Monday, November 1, 2010

CONQUERED!

They're cryin' at the Coli.
"They have a good running back and a good quarterback. Other than that, they're really not that good."  -- USC D.End Jurrell Casey before game.

Jurrell Casey's Not-That-Good Players of the Week Awards: Photos from R-G
 
Talmadge Jackson III and his "not that good" denial of a
first down reception to USC, forcing them to punt.



Jeff Maehl's "not that good" double catch for a TD that was
the #1 ESPN hilite Saturday night. His two other TD's made
him the Pac 10 Offensive Player of the Week.

Lavasier Tuinei hauls in a not that good
33-yard TD.



Not that good Boseko Lokombo blitzes past entire USC
offense to pounce on fumble made possible by
 bonehead snap to Barkley while his head was turned.
 
Oregon's entire D.Front and Linebackers
not that good as they sacked Barkley twice
and hurried or flushed him a number of times.
















Also Not That Good:
Cliff Harris -- Interception and incredible punt return.
John Boyett -- Interception in endzone.
Offensive line -- Pushing around Trojans like they were 7-year old girls every 23 seconds for entire game.
Jackson Rice -- Excellent punting. 
Casey Matthews -- Because really, he's not that good.

 “They came out and responded and played a hell of game, They definitely responded to what I said. They’re a good team.” -- USC D.End Jurrell Casey after game.
Well alright then. We'll forget it this time. But watch your mouth or I'll come down there!


Oregon got the surprise nod from the BCS this week as the consensus #1 team in the nation.  Looking back it seems only fitting that it took an invasion on the Coliseum and a very public and decisive conquering of the Trojans to earn that #1 ranking.
Sometimes the story has more impact when it comes from those least likely to say it. Bill Plaschke of the LA Times legitimizes what everyone across the country is saying:

It's obvious to this observer that the Ducks deserve to play in the BCS national championship game.
October 30, 2010
Bill Plaschke

I can't duck it anymore.

Oregon is the best team in the country.

I'm going to stop being so daffy about it.

Oregon deserves a spot in the national championship game right now.

I tried — oh, Phil Knight knows I tried — but my mocking disbelief no longer works, not after what happened Saturday on a beak-dropping, metaphor-flying night at the Coliseum.

It was USC's title game, and Oregon kicked the BCS out of the Trojans.

It was the first time the top-ranked Ducks had truly been hit in the mouth, and they just grinned. It was the first time the Ducks had been enveloped by 80,000 hostile screams, and they just roared.

The Trojans led once, twice, three times, including by three points midway through the third quarter, but each time the Ducks came scampering or soaring or just slugging back, eventually taking a 53-32 victory.

USC wasn't ready for this. Nobody is ready for this.

"We feel like we can do anything," said Oregon running back LaMichael James.

Oregon is now 8-0 and, in four games, here's guessing it will be 12-0. Even with Arizona coming to Eugene and Oregon State waiting in Corvallis, the Ducks will not play a tougher game all season.

They were run around by USC's offense for three quarters, yet they never lost their breath. They were flustered into 85 yards' worth of penalties, yet they never lost their grip. They allowed the Trojans to average nearly 25 yards on punt and kickoff returns, yet the lousy field position only made them stronger.

I can no longer make jokes about a "gimmick" offense that gained 599 yards, including 239 yards rushing by James, who would have already been given the Heisman Trophy if he played in Tuscaloosa. I can no longer poke fun at a "soft" defense that knocked around quarterback Matt Barkley and his star receivers, causing bad passes and thumping drops and a rising temper in Coach Lane Kiffin.

"Our offense was terrible today," Kiffin said.

I will no longer even keep reminding Oregon of how its funky offensive system was overpowered against Ohio State in last season's Rose Bowl, because this is clearly not last year's team. I will no longer keep saying that Oregon will have no chance against an SEC team if they meet in this year's bowl, because for all of Auburn and Alabama's skill, they simply do not have the combination of athlete and playbook that Oregon possesses, not this time.

With previously unbeaten Michigan State and Missouri losing Saturday, Oregon, currently No. 2 in the Bowl Championship Series standings, will surely retain one of the top two spots if it wins its final four games, putting it in the BCS title game in Glendale, Ariz.

I can't imagine the crowd there being nastier than Saturday night's. I can't imagine the Ducks falling behind as many times as on Saturday night. I understand now that none of that will matter.

When USC took a 3-0 lead, Oregon scored barely two minutes later. When USC took a 17-15 lead, Oregon scored barely two minutes later.

It wasn't just when the Ducks fought back, but how they fought back, not only with head butts but, finally, with a headlock. When USC scored twice in the third quarter to take the lead, Oregon pushed back in a totally different style, slowly and painfully, driving down the field in a dozen plays, 69 yards, finishing when Jeff Maehl caught a ball across the middle, wide open, and ran untouched into the corner of the end zone, a 30-yard touchdown to give Oregon a 36-32 lead.

On a third-and-13 play.

It was the start of a 24-0 run to end the game, the BCS colliding with the NBA.

"We honestly thought coming into this game that we had a good chance of beating them, but that offense is better than a lot of people thought," USC defensive end Wes Horton said.

As in, like, me.

"Our team feels they get stronger as the game goes on," said Oregon Coach Chip Kelly.

How good was Oregon? It ran one play that faked out at least 20,000 people, the end zone crowd roaring at a backfield tackle of James while quarterback Darron Thomas ran 21 yards around end.

How good was Oregon? It even ran many folks out of the Coliseum's best seats. When the game ended, the Ducks ran along the sidelines and slapped hands with their fans who had moved down to the usually filled front row.

How good was Oregon? It turned the usually bold Kiffin timid. As Oregon's power became more apparent, there were times when it seemed as if the Trojans' coaching staff backed into a corner and covered up.

Example: In the last two minutes of the first half USC, trailing 22-17, faced fourth and one on its 37. But instead of going for it and keeping that wicked offense off the field, the Trojans punted.

Kiffin: "To tell you the truth, Matt,
I really don't know what I'm doing.
This chart is actually a Chinese take-out menu."
Two plays later, Thomas threw a 33-yard touchdown pass to Lavasier Tuinei to make it 29-17.

"It's about making plays," Kiffin said.

Not to quack on about it, but right now, Oregon does that better than anyone.
USC had to learn with the rest of the Old Boys in college football that what Chip Kelly is doing at Oregon is revolutionary, incredibly effective, and not going away. More teams are looking at Oregon's system. We could be seeing the end of the huddle, and the end of "Five yards and a cloud of dust" football.
   USC was the next of the big tests on Kelly's system. UCLA failed miserably. Now let's give USC the home field advantage, over two weeks to prepare. Let them practice extra win sprints, study miles of film, and bring in one of the best pro-trained minds in defense (Lane Kiffin's dad.) to analyze it and teach these talented four and five star Trojan kids how to stop it.
  With all these advantages, USC might have beaten almost anybody else. And for a brief moment they looked like they might beat Oregon.  But the end showed a three-TD lead on the board, and exhausted Trojan bodies scattered all over the sideline, working out cramps and sucking in air.  Test failed.
  Even the computers can see it now. Oregon is the new college football.

Next Week
A very sorry, sad, pathetic, hurt, suffering pack of Dawgs is coming to Oregon.  If they were my dogs back home on the farm, I'd be walking them out to the field with a rifle in one hand and a shovel in the other.

More later,
--KB

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Just a footnote to the "Not-that- good Jeff Maehl": JM had more receiving yards at USC than the Trojans' Ronald Johnson and Robert Woods combined.

Anonymous said...

Killer Bee,
Love the insight, and humor your blog is right on!! - Go Ducks.

ScottBePrepared said...

Killer Bee,
Thanks for scouring the headlines and filling in the spaces...Love the humor, wit and well that down home Milton Freewater insight!!-Rad

Freedom Fighter said...

Washington and USC made the same fatal mistake. Needing a new coach they both opted for the USC pedigree that destined them to play "old school" football for the next decade.
Time and history are passing them by. USC got it on film last week. UW will document it this Saturday.
You can't run a "pro" type offense all year and practice defending a spread like Oregon's just before the game.

Killer Bee said...

Maybe "Not-that-good" should become the Defense's unoffical name. Kinda like Saturday Night Live's "Not Ready for Primetime" Players.
It would make for great trash talk to opposing teams getting whacked, "Oh, we're not really that good. Stop making it look like we are."
Thanks for the comments. Keep 'em coming. Always great to hear from you, Scott.

Anonymous said...

Good point, Freedomfighter. They play "Entitlement" football - they just cruise on the Pro Leisure Tour and expect to win because it's their "right". Harbaugh has a little of that as well. These guys need to learn a work ethic to get it done.