A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2022 SPORTS FOOTBALL PREVIEWS Ducks embark on 1st season under Oregon State puts 2nd straight Lanning with yet unnamed QB bowl on list of season goals BY ANNE M. PETERSON Associated Press BY ANNE M. PETERSON Associated Press EUGENE — Oregon first- year coach Dan Lanning isn’t dropping any clues about his starting quarterback this sea- son. “If I felt like it gave us a competitive advantage to tell you, I would,” Lanning said. “I don’t.” Fall camp has been a battle behind closed doors between transfer Bo Nix and redshirt freshmen Ty Thompson and Jay Butterfield. Nix, a fourth- year junior, is widely consid- ered the favorite to start for the No. 11 Ducks, who have undergone quite a makeover in the offseason. Former coach Mario Cris- tobal has moved on, quarter- back Anthony Brown is now with the Baltimore Ravens, and defensive end Kayvon Thibodeaux was the fifth overall pick in the NFL draft by the New York Giants. Nix transferred to Oregon from Auburn, where he was a three-year starter. The for- mer five-star recruit started the first 34 games of his career before a season-ending ankle injury last November. Nix threw for 2,294 yards with 11 touchdowns and three interceptions last season. He also ran for four touchdowns. Thompson played in three games last season as a true freshman behind starter An- thony Brown. He passed for 87 total yards with two touch- downs and one interception. “Oregon quarterbacks, just like any quarterback, the most important thing you can do is be right with the football, take care of the football because possessions and limiting turn- overs is the most important thing,” Thompson said. “Mak- ing good decisions, putting the ball in the right spot.” CORVALLIS — After reaching their first bowl game since 2013 last season, the Oregon State Beavers want more. “We’re not a finished product by any stretch,” coach Jonathan Smith said. “But over the four years be- ing here as the head coach, really proud of the develop- ment we’ve had, the com- petitiveness, winning more games than we lost last year.” Oregon State has steadily risen under Smith: It went 2-10 in his first season, 2018. Last season, the Beavers fin- ished 7-6 — their first win- ning record in eight seasons. While the Beavers fell in the LA Bowl to Utah State, Smith recognizes the prog- ress made and that they need to build on it. Some of the keys to suc- cess have moved on, in- cluding receiver Trevon Bradford, running back B.J. Baylor and leading tackler Avery Roberts. But Chance Nolan is back and likely to be the start- ing quarterback again. And the lineup includes promis- ing freshman running back Damien Martinez, who im- pressed at the team’s spring game, and last season’s top returner, Deshaun Fenwick. “We feel like we have a veteran group that has learned now what it takes to win. We’ve got a lot of those guys back,” Smith said. “I’m looking forward to seeing what we can do this year, understanding how compet- itive, especially this league, is.” Oregon trail Lanning came to Oregon after Mario Cristobal went home to Miami. Cristobal went 35-13 as head coach of the Ducks, winning the Pac- 12 championship twice during Sean Meagher/The Oregonian Oregon quarterbacks Bo Nix (No. 10) and Ty Thompson (No. 13) throw during Ducks spring football practice in Eugene, Oregon on Tuesday, April 5, 2022. his tenure. Lanning, 35, came from Georgia, where he was defen- sive coordinator and lineback- ers coach for the last three seasons. The Bulldogs had the top-ranked defense in the nation last season when they won the national champion- ship. As for his goals, Lanning tipped his hat to Oregon’s old “Win The Day” mantra from former coach Chip Kelly’s ten- ure. “Our goal right now is to win today. I know that’s an old phrase that’s been said here a lot but it’s really true. We’re looking for investments. Each day, we’re putting money in the bank. We want to be able to capitalize on those invest- ments down the road,” he said. “That’s where it starts. Focus- ing on Oregon.” Remembering Spencer The Ducks are still reel- ing from the loss of tight end Spencer Webb, who died after striking his head during an offseason outing at a popular swimming spot in Eugene. Webb, who had a large fol- lowing on TikTok, was ex- pected to compete for a start- ing role this season. In his career with the Ducks, he had 31 receptions for 296 yards and four touchdowns. “Spencer was a really unself- ish guy, and he always cared about the team. Everybody saw that,” said linebacker Jus- tin Flowe. “It really hurt when Spencer passed. When he passed, everybody just wanted to make everything about the team and just the culture and everything, we made it even more just for Spencer, because we really loved him.” Recapping Early on last season, the Ducks climbed into the na- tional championship conver- sation with a 35-28 victory over then-No. 3 Ohio State. But they stumbled at the finish — a 38-7 drubbing by Utah in the second-to-last game of the regular season, and a second loss to the Utes in the Pac-12 Championship game. After Cristobal left, assis- tant Bryan McClendon served as interim coach to lead the Ducks into the Alamo Bowl. Oregon lost 47-32 to Okla- homa State finishing the sea- son 10-4 and ranked No. 22 in the final AP Top 25. Season ahead There’s intrigue for the Ducks right at the start when they play Lanning’s old team, Georgia, at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Sept. 3. Oregon plays No. 25 BYU on Sept 17 before embarking on the Pac-12 season. They host No. 7 Utah — the team that beat them in the Pac-12 championship game last sea- son — on Nov. 19. Maturity matters Although there has been a quarterback competition in fall camp, the starting nod will almost assuredly go to Nolan. A redshirt junior, Nolan started in 12 games for the Beavers last season, throw- ing 2,677 yards for 19 touch- downs. He had a 64.2% Leon Neuschwander for The Oregonian, File Oregon State’s Chance Nolan looks to pass as the Beavers take on the Arizona State Sun Devils in a Pac-12 football game on Saturday, Nov. 20, 2021, at Reser Stadium in Corvallis. Oregon State won 24-10. completion rate. “What I love about Chance is how competitive he is. I think he displays that in his style of play,” Smith said. “Being competitive in the pocket but also extend- ing the play, getting some extra yards, gaining first downs.” The question is who will back him up. The top can- didates are Tristan Gebbia, who started in four games in 2020 but didn’t play last sea- son because of an injury, and redshirt freshman Ben Gul- branson, also sidelined last season with an injury. Road woes The Beavers beat USC at the Coliseum last year, which was Oregon State’s first road win over the Tro- jans since 1960. The problem was that it was also Oregon State’s lone road victory. The schedule this year in- cludes a tough game at No. 7 Utah, but the Beavers get to host the Trojans and the No. 11 Oregon Ducks. Construction zone Oregon State’s Reser Sta- dium is in the midst of a $161 million makeover, with construction to go on throughout the season. The west side of the sta- dium is now a steel skeleton that will eventually become three tiers of new seating. A new $5 million video score- board should be working by the team’s opener against Boise State on Sept. 3. “It will be a little bit differ- ent for us in a stadium that is half-built ... Playing a sea- son in about half a stadium filled,” Smith said. “But we’re really looking forward to, when (construction) finishes ... to be in one of the best football facilities and stadi- ums in the country.” Oregon State expects the stadium to be completed by June 2023. Mountain West woes The Beavers open the sea- son against a pair of Moun- tain West opponents, first at home against Boise State be- fore a game at Fresno State. Last season, Mountain West teams were 6-5 against Pac-12 teams, including Utah State’s victory over the Beavers in the LA Bowl. It was the third time since 1999 and first since 2008 that the conference has had a winning record over the Pac-12. Additionally, the Moun- tain West champion has won four of the past five bowl games against the Pac-12. The competition between the two leagues should gar- ner more attention as Pac- 12 faces an uncertain future with realignment. NFL looks like its old self entering 3rd season of the COVID-19 era BY TERESA M. WALKER AP Pro Football Writer NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Derrick Henry has been seen jogging on the field with his daughter after practice. Green Bay Packers are once again borrowing kids’ bicycles for rides to practice. Fans are rub- bing elbows with their favorite players to get those coveted au- tographs. Yes, the NFL is looking and acting like it’s essentially back to normal going into its third season dealing with COVID-19. There are no more trailers or tents for testing, and masks are rare. In fact, the protocols devised and tweaked by the league and the NFL Players Association in 2020 and 2021 were suspended last March. The NFL seems to be follow- ing the lead of the CDC, which dropped social distancing and quarantine requirements last week with an estimated 95% of Americans 16 and older ac- quiring some level of immunity from vaccinations or infections. The league still wants any- one with possible symptoms to speak up and wear a mask af- ter contact with someone with COVID-19. A positive test still means isolating at home for at least five days. “I think we are always con- cerned about everybody’s safety, ours and the health of our fam- ilies,” Tennessee Titans coach Mike Vrabel said, adding that 2½ years into the pandemic: “Hopefully we are past that.” The biggest changes have been the easiest to notice at training camps across the NFL: Fans are back and close enough to high-five and shake hands with players, no longer kept at a distance and happy to resume preseason traditions. Players are happy to have fans fully back, grateful for the energy boost during the mo- notonous routine and long days of camp. “It’s huge,” Packers running back Aaron Jones said. “The fans are everything. They’re what makes football go, and I would say this is one of the best traditions in football, the bike rides. I’ve had my same little bike rider since I came in, got to bring my son to practice with me as well, so it’s special to me.” The Packers were among the teams that allowed fans to watch training camp practices in 2021 at a distance, though no interaction with players was allowed. Cheers are very welcome after the relative silence the past two years when the only sounds were pads thudding, coaches yelling and occasion- ally music over speakers to simulate fan noise. Families of players, coaches and team staff- ers couldn’t attend either, pre- venting them from stealing a few minutes at work with their kids or spouses. Henry’s daughter Valentina, now 2, is the perfect age to en- joy racing her father to an end zone after an early practice at camp. The two-time NFL rush- ing champ said it’s the kind of moment his daughter can look at when older. Text us your tire photo 541-519-8878 we will text back with a quote for new tires! 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