice the kicker? Why do you actually do that?’ Well, if we have a timeout, I’m gonna keep doing that. … You don’t have any other plays.”

Henry lined up for the kick and it was wide right. The Ducks were given a lifeline. They would get a chance to not only defeat their rival Washington for the first time since 2015, but to get their first overtime victory since October of 2015.

In overtime, it took a few big plays to send Autzen into a frenzy.

After the defense held the Huskies to a field goal — thanks to a run that was stuffed by Austin Faoliu and an incompletion by Washington quarterback Jake Browning — the offense took the field looking to put at least three points on the board.

The Oregon Ducks celebrate the win over UW. Oregon Ducks Football takes on University of Washington at Autzen Stadium on Oct. 13, 2018. (Devin Roux/Emerald)

Unlike the Stanford overtime drive, Oregon did not panic when trailing. The Ducks ran two times up the middle but were forced into a third-and-11 situation.

Despite Dillon Mitchell being the most obvious target (119 receiving yards and a touchdown on the day), quarterback Justin Herbert still found his go-to guy for a clutch 17-yard gain.

“That’s a play we run 20 times in practice,” Herbert said. “So I knew he was gonna get open.”

Two plays later, on third and 6, Verdell took the handoff to win the game. This, of course, comes just three weeks after Verdell had a heartbreaking fumble at the end of the Stanford loss. Saturday, however, Verdell didn’t need any consoling thanks to his 111 yards and two touchdowns.

“I always say things happen for a reason,” Mitchell said. “We were just out there sitting with CJ before we came in. I was definitely just looking at him, remembering the Stanford game and how bad it was. He was talking about how, at the end, people were trying to pick him up. … I was happy for him. I definitely was.”

The Stanford game could have been catastrophic, but players did not allow that result to beat them twice. The team came back and won what could be the program’s best victory since the 2015 Rose Bowl.

“I’ve been here for a lot of games, and I think that’s probably one of the best experiences that I’ve ever been a part of,” Herbert said. “For us to fight back like that and not lose focus was unreal. It’s great to celebrate with these guys.”

Follow Maverick Pallack on Twitter @mavpallack

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Rapid Reaction: No. 17 Oregon and No. 7 Washington tied at 17 at the half

The No. 17 Oregon Ducks are tied with the No. 7 Washington Huskies 17-17 in a depth-testing first half. Oregon offensive linemen Penei Sewell and Dallas Warmack left with injuries (Jacob Capra and Brady Aiello replaced them). Washington also lost starting running back Myles Gaskin to injury. Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert got off to a slow start, but ended with two touchdowns and zero interceptions.

Key Plays

On the second play of the game, Oregon cornerback Deommodore Lenoir intercepted Jake Browning, setting up an Adam Stack field goal.

Following a Washington field goal, Oregon kick returner Tony Brooks-James fumble the kick off and the Huskies recovered.

Washington running back Salvon Ahmed gave the Huskies the lead on a 25-yard touchdown run.

Dillon Mitchell scored Oregon’s first touchdown against the Huskies since 2016 on a 12-yard pass.

Ahmed scored again to give Washington a 17-10 lead.

Jaylon Redd made an incredible toe-tapping touchdown catch in the end zone to tie the game at 17 with 14 seconds left in the half.

Oregon Passing

Justin Herbert — 7-16 passing, 90 yards and two touchdown

Oregon Rushing

CJ Verdell — 20 rushes for 83 yards

Travis Dye – One rush for one yard

Justin Herbert — One rush for three yards

Oregon Receiving

Dillon Mitchell — Four catches, 68 yards and one touchdown

Jaylon Redd — One catch, nine yards and one touchdown

Kano Dillon — One catch for eight yards

Washington Passing

Jake Browning — 6-14 passing, 91 yards and one interception

Washington Rushing

Salvon Ahmed — Eight rushes, 54 yards and two touchdown

Myles Gaskin — 11 rushes for 54 yards (left game with injury)

Sean McGrew — One rush for seven yards

Washington Receiving

Drew Sample — Two catches for 44 yards

Cade Otton — One catch for 20 yards

Aaron Fuller — One catch for 12 yards

Ty Jones — One catch for 12 yards

Follow Maverick Pallack on Twitter @mavpallack

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Oregon’s Drayton Carlberg uses big plays to stick in the lineup

In the fourth quarter of Oregon’s game against then-ranked No. 7 Stanford, the Cardinal were looking to score, trailing 24-21. The Ducks defense held strong, putting Stanford in a fourth-and-one situation. With the offense remaining on the field, there was no secret what the Cardinal would do. They were going to run the ball and the Ducks needed a stop to silence the Cardinal’s momentum.

On the play, Stanford running back Cameron Scarlett took the ball and was immediately tackled by Oregon defensive end Drayton Carlberg.

“Carlberg made a great play there,” defensive coordinator Jim Leavitt said. “That was pretty neat to see.”

Arriving at Oregon as the No. 2 overall high school player from Minnesota, the redshirt junior entered the year with just 15 career tackles. Beginning this season as a reserve, Carlberg has used hard work and clutch plays to make an impact on the field.

In 2018, Carlberg’s playing time has increased. He’s already tied his season-high in tackles with nine. He is tied with defensive end Jalen Jelks for second on the team with 2.5 sacks, which also ties him for fourth in tackles for loss with nose tackle Jordon Scott.

When starting defensive end Austin Faoliu left the Stanford game with an injury, Carlberg made the most of his opportunity by getting that fourth down stop.

“It’s just pride in yourself and working on your technique every week and trying to improve yourself when your opportunity comes,” Carlberg said. “Just make the best of it. So that’s what I’ve been doing. Just working every day.”

With Oregon leading 21-10 in the second quarter, Cal quarterback Brandon McIlwain had two straight runs for 11 yards to put the Golden Bears on the Oregon 28-yard line.

A big play was needed and Carlberg did it once again. He swung past Cal left guard Kamryn Bennett to sack McIlwain. The quarterback fumbled, and the ball was scooped up by linebacker La’Mar Winston Jr., who had a 20-yard head start in a 61-yard race to the end zone with Cal wide receiver Kanawai Noa.

“I hit the guy and I was on the ground and I look up and see La’Mar just take off,” Carlberg said. “I was like, ‘Thank the lord, man.’ They were moving the ball a little bit so I didn’t even know the ball came out. I was just trying to get to the quarterback. I got up and just threw my hands up when I saw La’Mar. I knew no one was going to catch him because it’s La’Mar Winston. He’s a freak athlete.”

The score was the first of Winston’s career, and he knew it wouldn’t have happened if it weren’t for Carlberg.

“I didn’t expect, in my wildest imagination, something like that,” Winston said after the 42-24 victory over Cal. “I’m gonna have to take Drayton to dinner all next week. … The big dogs, they always eat together. I’ma see where he wants to go. It’s on me.”

Follow Maverick Pallack on Twitter @mavpallack

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No. 19 Oregon’s offense utilizes familiar faces to beat No. 24 Cal

BERKELEY, Calif. — The No. 19 Oregon Ducks defeated the No. 24 California Golden Bears 42-24 thanks to well-played games by quarterback Justin Herbert, wide receiver Dillon Mitchell and two freshmen running backs.

The Ducks utilized big plays in order to beat the Golden Bears, with every touchdown but one being at least 30 yards (Cyrus Habibi-Likio’s one-yard rushing touchdown was setup by CJ Verdell’s 74-yard run to the one yard line).

The Ducks converted on eight of 13 third downs, with three being Herbert to Mitchell linkups.

Mitchell was Herbert’s go-to target for the second straight week. He caught seven passes for 105 yards and a touchdown. This comes just one week after he had 14 receptions for 239 yards against the Cardinal. Mitchell had six receptions in the first three games. Ever since Pac-12 play started, the Ducks have unleashed their top pass-catching weapon.

“He’s a guy who’s made great plays all year,” Herbert said. “He’s a guy who just shows up and plays. He’s great to have on your side.”

Besides Mitchell, the Ducks’ offense was full of one-hit wonders. Mitchell was the lone receiver to have more than one reception while also having more than 20 receiving yards. Jaylon Redd’s one catch for 33 yards was the second highest yard total on the team.

With the lack of open receivers, Oregon needed its running game to step up. The running game put up some high numbers thanks to two long runs by a couple of freshman.

Senior running back Tony Brooks-James was limited to kick-return duties after sustaining an injury against Stanford. This led to redshirt freshman Verdell getting his first career start and true-freshman Travis Dye getting his first game with over 10 carries.

Dye led the team in both carries and yards (20 for 115 yards and a touchdown) and Verdell added another 106 yards on nine carries. This marks the Ducks’ second game with two rushers eclipsing 100 yards, Dye’s first 100-yard game, and it’s Verdell’s third time reaching the century mark.

“We’re a young group, so we definitely take pride in it,” Verdell said. “Us being freshman, we just want to go out there and give it our best every day.”

Verdell’s first start came after a rough ending to his first Pac-12 game. Verdell responded to last week’s fumble in a strong way, breaking out a 74-yard run that appeared to cross the end zone, but ultimately was called down at the one.

“I appreciate the coaching staff for doing that, showing they got trust in me,” Verdell said. “They always tell me they got trust and belief in me.”

Not to be missed in the offensive showcase, Herbert once again had a great game. The junior threw for 225 yards and two touchdowns in the air and rushed for two first downs on third down.

“I think you’ve got to give a lot of credit to him and Marcus Arroyo,” head coach Mario Cristobal said. “I don’t think I’ve seen them apart for more than five minutes. … You’re gonna hear me say it every week: He just continues to elevate his game.”

Follow Maverick Pallack on Twitter @mavpallack

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Rapid Reactions: No. 19 Oregon defeats No. 24 Cal 42-24

No. 19 Oregon defeated No. 24 Cal 42-24. The Ducks had four interceptions in the game, all by safeties.

Key Plays

Cal opened the game with points, driving 72 yards in seven minutes, 29 seconds for a field goal. No. 24 Cal 3, Oregon 0.

Oregon answered on its opening drive, but with a touchdown. Quarterback Justin Herbert hit tight end Kano Dillon over the middle for a 30-yard touchdown pass. Oregon 7, Cal 3.

Oregon safety Ugochukwu Amadi intercepted Cal quarterback Chase Garbers on a deep throw.

Cal quarterback Brandon McIlwain scored a touchdown on a 28-yard run to extend Cal’s lead to 10-3.

Oregon freshman running back Travis Dye scored on a 45-yard touchdown run to give Oregon the 14-10 lead with 5:44 left in the half.

Herbert hit Dillon Mitchell for a 36-yard touchdown pass to give Oregon the 21-10 lead.

Oregon extended its lead on a scoop-and-score from its defense. Drayton Carlberg sacked McIlwain and jarred the ball loose. Linebacker La’Mar Winston Jr. picked it up and ran 61-yards for a touchdown.

CJ Verdell broke a 74-yard run to set the Ducks up for a one-yard touchdown run.

Freshman Jevon Holland gets two interceptions including the game-sealing pick.

Ugochukwu Amadi gets his second interception on the day with pick-six.

Oregon Passing

Justin Herbert — 16-of-22, 225 yards and two touchdowns.

Oregon Rushing

Travis Dye – 20 rushes, 115 yards and one touchdown.

CJ Verdell — Nine rushes for 106 yards.

Justin Herbert — Six rushes for 31 yards.

Cyrus Habibi-Likio — Six rushes, 12 yards and one touchdown.

Oregon Receiving

Dillon Mitchell — Seven receptions for 105 yards and one touchdown.

Kano Dillon — One reception for 30 yards and a touchdown.

Jaylon Redd — One reception for 33 yards.

California Passing

Brandon McIlwain — 10-for-19 for 125 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions.

Chase Garbers — Four for nine for 44 yards and two interceptions.

California Rushing

Chase Garbers — Six rushes for 24 yards.

Brandon McIlwain — 15 rushes for 123 yards and one touchdown.

Patrick Laird — 18 rushes for 92 yards and one touchdown.

California Receiving

Kanawai Noa — Four receptions for 46 yards.

Vic Wharton III — Six receptions for 68 yards.

Follow Maverick Pallack on Twitter @mavpallack

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Ducks travel to Cal looking to rebound

Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert’s first career road start did not end the way he wanted. Forced into overtime against Cal in 2016, Herbert was looking to win the game on a pass to wide receiver Jalen Brown, but was intercepted by Jordan Kunaszyk to end the game.

The true freshman brought excitement to an Oregon team in the midst of a four-game losing streak. Despite throwing for 258 yards and six touchdowns, Herbert was left with the bitter taste of that one interception.

“It was a tough game, but I thought we played pretty well,” Herbert said Tuesday reflecting on that start. “The offense kind of picked it up late in the game and unfortunately came up short, but it was a great learning experience.”

The 52-49 Cal loss in 2016 was tough. Last Saturday’s 38-31 overtime defeat against Stanford was devastating. Although faces of pain could be seen throughout the postgame press conferences, head coach Mario Cristobal, players and staff know they need to quickly move on in order to prepare for No. 24 Cal (3-0).

“I think we all acknowledge that getting close isn’t good enough,” Cristobal said. “It’s not what we train for.”

The game was possibly the most anticipated Ducks’ football game since the 2015 National Championship. Given the 4.3 million viewers, according to ESPN, it’s safe to say Oregon football skeptics watched the game, too.

Stanford wide reciever JJ Arcega-Whiteside (19) breaks the tackle. Oregon Ducks Football takes on Stanford at Autzen Stadium on Sept. 22, 2018. (Ben Green/Emerald)

The Ducks, specifically Herbert, were given a chance to earn national respect, and they did just that, leading the No. 7 Stanford Cardinal 24-7 in the second quarter. But the dream win was not to be. The Ducks never trailed in regulation, but still lost due to miscues and possible missed calls.

“I know for a fact that no one in Berkeley is going to feel sorry for us,” left guard Shane Lemieux said postgame. “We gotta wipe this game really fast. I am already thinking about Cal right now.”

Cristobal knows that Cal should not be taken lightly. The undefeated Golden Bears defeated BYU 21-18 Sept. 8. And the No. 20 Cougars went on to beat a top-10 Wisconsin 24-21 the following week.

“For our guys, it’s an exciting moment and a great challenge,” Cristobal said during his Monday press conference. “Our focus turned to that immediately after our film review of Saturday’s game, knowing we have a lot to prove to ourselves.”

The game will be Oregon’s first time away from Autzen in 2018. Road games have not been friendly to the Ducks in the Herbert-era. Oregon is just 1-4 in Pac-12 road games with Herbert starting.

“It’s a different mentality,” Cristobal said of road games. “It galvanizes and unifies a team more than anything else. Your trust and belief and accountability, whenever you go into a conference game on the road, has to be at the highest level.”

To be at their best, the Ducks need to rebound. Redshirt freshman running back CJ Verdell’s fumble and center Jake Hanson’s errant snaps received a lot of negative attention following last weekend’s loss. There is no time to dwell on mistakes. Both players deservedly expect to see the field as much as usual.

“They’ve done a great job all year,” Herbert said. “[A mistake] doesn’t define them. We’ll come back and have plenty of more opportunities, plenty of more games to make plays — I trust them and the rest of the team trusts them too.”

If there are any mistakes by the Oregon offense, Cal’s defense will look to take advantage. Head coach Justin Wilcox, an Oregon alum and Eugene native, has taken a defense that, three years prior to his arrival, was not in the top-100 FBS defenses and built them into the FBS’ No. 6 defense.

The Golden Bears’ defense has held their opponents to an average of 19.33 points a game, and is coming off a bye week, giving them an extra week to prepare for Oregon’s offense.

“They’ve done a nice job,” offensive coordinator Marcus Arroyo said. “They’ve got good coaches, they’ve got good players, they’ve got a good scheme… They’ll be improved and they’ll be ready for us and we’ve got to go out there and get it done.”

The good news defensively for the Ducks is Cal’s lack of 6-foot-3-plus NFL-caliber receivers. Stanford’s 6-foot-7 tight ends and 6-foot-3 receivers were almost impossible to cover since Oregon’s entire defensive backfield is under 6-foot-2. This week, however, will be different. With Cal’s top-3 passing targets listed under 6-foot-2 as well, Oregon’s Thomas Graham Jr. and Deommodore Lenoir should not be outmatched.

Oregon Ducks wide receiver Dillon Mitchell (13) carries the ball. Oregon Ducks Football takes on Stanford at Autzen Stadium on Sept. 22, 2018. (Devin Roux/Emerald)

Possibly the most exciting part of the Stanford loss was that Oregon held Heisman-hopeful Bryce Love to just 89 rushing yards. The Cardinal’s run-game was seriously outmatched by the Ducks, which resulted in a switch to the successful jump-ball-only offense. Cal, like the rest of the country, has no one as talented as Love. Running back Brandon Laird has 144 rushing yards and Cal’s two quarterbacks, Brandon McIlwain and Chase Garbers have over 125 rushing yards as well.

Wide receivers Jordan Duncan (127 receiving yards and two touchdowns) and Kanawai Noa (113 receiving yards and one touchdown) are the main weapons in the passing game that the Ducks’ defense will be watching.

“They have a lot of playmaking ability,” linebacker Troy Dye said. “It’s the Pac-12. Every team has a lot of playmaking ability. … We just got to go out there, play an Oregon brand of defensive football and hopefully come out on the right end.”

Garbers and McIlwain will be sharing time at quarterback. McIlwain is a runner with 16 passing attempts and 23 rushing attempts. Garbers will be the main quarterback. As the more traditional of the two, Garbers 25 rushing attempts and 66 pass attempts (45-66) for 449 yards and six touchdowns.

“Both are great quarterbacks,” Dye said. “They understand their scheme and they understand the defensive scheme. It’s gonna be a fun game to go out there and compete.”

This year the expectations of Oregon are once again very high, but the only way to meet those expectations is to travel to Cal and beat the Golden Bears.

“We expect their best,” Cristobal said. “We know they’re a good football team.”

Follow Maverick Pallack on Twitter @mavpallack

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Oregon senior running back Taj Griffin to transfer

Senior running back Taj Griffin announced via Twitter on Saturday after the loss to No. 7 Stanford that he will be transferring to explore other options.

Head coach Mario Cristobal confirmed during Monday’s press conference that Griffin was transferring for more playing time. With the new redshirt rule, Griffin can redshirt this season even though he played in the first three games this season.

“It’s playing time oriented,” Cristobal said. “Any time a student-athlete has a decision to make that’s in the best interest of himself, we support it 100 percent. … Certainly gonna wish him well and help him.”

This season, Griffin has 120 all purpose yards, including an 83-yard touchdown reception against Bowling Green.

Griffin contributed the last three seasons on offense for the Ducks with his most successful and healthiest campaign being his freshman season. He got his lone 100-yard rushing game that season in his first collegiate start against Colorado (110 yards).

During his junior season however, Griffin was moved to wide receiver due to Charles Nelson’s injury and the depth at the running backs position with upperclassmen Royce Freeman, Kani Benoit and Tony Brooks-James ahead of him on the depth chart.

Griffin was often productive when on the field, but missed some games throughout his career due to injuries.

“With my recent position change, I had to learn the running back position over spring,” Griffin said during Oregon’s media day prior to the season. “Now I kind of got it locked down. Just working hard and lifting over the summer. … I was doing all that to get ready for the season.”

Some teammates reached out via twitter to offer their support of Griffin as well.

The Powder Springs, Georgia, native was a four-star recruit coming out of high school and was clocked running a 4.31 40-yard-dash.

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No. 12 Oregon volleyball defeats No. 22 Washington State 3-2

Three days after a 3-1 victory over Oregon State, the No. 12 Oregon volleyball team (8-3) returned to action, defeating to the No. 22 Washington State Cougars (9-2) 3-2 (22-25, 25-22, 22-25, 25-23, 15-12) Sunday.

Despite hitting .362 and only making 10 errors as a team on Thursday, the Ducks hit just .181 and made 32 errors against the Cougars.

Although Oregon won, it wasn’t pretty. The Ducks hit under .230 the first four sets, forcing an uphill battle to win. In set five the Ducks turned it around and hit .286.

“We were successful because they passed great in the fifth set and they were able to execute,” head coach Matt Ulmer said.

The fifth set perfectly summarized the rest of the match with a come-from-behind effort by the Ducks. Oregon trailed 8-5, but went on to win 15-12.

With the Ducks trailing 2-1 heading into set four, senior outside hitter Lindsey Vander Weide turned it on, recording nine kills and an ace. Overall, Vander Weide had 22 kills, 28 digs, two blocks and eight errors.

“I thought Lindsey really stepped up,” Ulmer said. “She’s been doing that for us for four years. It’s not always scoring. Her serve I thought was great. … She shut down their middles.

August Raskie assisted 16 times in the win-or-go-home fourth set (eight of them to Vander Weide), but none of them were bigger than the last one. With the score 24-23, Raskie assisted Brooke Van Sickle, who clinched the set with a kill and tied the match at two.

“I just kind of felt the groove,” Vander Weide said. “August was setting me really well in that set. … Everything was coming together.”

One set later, Van Sickle ended the match with her eighth kill.

Halfway through the second set, the Oregon offense found some life. The Ducks hit .094 in the set, but were able to manufacture the 25 necessary points thanks to Ronika Stone. Stone had five kills, an ace, a block and an assist heading in the second. Heading into the break, Stone was lone Duck hitting over .300. Overall, Stone had 16 kills

Freshman libero Brooke Nuneviller’s 35 digs were the most by a Duck since 2015.

Nuneviller and Vander Weide’s defensive performances saved the team and Ulmer thinks it kept the team in the match.

“Individually, I thought Lindsey and Brooke played great,” Ulmer said. “We needed every one of those digs.”

That was not the only milestone reached. In the third set, Oregon outside hitter Lindsey Vander Weide reached the 1,000 career digs club. Her 14th dig made her the first Duck since Liz Brenner to have 1,000 career digs, kills and points.

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Oregon football jumps to 19 in rankings following loss to Stanford

The now No. 19 Oregon football (3-1) team jumped one spot in the Associated Press Top-25 Poll following the 38-31 overtime loss to No. 7 Stanford.

Oregon led by as many as 17 at one point, but the Cardinal were able to battle back and tie the game as regulation ended.

The Ducks did not trail the Cardinal until Colby Parkinson’s 23-yard touchdown catch in overtime.

Oregon will need to bounce back quickly. The Ducks will play their first road game of the season against No. 24 Cal (3-0).

Washington is the third team in the Pac-12 ranked, dropping one spot to 11. Other Pac-12 teams with votes were Colorado (83), Utah (9) and Arizona State (4).

Week 5 AP Poll:

  1. Alabama (4-0)
  2. Georgia (4-0)
  3. Clemson (4-0)
  4. Ohio State (4-0)
  5. LSU (4-0)
  6. Oklahoma (4-0)
  7. Stanford (4-0)
  8. Notre Dame (4-0)
  9. Penn State (4-0)
  10. Auburn (3-1)
  11. Washington (3-1)
  12. West Virginia (3-0)
  13. UCF (3-0)
  14. Michigan (3-1)
  15. Wisconsin (3-1)
  16. Miami (3-1)
  17. Kentucky (4-0)
  18. Texas (3-1)
  19. Oregon (3-1)
  20. BYU (3-1)
  21. Michigan State (2-1)
  22. Duke (4-0)
  23. Mississippi State (3-1)
  24. Cal (3-0)
  25. Texas Tech (3-1)

Others receiving votes: Colorado 83, Boise St. 58, Virginia Tech 55, South Florida 50, Oklahoma St. 44, Texas A&M 41, Iowa 31, South Carolina 31, Florida 29, NC State 28, Syracuse 25, TCU 24, North Texas 10, Cincinnati 10, Utah 9, Mississippi 7, Missouri 7, Buffalo 6, Maryland 6, San Diego St. 5, Arizona St. 4.

Follow Maverick Pallack on Twitter @mavpallack

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