Santa Cruz Sentinel

Pac-12 to go quietly into the twilight

- JON WILNER

Reaction to Pac-12 developmen­ts on and off the field (and court) …

1. AND THAT’S A WRAP … >> In the aftermath of Oregon’s lopsided loss in the Fiesta Bowl, which came in the aftermath of Colorado’s blowout loss in the Alamo Bowl, our lasting takeaway of the 2020 Pac-12 football season is as follows: It existed.

The conference played football this fall.

Above and beyond that, there’s little to chew on and even less to carry forward.

Put another way …

Imagine the college football season as a party and every Football Bowl Subdivisio­n conference a guest.

(Also imagine that some of the neighbors are greatly disturbed by the party.)

The Pac-12 showed up late, stood quietly in the corner, completely unnoticed, and then left through the back door without saying goodbye and leaving behind zero evidence of its presence.

That was the 2020 season:

• Just 5.5 games per team

• No playoff contenders

• Zinged by ESPN

• No top-10 teams

• Zinged by ESPN again

• No Heisman finalists

• Two bowl teams

• Two bad bowl losses

The final two weeks, especially, were a horror show for the conference.

The stretch began with the decision to elevate a secondplac­e team into the championsh­ip — and giving that team (Oregon) a significan­t competitiv­e advantage over an actual division winner (USC) — and ended with losses to Big 12 teams (Texas and Iowa State) by a combined 49 points.

2. OREGON WAS, WELL, OREGON >> This is not to fault the Ducks for their showing this afternoon in the Fiesta Bowl: That was who they are.

They were not a good team this year.

They nearly lost at home to UCLA (3- 4) and its backup quarterbac­k.

The lost to Oregon State (2-5). They lost to Cal (1-3).

Then, after Washington was unable to represent the North

in the title game, the Ducks were handed extra rest and preparatio­n time while their opponent, USC, was playing its third game in 13 days.

The Ducks were faster, fresher, better prepared and the better team in the conference championsh­ip.

But that was the outlier, folks.

What we saw today was the mistake-prone, mediocre Oregon team that we saw most of the season, only matched against an opponent far more capable than any the Ducks faced during the season.

As soon as we saw Oklahoma run Florida off the field in the Cotton Bowl, the Hotline knew Oregon was in trouble:

Two weeks ago, Iowa State took those same Sooners to the wire in the Big 12 title game.

The Cyclones aren’t physically superior to Oregon, but they are savvy, they’re smart, they love to grind, and they’re built to feast on the mistakes of others.

Oregon committed four turnovers.

So yes, the last appearance by the Pac-12 in the 2020 season was a clunker — the last two appearance­s, in fact, were clunkers

But again, let’s not lay this all on Oregon and Colorado.

Five bowl- eligible teams declined invitation­s.

There hasn’t been a playoff-worthy team in years.

The conference office did the title game all wrong.

The university presidents restarted the season too late.

It was all a big mess — Colorado and Oregon were simply the last ones at the scene.

Now, it’s time to forget and move on.

3. USC’S BIG CATCH >> The second day of the year wasn’t all bad for the Pac

12.

In one regard, it was very, very good: Defensive end Korey Foreman, considered the No. 1 recruit in the country in the class of 2021, announced he has signed with USC.

Foreman, from powerhouse Centennial High School in Corona, is a massive pickup generally for the Trojans and specifical­ly for coach Clay Helton, whose tenure remains stuck in purgatory.

The Trojans aren’t good enough to achieve blue blood-level success or bad enough to cost Helton his job .

Foreman’s announceme­nt — he signed weeks ago but kept it secret from the public — elevates USC’s class into the top 10 in the 247sports composite rankings.

Nor was he the only pickup of the day: The Trojans also secured a commitment from fourstar cornerback Ceyair Wright.

And they’re leading for four-star linebacker Raesjon Davis, a top-50 player nationally.

By the close of business on National Signing Day (Feb. 3), the Trojans just might overtake Oregon for the best class in the conference.

4. THE BROADER IMPACT >> Foreman’s decision is significan­t for the Pac-12 writ large, for it slows the exodus of elite players to other Power Five leagues.

That talent drain was never more evident than this week:

• Bijan Robinson, a tailback from Tucson, rushed for 183 yards for Texas in its .victory over Colorado in the Alamo Bowl.

• Spencer Rattler, a quarterbac­k from Phoenix, passed for three touchdowns for Oklahoma in its victory over Florida in the Cotton Bowl.

• Najee Harris, a tailback from the Bay Area, rushed for 125 yards for Alabama in its victory over Notre Dame in the Rose Bowl.

• Haskell Garrett, a defensive lineman from Las Vegas, led a dominant performanc­e by Ohio State in its victory over Clemson in the Sugar Bowl.

Oh, and let’s not forget Brock Purdy, a quarterbac­k from Phoenix, who directed Iowa State’s victory over the Ducks.

Impact performanc­es on the sport’s biggest stage — all courtesy of players from the Pac-12 footprint who aren’t playing for Pac12 teams.

Foreman, it seems, is more exception than rule.

5. REFUND REQUEST >> Far off the radar comes a developmen­t worthy of monitoring.

The UCLA basketball team traveled to Oregon two weeks ago, only to have its date with the Ducks called off because of COVID-19 issues with the officials.

At that point, athletic director Martin Jarmond did something unusual:

He asked the conference to reimburse the Bruins for their travel expenses.

Makes sense, right? The conference is in charge of the officiatin­g program and has establishe­d the testing plan for each crew.

The postponeme­nt had zero to do with the Bruins or Ducks.

The Pac-12 doesn’t have a policy when it comes to the conference office picking up the tab for a game not played — until this fall, games were never not played.

But in football and now basketball, we have seen cancellati­ons at the last minute, we’ve seen road games added to schedules, and we’ve seen teams uprooted for weeks at a time.

 ?? RICK SCUTERI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Iowa State wide receiver Tarique Milton (1) is hit by Oregon safety Jamal Hill during the second half of the Fiesta Bowl on Saturday in Glendale, Ariz.
RICK SCUTERI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Iowa State wide receiver Tarique Milton (1) is hit by Oregon safety Jamal Hill during the second half of the Fiesta Bowl on Saturday in Glendale, Ariz.
 ??  ??
 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Oregon linebacker T.J. Gilbert (56) leaves the field after the Fiesta Bowl against Iowa State on Saturday in Glendale, Ariz. Iowa State won 34-17.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oregon linebacker T.J. Gilbert (56) leaves the field after the Fiesta Bowl against Iowa State on Saturday in Glendale, Ariz. Iowa State won 34-17.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States