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Oregon–Washington football rivalry

The Oregon–Washington football rivalry, also known by fans as the Border War or the Cascade Clash, is an American college football rivalry between the Oregon Ducks and Washington Huskies of the Pac-12 Conference. The respective campuses in Eugene and Seattle are 285 miles (460 km) apart, via Interstate 5. It is often regarded by fans as the fiercest and most competitive rivalry for both sides.

Oregon–Washington football rivalry
First meetingDecember 1, 1900
Oregon, 43–0
Latest meetingDecember 1, 2023
Washington 34–31
Next meetingNovember 30, 2024
Eugene, Oregon
StadiumsAutzen Stadium
Husky Stadium
Statistics
Meetings total116
All-time seriesWashington leads, 63–48–5 (.565)[1]
Largest victoryWashington, 66–0 (1974)
Longest win streakOregon, 12 (2004–2015)
Current win streakWashington, 3 (2022–present)
Locations of the University of Oregon (1) and University of Washington (2).

It is one of the most played rivalries in NCAA Division I FBS history, and has been played regularly since 1900.[2]

Series history edit

Early years edit

The series opened in 1900, with Oregon dominating Washington 43–0 in Eugene.[3]

The rivalry became heated from Oregon's perspective in 1948, when Oregon and California both went undefeated in the Pacific Coast Conference.[4] California was undefeated overall, and Oregon's only loss was at undefeated Michigan,[5][6] that year's national champions. The Webfoots (as the Ducks were then known) had seven victories in the PCC to Cal's six. The winner of the PCC, as is today with the Pac-12, played in the Rose Bowl. Oregon, led by quarterback Norm Van Brocklin and halfback John McKay,[7] opted for a playoff game, but California declined.[8] The tiebreaker format the PCC elected to use was that the championship team be elected by the schools. The PCC had ten member schools in 1948, six in the Northwest (with Idaho and Montana) and four in California, so it was assumed that Oregon would be the team playing in the Rose Bowl, as even a 5–5 tie vote would be in their favor.[9] Instead California was voted champion of the PCC,[8][10] because Washington had persuaded Montana to vote for California, something that has not been forgotten by Oregon fans.[6][11] (The PCC allowed a second bowl team that season and Oregon went to the Cotton Bowl,[12] but lost 21–13 to hometown SMU in Dallas. California lost to twice-beaten Northwestern by six points in the Rose Bowl.)[13]

1950s and 1960s edit

All-Pacific Coast Conference fullback Hugh McElhenny and the Huskies ran up the score on Oregon, 63-6 in 1951[14] in what was at the time the most lopsided score of the series.[15]

In 1962, Larry Hill of Oregon was tackled by Washington fans who had rushed onto the field at Husky Stadium while he was trying to catch the tie-breaking touchdown on the game's final play.[16]

1970s and 1980s edit

In 1973, the Ducks exceeded the 57 point loss margin that the Huskies had inflicted on them in 1951 with a 58-0 shutout in Eugene. The following season, the Huskies returned the favor, shutting out the Ducks 66-0 in Seattle.[14]

From 1974 through 1986, the Huskies won 12 of 13 games against the Ducks.[15]

1990s and later edit

In 1995, Washington head coach Jim Lambright unsuccessfully lobbied for the Huskies to be selected to play in the Cotton Bowl instead of the Ducks.[17] Seattle Post Intelligencer columnist Bud Withers wrote that Lambright's actions "invited at least another half-century worth of bile from Oregon fans."

After winning four of six over Lambright in the 1990s, the rivalry was given another boost in Oregon eyes when Colorado head coach Rick Neuheisel moved to Washington in 1999. At the 1996 Cotton Bowl between #12 Oregon and #7 Colorado, Neuheisel called for a fake punt while the Buffaloes led 32–6 with less than five minutes left.[18] Oregon coach Mike Bellotti was also accused of turning Neuheisel in for recruiting during the dead period. The Ducks were 1–2 against the Huskies under Neuheisel, and the rivalry grew even more when Neuheisel celebrated by taking photos and jumping up and down on the "O" in the middle of the field after a win at Autzen Stadium in 2002.[19][20] Two years earlier,[21] the Ducks' victory in 2000 in Eugene spoiled an otherwise undefeated season for the Huskies, who won the Rose Bowl and finished third in the nation.[22] Due to Pac-10 scheduling, the teams did not meet in 2001,[23] the first break in the rivalry since the hiatus in 1943 and 1944 due to World War II.[24]

From 2004 through 2015, the Ducks won 12 straight games against the Huskies, the longest streak of the series for either team.[25]

Through 2023, Washington leads 63–48–5 (.565). The Huskies went 18–4 from 1972 to 1993 (mostly under Don James, 15–3), but Oregon then went 17–4 from 1994 through 2015. The Ducks won 12 straight from 2004 to 2015, the longest run by either team in the series; the closest margin was six points (26–20) in 2015. It ended in 2016 when the fifth-ranked Huskies won 70–21 in Eugene, a game that set series scoring records for one team (70 points) and both teams (91).[26] Washington followed it up with a 38–3 home win in 2017. Oregon ended their 2-game losing streak in the series in 2018 with a 30–27 overtime win over Washington in Eugene, the first overtime game in the rivalry's history. In the 2019 rendition in Seattle, the Ducks came back from a 14-point deficit in the 2nd half to prevail 35–31 over the Huskies. It was the 2nd consecutive meeting in which both teams were ranked, and 7th all-time. The 2020 game was canceled due to increasing COVID-19 cases in the Washington football program.[27]

Notable events after 1990 edit

"The Pick" edit

Arguably the most iconic moment in the history of the rivalry for Ducks fans happened in 1994, when Oregon freshman cornerback Kenny Wheaton intercepted Washington quarterback Damon Huard and returned the ball 97 yards for a touchdown with under a minute to play to seal a 31–20 upset win that snapped a five-game losing streak in the series for the Ducks and set them on course for what would become their first conference championship (and trip to the Rose Bowl) since 1957. This play, coined "The Pick",[28] is widely credited as the turning point for the Oregon football program on their way to becoming nationally relevant in the decades that followed. It also swung momentum in the rivalry that was until then mostly dominated by the Huskies 54-28-5, with Oregon notching a 17–4 record against Washington from The Pick until the end of The Streak. Just before kickoff of every Ducks home game, a replay of "The Pick" is shown on the Autzen Stadium video board, always accompanied by a loud and gleeful reaction.

"The Streak" edit

Oregon beat Washington in 12 straight games from 2004–2015, the largest winning streak in the rivalry.[29]

This streak correlated with Oregon's most successful era of football and Washington's least. The Ducks went 120–36 (.769) over these 12 seasons, with two national championship game appearances, four conference titles, two Rose Bowl victories, and a Heisman Trophy winner. Meanwhile, the Huskies went 62–88 (.413) including a winless 0–12 in 2008.

"The Point" and 70 point victory edit

The Huskies finally snapped their losing streak in 2016 with a dominating 70–21 win over the Ducks in Eugene.[30] This was the first time an opponent had scored 70 points in Autzen Stadium's history, and the first time an Oregon team had allowed 70 points or more in a game since a 71-7 loss to the Texas Longhorns in 1941. The 2016 Huskies would go on to finish the regular season 12–1, win the Pac-12 Championship, and face Alabama in the CFP semifinal Peach Bowl. Their win vs. Oregon was seen as a major realignment in the power ranking of the Pac-12 North. In contrast to the Huskies, Oregon would go on to finish the season 4-8, resulting in head coach Mark Helfrich being fired at the end of the season.[30]

On the game's first play from scrimmage, Ducks quarterback Justin Herbert, making his first college start, was intercepted by Huskies cornerback Budda Baker. Four plays later, QB Jake Browning scored the first of the Huskies' ten touchdowns on a 1-yard run. As he crossed the goal line Browning pointed his left index finger at trailing linebacker Jimmie Swain, who was clad in a throwback blue and yellow Oregon Webfoots jersey.[31] This gesture became known as The Point after sideline photographs of the play went viral across social media during and after the game.[32]

2023 Games

First ever Top 10 matchup edit

The 2023 matchup between eighth ranked Oregon and seventh ranked Washington was the first ever where both teams were ranked within the top ten in the AP Poll.[33] In front of a sold out Husky Stadium,[34] Washington defeated Oregon 36—33 in what was immediately considered one of the greatest games in the history of the rivalry.[35] Despite having stopped two red—zone fourth down conversion attempts by Oregon, Washington trailed with two minutes remaining in the fourth quarter. After Oregon failed to convert another fourth down to end the game, Washington's quarterback Michael Penix Jr. connected with receiver Rome Odunze for a game winning touchdown after a drive spanning just two plays.[36] With four seconds on the clock and one timeout remaining, Oregon kicker Camden Lewis missed a 43 yard field goal attempt, giving the Huskies the win.[37]

Final Pac-12 Championship edit

The 2023 Pac-12 Football Championship Game, the last before the collapse of the traditional Pac-12 Conference as a result of the 2021–2024 NCAA conference realignment, was between 11–1 Oregon (ranked fifth) and 12–0 Washington (ranked third). Oregon's sole loss had been the earlier road defeat to Washington, and they had looked dominant in the second half of the season, entering the game as the betting favorite. As a result, adding even more suspense to the final Pac-12 championship between two rivals, it was widely predicted before the game that the winner would go to the College Football Playoffs.[38] Washington's offense caught the Ducks by surprise early in the game, jumping out to a 20–3 lead, before the Ducks, led by quarterback Bo Nix, responded with 21 straight points. After a series of turnovers, the momentum swung back in the Huskies' favor. Washington scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter, and won the game, 34–31, after a key first down by running back Dillon Johnson allowed them to run out the clock. Michael Penix Jr. received the Pac-12 Championship MVP. [39]

Game results edit

Oregon victoriesWashington victoriesTie games
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
1 December 1, 1900 Eugene, OR Oregon 43–0
2 November 14, 1903 Seattle, WA Washington 6–5
3 November 12, 1904 Eugene, OR Oregon 18–0
4 November 18, 1905 Eugene, OR Tie12–12
5 November 20, 1906 Eugene, OR Oregon 16–6
6 November 16, 1907 Seattle, WA Oregon 6–0
7 November 14, 1908 Eugene, OR Washington 15–0
8 November 25, 1909 Seattle, WA Washington 20–6
9 November 18, 1911 Portland, OR Washington 29–3
10 November 16, 1912 Seattle, WA Washington 30–14
11 November 15, 1913 Portland, OR Washington 10–7
12 November 14, 1914 Seattle, WA Washington 10–0
13 November 4, 1916 Eugene, OR Tie0–0
14 November 30, 1918 Eugene, OR Oregon 7–0
15 November 1, 1919 Seattle, WA Oregon 24–13
16 November 13, 1920 Eugene, OR Oregon 17–0
17 November 30, 1922 Seattle, WA Tie3–3
18 December 1, 1923 Seattle, WA Washington 26–7
19 November 1, 1924 Eugene, OR Oregon 7–3
20 November 26, 1925 Seattle, WA Washington 15–14
21 October 9, 1926 Portland, OR Washington 23–9
22 November 24, 1927 Seattle, WA Washington 7–0
23 October 20, 1928 Portland, OR Oregon 27–0
24 October 26, 1929 Seattle, WA Oregon 14–0
25 October 18, 1930 Portland, OR Oregon 7–0
26 October 10, 1931 Seattle, WA Oregon 13–0
27 October 8, 1932 Portland, OR Tie0–0
28 October 14, 1933 Seattle, WA Oregon 6–0
29 October 13, 1934 Portland, OR Washington 16–6
30 November 23, 1935 Seattle, WA Oregon 7–6
31 October 31, 1936 Portland, OR #4 Washington 7–0
32 November 20, 1937 Seattle, WA Washington 14–0
33 November 19, 1938 Portland, OR Oregon 3–0
34 November 23, 1939 Seattle, WA Washington 20–13
35 October 12, 1940 Portland, OR Washington 10–0
36 November 22, 1941 Seattle, WA Oregon 19–16
37 October 10, 1942 Portland, OR Washington 15–7
38 September 29, 1945 Seattle, WA Washington 20–6
39 November 3, 1945 Portland, OR #18 Washington 7–0
40 November 16, 1946 Seattle, WA Washington 16–0
41 October 18, 1947 Portland, OR Oregon 6–0
42 November 6, 1948 Seattle, WA #16 Oregon 13–7
43 November 5, 1949 Portland, OR Washington 28–7
44 November 11, 1950 Seattle, WA #17 Washington 27–13
45 October 13, 1951 Portland, OR Washington 63–6
46 October 18, 1952 Seattle, WA Washington 49–0
47 October 17, 1953 Portland, OR Washington 14–6
48 October 30, 1954 Seattle, WA Oregon 26–7
49 October 1, 1955 Portland, OR #19 Washington 19–7
50 October 13, 1956 Seattle, WA Washington 20–7
51 November 9, 1957 Portland, OR Washington 13–6
52 November 1, 1958 Seattle, WA Washington 6–0
53 October 24, 1959 Portland, OR Washington 13–12
54 October 29, 1960 Seattle, WA #9 Washington 7–6
55 October 28, 1961 Portland, OR Oregon 7–6
56 October 27, 1962 Seattle, WA Tie21–21
57 October 26, 1963 Portland, OR Washington 26–19
58 October 24, 1964 Seattle, WA Oregon 7–0
59 October 23, 1965 Portland, OR Washington 24–0
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
60 October 22, 1966 Seattle, WA Washington 10–7
61 October 14, 1967 Eugene, OR Washington 26–0
62 October 12, 1968 Seattle, WA Oregon 3–0
63 October 25, 1969 Eugene, OR Oregon 22–7
64 October 31, 1970 Seattle, WA Washington 25–23
65 October 16, 1971 Eugene, OR Oregon 23–21
66 October 7, 1972 Seattle, WA #11 Washington 23–17
67 October 27, 1973 Eugene, OR Oregon 58–0
68 October 26, 1974 Seattle, WA Washington 66–0
69 October 4, 1975 Eugene, OR Washington 27–17
70 October 23, 1976 Seattle, WA Washington 14–7
71 October 8, 1977 Eugene, OR Washington 54–0
72 October 21, 1978 Seattle, WA Washington 20–14
73 September 22, 1979 Eugene, OR #12 Washington 21–17
74 September 27, 1980 Seattle, WA Oregon 34–10
75 September 26, 1981 Eugene, OR #16 Washington 17–3
76 September 25, 1982 Seattle, WA #1 Washington 37–21
77 October 22, 1983 Eugene, OR #14 Washington 32–3
78 October 20, 1984 Seattle, WA #1 Washington 17–3
79 October 5, 1985 Eugene, OR Washington 19–13
80 October 25, 1986 Seattle, WA #8 Washington 38–3
81 October 3, 1987 Eugene, OR Oregon 29–22
82 October 22, 1988 Eugene, OR Oregon 17–14
83 October 14, 1989 Seattle, WA Washington 20–14
84 October 13, 1990 Seattle, WA #17 Washington 38–17
85 October 26, 1991 Seattle, WA #3 Washington 29–7
86 October 17, 1992 Eugene, OR #1 Washington 24–3
87 October 23, 1993 Seattle, WA #22 Washington 21–6
88 October 22, 1994 Eugene, OR Oregon 31–20
89 November 4, 1995 Seattle, WA #19 Oregon 24–22
90 October 26, 1996 Eugene, OR #23 Washington 33–14
91 November 8, 1997 Seattle, WA Oregon 31–28
92 November 7, 1998 Eugene, OR #21 Oregon 27–22
93 October 2, 1999 Seattle, WA Washington 34–20
94 September 30, 2000 Eugene, OR #20 Oregon 23–16
95 November 16, 2002 Eugene, OR Washington 42–14
96 November 1, 2003 Seattle, WA Washington 42–10
97 October 30, 2004 Eugene, OR Oregon 31–6
98 October 15, 2005 Eugene, OR #20 Oregon 45–21
99 November 4, 2006 Eugene, OR #24 Oregon 34–14
100 October 20, 2007 Seattle, WA #7 Oregon 55–34
101 August 30, 2008 Eugene, OR #21 Oregon 44–10
102 October 24, 2009 Seattle, WA #12 Oregon 43–19
103 November 6, 2010 Eugene, OR #1 Oregon 53–16
104 November 5, 2011 Seattle, WA #6 Oregon 34–17
105 October 6, 2012 Eugene, OR #2 Oregon 52–21
106 October 12, 2013 Seattle, WA #2 Oregon 45–24
107 October 18, 2014 Eugene, OR #9 Oregon 45–20
108 October 17, 2015 Seattle, WA Oregon 26–20
109 October 8, 2016 Eugene, OR #5 Washington 70–21
110 November 4, 2017 Seattle, WA #12 Washington 38–3
111 October 13, 2018 Eugene, OR #17 Oregon 30–27OT
112 October 19, 2019 Seattle, WA #12 Oregon 35–31
113 November 6, 2021 Seattle, WA #4 Oregon 26–16
114 November 12, 2022 Eugene, OR #25 Washington 37–34
115 October 14, 2023 Seattle, WA #7 Washington 36–33
116 December 1, 2023 Paradise, NV #3 Washington 34–31
117 November 30, 2024 Eugene, OR
Series: Washington leads 63–48–5[1]
  • Oregon's home games against Washington were played in Portland from 1911–1913 and 1926–1965.

Results by Location edit

As of December 1, 2023

State City Games Washington victories Oregon victories Ties Years played
Washington Seattle 56 33 21 2 1903-present
Oregon Eugene 37 13 22 2 1900-1924, 1967-present
Portland 22 16 5 1 1911-1913, 1926-1965
Nevada Paradise 1 1 0 0 2023

Coaching records edit

Since 1945

Oregon edit

Head Coach Team Games Seasons Wins Losses Ties Pct.
Tex Oliver Oregon 3 1945–1946 0 3 0 .000
Jim Aiken Oregon 4 1947–1950 2 2 0 .500
Len Casanova        Oregon 16 1951–1966 3 12 1 .219
Jerry Frei Oregon 5 1967–1971 3 2 0 .600
Dick Enright     Oregon     2 1972–1973 1 1 0 .500
Don Read Oregon 3 1974–1976 1 2 0 .333
Rich Brooks Oregon 18 1977–1994 4 14 0 .222
Mike Bellotti Oregon 13 1995–2008 9 4 0 .692
Chip Kelly Oregon 4 2009–2012 4 0   1.000 
Mark Helfrich Oregon 4 2013–2016 3 1   .750
Willie Taggart Oregon 1 2017 0 1   .000
Mario Cristobal Oregon 3 2018–2021 3 0   1.000 
Dan Lanning Oregon 3 2022– 0 3   .000
Source:[40]

Washington edit

Head Coach Team Games Seasons Wins Losses Ties Pct.
Ralph Welch Washington 4 1945–1947 3 1 0 .750
Howard Odell Washington 5 1948–1952 4 1 0 .800
John Cherberg Washington 3 1953–1955 2 1 0 .667
Darrell Royal  Washington  1 1956 1 0 0 1.000 
Jim Owens Washington 18 1957–1974 11 6 1 .639
Don James Washington 18 1975–1992 15 3 0 .833
Jim Lambright Washington 6 1993–1998 2 4 0 .333
Rick Neuheisel Washington 3 1999–2002 2 1   .667
Keith Gilbertson Washington 2 2003–2004 1 1   .500
Tyrone Willingham Washington 4 2005–2008 0 4   .000
Steve Sarkisian Washington 5 2009–2013 0 5   .000
Chris Petersen Washington 6 2014–2019 2 4   .333
Jimmy Lake Washington 1 2020–2021 0 1   .000
Kalen DeBoer Washington 3 2022–2023 3 0   1.000
Jedd Fisch Washington 0 2024–present 0 0   – 
Source:[41]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Winsipedia - Oregon Ducks vs. Washington Huskies football series history". Winsipedia.
  2. ^ Raley, Dan (October 29, 2004). "Nothing neighborly about Huskies vs. Ducks". Seattle Post Intelligencer. Retrieved March 23, 2009.
  3. ^ Peterson, Anne M. (November 13, 2002), "Oregon-Washington Rivalry Renewed", Edwardsville Intelligencer
  4. ^ "Final Coast Conference standings". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. November 21, 1948. p. 1.
  5. ^ Strite, Dick (October 3, 1948). "Oregon suffers 14-0 loss, but shows real class". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. p. 1.
  6. ^ a b Bellamy, Ron (September 19, 2003). "Ducks have been shut out of success against the Wolverines". Euegene Register-Guard. Oregon. p. B1.
  7. ^ Clark, Bob (September 3, 1998). "Top Ducks". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. p. 3D.
  8. ^ a b "California Bears get Rose Bowl Bid". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. United Press. November 22, 1948. p. 1.
  9. ^ "Unofficially, its Northwestern in the Rose Bowl; Oregon would like bid". Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. Associated Press. November 22, 1948. p. 11.
  10. ^ "Northwestern, California get nominations to Rose Bowl". Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. November 23, 1948. p. 4, part 2.
  11. ^ Smith, Shelley (April 20, 2001). "Oregon-Washington: "We know they hate us"". ESPN Classic. Retrieved October 20, 2009.
  12. ^ "Oregon to play in Cotton Bowl". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. November 27, 1948. p. 1.
  13. ^ Strite, Dick (January 2, 1949). "Oregon, Cal both drop bowl games". Eugene Register-Guard. Oregon. p. 1.
  14. ^ a b Stone, Larry (October 12, 2018), "Boiling Point? Ducks sure to be looking for revenge on Jake Browning's famous finger wag at Autzen", The Seattle Times
  15. ^ a b "Game Log for Washington Huskies versus Oregon Ducks". Winspedia.com. Hazzah LLC. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
  16. ^ Strite, Dick (October 28, 1962). "Rallying Ducks battle Huskies to tie". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). p. 1B.
  17. ^ Conrad, John (November 14, 1995). "Ducks, Huskies fightin' again". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). p. 1D.
  18. ^ Bellamy, Ron (January 2, 1996). "Fake punt: Ducks think it adds insult to their injury". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). p. 5C.
  19. ^ Hansen, Chris (November 17, 2002). "Huskies party at Ducks' expense". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). p. 4D.
  20. ^ Condotta, Bob (October 28, 2003). "Ducks still have dander up". The Seattle Times. Retrieved March 24, 2022. After UW's win last season [in 2002], the Huskies lingered on the field for 20 to 30 minutes, stomping on the Oregon "O" at midfield, posing for pictures in the end zone and generally celebrating in a manner usually reserved for something other than a regular-season win.
  21. ^ "Ducks flying high". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). October 1, 2000. p. 1A.
  22. ^ Nadel, John (January 2, 2001). "Huskies follow leader to bowl victory". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. p. 1E.
  23. ^ Clark, Bob (November 13, 2002). "Time turns down rivalry's heat". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). p. 1C.
  24. ^ Clark, Bob (November 16, 2002). "Northwest rivalry resumes, no love lost". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). p. 1D.
  25. ^ "Washington Huskies versus Oregon Ducks". Winspedia.com. Hazzah LLC. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
  26. ^ Greif, Andrew (October 8, 2016). "Oregon Ducks routed by Washington Huskies: Game at a glance". The Oregonian/OregonLive.
  27. ^ Crepea, James (December 10, 2020). "Washington Huskies vs. Oregon Ducks canceled, meaning the rivals won't meet for the first time since 2001". The Oregonian. Retrieved December 11, 2020.
  28. ^ Kenny Wheaton - The Pick on YouTube
  29. ^ Odom, Joel (October 6, 2016). "A dozen years of dominance: Oregon Ducks' 12-game win streak against Washington Huskies". The Oregonian / OregonLive. from the original on November 8, 2020. Retrieved April 6, 2022. For 12 years running, the Oregon Ducks have beaten the stuffing out of the Washington Huskies [...] The Ducks have averaged 42.3 points and hung these totals on Washington: 31, 45, 34, 55, 44, 43, 53, 34, 52, 45, 45 and 26.
  30. ^ a b Jude, Adam (November 3, 2017). "'The Point' and 70 more: How the Huskies ended their 12-year losing streak to Oregon, an oral history". The Seattle Times. from the original on November 17, 2020. Retrieved May 9, 2022. The Huskies' 70-21 victory over Oregon on Oct. 8, 2016 was UW's first in Eugene in 14 years, and it signaled a stunningly swift changing of the guard in Northwest supremacy. [...] The Ducks love to celebrate "The Pick" off UW's Damon Huard from 1994. Twenty-two years later, "The Point" became a seminal moment in the rivalry for UW.
  31. ^ Alger, Tyson (October 3, 2016). "Oregon Ducks bring back 'Webfoots' uniforms for game vs. Washington Huskies". The Oregonian. Retrieved December 7, 2021. The tops are navy blue with yellow lettering with "Webfoots" across the chest. The bottoms are black.
  32. ^ Caple, Christian (October 11, 2018). "'We riding with Jake after that one': An oral history of 'The Point'". The Athletic. from the original on January 30, 2021. Retrieved May 9, 2022. The gesture lasted less than half a second, but birthed an image that will live for as long as Washington and Oregon play football.
  33. ^ Forde, Pat (October 12, 2023). "The Oregon-Washington Rivalry May Never Be This Great Again". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved October 16, 2023.
  34. ^ Raley, Dan (October 15, 2023). "Amid the Sellout, Comeback and Huge Win, DeBoer Found Time for Former Players". Sports Illustrated Washington Huskies News, Analysis and More. Retrieved October 16, 2023.
  35. ^ Stephensbailey, Iyo (October 14, 2023). "Instant Classic: Washington Surges Past Oregon 36-33". UW Dawg Pound. Retrieved October 16, 2023.
  36. ^ "Did Oregon get caught red-handed trying to fake injury in Washington loss?". FanSided. October 15, 2023. Retrieved October 16, 2023.
  37. ^ Athletic, The (October 15, 2023). "Oregon-Washington live updates". The Athletic. Retrieved October 16, 2023.
  38. ^ "College Football Playoff scenarios: With 8 teams in contention, how each could reach top 4". USA TODAY. Retrieved December 2, 2023.
  39. ^ "Championship weekend live: Huskies take down Ducks to set up playoff run". ESPN.com. December 2, 2023. Retrieved December 2, 2023.
  40. ^ "Results against 2018 opponents" (PDF). University of Oregon Ducks Football Record Book. 2018. p. 72.
  41. ^ "All-time series results" (PDF). University of Washington Husky Football Record Book. 2018. p. 210.

oregon, washington, football, rivalry, also, known, fans, border, cascade, clash, american, college, football, rivalry, between, oregon, ducks, washington, huskies, conference, respective, campuses, eugene, seattle, miles, apart, interstate, often, regarded, f. The Oregon Washington football rivalry also known by fans as the Border War or the Cascade Clash is an American college football rivalry between the Oregon Ducks and Washington Huskies of the Pac 12 Conference The respective campuses in Eugene and Seattle are 285 miles 460 km apart via Interstate 5 It is often regarded by fans as the fiercest and most competitive rivalry for both sides Oregon Washington football rivalryOregon DucksWashington HuskiesFirst meetingDecember 1 1900Oregon 43 0Latest meetingDecember 1 2023 Washington 34 31Next meetingNovember 30 2024 Eugene OregonStadiumsAutzen StadiumHusky StadiumStatisticsMeetings total116All time seriesWashington leads 63 48 5 565 1 Largest victoryWashington 66 0 1974 Longest win streakOregon 12 2004 2015 Current win streakWashington 3 2022 present 200km125miles Washington Oregon Locations of the University of Oregon 1 and University of Washington 2 It is one of the most played rivalries in NCAA Division I FBS history and has been played regularly since 1900 2 Contents 1 Series history 1 1 Early years 1 2 1950s and 1960s 1 3 1970s and 1980s 1 4 1990s and later 1 4 1 Notable events after 1990 1 4 1 1 The Pick 1 4 1 2 The Streak 1 4 1 3 The Point and 70 point victory 1 4 1 4 First ever Top 10 matchup 1 4 1 5 Final Pac 12 Championship 2 Game results 2 1 Results by Location 3 Coaching records 3 1 Oregon 3 2 Washington 4 See also 5 ReferencesSeries history editEarly years edit The series opened in 1900 with Oregon dominating Washington 43 0 in Eugene 3 The rivalry became heated from Oregon s perspective in 1948 when Oregon and California both went undefeated in the Pacific Coast Conference 4 California was undefeated overall and Oregon s only loss was at undefeated Michigan 5 6 that year s national champions The Webfoots as the Ducks were then known had seven victories in the PCC to Cal s six The winner of the PCC as is today with the Pac 12 played in the Rose Bowl Oregon led by quarterback Norm Van Brocklin and halfback John McKay 7 opted for a playoff game but California declined 8 The tiebreaker format the PCC elected to use was that the championship team be elected by the schools The PCC had ten member schools in 1948 six in the Northwest with Idaho and Montana and four in California so it was assumed that Oregon would be the team playing in the Rose Bowl as even a 5 5 tie vote would be in their favor 9 Instead California was voted champion of the PCC 8 10 because Washington had persuaded Montana to vote for California something that has not been forgotten by Oregon fans 6 11 The PCC allowed a second bowl team that season and Oregon went to the Cotton Bowl 12 but lost 21 13 to hometown SMU in Dallas California lost to twice beaten Northwestern by six points in the Rose Bowl 13 1950s and 1960s edit All Pacific Coast Conference fullback Hugh McElhenny and the Huskies ran up the score on Oregon 63 6 in 1951 14 in what was at the time the most lopsided score of the series 15 In 1962 Larry Hill of Oregon was tackled by Washington fans who had rushed onto the field at Husky Stadium while he was trying to catch the tie breaking touchdown on the game s final play 16 1970s and 1980s edit In 1973 the Ducks exceeded the 57 point loss margin that the Huskies had inflicted on them in 1951 with a 58 0 shutout in Eugene The following season the Huskies returned the favor shutting out the Ducks 66 0 in Seattle 14 From 1974 through 1986 the Huskies won 12 of 13 games against the Ducks 15 1990s and later edit In 1995 Washington head coach Jim Lambright unsuccessfully lobbied for the Huskies to be selected to play in the Cotton Bowl instead of the Ducks 17 Seattle Post Intelligencer columnist Bud Withers wrote that Lambright s actions invited at least another half century worth of bile from Oregon fans After winning four of six over Lambright in the 1990s the rivalry was given another boost in Oregon eyes when Colorado head coach Rick Neuheisel moved to Washington in 1999 At the 1996 Cotton Bowl between 12 Oregon and 7 Colorado Neuheisel called for a fake punt while the Buffaloes led 32 6 with less than five minutes left 18 Oregon coach Mike Bellotti was also accused of turning Neuheisel in for recruiting during the dead period The Ducks were 1 2 against the Huskies under Neuheisel and the rivalry grew even more when Neuheisel celebrated by taking photos and jumping up and down on the O in the middle of the field after a win at Autzen Stadium in 2002 19 20 Two years earlier 21 the Ducks victory in 2000 in Eugene spoiled an otherwise undefeated season for the Huskies who won the Rose Bowl and finished third in the nation 22 Due to Pac 10 scheduling the teams did not meet in 2001 23 the first break in the rivalry since the hiatus in 1943 and 1944 due to World War II 24 From 2004 through 2015 the Ducks won 12 straight games against the Huskies the longest streak of the series for either team 25 Through 2023 Washington leads 63 48 5 565 The Huskies went 18 4 from 1972 to 1993 mostly under Don James 15 3 but Oregon then went 17 4 from 1994 through 2015 The Ducks won 12 straight from 2004 to 2015 the longest run by either team in the series the closest margin was six points 26 20 in 2015 It ended in 2016 when the fifth ranked Huskies won 70 21 in Eugene a game that set series scoring records for one team 70 points and both teams 91 26 Washington followed it up with a 38 3 home win in 2017 Oregon ended their 2 game losing streak in the series in 2018 with a 30 27 overtime win over Washington in Eugene the first overtime game in the rivalry s history In the 2019 rendition in Seattle the Ducks came back from a 14 point deficit in the 2nd half to prevail 35 31 over the Huskies It was the 2nd consecutive meeting in which both teams were ranked and 7th all time The 2020 game was canceled due to increasing COVID 19 cases in the Washington football program 27 Notable events after 1990 edit The Pick edit Arguably the most iconic moment in the history of the rivalry for Ducks fans happened in 1994 when Oregon freshman cornerback Kenny Wheaton intercepted Washington quarterback Damon Huard and returned the ball 97 yards for a touchdown with under a minute to play to seal a 31 20 upset win that snapped a five game losing streak in the series for the Ducks and set them on course for what would become their first conference championship and trip to the Rose Bowl since 1957 This play coined The Pick 28 is widely credited as the turning point for the Oregon football program on their way to becoming nationally relevant in the decades that followed It also swung momentum in the rivalry that was until then mostly dominated by the Huskies 54 28 5 with Oregon notching a 17 4 record against Washington from The Pick until the end of The Streak Just before kickoff of every Ducks home game a replay of The Pick is shown on the Autzen Stadium video board always accompanied by a loud and gleeful reaction The Streak edit Oregon beat Washington in 12 straight games from 2004 2015 the largest winning streak in the rivalry 29 This streak correlated with Oregon s most successful era of football and Washington s least The Ducks went 120 36 769 over these 12 seasons with two national championship game appearances four conference titles two Rose Bowl victories and a Heisman Trophy winner Meanwhile the Huskies went 62 88 413 including a winless 0 12 in 2008 The Point and 70 point victory edit The Huskies finally snapped their losing streak in 2016 with a dominating 70 21 win over the Ducks in Eugene 30 This was the first time an opponent had scored 70 points in Autzen Stadium s history and the first time an Oregon team had allowed 70 points or more in a game since a 71 7 loss to the Texas Longhorns in 1941 The 2016 Huskies would go on to finish the regular season 12 1 win the Pac 12 Championship and face Alabama in the CFP semifinal Peach Bowl Their win vs Oregon was seen as a major realignment in the power ranking of the Pac 12 North In contrast to the Huskies Oregon would go on to finish the season 4 8 resulting in head coach Mark Helfrich being fired at the end of the season 30 On the game s first play from scrimmage Ducks quarterback Justin Herbert making his first college start was intercepted by Huskies cornerback Budda Baker Four plays later QB Jake Browning scored the first of the Huskies ten touchdowns on a 1 yard run As he crossed the goal line Browning pointed his left index finger at trailing linebacker Jimmie Swain who was clad in a throwback blue and yellow Oregon Webfoots jersey 31 This gesture became known as The Point after sideline photographs of the play went viral across social media during and after the game 32 2023 Games First ever Top 10 matchup edit The 2023 matchup between eighth ranked Oregon and seventh ranked Washington was the first ever where both teams were ranked within the top ten in the AP Poll 33 In front of a sold out Husky Stadium 34 Washington defeated Oregon 36 33 in what was immediately considered one of the greatest games in the history of the rivalry 35 Despite having stopped two red zone fourth down conversion attempts by Oregon Washington trailed with two minutes remaining in the fourth quarter After Oregon failed to convert another fourth down to end the game Washington s quarterback Michael Penix Jr connected with receiver Rome Odunze for a game winning touchdown after a drive spanning just two plays 36 With four seconds on the clock and one timeout remaining Oregon kicker Camden Lewis missed a 43 yard field goal attempt giving the Huskies the win 37 Final Pac 12 Championship edit The 2023 Pac 12 Football Championship Game the last before the collapse of the traditional Pac 12 Conference as a result of the 2021 2024 NCAA conference realignment was between 11 1 Oregon ranked fifth and 12 0 Washington ranked third Oregon s sole loss had been the earlier road defeat to Washington and they had looked dominant in the second half of the season entering the game as the betting favorite As a result adding even more suspense to the final Pac 12 championship between two rivals it was widely predicted before the game that the winner would go to the College Football Playoffs 38 Washington s offense caught the Ducks by surprise early in the game jumping out to a 20 3 lead before the Ducks led by quarterback Bo Nix responded with 21 straight points After a series of turnovers the momentum swung back in the Huskies favor Washington scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter and won the game 34 31 after a key first down by running back Dillon Johnson allowed them to run out the clock Michael Penix Jr received the Pac 12 Championship MVP 39 Game results editOregon victoriesWashington victoriesTie gamesNo DateLocationWinnerScore1December 1 1900Eugene OROregon43 02November 14 1903Seattle WAWashington6 53November 12 1904Eugene OROregon18 04November 18 1905Eugene ORTie12 125November 20 1906Eugene OROregon16 66November 16 1907Seattle WAOregon6 07November 14 1908Eugene ORWashington15 08November 25 1909Seattle WAWashington20 69November 18 1911Portland ORWashington29 310November 16 1912Seattle WAWashington30 1411November 15 1913Portland ORWashington10 712November 14 1914Seattle WAWashington10 013November 4 1916Eugene ORTie0 014November 30 1918Eugene OROregon7 015November 1 1919Seattle WAOregon24 1316November 13 1920Eugene OROregon17 017November 30 1922Seattle WATie3 318December 1 1923Seattle WAWashington26 719November 1 1924Eugene OROregon7 320November 26 1925Seattle WAWashington15 1421October 9 1926Portland ORWashington23 922November 24 1927Seattle WAWashington7 023October 20 1928Portland OROregon27 024October 26 1929Seattle WAOregon14 025October 18 1930Portland OROregon7 026October 10 1931Seattle WAOregon13 027October 8 1932Portland ORTie0 028October 14 1933Seattle WAOregon6 029October 13 1934Portland ORWashington16 630November 23 1935Seattle WAOregon7 631October 31 1936Portland OR 4 Washington7 032November 20 1937Seattle WAWashington14 033November 19 1938Portland OROregon3 034November 23 1939Seattle WAWashington20 1335October 12 1940Portland ORWashington10 036November 22 1941Seattle WAOregon19 1637October 10 1942Portland ORWashington15 738September 29 1945Seattle WAWashington20 639November 3 1945Portland OR 18 Washington7 040November 16 1946Seattle WAWashington16 041October 18 1947Portland OROregon6 042November 6 1948Seattle WA 16 Oregon13 743November 5 1949Portland ORWashington28 744November 11 1950Seattle WA 17 Washington27 1345October 13 1951Portland ORWashington63 646October 18 1952Seattle WAWashington49 047October 17 1953Portland ORWashington14 648October 30 1954Seattle WAOregon26 749October 1 1955Portland OR 19 Washington19 750October 13 1956Seattle WAWashington20 751November 9 1957Portland ORWashington13 652November 1 1958Seattle WAWashington6 053October 24 1959Portland ORWashington13 1254October 29 1960Seattle WA 9 Washington7 655October 28 1961Portland OROregon7 656October 27 1962Seattle WATie21 2157October 26 1963Portland ORWashington26 1958October 24 1964Seattle WAOregon7 059October 23 1965Portland ORWashington24 0No DateLocationWinnerScore60October 22 1966Seattle WAWashington10 761October 14 1967Eugene ORWashington26 062October 12 1968Seattle WAOregon3 063October 25 1969Eugene OROregon22 764October 31 1970Seattle WAWashington25 2365October 16 1971Eugene OROregon23 2166October 7 1972Seattle WA 11 Washington23 1767October 27 1973Eugene OROregon58 068October 26 1974Seattle WAWashington66 069October 4 1975Eugene ORWashington27 1770October 23 1976Seattle WAWashington14 771October 8 1977Eugene ORWashington54 072October 21 1978Seattle WAWashington20 1473September 22 1979Eugene OR 12 Washington21 1774September 27 1980Seattle WAOregon34 1075September 26 1981Eugene OR 16 Washington17 376September 25 1982Seattle WA 1 Washington37 2177October 22 1983Eugene OR 14 Washington32 378October 20 1984Seattle WA 1 Washington17 379October 5 1985Eugene ORWashington19 1380October 25 1986Seattle WA 8 Washington38 381October 3 1987Eugene OROregon29 2282October 22 1988Eugene OROregon17 1483October 14 1989Seattle WAWashington20 1484October 13 1990Seattle WA 17 Washington38 1785October 26 1991Seattle WA 3 Washington29 786October 17 1992Eugene OR 1 Washington24 387October 23 1993Seattle WA 22 Washington21 688October 22 1994Eugene OROregon31 2089November 4 1995Seattle WA 19 Oregon24 2290October 26 1996Eugene OR 23 Washington33 1491November 8 1997Seattle WAOregon31 2892November 7 1998Eugene OR 21 Oregon27 2293October 2 1999Seattle WAWashington34 2094September 30 2000Eugene OR 20 Oregon23 1695November 16 2002Eugene ORWashington42 1496November 1 2003Seattle WAWashington42 1097October 30 2004Eugene OROregon31 698October 15 2005Eugene OR 20 Oregon45 2199November 4 2006Eugene OR 24 Oregon34 14100October 20 2007Seattle WA 7 Oregon55 34101August 30 2008Eugene OR 21 Oregon44 10102October 24 2009Seattle WA 12 Oregon43 19103November 6 2010Eugene OR 1 Oregon53 16104November 5 2011Seattle WA 6 Oregon34 17105October 6 2012Eugene OR 2 Oregon52 21106October 12 2013Seattle WA 2 Oregon45 24107October 18 2014Eugene OR 9 Oregon45 20108October 17 2015Seattle WAOregon26 20109October 8 2016Eugene OR 5 Washington70 21110November 4 2017Seattle WA 12 Washington38 3111October 13 2018Eugene OR 17 Oregon30 27OT112October 19 2019Seattle WA 12 Oregon35 31113November 6 2021Seattle WA 4 Oregon26 16114November 12 2022Eugene OR 25 Washington37 34115October 14 2023Seattle WA 7 Washington36 33116December 1 2023Paradise NV 3 Washington34 31117November 30 2024Eugene ORSeries Washington leads 63 48 5 1 Oregon s home games against Washington were played in Portland from 1911 1913 and 1926 1965 Results by Location edit As of December 1 2023 State City Games Washington victories Oregon victories Ties Years played Washington Seattle 56 33 21 2 1903 present Oregon Eugene 37 13 22 2 1900 1924 1967 present Portland 22 16 5 1 1911 1913 1926 1965 Nevada Paradise 1 1 0 0 2023Coaching records editSince 1945 Oregon edit Head Coach Team Games Seasons Wins Losses Ties Pct Tex Oliver Oregon 3 1945 1946 0 3 0 000 Jim Aiken Oregon 4 1947 1950 2 2 0 500 Len Casanova Oregon 16 1951 1966 3 12 1 219 Jerry Frei Oregon 5 1967 1971 3 2 0 600 Dick Enright Oregon 2 1972 1973 1 1 0 500 Don Read Oregon 3 1974 1976 1 2 0 333 Rich Brooks Oregon 18 1977 1994 4 14 0 222 Mike Bellotti Oregon 13 1995 2008 9 4 0 692 Chip Kelly Oregon 4 2009 2012 4 0 1 000 Mark Helfrich Oregon 4 2013 2016 3 1 750 Willie Taggart Oregon 1 2017 0 1 000 Mario Cristobal Oregon 3 2018 2021 3 0 1 000 Dan Lanning Oregon 3 2022 0 3 000 Source 40 Washington edit Head Coach Team Games Seasons Wins Losses Ties Pct Ralph Welch Washington 4 1945 1947 3 1 0 750 Howard Odell Washington 5 1948 1952 4 1 0 800 John Cherberg Washington 3 1953 1955 2 1 0 667 Darrell Royal Washington 1 1956 1 0 0 1 000 Jim Owens Washington 18 1957 1974 11 6 1 639 Don James Washington 18 1975 1992 15 3 0 833 Jim Lambright Washington 6 1993 1998 2 4 0 333 Rick Neuheisel Washington 3 1999 2002 2 1 667 Keith Gilbertson Washington 2 2003 2004 1 1 500 Tyrone Willingham Washington 4 2005 2008 0 4 000 Steve Sarkisian Washington 5 2009 2013 0 5 000 Chris Petersen Washington 6 2014 2019 2 4 333 Jimmy Lake Washington 1 2020 2021 0 1 000 Kalen DeBoer Washington 3 2022 2023 3 0 1 000 Jedd Fisch Washington 0 2024 present 0 0 Source 41 Last tie was in 1962 overtime began in 1996 in Division I A one 2018 Two games were played in 1945 not scheduled in 2001 canceled COVID 19 in 2020See also editList of NCAA college football rivalry games List of most played college football series in NCAA Division IReferences edit a b Winsipedia Oregon Ducks vs Washington Huskies football series history Winsipedia Raley Dan October 29 2004 Nothing neighborly about Huskies vs Ducks Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved March 23 2009 Peterson Anne M November 13 2002 Oregon Washington Rivalry Renewed Edwardsville Intelligencer Final Coast Conference standings Eugene Register Guard Oregon November 21 1948 p 1 Strite Dick October 3 1948 Oregon suffers 14 0 loss but shows real class Eugene Register Guard Oregon p 1 a b Bellamy Ron September 19 2003 Ducks have been shut out of success against the Wolverines Euegene Register Guard Oregon p B1 Clark Bob September 3 1998 Top Ducks Eugene Register Guard Oregon p 3D a b California Bears get Rose Bowl Bid Eugene Register Guard Oregon United Press November 22 1948 p 1 Unofficially its Northwestern in the Rose Bowl Oregon would like bid Spokesman Review Spokane Washington Associated Press November 22 1948 p 11 Northwestern California get nominations to Rose Bowl Milwaukee Sentinel Associated Press November 23 1948 p 4 part 2 Smith Shelley April 20 2001 Oregon Washington We know they hate us ESPN Classic Retrieved October 20 2009 Oregon to play in Cotton Bowl Eugene Register Guard Oregon November 27 1948 p 1 Strite Dick January 2 1949 Oregon Cal both drop bowl games Eugene Register Guard Oregon p 1 a b Stone Larry October 12 2018 Boiling Point Ducks sure to be looking for revenge on Jake Browning s famous finger wag at Autzen The Seattle Times a b Game Log for Washington Huskies versus Oregon Ducks Winspedia com Hazzah LLC Retrieved December 21 2022 Strite Dick October 28 1962 Rallying Ducks battle Huskies to tie Eugene Register Guard Oregon p 1B Conrad John November 14 1995 Ducks Huskies fightin again Eugene Register Guard Oregon p 1D Bellamy Ron January 2 1996 Fake punt Ducks think it adds insult to their injury Eugene Register Guard Oregon p 5C Hansen Chris November 17 2002 Huskies party at Ducks expense Eugene Register Guard Oregon p 4D Condotta Bob October 28 2003 Ducks still have dander up The Seattle Times Retrieved March 24 2022 After UW s win last season in 2002 the Huskies lingered on the field for 20 to 30 minutes stomping on the Oregon O at midfield posing for pictures in the end zone and generally celebrating in a manner usually reserved for something other than a regular season win Ducks flying high Eugene Register Guard Oregon October 1 2000 p 1A Nadel John January 2 2001 Huskies follow leader to bowl victory Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press p 1E Clark Bob November 13 2002 Time turns down rivalry s heat Eugene Register Guard Oregon p 1C Clark Bob November 16 2002 Northwest rivalry resumes no love lost Eugene Register Guard Oregon p 1D Washington Huskies versus Oregon Ducks Winspedia com Hazzah LLC Retrieved December 21 2022 Greif Andrew October 8 2016 Oregon Ducks routed by Washington Huskies Game at a glance The Oregonian OregonLive Crepea James December 10 2020 Washington Huskies vs Oregon Ducks canceled meaning the rivals won t meet for the first time since 2001 The Oregonian Retrieved December 11 2020 Kenny Wheaton The Pick on YouTube Odom Joel October 6 2016 A dozen years of dominance Oregon Ducks 12 game win streak against Washington Huskies The Oregonian OregonLive Archived from the original on November 8 2020 Retrieved April 6 2022 For 12 years running the Oregon Ducks have beaten the stuffing out of the Washington Huskies The Ducks have averaged 42 3 points and hung these totals on Washington 31 45 34 55 44 43 53 34 52 45 45 and 26 a b Jude Adam November 3 2017 The Point and 70 more How the Huskies ended their 12 year losing streak to Oregon an oral history The Seattle Times Archived from the original on November 17 2020 Retrieved May 9 2022 The Huskies 70 21 victory over Oregon on Oct 8 2016 was UW s first in Eugene in 14 years and it signaled a stunningly swift changing of the guard in Northwest supremacy The Ducks love to celebrate The Pick off UW s Damon Huard from 1994 Twenty two years later The Point became a seminal moment in the rivalry for UW Alger Tyson October 3 2016 Oregon Ducks bring back Webfoots uniforms for game vs Washington Huskies The Oregonian Retrieved December 7 2021 The tops are navy blue with yellow lettering with Webfoots across the chest The bottoms are black Caple Christian October 11 2018 We riding with Jake after that one An oral history of The Point The Athletic Archived from the original on January 30 2021 Retrieved May 9 2022 The gesture lasted less than half a second but birthed an image that will live for as long as Washington and Oregon play football Forde Pat October 12 2023 The Oregon Washington Rivalry May Never Be This Great Again Sports Illustrated Retrieved October 16 2023 Raley Dan October 15 2023 Amid the Sellout Comeback and Huge Win DeBoer Found Time for Former Players Sports Illustrated Washington Huskies News Analysis and More Retrieved October 16 2023 Stephensbailey Iyo October 14 2023 Instant Classic Washington Surges Past Oregon 36 33 UW Dawg Pound Retrieved October 16 2023 Did Oregon get caught red handed trying to fake injury in Washington loss FanSided October 15 2023 Retrieved October 16 2023 Athletic The October 15 2023 Oregon Washington live updates The Athletic Retrieved October 16 2023 College Football Playoff scenarios With 8 teams in contention how each could reach top 4 USA TODAY Retrieved December 2 2023 Championship weekend live Huskies take down Ducks to set up playoff run ESPN com December 2 2023 Retrieved December 2 2023 Results against 2018 opponents PDF University of Oregon Ducks Football Record Book 2018 p 72 All time series results PDF University of Washington Husky Football Record Book 2018 p 210 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oregon Washington football rivalry amp oldid 1226372689, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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