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Oregon Loses 4-2 in Pac-12 Tournament Today vs. Utah
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
2-2 after six innings, as Brock Moore went about 73 pitches to slowly build his arm, and perhaps be available for the final on Sunday? Logan Mercado is pitching now... -
Oregon Loses 4-2 in Pac-12 Tournament Today vs. Utah
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
2-2 after five innings. -
Oregon Loses 4-2 in Pac-12 Tournament Today vs. Utah
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
1-1 after four innings. -
Oregon Loses 4-2 in Pac-12 Tournament Today vs. Utah
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
We will take a run on an error! -
Tomorrow is win or go home vs. USC at 2:30 on the Pac-12 Channel. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Oregon leads 1-0 after three innings, and wowsa, as surprises all the way around. Utah saved their Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year to face us after losing to USC yesterday 7-6, and he is tough to hit! The Ducks have a surprise of their own, starting reliever Brock Moore today! Clearly Oregon is trying to save their best for later, and has confidence in Moore. Thus far he has all three of his pitches in control between his 97 mph fastball, a nasty slider, and just struck out a star hitter with a potent breaking ball that really drops. But wait! There is more! Stanford went 2-0 in their pod beating Oregon State today, 2-1 and thus advance to Friday's semifinal while the Beavers go home... There is a shot of Oregon hosting a Regional series if we can win the Pac-12 Tournament. Nasty is right!
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Fox Announces 2024 Friday Night CFB Broadcasts
Charles Fischer replied to Jon Joseph's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
I LOVE this, as the curiosity about Oregon will be high before the Ohio State game, and we should have a lot of eyeballs watching. If we beat Ohio State, then the interest and eyeballs will be even more. What a great way to build our audience immediately! -
Ducks Lose 3-2 to UCLA in National Semifinal
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Well, they call it 3-1 because they did not finish the last match where Oregon was leading. I guess once a team gets to three--they end it. -
Too bad, but Final Four in two of three years is pretty darn good. SIDEARM Integrations GODUCKS.COM The Ducks came up one step short of the national title match on Tuesday, dropping a 3-1 decision to UCLA in the match play semifinals at the NCAA Championshi...
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This is fun to follow! All four Pac-12 teams advanced to the National Semifinals! Ducks Down LSU, Advance to NCAA Semifinals CARLSBAD, Calif. — The Oregon women’s golf team is one win away from the national title match after defeating No. 2 seed LSU, 3-2, on Tuesday morning in the quarterfinals of the 2024 NCAA Championships at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa. The No. 7 seeded Ducks advance to play No. 6 seed UCLA in the semifinals later on Tuesday, beginning at 1:15 p.m. PT. Golf Channel will have coverage beginning at 3 p.m. Oregon got two points from its two seniors, Ching-Tzu Chen and Minori Nagano, before freshman Kiara Romero won her match on the 18th hole to send Oregon into the semifinals. “I’m so proud of our group for coming together,” head coach Derek Radley said. “Our two senior leaders stepped up and put two points on the board, and our three freshmen are fighting like crazy. So honored and so proud to be going back to the final four.” How it Happened: Nagano wasted little time to secure Oregon’s first point of the day, immediately picking up a 1 up advantage on the first hole. Her lead remained 1 up until the sixth hole, where she won her first of six straight holes to move to 7 up through 11. She halved her next hole and put her opponent away, 7&6. Chen held a 3 up lead through 14 holes, after winning back-to-back holes to start the back nine. A pair of impressive birdies by LSU’s Carla Tejedo Mulet brought Chen’s lead to 1 up through 16, but Chen halved each of the final two holes to win, 1 up. LSU pulled the match even with a pair of wins in the third and fourth pairings, leaving Romero on the course against LSU’s Aine Donegan. Romero was trailing through the first eight holes before winning No. 9 to pull even, and she picked up another win at No. 10 to go 1 up. After Donegan tied the match again at No. 13, Romero bounced back to win No. 14 and move back in front. Donegan made a long birdie putt at No. 15 to put the pressure on Romero, but Oregon’s star freshman responded with a birdie putt of her own. Romero again drained a birdie putt at No. 16 to move to 2 up with two holes to play. Donegan responded with a birdie at No. 17 to cut Romero’s lead to 1 up, but Romero made par on No. 18 to lock up Oregon’s spot in the semifinals. What it Means: Oregon reaches the NCAA semifinals for the second time in program history, and will look to return to the national title match after finishing as the NCAA runner-up in 2022. The semifinals features only Pac-12 teams, with the winner between Oregon and UCLA advancing to face either Stanford or USC in the championship match on Wednesday afternoon. NCAA Quarterfinal – Oregon 3, LSU 2 Ching-Tzu Chen (Oregon) def. Carla Tejedo Mulet (LSU), 1 up Minori Nagano (Oregon) def. Taylor Riley (LSU), 7&6 Latanna Stone (LSU) def. Ting-Hsuan Huang (Oregon), 3&2 Ingrid Lindblad (LSU) def. Karen Tsuru (Oregon), 4&3 Kiara Romero (Oregon) def. Aine Donegan (LSU), 1 up
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Move the Goalpost: Who Changed Your Opinion Most?
Charles Fischer replied to FishDuck Article's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
OK...that is a very legit point. Where would we be without superior recruiting? Where would Lanning be without the portal? The rebuild would have taken twice as long... A conversation like this demonstrates the impact that each coach made to the future of Oregon football, and THANKS to Ryan for the fascinating topic! -
More Head-Shaking That Makes You PROUD...
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
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Move the Goalpost: Who Changed Your Opinion Most?
Charles Fischer replied to FishDuck Article's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
It is pretty hard, because without Brooks....nothing happens and we are in the fix that OSU is in. Yet Belotti raised the bar, and Chip made us a household name...and Lanning makes us all believe that the final step is finally achievable. Phil Knight was approached often by Brooks and Bellotti, but would not take part until Oregon went to the '94 Rose Bowl and '95 Cotton Bowl on their own. Winners want to work with winners, and our two coaches had to do it on their own first. Even when he joined...he was not the major donor of the first major project; the Indoor Practice Facility was named and primarily funded by Ed Moshofsky, a former Oregon player who founded a timber company. Ed Moshofsky -
Dan Lanning is doing EVERYTHING right...
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Seniors Propel Ducks to Championship Match Play CARLSBAD, Calif. — For the second time in three years and third time in program history, the Oregon women’s golf team has advanced to match play at the NCAA Championships. The Ducks earned the No. 7 seed and will face No. 2 seed LSU in the NCAA quarterfinals on Tuesday morning after tying for sixth place in stroke play on Monday at 19-over par, three strokes clear of the cut line for the top eight. Oregon was locked in a battle for the final spots for most of the final round, and even fell below the cut line midway through the day after starting in a tie for seventh. But the Ducks’ two seniors, Ching-Tzu Chen and Minori Nagano, combined to shoot 5-under par over their final nine holes to get their team back into qualifying position and secure their spot in the quarterfinals. “I am so proud of CCT and Minori for the way they led this team today,” head coach Derek Radley said. “What they were able to do on the final nine holes when their team needed them most was truly incredible. They stepped up in the biggest moments and they showed our three freshmen what it means to lead not only with your words, but with your actions.” Star freshman Kiara Romero ended stroke play as Oregon’s top finisher, in sixth place overall at 4-under par after leading the Ducks with an even-par 72 on Monday. Her 4-under 284 for the tournament is the best individual 72-hole performance in program history, and her sixth-best finish is the second-best ever by a Duck at the NCAA Championships. “Just an incredible four days for Kiara out there,” Radley said. “Even as a true freshman as the moments got bigger and the lights got brighter, she stayed committed to her game and her plan and went out there and executed. She is so naturally talented and works so hard to get better each and every day. She was a rock for our team this week and she deserves all of the accolades that are coming her way.” But it was Chen and Nagano who proved to be the difference on Monday. After combining to shoot 9 over on the back nine – Oregon started its round on hole No. 10 – the senior duo made six birdies between No. 1 and No. 5 and combined to make just one bogey on the front side. Oregon finished tied for sixth with UCLA, while LSU ended stroke play in a tie for first with Stanford. Tiebreaker procedures determined it would be the Ducks vs. the Tigers on Tuesday morning beginning at 6:50 a.m. PT from hole No. 1, with the winners advancing to face either UCLA or Texas A&M in the semifinals later in the day. “Our team has gone through quite a few ups and downs this season, and their hard work and resiliency is being rewarded now with a trip to the quarterfinals,” Radley said. “They deserve this, and I’m so proud of what they’ve been able to do so far this week. We’re going to continue to lean our seniors, continue to play for each other and we’re going to come out and give our very best tomorrow and see how far we can take this thing.” How it Happened: Starting their day on the more difficult of the two sides, the Ducks got birdies from Romero and Nagano on No. 10 but then made just one more birdie before the turn, by freshman Ting-Hsuan Huang on No. 17. Oregon dropped below the cut line for a period of time, but remained within striking distance as it battled with UCLA, Auburn, Wake Forest and Arkansas for the final three spots. After making six straight bogeys on the back nine, Chen rattled off four birdies in five holes coming out of the turn. She saved a bogey on a very difficult par-5 at No. 6 after an errant tee shot, but rebounded to end her round with three straight pars. Nagano also ran into trouble going into the turn, making a bogey at No. 17 and a double at No. 18. But after a pair of pars to open the front nine, she chipped in for a birdie at No. 3 and then stuck her approach at No. 4 to set up a short birdie putt. She rode that momentum to five consecutive pars to finish, leaving only Romero on the course with Oregon safely above the cut line. Romero was fairly drama free in her final round, making a bogey at No. 12 after opening with a birdie but then making six straight pars. She opened the front side with a bogey, but then made four pars in a row before a birdie at No. 6. She cruised in with three straight pars, lagging a birdie putt to tap-in range on No. 9 before beginning the celebration for the Ducks. Huang matched Chen with a 3-over 75 to complete Oregon’s counting scores, and her birdie at No. 17 was a much-needed momentum boost for the Ducks as they finished the back nine. What it Means: Oregon was the national runner-up in 2022, and now returns to NCAA match play after falling short of the NCAA Championships last season. Only Chen remains from that 2022 team, and she entered this weekend as the only player in Oregon’s lineup with NCAA Championships experience. It will take two wins in match play across a grueling 36-hole day on Tuesday to return to the national championship match, but the Ducks have shown all weekend long they are up to any challenge set in front of them. Notable: Romero became Oregon’s single-season record holder for birdies on Monday, making two to give her 118 on the season and break a tie with Hsin-Yu (Cynthia) Lu … Both Lu and Tze-Han (Heather) Lin were in attendance on Monday and walked mainly with Chen, their teammate from that 2022 team … Chen’s four birdies give her 356 in her career, moving her past Caroline Inglis (354, 2013-16) for second-most in program history. NCAA Quarterfinals – Oregon vs. LSU Teeing off from hole No. 1 6:50 a.m. – Ching-Tzu Chen (Oregon) vs. Carla Tejedo Mulet (LSU) 7:00 a.m. – Minori Nagano (Oregon) vs. Taylor Riley (LSU) 7:10 a.m. – Ting-Hsuan Huang (Oregon) vs. Latanna Stone (LSU) 7:20 a.m. – Karen Tsuru (Oregon) vs. Ingrid Lindblad (LSU) 7:30 a.m. – Kiara Romero (Oregon) vs. Aine Donegan (LSU)
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Good Gosh! Does it Get Any Better for Will Stein?
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Will Stein is killing-it as a developer of quarterbacks, and a recruiter of QBs! Have you ever seen all four QBs play so well in a Spring Scrimmage? -
I am shaking my head again at our good fortune of having Dan Lanning, who recruited Will Stein to be our OC. Below is a quote from Ryder Lyons, a 2026 QB prospect, and it is from an On3 article with some other great stuff that I'll leave to the subscribers. “I think Coach Stein is just an incredible human, not even a coach,” he said of the Oregon OC. “You get those, there’s some people where you can kind of just tell they’re being a little fake, it’s not real. But you never really get that from Coach Stein. I’ve never felt that it’s just being fake. He’s not just being a recruiter, he’s not telling me what I want to hear. He’s just telling me what the truth is, which is a big deal ’cause a lot of these coaches kind of don’t do that.”
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Moving to the B1G: Feeling Different NOW About it?
Charles Fischer replied to Charles Fischer's topic in Our Beloved Ducks
Gentlemen, you exemplify the height of what we strive for on this forum, and what so many who left us do not have the guts to be. You disagree, but do not take personal shots at each other, and are humble in your disagreement. (I wish I could say I was as noble...) Was this the exchange of the year? Both you guys take a bow... And aside from being classy--I love both your takes on the topics!