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Don’t Let Loss Be The Final Word on Oregon’s Amazing Season

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

 

Oregon got beat. Handily, convincingly, and thoroughly, and Urban Meyer didn’t need to run up the score to prove that point.

It was a beat-down. And despite the Ducks getting break after break – from Buckeye fumbles, to Cardale Jones’ Jameis Winston impression, to Byron Marshall just barely avoiding Kaelin Clay ignominy on the goal-line – Ohio State’s superiority was clear.

It’s disappointing. Not just because Oregon once again came up short on the biggest stage, but also because this Ducks team was the one we really wanted to win.

They carried themselves with class and calm and a barely believable togetherness. They had contributors from all over the depth chart, were well drilled by an unsung coaching staff, and led by pride of Coos Bay in Mark Helfrich and the pride of Honolulu in Marcus Mariota.

These were good guys. That’s why it was hard to see their journey end like bouncy house that has just had the air let out of it.

Oregon will have to live with the fact that they played pretty poorly on the biggest stage. They committed way too many penalties, yielded too many yards, and got blown back on the lines of scrimmage by the Buckeyes.

Ohio State walks away champions. They were almost flawless in a performance that started with their freshman quarterback making just his third start. It was a master-class in coaching from Meyer, who wins title number three.

After a bout with depression after winning his last national title at Florida, hopefully he gets to enjoy this one.

Were the Ducks soft? Nah. Re-watch this game and you’ll see Thomas Tyner, who could have spent the rest of the season drawing up his transfer papers after being unseated by Royce Freeman, fighting and clawing for every available yard on the field at AT&T Stadium. There weren’t many out there.

Ohio State was just better. Oregon knows it. And the Buckeyes knew it too when they pounded away with the clock ticking down to zeros trying to get Ezekiel Elliott his fourth touchdown.

It’s not Marcus Mariota’s fault. It’s not Helfrich’s because he punted in the fourth quarter. The game was up by then. This isn’t on Don Pellum. He did just about as well as his counter-part Kirby Smart at Alabama did against OSU.

This isn’t on Darren Carrington, or the NCAA’s prehistoric marijuana policies.

Want something to blame? Hell, take it out on the uniforms. They were just as disappointing as we thought they’d be.

Oregon gave it everything. They played for each other. When Marcus Mariota was hit late and injured in the fourth quarter and the entire offensive line jumped out of their skin, we saw that.

Of course, the final score wasn’t preordained. Oregon’s first drive was a thing of beauty. They got four turnovers, and had the game at 21-20 in the third quarter. They had their chances. They just didn’t have any killer instinct.

Losing to Auburn hurt because more than five minutes around a Tigers fan made you want to throw up and because of the last-second heartbreak of that loss.

This one hurts because the championship window was so wide open for as long as #8 was playing quarterback. This appeared to be the year. But it wasn’t to be.

The truth is probably that Oregon overachieved all year. Their system and their signal caller papered over a lot of cracks. The Ducks didn’t have elite talent at receiver, on either line, in the secondary, or on special teams, and injuries and suspensions made the Ducks’ talent deficiencies even starker.

Oregon’s 2010 team had NFL players everywhere on defense and offense. I don’t think that’s the case with this team. They were young and inexperienced.

Think the Ducks’ system failed? The system was responsible for getting Oregon to Arlington.

It’s been a hell of a run. A championship would have popped the cork on the champagne of this era. But there will be no forgetting the Ducks’ sustained and unrelenting excellence since 2009. And never were they any more excellent than from after the Arizona loss until the glorious Rose Bowl win over Florida State this year.

It’s interesting that Oregon fell apart in the fourth quarter. If there was any sign that Ohio State were going to be the deserved winner, it was that they didn’t fall for the Ducks’ tempo. Urban Meyer’s halftime emphasis on the second half was the first sign that this game was going to be different.

It was. Only a story as wacky as Cardale Jones – who might be the third-stringer again at Ohio State next year – and the three quarterbacks could have trumped Marcus Mariota’s destiny.

The future from here is murky.

Mariota has a decision to make, and if he wants to shock the world and return to school for a fifth year, that’s great. But he shouldn’t decide based on this one loss.

Questions will be asked of Helfrich, as if thirteen wins, a Pac-12 championship, a Rose Bowl championship, and a national championship appearance later, he isn’t already arguably the second most decorated coach in the history of the program he grew up rooting for.

It’s all about winning, right?

Wrong. Hard as it might be, look past the final score. Be proud of this team – they absolutely deserve it.

The Ducks lost on Monday night. They’re now 0-2 in the national championship, and the next opportunity may be decades down the road.

Will Oregon have regrets? Sure. Should they be sad? Absolutely not.  

GoLocalPDX partner Oregon Sports News: Since 2011, Oregon Sports News has provided entertaining, hard-hitting local sports news & commentary every weekday. To read more from Abe Asher, check out his page here. To read the rest of our columns, check out their page here.

 

Related Slideshow: Slideshow:UO Campus Reacts to NCAA National Championship

Here are some U of O students reactions to the Ducks' loss in the national championship game:

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Ryan Hsu

"It was a really good game overall. The Buckeyes honestly just beat us. Our defensive line was just tired the whole time; and they Buckeyes defense was really good.

"We missed a bunch of opportunities, like all of those third-down drops. The Bucks just beat us."

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Andrea Harvey

"I really, really thought we were going to win and we just didn't. It's depressing. I don't even know what to say about it. All I can do is eat, and hopefully forget."

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Howard Pickering

"Watching the game, I felt very anxious. It was definitely very nerve-racking. There were some moments I was on cloud nine, then there were some moments, I was like, 'What's going on?!'

"After the game was over I couldn't help but sit back and smile, look at the great season we had, and take away all of the positives. Looking back, I'm proud of what we did and I can't help bit look forward to next season."

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Max Borman

"When we were down 21-20, I honestly thought Marcus (Mariota) had it in him to lead the comback. We've been a second half team; we've had some good third quarters this season. It just wasn't enough.

"I felt like like we kept waiting for plays to happen, but it never happened. It's not a fault to Marcus. We were missing some key players."

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Ryan Donlan

"It's sad. We're obviously devastated. But at the same time we're very proud of our team. No matter what, we love our Ducks and we want to be there for them.

"Bottom line, we're proud of the boys who played for us. Especially the ones from the Portland-area, like Matt Pierson and Keanon Lowe."

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Patrick McFarland

"No question, it's kind of disappointing. I was really hoping for the win. But we're proud of them and their near comeback, and sticking it out to the end."

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Michael Khouri

"It was a tough loss, of course. We pulled through as much as could. We fought back as much as we could. We didn't give up. We played until the clock hit zero - that's what a real championship team does. 

"We have phenomenal players, a great coaching staff, fans and school. It's just that Ohio State came out stronger and played stronger than we did today. But it's okay, we always have the years ahead."

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Joel Jacobs

"It's tough. It was great to watch the game surrounded by friends, but I was really hoping for the potential comeback. We had a great team." 

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Gabe Ovets

"I'm very disappointed, but I love my Ducks. We had a great season. The Rose Bowl was huge - I'm happy we were able to win the Rose Bowl. We had a great season and there's always next year."

 
 

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