Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pac-12 suffering through rocky season

No. 5 Oregon lone league team in Top 25

- By Pat Graham

Just about any sort of win in the Pac12 is cause for fans to rush the field in celebratio­n these days.

In Boulder last weekend, the backers of the struggling Colorado Buffaloes stormed the turf after beating a five-win Oregon State team on homecoming. In Tucson, the Arizona Wildcats faithful cut loose after ending a 20-game skid.

Outside of No. 5 Oregon (8-1, 5-1 Pac-12), this has been a rocky season for a league that began with five teams in the top 25 and high hopes. Now, the Ducks are flying solo in the AP poll.

USC’S Clay Helton was fired for losing too many games. Washington State’s Nick Rolovich and several assistants were let go in October for not complying with the governor’s order that all state employees get a COVID-19 vaccine. Colorado parted with its offensive line coach. Washington recently let go of its offensive coordinato­r. Oh, and more coaching news: Jimmy Lake of Washington drew a suspension for a sideline incident last weekend.

There are only a few headline-grabbing wins over other Power 5 teams (most notably, Oregon at Ohio State), juxtaposed against stunning losses (the Huskies falling to lower-tier Montana) and an 0-4 mark versus No. 14 BYU (the Cougars can add to it against USC).

The league’s top offensive team checks in at No. 23 in scoring (Utah, 35.4 points) and scoring defense, too (Washington, 19.7). In total offense, a Pac-12 team doesn’t show up until No. 34 (USC, 441.8 yards per game) and in total defense until No. 27 (Arizona State, 328.8).

There’s also this: A league known for producing plenty of elite passers doesn’t have a QB in the top 15 in yards passing. USC’S Kedon Slovis checks in nationally at No. 32. Finish outside the top 15 in yards passing and it will be something the conference hasn’t experience­d since Colorado and Utah joined in 2011 (excluding the virus-shortened 2020 season).

A statistica­l anomaly? Could be. The Beavers, behind B.J. Baylor, boast the 10th-best rushing offense in the nation and the Huskies the top-ranked pass defense.

“I believe football does go in cycles,” said Colorado coach Karl Dorrell, whose team needs to close with three straight wins to become bowl eligible for a second straight season. “There’s going to be in five years’ time a different element of the game. The game changes and we have to evolve with all the evolution of it.”

One constant: Oregon … besides that OT loss at Stanford.

This Ducks squad could clinch the Pac-12 North this weekend should they beat Washington State (5-4, 4-2) and Oregon State (5-4, 3-3) falls to Stanford (3-6, 2-5). On the other side, Utah (6-3, 5-1) can take a step closer to winning its fourth Pac-12 South title with a win at Arizona (1-8, 1-5).

“I don’t personally feel any (extra pressure) and with our players, there is no indication that they feel any,” Utah coach Kyle Whittingha­m said. “We never talk about it in meetings and we just say we are in a good position.”

In Tempe, Arizona, last weekend, one of the stars of the Usc-arizona State show was a “tailback” who proved to be crafty as a fox. There was virtually no stopping the furry fourlegged guest on its mad dash inside the stadium as it simply tried to leave the field.

But storming the field in Boulder? That was an overtime win against an Oregon State team that hasn’t been to a bowl since 2013. And in Tucson, Arizona, fans reveled in a 10-3 victory over a Covid-19-depleted California squad.

“A great feeling,” Arizona defensive lineman Jalen Harris said. “It’s been a while since we won so it felt good to go out there and get that first win.”

 ?? David Zalubowski The Associated Press ?? Fans storm the field after Colorado defeated Oregon State 37-34 in double overtime Saturday in Boulder, Colo.
David Zalubowski The Associated Press Fans storm the field after Colorado defeated Oregon State 37-34 in double overtime Saturday in Boulder, Colo.

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