Mariota
leads No. 2 Oregon past California 59-17
By JOSH
DUBOW (AP Sports Writer) | The Associated Press – 5 hours ago
BERKELEY,
Calif. (AP) -- In a blink of an eye, Marcus Mariota and Oregon turned a tight
game into another blowout that could have the second-ranked Ducks in position
to move into the top spot in the country.
Mariota
threw the third of his school record-tying six touchdown passes on the first
play after an interception to break open what had been a close game and help
Oregon make its case for the top ranking in the country by beating California
59-17 on Saturday night.
| Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota (8) throws against California during the first half of an NCAA college football game in Berkeley, Calif., Saturday, Nov. 10, 2012. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez) |
While the
final score was lopsided, the game was tight until midway through the third
quarter when Boseko Lokombo intercepted a screen pass from Allan Bridgford.
Mariota threw a 35-yard touchdown pass to Josh Huff on the next play to give
the Ducks (10-0, 7-0 Pac-12) a 31-17 lead.
''That kind
of got things going again,'' Mariota said. ''It flipped the momentum. It's
really a momentum game. That helped us out.''
The Ducks
withstood injuries to its entire starting defensive line and brief absences by
Mariota and star running back Kenjon Barner to extend the longest active
winning streak in major college football to 13 games.
The win
over California (3-8, 2-6) could be enough to move Oregon up to No. 1 after
top-ranked Alabama lost earlier in the day 29-23 to No. 15 Texas A&M. Even
more importantly, the Crimson Tide loss cleared one potential rival for a spot
in the BCS title game, leaving Notre Dame and Kansas State as the only other
major undefeated teams eligible for a bowl. The Ducks are currently third in
the BCS rankings.
''That's
what's so good about this team,'' Huff said. ''We don't pay attention to the
rankings and what's around us. We just play Oregon football. We'll pick our
heads up in December and we'll see where we're at.''
After
struggling for more than a half against a Golden Bears team that was missing
quarterback Zach Maynard and star receiver Keenan Allen, the Ducks will have to
be more consistent the next few weeks if they want to remain unbeaten. They
finish the regular season against No. 16 Stanford and No. 13 Oregon State and
also could be in the Pac-12 title game.
Oregon
raced past the Bears with their passing game instead of the vaunted running
attack that had rushed for at least 400 yards in the previous three games. Cal
held Barner to 65 yards on 20 carries - 256 fewer yards than he had last week
against USC - and even knocked him out briefly with a hard hit that sent him to
the locker room in the first half.
''They did
a good job of filling the box,'' Mariota said. ''That gave us and the passing
game more opportunity to do what we can do. That's the kind of thing that
happens when you have such a good running back like Kenjon. Guys fill the box
to stop him.''
Mariota
also left the game after a hard fall late in the second quarter but returned
the following series. He then helped the Ducks break the game open in the
second half with four TD passes, including two to Huff.
Mariota
completed 27 of 34 passes for a career-high 377 yards and tied the school TD
record last achieved by Darron Thomas last year against Nevada. Huff finished
with five catches for 109 yards and three scores as the Ducks set a major
college football record by scoring at least 40 points for a 13th straight game.
| Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota, left, runs past a California defender during the first half of an NCAA college football game in Berkeley, Calif., Saturday, Nov. 10, 2012. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez) |
''You have
to pick your poison really with them,'' Cal coach Jeff Tedford said. ''If
you're going to get up in there and try to stop the run, then the play-action,
you're covering really fast guys running down the field.''
The biggest
moment came midway through the third quarter after the Bears cut Oregon's lead
to 24-17 and got a stop on defense to fire up a crowd that has had little to
cheer about this season.
Isi Sofele,
who rushed for 134 yards, had been gashing Oregon's defense in the second half
and started this drive with a 14-yard run. But Cal went away from him and
Bridgford threw the interception under heavy pressure from Arik Armstead that
turned the tides as Oregon scored the final 35 points.
''From then
on it just stockpiled,'' safety Brian Jackson said. ''It was very important to
that game.''
That ended
the Bears chances in the final home game of the season and perhaps final home
game for Tedford at Cal. There have been questions raised about Tedford's
status after missing a bowl for the second time in three years. The Bears have
lost four straight for the first time ever under Tedford.
Bridgford
finished 9 for 21 for 113 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions.
''We felt
like at halftime we were going to win the game,'' Bridgford said. ''The second
half they pulled away a little bit, but we had our chances. We beat ourselves.''
Mariota
left the game holding his left arm in the second quarter but returned after
Vincenzo D'Amato missed a 48-yard field goal late in the half for Cal. Mariota
drove the Ducks 69 yards, capped by a 10-yard pass to Huff that made it 24-10
at the half.
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