Strong chance USC-UCLA could be a late-night game, which would be awful

#USC – #UCLA was put on a 6-day hold by the TV networks. The outcome is bad for the #Pac12 and could get much worse for us and @Ducks_Wire

It is not a surprise — or a problem — that the upcoming USC-UCLA football game was placed on a six-day hold, meaning that the scheduled kickoff time and the assigned television network will not be disclosed until Sunday, Nov. 13 (or at least no later than the 13th). It was and is unlikely that a start time would be disclosed before Nov. 12, when another Saturday of games unfolds.

The problem is that the Pac-12, which is trying to return to the College Football Playoff for the first time since the 2016 season, will have reduced exposure in the pursuit of that playoff bid.

We have full reaction to the announcement of the six-day hold for the USC-UCLA and Utah-Oregon games, with an explanation of why this is such an embarrassment for the Pac-12:

Photos from Notre Dame’s Shamrock Series win over BYU

Here are some images you might have missed in this year’s Shamrock Series game.

Notre Dame defeated BYU, 28-20, in its annual Shamrock Series game. It might not have been the prettiest win, but nobody’s counting that. All we know is the Irish are above .500 for the first time this season, and that’s a great first step towards getting into a quality bowl game. Yes, it stinks that we’ve had to temper our expectations for this season, but that’s how it goes in college football.

The nice thing about this game is that it set the Allegiant Stadium attendance record for a college game (62,742), which previously was held by last year’s Pac-12 title game. It qualified as a sellout, so if you weren’t there, you only could imagine what it was like to be there in Las Vegas. We can’t replicate the atmosphere exactly, but we can give you some images to illustrate what people at the game saw. Here they are, and we know you enjoyed the outcome:

College Football Conference Championship Games Without Divisions. What Would’ve Happened?

College football conferences without divisions? What would the championship games have been without them?

College football conferences are starting to do away with divisions. How would the conference championship games have been if there weren’t the division formats?


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College Football Conference Championships Without Divisions – What Would They Have Been?

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The NCAA said it was cool for conferences to ditch the division formats when it comes to the championship games. Going forward – if conferences want to – the championships can be between the two top teams by conference winning percentage.

The Big 12 was already there, the Pac-12 jumped at the chance, and the Mountain West followed suit. Others are sure to do the same soon.

So how would college football history have been rewritten if the conference championship games didn’t have divisions?

As you’d expect – and as it’ll likely be going forward – the big winners were the powerhouse teams that had one bad day against the division rival.

Ohio State, Oklahoma, Texas, Clemson, Florida, Alabama, Oregon – all would’ve been in a lot more conference championships, and there wouldn’t have been as many out-of-the-blue one-hit wonder teams getting in.

Here’s what would’ve happened in each conference championship had there not been divisions.

No Division Conference Championships: What Would’ve Happened?
ACC | AAC | Big Ten | Big 12 | C-USA | MAC
Mountain West | Pac-12 | SEC | Sun Belt  


ACC Conference Championship: What Would’ve Happened Without Divisions

Everything worked out fine lately, but there was a long stretch when just about everyone was in the ACC title hunt. It all worked in the divisional format, but it would’ve been insane for a few seasons without them. The tie-breakers would’ve been brain-melting in a few of the years.

The years when the championship would’ve been different without divisions are in bold, and the ones when the matchup would’ve been what actually happened aren’t. The records are for the regular season conference season only.

2021 Pitt 45, Wake Forest 21

2020 Clemson 34, Notre Dame 10
This was 1 vs 2 – ACC had no divisions

2019 Clemson 62, Virginia 17

2018 Clemson 42, Pitt 10

2017 Clemson 38, Miami 3

2016 Clemson 42, Virginia Tech 35
No Divisions Championship: Clemson vs Louisville
Lamar Jackson and 7-1 Louisville would’ve had another shot at 7-1 Clemson after losing the first time around in a 42-36 thriller. Virginia Tech was 6-2.

2015 Clemson 45, North Carolina 37

2014 Florida State 37, Georgia Tech 35

2013 Florida State 45, Duke 7
No Divisions Championship: Florida State vs Clemson
The Duke thing was fun – it was 6-2 – but it would’ve been a high-powered rematch of the 8-0 Seminoles and 7-1 Clemson.

2012 Florida State 21, Georgia Tech 15
No Divisions Championship: Florida State vs Clemson
Clemson’s only ACC loss was to 7-1 FSU. Georgia Tech was 5-3.

2011 Clemson 38, Virginia Tech 10

2010 Virginia Tech 44, Florida State 33

2009 Georgia Tech 39, Clemson 34
No Divisions Championship: Georgia Tech vs Virginia Tech
This would’ve been debatable. 7-1 Georgia Tech was a lock, but 6-2 Clemson and 6-2 Virginia Tech didn’t play each other and both lost to the Yellow Jackets. This likely would’ve come down to overall record or ranking. The Hokies would’ve received the very questionable call.

2008 Virginia Tech 30, Boston College 12
No Divisions Championship: Boston College vs Georgia Tech
Tis would’ve been an ugly mess, but it would’ve been a fascinating race. Duke was 1-7 and Virginia was 3-5, but six teams were 4-4 and in it until late, and Boston College, Florida State, Georgia Tech, and Virginia Tech all went 5-3. Out of the four 5-3 teams, the Yellow Jackets and Eagles each had only one loss among the group, the Hokies and Seminoles each had two.

2007 Virginia Tech 30, Boston College 16

2006 Wake Forest 9, Georgia Tech 6
No Divisions Championship: Georgia Tech vs Virginia Tech
America might have been spared from the game that actually happened. Georgia Tech would’ve been in at 7-1, but 6-2 Virginia Tech beat 6-2 Wake Forest.

2005 Florida State 27, Virginia Tech 22
No Divisions Championship: Virginia Tech vs Miami
The Bobby Bowden ACC Championship narrative wouldn’t have happened. FSU was 5-3, so it would’ve been 6-2 Miami against 7-1 Virginia Tech.

No Division Championships: What Would’ve Happened?
ACC | AAC | Big Ten | Big 12 | C-USA | MAC
Mountain West | Pac-12 | SEC | Sun Belt  

2022 College Football Win Total Projections: Spring Version
ACC | AAC | Big Ten | Big 12 | C-USA | Independents
MAC | Mountain West | Pac-12 | SEC | Sun Belt | All 131 Teams

NEXT: American Athletic Conference Championship: What Would’ve Happened Without Divisions

Pac-12 announces major change to football championship game format

Major changes are going to the Pac-12 conference championship game, starting in 2022.

A major change took place in the Pac-12 football conference on Wednesday afternoon.

The Pac-12 announced that they would be changing the format for teams to get into the conference championship game, starting in 2022, now based on win-percentage vs. other conference teams, rather than the winner of the north and south divisions.

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“Starting in 2022, the two teams with the highest conference winning percentage will face off in the championship game,” the conference stated in a release. “This change would have resulted in a different Pac-12 Football Championship matchup in 5 of the past 11 years.”

According to the release, this change was passed with unanimous support from coaches in the Pac-12, as well as athletic directors and board of directors.

The Pac-12 says that the current 2022 schedule, with matchups based on divisions, will remain in place, but things will be re-evaluated after the season. There is a feeling that the conference could do away with divisions in the near future.

While this is a great move for parity in the conference, it could make for a tougher road to the conference championship game in the future for the Oregon Ducks. The northern division in the Pac-12 is widely viewed as the weaker of the two, and Oregon has found a lot of success since the conference expanded to 12 teams and put divisions into place. making it to 5 of the 11 conference title games since it was introduced in 2011.

Should scheduling be opened up and not require Oregon to play against North division teams every year, it could give them a harder path forward into the title game, which is held in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Contact/Follow us @Ducks_Wire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinion.

Let us know your thoughts, comment on this story below. Join the conversation today.

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One historic team victory, one individual crown for Oregon Ducks at Pac-12 women’s golf tournament

The Ducks won their first Pac-12 women’s golf championship with sophomore Cynthia Lu winning the individual title.

EUGENE, Ore. — Oregon made history Wednesday, winning its first Pac-12 women’s golf championship.

It didn’t end there for the Ducks, as sophomore Cynthia Lu held off all comers, including a late challenge from the nation’s No. 1 player, to win the individual title.

Playing through a persistent rain that softened the fairways and soaked the greens on the Eugene Country Club’s par-72, 6,267-yard course, No. 2 Oregon was 2-over for the day to bring its three-round score 6-over 295-285-290 — 870.

The Ducks were seven shots better than No. 1 Stanford and Oregon State, which tied for second at 13-over 877.

“Wow, just so proud of this group,” Oregon coach Derek Radley said. “What an incredible performance. We talked about it all year, to be able to do this on our home course is extremely special.”

Leading the way for Oregon was Lu, who stormed into the lead during Tuesday’s second round when she shot 6-under, just missing the conference tournament single-round record by one stroke.

Wednesday, she shot even par (35-37 — 72) to bring her three-round total to 6-under 210.

“Cynthia’s a superstar,” Radley said. “We’ve known it from the first day she’s stepped foot on this campus and she just continues to shine and I can’t wait to see what’s in store for her for the future.”

Oregon’s only other Pac-12 champion was Caroline Inglis in 2015, though Inglis didn’t have the luxury of a large home crowd watching her finish her round on the 18th green — a crowd that included Lu’s father from Taiwan and several teammates who ran out and doused her with water soon after her final putt went into the hole.

“It was so nice we have people from Eugene, from Oregon, cheering for our team,” Lu said. “I’ve been waiting for this moment and I was really happy. I feel like I’m the luckiest person in the world.”

Lu’s sensational second round gave her a four-stroke lead at 6-under heading into Wednesday’s finale, which she opened with birdies on the first and third hole, but also a bogey on the second hole.

“I can’t lie, I was pretty nervous this morning,” Lu said. “I know I’m leading, and our team is leading. But honestly, I’m worried about team score more than mine. It kind of distracted me from my game.”

Stanford’s Rose Zhang, who is No. 1 in GolfStat’s player ranking, was the runner-up at 2-under 214. Zhang, who was tied for the lead after Monday’s opening round and five shots back in fifth place after the second round, shot 1-under 71 on Wednesday, including an eagle on the par-5 16th — her 11th hole of the day after her shotgun start began on the sixth tee — that cut Lu’s lead to two strokes.

But Lu, who started her round on the first tee, got a stroke back with a birdie on the par-4 16th to go back up by three shots and Zhang never got any closer.

No other players finished under par for the tournament, as Arizona’s Carolina Melgrati and UCLA’s Alessia Nobilio tied for third at 1-over 217.

Oregon senior Heather Lin, who was also instrumental in the Ducks’ rise in the standings from fifth place on Monday to the top of the podium by Wednesday, finished in a tie for seventh at 3-over 219.

Lin shot even par Wednesday in what was her best round of the tournament.

“Heather Lin is the heart and sole of this team,” Radley said.

Briana Chacon also provided a steady hand on Wednesday as she shot even par to finish tied for 13th at 5-over 221.

Sofie Kibsgaard Nielsen, who was at 10-over after the first 25 holes, had an impressive rally as she played the next 27 at 1-under to finish in a tie for 31st place at 9-over 225.

Ching-Tzu Chen finished in a tie for 36th at 11-over 227.

Oregon’s previous best team finish was second place in 2015. The only other time it placed in the top three was in 2010 when it was third.

“Our team proved that we are the best team in the country,” Lin said.

The Ducks will get a chance to prove with NCAA Regionals (May 9-11) and the NCAA Championships (May 20-25) coming up next.

Oregon State (296-296-285 — 877) had a strong final day, led by Kelsey Webster who finished tied for fifth at 1-over 2018.

Also for the Beavers, Ellie Slama was tied for 13th at 5-over 221; Chayse Gomez was tied for 19th at 6-over 222; and Madde Sund and Issy Taylor were tied for 22nd at 7-over 223.

Reigning two-time champion USC (292-292-300 — 884) was tied for fifth and Arizona State (294-286-309 — 889), which began Wednesday tied with Oregon for first place, had a disastrous final round as the Sun Devils were 21 over to drop to to seventh place.

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No. 2 Oregon Ducks dominate final round, win first Pac-12 Championship in program history

Pac-12 Champions! The Oregon Ducks held on to win the first conference title in school history on Wednesday afternoon.

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In the end, it wasn’t much of a contest.

No matter how they got it done, though, the No. 2 ranked Oregon Ducks women’s golf team walked away from the Eugene Country Club with the first Pac-12 Championship victory in program history.

As poor weather rolled through the Willamette Valley throughout the week, the Oregon players stayed their course and battled through the rain and wind, ultimately taking advantage of the “Duck weather” that caused other teams in the pack to fade on the final day of the tournament.

On Wednesday, the Ducks turned in a 290 (+2) to end the tournament at +6, which was seven shots clear of the next closest finisher.

It was Hsin-Yu (Cynthia) Lu who led the way for the Ducks after another remarkable performance on Wednesday. Lu finished with an even-par 72, tied for Oregon’s best round on the day, to complete the tournament with an individual score of 210 (-6), which was the best in the tournament. Stanford’s Rose Zhang came in 2nd with 214 (-2).

While Oregon took the title on their home course, it was Oregon State and Stanford who split second-place at 877 (+13).

Up next, the Ducks will partake in one of six NCAA regionals, where they will look to advance to the NCAA Championships. The regionals take place on May 9-11.

Contact/Follow us @Ducks_Wire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinion.

Let us know your thoughts, comment on this story below. Join the conversation today.

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UCLA vs Arizona Prediction, Game Preview: Pac-12 Championship

UCLA vs Arizona prediction, college basketball game preview, how to watch, lines, and why each team might – or might not – win on Saturday in the Pac-12 Championship.

UCLA vs Arizona prediction, college basketball game preview, how to watch: Saturday, March 12


UCLA vs Arizona Game Preview, Pac-12 Championship How To Watch

Date: Saturday, March 12
Game Time: 9:00 ET
Venue: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, NV
How To Watch: FOX
Record: UCLA (25.6), Arizona (30-3)
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All of the CFN Fearless Predictions

3 keys to victory for Oregon Ducks against Utah in Pac-12 title game

The Oregon Ducks are one win away from another Pac-12 championship and a chance to head to Pasadena for the Rose Bowl.

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The Oregon Ducks have a chance at redemption in a major way on Friday evening as they’ll take on the Utah Utes in the Pac-12 Championship game.

The winner will most likely play in the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, barring a surprise inclusion in the College Football Playoffs if Oregon does win.

The Ducks got their bell rung the last time these two teams met a few weeks ago, with the Utes dominating from kickoff all the way until the end of the game in a decisive 38-7 victory in Salt Lake City.

For Oregon to earn their redemption, and another Pac-12 title, they’ll need to make some adjustments in a major way – starting with:

Stopping the Run

Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Swinger-USA TODAY Sports

This was a key for Oregon two weeks ago, one they weren’t able to accomplish successfully. Utah’s star back Tavion Thomas carried the ball 21 times for 94 yards – which doesn’t look too bad until you factor in his three rushing touchdowns.

The Utes as a team ran for over 200 yards on the ground and have more total rushing yards and rushing yards per game than any other team in the conference.

A lot has to change for Oregon to pull off a victory after the debacle from two weeks ago, with stopping the run the top task on coach Cristobal’s to-do list.

Pac 12 Championship: Oregon vs Utah Prediction, Game Preview

Pac 12 Championship: Oregon vs Utah prediction, game preview, how to watch, lines, and why each team might – or might not – win on Friday night

Pac 12 Championship: Oregon vs Utah prediction, game preview, how to watch: Friday, December 3


Pac 12 Championship: Oregon vs Utah How To Watch

Date: Friday, December 3
Game Time: 8:00 ET
Venue: Allegiant Stadium, Las Vegas, NV
How To Watch: ABC
Record: Oregon (10-2), Utah (9-3)
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Today’s Best Bet to Lock in Now

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All of the CFN Fearless Predictions

Pac 12 Championship: Oregon vs Utah Game Preview


Why Oregon Will Win

Can Utah possibly generate the same energy, the same effectiveness, and the same sort of production twice?

That 38-7 loss in Salt Lake City a few weeks ago was almost too obvious.

Oregon had been winning, but it wasn’t consistent and it wasn’t quite as sharp as a College Football Playoff team should look, it had a few problems on the road after the Ohio State win – losing at Stanford and needing to battle to get by UCLA and fight too hard in bad weather against Washington – and …

The Utes ripped through the Ducks clean.

But the running game still works. It was humming along before the Utah loss, and it showed up after in the win over Oregon State to get here.

The talent on both sides is undeniable, the O can match Utah’s third down conversion for third down conversion, the defense should come out and play like it’s personal.

Oregon’s run defense has been a rock over the second half of the season, but Utah ran for over 200 yards. Expect a quick adjustment in energy and production up front, and expect the defense to start taking the ball away a bit.

Missing in the first meeting were takeaways – that’s not normal for Oregon.

The Ducks went without a takeaway four times, and two of those games were the two losses. The offense hasn’t lost the ball in the last two games, but …

College Football Expert Picks, Championship Week

Why Utah Will Win

Utah doesn’t turn the ball over.

It doesn’t come up with takeaways – none in the last three games – but it has just two turnovers in the last six games.

No, Utah isn’t going to have the same juice it showed in the first meeting, but the idea is still the same.

Dominate the time of possession battle, own third down conversions, and swarm around the running backs and make Anthony Brown make big plays. Everyone tries that, but Utah was able to actually do it.

This is still a brutish team on the lines, it’s great in pass protection and it leads the Pac-12 in sacks and tackles for loss, and Utah has to prove that its talent can overcome the pure power Utah brings.

It’s not that the offense went off in the first meeting. It’s that the offense just kept moving. It never let the Ducks offense get into any sort of a groove outside of the opening drive of the second half, and that was answered by a dominant finish.

Utah didn’t get any less nasty and physical over the last few weeks.

NFL Expert Picks, CFN Week 13

What’s Going To Happen

The script is playing out like it’s supposed to.

Oregon plays well, Oregon loses November road game to screw up College Football Playoff chances, Oregon gets into the Pac-12 Championship, Oregon wins Pac-12 Championship over Utah, Oregon goes off to win the Rose Bowl.

At least that was how 2019 played out.

It’s so, so hard to be a talented team like Oregon twice. It’s even harder to try recreating the magic that got the win the first time around.

However, Utah is going to do what Utah does. It’s going to slug Oregon with the best running game in the Pac-12 and dare the D to hold up. Only this time, the Ducks will get its own O going.

Expect an entirely different Oregon.

The speed and flash will show up, the offensive line will play like it’s been challenged – because it has been – and Oregon takes its third straight Pac-12 Championship helped by two key takeaways in the second half.

College Football Schedule: Championship Week Predictions, Lines

Pac 12 Championship: Oregon vs Utah Prediction, Lines

Oregon 30, Utah 24
Line: Utah -3, o/u: 59.5
ATS Confidence out of 5: 1.5

Must See Rating: 4.5

5: The King’s Man
1: CMA Country Christmas

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Championship Week Schedule | CFN Expert Picks
Rankings CFN 1-130 RankingsAP | Coaches
Bowl Projections, CFP Predictions
Heisman Top Candidates: Who Wants To Win?

Oregon Ducks win Pac-12 North, secure rematch with Utah in conference championship

Oregon will have a chance to three-peat as Pac-12 Champs next week in a rematch against the Utah Utes.

Oregon Duck fans can’t say that they won the Pac-12 North Division for a second-straight year after beating the Oregon State Beavers on Saturday, but they can boast about the opportunity to win a third-straight Pac-12 Championship next week.

The Ducks dispatched with the Beavers, 38-29, winning the Pac-12 North for the second time in the past three years. While Oregon won the conference championship last year, they technically didn’t win the north division, and only played in the title game because the Washington Huskies, who won the north, were unable to play in the game due to a COVID outbreak.

Now, the Ducks have secured a spot in the Pac-12 Championship game next week, where they will get a rematch against the Utah Utes in Las Vegas on December 3rd.

It was Utah who embarrassed the Ducks a week ago, winning 38-7 in Salt Lake City, knocking Oregon out of contention for the College Football Playoff.

The Ducks will surely be looking for revenge, and hoping to become the first three-peat winner of the conference since Oregon did so from 2009-2011.

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