Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mariota, Ducks overwhelm Wildcats

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SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Marcus Mariota made his final case for the Heisman Trophy, and No. 2 Oregon left no doubt about whether the Pac12 champions will get a chance to play for the national title.

About the only question now is who the Ducks will face next.

Mariota threw for 303 yards and two touchdowns and ran for a career-high three scores, and Oregon likely secured a playoff spot by overwhelmi­ng No. 7 Arizona 51-13 in the Pac-12 title game Friday night.

The Ducks (12-1) entered the week ranked second in this first year of the College Football Playoff standings and are expected to land in the Rose Bowl for their semifinal.

Alabama (11-1) is No. 1 and TCU (10-1) is third followed by Florida State (12-0), Ohio State (11-1), Baylor (10-1) and Arizona (10-3), which is now just hoping to make a Jan. 1 bowl.

Even that is no longer certain.

On a rainy night in Silicon Valley, Oregon wiped out the Wildcats in front of a sparse but rowdy pro-Ducks crowd — announced as 45,618 — that sprinkled the red seats at the $1.3 billion Levi’s Stadium bright yellow and green.

Mariota boosted his credential­s for college football’s most prestigiou­s award as the Ducks turned the patchy field into their personal playground.

Oregon outgained Arizona 640 to 224 yards. The Ducks ran for 324 yards and held the Wildcats to 111 yards on the ground.

The victory avenged Oregon’s only loss this season — a 31-24 setback to Arizona on Oct. 2 in Eugene — and a 42- 16 loss in Tucson last year that kept the Ducks out of the conference championsh­ip game.

Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez benched quarterbac­k Anu Solomon — and later backup Jesse Scroggins — in the second half trying to find a spark. By then it was too late, and Rodriguez’s scrunched face on the sideline exemplifie­d his team’s frustratio­ns.

It was quite a turnaround from the last meeting between these teams, when Arizona held the Ducks to a season-low 144 yards rushing. The Wildcats also sacked Mariota five times and forced two fumbles in that game.

This time, Mariota completed 25 of 38 passes and ran for 33 yards on 10 carries. He extended his conference record to 53 touchdowns this season — 38 passing, 14 rushing and one receiving.

As wide as the final margin was, it could’ve — and probably should’ve — been even wider.

Oregon settled for four field-goal tries — making three — in the first half. The Ducks also finished with 13 penalties for 97 yards, including a holding penalty that erased Royce Freeman’s 37-yard TD run and back-to-back false starts that pushed back the failed fieldgoal attempt in the second quarter.

Mariota made up for most of Oregon’s errors, though, running for two TDs just before the break to give the Ducks a 23-0 lead. It was the first time Arizona was held scoreless in the first half since a 49-0 loss to Oregon on Sept. 22, 2012.

The Wildcats briefly broke through when Scroggins found a wide-open Cayleb Jones for a 69-yard TD pass with 9:34 remaining in the third quarter. Scroggins finished 3-for-9 passing for 79 yards and also had an intercepti­on.

 ?? AP/BEN MARGOT ?? Oregon running back Royce Freeman (right) fends off Arizona defender Jared Tevis during Friday’s Pac-12 Championsh­ip game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif.
AP/BEN MARGOT Oregon running back Royce Freeman (right) fends off Arizona defender Jared Tevis during Friday’s Pac-12 Championsh­ip game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif.

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