Showing posts with label Kenny Wheaton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kenny Wheaton. Show all posts

Friday, January 24, 2014

Early Departure Ducks Legacy: Who’s The First Duck To Leave Early for NFL?

Early Departure Ducks Legacy: Who’s The First Duck To Leave Early for NFL?

Originally posted on CampusAttic.com on January 8th, 2014



Oregon CB Terrance Mitchell has decided to enter the NFL draft.

 
    ‘Tis the season, that time in the postseason before the January 15th deadline when college athletes can decide if they want to leave school before their eligibility is up and declare for the NFL draft.

     As Oregon has steadily improved, so too have the early departures, an inevitability in today’s big money football for some to choose to jump the ship early. For a few it makes total sense, having proven everything they possibly could at the college level and being 100% NFL ready, like Kenny Wheaton or Haloti Ngata.

     For others it has raised an eyebrow, appearing as a move to leave before losing their job their senior year to a younger player, like Javes Lewis and Darron Thomas. Considering the rough and tumble game of football and injuries that can and will occur, it’s understandably a matter of making a living while the body still holds up for some.

     Regardless of the motivation, this is the time of year when fans worry, checking message boards constantly for the latest rumor on this player or that, who said what, which twitter or instagram post might maybe hint at their decision (and about DAT’s now infamous instagram post of a Campus Attic image–let us reiterate once more that he just liked our drawing of him, it wasn’t an announcement of ANYTHING, as was proven by his departure).

     While fans held their breath about news of Ifo Ekpre-Olomu as the next potential player from the UO to also declare for the draft following Terrance Mitchell and De’Anthony Thomas both deciding to leave this year, there is also great comfort in knowing that at least Marcus Mariota and Hroniss Grasu are returning for the 2014 season. And now with official word from Ifo Ekpre-Olomu that he is returning for his senior year, barring a last-minute change of heart, fans can breathe easy this week.

    Kenny Wheaton, Onterrio Smith, George Wrighster, Igor Olshansky, Haloti Ngata, Jonathan Stewart, Jairus Byrd, Javes Lewis, Darron Thomas, LaMichael James, and now Terrance Mitchell and De’Anthony Thomas after their recent decisions to test the NFL waters–what was once the rarest of occurrences is now an almost annual event, somebody leaving Oregon early for a shot at the pros.

Kenny Wheaton left Oregon after the 1996 season,
taken in the 3rd round by the Dallas Cowboys.


    Kenny Wheaton in 1996 was the first Oregon player in recent history to make the leap to the NFL, foregoing his senior season after being a two-time 1st team all-Pac-10 selection and All-American, most famous for his 1994 interception vs. Washington. Wheaton had led Oregon in tackles in 1996, the only in team history to do so from the cornerback position, becoming one of the most feared and respected cover men in Pac-10 history.

     A third round draft pick of the Dallas Cowboys, his career was derailed by a severe knee injury in 1999 that ended his NFL career, but he continued playing for a decade thereafter in the CFL before retiring. Regardless of how his pro career went, Wheaton remains a legend in Eugene.

    But contrary to popular belief, Kenny Wheaton was not actually the first Oregon Duck to leave school early for the NFL. That came nearly half a century earlier, when Norm Van Brocklin forgo his senior year for the NFL draft in 1949. He would go on to become the first University of Oregon player inducted into the NFL Hall of Fame.

     Van Brocklin established a legacy of providing great NFL talents to the pro leagues…whether or not they had actually finished school. Let’s take a look back at where the trend began, Norm Van Brocklin — the player who established Oregon’s early departure legacy.

THE FLYING DUTCHMAN IS THE FIRST TO GO

     Nicknamed “The Flying Dutchman,” Norm Van Brocklin grew up in Walnut Creek, CA by way of South Dakota, serving in the US Navy during WWII. Joining the University of Oregon football team after being discharged from the military, Oregon coach Tex Oliver didn’t think much of the young halfback/punter, barely using him in 1946.

Norm van Brocklin was the first Oregon Duck to leave school
early for the NFL draft. ©University-of-Oregon-Libraries-
Special-Collections-and-University-Archives

 
    “He’s only a fair runner, and can’t block,” was Oliver’s assessment. Van Brocklin had been known more for baseball in high school than football, and wasn’t recruited heavily, but perhaps Oliver should have taken a closer look at the talent. He wouldn’t get a chance to, however, resigning after a 4-4-1 season in 1946.

    In 1947 a new head coach took over, Jim Aiken, and with the fresh face came a new opportunity for Norm Van Brocklin after being moved to quarterback. Oregon had an All-American candidate in halfback Jake Leicht, who had been an All-American prior to joining the war effort, but amidst a switch in offensive philosophy to the T-formation in 1947 under Aiken, Van Brocklin outshined Leicht as the young team leader.

    In the first game of the year, Van Brocklin connected for a touchdown pass to Dan Garza on just the fifth play of the game, a great start to a season in which he would throw for nearly 1,000 yards and nine TDs, huge numbers in an era when throwing the ball was rare. Leicht meanwhile led the Pacific Coast Conference in rushing yards and scoring during his senior campaign, returning to his All-American form.

    Oregon would finish that season 7-3, ending the year on a six game winning streak once Van Brocklin and Leicht found their stride–a marked improvement from the 4-4-1 record under Tex Oliver while Van Brocklin sat on the bench for most of the year, out of position.

Jake Leicht was an All-American at Oregon before and after WWII.
©University-of-Oregon-Libraries-Special-Collections-and-University-Archives


    If the 1947 season made Van Brocklin big man on campus, the 1948 season would make him a national superstar. With John McKay replacing Leicht in the backfield (McKay later becoming a hall of fame coach at USC and the first coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers), Oregon lost only one game in the regular season, finishing 9-1, dropping a tough battle to national champion Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI, 14-0.

     Thanks to Van Brocklin efforts, Oregon would make its first ever appearance in the AP Poll, climbing as high as 9th by season’s end.

    Van Brocklin led the PCC in passing in both 1947 and 1948, and also led the league in punting, becoming the first Oregon player to throw for more than 1,000 yards in a season (1,010 yards in 1948), but the Ducks would be denied a chance at roses. In one of the most atrocious underhanded blows from Washington adding to the already bitter rivalry, despite Oregon being a perfect 7-0 in conference the Huskies lobbied other schools hard to pick Cal over Oregon to represent the conference in the prestigious Rose Bowl.

     The Washington politicking worked, the vote going 7-3 in favor of Cal (Oregon and Cal didn’t play each other in 1948, so there was no on-field tie-breaker to settle it). When Van Brocklin learned of the news of being denied a trip to the Rose Bowl, he openly wept at the team banquet.

Action from the 1949 Cotton Bowl – Oregon vs. SMU. ©University-of-Oregon-Libraries-Special-Collections-and-University-Archives


    Denied a shot at the Rose Bowl by those bad dawgs to the north, the season instead earned Oregon a trip to the Cotton Bowl on January 1st, 1949, to play SMU–led by the legendary Doak Walker. In the game Van Brocklin was spectacular as usual, bringing Oregon back from a 14-0 deficit, but eventually lost to the Heisman Trophy winner Doak Walker and SMU Mustangs, 21-13.

    Norm Van Brocklin earned All-American honors in 1948, and many coaches and writers alike agreed that Van Brocklin was clearly the best quarterback in the country. Having earned his degree in only three years, Norm Van Brocklin did the unthinkable–he left Oregon with a year of eligibility remaining to enter the NFL draft.

VAN BROCKLIN IN THE NFL

    Norm Van Brocklin was selected in the 4th round of the 1949 NFL draft by the Los Angeles Rams (37th overall), as a quarterback/punter. He would play in eight games his rookie year, starting none but throwing 58 passes and kicking two punts, but by the 1950 season it was Norm’s team, leading the Rams to a playoff victory. The next year, he would lead the Rams to the NFL championship.


Norm Van Brocklin led the Los Angeles Rams to a NFL Championship in 1951.

    Over the course of a 12-year NFL career with the Rams and Philadelphia Eagles, Van Brocklin was one of the biggest stars of the NFL. Nine times selected to the Pro Bowl, the 1960 NFL MVP, he led both the Rams and Eagles to National Football League Championships. His greatest game came September 28th, 1951, when Norm Van Brocklin threw for an astounding 554 yards vs. the New York Yanks, a record that still stands after 62 years.

     Three times he led the NFL in passing, and twice in punting, also giving the Green Bay Packers the only playoff loss ever suffered during Vince Lombardi’s tenure.

   Rather than continue his playing career after his NFL MVP season in 1960, Van Brocklin again made an interesting career move, becoming the first head coach of the new expansion NFL franchise Minnesota Vikings. He coached the Vikings for six years (1961-66), followed by a seven year stint with the Atlanta Falcons (1968-74).

A CHANCE TO RETURN HOME

    A 1966 College Football Hall of Fame inductee and 1971 NFL Hall of Fame inductee, Norm Van Brocklin wanted to come home to Eugene to end his career, lobbying to take over the University of Oregon head football coach position in 1977 after the university had fired coach Don Read following a 4-7 season.

   Van Brocklin wanted to finish his career back at Oregon, but that final year of eligibility from 28 years prior wouldn’t be put to use, the university choosing instead to hire Rich Brooks as the new head football coach, an Oregon State graduate. Van Brocklin coached one year at Georgia Tech as the running backs coach in 1979, and died due to complications of a stroke in 1983 in Georgia. He was posthumously inducted into the inaugural University of Oregon Hall of Fame class in 1992.

Ad in 1977 promoting Rich Brooks’ hire as new head coach, picked over Norm Van Brocklin as Don Read’s successor.



    Today Norm Van Brocklin’s mark is permanently placed on the University of Oregon, for those adventurous and savvy enough to go exploring to seek it out. Along the path of old campus in the area once known as “Hello Walk,” in front of one of the entrances of Deady Hall, is an old bench by a tree. Like many of the benches on campus, it at initial glance has little distinction, other than a quiet place to rest in a part of campus rarely visited by students, but at its foot is a plaque marking the place where Norm Van Brocklin first met his wife.

The plaque next to the Van Brocklin bench outside Deady Hall.


The plaque reads:
It is here we met
and here we will always be
Gloria Schiewe – ‘46
Norman Van Brocklin – ‘49
——————-
Placed in loving memory
by their children

    Despite missing out on his senior year, Van Brocklin remains arguably Oregon’s greatest player in history, alongside some of the other legends who have chosen to leave early–Kenny Wheaton, Haloti Ngata, LaMichael James. Of the six NFL Hall of Famers though with UO ties, only Van Brocklin left early for the NFL, while Emil “Tuffy” Leemans transferred to George Washington after playing the 1932 season at Oregon. John Madden, another NFL hall of famer, played on the Oregon freshmen football team before transferring.

EARLY DEPARTURES TODAY

    Of the other Ducks who have answered the beckoning call, only Haloti Ngata seems a possibility so far for the NFL Hall of Fame, though LaMichael James seems likely to join Van Brocklin and other Ducks in the College Football Hall of Fame someday.

    The NFL is a very different game than in Van Brocklin’s era, but the lures of pro ball are understandable with millions of dollars at stake. This year Terrance Mitchell joins the fray as early departed Ducks, a corner with solid numbers who certainly could have used another year in college to polish his game, but has the skills to be given a shot at the next level. De’Anthony Thomas is also NFL bound, the multi-talented but enigmatic superstar RB/WR hybrid tweener, who seems likely to get his first shot in the pros as a returner.

    With a week to go to the deadline, it is unlikely that more may join Mitchell and Thomas, with nervous eyes now relaxed after second team All-American Ifo Ekpre-Olomu’s decision to return. More will follow suit in the coming years though, a chance at a paycheck taking precedent over collegiate glory. It is interesting to note though after speaking directly with several former Oregon players who spent time in the NFL how much they opine for one more chance to run out of the tunnel at Autzen Stadium, stating they would happily trade their NFL experience for one more chance to play in a big game in college against Washington or Oregon State.

    During the pep rally before the 2011 BCS National Championship – Oregon vs. Auburn, Joey Harrington declared in front of thousands of Oregon fans that he would trade his entire NFL experience for one more chance to play a game at Autzen Stadium. Hyperbole perhaps, but nonetheless the sentiment has been often stated by many Ducks who played at the highest level.

     There’s just something special about game days at Autzen Stadium, something Van Brocklin couldn’t speak of as a coach after being denied the job in 1977, but others who have chosen to leave early can speak to the difference between college life and professional. The pro game will be waiting, it will always be there for those with the skill to play, but the time in college they will never get back, especially the times they could have had but chose to miss.

    Best of luck to Terrance Mitchell and De’Anthony Thomas, and any other Oregon Ducks who choose to forgo college glory for professional paychecks. The league will wait, but if they can’t, like Van Brocklin or Wheaton their exploits in Eugene will still be fondly remembered.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Kenny Wheaton: From the pick to the Oregon Hall of Fame

 Kenny Wheaton: From the pick to the Oregon Hall of Fame

Originally posted on FishDuck.com on November 2nd, 2011
 
Last Saturday a mild-mannered, shy, quiet, unassuming gentleman roamed Autzen stadium with a slight limp in his giddy-up, a lingering ailment due to repeated knee injuries.  He was one of nearly 60,000 present that day enjoying the festivities for the Washington State-Oregon game.  In other cities his presence may have gone largely unnoticed, but in this town on this day he could barely take a step without being recognized and approached by clamoring fans asking for a photo, an autograph, or simply wanting to talk about their memories of him.  The previous night a banquet had been held, largely in his honor, and on this day an entire stadium would cheer him for his efforts long ago during a ceremony at midfield at halftime of Oregon’s victory over WSU.

Kenny Wheaton had returned to Eugene, OR, as he often does, but this time it was different…he was being elected into the Oregon Ducks Hall of Fame.  With the annual grudge match fast approaching this weekend between the Ducks and the Dawgs, it seemed appropriate to have honored the man who will forever be associated with sinking the Husky juggernaut, killing the UW giant, permanently altering the landscape of football in the Pacific Northwest.  His efforts at Oregon have been written about many times, the stories of his greatest moments passed on from the older fans to the newest generation, his kindness and generosity now equally the stuff of legend in his ongoing efforts to give back to the community that he feels gave him so much.

To Oregon fans he is remembered for that one shining moment in time in 1994, to Husky fans he is loathed for that same ugly moment in time in 1994.  For as often as it is said in baseball by fans who can’t let the past go regarding similar iconic moments with players like Bill (expletive) Buckner, Bucky (expletive) Dent, or Aaron (expletive) Boone as they are all known these days, so too do many Husky fans often lament about Kenny (expletive) Wheaton and what he did to rip their hearts out and crush their souls, if they even had one to begin with.

It’s been quite a journey for Kenny Wheaton to reach this point, the culmination of effort and dreams realized, the accomplishment of a personal goal he set out to achieve long ago.  Today it is arguable that he along with Joey Harrington, are the two most recognizable faces in the history of University of Oregon athletics.  Showered with praise wherever he goes, surrounded by fans wearing shirts with images re-creating his greatest moment, it would be easy to expect that Kenny Wheaton could have developed a big head, an ego…yet he remains one of the most humble, kind, and honest people anyone would ever be lucky enough to encounter, while also happening to be one of the greatest to ever don an Oregon jersey.

I am but one of many Oregon fans over the years who has mustered up the courage to ask for a photo with Oregon Ducks legend Kenny Wheaton 

It’s a little odd to witness the contradiction first-hand when meeting Kenny Wheaton, the person….Relaxed, shy, gentle, kind and generous with his time to everyone who approaches him.  It is hard to see this mellow individual and associate him with being the same snarling beast on the football field who destroyed the Pac-10 for three years, then the NFL and CFL for a decade.
Could this really be the same guy who played through injuries, including spending half the 1995 season with a broken hand wrapped in a cast so large it looked like he was wielding a club?
 
Could this be the same man who led the team in tackles in 1996, from the cornerback position!  The one who for those efforts was named a 1st team All-American?

Could this be the same man who was so good that the entire 1996 defensive scheme under Defensive Coordinator Rich Stubler was re-designed for the sole purpose of moving him to different areas of the field playing various positions just so that teams couldn’t go away from him every play?

Is this the player feared by all, who could knock the helmet off a receiver one play and return an interception 70 yards for a touchdown the next?  Indeed it is, for as tough and gritty of a player Wheaton was on the football field, off of it he remains humbled and kind, seemingly incapable of a harsh word or raised fist towards anyone.

The call is familiar to all who pack the stands at Autzen Stadium. “Huard gonna go back to throw the ball, sets up, looks, throws toward the corner of the endzone and it’s…INTERCEPTED! IT’S INTERCEPTED!  Kenny Wheaton has the ball!  Down to the 35, the 40…KENNY WHEATON IS GONNA SCORE! KENNY WHEATON IS GONNA SCORE! Touchdown! Touchdown! Kenny Wheaton, On the interceptiiiiiooooooonnnnnn…The Most IMPROBABLE finish to the football gaaaaaaaaammmmmeeee!!!”
 
Jerry Allen’s iconic radio call rings out over the P.A. system at Autzen Stadium moments before the team storms the field before every game, with a raucous crowd chanting the words of Jerry’s call in–synch with the video being displayed.  It was October 22nd, 1994, when that epic moment happened, and by Kenny’s own count it is approximately a quarter of a million people since who have claimed to his face that they were on hand in the stands that day to personally witness the moment as it unfolded.

It was perhaps not the exact moment that changed the face of Oregon football, but in that magical 1994 season that gets credited for changing the tides, it is appropriate that the most memorable play from the most memorable season be etched in the history books for its greater significance.  This is why it is replayed before every game, why every fan has the radio call memorized word-for-word, why even young fans who weren’t born yet still memorialize the moment wearing ‘The Pick’ T-shirts, cheering on the play on the Autzen big screen, and approaching Kenny Wheaton with tentative awe when they see him pass by.  If ever a career could be defined by one glorious moment for which a person will be remembered and beloved for the rest of their lives, it is Kenny Wheaton and this snapshot in time.


Kenny Wheaton signs a photograph of his epic interception return vs. Washington 

It is both a blessing and a curse for Kenny Wheaton though, who will be the first to remind people that he did much more than just make one play.  While appreciative that he is remembered so fondly, he has told me how he wished more people would remember him for the other things he did on the field.  A two-time All-American cornerback (1995, 1996) before a lengthy career in the NFL and CFL, there is so much more to Kenny Wheaton than one play against Washington in 1994.  He has endured horrible personal tragedy, overcome career-threatening injury, and persevered through good times and bad while staying completely grounded.

Now a proud father, retired football player, trainer, and CEO of the Kenny Wheaton Foundation (which sponsors various events to generate funds for school supplies and holiday gifts for under-privileged children in the Lane County community), Kenny Wheaton spends much of his time simply saying thank you and to give back to the community that has done so much for him.

Kenny Wheaton came to Eugene by way of Phoenix, AZ in 1993, an all-state prep athlete with great promise capable of playing multiple positions.  He was paired with fellow incoming freshman safety Jaiya Figueras as roommates, and a close friendship that continues today immediately began.  Kenny was extremely shy, by his own admission he barely spoke to anybody except Jaiya, and he relied on Jaiya to do much of his talking for him.  Kenny and Jaiya were inseparable, pushing each other to always be better.  Jaiya would challenge Kenny to push-up contests in their dorm room, Kenny would challenge Jaiya to watch more film than him.  Together they would go on to change the attitude and success of the Oregon Ducks football program through their mutual efforts both on and off the football field, as was highlighted in a previous DuckTales story on Fishduck.com.

Kenny was a versatile and intelligent player who found his success through film study as much as reps in practice and athletic talent.  In the first game of the season in 1994 Kenny Wheaton was the starting running back for Oregon, due to injuries during fall camp, and he scored his first career touchdown for the Ducks on offense…there would be more to come on the defensive side.
 
Not many recall that the magical season of 1994 didn’t start very magical, a 1-2 opening led to the team being 3-3 and floundering with multiple injuries to key positions when the season turned in Oregon’s favor, spearheaded by Kenny Wheaton and the group of youngsters that were getting their first shot at extensive playing time.

The setting was the Coliseum in Los Angeles, CA, where Oregon arrived to face the #5 USC Trojans without starting QB Danny O’Neil, starting RB Ricky Whittle, or All-American cornerback Herman O’Berry on the field.  Their replacements were many Ducks getting their first chance at significant playing time; quarterback Tony Graziani, junior college transfer runningback Dino Philyaw, and Kenny Wheaton all making their first career starts.

Nobody gave Oregon a chance.  Not the opposing team, not the announcers, not even the USC marching band, who felt obligated to start a fight with some Duck players as they came out of the tunnel.

“When we came out of the locker room a guy in the USC band was blowing his horn at us, and one of the guys punched the horn right into his face, and next thing you know the whole team is in a big scuffle with the marching band before we headed out onto the field,” said Tasi Malepeai, an offensive lineman for the Ducks from 1992 – 1996.

“They thought it was just a stat game, they didn’t respect us at all,” said Dino Philyaw, a senior junior college-transfer runningback getting his first career start. “Keyshawn Johnson told me right to my face he thought it was going to be a stat game, I never forgot that, I responded ‘Yeah it will be, FOR ME!’”

Tasi, Dino, Kenny Wheaton and the rest of the Ducks shocked the world that day.  They dominated the USC Trojans from start to finish, with things getting started early with an astonishing interception by Kenny Wheaton, ripping the ball away from the receiver.
 
Ask Kenny Wheaton today what his favorite moment or favorite game was, and without hesitation he responds 1994 USC.  His favorite play? Not the pick vs. Washington, it was this interception vs. USC. It was his first significant playing time, his first career interception, and according to him his most complete game as a player.  Aside from Wheaton’s performance, it was one of the most complete games from the team, defeating the Trojans 22-7 on national television, the Ducks first win over USC in the Coliseum since 1971.
 
A loss to Washington State and victory against Cal set up the now immortalized Washington matchup.  The Ducks seemed to always battle UW tough, and the Huskies would nonchalantly stroll through the game casually taking the victory in the final minutes.  The script had played out many times before, and everyone in the stands knew it.  Oregon had taken the lead with a 99 yard drive, but Washington in the final minute had driven right back and were threatening to score the game-winning touchdown…just like they ALWAYS did.

Through Kenny Wheaton’s extensive film study he had noticed that when near the goal line Washington liked to throw the out pattern when they lined up in a particular formation.  As Wheaton checked into the game with the Huskies about to score, the same formation he recognized from his personal film study emerged and Wheaton decided then and there he would jump the out-pattern no matter what.  If they ran any other pattern they were going to score, but Wheaton felt confident that his game preparation showed him exactly what would come.

When the ball was snapped, Wheaton jumped the out pattern, and jumped into the history books, intercepting the pass and returning it for a touchdown.
 
The Ducks overcame their greatest bugaboo, the curse was lifted, and greatness lay ahead.  The Ducks won the final four games of the year to win the Pac-10 title and go to the Rose Bowl.  Despite not being a starter, Kenny Wheaton was a hero in fan’s eyes for making the biggest play in the greatest season anyone could recall.  Even his teammates looked at it with awe.

My all-time favorite moment as a Duck was Kenny Wheaton’s interception against Washington,” Josh Wilcox said, a legend in his own right at Oregon for both his performance on the field and his family name.  “Growing up a fan of Oregon, that was my highlight, it was such a great moment.”



While the Ducks lost the Rose Bowl, it didn’t seem to matter much.  The attitude had changed, the perception of Oregon football was different.  The 1995 season would see Wheaton emerge as a leader of the defense and a known commodity in the Pac-10 conference.  His highlights that season included a 71-yard interception return for a touchdown vs. Pacific, and numerous big plays in big games when big players needed to step up.  Kenny was a play-maker through and through, someone who his teammates could rely on to be there backing them up or coming up with a big play of his own.
 
Wheaton was the leader of the defense in 1995, a team that finished the regular season 9-2 earning a trip to the Cotton Bowl, led by a defense that many think was even more talented than the much-hyped ‘Gang Green’ defense of the year prior.  It was also a tough year though, as his best friend Jaiya Figueras had seen the highest highs and lowest lows in a two-week stretch, making the game-winning plays vs. Illinois and UCLA in back-to-back weeks only to shred his knee the following week, ending his season.
 
Wheaton would have to go it alone on the field without his closest comrade, but Wheaton shined in the role as defensive leader, racking up a total of five interceptions on the season, earning him 2nd team All-American honors.  Wheaton played through multiple injuries, suffering a disc problem, bicep injury, and broken hand during the course of the year.

Wheaton was a superstar by his junior year of 1996.  While his friend Jaiya Figueras struggled to return to his previous form before his devastating knee injury, Wheaton had become a one-man wrecking crew.  Under new defensive coordinator Rich Stubler a new defensive scheme was devised, one that would have Wheaton switching between cornerback and safety from snap to snap moving him all over the field, giving him more chances to be around the ball.  A normal player probably couldn’t take on all the responsibilities this entailed, but Kenny was such a cerebral player in his film study and game preparation that coaches felt confident it would work.
 
In the first game of the 1996 season, a 30-27 overtime victory over Fresno State, Wheaton was far and away the best player on the field.  Early in the game he returned an interception 69 yards for a touchdown.  Shortly thereafter he had another interception and long return, putting him in the rare position for a defensive player of accumulating more total yards than either offense.
 
 
Injuries during the season derailed a fast start for Oregon, and a 3-0 start soon turned into a 5-game losing streak before rebounding to win the final three of the year.   The path to redemption in those final three games was of course kick-started by Wheaton, who made a remarkable game-changing play recovering a fumble at the goal line vs. Cal in a game Oregon would go on to win 40-23.
 
In Wheaton’s final game as a Duck, Oregon throttled the rival Oregon State Beavers 49-13 in Corvallis.  Despite expecting to have teams avoid him all year, Stubler’s plan to move Wheaton around the field worked in keeping the superstar around the ball making plays, and despite the team’s disappointing record, it was a season to be proud of for Wheaton, the unquestioned team leader and best player.

During the season Wheaton had been mulling over another issue, whether or not to be the first player in the history of the University of Oregon to declare early for the NFL draft.  He was a two-time All-American, team leader, an icon, and the most feared playmaker on the west coast, there was little left to prove for Wheaton in college.  All indicators were that Wheaton SHOULD go, but family and friends made the decision difficult.

Back in Arizona Kenny’s younger brother Derrek had earned a scholarship offer from Oregon after playing at Phoenix College.  Ask Kenny, and he’ll tell you Derrek was the best athlete in the family, and people were abuzz with the prospect of having two Wheaton’s on the Ducks at the same time.  Then there was also the thought of leaving behind Figueras, who was playing again but still not at full strength due to his 1995 leg injury.  The two had set goals together; to win the Pac-10 title, to change the perception of Oregon football, to earn a place in the Oregon Ducks Hall of Fame.

The double-Wheaton secondary would not turn out to be, as Wheaton chose to enter the draft, and was selected in the third round by the Dallas Cowboys.  Oregon fans said goodbye to Kenny Wheaton’s days as a Duck, but cherished every moment they got to see #20 dominate the game for Oregon.  And there was hope that the name would continue if brother Derrek came to Oregon.

Then tragedy struck…while returning from a team banquet in November, 1997, Derrek Wheaton was shot and killed in a drive-by-shooting in Phoenix, AZ.  With Derrek’s tragic death the Wheaton name would not be seen again in an Oregon uniform, but the family athletic prowess is alive and well, with cousin Marquese Wheaton playing at Southern Miss and cousin Markus Wheaton one of the top weapons for the Oregon State Beavers.

Derrek Wheaton seemed destined to follow in his brother's footsteps at Oregon to perhaps an even greater legacy, but a senseless tragedy deprived us all of getting to know him 

Suffering the loss of a sibling, Kenny was also dealing with tough times on the field, recovering from a catastrophic knee injury that required extensive rehab.  Kenny would check in often with his friend Figueras back in Eugene, now a senior captain struggling to keep the defense together on an Oregon team that had changed from a great defensive team in their early years to now an offensive-minded squad.  Kenny could feel the sorrow in Figueras struggling to overcome injury, struggling to keep the team together, struggling to carry on without Wheaton in the secondary with him.

After three seasons with the Cowboys Kenny Wheaton was released, his knee injury thought to be career-ending.  In 2002 he rebounded and played in the Arena Football League for one season, then 2003 he went north to the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League.

It was here that Wheaton regained the prowess that had made him a legend in Eugene, gaining a reputation as a heavy-hitter and dangerous man with the ball in his hands.  In a 2004 playoff game vs. Hamilton, Wheaton intercepted a pass in the endzone and returned it 116 yards for a touchdown, a CFL record.  It was a play eerily similar to the pick vs. Washington a decade earlier, a moment that by now was getting replayed before every game at Autzen Stadium.  Four times Wheaton would be named to the all-star team and helped lead the Argonauts to a Grey Cup championship in 2004 alongside another Oregon Duck, safety Michael Fletcher.

Kenny Wheaton played seven years in the CFL, after he was told by doctors he would never play football again due to his knee injury in Dallas
 
The late 90’s and into the 21st century has been a time where the Oregon fan base and appeal has grown by leaps and bounds.  Those who have claimed membership in the Oregon family long after Wheaton’s days in Eugene were done have been introduced to his exploits through the gameday tradition of watching his 1994 interception vs. UW on the replay board, added in 1998, thanks in part to the success of the team during the Wheaton years.  Those who never saw Wheaton in person know verbatim the call of Wheaton’s immortal interception, they know the name, they know the legacy.  He is credited with being the lightning rod of the 1994 season, the year everything changed.

For Kenny Wheaton, who spends his time between Phoenix and Dallas, Eugene has become another home for him.  Nowhere is he more welcomed, more admired, even by those who know him for nothing beyond one single moment that continues to be immortalized every Saturday in the fall.

Kenny Wheaton's interception is always replayed on the big screen at Autzen Stadium, an homage to overcoming adversity and the achievements of those who laid the foundation for Oregon's success 

Wheaton retired from football in 2009 and returned to Dallas and his family.  Now a proud dad of two, he spends his time training athletes, helping the next generation of players pushing them to be the best they can possibly be, just like how Figueras and Wheaton pushed each other years earlier at Oregon.  He founded the Kenny Wheaton Foundation, a non-profit organization that has put together multiple events to raise funds for the benefit of low-income children around the Eugene area.

To Wheaton, it seems like the least he could do.  While everyone is quick to lay praise upon him for what he did on the field, it is how he was and continues to be embraced by the Eugene community that makes him most proud.  In speaking with Wheaton it seems as though he feels obligated to do what he can to help out people around Eugene, a community that gave him so much support over the years.

Now, after four memorable years in Eugene and a decade in the pros, a new accomplishment has been achieved, a goal set years earlier.  Figueras and Wheaton together wanted to someday be in the Oregon Ducks Hall of Fame, it was their ultimate goal, what drove them to succeed.  The 1994 team was inducted a few years ago thereby they achieved that status as part of the larger entity, but the individual goals remained unfulfilled…until last Saturday, when Kenny Wheaton was officially added to the roster of Hall of Fame players at the University of Oregon.


Kenny Wheaton and Jaiya Figueras enjoy some pregame festivities before the national championship game. Also pictured: Lyndsey Kyle. 

It seems only proper that the dignified classy gentleman who does so much to give back would be honored in this manner, returning to Autzen Stadium to once again hear the roar of the crowd cheer for #20, to watch ‘the pick’ play on the big screen moments before the team storms out of the tunnel once more, and to graciously do his best to give back to the community that gave him so much…be it a handshake, a photo, an autograph, or a wave to the crowd, Kenny Wheaton remains humble and gracious that so many continue to show him love and support.

Correction, make that Oregon Ducks Hall of Fame inductee Kenny Wheaton.
Congratulations, Kenny, and THANK YOU for everything.
 
A message of thanks from Kenny Wheaton to everyone can be viewed here.
 
 
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To find out more about the Kenny Wheaton Foundation, please visit their website at: http://www.kennywheatonfoundation.com/index.html
For information on Kenny Wheaton’s training services, contact KW Next Level Training at: kenny@kwnlt.com 

Refuse to lose: How Oregon won the first Regular Season overtime game in college football history

  Refuse to lose: How Oregon won the first Regular Season overtime game in college football history

Originally posted on FishDuck.com on September 28th, 2011

Overtime rules had existed for decades in professional football, but the collegiate game was slow to come around to extending games beyond regulation.  Ties weren’t commonplace, but they did happen.  Oregon had in fact played in the final 0-0 tie, the 1983 Civil War game vs. Oregon State, a game so bad it was coined “The Toilet Bowl.”
 
In 1996 the NCAA finally relented and ended the era of college football ties, implementing overtime rules.  But unlike the NFL it was not first score wins (sudden death), something that often infuriated fans because the victor was largely dependent on which team won the coin toss. 

The NCAA established rules where each team would get at least one possession, if the score remained tied after the first round, a second round of overtime would then be played and so on.  The team that had played offense in the first round would then go second in the next round, and with each successive round this would continue to switch until one team had a higher score at the end of a round of overtime play.

If it sounds complex, it was.  Or at least, it was new.  The ball would be placed arbitrarily on the 25-yard line within field goal range giving each team a chance to quickly score from that location.

But why the 25-yard line?
Why does each team get a chance to score?
Why rotate who goes first with each round?

The overtime rules for college football would take effect at the start of the 1996 season.  Coaches talked through the rules with their players, reps in practice were dedicated to overtime drills.  Yet nobody really knew quite how it would work until there was an actual overtime game played.

It wouldn’t take long to find out, and perhaps fitting that the last team to play in a 0-0 tie would be the first to play in an overtime game.

The Oregon Ducks and Fresno State Bulldogs had some interesting history linking the two programs.  Bulldog Stadium, built in 1980, had been modeled directly after Oregon’s Autzen Stadium in nearly every way.  The inaugural game played at Bulldog Stadium was between Oregon and Fresno State in 1981, a game that the Bulldogs won 23-16.

In 1996 the first game of the season had Oregon making their first return trip to Fresno since that loss.  Oregon had a new defensive coordinator in Rich Stubler, who had spent the previous 16 seasons in the Canadian Football League coaching with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.  On the opposite sideline was Fresno State offensive coordinator Jeff Tedford, a quarterback who had played one game with Hamilton under Coach Stubler years earlier as an emergency safety due to injuries, and even had an interception.  Two years later, Tedford would become Oregon’s offensive coordinator.

While it had been 14 years since Oregon and Fresno State last played, there would be numerous rematches to follow in the coming years between the two teams, but none would prove to be as memorable as the game played in Fresno on August 31st, 1996, the first overtime game in college football history.
 
The 1996 Ducks looked different from what had been the norm the last few years.  Rich Brooks was now in his 2nd year of coaching the St. Louis Rams, Mike Bellotti was the big man in charge.  Both coordinators had to be replaced from the previous year.  1995 offensive coordinator Al Borges had left after one year, and was replaced with Dirk Koetter.  Defensive coordinator Charlie Waters had left for an NFL job, with Stubler brought in to replace him, for the team on both sides of the ball it was the third new coordinator in three years.
 
Stubler brought with him a defense he had used to great success in the Canadian Football League, a zone scheme known as the “edge defense” that also included the defensive line backing off of the ball a yard.  The concept was to give the defensive linemen a chance to build momentum before colliding with the offensive line and get a better read on the developing play, which in theory worked…in theory.  It was successful in the CFL, but the CFL style of play was more of a pass-first game, the big question remained as to if this concept would be effective in stopping the run.  It was a huge adjustment for the Oregon defense, a crew that had come to be known as “Gang Green,” a stout attacking 3-4 man coverage blitz scheme that was the calling card of Oregon’s football program.

For the upperclassmen there was a huge learning curve, a team that had played man-to-man almost exclusively for years suddenly had to learn to play zone.  The linemen didn’t understand why they weren’t lining up on the ball the way they had for their whole playing careers, it was foreign to them.
“The edge defense, I do get what Stubler was trying to do,” said Kenny Wheaton, a junior cornerback and team leader for the 1996 defense.  “But he came to a team that primarily ran a man-to-man blitz, and he tried to make us a zone team and didn’t have the right personnel for it.  We were used to playing our gaps and sending pressure.  It could have worked if we had the players and understood what he was trying to do, it would have made it a lot easier on all of us, but it’s tough learning under three different coordinators, learning three new systems.  I never had the same defensive coordinator the whole time I was at Oregon.  Each coach was special in their own way, but they all had a different way of doing things and it was too confusing.”

Junior cornerback Kenny Wheaton was the superstar of Oregon's 1996 defense, finishing the season as the team leader in tackles and an All-American
 
“Guys didn’t buy in to the defense, and I admit I was one of those guys.  For the most part 95% of us didn’t buy into it until training camp, especially the veterans as we had been so successful doing things our way, but by then it was too late.  There were times I was playing inside nickel, then corner, then safety.  I put a lot of that on myself because at that time I was a team leader, it was nothing against coach Stubler, it was because it was something new, nobody understood why we were changing things so much when we had been so good.”

Opening the season in Fresno was an exciting trip for one Oregon player in particular, starting senior quarterback Tony Graziani, who had grown up in Modesto, CA, only about an hour’s drive away.  Graziani was in his second year as starting quarterback, an agile lefty with the ability to improvise when plays went sour and possessing a cannon for an arm.  Graziani was also on a learning curve, learning a new system under his third offensive coordinator.  Many family and friends would be on hand, and the Fresno fans were well aware of the local kid who had left the area to find success up north in Oregon.

Oregon senior quarterback Tony Graziani was great at making plays with both his arm and his feet
 
“There was a lot of pressure on me to go to Fresno State, I took a bunch of heat from the locals when I chose Oregon,” Tony Graziani remembers, now retired after a lengthy career in the NFL and Arena League, who stays close to football by doing national radio broadcasts of NFL games.  “Trent Dilfer was my host on my recruiting trip there, but I really wanted to get out of the valley and I had a great relationship with Coach (Rich) Brooks and Coach (Mike) Bellotti.”

Fresno State wasn’t unfamiliar with Oregon either, as assistant coach Kelly Skipper had been a high school superstar at Churchill High School in Eugene, OR, in the early 80s before a successful career at Fresno State where he still held several rushing records.  Skipper grew up a Duck fan and stayed close to his hometown, visiting often and keeping an eye on the Ducks football team with the 1996 game and the subsequent 1997 rematch back in Eugene on the schedule.

Fresno State featured a powerful running back under Skipper’s tutelage, Michael Pittman, who would go on to a very successful career in the NFL.  Pittman could beat a team with his speed, or was powerful enough to run over them.  Fresno State had a reputation for blue-collar play, hard-hitting ground & pound style football, a reflection of the hard-working people of the central valley.  None represented that philosophy better than Pittman, a combination of punishing size and speed.  They had been incredibly successful despite disappointing overall records, being ranked in the top 10 in the nation in total offense five of the past six seasons.

Fresno State runningback Michael Pittman was a terror on defenses in the mid-90s before a long career in the NFL
 
Oregon senior linebacker Reggie Jordan was one of a handful of holdovers from the glory days of the Gang Green defense that had become famous in 1994, along with several other highly-touted veterans, none better than junior cornerback Kenny Wheaton.

Senior Oregon linebacker Reggie Jordan was a key cog in the 1996 Duck defense
 
Wheaton had become famous two years prior as a freshman with his iconic pick six interception vs. Washington that spurred the improbable run to the Rose Bowl, but he was much more than just the one interception.  Wheaton had finished third on the team in tackles in 1995 as a cornerback and named 2nd team All-American, a great player with a nose for the ball and ability to hit that was rarely seen from the CB position.

“It was great being able to practice against Kenny Wheaton everyday,” said Graziani.  “Kenny was one of the most instinctual smart football players I have ever been around, one of the better I ever played with, he was special.  I loved going against him, we made each other better, we used to talk so much trash.  He knew if he could defend a pass from me or if I could get one past him that we could do it against anybody.”

Oregon’s offense featured a rotating crew of running backs including Kevin Parker, Jerry Brown and JC transfer Saladin McCullough all trying to replace the huge void left by graduated senior Ricky Whittle.  Tight end Josh Wilcox epitomized the blue-collar hard-work mentality for the Ducks, while young wide receiver Patrick Johnson was one of the best deep threats in the country, though still somewhat inconsistent while still learning the nuances of the receiver position.

It is often said teams make the most progress between their first and second game, needing a tune-up game to start the season shaking off the rust of the off-season and getting into sync.  This certainly applied to both teams as sloppy play defined the early going, but the one thing the game had no shortage of was big hits.  In typical style for Oregon-Fresno State matchups that would follow, it wasn’t always pretty, but made up for aesthetics through sheer brutality.
 
In the opening drive Reggie Jordan made his presence felt early bringing down a Fresno player on a reverse for a 9-yard loss.  Fresno State in turn responded with a couple big hits, quickly forcing an Oregon punt.
 
After the initial punts, Oregon struck the first blow.  On Oregon’s second possession Tony Graziani dropped back and threw deep to Patrick Johnson, who had sprinted past the safeties bringing in the ball for an impressive 88-yard touchdown.
 
“I just tried to throw it as far as I could, I figured if you’re going to go deep you might as well toss it up to the fastest guy in the nation, Patrick Johnson,” said Graziani.  “Thankfully I hit him in stride and he had the speed to break away.”

Fresno State answered with several long runs by Pittman, a sign of things to come, but couldn’t capitalize.  Things would turn worse for Fresno in the short term, as another long drive into Oregon territory would end abruptly when Kenny Wheaton intercepted a pass along the sideline and returned it 69 yards for a touchdown.

“I pride myself on making plays before the game even starts, from watching film, “ Kenny Wheaton said, now retired after a long career in the NFL and CFL.  “As a defensive back I learned from film that if the receiver comes out lined up on the numbers in a certain position that he was running an out pattern, so I knew before the snap he was running an out if they threw my way.  I saw it, jumped it, and it was a clear path to the endzone.  I had to cut back, couldn’t let the QB tackle me, but it was great to make a play like that for the team.”
 
Oregon was rolling 14-0, but there was reason to be concerned…Oregon’s secondary seemed more than up to the task, but this odd edge defensive scheme was having zero luck stopping Fresno State’s run game as Michael Pittman was chewing up big chunks of yards with every carry.  If Fresno focused on running between the tackles and quit throwing towards Kenny Wheaton, they could potentially dominate this game.

It seemed to be playing right into Fresno State’s gameplan for the Ducks defensive line to line up a yard off the ball, for a team that liked to run right at a defense between the tackles it was a gift to give the Fresno offensive line momentum running downhill.  After five carries Pittman was already over 40 yards, and the Bulldogs seemed more than content to slow down the game grinding it out 4-5 yards a pop.  Oregon’s defense had the speed to roam sideline-to-sideline, but a shortage of healthy defensive linemen made for big run holes for Pittman and co.

Early in the 2nd quarter a deep play-action pass beat Kenny Wheaton to the corner, setting up Fresno State near the goal line, leading to an easy touchdown run by Michael Pittman.

While Oregon was leading thanks to two big plays, things were not clicking.  The defense was having trouble against the run, and Oregon’s receivers were having a bad case of the drops.  The running back-by-committee from Oregon was having zero success finding any running lanes.  The Ducks offense was off the field almost as quickly as it got on, and the Oregon defense was quickly tiring in the Fresno heat.

Perhaps it was first game jitters, perhaps it was playing close to home in front of friends and family, or maybe it was the relentless pass rush, but Graziani and the rest of the Duck offense was nowhere to be found.

“We had a new offensive coordinator, it was Coach (Dirk) Koetter’s first game,” Graziani recalls. 

“We were trying to get on the same page with him, but we had a lot of drops throughout the game, and every time it felt like we were finally getting on a roll we would shoot ourselves in the foot.”

However, Fresno State looked impatient, unwilling to grind out the game on the ground.  They got pass happy, testing Oregon’s secondary deep with the safeties playing up near the line to stop Pittman.  A dropped second interception by Kenny Wheaton on a deep pass where the ball was knocked out of his hands by Oregon cornerback Eric Edwards was quickly redeemed when Wheaton intercepted a pass on the following play, returning it 20 yards before eventually being brought down.  With his second interception, Wheaton was momentarily the leading receiver in the game and also led in total yards, a bizarre anomaly for a cornerback.
 
“I guess they decided that they were going to go after me,” Kenny Wheaton remembers.  “Their big wide receiver Brian Roberson made some comments in the newspapers before the game that he didn’t think I was that good and was coming after me.  I took it personal, I was a 2nd team All-American the year before, I thought it was disrespectful.  I came into that game with a chip on my shoulder and the mindset that you’re not gonna get it on my side.”

Fresno State’s offense had been known for having a potent offense in previous years, so perhaps it was not completely unexpected that Fresno would move the ball, but the way that the Bulldogs so easily ran at will against this supposedly innovative new defensive scheme was alarming.  It was clear that the edge defense was completely ineffective at slowing down Fresno’s ground assault. 

FSU liked to play traditional 3-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust smashmouth football, but Oregon was giving them 3 yards before the 3-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust.  Fresno followed one long drive with another slowly moving the chains with one physical runs predominantly with Pittman.  While Oregon had managed early to gouge Fresno with two big scoring plays, the Bulldogs were the exact opposite, 4-5 yards at a time content to slowly pound Oregon’s defense into submission methodically trekking down the field.

Yet while Oregon’s defense would bend badly in the middle of the field, they made life difficult whenever Fresno State got into scoring range.  Oregon safety Brandon McLemore almost brought in an interception in the endzone but couldn’t hold onto it, the defense clearly fatigued as a Fresno drive progressed onto its 13th play from scrimmage.  The next play the defense was again opportunistic, or maybe just lucky, as linebacker Caleb Smith’s leg knocked the ball loose from Pittman causing a fumble, recovered by Oregon at the 1-yard line.
 
A couple runs up the gut ran out the clock to halftime.  Oregon led 14-7, but the momentum was clearly in Fresno State’s favor, Oregon leading solely because of the three forced turnovers and two long plays.  The Ducks had been lucky, but at some point the offense would have to do something, Oregon’s defense looked completely gassed from the Fresno heat and lengthy drives.

Halftime offered no rest for the tired Duck defense, as the design of the stadium placed the visitor locker rooms so far away from the tunnel that the team has to sprint to reach it to quickly review the half and go over adjustments, then sprint back to return within the allotted time.  For a team fatigued after long FSU drives and sweating in the Fresno heat, this was just cruel.  No rest would come for the defense for quite some time.

The 2nd half began with Fresno State once again getting the ball, but the Bulldogs became impatient and pass happy.  A Fresno fumble by their QB on a scramble was incorrectly called down, what should have been Fresno State’s fourth turnover of the day, and the Bulldogs immediately took advantage on a long pass completion to WR Brian Roberson where cornerback Eric Edwards got turned around, setting up FSU in the redzone.
 
A series of runs led to a short touchdown, despite numerous long drives that had ended with turnovers or stalls, Fresno State finally had tied the score at 14-14.

Fresno State was absolutely dominating the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball.  After the way the previous season had ended with a whimper in an embarrassing loss to Colorado in the Cotton Bowl, it looked like the tough times would likely continue.  Nothing for Oregon was working except when Fresno foolishly chose to throw the ball in Wheaton’s direction.  The defense couldn’t figure out how to play in this new edge defense, the offense couldn’t connect on any throws or create run lanes.  It could be a long season ahead.  Great individual efforts, particularly by Reggie Jordan, Kenny Wheaton, and Ryan Klaasen (who already had 16 tackles in the game by the third quarter) couldn’t carry the team by themselves.

The 3rd quarter continued where the 2nd quarter left off, long methodical drives by Fresno State and 3-and-outs for Oregon.  The Ducks were extraordinarily fortunate for the score to be tied, but unless the offense started moving the ball that would be only temporary.  There were broken tackles, big run lanes; all the signs of a tired defense unable to stop Fresno’s attack.  By the mid-3rd quarter Fresno State had out-rushed Oregon 173-23 and held a 17-14 lead, but if not for the three turnovers this one might well be a blowout.
 
Finally, Oregon’s offense came alive.  In what came to be his signature play throughout his career, tight end Blake Spence ran a seam route past the linebackers finding open space in the middle of the field for a 26-yard gain.
 
A few plays later a flea flicker resulted in a 32-yard touchdown pass to Damon Griffin.  Again, the big play was coming through keeping Oregon in the game, but Fresno State continued to be the far more impressive team.  Oregon had scored on 32 and 88-yard pass plays and a 69-yard pick-six, beyond that nothing had worked.

“On the flea flicker, we just wanted to get back on the scoreboard,” said Graziani.  “We knew we had to get back on the scoreboard.  The defense had been grumbling in the first half with the amount they had to play, unfortunately that drive was so quick they didn’t get much rest.”
 
A bruising run by Michael Pittman finished off yet another long 16-play drive to retake the lead 24-21, a play that also injured Oregon safety Brandon McLemore in a wicked collision at the goal line.  Oregon’s defense was running on fumes, and the offense had done nothing to give them a chance to rest.   The broadcast team Todd McKim and Ken Woody could only marvel at the dominance, “I can’t remember the last time Oregon’s defense gave up so much yardage on the ground,” said McKim, bewildered.

By the mid-4th quarter Oregon had run for only 13 yards in the 2nd half, but Graziani managed to make a play with his feet, buying time rolling out and throwing against his body to find wide receiver Jibri Hodge for a first down.
 
Oregon was down, but not out.  Turnovers and lucky plays had kept them in it, but there was no quit in the Ducks.  Oregon had brought five tailbacks on the travel roster, but had all but abandoned all aspects of the run game to Fresno State’s tough defense, it was an all-out pass attack by the Ducks to just keeping hanging on.  Desperate to give the defense some rest knowing Fresno State could continue to run at will, Oregon went for it on a 4th & 4, but the pass intended for tight end Josh Wilcox was knocked away.

Then, something changed, Oregon awoke from their fatigued slumber.  Fresno State had bled the clock with a 3-point lead, but a big play by LB Reggie Jordan forced a 4th down. The defense had finally made a stop.
 
The subsequent punt pinned Oregon at the 1-yard line, needing to go the length of the field to win with little time left on the clock.  The task ahead was daunting, and while the defense sat on the sidelines sucking oxygen the offense knew it was now or never.

Oregon had done very little all day, plagued with dropped passes and the inability to slow Fresno’s rushing attack.  The Ducks were 1 for-8 on converting 3rd downs in the game, but on 3rd down when a play absolutely had to be made, somehow quarterback Tony Graziani found a way.  Breaking nearly every rule there is about playing quarterback, Graziani rolled out in the endzone buying time with his feet, running out of real estate pinning himself in the corner of the endzone he then threw across his body to the opposite side of the field connecting with running back Kevin Parker for a first down.
 
“I just remember it being third down and I had to make a play,” said Graziani.  “I could always do that well, when a play broke containment I could get out of the pocket and make plays with my feet.  I was very fortunate to convert that play, and it really jump-started our offense.  It reinvigorated us, woke us up, it was absolutely do or die and somehow we made a play to stay in it.  Fresno State head coach Jim Sweeney approached me after the game and said that was the play that lost the game for them, and that if I had decided to be a Bulldog the game would have been a blowout, I appreciated that.”

Oregon had escaped from their own endzone, but still had a long way to go to steal this victory away from this Bulldog team that had vastly outplayed Oregon.
Graziani then threw a short dump off pass to fullback Eric Winn who rumbled his way upfield for a 15 yard gain.
 
Oregon then caught Fresno off-guard with a draw to Jerry Brown, who ran for a first down and got out of bounds to stop the clock.
 
Now at midfield, a deep pass to wide receiver Damon Griffin had Oregon on the edge of field goal range.
 
After a couple incompletions on 3rd & 10 Griffin again made a big play, catching a pass over the middle and taking a huge hit while diving to just barely get the first down.
 
Oregon had driven almost the length of the field, now set up on the 10-yard line with less than a minute left in the game.  A touchdown would win it, a field goal would likely send the game to this crazy new college overtime scenario that nobody had ever experienced before.

Then came one of the strangest referee calls ever that almost gave the game back to Fresno State.  Tony Graziani dropped back to throw, but a pass rusher was in his face. In a panic Graziani threw towards fullback Eric Winn, who was knocked down by a defender as Graziani was simultaneously knocked to the ground.  A good 10-15 seconds passed until a flag was thrown. 

At first it seemed obvious to be either roughing the passer or pass interference against Fresno State for the hits sustained by both Graziani and Winn.  But when the referee indicated intentional grounding, for a pass that nearly hit the receiver, the Oregon sideline exploded.  Graziani and Kevin Parker pleaded with the referee, then ran to the next official and stated their case to them.  Then the next official.  Then the next official.  How could they call intentional grounding in this situation, so close to the goal line, with almost no time left, when the pass almost hit the intended receiver?
 
Their pleas didn’t work, intentional grounding remained the call, and Oregon was now backed up to the 25 on 3rd down with almost no time left.

“It was just a horrible call,” Graziani remembers.  “I mean I understand that the refs are human too.  It was a really heated exchange because of the situation and time left, here was a Pac-10 team that had been to two new years day bowls in a row playing at a WAC school, I’m not gonna say the refs were trying to give the game to Fresno, but it was just a horrible call.”

With one chance left to try to win it, Graziani threw a beautiful pass on the move to the back of the endzone to true freshman wide receiver Tony Hartley, the first pass thrown his way in his career, but he dropped it despite the ball hitting him squarely in the hands behind the coverage.  Hartley would go on to break nearly every receiving record at Oregon during his career, but it was an embarrassing way to start.
 
“Tony felt horrible about that,” Graziani recalls.  “Obviously to drive all the way down and then for that to happen, I felt bad for Tony just for the fact that I knew how much he cared, but at least we had learned that we could drive on them so we felt good about overtime.”

The Ducks had improbably driven nearly the length of the field to steal the game away from Fresno State in their house, but a bad call and another bad drop had left them just short.  With mere seconds remaining, Joshua Smith hit a 38-yard field goal, tying the game.  Fresno State chose to run out the remaining clock, and the very first overtime game in college football history was about to begin.
There was a lengthy delay before the coin toss for overtime occurred, as each team huddled (as did the referees) to go over the new overtime rules, while the P.A. system went into it in great detail for the crowd.  It had been explained and practiced in training camp, but to do it in a game for the first time was something different.  Eventually after several minutes the coin toss occurred, with Oregon winning the flip and taking the ball second.  This is common strategy today, but at the time nobody was quite sure how the overtime scenario would play out.

“Coach Bellotti had actually done a really good job of preparing the offense for overtime,” said Graziani.  “He went over the rules, and we dedicated an entire practice in fall camp to overtime, so we had an idea of how it worked and what we wanted to do, but still nobody was exactly sure how it would work.”

The one great benefit about the delay was that Oregon’s defense was finally able to get a breather.  It had been a long game for the Ducks defense, punished all night playing against a vicious running game and the offense going 3-and-out for much of it, the final drive Oregon put together to tie it was their first chance to rest since the opening kickoff.  The distance to the Bulldog Stadium visitor locker rooms provided no relief at halftime.  The long Oregon drive at the end and delay before the start of overtime was just what the Oregon defense needed to catch their breath and recoup for one final big effort.  Not everyone was exactly clear on the overtime rules, but they knew if they could get a stop that the Ducks would probably win.

“It was explained and talked about in camp, but overtime was something none of us had ever been in,” said Wheaton.  “Until you experience it there’s still some uncertainty.  It was a shock, first time ever going into overtime, it was confusing from the start.  I didn’t quite know what was going on, only thing I remember was that each team got the ball.  There was no real strategy other than try to stop them.  Fortunately the long drive and break before the start of overtime was a chance to rest.  I’m not gonna lie, I was really hurting out there.  It was a long game for our defense, first time I ever had to use oxygen on the sideline.  During that break the veterans stepped up and said ‘they can’t score, stop them and we win.’  We may not have known exactly what the rules were, but we knew if we could just stop them once we would win.”

They would need every ounce of effort remaining in those fuel tanks running on fumes, legs feeling like jell-o.  Fresno State took the ball first in overtime and immediately went back to what they did best, pounding Michael Pittman up the middle for a six yard gain.  The next play it was Pittman again, but linebacker Peter Sirmon stepped into the hole and dropped him for just a yard.  This set up a 3rd and 3, Oregon’s defense concerned with just one thing, stopping Fresno at all costs.
Fresno threw a pass putting the ball in their best receiver’s hands, Brian Roberson, but Sirmon again came up with a huge hit stopping him just short of the first down.
 
Not wanting to press their luck, Fresno State chose to take the easy field goal.  Oregon had to now match it, or they could win with a touchdown…it didn’t take long to decide the outcome.
On Oregon’s first play Tony Graziani faked a handoff to Jerry Brown then dropped way back to avoid the pass rush, releasing a pass just before getting clobbered to the corner of the endzone to tight end Josh Wilcox, who had found a gap in the zone coverage.  Wilcox reeled it in and snuck into the corner for a 25-yard touchdown.  Ballgame over.
 
“It was a waggle to Josh (Wilcox),” Graziani remembers.  “The safety came up on the play-action fake, and I was able to throw a good ball and he caught it, it was pretty surreal.  I got hit pretty good at the end of it, I stayed on the ground for awhile, part exhaustion part jubilation part exuberance part relief.”

Oregon had somehow hung in there all game getting steamrolled play after play, but with the heroics of Kenny Wheaton and the late drive to tie it followed by the touchdown pass to Wilcox, Oregon had stepped into Bulldog Stadium and stolen an assured victory right out from under the Bulldogs.  Not just any win, the first college football overtime win in history, 30-27, nothing like it had ever been seen before.  Many Duck players were simply too exhausted to celebrate much, just happy to escape with a win.

“The game took a lot out of us,” said Graziani.  “The emotions, the fatigue, the heat, we were just relieved and couldn’t wait to get out of there.”

Graziani had thrown 19 for 32 for 316 yards and 3 touchdowns, voted the player of the game.  But the stats were only part of the story, despite a miserable performance leaving the defense hanging for 58 minutes of the game, Tony had rallied the troops and somehow willed the Ducks to get the job done when somebody absolutely needed to make a play.  To top it all off, he had perservered in front of friends and family, and one teammate made sure that the Graziani family remembered this night forever.

“When Josh caught the touchdown, he kept the ball,” Graziani recalls.  “My mom had been diagnosed with cancer and was going through treatment, they interviewed her before the game and she had this crazy wig on because all her hair had fallen out.  Josh hung onto that ball all the way back to the showers, and as soon as he got out he presented the game-winning ball to my mom, painted with the score.  I still have that ball, it means a lot to me.”
 
Kenny Wheaton played a lot of games over his long career in college, the NFL, and CFL, but this game stands out to him as well.  “It’s in the top three of being the most exhausting games I ever played in.  I was cramping up and sucking oxygen in the first half of that game, I’d never had that happen before.  I don’t think there was ever a game where I played more snaps than that night.  I was absolutely exhausted, I was just about finished in the first half, it was great we didn’t have to go out there again because we were beat. 

It was a big win, it was sweet, but there was also a real bitterness there because we had struggled.  I remember telling my parents ‘we need to change something quick, we didn’t stop the run.’  If you don’t stop the run your chance of winning is slim to none.  From a personal side I had a good game, I didn’t believe for a second coming into that season that I would get a lot of balls thrown my way but I ended up with two interceptions.  From a team point of view, I was proud that we fought and so many young guys stepped up and played hard.  They could have hung it up, but when it came down to it they made the plays needed to win.  That game embodies what Oregon football is all about.  We had a bunch of guys that had chips on their shoulder and they were going to fight to the end.  We didn’t quit.  It wasn’t pretty, but it was a win.  We had learned from the 1994 season to be stubborn, don’t quit, we didn’t know any better but to win.”

The game was the perfect representation for the 1996 season.  It was a game where Oregon was still learning, adapting to new coaches and systems, not quite clicking, yet somehow hanging tough refusing to quit and finding a way to win.  Grit and toughness overcame faults in scheme or overall talent for the system.

“We were a team that just refused to lose,” Graziani recalls. “We had a will to win, we were talented back then but not always as good as everybody else out there, but somehow we’d find a way to make a play when it was needed and get the victory.”

The Ducks would win their next two games, before going on a 5-game losing streak including another overtime game, after Tony Graziani suffered an injury that kept him out for much of his senior year.  Halfway through the season the edge defensive scheme implemented by Rich Stubler was scrapped, and the Ducks returned to the standard defensive approach that had worked so well in 1994 & 1995, but it was too late.  After spending all of spring practice and fall camp and the first few games trying to learn this new defense, to then scrap it and return to what had been done before was too much change and adjustment for the players to handle, and the defense suffered despite a phenomenal season from Kenny Wheaton.  As a cornerback Wheaton would lead the team in tackles that year, something almost unheard of from a CB.

Still, there was no quit, and the Ducks rallied to win their last three games, including a dismantling of Oregon State in Corvallis, OR, 49-13, scoring at least 40 points in their last three games upon the return of Graziani.  At 6-5 the Ducks did not get a bowl invite, one of only two years under Head Coach Mike Bellotti’s 13-year tenure that the Ducks would not participate in postseason play.
As with every year there would be attrition, as Tony Graziani, Reggie Jordan, and other seniors left, while Kenny Wheaton decided to become the first Oregon Duck player in school history to depart early for the NFL. 

Defensive Coordinator Rich Stubler and his experimental edge defense would be shown the door.  Yet the lessons learned from 1996, the toughness and never-say-die attitude would carry over into future seasons, and the offensive explosion witnessed over the final three games extended into the 1997 and 1998 seasons as the Ducks transitioned from being one of the top defensive teams in the country in the Brooks-era into one the top offenses in the nation.

There would be more overtime games as well, including the very next season an overtime rematch against Fresno State that again saw Oregon emerge victorious in thrilling fashion, 43-40.  Two years later a triple overtime thriller in 1999 vs. USC would be a night never to be forgotten in Autzen Stadium history, followed by an unbelievable 2000 double overtime win vs. ASU, and a double overtime victory at Arizona in 2009 most notable among Oregon’s future overtime games.  Oregon rarely if ever lost games in overtime, somehow finding a way to rally when it counted most, just like that one hot night in Fresno when the overtime rules were first tested and an exhausted team simply refused to lose.
 
 
The first overtime in college football history in its entirety can be seen below:
 
 
-Kenny Wheaton lives in Dallas, TX and Phoenix, AZ, and operates the Kenny Wheaton Foundation, helping underprivileged youth in Oregon.

-Tony Graziani is retired from football after a 15 year career that spanned the NFL and Arena League.  He resides in Palm Desert, CA with his family and works in real estate with TD Desert Properties, while also participating in national radio broadcasts of NFL games during the football season.