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USC cornerback Kevin Thomas lands awkwardly after breaking up a pass intended for Ducks receiver Jeff Maehl in the end zone on Saturday. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times / October 31, 2009) |
Welcome to their nightmare.
USC's hopes for a berth in the Bowl Championship Series title game are over.
So, almost certainly, are the Trojans' chances of winning an eighth consecutive Pacific 10 Conference title.
Both ended Saturday night at Autzen Stadium when 10th-ranked Oregon handed fourth-ranked USC its worst loss of the Pete Carroll era, a 47-20 pounding before a delirious Halloween night crowd of 59,592.
On a cold night in the Pacific Northwest, Oregon quarterback Jeremiah Masoli and running back LaMichael James chilled the Trojans to the bone with outstanding performances for the Ducks, who are in complete control of the Pac-10 race with designs on a BCS bowl game bid.
"That was a real mess," Carroll said outside the Trojans' locker room after the Ducks manhandled a Trojans team that was fifth in the BCS standings.
USC players appeared stunned after the Ducks rolled up 613 yards, the second-most ever yielded by the Trojans.
"They hit us in the mouth and kept hitting us in the mouth," senior safety Taylor Mays.
The Trojans, who fell to 6-2 and 3-2 in the Pac-10, had no answer against an Oregon team that is 7-1 and in the Pac-10 driver's seat at 5-0.
After being exposed in the second half of victories over Notre Dame and Oregon State, USC's defense went from bent to broken.
"I never thought it would happen to us," defensive end Everson Griffen said. "They came out and played at a whole different level.
"We couldn't match their intensity and they kept making big plays."
Masoli made many of them.
While it's hard to fathom anyone running the Ducks' spread offense better than Dennis Dixon in 2007, Masoli did just that.
The junior, from Hawaii by way of City College of San Francisco, operated the no-huddle offense to perfection and rushed for 164 yards and a touchdown.
"The runs that he popped, whether they were scrambles or by design, just broke our back," Carroll said.
So did Masoli's passes.
He completed 19 of 31 for 222 yards, and added insult to injury by throwing a second-quarter touchdown pass to wide receiver Jamere Holland, a former USC player who transferred to Oregon.
James was even more unstoppable.
The 5-foot-7 redshirt freshman made like Oregon State's Jacquizz Rodgers and darted his way to a career-best 183 yards, slipping tackles with ankle-breaking moves and surprising power.
USC's hopes for a berth in the Bowl Championship Series title game are over.
So, almost certainly, are the Trojans' chances of winning an eighth consecutive Pacific 10 Conference title.
Both ended Saturday night at Autzen Stadium when 10th-ranked Oregon handed fourth-ranked USC its worst loss of the Pete Carroll era, a 47-20 pounding before a delirious Halloween night crowd of 59,592.
On a cold night in the Pacific Northwest, Oregon quarterback Jeremiah Masoli and running back LaMichael James chilled the Trojans to the bone with outstanding performances for the Ducks, who are in complete control of the Pac-10 race with designs on a BCS bowl game bid.
"That was a real mess," Carroll said outside the Trojans' locker room after the Ducks manhandled a Trojans team that was fifth in the BCS standings.
USC players appeared stunned after the Ducks rolled up 613 yards, the second-most ever yielded by the Trojans.
"They hit us in the mouth and kept hitting us in the mouth," senior safety Taylor Mays.
The Trojans, who fell to 6-2 and 3-2 in the Pac-10, had no answer against an Oregon team that is 7-1 and in the Pac-10 driver's seat at 5-0.
After being exposed in the second half of victories over Notre Dame and Oregon State, USC's defense went from bent to broken.
"I never thought it would happen to us," defensive end Everson Griffen said. "They came out and played at a whole different level.
"We couldn't match their intensity and they kept making big plays."
Masoli made many of them.
While it's hard to fathom anyone running the Ducks' spread offense better than Dennis Dixon in 2007, Masoli did just that.
The junior, from Hawaii by way of City College of San Francisco, operated the no-huddle offense to perfection and rushed for 164 yards and a touchdown.
"The runs that he popped, whether they were scrambles or by design, just broke our back," Carroll said.
So did Masoli's passes.
He completed 19 of 31 for 222 yards, and added insult to injury by throwing a second-quarter touchdown pass to wide receiver Jamere Holland, a former USC player who transferred to Oregon.
James was even more unstoppable.
The 5-foot-7 redshirt freshman made like Oregon State's Jacquizz Rodgers and darted his way to a career-best 183 yards, slipping tackles with ankle-breaking moves and surprising power.
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