Showing posts with label 2003. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2003. Show all posts

Thursday, January 23, 2014

The night the lights went out at Autzen: Tedford’s 2003 return to Eugene

 The night the lights went out at Autzen: Tedford’s 2003 return to Eugene

Originally posted on FishDuck.com on October 26th, 2011


From 1998 – 2001 the University of Oregon Ducks football team reached heights never before thought possible.  Unbelievable games, great offenses, bowl victories, high rankings, conference titles, and Heisman contenders.  Leading the helm for the potent Oregon offenses during that time, molding players into the best they could be, was offensive coordinator Jeff Tedford.

Following Oregon’s triumphant victory over Colorado in the 2002 Fiesta Bowl, it felt like the end of an era…Oregon had reached the crest of the wave, the pinnacle, and the only way now was down. 
Iconic quarterback Joey Harrington was leaving for the NFL, and Tedford was leaving to take over the head coach job at Cal.  He took with him a vast array of Oregon coaches and former players to fill his coaching staff, molding the team in Berkeley from an also-ran into a mirror image of the model Oregon had used to become successful.

Tedford had picked from the Oregon ranks, building a staff that included nine former Oregon Ducks, including himself.

Cal head coach Jeff Tedford
Jeff Tedford (Offensive Coordinator at UO 1998-2001)
Bob Gregory (Defensive Backs coach at UO 1999-2000)
Ron Gould (Cornerback at UO 1987, Graduate Assistant 1990-1991)
Eric Kiesau (Team Coordinator at UO 1999)
Justin Wilcox (Cornerback at UO 1995 – 1999)
John Krasinski (Strength Coach at UO 1998-2000)
Eric Young (Strength Coach at UO 1996-1997)
Kevin Parker (Runningback at UO 1994 – 1998)
Mike McHugh (Operations Director at UO 1999-2000)

Tedford’s attempts to Oregon-ize the beleaguered Cal program had an immediate impact.  Cal went from the worst program in the conference in 2001 (1-10) to 7-5 the following year, and in 2003 had beaten the seemingly-invincible USC Trojans in triple overtime.  It was clear Tedford and his crew of former Oregon Ducks were on their way to changing the perception of Cal Bears football.

Oregon meanwhile had appeared to have taken a step backwards since Tedford’s departure.  Sure Oregon was still winning games, packing the newly-remodeled Autzen Stadium, and recruiting well…but an embarrassing loss at the end of the 2002 season in the Seattle Bowl to Wake Forest felt like this wasn’t the same Oregon team that had finished #2 in the country at the end of the 2001 season.  There were still good players, familiar tenured coaches, and the Autzen atmosphere, but to fans it felt like when Tedford left a piece of Oregon’s success had been taken with him down to Berkeley.  Cal was a team on the rise, Oregon was a team struggling to maintain the success it had felt during the Tedford years.

It was easy to understand then why on November 8th, 2003, during the Cal-Oregon game at Autzen Stadium, emotions ran high as Tedford and co. returned to Eugene for the first time since leaving.  2003 had been an up and down season for both teams, Oregon had beaten then-undefeated and #3-ranked Michigan, and Cal had taken down USC in triple OT, but both teams had also suffered some embarrassing losses and were struggling to become bowl eligible.

Watching Cal was like a mirror image to what Oregon had been a couple years prior.  The same defensive style, the identical playbook used at Oregon, a talented dual-RB tandem in J.J. Arrington and Adimchinobe Echemandu that appeared the second-coming of Maurice Morris and Onterrio Smith at Oregon two years prior, and a talented quarterback destined for success in Aaron Rodgers.

Oregon had wanted J.J. Arrington for their own, badly, so much so that Oregon Runningbacks Coach Gary Campbell was sanctioned by the NCAA for forging a signature on Arrington’s Letter of Intent making it appear like he signed with Oregon when at the last minute he had instead chosen Cal.
Tedford had become known as a quarterback guru at his various coaching stops, particularly Fresno State and Oregon.  Under Tedford’s tutelage Trent Dilfer, David Carr, Akili Smith, and Joey Harrington had all become 1st round NFL draft picks.  His next quarterback superstar was now leading Cal, Aaron Rodgers.
 
Rodgers hadn’t been recruited by any division-1 school coming out high school, so he had decided to attend Butte Junior College to continue playing football.  One of the first recruits Tedford had pursued since arriving in Berkeley was Butte’s talented tight end Garrett Cross to fill an immediate need in their roster, and Tedford recognized that the quarterback throwing Cross the ball in all the game footage was really good as well.  It was Aaron Rodgers, and Tedford wanted him, even though no other school in the country had ever heard of Rodgers.  Cal would be the only BCS team in the nation to offer Aaron Rodgers a scholarship, but by the time he was done at Cal two years later he would be a first round draft pick, and today one of the top quarterbacks in the NFL.

Watching Rodgers and Cross, Arrington and Echemandu and Tedford coaching on the sidelines was an odd experience for Oregon fans.  If an Oregon fan squinted they could swear that it was actually Joey Harrington and Justin Peele, Maurice Morris and Onterrio Smith from two years prior for some reason wearing Cal uniforms…the players looked the same, the playbook was the same, the successful results similar.  Cal had become everything that Oregon was.

The two teams did not play each other during the 2002 season, making the 2003 game in Eugene the first time Mike Bellotti’s Ducks would face Jeff Tedford’s team of Oregon-esque Cal Bears.  Coaches may have preached that it was just another game, but everyone knew it was so much more than that.
 
A national television audience tuned in for the evening’s festivities November 8th, 2003, for the 7pm kickoff of Cal at Oregon.  Normally the Ducks would have all the advantages playing at home in front of the raucous Oregon fans, but Cal knew everything about the Ducks.  The coaches knew Oregon’s playbook, personnel, tendencies, hand signals, and every nuance of the stadium’s facilities.  It would be a battle of the current Oregon team vs. a team built to imitate Oregon of a couple years prior in every way.

“All week it was about Tedford is coming back, let’s get past the emotions, but once we get going it’s just them vs. us, treat it like another game,” said Tim Day, Oregon’s starting sophomore tight end in 2003.  “Coaches emphasized that it was just another game, Coach (Mike) Bellotti always tried to put it in perspective, it’s still another game.  We tried to believe that, but in the back of our minds we knew it was bigger, this one really mattered to the coaches and players.”
 
It clearly meant more to the Cal team as well, evidenced by the words “Beat Oregon” written in big letters and circled in ink on the back of Tedford’s play card that he held up to his mouth while making calls into his headset, visible to everybody.

“It was a big thing going into that week, there was a lot of tension and excitement because of Tedford and the other guys coming back,” said Chris Solomona, a defensive end who had joined Oregon in 2002 but still knew of Tedford’s impact at Oregon in the years prior.  “He had been a part of Oregon’s success for the past 3-4 years, that week preparing for Cal I could feel the intensity from the team and coaches, it was big, everyone was excited, everyone was looking forward to it, everyone knew these guys were coming ready to play.”

Chris Solomona was a vital cog in Oregon's powerful defensive line
 
While Cal’s quarterback situation wasn’t in question, Oregon’s leadership was a bit more muddy.  The Ducks had a dual-quarterback system using senior QB Jason Fife and freshman Kellen Clemens.  Clemens was the better passer, Fife a scrambler who could make big plays with his feet.  The tandem at one point in the system their stats combined had the top-QB rating in the country, but in a disastrous loss to Washington State that included seven interceptions the train had derailed and struggled ever since.  It is often said that if a team has two quarterbacks, they have no quarterback, as unclear leadership can lead to divisions within the team, inner squabbles over whom should be playing having the potential to tear a team apart.

“We stayed pretty tight knit between the two QBs, Bellotti handled it well,” Day remembers.  “For me and Demetrius Williams we both said, ‘hey as long as the ball is coming our way it’s cool whoever is throwing it.’  Those guys were both best of friends so we all got along well.  It helped that they were okay with it, that made it easier to accept the rotation.  Bellotti made sure that everything stayed in house and nothing negative leaked to the press.  If you don’t control a situation like that it can get really bad within a team, but the coaches did well giving both guys opportunities to play in camp and practice.”

Kellen Clemens would get the start vs. Cal, the 10th of his career, but it was clear from the start that this one would be a defensive struggle.  The two teams knew each other too well, they had practiced each other’s schemes, had the same playbooks, the coaches knew each other too well.  In a game where two teams are nearly identical in almost every way, it would be a battle of defenses refusing to give up anything.

From the start it was clear that Oregon was treating this game differently.  Rather than the normal hand signals to call plays, Oregon’s quarterbacks would run to the sideline after every play to be told the play then sprint back to the huddle to deliver the call to avoid the Cal team from being able to read Oregon’s hand signals.  On the field the calls being made were recognizable by both teams too.
“We had a lot of hand signals,” said Day.  “On their defensive side they would call defensive plays that we knew from practice, and in turn the calls we made at the line they recognized.  It was crazy, some of the calls were exactly the same.  So Kellen and Jason started running to the sidelines so as not o give anything away, our teams were mirror images of each other.”

Tim Day continued the lineage of great NFL-bound tight ends at Oregon
 
Oregon struggled to find any offensive consistency early, punting after stalling out on the opening drive, but Oregon’s defense also recognized much of their team in Cal’s offense and came ready to play.
 
“The Cal coaches, they knew everything about us,” said Solomona.  “They knew the ins-and-outs and knew the plays and players.  Tedford knew our personnel, be it Jason Fife or Kellen Clemens, he understood our offense, and it showed.  It was a fierce defensive struggle, this was intense football.  Both defenses were competing hard, it was a great game, but it wasn’t to our advantage.”

Thanks to the running tandem of Arrington and Echemandu and Rodgers’ precise passing, Cal had the upper-hand early, stringing together first downs controlling the clock but unable to reach the endzone against Oregon’s stout defense.  The game was a grind in the trenches, and while Cal was moving the chains it was a struggle to do so against Oregon’s very talented defensive line, which featured five defensive linemen that would play in the NFL, and would have had six if Haloti Ngata not torn his ACL earlier in the year on a cheapshot in the first game of the season vs. Mississippi State.
“Coach (Steve) Greatwood had a weird rotation for us defensive linemen, Devan (Long) and I were competing at defensive end,” said Chris Solomona.  “Quinn Dorsey had been suspended for 4 or 5 games at the start of the season so I played a lot, but once Quinn came back I was a reserve again.  I was still adjusting from junior college.  But we had so much talent on that line, it was crazy.  Igor Olshansky, Junior Siavii, Robbie Valenzuela, Devan Long, Quinn Dorsey.  When Haloti got hurt, him alone, his dominance, our core defensive linemen would have been so powerful, if he had been healthy I’m sure we would have won a couple of games that season that we lost.”
“The reason why I became such a good blocker at the tight end position was because of our defensive line,” said Day.  “Those guys were so good, I had to change my technique just to compete with them in practice everyday, they were so talented.  It changed the way I blocked, they were so legit, some of the best in Oregon history.  I had actually come to Oregon as a defensive end but was switched to tight end, probably a good thing because our D-line was so stacked.”
Oregon meanwhile couldn’t do much of anything right on offense against a Cal defense that knew exactly what was coming before the snap.  By the end of the first quarter Clemens was 1/7 passing, and Cal had 13 minutes of time of possession.
 
At the end of the first quarter Cal had put together a scoring drive to take the lead 7-0, but neither defense was caving.  However Cal’s ability to methodically move the chains was wearing out Oregon’s defense, fatigue could become a factor later in the game if Oregon’s offense didn’t start making things happen.

“It took us a little longer to get started in that game for whatever reason, everybody started slow,” Tim Day recalls.  “I had a couple catches, but we just started slow, it took longer to get moving.  Their defense was playing well, but we were also shooting ourselves in the foot.  That happens in every game, but we just started slow.  We knew how good Tedford was, we definitely wanted to win this game, we wanted to keep things as calm as possible and just play our game, but deep down we also really wanted to beat our former coach.  The offense wasn’t executing, coming off the sidelines I’d talk to Kellen and Jason, and we kept saying once we get these things cleaned up we’ll be good, but things weren’t working.”

With Kellen Clemens having difficulty finding any consistency, at the start of the 2nd quarter Jason Fife took over at quarterback.  But things remained much the same, while Fife did make some nice plays on scrambles there still wasn’t much offensive consistency, while Cal continued to control the clock inching out small gains against Oregon’s tough defense.
 
“I remember us thinking like we couldn’t do anything right, like we were helpless, we had that feeling for the whole game,” Solomona remembers.  “These guys are aggressive, their defense is making all these plays shutting down our offense, Kellen stayed composed on the sidelines while Fife came in and did a good job, but it was clear guys were getting frustrated the defense always on the field and the offense not getting things done.”

While the score remained 7-0, it felt like with Oregon’s offensive ineptitude and Cal’s ability to control the clock that it was only a matter of time before the Ducks caved and the Bears took over.  Just when things looked bleak though, Oregon finally found some success…

On a 3rd & 17 with the ball on their own 20 yard line, Jason Fife uncorked a deep pass connecting with Demetrius Williams for a 32 yard gain.
 
“Once a couple drives don’t go your way, you start trying different things grasping for a big play,” said Tim Day.  “Demetrius (Williams) was a big play guy, I remember the 3rd & 17 play, and when D-Will caught it that changed so much, everybody ran down the field excited to get on the ball, it gave us more confidence and the coaches more confidence to open up the playbook.  If we didn’t get that play the defense would have been in trouble, we could have gone down 14-0 against a tough Cal team, in a game like that it would have been tough to overcome.”

Following the Williams catch, Fife connected with Samie Parker for a first down, suddenly things were clicking and the crowd could sense a new energy in the Oregon team.
 
Riding the wave of momentum, Fife again found Parker, this time for a 13 yard touchdown, tying the game at 7-7.
 
It felt like a new game.  Cal had been grinding away at Oregon, but there was a renewed energy in the crowd and with the Duck team…it would not be the only time this would occur.  The Duck defense continued its tough play when Cal got the ball back, smothering Cal’s various weapons.
 
But when it looked like Oregon had all the momentum, a lapse in judgment would come back to haunt them.  Cal tested Oregon’s secondary on a deep play-action pass, which was broken up by fiery safety Keith Lewis, who then celebrated by doing a throat slash, a celebration that had been outlawed by the NCAA the year prior, an unsportsmanlike flag was thrown.
 
Fans erupted in disappointment, coaches exploded in frustration.  With Lewis everyone knew it was a give-and-take.  He was one of Oregon’s best playmakers, a ball hawk that always seemed to step up when a play had to be made, but also a player who sometimes lost control of his emotions or let his mouth get the better of him.  In the week prior Lewis had talked a lot of trash to the media about Oregon’s matchup vs. Washington, and the Huskies targeted Lewis with multiple cheapshots all game as a result during their 42-10 romp over Oregon.
 
Coach Mike Bellotti berated Lewis on the sidelines for his dumb lapse in judgment.  Bellotti was always adamant on playing smart, disciplined football, and it was not the first time that Bellotti and Lewis clashed.  But Bellotti also knew he needed Keith Lewis, and made sure to lift him back up after tearing him down for his error.

“With Keith, Bellotti was reiterating that we don’t do that stuff, but we still need him,” said Tim Day.  “Lewis got caught up with emotions, he should know better, but he’s trying to hype our team up, and Bellotti reiterated that we don’t play like that, we make plays and we’re humble about it.”

“With Keith’s penalty, Keith did the throat-slash prior to that and didn’t get penalized, but that time vs. Cal he got caught,” Solomona remembers.  “Keith had a bigger chip on his shoulder vs. Stanford & Cal because he was from the bay area, it means that much more.  It was always that same way with me for the LA schools since I’m from there, you always want to do more to show up against the schools that are from your home, especially if you think they should have recruited you harder.  On that play Keith was excited, Bellotti was pretty heated about his penalty.”

The penalty put Cal deep into Oregon territory with the clock ticking down before halftime, but once again the Oregon defense would step up.  With Cal threatening to enter the redzone defensive end Quinn Dorsey, back into the starting lineup after serving his lengthy suspension, showcased his speed off the edge sacking Aaron Rodgers.
 
The sack forced Cal to kick a long field goal, Oregon once again relying on its defense to stay in the game while the offense continued to sputter.

“Quinn’s sack, he was that kind of player making big plays, you just wondered when he was going to break out,” said Chris Solomona, “We knew about his speed and athleticism.  It was a huge play, he did that all the time in practice, reading the count and getting a good jump, and on that play he got off the ball right away and came clean.  Whenever you can get a hit like that it is a huge boost, especially under that circumstance with Cal driving.”

At halftime Cal had the lead 10-7, and as rain started to fall there was a sense that Oregon was fortunate to still be in the game with how Cal had controlled the clock while the Ducks seemed inept offensively.

“At halftime we felt beat already,” said Solomona.  “The score was 10-7, but we felt helpless, we thought Cal was only leading by 3 because of self-inflicted wounds and could have scored easily, we were lucky to still be in it.  Coming out of halftime we had lost that motor, the energy, like we had already been defeated.  We were wondering when Cal was going to get the big play because we could feel it coming, but we weren’t going to stop fighting.”

“You never want to go into halftime down,” said Day.  “We wanted to come back out on the field knowing we had the lead, because we were always such a good 2nd half team.  Our coaches always made such good halftime adjustments.  Even though the mentality is always to treat it like a new game, like it’s 0-0, we knew we had made some mistakes and dug ourselves a hole.  We knew we could compete, we just had to make some adjustments.”

Day continued, “When I was watching film on Cal the defenses ran exactly what we did in practice, they were mirrors of us so we had an idea of how to attack them.  But they came out playing an entirely different defense for much of the game from what they had run all year and it gave us problems.  We felt bad at half, we congratulated the defense because we put them in a lot of bad situations, they were busting their butts, for how good Cal’s offense was to have only scored 10 points was amazing.  Bellotti told the team, ‘hey offense, you’ve got to get the defense off the field to rest.’  The captains on the team Jason and Kellen went around trying to pick us up, and Keith Lewis and Kevin Mitchell were trying to hype up the defense, but it had been a frustrating game.”
The 2nd half continued much of the same way the first half played out.  As the rain fell harder adding to the passing woes, Cal moved the ball but were unable to score while Fife and the Duck offense continued to be unable to find any rhythm.

The score was still 10-7 in the middle of the 3rd quarter when Jason Fife was able to make a play with his feet, as he had all year long, to create a spark.
 
Building off the momentum of Fife’s 26 yard run Oregon put together a drive into Cal territory, but the Bears defense came up big forcing a Jared Siegel field goal attempt that sailed left, leaving the score still 10-7.

As the 4th quarter began, Oregon was pinned back on their own goal line after a great Cal punt was downed at the 6-yard line.  On the first play Jason Fife dropped back and threw to fullback Matt Floberg in the flat for a small gain.  As Floberg fell out of bounds tripping over some wires suddenly the stadium went dark.  The lights had gone out at Autzen Stadium.
 
The crowd roared, while players looked around confused.  The night prior at the Rose Garden in Portland the buzzer had been stuck for 11 minutes, and the announcers laughed about all the mechanical issues taking place in the state of Oregon.

People stood around, unsure of what to do.  The Pac-10 officials discussed what to do if the lights couldn’t get turned back on, and decided that the game would have to be forfeited with Cal, who still led 10-7, declared the winner if the lights were not turned back on soon.  Tedford took his Cal Bears team back into the locker room, while Oregon stayed out on the field stretching and running to stay limber.  Fans took the occasion to treat it like a party.

“When the lights went out, I was trying to keep everyone loose,” said Day.  “I didn’t think the lights would be out that long.  I remember telling guys ‘hey, who forgot to to pay the electric bill?’  (Offensive Coordinator Andy) Ludwig came down from the booth to the field and talked to us about some of the plays he wanted to run in the 4th quarter.  It was like a second halftime, and we used that time to get re-focused.”

“It was unbelievable when the lights went out,” laughed Chris Solomona.  “I could understand that maybe happening once at a high school game, but this is big-time college football, that sort of thing doesn’t happen.  I remember throughout the following week everyone thought we pulled the plug on purpose, ask Cal and they’ll probably say we did, but when all that stuff happened we were just as surprised as Cal was.  The lights being out gave us that chip we needed, we went into the locker room and used that break as a time to focus.”

The Ducks eventually went into the locker room and Coach Bellotti told his team to use the moment.  Refocus, make something special happen in the 4th quarter.  The adjustments they tried to make in the first halftime hadn’t worked, but being given a second halftime was Oregon’s chance to rebound.  Bellotti delivered a speech that got the team pumped.

“I remember chatting with my buddy and we kinda liked the stadium dark, it was cool, like a movie,” said Solomona.  “That was our halftime, it was our chance to rest and recover.  Bellotti delivered a great speech that really lifted us up and the team attitude changed to ‘hey, we could win this game.  He told us this was our time, that the lights came off but it’s for a reason, now it’s time for us to turn it on.   We felt like we could beat them, we knew we could beat them but the first three quarters were so frustrating because they played with a sense of urgency and we couldn’t get things going.”
 
Autzen Stadium had recently been upgraded with an automated computer-controlled lighting system, but somebody had neglected to adjust the lighting settings for the evening kickoff so the lights started shutting down at the normal designated time for a typical afternoon practice or late afternoon kickoff.
“We didn’t know what caused it, but when we watched the film we were laughing because we thought Matt Floberg had maybe unplugged the lights because when he fell out of bounds on that play he tripped over some cords,” laughed Tim Day.

After an almost 20 minute delay the lights had been manually restarted and gameplay could resume, but it was obvious that something was different.  The teams that went into the locker rooms weren’t the same teams that returned to the field.

“It was such an epic feeling when the lights came back on and we were able to run out of the tunnel again, the fans were going crazy, we felt for the first time like we had this,” said Solomona.  “Everybody was re-energized, and we carried that momentum.”

“We felt like it was a second chance, and if you gave our team a second chance we would capitalize,” Tim Day recalls.  “The fans were pumped, we were pumped, we were able to go back through our gameplan.  We were really re-energized and ready to go get this win, suddenly we had the mindset ‘we’re winning this game.  Our team is too good to lose this game, let’s go get it done.’”

While there was a renewed sense of energy, it didn’t immediately translate into results, as Oregon’s drive continued from where Floberg had gone out of bounds but stalled leading to a punt.

When Cal got the ball back, despite the enthusiasm from the crowd and teammates, Cal finally got the big play that everyone had been expecting all night.  On a screen pass Cal RB Adimchinobe Echemandu broke a tackle and rumbled for a 35 yard gain down to the goal line.
 
Aaron Rodgers would fumble while trying to punch it in, but he was ruled down.
 
Following a penalty, a pass to WR Geoff McArthur appeared to be complete but the refs ruled it incomplete.  The crowd was amped, the defense smelled blood, but Cal would not be denied.  The Butte College connection once again hooked up as Aaron Rodgers threw to Garrett Cross for a touchdown to take the lead 17-7.
 
Yet even with the 10-point lead in a tough defensive struggle, the momentum gained from the lights going out still seemed to favor Oregon.  The crowd believed that Oregon was going to come back, the team believed they were going to come back, somebody just needed to make a play.

The Ducks unfortunately went 3 & out on the next possession, and the ball was back in Cal’s hands with a chance to put it away.  The defense held them though, and a nice punt return by Justin Phinisee with 6 minutes left in the game gave Oregon good field position at the 35.
 
It was at this time that Bellotti decided that it was time to give Kellen Clemens another chance.  Clemens had not played since the end of the first quarter, throwing a dismal 1-for-7 at the start before being pulled for Fife who had played the entire way since.  But Fife had only led one scoring drive, and the team needed a boost.  Oregon would need to throw to get back in the game, so it made sense to put in the better passer of the two, even if he had sat on the bench for the past few hours.

“Before that drive started Kellen stood right in front of me and asked me ‘are you ready to do this?’ I said, ‘Yeah, let’s do it, we’re about to make this drive happen,’” Day remembers.

A pass to Samie Parker followed by an option run picked up a first down.  A screen pass to Terrence Whitehead netted an 8-yard gain, getting the Ducks out to midfield.  It was then that the magic that everyone had anticipated finally occurred.

Kellen Clemens dropped back to throw to the reliable playmaker Demetrius Williams, but the pass went off his hands and almost intercepted by a Cal defender, but somehow freshman wide receiver Kyle Weatherspoon came up with the juggling catch of the year snagging the pass for a big gain after the ball deflected off of two players.
 
“I remember when Spoon caught that ball, I yelled out ‘how did he catch that?’” said Solomona.  “Plays like that pumped us up, that really started something, we thought now this miracle was coming true, things are falling into place, we’re starting to believe now that we can get this done.”

“D-Will ran a slant and the ball tipped off his hands, and I saw Spoon get the ball,” said Day.  “It got the whole team pumped up, guys on the sidelines were waving their arms to get the crowd up, we wanted to capitalize on the momentum that play created.  I went over to Spoon and congratulated him, I was so pumped by that play.”

The crowd went crazy, the sidelines erupted.  Autzen had come alive, the place was electric.  Most of all Cal was reeling, and it seemed a foregone conclusion that Oregon was going to score.  It would not take long.  On the very next play, Oregon would make their presence felt.
“We were in a no-huddle, and as we lined up I saw Kellen snapping his fingers which indicated to everyone ‘Special’, meaning we were all supposed to run 5-yard outs,” Tim Day recalls.  “It was the most basic play in the playbook, just everybody run an out.  We got lucky, Cal was in a straight man-to-man.  Kellen threw me the ball and I was able to shake off my guy and as I turned there was nobody in front of me, 20 yards of open field.  I just started running as fast as I could, I saw one guy coming towards me and I made a move and was able to shake him, then split two guys and lowered my head.  Somehow I was still running after the impact, somebody grabbed onto me right before the endzone and I carried him in.”
 
A short pattern intended to set up a first down had turned into one of the most remarkable individual efforts ever witnessed at Autzen Stadium.  Tim Day had taken a 5-yard out and turned it into a 31 yard touchdown, breaking multiple tackles, getting his team back into the game, and making an iconic play that remains to this day his signature moment on a football field.

“Tim always had guys bouncing off him, even in practice, but you could tell he wanted that one,” said Solomona, laughing.   “We knew our defense was going to come out and stop them after that.  Autzen was going crazy when Tim scored, there was an unbelievable feeling like we knew we were going to win.  Robbie (Valenzuela), Junior (Siavii), everyone was so excited, we wanted to get that stop and get the ball back to our offense.”

“I don’t think I ever had a better feeling in my life than when I scored that touchdown,” Tim Day stated proudly. “I was so pumped.  I was just a sophomore, it was my coming out, we had been down, even after that play we were still down, but that catch was so big and I couldn’t believe I actually scored on it.  It felt like I couldn’t be denied, I was going to get in that endzone no matter what.  That play had NEVER turned into a 30 yard touchdown in practice, it was just supposed to be a quick gain, but I just happened to shake some guys and turned upfield and there was nobody there.  When you see two guys coming your way as a big tight end you just have to split them and lower the shoulder. And somehow it worked.”

Day continued, “I wanted to jump in the stands I was so full of energy, I told coach after that play that I wanted to go in the stands because I was just so amped.  I had no idea at the time that play was going to turn into anything, I just wanted to get into the endzone.”

Cal got the ball back, now leading by just 3, and immediately put themselves in a big hole.  A holding penalty on the kickoff return backed them up deep, followed by a second flag when there were too many players when Cal huddled by the sideline.  Backed up to their own 10-yard line, Cal’s worst field position of the entire game, two runs netted minimal gains.

On 3rd down with the stadium going nuts and the offense on the sidelines urging on their teammates, it was Keith Lewis who would make the big play, the man whose dumb penalty in the first half had given Cal their 3-point lead.  Stepping into the run lane, Lewis came out of nowhere to stuff the Cal runningback when it appeared there was room to pick up a first down, instead Cal would have to punt.
 
Oregon got the ball back with great field position, and the atmosphere was like something rarely if ever felt at Autzen.  Despite being down by 3, everyone at that point could sense the outcome, Oregon was going to take the lead and win this game.

“It was one of the loudest times I have ever heard Autzen Stadium, that noise gave us such a boost,” said Tim Day.  “Hearing that, it makes a difference.  We knew we had to finish, but we felt so cocky like we can’t be stopped.  In any game I ever played I never felt that much momentum as a team, like we knew we were unstoppable at that point.  The play calling, the offensive line, we found it, we put it together, we were like a train that couldn’t be stopped.  We used the momentum from the plays and the crowd to get it down the field on the next drive.  I remember seeing the whole defense on the side cheering us on, we didn’t want to let our team down.

Kellen Clemens and the offense returned to the field, and immediately connected with a pass to Samie Parker to the 40 yard line.  But two incomplete passes set up a 4th down & 3, with 1:34 left on the clock Oregon had to convert the first down or Cal could run out the clock to win 17-14.

Needing three yards to extend the comeback drive, Kellen Clemens rolled out and threw to Demetrius Williams near the sidelines, who turned and sprinted down the sidelines for a 25 yard gain.
 
“D-Will made a great play on 4th down,” Day remembers. “It was almost overwhelming just how much energy we had.  We maybe got a little too excited, but D-Will said he could go down the sidelines for a big gain if Kellen got him the ball quick, and he did.  Momentum was on our side, if you ever want to see how much momentum can swing in a game look no further than this one.”

Following Williams’ big gain, a Kellen Clemens keeper went nowhere.  The Ducks called a timeout, but coming out of the break Cal miscalculated on the number of defenders and a linemen was late coming off the field, resulting in a penalty when Clemens alertly snapped the ball with 12 defenders on the field, setting up Oregon close to the endzone.

A pass intended for tight end Dan Kause fell incomplete, Kause able to get a hand on the pass but unable to come up with the diving grab with a defender on his back.  On 3rd and goal, an option run to the left with a pitch to Terrence Whitehead resulted in an easy touchdown run, giving the Ducks their first lead of the day, 21-17.
 
The student section counted off the pushups as the Duck mascot celebrated in his usual fashion, while the Duck football team celebrated on the sidelines.  With the extra point the Ducks now led by four, meaning Cal had under a minute to drive the length of the field to score a touchdown, a field goal did them no good.  The team implored the crowd to get louder, urging the defense to stop Cal in their last opportunity.

Cal struck quickly.  With Oregon playing soft prevent defense, on the first play Rodgers found his old junior college teammate Garrett Cross for a deep pass over the middle moving the ball to midfield.  The next play Rodgers again found a receiver, hitting Geoff McArthur for a 14 yard gain.  With 30 seconds still on the clock, suddenly Cal was in field goal range in just two plays, and the boundless energy suddenly turned to enthused worry.

“Cal started driving, we knew they were capable of putting together a last minute drive like that,” Day recalls. “You’re just hoping that the defense can stop them, but in the back of your mind you know Cal has the capability to make that comeback, you have to hope the defense can ride the momentum wave and make a stop.  I had confidence in our D, and seeing the stop in the previous possession I knew they could do it.  We knew that with our defense, with our coaches, somebody was going to make a play.”

“When Cal started marching, I just kept telling the guys ‘stay back, whatever you do stay back,” said Solomona. “I had confidence in the defense that sooner or later we would stop them, we still had faith.  We had that feeling like they weren’t going to get in.  We put our trust and belief into whatever Coach Aliotti was calling.”

Cal would move to the 33-yard line with 15 seconds left on the clock, enough time to make several attempts at the endzone.  When a play was needed, once again Oregon’s playmakers made their presence felt.  As Rodgers rolled out to throw deep, Oregon defensive end Devan Long shook free from his blocker and got into Rodgers’ face.  In a panic Rodgers threw off his back foot off-balance, floating a pass over the middle of the field short of his receiver.  Once again it was Keith Lewis, who had been bitterly chewed out for his error in the first half, who redeemed himself, stepping in front of the receiver and leaping to intercept the pass.  Oregon knelt on the ball and the game was over.
 
“After the dumb stuff he did in the first half, it was so great to see Keith make the two biggest plays of the 2nd half to totally redeem himself,” said Solomona. “Bellotti told him to keep his head up in the game because we would need him, he was a playmaker.  For him to come up big like that vs. Cal his senior year, it was great for him, great for the team.”

“When you see a quarterback rolling out you know he has a target already in mind,” said Day. “I don’t want to discredit Cal at all, Rodgers was good, we knew they were going to have something to throw at us. To see that ball float and once Keith caught it I wanted to run out onto the field and tackle him, it was just like wow, what a finish! It was so great after he had the penalty early to come back and make that play. I remember him saying that coach told him to be humble and keep his head in the game, and he definitely did.”

A game that appeared futile for three quarters had instead turned into one of the most remarkable comebacks in team history, over an opponent that knew every little detail about their team.  Somehow Oregon had overcome, defied the odds, thanks in part to a mechanical failure of the lighting system but also through sheer will refusing to lose.

“It’s one of the games that will live with me forever,” said Day. “People still remember it, people still talk to me about it.  Fans don’t think about me being all Pac-10 or my time in the NFL, everyone remembers me for the touchdown in the lights out game.”

“After that game we finished really late, it was already a late kickoff and then the lighting delay, and the way that game played out the defense was so exhausted.  Plus add in the emotional connection of going up against all the former Oregon guys on the opposite side, and we were just completely drained.  After all that adrenaline and excitement, you would think we would have had a big party or something, but we just went home.  We were so exhausted, all we wanted to do was sleep.”
 
 
In the coming years there would be more tremendous battles between Oregon and Cal. A heartbreaking pass drop in 2004 would give Cal a close 28-27 win at home, followed the next year by a thrilling overtime victory for the Ducks.  2006 Cal would win big, 2007 Cal would win at Autzen by an inch by forcing a fumble at the 1-yard line as time expired.  2008 a monsoon would strike Berkeley resulting in a Cal victory, and leaving everyone in attendance wondering if they would have to swim out of the stadium.

Tedford and Bellotti, the two close friends and former coaching staff comrades, had turned both of their programs into contenders and bitter rivals.  Every time Oregon and Cal clashed, people knew the results would be worth watching, starting with the 2003 game.

In the time since Mike Bellotti’s retirement Oregon has had the better of the rivalry, winning the last three games.  Tedford continues to coach at Cal, with a coaching staff still largely comprised of individuals with ties to Oregon, still imitating the mold that made the Ducks so successful when he was offensive coordinator there.  But for all the great battles between the Bears and the Ducks that have occurred and may be yet to come, none will stand out in people’s memories better than the night the lights went out at Autzen.
 
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Tim Day was an All-Pac-10 tight end at Oregon who graduated following the 2005 season.  Coming from Las Vegas, he had almost chosen to attend Oregon State with his close friend Steven Jackson, but is proud of his decision to instead be a Duck.  He played  4 ½ years in the NFL with the Bears, Eagles and Bengals, including time spent at Cincinnati with former Oregon teammate Terrence Whitehead.  Multiple injuries requiring surgery led to his decision to retire from football, and Tim now lives in Portland working with Nike.  He remains a huge Oregon Duck fan returning to catch games at Autzen Stadium often and is always happy to sign autographs and talk with Duck fans, though he would like to remind people that he did actually make a lot more plays than just the touchdown against Cal in 2003 as that’s what everyone usually wants to discuss, but he appreciates that people remember him for his efforts as a Duck.

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Chris Solomona played for Oregon for three years after coming from El Camino Junior College.  In 2004 he joined the Miami Dolphins, but after being among the final cuts decided to return to Oregon to complete his degree.  In 2006 he joined the San Jose Sabrecats of the Arena League.  He continues to play in the Arena Football League, for the past two seasons a part of the Utah Blaze.  Chris lives in Utah with his wife and daughter.  He remains a passionate Oregon fan though rarely is able to make it back to Autzen (but is VERY excited about Oregon coming to play the Utes in the future), and always goes out of his way to talk to or honk at anyone he sees in Utah that is representing the O.
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The Michigan series: How Oregon demolished 100 years of the biggest winning tradition in football

 The Michigan series: How Oregon demolished 100 years of the biggest winning tradition in football

Originally published on FishDuck.com on September 21st, 2011

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“We could tell they were not prepared, they had size but we ran right past them.”
-Kwame Agyeman
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It was the ultimate matchup of new and old.  On one side Michigan, the winningest program in college football history, the epitome of success and tradition.  On the other side, up-and-comer Oregon, finding great success in recent years but for decades little more than an also-ran.

A home-and-home series was agreed to, with the first game being played at Oregon in 2003, and the following year a return trip to Michigan.  However, Michigan requested to push the game in Ann Arbor back a few years, to 2007.

By the time the dust settled and the clock hit zeroes on both games, college football as it had been for decades would never be the same.

The Michigan Wolverines WERE college football.  Playing them was beyond just playing a team, it was playing against a legacy.  The largest fan base, the most victories in history, the team, the helmets, the tradition, the Big House.  Michigan was a name that brought a hush to a room, they were right to be boastful, the record of over 100 years of success was more than enough validation to think of themselves as holier than thou.

At Oregon, there had been moments of success over the years mixed with a lot of pain, but since the late 80s the Ducks had been emerging as a young powerhouse out west.  Still, when Michigan came to Eugene, OR as the #3 team in the country with aspirations of a national championship, few gave Oregon much of a chance, even though the Ducks were ranked in the top-25 as well at #22.

Four years later that same general scenario would be replayed, when an Oregon team not discussed much came to Ann Arbor to take on a Michigan team that had been ranked #5 in the preseason stacked with awards finalist and a senior-laden roster with future NFL stars, but Michigan was reeling from an embarrassing home loss to open the season to a 1-AA team, Appalachian State.  It had been called the worst loss in program history, and the media anticipated the Wolverines to take their revenge out on Oregon in brutal fashion.

The 2003 game was a showcase, a chance for Oregon to validate itself, the game being broadcast on national television in the newly remodeled Autzen Stadium after being expanded the previous year.  Sure the Ducks were a good team, hell they had finished #2 in the country two years prior, but against this senior-laden Michigan team stacked with future draft picks and the Heisman Trophy frontrunner in Chris Perry it was easy to predict a steamrolling of the Oregon Ducks in their own house.

Thus was the setting, a loud, perfect day at Autzen Stadium where Oregon shocked the college football world.  Four years later in Ann Arbor, Oregon would not just do it again, but in such punishing fashion that it forever changed college football, destroying the traditional college football game and ushering in the new era of spread offenses.

Saturday, September 20th, 2003.  A bright sunny day in Eugene, OR with the world watching, as the 3-0 Michigan Wolverines arrive at a packed Autzen Stadium and record crowd.  Perry had dominated in the first few weeks of the season, all but assured to likely lead the nation in rushing at season’s end behind one of the biggest and most highly-touted offensive lines in the country.  

The Wolverines featured future NFL players like John Navarre, Braylon Edwards, and Steve Breaston.  They were picked to be a national title contender, and Chris Perry was the main cog in the machine, destroying defenses in the first three weeks well on his way to be the next Wolverine to win the Heisman.


Michigan RB Chris Perry was the media darling in 2003, until he played against the Ducks
 
Oregon meanwhile was also 3-0 but hadn’t had a high-profile win yet to their season.  Featuring a dual-QB system with Kellen Clemens and Jason Fife, collectively their numbers equaled the top quarterback rating in the nation.

“Coaches kept us focused, it was a big opportunity for us to play a team that was that highly ranked,” former Oregon LB AJ Tuitele recalls, at the time a redshirt freshman who was a senior team captain in the 2007 rematch.

Oregon coaches may have preached all week how it was just another game, but ask anyone and this was more than just a game.  This was the greatest program in college football history coming to Oregon’s house, it was the ultimate test and Oregon fans and players all knew there was a greater meaning to this one.

“Watching the film we saw how well they ran the ball, Chris Perry went nuts running for a couple hundred yards every game,” recalls Justin Andrews, a linebacker for Oregon (01-05) who now coaches high school football in the San Francisco bay area.  “Perry was the leading rusher in the nation at the time, everyone was saying how the Michigan offensive line would dominate us and further Perry’s Heisman campaign.  I remember going to the meetings and DP (linebacker coach Don Pellum) and (Nick) Aliotti were feeling really confident in the gameplan to stop their run and force them to throw.  We knew they were going to come in and run, when they have a Heisman guy they try to hit you with him first.”

ABC broadcast the game live across the nation from Eugene with Keith Jackson and Dan Fouts calling the action.  All the talk was about Michigan, its tradition, Chris Perry’s Heisman Trophy, the Wolverines’ move towards the national championship that year.  What they saw instead was an Oregon team that proved that they could play with anyone.
 
“Everyone was calling me saying ‘ooh it’s Michigan, they have too much prestige.’” Andrews laughed.  “Coaches were trying to say it was like any other team, but you could tell it was a big game.  The coaches were confident though and that rubbed off on the team.  The whole atmosphere that day was like a bowl game, especially with them ranked #3.  Everyone in the program down to the trainers and staff, the atmosphere was charged in Autzen, you could feel the electricity in the air and the crowd noise was as loud as it gets.”

Linebacker Justin Andrews (2001-05) was a key contributor on special teams during his career
 
Oregon got the ball first and methodically drove the distance of the field burning up much of the first quarter, but at the goal line a Kellen Clemens touchdown run was incorrectly called down at the 1 yard line.  A penalty nullified what would have been a touchdown on 4th down, setting up a field goal that was blocked and returned for a touchdown.  Michigan missed the extra point, making it 6-0 without the Wolverines ever running an offensive play.
 
Another long Oregon drive chewed up almost the entire remaining first quarter, ending with the anomaly of Michigan leading the game 6-0 despite only having 5 yards of offense and one play from scrimmage by the quarter’s end.

“It was a little anticlimactic in the fact that our defense didn’t even step on the field in the first quarter,” Andrews remembers.  “We had run a no-huddle offense in practice every day, but we hadn’t shown it in games yet and that really surprised Michigan’s defense, they started getting gassed and we had some long drives.”

Oregon may not have been winning on the scoreboard, but time of possession was as lopsided as it gets.  When Michigan finally got the ball they tried to pound Chris Perry directly into Oregon’s line, bringing the old Big-10 3 yards and a cloud of dust style of traditional football.  It didn’t work.  Oregon’s defensive line was massive, with future NFL tackles Igor Olshansky and Junior Siavii plugging the gaps, and Perry was finding no room to run.  The gameplan became clear, Oregon was going to stack the box and force Michigan to beat them through the air.  The question was how stubborn would Michigan be before they started throwing.

Oregon took advantage of their possessions, taking the lead with a 19-yard touchdown run by Terrence Whitehead, followed by a botched fake punt by Michigan to give Oregon the ball at midfield.
 
 
A big catch by Tim Day followed by a touchdown run by quarterback Jason Fife gave Oregon a 14-6 lead, and for the first time there appeared to be a chink in the impregnable armor of Michigan’s 100+ years of superiority.
 
“When the D finally got out there, Michigan was so pompous they played right into our scheme, trying to run Perry right at us,” said Andrews.  “It was exciting because we already knew exactly what they would do, we were really confident in what we were going to do as far as our adjustments, and feeding off the energy from the crowd.  We could have played that same exact game against another opponent and it could have been as loud, but there was something special that day.  The fact that it was Michigan, all the history that name represents, to then outplay them and dominate them in several aspects of the game.  It was hard to be rivaled.”

If the crowd and team were starting to believe they could compete, they received a resounding boost when cornerback Steven Moore returned a punt 67 yards for a touchdown.
 
“Noise is what Autzen is known for, but there were moments in that game particularly, like when Moore ran the punt back, I thought the place was going to collapse,” said Andrews.  “The whole place was rocking, I thought my eardrums were going to explode, it was a special atmosphere.  It was total craziness.”

At halftime Oregon had extended the lead to 21-6, but while fans and players were jubilant, this was still Michigan, there was still the aura, and this game wasn’t over by a longshot.  Chris Perry hadn’t had any running lanes to work with, but the Ducks couldn’t possibly keep Michigan down forever, could they?
 
In the 2nd half Michigan coach Lloyd Carr finally relinquished on the stubborn Big-10 ground pound offensive gameplan, all but completely abandoning the run game.  By game’s end Michigan QB John Navarre had thrown a very unMichigan-like 54 pass attempts, but it worked. 

A couple interceptions by Steven Moore and Justin Phinisee helped to slow down Michigan’s comeback, but slowly in the 2nd half Michigan worked their way back into the game thanks to the 1-2 wide receiver combo of Braylon Edwards and Steve Breaston, being left in man coverage so that Oregon could stack the box to stop Chris Perry.
 
Oregon had a good scoring opportunity to extend the lead, but got greedy choosing instead to run a fake field goal attempt on an easy chipshot, coming up short.
 
Oregon managed to add a field goal later, but were holding on to a precarious small lead when magic happened.  Michigan, backed up into their own endzone feeling the full brunt of the Autzen crowd were forced into a third and long, and following an incompletion had to punt.

Oregon safety Keith Lewis had always had a flair for the dramatic as a Duck, from big interceptions to big hits to big plays, and his forte’ was blocking kicks.  As the kick block specialist, it seemed a no-brainer that Michigan would scheme to double him off the line, yet Lewis churned his legs pushing his blocker backwards into the foot of the Michigan punter, knocking the ball backwards into the endzone where Jordan Carey fell on the ball for a touchdown.
 
To somebody casually walking by in the neighborhood or just changing the channel to the broadcast at that moment might have thought a bomb had just gone off, the explosion of crowd noise could be felt for miles and across the country on the broadcast.

Thanks to the blocked punt and Michigan’s earlier missed extra point, Michigan was now down by 10 with the clock ticking away.  Justin Phinisee’s interception prevented a scoring chance, but Oregon squandered their opportunity.
 
Michigan quickly drove the field and scored to potentially bring it to within a field goal, but Oregon defensive tackle Igor Olshansky again came up with a big play blocking the extra point, forcing Michigan to have to score a touchdown to complete their comeback.
 
Oregon could once again not sustain a drive to burn off the clock, and gave Michigan one last chance to comeback. A long desperate drive had some late heroics with long catches, but a 4th down toss to Braylon Edwards went off his fingertips, and Oregon knelt on the ball preserving a 31-27 victory over the #3 ranked and undefeated Michigan Wolverines.
 
Chris Perry had been held to 23 yards on the ground, and Michigan had -3 yards rushing overall.  Devastated, Perry could only sulk on the bench on the sidelines with a towel over his head as his eardrums begged for mercy from the crowd, Michigan’s shot at a national title and Perry’s chance for a Heisman Trophy was over.

Michigan RB Chris Perry (#23) couldn't stand to watch as his Heisman dreams and Michigan's National Championship aspirations were sunk one day at Autzen Stadium
 
“The whole atmosphere of that game was unreal,” said Tuitele.  “The blocked punt and Moore’s punt return, it was just an unbelievable feeling.  You don’t really know how loud it is until you’re there, I think it shocked them.  We were really excited that we won, it was a really big accomplishment.  Knowing they were #3, their team was loaded, and for us to beat them that year put Oregon back on the map.”

A new team slogan emerged brought on by Oregon defensive tackle Igor Olshansky, “why not us?”  Why couldn’t Oregon compete with anybody in the country?  Why couldn’t Oregon be considered a national title contender?  Oregon QB Jason Fife’s touchdown run was featured on the front cover of Sports Illustrated that week with the tagline, ‘Rich, Cool, and 4-0.’

Oregon QB Jason Fife graced the cover of Sports Illustrated after the 31-27 win over Michigan in 2003
 
S.I. was right, on a national stage Oregon had proven that they were more than just flashy uniforms and amazing facilities, they were a team to be reckoned with.

Unfortunately the rest of the season did not go quite as planned, though there were some victories leading to an eventual berth in the 2003 Sun Bowl, but injuries took their toll.

In the offseason, Oregon managed to defeat Michigan in another aspect, recruiting.  Many recruits watched the 2003 Michigan-Oregon game, including two that were being recruited by both schools.
Kwame Agyeman, a native of Itasca, IL, had grown up in Big-10 country hearing about Michigan and Ohio State, but he also had his eyes set on Oregon as a possibility out west.

“What made me notice Oregon was their 2002 Fiesta Bowl victory over Colorado, seeing Maurice Morris and Samie Parker go wild.  I didn’t know much about them, but they were up and coming,” Agyeman remembers.  “Coach (Lloyd) Carr had recruited me to Michigan and I attended their camp, and they whole thing was one big propaganda show about their history and tradition.  Coach Carr told me ‘yeah you COULD go to Oregon, but they don’t have a winning tradition there.”

Agyeman continued, “But when I watched that 03 Michigan-Oregon game, I saw Michigan jumping offsides a lot, I saw the atmosphere at Autzen, I aw that Oregon had some players, the Ducks weren’t a one-year fluke.  That game had a big impact on me choosing Oregon over Michigan, tradition is great and al but when I came on my recruiting trip to Oregon so many guys commit, I decided I wanted to as well, we wanted to be a part of our own winning tradition at Oregon.”

Agyeman wasn’t the only one.  In a major coup at the time, 5-star wide receiver Cameron Colvin, a prep superstar at San Francisco area powerhouse De La Salle High School, selected Oregon over Michigan on live TV on ESPN.  Live television announcements were rare at the time, though televised commitment ceremonies are commonplace now.

“As soon as I put on an Oregon hat my phone started ringing,” said Colvin, laughing.  “It was the Michigan coaches calling, you could hear my phone over ESPN, they couldn’t understand why I would ever want to go to Oregon over Michigan because of their tradition.”

As years passed Agyeman, Colvin, Tuitele and the rest of the Oregon Ducks had some successes and failures as the 2007 Michigan rematch loomed on the distant horizon.  The 2006 Oregon season ended with a whimper in an embarrassing loss to BYU in the 2006 Las Vegas Bowl that had few predicting great things for the 2007 team.  But changes were afoot, a new offensive coordinator, Chip Kelly, was brought in from New Hampshire bringing with him a new variation of the high-tempo spread offense as of yet unseen in division 1 college football.  The Ducks were stacked with seniors, including quarterback Dennis Dixon and an amazing wide receiver corps and speedy defense.

The big rematch with Michigan awaited in week 2 of the 2007 season, but week 1 started with a hiccup for both teams.  Call it rust, first game jitters, adjusting to a new offense, but Oregon won their matchup at home vs. Houston though in unimpressive fashion, furthering the belief among many that for all the flash Oregon would be mid-tier at best that season.

Michigan meanwhile had a much bigger problem though, they were the joke of the college football world.  After being hyped all preseason as a national title contender with a roster of seniors that all collectively chose to forgo the NFL for a year to return to school to win it all, they lost in one of the most stunning upsets in college football history at home to 1-AA team Appalachian State on a last-second blocked field goal.
 
Michigan was embarrassed, App. State were media darlings, and everyone looked forward to seeing how Michigan would rebound with their next home game against Oregon.  Few gave Oregon much of a chance, most predicted a vengeance game with the Ducks getting stomped by a Michigan team looking to not only return the favor from the 2003 game, but redeem the reputation of Coach Lloyd Carr who suddenly had his job in question by a furious fan base.

“We were stunned just like everybody else that Michigan had lost to Appalachian State,” Kwame Agyeman recalls.  “But when we watched the game film we saw that App State was basically us, they ran the same kind of offense but we had far better athletes, and we thought we expose Michigan the same way App State had.  Our mentality was that we have to show up because they’re going to be mad, but let’s just throw some shots at them and see what happens.”

“We didn’t pay much attention to the media as they tried to talk about how badly Michigan was going to beat us,” said AJ Tuitele.  Our preparation that week was phenomenal, we had great senior leaders, coaches did a good job of getting us focused going into the big house.”

In the first game against Houston, Oregon had scored a lot of points, but appeared to be out of synch for much of it.  What had been off-target in week 1 suddenly came into perfect working order, much to the dismay of Michigan.  At the heart of the Oregon offense was a no-huddle high-tempo offense built around getting playmakers into open space, and did Oregon ever have playmakers.  Two of the best backs in the country were featured in Oregon’s backfield, a human bowling ball named Jonathan Stewart and a lightning quick greased pig scatback by the name of Jeremiah Johnson.  Oh, and Dixon was a threat with his legs and his arm on every play too if defenses keyed in on JJ and Stewart.

“Going against Oregon’s offense every day in practice really prepared us well,” said AJ Tuitele.  “Chip’s system was so fast.  Our offense was great that year, and once they got going on the same page learning the system it was scary how good it was.  Practicing everyday against Stewart and JJ going one on one made us so much better, if you can take down a guy like Jonathan Stewart in the open field at full speed in practice, then the games are easy.”

“Our practices would go so fast that once the games started it felt slow, the games felt more like a walkthrough for us because our practices were so much harder than our opponents,” said Agyeman.  “If you knew you could make plays against them in practice, we knew that we were better than the guys we would then be facing in games.  In Chip’s first season practice was really chaotic with the tempo while guys learned the system, but when they went through their growing pains with it afterward we saw just how lethal it could be.  It was a lot of fun seeing Chip come up with some new wrinkle and it would take a couple days for the defense to figure out a way to stop it.”

It was a mirror image of the 2003 game.  Oregon, with flash and panache, a 21st century program but unproven.  Michigan, a run-first Big-10 traditional program with all the pomp and prestige deserving of their name while featuring future NFL stars and a highly-touted running back, this time around senior Mike Hart.  Oregon undefeated, Michigan reeling from their loss but still ranked and out for blood seeking redemption with a shot at the Rose Bowl still within grasp.  Into this setting again came ABC and a national television audience to watch the carnage, what they got nobody expected.
 
A packed Big House with over 100,000 Michigan fans, and a small sliver of a couple thousand Oregon fans, packed the stands.

“I had no doubt Oregon would play well,” said Justin Andrews, having graduated after the 2005 season and watching now as a fan from Miami at the time as a high school football coach.  “I knew it was going to be competitive, even though they had lost to App State, but they’re still Michigan. Everyone was saying ‘Oh, I feel sorry for Oregon having to play them the next week.  I was the only Oregon fan within 100 miles, and everyone was talking crap about Michigan this and Michigan that, people knew the Oregon name but they hadn’t really sat down to watch Oregon play yet.  That Michigan game was the first time the east coast really watched an Oregon team play.  It was a damn shame App State beat us to it, because I wanted Oregon to be the ones to shut them down with their pompous attitude.”

Oregon came out confident, even taunting the Michigan faithful with a sledgehammer that Jeremiah Johnson used to pound the endzone before kickoff, a short-lived tradition at Oregon that had been started two years prior.  Cameras caught it, and the announcers noted it expecting it to be one more reason why the bloodbath would ensue.


Jeremiah Johnson (#24) taunts the crowd after striking the Michigan endzone with the Duck sledgehammer before the start of the game
 
“The hammer I remember,” said Agyeman, “JJ came out and hammered their field.  When you do that you better back it up, it was a moment like an afterschool fight, let’s take our first shot taking on the bully, it just got real.  It was a metaphor, the hammer showed we weren’t scared, we kicked the door down, we were here.”

Michigan got the ball to start the game, and immediately started grinding it out with Big-10 style football between the tackles, running with Mike Hart primarily behind tackle Jake Long, who would become the #1 overall NFL draft pick the following year.  Michigan was moving the chains, but then they tried to get cute, and an audible at the line by quarterback Chad Henne led to a deep play action pass that was intercepted by safety Matthew Harper.  It was all downhill from there for Michigan.
 
Oregon drove the field down to the goal line but were held to a field goal.  Michigan tried to continue grind it out between the tackles but Oregon’s defense stacked the box and got into the backfield shutting it down.  Just like in 2003, Michigan seemed unwilling to do anything other than play Michigan football, running right at the Oregon defense that held its ground and utilized speed to fly around the big & slow lumbering Michigan offensive line.

A punt pinned Oregon back on the 15 yard line, and Oregon would strike quickly.  On the first play from scrimmage wide receiver Brian Paysinger left his man in the dust sprinting down the sidelines to catch a perfectly thrown ball from Dennis Dixon for an 85 yard touchdown, making it look simple.
 
With Michigan still reeling Oregon quickly lined up and ran a two-point conversion to tight end Ed Dickson, which had the announcers laughing and marveling at the speed of things.  Still anticipating Michigan to steamroll Oregon though, they surmised that this was merely a fluke and wake up call, that Oregon had awakened the beast and were in trouble now.

Michigan put together a long drive slowly moving the chains grinding it out on the ground eventually leading to a touchdown 11-7.  Things got worse for Michigan, when backup RB Brandon Minor came in for Mike Hart and immediately fumbled, Ducks got the ball back and things seemed to be coming apart at the seams for the Wolverines.
 
“We could tell they were not prepared, they had size but we ran right past them,” said Kwame Agyeman.

The Big-10 style of play wasn’t working, within the Big-10 holiest grounds, the Big House.  Oregon drove the length of the field seemingly toying with Michigan, running a statue of liberty play that had Jonathan Stewart hurdling and knocking over defenders.
 
Oregon would score on a Stewart touchdown run, increasing the lead.  Oregon was supposed to be the finesse team, but the Ducks were playing power run football AND out-maneuvering Michigan, controlling the line of scrimmage and finding mismatches to attack through the air.  The game was slanting decidedly in Oregon’s favor, soon it would become flat-out embarrassing.
 
Oregon’s defense hounded Chad Henne and stuffed the gaps Mike Hart tried to attack, there was simply no ground to be gained through the run or pass.  Oregon’s defense knew exactly what Michigan was doing before they did, and compared to the speed at which they practiced every day going against Michigan was like having the game played in slow motion.
 
It was easy, simple, child’s play.  Oregon looked like a cat toying with a caught mouse, they could do anything against Michigan and it would work.

Oregon proved just that, pulling off the iconic play of the 2007 season on the next drive that became the highlight forever remembered from this game, and the footage that centered around the much-deserved Heisman trophy campaign surrounding Oregon quarterback Dennis Dixon that would follow.

After driving the length of the field on several long runs, at the 9-yard line Oregon again appeared to run a statue of liberty play, one of the oldest plays in football but rarely if ever used today but iconic for Boise State’s use in the 2006 Fiesta Bowl.  When Michigan’s defense immediately all moved to the right to pursue Jonathan Stewart, Dennis Dixon casually strolled into the endzone like taking a nonchalant walk in the park, ball in hand.  The announcers laughed, the fans stood silent in awe, the Michigan players looked on in disgust, and Oregon fans and players were all smiles.
 
“I remember we had practiced that statue of liberty play and the defense stuffed it,” said Kwame Agyeman.  “A few reps later they did the fake statue of liberty with Dixon and it went for a 60 yard touchdown.  We had to laugh at it, it was so genius, but we knew it would work.  It was funny that in the game Chip chose to keep the same sequence, and it worked perfectly.”

Michigan entered desperation mode while still in the first half, while boos echoed down from the Michigan fans and signs began to appear in the stands that read ‘Anybody But Carr.’

Dixon and company struck again once again making Michigan look foolish, as another deep flawlessly dropped into the hands of wide receiver Derrick Jones in stride for an easy 61 yard touchdown.
 
The rout was on, and 100,000 fans couldn’t possibly be quieter, except for a sliver of green & yellow ones in the corner noticeably chanting ‘Lets Go Ducks!’ that could be heard on the broadcast.  The announcers recognized something special was happening here, the over 8 million watching on television could feel it too.  This was a complete dismantling of the most storied program in history, in their house.  It seemed almost blasphemous to suggest it, but it was clear that Oregon’s spread offense was the wave of the future, something that Michigan’s traditional ways could not compete with.
 
Another long touchdown pass came on a 45 yard connection from Dennis Dixon to Jaison Williams, like a game of catch in the backyard with a Nerf ball it looked like the Michigan defense wasn’t even on the field.
 
More turnovers followed, Henne was taking a pounding from Oregon’s relentless defense.  “The vibe on the sidelines was like sharks in the water, we sensed the blood and wanted to get the offense the ball as many times as possible,” Agyeman remembers.  “We didn’t just want to win, we wanted to destroy them.  By the end of the game it was almost a party atmosphere.”
 
Henne would not finish the game, too many big hits ended his day with an injury forcing freshman Ryan Mallett to come off the bench.  Despite Mallett’s cannon arm, it was too little too late.
Frustration set in on the Michigan sidelines.  Mike Hart refused to leave the game and yelled at the coaches, players on the Michigan sidelines got into arguments.  Greg Matthews after a play out of frustration tried to injure Oregon safety Matthew Harper with a ridiculous cheapshot to the knee that should have been grounds for an ejection.
 
“We could tell they were getting frustrated,” said Agyeman. “We always look for signs when teams begin to quit.  They started arguing with each other Matthews kicked at (Matthew) Harper’s knee, (Ryan) Mallett and (Jake) Long were arguing after plays.  Their gameplan was basic, they thought they were just going to outpower us, but our D-line played great and shut them down, their plan didn’t work and they lost composure very fast.”

Oregon LB AJ Tuitele (#34) makes a tackle during the 2007 Oregon-Michigan game
 
Oregon let off the gas in the 2nd half content to run out the clock, but the running game continued to punish the Michigan defense, highlighted by a series of wicked stiff-arms dished out by Jeremiah Johnson.
 
The final score would be Oregon 39-7, but with the Ducks stopped on a 4th goal and another fumble in the redzone it could have been far far worse.  The announcers and crowd and viewers knew it, this was a beatdown of epic proportions.  Michigan fans streamed out of the stadium early while Duck fans celebrated in jubilation, visibly and audibly noticeable during the broadcast.
 
 
“What stuck out to me was the fans,” Agyeman remembers.  “Their faces, the surprise, the silence of the stadium in the 2nd half.  It was the greatest being able to silence the Big House like that with about 60 friends and family from Illinois watching.  It gave us so much more confidence, the Michigan game told us that we could play with anybody.  It validated my decision to leave home to play for Oregon.  This is why I left, this is why I went there.  It opened people’s eyes that there was a new style of football being played, we weren’t just guys in crazy uniforms but real football players.  That game changed the perception, it ended the Midwest bias that the west coast was just USC and the little 9.”

Kwame Agyeman (#30) and Andiel Brown (#27) celebrate Oregon's victory over Michigan in the Big House. Photo courtesy: Chris Wilson
 
“We talked about it after the game about how it wasn’t as loud as we expected it to be,” said AJ Tuitele.  “It was awesome to celebrate with all the Oregon fans that flew cross-country to support us, it showed how great Oregon fans are home or away that they’re still with us.”

Oregon players celebrate with the Duck fans that made the trip to the Big House. Photo courtesy: Chris Wilson
 
For fans not in attendance watching on TV, like Justin Andrews back in Miami surrounded by stunned east coast SEC fans, it was a source of immense pride.  “You could tell the announcers were just waiting to give the game to Michigan, but it never happened.  They were just waiting for them to show their dominance, and instead Oregon dominated them with such style.  After that things changed, everybody started talking about Oregon even out east, that game turned a lot of people into Oregon fans.”

Not just around the country, but actually in the stands at the Big House as well…Kwame Agyeman remembers one particular converted fan that day.

“I remember at the end of the game we were heading back into the tunnel to the locker room and I see this upset little kid in a Michigan jersey.  Out of frustration he takes off the jersey, throws it on the ground, and flashes the Oregon ‘O’ sign with his hands to all of us like he was a Duck fan.”

Agyeman continued, “Guys were hugging afterward, it was all smiles.  It was such a sense of accomplishment, it confirmed to us that we were a special team, we put so much hard work into the offseason and first implemented the ‘Win The Day’ attitude and the conditioning we did, that game was confirmation of all of it.  We wanted to be elite, after the 2006 Vegas Bowl we were so low, but in the offseason we went on a trip and got a lot of things off our chest and it just changed everything.”
There was still a lot of season left to be played, but Michigan and Oregon were the talk of the nation, for all the wrong and right reasons respectively.  Suddenly there was nothing cooler than to be an Oregon Duck.  They had the uniforms, they had the facilities, they had the Nike connection, and they had the most fun team in the nation to watch.  High school kids around the country bought Oregon jerseys and put up Dennis Dixon posters on their walls dreaming of someday being the quarterback at Oregon, there was nothing better than being a Duck
 
“We knew we had done something special when we won that game, and our coaches reminded us of that,” said AJ Tuitele.  “But we still had a lot of football left in our season, one win doesn’t define our year, so they helped to focus us on the next task at hand.”
 
For Michigan and Oregon it would continue to be a year to remember.  Michigan after the Oregon loss would rebound to win 9 games in a row before losing to their traditional matchup to Ohio State and reach a berth in a bowl, but it wouldn’t be enough to save Lloyd Carr’s job.  The damage had been done, a fatal blow inflicted by Appalaichan State and Oregon and their crazy new spread offenses, as Lloyd Carr was fired after the season.  Michigan hired Rich Rodriguez from West Virginia who implemented a spread offense just like what Oregon ran.  In one game Oregon had beaten Michigan so badly that they abandoned 100+ years of tradition, in a panic trying to imitate Oregon in every way.

Oregon meanwhile would ascend the rankings reaching as high as #2 in the country, but a rash of injuries culminating in the tear of Dennis Dixon’s ACL ligament on national television would send the Ducks season crashing to the ground.  Dixon had played his way into the front-runner for the Heisman trophy, but it was not to be.  Oregon los the last three games of the season working with a team that was a mere shadow of its formidable self in September, though found redemption of its own with a 56-17 victory over South Florida in the Sun Bowl.

Still, the message was clear.  Oregon had emerged as not just a marketing gimmick, but a legit program knocking off the most prestigious program in the land, diminishing them to imitators, wishing they could be like Oregon.  Michigan’s attempts at a spread program would prove to be a dismal failure, and the program still is searching to return to their identity of a powerhouse traditional Big-10 style program.  Perhaps those days are done, Oregon proved that speed, at least for now, beats size.

Oregon finished 2nd in the Pac-10 the following year winning the Holiday Bowl in impressive fashion.  The next year they won the Pac-10 outright earning a trip to the Rose Bowl.  The next, they played in the national championship.  There was no longer a question that Oregon was for real, that they could compete with anybody in the country, and that there was nothing cooler than being a Duck.  They fit the mold across the board.  What had previously been a roster comprised largely of California players now was a team built on recruits from every corner of the country, all wanting to be Ducks having cheered on the team growing up as Oregon fans, many able to point directly at Oregon’s demolition of the Michigan program as the moment they decided they wanted to be a Duck.
The victory over Michigan was the moment that everything changed, when tradition and legacy took a backseat to innovation, and college football going forward would never be the same.