THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 2015 SPORTS 7A ‘Rootin’ Tootin’ Hooton’ cheers on Ducks By CHELSEA GORROW Eugene Register-Guard Alice Hooton turned 87 this week, but as she ate her celebratory cookie and ice cream at The Wild Duck Cafe in Eugene New Year’s Day, she wasn’t thinking about 2015 or her birthday. The self-proclaimed “Rootin’ Tootin’ Hooton” was there to cheer on the University of Oregon Ducks football team and their win at the Rose Bowl, 59-20 against Florida State. “I’ve lived in Eugene since 1999. I’ve lived in this area since 1948, and this is said. “I had no idea how much fun this would be. Everything couldn’t have been nicer. The food was delicious, the ser- vice was wonderful, and the fact that we had the screens to watch the game — I’m almost out of breath with ex- citement.” Hooton said she’s always been a big Ducks fan. She’s taken classes through the uni- versity, and her youngest of three sons managed the UO maintenance department un- til his recent retirement. Hooton lives in the Patter- son Tower apartments, just 1½ miles away, and she said she’s “so glad I lived long enough to be able to come here and try a meal here and be here to watch the game. It’s extra special.” A few tables down from Hooton sat Colleen Kel- ly with Jack Voth and her 11-year-old son, Grant, who says he wants to grow up to be a Ducks quarterback just like his hero, Marcus Mari- ota. “My son has every sin- gle jersey just about that they ever made, and in fact when Mariota started play- ing, Grant really fell in love with him early on. But you couldn’t get that jersey in kids’ sizes because they didn’t know (Mariota) would be such a big player,” she said. So Kelly had the jerseys kids’ sizes became available, she said. Grant did a push-up on the Thursday night for every point scored by the Ducks. “For every single point,” Grant said proudly, admit- ting that his arms were a little sore. “It’s sort of a good luck charm, and that helped us get through all the years.” Kelly said she was born in Eugene and has been a life- long Ducks fan, graduating from the university in a year she wouldn’t disclose. “I lived in the same dorms as the ones where they housed the football players in so I got to eat, breathe, live, ev- AP Photo/Richard Vogel In this photo taken with a fisheye lens, an Oregon fan raises a banner in support of her team before the Rose Bowl NCAA college football playoff semifinal against Florida State. PREP SCHEDULE TODAY Girls Basketball — Willa- pa Valley at Ilwaco, 7 p.m. SATURDAY Girls Basketball — Sutherlin at Seaside, 2 p.m.; Gaston at Warrenton, 3 p.m. Boys Basketball — Gas- ton at Warrenton, 4:45 p.m.; Ilwaco at Willapa Valley, 7 p.m. Wrestling — Astoria at Scappoose Tournament, TBA AP Photo/Jae C. Hong erything with the Ducks so I learned all about football and it was really fun,” she said. She and her family were Oregon wide receiver Darren Carrington, front, scores un- der pressure by Florida State defensive back Trey Marshall during the second half of the Rose Bowl NCAA college football playoff semifinal, Thursday, in Pasadena, Calif. would win. And sure enough, the boys in green and yellow came through. “I love the Ducks,” Grant said. “People don’t always think that the Pac-12 stuff is really important. I feel this is great exposure for not only Oregon, but also the entire Pac-12.” Grant also plays football, as a quarterback, and had the No. 8 jersey for his team just two years ago. “Now, everybody wants to be No. 8, but he takes pride in the fact that he was No. 8 before everybody else,” Kel- ly said. Kelly described her family as “front row people,” as they watched the game in front of the biggest TV — a projector screen — set up at The Wild Duck Cafe for the game. A few rows back sat alum- nus Trevor Gant, who drove from Los Angeles to see the game with a group of his friends. “It’s just incredible for us to beat a team this badly,” the 32-year-old Gant said, refer- ring to the Ducks 59-20 win over Florida State. “I’m at a loss for words that we were able to win by so many points and we were sweating it in us just went crazy, turnover after turnover.” His friend, Tanner Baldus, AP Photo/Jae C. Hong Oregon wide receiver Charles Nelson, left, dives just short of the goal line over Florida State safety Tyler Hunter a UO student, described it as “the perfect game” because, half, and it’s like, ‘alright, we’ve got our competitive- ness going.’ And then you just go straight for the win in the second half.” Gant said he was “heart- broken” when the Ducks lost the national championship to Auburn in 2011 and he’s looking forward to his team getting back to the champi- onship this year. See game covertage at http://bit.ly/14i1tZi Follow Chelsea on Twitter @chelseagorrow. Email chel- sea.gorrow@registerguard. com AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota, right, scores past Florida State defensive back P.J. Williams during the sec- ond half of the Rose Bowl NCAA college football playoff semifinal, Thursday, in Pasadena, Calif. Ducks: Oregon is a seven-point favorite against Ohio State Continued from Page 1A The Ducks (13-1) and Buckeyes (13-1) last played in the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, in 2010. Ohio State won that game 26-17. Now the Rose Bowl comes to Tex- as, but with so much more at stake. Cardale Jones, Ezekiel El- liott and fourth-seeded Ohio State rallied, and then held on for a 42-35 victory over No. 1 Alabama at the Sugar Bowl on Thursday night. Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota and Oregon had it much easier. The sec- ond-seeded Ducks crushed Florida State 59-20 at the Rose Bowl. “Oregon won by 40?” Ohio State coach Urban Meyer said, startled when he heard about the results during his postgame news conference in New Orle- ans. “I gotta go. We gotta go get ready for that one.” The oddsmakers have installed the Ducks as sev- en-point favorites. The College Football Play- off, a four-team tournament that replaced the Bowl Cham- pionship Series, has provided a jolt to the sport. The BCS matched the top two teams and didn’t allow much room for error. An early slip often could spell doom for ‘Oregon won by 40? I gotta go. We gotta go get ready for that one.’ — Urban Meyer AP Photo/Jae C. Hong Oregon wide receiver Darren Carrington, left, celebrates his touchdown with tight end Pharaoh Brown during the second half of the Rose Bowl NCAA college football playoff semifinal against Florida State, Thursday, in Pasadena, Calif. AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi Oregon players celebrate their win over Florida State at the Rose Bowl NCAA college football playoff semifinal, Thursday, in Pasadena, Calif. a team’s national title hopes. In the old system, it would Ohio State to recover from a September home loss to Vir- ginia Tech. The Buckeyes were a team looking for an identity back then. They had lost star quarterback Braxton Miller to a preseason injury and redshirt freshman J.T. Barrett was still developing. Ohio State lost by 14 to the Hokies on the same day Ore- gon beat Michigan State. Two weeks into the season, the Big Ten was already being - off. But a funny thing hap- pened. Ohio State just kept getting better. Barrett turned into a Heisman contender, but then Michigan, he broke his ankle. In stepped Jones, who helped Ohio State blast Wisconsin in the Big Ten title game to earn - eyes beat Alabama, eliminat- ing the Southeastern Confer- ence from title contention. After winning seven straight national championships in the BCS, it’s now two straight sea- sons in which the SEC won’t wear the crown. Oregon’s loss came at home, too, in early October against Arizona. The Ducks have been a juggernaut since, winning nine straight games, all by double digits and scoring at least 42 points in each. Ohio State can put up some points, too. The Buckeyes haven’t scored less than 31 since losing 35-21 to Virginia Tech. The Ducks and Buckeyes run similar spread offenses. Ohio State coach startled when he heard about the results during his postgame news conference in New Orleans “We know Oregon. I’ll probably be able to call Ore- gon’s plays because we study them and they study us,” Mey- er said. “There’s a mutual re- spect.” For what it’s worth, Ohio State is 8-0 all-time against Oregon. And think about this: Ala- bama and Florida State were - ular-season Associated Press and USA Today coaches’ polls. There’s a good chance that in the BCS the champi- onship game would have been Tide vs. Seminoles with Or- egon and Ohio State playing a traditional Big Ten-Pac-12 Rose Bowl for nothing but pride. Now they’ll take it to Texas for a championship game with which no one can argue.