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A Brief History Of the Ducks For the Curious Auburn Fan

As the self-appointed alleged resident historian over at Addicted to Quack, I thought it might be helpful to provide TET with a bit of historic perspective on your upcoming BCS Championship Game opponents.

The casual Auburn fan is likely aware of a few basic facts about the Oregon Ducks:

1. They are from Oregon.
2. Their mascot is a duck.

The more involved Auburn fan may have a few more details, possibly including:

3. They are in the Pac-10 Conference.
4. The University of Oregon is in Eugene.
5. They were in the Rose Bowl last year.
6. Their QB got kicked off the team and wound up at Ole Miss.
7. They got screwed out of going to the championship game in 2001, just like Auburn did in '04.
8. Their running back punched out that big fat Boise chump last year, which was AWESOME.
9. They are owned by Nike.
10. They really hate Washington for some reason.
11. "Animal House" was filmed there.

All of which is true, or at least true-ish. But ask Auburn fans what they know about Oregon football in the 20th Century, and if you don't hear crickets, you might get this kind of response:

a) They started playing football in 1994...

or

b) They used to really suck.

"a" is not true -- it was 1894 -- but we get it. And there's no denying "b". Oregon doesn't have the kind of football history that Auburn has. The Ducks were irrelevant for decades. That fact doesn't make us bad, or inferior, just .. different. We're relatively new at this whole "success" thing.  

Your next opponent was a team that, between 1960 and 1995, had only two of its game televised nationally. Two games in 35 years. Six bowl appearances in the first 100 calendar years of existence. Played half its home games until 1967 in a 35,000 seat stadium over a hundred miles from campus. 

Yes, some of our players went on to great futures. NFL Hall of Famers (Van Brocklin, Renfro, Fouts, Zimmerman). You might know that legendary NBC sports softball tosser, Ahmad Rashad, was a star tailback as Bobby Moore. 

There's the rub. It's more likely that a football fan knows a player is from Oregon, than anything about Oregon, especially pre-1994.

Knowing a little of what we've gone through might help you understand why some of us are going more than a little crazy this season.  Get to know the back story of your future championship opponent, after the jump.

Star-divide

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Consider this. Y'all have no doubt heard of Rich Brooks, who just retired last year from coaching at Kentucky. Well, Rich was our coach from 1977 through 1994, an 18 year period in which he went 91-109-4, and went to 4 bowl games, all of which were in the last 6 years of his term. After his one breakout season in 1994, when he finally won the conference, he bailed out for NFL money. 

And the university named the field after him.

Think about it. What SEC school would keep around a coach for 18 years who only managed to win more than 6 games *twice* in his first 17 seasons?  In Rich's first six seasons, he only won 2 games 4 times, and wound up forfeiting the 12 victories he had in the other two years. He roundly criticized the UO administration for its failure to live up to promises made years earlier to update the lousiest facilities in the Pac-10. He'd talk up his teams pre-season, and then coach them to losses against teams like Fresno State and Pacific.

Brooks was a stubborn caretaker who loved his players, hired quality help, and refused to lose, even when he lost. And we kept him. Because the culture in Eugene in the last half of the century wasn't one that celebrated college football. All that we expected was that it earn at least make enough money to pay for the other programs that qualified us to stay in the Pac-10. And win a home game or two. Some years, the Ducks could barely do that.

I grew up in Eugene. I was a Boy Scout usher in '68 and '69 at Autzen Stadium. The fact that Oregon used teenaged boys in dorky uniforms for crowd control back then should tell you something about the crowd, and the culture. And that culture, I believe, helped keep Oregon football down for so long. (Think Vanderbilt, with more hippies and not quite the academic standards.)

***

Since most "modern" college football histories use WWII as a dividing line, that's a good place to begin. Oregon was at least a competitive program in the post-war years. There weren't a lot of bowl bids, because back then there weren't a lot of BOWLS, and they were mostly back in your neck of the woods, and they didn't like to invite teams from the West because it was hard for fans to get to the games.

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Norm Van Brocklin, Oregon QB 1947-48

The really good teams weren't ignored. Norm Van Brocklin led the '48 team to a 9-2 record and the Cotton Bowl, where they lost to Doak Walker and SMU. This being Oregon, we only won seven games over the next three years, and a coaching change brought Len Casanova to the sidelines. "Cas" is one of the titans of Oregon football. His name is on the athletic department building. And he took us to three bowls in 16 seasons. For this, he was revered. Culture.

Cas' biggest success was making the Rose Bowl, after the 1957 season, where Jack Crabtree and Jack Morris led a 7-3 Duck team in a heroic effort against #1 Ohio State, losing 10-7. (You will note that we have a history of losing bowl games. Please allow this to instill a sense of confidence for January 10.)

This is where it starts to get interesting, in a "Damn, why did y'all put up with that for so long?" way.

In 1959, thanks to the machinations of other conference members, Oregon found itself as an independent. There was moderate success -- a Liberty Bowl bid, against Penn State, in 1960 (another loss); and a Sun Bowl bid in 1963, a win -- the first Oregon bowl victory since the 1917 Rose Bowl! -- over a 4-6 SMU team that was only in the game because no qualified team was available.

By 1964, the Ducks were back with their old conference mates in the new Pacific Eight Conference. For Oregon football, the decade of the '60s was consumed with struggling to keep up with the titans of the new Pac-8 -- USC and UCLA, the only teams you ever saw on TV. As college football grew in popularity, it became clear that Hayward Field, the on-campus stadium, was far too small at 23,500 seats to host a major college team. Half the home games were actually played 110 miles up the road, in Portland, including the Border War with UW. In an attempt to keep up with the conference leaders, a new stadium was proposed and built. It cost about $2.5 million, seated 42,000, and was named "Autzen Stadium" after the timber baron who donated $250,000 to get the project off the ground, across the Willamette River from the UO campus.

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Autzen Stadium, 1967

Autzen opened in 1967. Oregon had a new coach, Jerry Frei, who struggled under the legacy of his predecessor, Len Casanova, who had moved on to AD. Progress was gradual. 2-8, then 4-6.  But Frei was a solid coach who eventually found a career as an NFL assistant. He had the right ideas, and was building a Program. Recruiting the West heavily, he brought a speedy back named Bobby Moore in from Tacoma; you know him now as Ahmad Rashad, the softballing NBC commentator. Then, he landed Dan Fouts out of San Francisco.

Things started clicking. The '69 Duck team was highly competitive, just 8 points from going 8-2. The '70 team had our first winning season in 6 years, and was ranked as high as AP#16 after a win over USC.

But Frei had a problem. He couldn't beat the aggie school up the road. And in the state of Oregon, nothing defined a team more than the Civil War results. Since 1958, in fact, Oregon's record against OSU was a pathetic 1-11-1. The boosters expected that '71 would, at last, be the year the Ducks took back the state from the damn barkrats.

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Dan Fouts, Coach Jerry Frei (hat) and assistant Bruce Snyder, 1971

Frei called the 1971 Civil War game the most important of his life.

The '71 Ducks lost to the Beavers at Autzen again, 30-29, securing another losing season at 5-6.

A month later, Frei, under pressure to sack some assistant coaches that certain Portland-area boosters considered incompetent, and without any show of support from his basketball-friendly athletic director, resigned.  Among the members of Frei's incompetent coaching staff were:

  • John Robinson, who would go on to win a national championship coaching at USC; College Football Hall of Fame.
  • George Seifert, who would eventually win two Super Bowls with the 49ers; 
  • Bruce Snyder, who was Pac10 COTY at Cal and swept the national COTY awards in 1996 Arizona State;
  • John Marshall,  the DC for USC's 1978 national champions and for two Super Bowl winners, now in his 26th year as an NFL assistant coach, currently DC with Oakland;
  • Dick Enright, who would one day be Todd Marinovich's high school coach, and be suspended for an entire season for secretly recording his opponent's practices in 1987. 

Guess who got promoted?  Naturally, Enright was deemed the competent one in the bunch, and was named Oregon's new head coach. 

The period of Oregon football history known as The Suffering had begun.

***

Call it a curse, or bad karma. Call it getting what you expect. Call it getting what you pay for. The bottom line is that between 1971 and 1994, Oregon Football was irrelevant to all but around twenty thousand of its most interested fans. The only others who cared were members of the local media, who were paid and thus under obligation to pay attention to them; the student-athletes themselves, who were at least getting a free education, and their families; and others under direct employ of the UO. That makes for a limited support base. Combine this with the fact that there was a lot more to do in the Eugene area in 1972 besides paying to watch bad football in the rain and it's not hard to see what the Ducks were up against back in the day.

From whom little is expected, little is returned.  Enright's career lasted two years. He was a "player's coach", a good recruiter at a school that didn't have a recruiting budget, but a lax disciplinarian and a poor tactician. Enright did finally break the OSU curse, winning the Civil War 30-3. But his team was blown out 68-3 at Oklahoma, and 65-20 at UCLA, and not even beating the Huskies 58-0 in '73 could save his job, after losing at home to OSU and going 2-9. Out went Enright. (Warning: Do *not* search the internet for Images using "Dick Enright.")  

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Don Read, Oregon HC 1974-76

In came Don Read, a cerebral genius and quarterback guru and genuinely nice guy. Read would eventually find his footing at Montana, leading the Griz to a 1AA national championship. But at Oregon, in the Pac-8, he was simply over his head. Some of Oregon's most legendary beatdowns occured on his watch. It didn't help that the athletic director continued to support those paycheck games against the national powers in an effort to balance the budget.

His first game was at Nebraska. Ducks lost, 61-7. More blowouts followed. 40-10 to Cal. 66-0, to a terrible UW team. 35-17 to the Beavers.

In '75, the bottom fell out.

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Typical road game performance, Oregon, 1972-1985

Another paycheck-game blowout at Oklahoma (62-7) was followed by a loss in the home opener.. 5-0, to San Jose State. Yes, football, not baseballAfterward, new Oregon President William Boyd famously declared "I'd rather be whipped in a public square than watch a game like that." Fans agreed. The announced paid attendance in '75 averaged just over 22,000 per game, a gross overestimate. In the ultimate insult to tradition, official Homecoming festivities were cancelled in 1975; who wanted to come home to this?

The losing streak eventually reached 14 games, finally ending where it started, with a win over a Utah team that finished 1-10. The victory was witnessed by just 10,500 true-green fans, an Autzen record that will almost certainly live forever.

Read, despite a modest upgrade in his recruiting budget, kept telling the Oregon Club that we just couldn't compete with the "big schools" for top players, so, he wasn't going to bother trying. He had it backwards, of course.

After 1976, when USC blew the Ducks out of Autzen, 53-0, and another paycheck loss at Notre Dame (41-0) was the highlight of a six-game losing streak, not even another win against OSU could save Read's job.

***

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Promotional billboard, 1977

There was a nationwide search. Bill Walsh was offered the job, but turned it down for Stanford. The desired qualities sought eventually devolved to "anybody stubborn enough to take THIS job for $32,000 a year."  In the end, it fell to Rich Brooks, a UCLA assistant coach and -- horrors! -- OSU graduate.

The Brooks era did not begin auspiciously. For one thing, Rich had the honor of taking his team into the SEC for not one but *two* paycheck games, including his season opener at Athens. The team kept it respectable, losing by 11, then got his first win as a head coach at moribund TCU. But the beatdowns resumed; 8 straight losses, average score 40-11. He did get a win over OSU in his first try, though.

Another 2-9 year followed. They started 0-7, including a home loss to TCU, a team that hadn't won a road game since Nixon was president. But the last 5 losses were by a total of 17 points, which was a lot better than being blown out. Progress. 

And Brooks was starting to see the results of an upgrade in recruiting. He'd pounded the table, insisting on a higher recruiting budget. He hired John Becker as his offensive coordinator, and made him the highest-paid assistant in the conference. Becker had coached at a juco in Los Angeles and knew the good players, and brought some along with him. There was finally real talent in the backfield, and size in the trenches.

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Reggie Ogburn, Oregon QB 1979 - 80

In '79, dual-threat juco transfer Reggie Ogburn chose Oregon over Cal, and with him at QB -- think of him as the 75% Cam Newton and you'd understand -- the Ducks had their first winning season in 10 years, going 6-5. The city went nuts. Home attendance was up 35%. 1980 was going to be The Year of the Duck.

Then... thud. It turned out that one of OC Becker's qualities was his ability to get players academically eligible without attending all those silly classes. And the culture of the team had suddenly become sadly similar to that at some of the big-boy schools; a group of talented players thought they could get away with anything they wanted. Brooks had gambled, and lost one of the few qualities his predecessor possessed - integrity.

Caught up in the national pay-for-credits scandal, and with players accused of crimes ranging from phone-card theft to burglary to sodomy, the '80 Ducks played under probation. Ineligible for bowls, with some star players sidelined, they still managed to go 6-3-2, with a blowout win at Washington. Still, attendance was up again. Fans liked winners. Who knew?

One more year of probation. Plenty of talent returning for '81. The Quack was Back. Brooks challenged reporters to put his 1981 team in the Top 20. He was confident of winning seven, maybe eight games, and challenging for the Rose Bowl.

Oregon lost the first game of 1981. To Fresno State. 

They wound up 2-9. Nobody voted them into the Top 20. They were,  however, fixtures in Steve Harvey's Bottom Ten.

In 1982, they lost to Fresno again, this time at Autzen, 10-4. (The score, not the CB lingo.) Only an inexplicable tie with Notre Dame salvaged another 2-win season. Sure, they beat OSU again, but that was now expected; in fact, Brooks had never lost a Civil War game, as a player, an OSU assistant, or as Oregon's head coach. A solid faction of boosters would have kept him employed for life at Oregon just for that.

1983 opened with another loss. At home. To Pacific, which would drop football altogether a few years later. The season ended with the infamous Toilet Bowl, the 0-0 Civil War turdfest that was the last scoreless tie ever in Division 1 football. And yet, many fans in Eugene, by now among the most patient in America, considered 4-6-1 great progress. 

In fact, 1983 was the year Oregon transitioned from "general suckitude" to "solid mediocrity." The Ducks went 6-5, 5-6, 5-6, 6-5, 6-6 between '84 and '88. And new NCAA regulations limiting scholarships and traveling roster sizes, along with increased support generated by a sharp young AD named Bill Byrne, were helping Brooks become more competitive on the field and on the recruiting trail.

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Bill Byrne, UO Athletic Director, 1983-92;
Savior of Oregon Football

Byrne gets credit for ending the dependence on paycheck games, and finally coming through with the facilities upgrades that Brooks had been begging for. Yes, he had the crazy idea of putting a dome over Autzen, but a lot of people in Eugene thought it was a good idea at the time. 

In 1987, after a 4-1 start capped by wins over ranked Washington and USC, Oregon was ranked AP#19. It was the first national ranking since 1970. The team celebrated by losing its next four games.

In 1988, an even better start. 6-1 after another win over the Huskies. Then, QB Bill Musgrave decided to attempt to tackle an ASU linebacker with his collarbone. Crack went the shoulder, and Musgrave and the Ducks were done for the season, with five straight losses.

Still, the Bill Musgrave Era marked a change. The strong-armed QB would finally lead Oregon in 1989 to its first 8-win season in decades and its first bowl bid since '63. Okay, it was the Poulan Weed-Eater Independence Bowl, in Shreveport, against Tulsa, and it cost the school a fortune in guaranteed tickets, but it was a BOWL GAME DAMMIT! Which they WON. The cherry was popped. Success was imminent! Respect was demanded!

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via www.gasolinealleyantiques.com

As a senior, Musgrave took the Ducks to another 8 wins, and another bowl, the Freedom, against Colorado State. They lost a heartbreaker.

Bill Musgrave graduated, having broken Dan Fouts' season and career passing records. The team returned to mediocrity. '91 saw a 2-0 start, but a 1-8 finish. And, somehow, Brooks started losing to OSU again, twice in three years. Injuries mounted. We were back to being just another .500 team, struggling to beat the Beavers and win more than a few conference games. Attendance was still high, but the natives were getting restless. A return to the Independence Bowl in '92 didn't exactly energize the fan base... especially when they lost to Wake Forest.

By the end of '93, Brooks was on the hot seat. Oregon had blown a 30-0 lead at Cal, losing 42-41, and another promising 3-0 start turned into a 5-6 downer. The coach had recently been named athletic director, in an obvious attempt to save money, and around Eugene fans were asking when Brooks would get around to firing himself.

In 1994, after 3 games, Oregon was 1-2 and had just lost to Hawaii and Utah -- at home. Now the sharks were circling. Now, after 17 seasons, Brooks had reached the end of his rope. Iowa was coming to Eugene to put him out of his misery.

Oregon beat the Hawkeyes 40-16. They went 8-1 to close out the season and win the conference; the tipping point was a dramatic win over AP#6 Washington at Autzen, that featured a play frequently considered kind of memorable...

The Ducks were in the Rose Bowl again, as a writer for the LA Times put it, "every 37 years, just like clockwork."

The Suffering was over. Brooks took the money and ran to the NFL. But the cupboard wasn't bare. OC Mike Bellotti stepped in as head coach. Oregon's richest fan, Nike head Phil Knight, started pouring his personal fortune into facility improvements, and made the Ducks his company's featured client.. and the rest, you probably know about.

Since 1994, Oregon's only seen one losing season (2004, 5-6). Only missed post-season play twice. Won ten games or more 6 times. Finished ranked in the AP Top 25 ten times. Won or shared the Pac-10 title four times. Hasn't lost to Washington in seven years (average score, 43-17). Etc.

Despite the 2002 expansion to over 58,000 seats, Autzen Stadium has been sold out for every game since 2004. Oregon has the best facilities in the Pac-10, rivaling any in the country, and they just keep improving.

A significant majority of current Oregon fans jumped on the bandwagon in 1994. Who can blame them for sitting out the years of suck? But for those of us who lived through The Suffering, the recent success of our beloved Ducks is just mind-boggling.

The old saying is "I've been rich and I've been poor, and rich is better." Are Duck fans who stuck with the team through twenty years of bad football more legitimate than the ones who jumped on in 1994? No.. but you'll have to forgive us for thinking we appreciate it a little more than they do.

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Autzen Stadium, Halloween 2009

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Very interesting read

We called our years of suffering The Bear Bryant years. Hence the joke… what do a maggot and an Alabama fan have in common? Both can live off a dead bear for 30 years.

by WrDmnEgle on Dec 10, 2010 4:04 AM CST reply actions  

rrrrrrrrrrrr0f11111c??

THAT'S RIGHT, Kenny Wheaton you did. You cut back into GREATNESS.

by HoodRiverDuck on Dec 12, 2010 3:20 PM CST up reply actions  

This post brought to you by my 18-month old.

He really liked benz’s post.

THAT'S RIGHT, Kenny Wheaton you did. You cut back into GREATNESS.

by HoodRiverDuck on Dec 12, 2010 3:23 PM CST up reply actions  

benzduck

Wow. You obviously put a lot of time into your post. I am not one to look down on a school that doesn’t have an aristocratic pedigree of football greatness. I mean, look at the once-dominant Notre Dame and we see how a long storied history relates to on-field results.

The nature of the game has changed greatly in recent years with the proliferation of TV money, coverage, and public interest. Also, coaching skills have spread across the nation as assistants take head coaching jobs and bring what they learned from great old timers to lower tier schools. This has the effect of raising the bar for everyone. Thus the chosen few media darlings see themselves facing increasingly qualified competition. This is a good thing.

I applaud your success and think your team represents a serious threat to our quest for the National Championship. I also like whoever is inside the mascot as he has imbued the character with a distinct personality.

This is the game I have wanted to see since the chance of us playing became possible. I didn’t want you guys to lose and then have to play TCU because then it would always have been, “Yeah, but you wouldn’t have beaten the Ducks. Not with that offense.” Nobody will say squat about either of us beating or not playing TCU, which is a testament to public perception about the quality of our two football programs as they exist right now.

by KungFuPanda9 on Dec 10, 2010 6:04 AM CST reply actions  

Great Post

I will have to say, that I knew little about the ducks until they became my “West Coast Team.” It was the middle 90s and it really came to the for front when you guys got screwed in 2001. That team was awesome. Good to know that I joined the UO party about the same time as most Duck fans. I have not missed out on too much :)

If you are a War Damn Eagle, you can War Damn anything.

by WarDamnZach on Dec 10, 2010 7:11 AM CST reply actions  

I really enjoyed that article..

Thanks benzduck, for a most interesting read.

Come and join me at http://trackemtigers.com

by KoolBell777 on Dec 10, 2010 7:40 AM CST reply actions  

I hope someone...

can do this about Auburn on the ATQ page.

by DyeHardAUFan on Dec 10, 2010 7:41 AM CST reply actions  

I'd like to see that.

Thanks to CBS, we get plenty of SEC coverage every week nowadays, but in the past we’ve been limited to seeing Alabama and whoever is playing Alabama. I remember watching Pat Sullivan throwing the ball all over the place to Terry Beasley when I was a kid. Bo Jackson couldn’t be avoided. But I bet Duck fan knows little about Auburn otherwise.

Example: I had no idea that Auburn – Georgia is the oldest rivalry in the South.

I remember when they stopped playing the Iron Bowl in Birmingham. That must have felt pretty good, getting them at home. (We played UW in Portland for over 50 years until Autzen was built.)

I vaguely recall a game back in the 90s where you were way behind LSU in the 4th, and set a record for picks in one quarter to pull it out.

I know y’all have history… Lay it on us.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 10:05 AM CST up reply actions  

the LSU game to which you refer

1994. Kept the winning streak alive (Terry Bowden won his first 20 games as a head coach, that was number 14 i think). 3 pick-sixes in the 4th quarter to come back from 23-9 to lead 30-26 (LSU got a FG in there after the first two), then had to get two INTs on the final drive after the first was fumbled away on the return.

Even after the rain-soaked win over WVU, the 4th and forever against UGA, the explosion on the hogs, Florida forgetting to cover Shane Wadsden, that is still the craziest 4th quarter I’ve ever seen in person

by AU_Jonesy on Dec 10, 2010 1:47 PM CST up reply actions  

Was Terry Bowden a good coach?

Or did he just luck into some good players at first, and then once Dye’s classes were run out he was exposed?

He certainly took a spectacular fall.

At the time I blamed it on a Peyton Manning hangover, but was there more to it?

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 2:23 PM CST up reply actions  

Ugh, Terry Bowden...

Okay so for the record, he was 47-17-1 while at Auburn. He started off 20-0 and never lost more than 4 games in one season UNTIL 1998. The ole 1-5 season. It seemed like the perfect storm for disaster really. We lost players to the NFL, 7 signees became ineligible because of grades. there were other off-field issue—the specifics of which, I have forgotten other than there were players acting nefariously which lead to their suspension. Now on October 24, 1998, Bowden claimed that he was resigning for the ‘good of the athletes and for the good of Auburn. These kids don’t deserve this kind of attention’..blah, blah, blah blah blah. IMO, he quit because he didn’t like losing AND he knew that the fat lady would be singing especially for him by the end of the season. Like a coward he quit on his team in MID F***ING SEASON!!! Clearly, I still have some issues over this. Why?
Well, I was in the stands in 1993, when we won the Iron Bowl and went 11-0. That was magical. He made me believe that even though Pat Dye was no longer on the side lines (in a coaching capacity) that Auburn would be OK. Auburn would build on Dye’s hard work and tradition. Ultimately, I view Bowden’s departure as a betrayal of sorts. My feelings for him are so strong that when I look at this (Bowden’s Tiger eyes):
I literally cringe. Still over 12 years later…….

by Tiger on the mountain on Dec 10, 2010 3:03 PM CST up reply actions  

Buster Brown as he was called by some

Did an adequate job with Dye recruits. He was an adequate coach but not much of a recruiter, hence the problems after he bailedt. He is definitely not one of the revered AU past coaches. My opinion only.

by myauburn on Dec 10, 2010 3:06 PM CST up reply actions  

Both

When Bowden arrived at Auburn the cupboard was full of talent left by Pat Dye. That talent coupled with Bowden’s knack for gameplanning made him appear to be a very good coach his first couple of years.
By 1995, however, Bowden thought that having cocktails with coeds was more important than recruiting or coaching. He began to lose the respect of his staff (mostly Dye holdovers), and once Rodney Garner left for Georgia, suddenly the recruits weren’t coming in. Or all the big ones we did get never seemed to qualify.
Sure, we made it to the SEC championship game in 1997, but that was due more to Dameyune Craig’s athletic prowess than Bowden’s coaching.
Personally, he lost me in 1995 when he decided to rely on Patrick Nix’s “arm” and use Stephen Davis as more of decoy.

They say Cam shot a man named Gray and took his wife to Italy.

by Foy Onion on Dec 10, 2010 3:09 PM CST up reply actions  

even in the season of DEATH (2008), there has never been a more inept offensive performance in Auburn history than when the 98 team got beat 19-0 by UVa on opening Thursday night (Bowden LOVED those Thursday night games…)

by AU_Jonesy on Dec 10, 2010 3:59 PM CST up reply actions  

Damn. I’d imagine it would be hard to show your face around the SEC after getting shut out by Virginia at home. At least the Cavs were pretty good that year as I recall.

Didn’t USC come down there and shut you out in a season opener a while back? They used to do that to us all the freakin’ time. I hated that.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 4:18 PM CST up reply actions  

Yes, 2003. I think we started the year ranked either 4th or 6th, depending on the poll. That still stings.

by Jumpn_JackFlash on Dec 10, 2010 4:22 PM CST up reply actions  

Yeah it does.

I came home for that game and left feeling completely deflated……

by Tiger on the mountain on Dec 10, 2010 4:24 PM CST up reply actions  

Don’t feel bad. That was the start of their reign of terror on the Pac-10. We all got the same treatment for several years. And at one point, it looked like they’d never stop.

But they did. Did you know USC hasn’t won a game in the state of Oregon since 2005?

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 4:29 PM CST up reply actions  

Did you know USC hasn’t won a game in the state of Oregon since 2005?

I knew there were more reasons to like Oregon than just good microbrews, pretty girls, hippies and Nike.

by Jumpn_JackFlash on Dec 10, 2010 4:35 PM CST up reply actions  

Pretty girls?

Where have you been looking and could you direct my attention there?

by GMan83201 on Dec 11, 2010 12:53 PM CST up reply actions  

Most here disagree with me...

but Bowden was a good coach and could’ve been a great coach for AU but he was handcuffed recruiting while AU was on probation and under scholarship limitations with no TV and no post season play his first couple of seasons. Bowden refused to play the good ole boy game that Lowder (our formerly uber-powerful booster/Trustee that was the Napoleon of our Empire) and his cronies insisted on….to say it quite frankly he would’nt bow to Lowder and he got jobbed for it, his firing came complete with a gag order on him from telling his side of the story (yes Lowder was that powerful) or he would lose his huge buyout which included his multi million dollar Auburn home. Lowder has since lost his power along with the bulk of his wealth when Colonial Bank was taken over by the Feds and sold to BB&T. The rumor mill got the best of Bowden and the bulk of the AU nation bought it hook, line, and sinker. Bowden’s only mistake in leaving was his resigning mid-season when he saw that Lowder was pulling the rug out from underneath him.

I don't troll so I reserve the right to berate trolls as I see fit.

by Todd92 on Dec 10, 2010 7:22 PM CST up reply actions  

Oh really?

Auburn vs Mississppi State, 2008. It was the mosts breathtaking display of offensive ineptitude I have ever beheld. I loved every minute of it!

If ya can't get your Dick Enright, get your Dick Harter!

by Old Ducker on Dec 10, 2010 4:41 PM CST up reply actions  

You must have missed the 2008 Sun Bowl.

Wouldn’t it have sucked to be Verne and Gary that year? CBS gets to do ONE bowl game all season, they assign their #1 crew to it, and they have to feign interest in a 3-0 pukefest. Should have received hazardous duty pay.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 4:45 PM CST up reply actions  

That's what you get for broadcasting a game involving the Beavs!

"(Kelly's) got a veteran team that is the favorite to win the Pac-10. His choice of Thomas reflects only one belief: He’s our best QB today."-Ted Miller

by TennesseeQuackAttack8 on Dec 10, 2010 8:07 PM CST up reply actions  

This is true, but at least we moved the ball somewhat in that game and missed on a chip shot field goal that would have made it and insurmountable 6-0 lead at the time. I don’t think MS State ever even crossed midfield. And looking back on it, I loved every minute of it too.

by Jumpn_JackFlash on Dec 10, 2010 4:47 PM CST up reply actions  

I used to joke that I’d take a 3-2 victory. I never thought I’d actually have to do it…

Come to think of it, Chip Kelly said he would take a 3-2 victory last week…

by AU_Jonesy on Dec 10, 2010 5:52 PM CST up reply actions  

That 3-2 victory was amazing. I thought about that during the Arkansas game this year, and I kinda miss it.

by T-Handy on Dec 14, 2010 11:57 PM CST up reply actions  

Great post--I have always respected Coach Brooks...

but after reading your post, it increased. I had no idea he was at UO that long—I thought he may have started in the late 80’s or early 90’s. The game that Auburn came back on us in 94 was tough to watch. We had a very highly rated QB coming out of high school (Jamie Howard) that did not live up to the hype, but that did not stop him on that day—a little frustation here and I do thank JH for coming to LSU. I watched with amazement/horror as he kept throwing over the middle to Auburn dbs—I think there was four int overall and three returned. Curley Hallman could beat Auburn and Bama and FL St. at Southern Miss, but not at LSU—bleep!, bleep!….

The Oregon game I remember was the 2002 Fiesta. I was in NO waiting for the Sugar Bowl trying to keep warm by drinking Hurricanes/beer and watching people make fools of themselves at the Cat’s Meow (karaoke) and avoided to do so myself—not drunk enough—and I remember watching Joey Harrington light up the Buffs on a TV in there. A lot of passes and y’all got some satisfaction from being slighted that year.

"When a hurricane damaged my father's house, my brother rushed over with a gas grill, three coolers of beer, and an enormous Fuck-It Bucket - a plastic pail filled with jawbreakers and bite-size candy bars. ("When s*** brings you down, just say 'f*** it,' and eat yourself some motherf****** candy.")"
— David Sedaris

by mjtig on Dec 10, 2010 7:29 PM CST up reply actions  

*returned for TD's

"When a hurricane damaged my father's house, my brother rushed over with a gas grill, three coolers of beer, and an enormous Fuck-It Bucket - a plastic pail filled with jawbreakers and bite-size candy bars. ("When s*** brings you down, just say 'f*** it,' and eat yourself some motherf****** candy.")"
— David Sedaris

by mjtig on Dec 10, 2010 7:30 PM CST up reply actions  

Hallman did beat Bama in 93 in T-Town (17-13)--no forfeit necessary.

I will not forget that one. The high mark of those tough years.

"When a hurricane damaged my father's house, my brother rushed over with a gas grill, three coolers of beer, and an enormous F**k-It Bucket - a plastic pail filled with jawbreakers and bite-size candy bars. ("When s*** brings you down, just say 'f*** it,' and eat yourself some motherf****** candy.")"
— David Sedaris

by mjtig on Dec 10, 2010 7:57 PM CST up reply actions  

Great Post

This should be required reading. Well-written. Damn funny. Filled with great anecdotes and history. Someone should sticky it to the sidebar until after the game.

It made an Oregon fan out of me!

Cheers!

by Carrollton Tiger on Dec 10, 2010 7:55 AM CST reply actions  

Great post, great info.....

I doubt Oregon fans even know THAT much about the program. As I was reading it, I realized that this is why most college fans don’t give the PAC-10 the respect it probably deserves. Most anyone over the age of 30 grew up never seeing or even hearing about any teams out west save for USC and UCLA and whoever made it to the Rose Bowl. Stanford made it on TV every once in a while but the rest of the PAC-10 was largely irrelevant on the national scene until the ‘90s. I’m a huge football fan and my biggest NON USC, UCLA memorey before 1990 was THE RETURN in the Cal – Stanford game.
Now before you go howling, that was before ESPN, and west coast games just didn’t get covered well out East….it was a ratings thing and football wasn’t on all the time like it is now. My son would die if he had to go back and live in the pre-ESPN era where there were about 4 games on every Saturday and you were lucky if one of them was your team.
What Oregon has done in the span of 15 years is pretty remarkable…..thanks in large part to Nike…..to go from irrelevance to perennial top 20 team is something to be extremely proud of. Your association with Nike even has given rise to more than a few rumors that Phil Knight was behind the Cam Newton scandal because he didn’t want Under Armour getting exposure in the BCS title game. The motive is certainly plausible but Cam and Auburn have certainly gotten more exposure because of the media coverage than they ever would have had they skated to the BCS, so if the plan was to keep Under Armor out of the national spotlight…..ooops. I’ll continue to go with my theory that the media was trying to drag up mud on the Heisman frontrunner, and Pete Thamel used his connection with Urban Meyer to find out about the ongoing investigation of Kenny Rogers and MSU, while he was digging dirt on the laptop incident. I don’t really think there was a conspiracy, the info was out there for anyone who wanted to find it.

Anyway, I digress, its nice to learn more about Oregon and the Quack Attack. I look forward to the game, and most importantly, beating the 2nd BEST team in the country!!

Col.Angus may be rough, Col.Angus may not smell like a bed of roses, but deep down Col.Angus is very sweet. If I overstay my welcome, just tap me on the head!!

by Col.Angus on Dec 10, 2010 7:55 AM CST reply actions  

4 games? You got FOUR games?

I remember when we’d be lucky to see three. Most Saturdays, up through the late 70s, it was two. ABC would have its game, and CBS would have its game. ABC was the “Pac-8” network and yet some years we didn’t even get to see a Pac-8 game, if there was a “better” Big Ten contest available.

So we got a lot of Michigan-Notre Dame out west. Or Miami-Notre Dame. And every year we could count on seeing USC-Notre Dame.

As for beating the 2nd best team in the country.. didn’t your mama tell you not to play with yourselves? /ducking

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 10:10 AM CST up reply actions  

And as for Phil Knight..

I can guarantee you that he spends as much time worrying about Under Armour’s exposure in a NCG as Steve Wynn worries about a laundromat installing new slot machines in suburban Vegas.

That “motive”, interesting in a tin-foil hat way, isn’t plausible at all.

Why would Phil want to piss off Cam Newton before he signs his shoe contract?

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 10:15 AM CST up reply actions  

Wow! Outstanding post!!!

It has been fun getting to know you Ducks!

by Tiger on the mountain on Dec 10, 2010 8:05 AM CST reply actions  

Thank you

This was an excellent piece that taught me a lot about UO that I didn’t know before. Good stuff.

by AU Tiger on Dec 10, 2010 8:40 AM CST reply actions  

Thanks!!

Interesting read and, obviously, a lot of effort on your part — Thanks again for the info!
Here’s to a great BCSNCG!!

DWWD -- WDE!

by ATL_AU_FAN on Dec 10, 2010 9:16 AM CST reply actions  

I love reading this stuff! Thanks so much for giving us the information...

in such an entertaining and enlightening way. Much appreciated. :-) War Eagle!

You have to play this game like somebody just hit your mother with a two-by-four.

DAN BIRDWELL

by rn4au on Dec 10, 2010 9:26 AM CST reply actions  

Nice Read

I’m always interested in the history/traditions of new opponents. Thanks for sharing. I love the old photo of Autzen, by the way. It reminds me of your current logo.

An addition to you list of things Auburn fans may already know about UO:

12. Pre

They say Cam shot a man named Gray and took his wife to Italy.

by Foy Onion on Dec 10, 2010 10:11 AM CST reply actions  

12. Pre

Of course. I tried to limit the athletic comparisons to football, but I’m glad you brought up Saint Steve.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 10:16 AM CST up reply actions  

I love the old photo of Autzen, by the way. It reminds me of your current logo.

That’s no coincidence. The outside of the current “O” matches the Autzen profile, while the inside of the O is shaped like old Hayward Field (still in use as the de facto American capital of track and field).

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 10:49 AM CST up reply actions  

What an awesome post

Extremely well written and very fun to read. I’m loving how the title game is turning into a cultural exchange between the fans!

by Vapor on Dec 10, 2010 10:58 AM CST reply actions  

Nice read; I especially like the 1977 Brooks

billboard. It looks like it could have been a Beatles record cover. Thanks for taking the time.

by aubgrad on Dec 10, 2010 11:14 AM CST reply actions  

Wow!

You guys have a duck pond right by the stadium? (bottom pic) How cool is that? And I did not know that Animal House was filmed on campus.

Good read. Maybe I should put something together about us for you guys.

An Auburn victory in Tuscaloosa, a SEC championship AND a national championship are defintely NOT part of 'The Process'.

by War Eagle Atlanta on Dec 10, 2010 11:19 AM CST reply actions  

It's a canal. But it gets plenty of ducks.

The official name is “Canoe Canal”, a man-made tributary of Patterson Slough, used for recreation and flood control. The whole site of the stadium and nearby Alton Baker Park was originally a big wetland zone on the north bank of the Willamette, and it used to flood all the time. Not any more. You can rent canoes and go tripping all over the park and around Autzen. There’s a nearby amphitheater, where they hold concerts and shows all summer, and you can canoe over there too.

When Autzen was first built, it had a grass field. But the level of the field itself is a few feet below ground level around the stadium (they dug a big hole and built a stadium in it), and they soon found that anytime it rained the field became a mud bath. So a couple of years later they installed Astroturf. The problem then was that for proper drainage, they had to give the field the highest “crown” in college football, a couple of feet higher at midfield than on the sidelines. Made for some strange viewing if you had sideline seats.

They didn’t get around to fixing THAT problem until this past season, when they installed our 4th or 5th new turf. The crown is barely visible now.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 5:03 PM CST up reply actions  

So....Gilligan was your coach in the late '60s/early '70s?

Do you remember that spelling bee you won in the first grade? Rock? "R-O-K"?

by jd is legend on Dec 10, 2010 11:23 AM CST reply actions   1 recs

More re: the cost of Autzen

A factoid I forgot to work into the original story..

Autzen was built in 1967 for $2.5 million — about $15 million in 2009 dollars.

The expansion of Autzen, that added about 14,000 seats, was completed in 2002 for about $82 million.

Sidebar: The new Matthew Knight Arena, replacing ancient McArthur Court, will open in January. The cost? $240 million. That’s the one that boggles my mind.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 4:42 PM CST reply actions  

Rec'd and thank you Benzduck

Realize AU fans, the Youtube clip of the Pick (minus UofO play-by-play guy Jerry Allen’s analysis of it) is played before every game at Autzen Stadium. I was there for that game. Not many athletic programs can point to a singular moment (at least from a fan’s perspective) and say “That’s when we turned the corner.” The fact that it turned against the Huskies makes it a billion times more sweet than pure sugar honey! :)

Season tickets $420.00
Tailgating food $250.00
Tailgating beer $89.00
Ducks in the Natty Priceless

by the_Duckinator on Dec 10, 2010 5:14 PM CST reply actions  

thanks Duckinator.

That play is just another 95 yard pick-6, unless you know the back-story.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 5:22 PM CST up reply actions   2 recs

I know the back story...

I know I was one of the grumblers although the USC win by Tony Graziani and Company a couple weeks before had assuaged much of that grumbling.

Season tickets $420.00
Tailgating food $250.00
Tailgating beer $89.00
Ducks in the Natty Priceless

by the_Duckinator on Dec 10, 2010 5:26 PM CST up reply actions  

I figured you knew the backstory :)

It’s hard to put it into terms that other fans of other teams can really grasp. It’s not like Auburn v Alabama, unless Bama had a 20-year period of absolute domination of Auburn that I don’t know about. I don’t know of another rivalry series that has had such a complete turnaround at one moment (pre-Pick, UW won 14 of 19; post-Pick we’ve won 12 of 16, or close to that.)

Can a third party comprehend the pent-up futility and rage simultaneously released with that interception? The Huskies were marching down field. They were going to do it again. We couldn’t stop them. They were too good. And then, in the blink of an eye, they weren’t.

Even with that, though, it wouldn’t have meant nearly as much if they hadn’t managed to beat Arizona 10-9 the next week. All it might have done was get us to another crap bowl game.

And of course, you know what could have happened if Wheaton had guessed wrong.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 8:12 PM CST up reply actions  

Rec'd -- the backstory post from Benzduck is also a must-read

as are all his historical posts on ATQ.

Oregon loves you, Chip Kelly!

by gamedaytribe on Dec 10, 2010 6:33 PM CST up reply actions  

not totally program defining...

The closest thing Auburn has to a program defining play is “Bo over the top”. The Crimson Turds had more or less embarrassed us for 9 straight years, not to mention that they were winning national championships doing it. While it was close in ‘81 (Dye’s first year), when that freshman from Bessemer chose Auburn over Alabama, then scored the winning TD on 4th and goal, it was the moment that defined Auburn as it is today. That we WILL NOT take a back seat to anyone.

The only other option would be the moment that it was announced that the 89 Iron Bowl would be played in Auburn. No longer would we have to deal with playing our arch-rival at a “neutral” site that had Bear Bryant’s statue out front, ushers wearing crimson blazers, and a 60/40 crowd split.

by AU_Jonesy on Dec 10, 2010 5:59 PM CST up reply actions  

How did the Iron Bowl get it's name?

If ya can't get your Dick Enright, get your Dick Harter!

by Old Ducker on Dec 10, 2010 6:36 PM CST up reply actions  

Birmingham

It used to be played at that “neutral” location. For years Birmingham was a massive steel city, so much so that it was called the Pittsburgh of the South. The name Iron Bowl came from that industry in the city.

by SrWiggles on Dec 10, 2010 7:01 PM CST up reply actions  

Remember the story of Coach Dye telling Bryant that

“We ain’t scared of you any more” before that Iron Bowl – classic Dye, love it.

by aubgrad on Dec 17, 2010 2:53 PM CST up reply actions  

This is great stuff, Benzduck. I've only been alive during the "relevancy" period, so your posts are quite informative.

Despite all the shit I give you about being really old, you really do teach myself and others a lot about the team that we love. Thanks.

"(Kelly's) got a veteran team that is the favorite to win the Pac-10. His choice of Thomas reflects only one belief: He’s our best QB today."-Ted Miller

by TennesseeQuackAttack8 on Dec 10, 2010 8:11 PM CST reply actions  

Aww, shucks. Thanks.

Because you’re such a good boy, I’m doubling your allowance this week.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 10, 2010 8:13 PM CST up reply actions  

Fourth Photo from Top

Great post Benzduck! I went to my first game at Autzen in 1970 (a 33-10 loss, naturally, to Stanford and pretty good quarterback by the name of Plunkett) and my years at UofO spanned the 1980-83 seasons , so I feel my dues are paid in full. Bruce Snyder is the previously unidentified assistant coach shown with Jerry Frei in the fourth photo from the top. May both of these fine men enjoy the NCG from their boxes in heaven.

by East Bay Duck on Dec 11, 2010 9:35 AM CST reply actions  

Thanks EBD — thought it might have been Snyder, but there was more hair than I expected. Will edit.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 11, 2010 3:51 PM CST up reply actions  

Crowd Control

Hey benzduck, I was one of those kids in a dorky uniform used for crowd control but it was in 1970 at Cliff Hare Stadium (now Jordan-Hare) in Auburn. In the 60s you could pay two bucks and watch the game sitting on the grass from the open end of the stadium.

by myskyn on Dec 11, 2010 10:22 AM CST reply actions  

In Eugene they used to have the “Knot-hole Gang” program. They’d set aside some end-zone bleacher tickets at old Hayward Field and let kids in for 50 cents, just had to show your student body card. Of course, the big games never qualified for cheap tickets, which is why my first Oregon game was vs Idaho and not USC.

I’m guessing you no longer have an “open end of the stadium”?

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 13, 2010 7:53 PM CST up reply actions  

I remember a funny line that an announcer said...

…about AU in the 2008 season. Something like, “the Auburn offense is so bad that they couldn’t find the end zone with a Garmin”.

by AugustDuck on Dec 11, 2010 12:09 PM CST reply actions  

Oregon is 5th (including ties)

on the list of pro football hall of famers with six.

http://www.profootballhof.com/hof/colleges.aspx

If ya can't get your Dick Enright, get your Dick Harter!

by Old Ducker on Dec 12, 2010 3:06 AM CST reply actions  

Oregon claiming Tuffy Leemans is like Alabama claiming 13 national championships.

Leemans only played in a couple of games for the ’32 Ducks before transferring to George Washington; he was at GW for three full seasons.

Still, 5 is good. And 4 more than Auburn :)

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 12, 2010 3:24 AM CST up reply actions  

That which was lost in the wins...

  In the early 70’s parking at autzen was free…they eventually promised if we paid a dollar they would pave the mud hole. It was possible for myself and friends to listen to the games on the radio and enter the stadium after first quarter when the ticket takers left,us poor students were appreciative. There was plenty of space to spread out and enjoy good games with the rainy day duck fans. An umbrella or beer was ignored…police and security did not continually scan the fans with their binoculars, and water was free by request at the food stands. During the later years buying tickets for you family and refreshments was still reasonable. We always loved our ducks, win or lose.
  Now we are a super business that will require huge corporate investments and a excellent performance to feed the new machine. Profits have been good and all is going super…however we cannot afford regression to the means of a mediocre season.
  Parking is ten dollars, small water is at least 2.50…end zone seating is expensive and good seating is reserved by the fans that can afford both the cost and a donation. I worry that most of the fans are sunny day duck fans that lose interest quickly with losses.
I am no longer able to afford to attend the duck games but what worries me the most is the ducks can no longer afford to be less than among the best. And, oh by the way,they never did pave the parking lot.

  

by Charles Potts on Dec 13, 2010 4:40 PM CST reply actions  

Great points.

We’ve created a bit of a monster. We named the field after the first coach to win 9 games… now, that’s considered a minimum success level. How times have changed.

No, they never did pave the parking lot, but at the rate they’re going there won’t be any parking lot left. Since the Halcion days of the early ‘70s, the facilities encroachment around Autzen has been inexorable. First, the Cas Center (athletic department HQ). Then, the indoor practice facility. Then, the practice fields were moved from across MLK Blvd. And then, the baseball stadium. Oh, and they’re expanding the Cas Center into a “Center for Football Operations”. The parking that’s left is mostly taken up by the giganto RVs driven primarily by post-1994 bandwaggoners. Thankfully, they pay up the wazoo for that privilege.

The stadium has been sold out for every game since, I think, 2004, which coincidentally was the last losing season (5-6). It’s hard to imagine Oregon ever regressing to a point where the stadium is half full, as was common in the worst years of the Suffering. (Just like there are probably 200,000 who claim to have been at the ‘94 Washington game, you probably wouldn’t find 500 who admitted to attending the Utah game in ‘75 when they broke the record losing streak.) But the experience of attending Oregon games has been upgraded to a point where it’s no longer just something you take the kids to on a Saturday when there’s nothing else to do. You can’t just drive up, park wherever you want, have a picnic, throw a frisbee around, then hang out at the gates waiting for someone to just give you tickets (which used to be how I got into most games) and walk in with your drinks in your backpack. You have to budget for the experience now, get there way in advance if you have the cheap endzone seats, and either get in line several hours before the gates open (if you’re driving) or use the bus shuttles.

More re parking: When I got out of high school in ‘75, I helped run the parking concession at the Masonic temple across from Autzen. This is where folks came when they wanted to park for less than the usurious $2 or $3 that Autzen charged for on-site. I made $5 a Saturday to sit around and help park a few cars here and there. One night we had all of ten cars in the lot. It was the home opener, but a night game also. The guy in charge said we could leave at dusk, which turned out to be around halftime. We walked across the street and right into the stadium with a bunch of kids in band uniforms. There was a fireworks show and the band was playing at half time, since fall term hadn’t started. Stands were maybe half full. We were playing San Jose State. We wound up losing 5-0. I felt I’d been ripped off.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 13, 2010 7:46 PM CST up reply actions  

Great stuff Benz

I thought Oregon bottomed out in 1983 with the Toilet Bowl, but after reading your article I’ll say that 1975 was worse. They canceled homecoming ?!?

A thought about the Ducks’ success: As much as Uncle Phil has helped, I think hiring good coaches has been just as critical. Mike Bellotti took the program to the A-list with his ability to adapt his schemes, develop his players, and yes cultivate the booster relationships. Chip Kelly is practically causing a revolution with his hyper-paced Win The Day approach. And that group of assistant coaches that has stuck together for 20 years might be the biggest difference-maker of all.

by DavisDuck on Dec 13, 2010 10:04 PM CST reply actions  

Cya on the field guys

It’s nice to see such respect and interest in the UO program by Auburn fans. I honestly can’t say I know that much about Auburn, looks like I have to brush up on some history. Looking forward to seeing you guys in Glendale.

GO DUCKS!

by mb526 on Dec 13, 2010 11:57 PM CST reply actions  

thanks

thanks for the info.
war eagle!

by justjim on Dec 14, 2010 5:32 AM CST reply actions  

Even for a relativly old Duck fan like me

This was an absolute pleasure to read. I learned a good bit more than I already knew. Thanks Benz.

Quack Quack Bitches!

by Quack Addict on Dec 15, 2010 12:41 PM CST reply actions  

I was there for the Suffering, and what he said is true

I went to UofO in 1971, following after my four brothers and sisters. Nobody paid much attention to football – the Ducks were bad, they’d been bad for a long time, and they continued to be bad for a long time more. However, they did gradually get better, except against the hated Huskies.

My main recollection of the ‘94 game against Washington was the UW quarterback after the game (with great disgust in his voice) saying "I can’t believe we lost to the Ducks!" like we were still the lowest of the low.

by bearalohalani on Dec 20, 2010 4:41 PM CST reply actions  

I graduated undergrad from Auburn and went to grad school at Oregon. I will just say this; I hate that football program and almost its entire fan base, I attended two games in my two years in Eugene. Without a doubt the most obnoxious, classless fans I’ve ever encountered (excluding WVU).
The only redeeming quality about that program is their cheerleaders, I will give Oregon that, they have hands down the hottest cheerleaders in the country.
WDE!

by AUTiger08 on Dec 22, 2010 12:15 PM CST reply actions   1 recs

I graduated undergrad from Auburn and went to grad school at Oregon

Carpetbagger.

Oregon Ducks. Undefeated vs SEC since 1977.

by benzduck on Dec 23, 2010 2:05 AM CST up reply actions  

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