Trio of Oregon Ducks named Associated Press pre-season All-Americans

A trio of Oregon Ducks were named pre-season All-Americans by the Associated Press going into the 2024 season.

We know that the Oregon Ducks are expected to be one of the best teams in the nation this fall, contending for a national championship as new members of the Big Ten. So it shouldn’t come as a surprise to see that a trio of the Ducks’ best players have been named preseason All-Americans, according to the Associated Press.

On Monday, quarterback Dillon Gabriel, wide receiver Tez Johnson, and right tackle Ajani Cornelius were all named second-team pre-season All-Americans, per AP.

These honors are just the last of many for the three of these players, all of whom have been named to multiple awards watch lists leading into the season.

Johnson and Cornelius were named first-team preseason All-Americans by the Sporting News.

27 total players were selected for the first team offense and defense on Monday, 10 of which came from the SEC, with eight coming from the Big Ten. The Ohio State Buckeyes led the Big Ten with four players named to the first team.

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Oregon is well represented in ESPN’s Top 100 players for 2024

Quarterback Dillon Gabriel, receiver Tez Johnson and corner Jabbar Muhammad are among ESPN’s top 100 college football players in 2024.

ESPN came out with their Top 100 players for the 2024 college football season and predictably, a few Oregon Ducks appeared on the list.

Quarterback Dillon Gabriel receiver Tez Johnson and corner Jabbar Muhammad are all on the list. In fact, the two offensive players for the Ducks cracked the Top 20 as Gabriel is No. 16 and Johnson is No. 18. Last season, Gabriel was No. 28 and Johnson wasn’t even ranked. Muhammad, when he was with Washington, was also not ranked in 2023.

Gabriel comes into the Oregon program with huge expectations and is currently a leading Heisman candidate. He’s wearing the No. 8 uniform, the same number as his idol, Marcus Mariota, who won the Ducks’ only Heisman Trophy.

According to ESPN, Gabriel’s experience is key here.

This two-time transfer brings experience to Oregon with 49 career starts. He already ranks in the top eight in FBS history in both passing yards (14,865) and passing touchdowns (125), earning all-conference honors for both the Sooners and Golden Knights. There’s a reason why Gabriel is the preseason Heisman betting favorite. — ESPN

Johnson’s only claim to fame when he came to Oregon last season was that he was Bo Nix’s adopted brother. But as the season went along, Johnson showed he was much more than that. After a rough first half of the year, Johnson turned into one of the best receivers in the Pac-12. He’s expected to have a monster season in the Big Ten, according to ESPN.

Troy Franklin garnered more attention in 2023, but Johnson set Oregon’s single-season record with 86 receptions and has 209 receptions for 2,780 yards the past three seasons at Oregon and Troy. The prolific senior should be the top target for new quarterback Dillon Gabriel. — ESPN

Muhammad is the rare player who transferred from Washington to Oregon. It’s not often a Husky becomes a Duck, but should Muhammad play like his 2023 self or even better, it makes a very good Oregon defense even better.

From purple to green, Muhammad’s offseason move was a short one down from Seattle to Eugene where he should become one of the Ducks’ key defensive players this season. Muhammad had 3 interceptions, 2 sacks and 46 tackles last season and is already getting plenty of hype from his new Oregon teammates, ready to crown him one of the best defensive backs in college football. — ESPN

If these three Ducks perform as everyone expects, the No. 3-ranked Oreegon team are going to be tough to beat this season.

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Two Ducks make CBS Sports preseason All-American list

Quarterback Dillon Gabriel and receiver Tez Johnson make the Second Team All-American list from CBS Sports.

Oregon has two weeks left to prepare for the 2024 season and more specifically, the Idaho Vandals for the August 31 date at Autzen Stadium.

But that doesn’t stop some Ducks from being named to preseason honor lists.

In the latest All-American lists from CBS Sports with 247 Sports, quarterback Dillon Gabriel and receiver Tez Johnson were named to their All-American Second Team.

On the whole, the Big Ten had seven players make their First Team with 16 players named overall, which included offense, defense, and specialists.

The SEC led the way in First Team selections with 12. Combined, the SEC and Big Ten accounted for 37 of 54 total picks (68.5 percent). Ten SEC teams and six Big Ten programs are represented on the overall 2024 CBS Sports Preseason All-America team.

The last two national champions, Georgia and Michigan, led all teams with three First-Team selections each.

Ohio State enters the season with the Preseason Coach of the Year in Ryan Day and Freshman of the Year in wide receiver Jeremiah Smith.

Ohio State and Oregon begin the season as the No. 2 and 3 teams, respectively, in the country, and the two teams will clash at Autzen Stadium Oct. 12.

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Leadership is key for Oregon WR Traeshon Holden as he anticipates a breakout in 2024

Oregon Ducks senior wide receiver has been working hard to improve his leadership in the hopes that it will lead to a breakout final season.

The University of Oregon has not been synonymous with elite wide receiver play over the past several decades.

Don’t get me wrong, there have been incredibly talented pass-catchers to come through Eugene — Tony Hartley, Sammie Parker, Demetrius Williams, Jeff Maehl, and Dillon Mitchell, to name a few — but nobody was going to start calling the Ducks ‘WR U’ any time soon.

Until Troy Franklin came along.

No. 11 changed things in Eugene and put Oregon on the map for highly-rated WR recruits looking for a place to flourish. Now, going into the 2024 season, many fans and analysts are considering the Ducks as one of, if not the top receiver group in the nation.

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With leading Heisman Trophy candidate Dillon Gabriel under center, and Tez Johnson and Evan Stewart out wide, big things are expected in Eugene.

But what about Traeshon Holden?

“Shoot, don’t worry about me then,” Holden told me on Tuesday when asked about his running mates getting most of the attention. “I’m glad they’re getting that attention, they work hard to get it. I ain’t no hater.”

It’s not hard to understand why Johnson and Stewart act as the two main focal points in the WR room. Their style of play — Tez’s quick and agile burst from the slot, and Evan’s go-up-and-get-it big-play ability — is endearing to fans, and has produced endless highlights over the past couple of years.

But don’t forget about Traeshon. He can dazzle when you’re least expecting.

Like late in the fourth quarter of the 2023 Pac-12 Championship Game? Oregon was down by 10 with just over two minutes on the clock. Bo Nix found Holden over the middle on a short crossing pattern, and No. 5 took it 63 yards for a critical touchdown.

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Holden’s 452 yards and 6 TDs in 2023 may not stack up next to Johnson’s 1,182 yards and 10 TDs, but don’t let that lead you to believe he isn’t a massive part of this WR corp.

For Holden, though, the biggest asset he brings to the room may come off the field in the form of leadership. That’s something that’s taken time to develop, with constant provoking from head coach Dan Lanning.

“I feel like the biggest thing I’ve grown is probably my mental,” Holden said. “Lanning would come to me every day and he’d be like, ‘On a scale of 1-10, how are you leading today?’ I feel like that helps me every day for sure with maturity.”

Maturity can’t be rushed, but it can be fostered. That’s something that Lanning has worked hard at over the last year since Holden landed in Eugene as a transfer from the Alabama Crimson Tide.

As is the case with us all, there are good days and bad days. But on those good days, the differences are palpable.

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“His best leadership role for us is when he goes out there and puts it on the field every single day,” Lanning said. “And then how he affects the people around him. And those days that he does that, it makes our team really tough to stop.”

One thing that Lanning has preached to his team in Eugene is the concept of consistency, calling it the rarest human trait. For Holden, it’s the consistency in leadership and effort that he wants to see continue to develop the most.

“The biggest piece that we’re talking with Trae on every single play is, ‘What’s the next play?'” Lanning said. “‘Great last play, what’s the next play? Bad last play, what’s the next play?’ He’s done a really good job of that.”

As long as Holden can keep stacking those days, and building on that leadership, the sky is the limit. He is a clear-cut starter in this offense, and projects to have a major role in the passing game.

If he follows through, it won’t just be Tez and Evan who are getting the attention in Eugene. Trae makes three.

“They’re gonna see,” Holden said. “Everyone’s gonna see. Watch.”

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A pair of Ducks make their debut on the Maxwell Award list for 2024

Quarterback Dillon Gabriel and Tez Johnson are on the preseason Maxwell Award List for the 2024 season.

The 2024 college football season is a little over a month away and it’s time for those preseason award catch lists to come out and one of the biggest lists included two Ducks who expected to have monster seasons.

Both quarterback Dillon Gabriel and wide receiver Tez Johnson appear on the Maxwell Award watchlist. The award, which enters its 88th year is presented annually to the most outstanding player in college football.

These pair of Ducks have great seasons will go a long way towards the Duks’ goal of being a college football playoffs team and a possible national championship contender.

As the team enters the Big Ten, the opposition increases. The conference has their share of watch list members. Michigan has one (RB Donovan Edwards, USC has one (QB Miller Moss) and Ohio State has three (QB Will Howard, RB Quinshon Judkins, and WR Emeka Egbuka).

The watch list will be trimmed down as the season goes along, but expect all of the Big Ten players to remain there for quite some time.

Dillon Gabriel and Tez Johnson recognized at Big Ten media day

Both Dillon Gabriel and receiver Tez Johnson were named to the preseason All-Big Ten team at media day.

A game hasn’t been played and two Oregon football players have been recognized by the Big Ten media.

Quarterback Dillon Gabriel and wide receiver Tez Johnson have been named to the pre-season Big Ten All-Conference team when the league’s three-day media day event began in Indianapolis Tuesday morning.

Gabriel, a transfer from Oklahoma, hasn’t played an official down for the Ducks, but many think this could be a Heisman season for Oregon’s newest QB1.

As for Johnson, he made quite the splash last season after spending two years at Troy. After a slow start, Johnson ended up with 86 catches for 1,182 yards and 10 touchdowns for the Ducks in 2023. He now leads a very talented receivers room that could be the best in program history.

Gabriel and Johnson were the only two Ducks named to the team. Ohio State had five players and Michigan had four. Here’s a complete list of preseason honorees.

  • LB Jay Higgins, Iowa
  • DT Mason Graham, Michigan
  • DB Will Johnson, Michigan
  • TE Colston Loveland, Michigan
  • QB Dillon Gabriel, Oregon
  • WR Tez Johnson, Oregon
  • SAF Caleb Downs, Ohio State
  • WR Emeka Egbuka, Ohio State
  • RB TreVeyon Henderson, Ohio State
  • DE JT Tuimoloau, Ohio State
  • DE Abdul Carter, Penn State
  • RB Kyle Monangai, Rutgers

 

EA Sports has two Duck receivers as the fastest in the nation

Tez Johnson and Evan Stewart are rated as the fastest players in the new EA Sports College Football ’25.

The hype for EA Sports’ College Football ’25 has been through the roof. Football fans, as well as non-football fans, are anxious for this game to come out.

Needless to say after waiting a decade, this game will sell millions and millions of copies and downloads.

Fans have their particular teams will surely want to play out the season using their favorite teams and fans of the Oregon Ducks will have a ton of fun leading the Ducks to the digital promise land.

They’ll also play with two of the fastest players in the game as receivers Tez Johnson and Evan Stewart were given a speed rating of 96 and 95, respectively.

Game players will no doubt like to throw the bomb to Johnson and Stewart to utilize that Olympic-type speed. They’ll also be using quarterback Dillon Gabriel to throw those long passes, one of the highest-rated QBs in the game.

The newest Duck signal-caller has an overall rating of 92, the fourth-highest rating among quarterbacks in the game. His speed (81) and awareness (99) make him one of the game’s most dangerous quarterbacks and nearly impossible to defend.

For college football fans and Oregon fans, July 19, the date this game comes out, just can’t come soon enough.

Oregon WR garners a Devonta Smith comparison

Dalton Wasserman of PFF compares Oregon Ducks transfer wide receiver Evan Stewart to Philadelphia Eagles WR DeVonta Smith.

One of the Oregon Ducks’ most exciting — and surprising — additions this offseason was Texas A&M transfer wide receiver Evan Stewart. 247Sports final transfer rankings lists Stewart as the No. 5 overall transfer this offseason, and this weekend, Pro Football Focus compared him to Philadelphia Eagles WR DeVonta Smith.

Smith played four years of college football at Alabama, where he became the fourth non-quarterback to win the Heisman Trophy this century, winning in 2020. Despite a lean frame, Smith excelled in college as a wideout and in the slot, using his elite speed and his one-of-a-kind route-running to dice up opposing defenses.

Dalton Wasserman, the PFF writer who compared Stewart to Smith, singled out Stewart’s route-running as parallel to the Eagles wideout. Stewart only has two seasons of college experience, and he dealt with injury issues during his time as an Aggie, but if Stewart’s route-running at Oregon is half as effective as Smith’s was at Alabama, he’ll be a perfect match with Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein’s offense.

 

At the top of the Ducks’ WR depth chart, next to Stewart, are Tez Johnson and Traeshon Holden. To oversimplify each of their styles, Johnson is a speed demon and Holden is a big, athletic pass catcher. That three-WR combination gives Stewart space to fill the X-receiver spot (No. 1 wideout). At the X, Stewart would have plenty of downfield big-play potential and frequent short targets from Dillon Gabriel as a reliable checkdown receiver.

Oregon OC Will Stein details the luxuries and the challenges of having so much depth at WR

There are a lot of mouths to feed in Oregon’s WR room, but only one ball. It’s a good problem to have, says Will Stein.

It may seem ironic, but sometimes it isn’t easy in college football to have a roster as complete as the Oregon Ducks do ahead of the 2024 season.

The Ducks are coming off a season in which they boasted a top-10 offense and a top-10 defense in points and points allowed per game — something only two other FBS teams did. Somehow, on paper, they’ve improved.

Although Oregon is losing Troy Franklin this offseason, the Ducks’ WR room looks like one of their most talented and deepest position groups, with elite talent at the top and bottom of the depth chart. For the 2024 season, Oregon is returning Tez Johnson, Traeshon Holden, and Gary Bryant Jr., and they’ve added Texas A&M transfer Evan Stewart and a trio of freshmen in Jeremiah McClellan, Ryan Pellum, and Dillon Gresham as well. Be sure not to sleep on Jurrion Dickey and Kyler Kasper, either.

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After practice on Tuesday, Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein spoke about the luxury of having so many talented wide receivers on a team.

“It’s huge,” Stein said. “I mean whenever you can roll six or seven deep at wideout, you know you’ve got a really good room. We still want to keep our play count up, and earlier in the year especially with the weather and the heat, we want to roll a lot of guys in there.”

It’s tough to say at this point in the process who Oregon’s top receivers will be, but Johnson, Stewart, and Holden are the early favorites to lead the WR room. With the quality receivers Oregon has in addition to those three, though, Stein may have a tough time balancing everyone’s usage.

“It’ll be fun, but it’s going to be stressful too,” Stein said about the challenge of getting everyone involved. “There’s a lot of players on our team. It’s a wonderful problem to have. It comes back to game planning and when you’re in that setting, personnel-specific plays are, I think, huge. We’ll see when we get there.”

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In addition to the wide receivers, Stein will have the challenge of working the ball to Oregon’s talented tight ends. Terrance Ferguson is coming back for his final season this fall, and last season he showed he is one of the best TEs in college football. Earlier this spring, Stein even said that he “needs to get him (Ferguson) the ball more.” Patrick Herbert and Kenyon Sadiq are two other TEs who could be big producers for the Ducks in the fall.

Like Stein said, having a variety of weapons at your disposal is a great problem to have. It should lead to a more diverse offensive strategy, making things more difficult for opposing defenses by throwing different concepts at them. It should also help the Ducks’ players manage their load, hopefully mitigating injuries.

“Shoot, we’ve got a lot of really good players. It’s about getting those kids the ball and getting their confidence up early,” Stein said.

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Oregon QB Dillon Gabriel is making an impression on and off the field

Oregon wide receiver Tez Johnson says the Ducks newest QB is making a strong early impression.

If there’s one guy on the Oregon Ducks football team to assess how the newest Duck quarterback Dillon Gabriel is faring in the early going, it would be Tez Johnson.

The Oregon senior receiver was in Gabriel’s place this time last year when he transferred in from Troy. Although he had plenty of experience under his belt, he was still the new guy on the field trying to make a positive impression to everyone on and off the field.

Only in Johnson’s case, he was catching passes, not throwing them.

So when asked how his new quarterback was doing in his short time on campus, Johnson offered up this analysis on the former Oklahoma Sooner.

“He’s funny. Ya know, Dillon Gabriel is a total goofball,” Johnson said. “Like, he’s all for the team. He’s a goofy guy. He’s a kid in the locker room. But he’s also good people like when it’s time to put work in, you’re gonna put the work in. And we like that about a quarterback.”

There was no other player like Nix when it came to putting the work in and being good people. Gabriel certainly has some big cleats to fill, but from the sound of it, No. 8 is handling it like the cool customer he was billed as being.

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