webfoots2001 wrote:Each team held them to nearly 200 yards and two scores less than Oregon was able to in the championship game.
I wonder if the weather of those games had any factor in this or the number of healthy WRs? Probably not.
I bet if we played Penix in a rainstorm in Autzen we'd have won the game, seeing as how it took our own mistakes to lose on the road followed by playing in a stadium with all of their WRs back.
Ok, blame the osu game completely on the rain that was primarily only in the first half. You’re saying Polk is worth 10 points and 180 total yards to the uw offense since that’s the difference between the WSU and Oregon games the following week?
It’s ok to like Lanning and still admit he’s failed against nearly every upper level team Oregon has played in his short career so far.
webfoots2001 wrote:Each team held them to nearly 200 yards and two scores less than Oregon was able to in the championship game.
I wonder if the weather of those games had any factor in this or the number of healthy WRs? Probably not.
I bet if we played Penix in a rainstorm in Autzen we'd have won the game, seeing as how it took our own mistakes to lose on the road followed by playing in a stadium with all of their WRs back.
Ok, blame the osu game completely on the rain that was primarily only in the first half. You’re saying Polk is worth 10 points and 180 total yards to the uw offense since that’s the difference between the WSU and Oregon games the following week?
It’s ok to like Lanning and still admit he’s failed against nearly every upper level team Oregon has played in his short career so far.
If you really can't understand what 3 healthy WRs who are about to be drafted all in perhaps the Top 75 can do for a passing offense with a lethal QB, I'm just not sure what to tell you.
It's okay to say that Lanning hasn't won the big game yet, but you're trying to portend that those close losses against high level opponents are a sign that he will never win them and it's absurd when viewing the larger context.
webfoots2001 wrote:Each team held them to nearly 200 yards and two scores less than Oregon was able to in the championship game.
I wonder if the weather of those games had any factor in this or the number of healthy WRs? Probably not.
I bet if we played Penix in a rainstorm in Autzen we'd have won the game, seeing as how it took our own mistakes to lose on the road followed by playing in a stadium with all of their WRs back.
Ok, blame the osu game completely on the rain that was primarily only in the first half. You’re saying Polk is worth 10 points and 180 total yards to the uw offense since that’s the difference between the WSU and Oregon games the following week?
It’s ok to like Lanning and still admit he’s failed against nearly every upper level team Oregon has played in his short career so far.
If you really can't understand what 3 healthy WRs who are about to be drafted all in perhaps the Top 75 can do for a passing offense with a lethal QB, I'm just not sure what to tell you.
It's okay to say that Lanning hasn't won the big game yet, but you're trying to portend that those close losses against high level opponents are a sign that he will never win them and it's absurd when viewing the larger context.
I didn’t come anywhere close to saying he eventually won’t be able to win against top level teams, only that his limited track record has shown he hasn’t for whatever reasons. Hopefully that changes, but at this point I’m far more certain of Gabriel leading the offense to a championship level than I am of Lanning having a championship level defense next season.
Jabbar Muhammad is apparently following Duck players on twitter now. Seems like a nice fit if it happens, with apologies to those who feel that safety is the real problem.
So did Jabbar Muhammad enter the transfer portal or the draft? 247 says transfer portal but Sports Illustrated says draft. Would love to add him to our secondary.
Jabbar Muhammad was one of the absolute best corners I saw all year long; we'd be able to let him take away an entire side of the field.
But what I like most about this potential addition is the continued depth Oregon is accruing. Knowing it's going to take 15-16 games to win a National Championship, having depth is going to be a premium.