Times Standard (Eureka)

Herbert has three touchdown runs

- By Greg Beacham

PASADENA >> Justin Herbert faked a handoff and went on the run of his life in the fourth quarter of the Rose Bowl.

Oregon’s 6-foot-6 quarterbac­k gracefully stiff-armed Wisconsin linebacker Jack Sanborn at the line of scrimmage. He surged downfield, found his blockers and sprinted to the greenpaint­ed end zone, even absorbing a very late hit from the frustrated Badgers as a reward.

The Eugene kid who took over his beloved hometown team during its worst season of this century had just scored the decisive touchdown of the biggest win of his career. A few minutes and a couple of big passes later, the Ducks all celebrated amid confetti and roses at midfield after Herbert’s final college game.

“I wish it wasn’t over,” Herbert said. “This has been the best four years of my life. I’ve been honored to be a part of this team.”

Herbert scored his third rushing touchdown of the 106th Rose Bowl on that thrilling 30-yard run with 7:41 to play Wednesday night, and No. 7 Oregon held off No. 11 Wisconsin 28-27 to win its third straight trip to the Granddaddy of Them All.

Herbert passed for just 138 yards without a touchdown, and Oregon (12-2) managed just 204 yards of offense — the fewest by any Rose Bowl team in 40 years. The Ducks still managed to win yet another frenetic edition of this venerated bowl game, surviving six lead changes and big specialtea­ms mistakes by both schools.

While the offense sputtered, the Ducks scored 21 points off the Badgers’ four turnovers,

including Brady Breeze’s early 31-yard fumble return for a TD off a botched punt.

And on the next snap after Breeze forced another fumble in the fourth quarter, Herbert rambled through the Wisconsin defense for that 30-yard score in what’s sure to be the signature moment of the four-year starter’s career.

“I’m going to be honest with you, we’ve been telling him to run all year,” Oregon linebacker La’Mar Winston Jr. said. “He runs in practice and torches, so I told him, ‘Man, pull that thing and get loose.’ Stiff-arming dudes. Juking dudes. Is he a running back or a quarterbac­k? We don’t know.”

Winston’s praise aside, Herbert had only 10 rushing touchdowns in the first 41 starts of his career. He turned into a big-play ballcarrie­r on Arroyo Seco’s hallowed ground, and Oregon improbably relied on its quarterbac­k’s long legs to grind out a landmark victory under second-year head coach Mario Cristobal, Herbert’s third coach in four years.

Herbert scored on runs of 4 and 5 yards in the first half, stiff-arming Wisconsin defenders on both runs. After his go-ahead TD, Herbert got back to what he normally does best: He made a key 12-yard throw to Mycah Pittman for a first down with 1:51 to play, and his 28yard throw to Juwan Johnson with 1:03 left allowed the Ducks to run out the clock.

“We knew coming in that he was athletic,” Sanborn said. “We didn’t have good angles and miscommuni­cations. Something we have to be better at in a game like this. It’s not the first game he ran with the ball.”

Three years after coach Mark Helfrich was fired when the Ducks went 4-8 in Herbert’s freshman season, Oregon held on to cap a Pac12 championsh­ip campaign with its 12th win in 13 games and the fourth Rose Bowl victory in school history.

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 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Oregon safety Brady Breeze, left, runs for a touchdown past Wisconsin running back Garrett Groshek after a blocked punt during the second half of the Rose Bowl on Wednesday.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oregon safety Brady Breeze, left, runs for a touchdown past Wisconsin running back Garrett Groshek after a blocked punt during the second half of the Rose Bowl on Wednesday.
 ?? MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Wisconsin wide receiver Aron Cruickshan­k runs against Oregon during first half of the Rose Bowl on Wednesday.
MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Wisconsin wide receiver Aron Cruickshan­k runs against Oregon during first half of the Rose Bowl on Wednesday.

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