2000 Oregon Ducks football team

2000 Oregon Ducks football
Holiday Bowl Champions
Pac-10 Co-Champions
Holiday Bowl vs Texas, W 35–30
Conference Pacific-10 Conference
Ranking
Coaches No. 8
AP No. 8
2000 record 10–2 (7–1 Pac-10)
Head coach Mike Bellotti (6th year)
Offensive coordinator Jeff Tedford (3rd year)
Defensive coordinator Nick Aliotti (4th year)
Captain Game captains
Home stadium Autzen Stadium
(Capacity: 41,698)
2000 Pacific-10 football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
#3 Washington $+   7 1         11 1  
#4 Oregon State %+   7 1         11 1  
#7 Oregon +   7 1         10 2  
Stanford   4 4         5 6  
UCLA   3 5         6 6  
Arizona State   3 5         6 6  
Arizona   3 5         5 6  
USC   2 6         5 7  
Washington State   2 6         4 7  
California   2 6         3 8  
  • $ BCS representative as conference champion
  • % BCS at-large representative
  • + Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2000 Oregon Ducks football team represented the University of Oregon during the 2000 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Ducks were led by sixth year head coach Mike Bellotti and participated as members of the Pacific-10 Conference. They played their home games at Autzen Stadium in Eugene, Oregon. Their roster on offense includes QB#3 Joey Harrington, QB#7 A.J. Feeley, RB#9 Maurice Morris, RB#34 Allan Amundson, RB#27 Ryan Shaw, RB#47 Josh Line, WR#5 Marshaun Tucker, WR#82 Sonny Cook, WR#83 Cy Aleman, TE#84 Justin Peelle, and WR/TE#8 Lacorey Collins.

Schedule

Date Time Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
September 2 12:30 PM Nevada* Autzen StadiumEugene, OR W 36–7   43,371
September 9 12:30 PM at No. 5 Wisconsin* Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI ABC L 23–27   78,521
September 16 3:30 PM Idaho* Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR OSN W 42–13   43,770
September 23 12:30 PM No. 6 UCLA Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR ABC W 29–10   45,470
September 30 12:30 PM No. 6 Washington No. 20 Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR FSN W 23–16   46,153
October 14 12:30 PM at USC No. 9 Los Angeles Memorial ColiseumLos Angeles, CA ABC W 28–17   54,031
October 21 7:15 PM No. 21 Arizona No. 9 Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR FSN W 14–10   45,950
October 28 12:30 PM at Arizona State No. 7 Sun Devil StadiumTempe, AZ ABC W 56–55 2OT  53,085
November 4 2:00 PM at Washington State No. 7 Martin StadiumPullman, WA W 27–24 OT  23,314
November 11 12:30 PM California No. 6 Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR ABC W 25–17   45,845
November 18 12:30 PM at No. 5 Oregon State No. 6 Reser StadiumCorvallis, OR (Civil War) ABC L 13–23   36,044
December 29 5:30 PM vs. No. 12 Texas* No. 8 Qualcomm StadiumSan Diego, CA (Holiday Bowl) ESPN W 35–30   63,278
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll. All times are in Pacific Time.

Game notes

Arizona State

Oregon played at Arizona State in the 2000 college football season. Oregon trailed 49-35 in the final four minutes. The Ducks scored a touchdown to make it a one possession game, but then were unable to score after getting the ball back late in the game. With possession and time on its side, Arizona State needed just a single first down to run out the clock and win the game. But as Arizona State freshman running back Mike Williams was crossing the first down marker, he fumbled the ball and Oregon was able to recover it at the 17-yard line, giving the Ducks one last chance. Joey Harrington then hit Justin Peelle with a touchdown pass to tie the game with 27 seconds left. After neither team was able to score in the first overtime period, Oregon scored on a one-yard run by Allan Amundson and the extra point by Josh Frankel put them up by seven points in the second overtime. Freshman Jeff Krohn then threw his fifth touchdown pass on Arizona State's next possession, finding Richard Williams from 21 yards out and bringing the Sun Devils within a PAT of forcing a 3rd overtime. After an Oregon touchdown, and instead of kicking the extra point after scoring, Arizona State faked the kick and had quarterback Jeff Krohn roll out to his right, throwing a pass toward tight end Todd Heap in the back of the end zone. The pass tipped off Heap's extended hand and fell incomplete, giving Oregon a 56-55 double overtime victory.[1]

Washington State

Oregon at Washington State
1 234OTTotal
Oregon 13 3083 27
Washington State 10 7070 24

Defensive tackle Jed Boice blocked Anousith Wilaikul's 39-yard field goal attempt in overtime to win the game.

Holiday Bowl

1 234Total
Texas 0 2109 30
Oregon 14 0714 35

References

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