Keith Price, operating with a sore right thumb, found himself a popular figure among  Ducks defenders, getting sacked four times. / Drew McKenzie, Sportspress Northwest

The dagger already in, Oregon fans near the top of Husky Stadium’s south deck provided the twist. “Ten more years!” they chanted in unison, near the end. “Ten more years!”

Oregon reached a decade of domination over Washington Saturday afternoon, and while it wasn’t a surprise, the 45-24 defeat offered poor rebuttal to the fans’ mockery.

Good as are the Huskies, they aren’t Ducks good, and won’t be for awhile.

Some solace was obtainable for Huskies fans when Washington trailed only 31-24 with a single play left in the third quarter. The national TV audience, along with 71,388 lakeside, were looking forward to a fourth-quarter shootout that at least held the outside possibility of upset.

Then Marcus Mariota took off as if the Heisman Trophy were just beyond the first down marker. On Oregon’s 29-yard line facing a first-and-15, the brilliant Oregon quarterback broke from the pocket, swung right and then crossed the field, clearly faster than every Huskies’ defender.

The 35-yard run was followed by a 30-yard completion to WR Bralon Addison, and two plays later, Mariota ran it in from five yards. The drive took 90 seconds to cover 66 yards in five plays. The Huskies were dead, but they had to look at their jerseys for blood, so clinical was the incision.

The distant hope the Huskies had of ending the nine-year humiliation was over. Didn’t matter that the new house was packed, that the roster had game-breaking players, and that emotional reward was taken from playing Stanford hard and well on the road the previous Saturday.

“We wanted this one bad, and I know all of Seattle wanted this one really bad,” said Austin Seferian-Jenkins. “We didn’t get it.”

It was made a little worse after the game: Stanford, the team they were so valiant against, lost 27-21 at Utah, one of the dregs of the Pac-12 Conference.

After a 4-0 start, the Huskies are  4-2 and looking at a hard game in the desert Saturday against Arizona State, where they rarely play well. Plus, they must listen to the insufferable Ducks for another year.

“It’s a great achievement,” said first-year head coach Mark Helfrich of the 10-game winning streak over Washington. “For the fans, for the alumni — it’s huge. It’s a big deal. By the same token, it’s number six. We had to get through number six.”

Win No. 6 for the second-ranked Ducks was harder than the first five, in which they scored a minimum of 55 per, but it was just as inevitable. After winning last year in Eugene 52-21, the Ducks did it this time without the services of their best rusher, De’Anthony Thomas (ankle), and premier tight end Colt Lyeria (quit the team). But it doesn’t much matter the names as much as the talent for which they are recruited: Virtually every one of Oregon’s players is faster than his Washington counterpart.

The linemen are faster, the skill players are faster and Mariota, a 6-4, 215-pounder, is the second coming of 49ers QB Colin Kaepernick, a long strider who is agile — he was not sacked, and rushed for 88 yards in 13 carries.

“I don’t know whether he is planning on going on to the NFL, but when he does, I think he’ll be a top five draft pick,” said Huskies coach Steve Sarkisian, whose desire to see him do that could not be more intense. As a redshirt sophomore, he will be eligible to go. Sarkisian, who tried to recruit Mariota to Washington, would happily drive him to the airport for draft day.

As with Kaepernick and his Seahawks counterpart, Russell Wilson, Mariota combines legs and arms beneath a poised demeanor and mastery of the day and the plan. He has gone 223 passing attempts without an interception and has accounted for 25 touchdowns (17 passing, eight running). Saturday he had 454 yards of total offense.

As for his Washington counterpart, Keith Price, he played with a sore right thumb that diminished his play a little, but did everything he could to give the Huskies a chance. He was 19 of 32 for 182 yards, but hit on only two passes longer than 20 yards and was sacked four times. His 11 runs netted only 18 yards.

“It hurts,” said Price, meeting the media with a large ice bag on his thumb, hurt against Stanford. “But I could play. I was planning to play all week. It wasn’t the reason we lost.”

The turning point came early, which it almost always does with the Ducks. Tied at 7 and desperate to keep the Ducks from pulling away, the Huskies drove to the Oregon 30 for a first down, but the play ended when RB Bishop Sankey, who otherwise had another strong day with 167 yards rushing on 28 carries, fumbled the ball away.

“I don’t know what happened,” said Sankey. “I got hit and suddenly the ball was on the ground.”

Almost as suddenly, Oregon put up two quick touchdowns around a Washington 3-and-out, and went into halftime ahead 21-7. In the second half, Washington managed to close to 21-14 and 31-24, but few saw indications that the moments were more than merely delays to the inevitable.

“That’s a good teams we lost to,” said Sarkisian. “It’s been two back-to-back weeks of really good football teams. I think our kids have shown a great deal of competitive spirit.”

All true. And it all sounds like junior high summer camp.

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22 Comments

  1. Bottom line….Sark and his staff either do a better job recruiting, or they gotta go. Longtime Dawgs fan. I understand what they came into. The being in it for the long haul mantra won’t last. Start by getting better recruits on both lines

    • Haha. First of all, Sark is as good as your tier-2 program is going to attract rignt now. And even if you could hire the ghost of vince lombardi, the cache (and cash) of nike isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

      The sherrif wears green and gold, and will for the forseeable future. Accept it.

      • Beat us 16 more times in a row and your Johnny-come-lately program will pull even over the hundred year rivalry.

        • Not my program; just an observation. I don’t really have a dog in this fight (pardon the pun). In fact, I’d rather see the Huskies beat the insufferables from Eugene, but I don’t see it happening soon.

          And invoking ancient history isn’t going to help.

          • True dat. Rivalry is only that when teams are competitive. Otherwise it’s geographic coincidence.

    • I think they just really need to develop the depth that Oregon now has. UW’s ones seemed about as good as Oregon’s ones, but the depth in the second half wasn’t there, IMO.

      Not sure any NW program is really going to be able to recruit an elite level of athletes. Especially when they are all competitive and vying for the Cali kids just like everyone else in the West.

      • TV money is everything, and allows schools to have higher minimums in every aspect. Assume nothing about the future from the current landscape.

      • They can, and must do a better job of recruiting the best players in state. That’s a part of the problem, they’ve been losing those kids to other programs out of state. I don’t agree with your assessment of our 1s versus their 1s. Take UWs Dline. They’re gonna have a tough time against the better programs, when our dline guys IMO are running 4.8-4.9. We need guys who are faster than that. Our talent, and our team speed definitely needs to be improved. Hopefully a good finish and some kind of ranking will convince more kids to stay home. They need to see the program is improving and not taking steps back. They have a uphill battle IMO. That’s why Sark and his staff MUST find a way to finish strong. They have to be able to point record wise to some of these kinds of kids they’re losing, and convince them, with you on our team, you’re gonna help close the talent gap

    • The new facilities are a big deal. Washington was way behind in the arms race. The staff deserves time to recruit to the new digs.

      • I don’t disagree with giving them that chance at all. I’m just saying if he keeps missing out on these kids after a fair chance, don’t hesitate to make the tough call

        • That’s reasonable. Most Huskies fans don’t understand that the stadium was a dump for 20 years in an era when, to many kids, bling is everything.

  2. They also chanted “this is our house” as well. The duck flying across the stadium at the end hurt too.

  3. Oregon doesn’t have the best people, just the fastest. Speed is their MO. But, just an observation, they still don’t play anyone with that cremepuff schedule.

  4. Since it has now been shown that we cant beat the ducks by copying them, can we just get back to hard nose husky football and dispense with all of the giimickry?