BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2022 A5 SPORTS OREGON FOOTBALL OREGON STATE FOOTBALL Ducks no match for Bulldogs Beavers handle error-prone BSU Broncos Georgia romps to 49-3 win BY PAUL NEWBERRY Associated Press ATLANTA — Stetson Ben- nett and the Georgia defense picked up where they left off in last year’s national cham- pionship game, even with a bunch of their former team- mates now playing in the NFL. Bennett threw for 368 yards and accounted for three touch- downs, a revamped defense didn’t miss a beat, and the No. 3 Bulldogs looked very much like a champion intent on repeating with a 49-3 rout of No. 11 Ore- gon on Saturday, Sept. 3. Bennett completed 25-of-31 passes with two touchdowns and ran for another score in the season opener before call- ing it a day in the third quar- ter. By that point, Georgia led 42-3 and had thoroughly ruined the debut of Oregon coach Dan Lanning. Georgia really opened it up on offense, throwing 37 times for 439 yards. “I think when you watch what they did today, if you’re watching from home, you’re saying, ‘Man, I’d love to come play in that offense,’” coach Kirby Smart said. After spending the last three years as Georgia’s co-de- fensive coordinator, Lanning got a look at his former team from the opposing sideline in a game played before a pre- dominantly red-clad crowd at the home of the NFL’s Atlanta Falcons. He saw just how far the Ducks have to go. “That locker room is hurt- ing a little bit,” Lanning said. “But they’re ready to grow.” Bennett, the former walk-on who led a storybook run to Georgia’s first national title since 1980, returned for a sixth college season with a firm grip on the starting job after battling for playing time most of his career. Bennett was the offensive MVP of both Georgia victo- ries in last year’s College Foot- ball Playoff. He started his final season with a career high for passing yards. “It’s always good to go in be- ing the guy,” Bennett said. “It was pretty cool.” He guided the Bulldogs to the end zone on all six pos- sessions he played. He ran BY GARY HOROWITZ Associated Press Jason Getz/Jason.Getz@ajc.com Georgia Bulldogs running back Kenny McIntosh (No. 6) scores a one-yard touchdown run during the sec- ond quarter against the Oregon Ducks in the Chick-fil-A Kickoff game at Mercedes Benz Stadium, Satur- day, Sept. 3, 2022, in Atlanta. for a 1-yard score and tossed TD passes of 4 yards to Ladd McConkey — spinning away from a pass rusher who ap- peared to have him corralled — and 18 yards to Adonai Mitchell. There were some questions about the Georgia defense, which had five players off the 2021 unit selected in the first round of the NFL draft. Any doubts were quickly put to rest by a swarming group that looked very much like last year’s defense for the ages, making life miserable for new Oregon quarterback Bo Nix. “One of our mottos is, ‘No one in our end zone,’” said Christopher Smith, who had one of Georgia’s two intercep- tions. Nix transferred to Eugene after starting at Auburn the last three seasons. He imme- diately found himself facing a team he lost to three times while playing in the SEC. Make it 0-4. Nix’s frustration was evi- dent when he buried his hel- met in his hands after a false- start penalty. Georgia’s day was epito- mized by a short pass to Dar- nell Washington that turned into a big gain when the 6-foot-7, 270-pound tight end shrugged off one defender hit- ting him high and hurdled an- other who tried to bring him down low. QUITE A DEBUT Freshman Malaki Starks looks like one of the new stars of the Georgia defense. He made a brilliant inter- ception while falling backward at the Georgia 8 and wound up leading the team with eight tackles. NIX IN GREEN Despite his poor showing, Nix has a solid grasp on the Oregon quarterback job. Nix completed 21 of 37 for just 173 yards, and his second interception — the one picked off by Smith — was an espe- cially poor decision. “He forced a throw he didn’t need to force,” Lanning said. “Bo knows that.” Even though he didn’t name a stating quarterback leading up to the game, Lanning never considered giving someone else a shot. Nix is still No. 1 on the depth chart. “He’s our quarterback,” Lan- ning said. “He did a a good job handling some adverse situ- ations. Now he’s got to figure out how he can improve.” THE TAKEAWAY Oregon: Lanning clearly has a lot of work to do to bring the Ducks up to a truly elite level. While there’s no shame in los- ing to a team such as Georgia, Oregon expected to be much more competitive in their new coach’s first game. Georgia: The Bulldogs are off and rolling in defense of their national championship. They weren’t threatened at all by perhaps the toughest team on their schedule until a Nov. 19 game at Kentucky. POLL IMPLICATIONS The Bulldogs are more than worthy of their No. 3 ranking. Smart has built a program that reloads rather than rebuilds. Oregon is sure to tumble in The Associated Press poll. But at least every game from here on out looks much easier than facing the Bulldogs. UP NEXT Oregon: Home opener next Saturday against FCS school Eastern Washington. Georgia: While this seemed like a home game for Georgia, its actual home opener is next Saturday against FCS oppo- nent Samford. COLLEGE FOOTBALL No. 2 Ohio State wears down No. 5 Notre Dame BY RALPH D. RUSSO AP College Football Writer COLUMBUS, Ohio — With its vaunted offense bogged down, No. 2 Ohio State leaned on its revamped defense in a top-five opener against a former Buckeye that tested its toughness. C.J. Stroud threw two touchdown passes and Ohio State shut out No. 5 Notre Dame over the final 42 min- utes in a gritty 21-10 victory on Saturday night, Sept. 3. “The story of the night was the defense, to turn around and play the way they did after what’s been said about them in the offseason, question- ing their toughness, and play the way they did against the No. 5 team in the country ... I thought the energy was off the charts for the defense to- night,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said. The first regular-season meeting of the storied pro- grams since 1996 was a home- coming for first-year Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman. The former Buckeyes line- backer has made a meteoric rise to lead the Fighting Irish at the age of 36. Freeman is 0-2 as a head coach after losing a bowl game just weeks after being named Brian Kelly’s successor. The Irish hung with the high-scoring Buckeyes for most of three quarters, frus- trating Heisman Trophy final- ist Stroud and putting together a couple of first-half scoring drives. “We battled for 2 1/2 quar- ters, but then they scored with 17 seconds left in the third and we didn’t respond,” Free- man said. Ohio State’s defense, too generous against the run last season, put the clamps on the Irish and new starting quar- terback Tyler Buchner in the second half. “We were called soft all last year and we had to sit there and just eat,” Ohio State defen- sive back Lathan Ransom said. Day turned over his de- fensive staff in the offseason, bringing in Jim Knowles from Oklahoma State to be coordi- nator. How quickly the Buckeyes would pick up a scheme that is considered more complicated and multiple than the one they have been running was an open question. Looked good in Game 1. The Irish managed just 253 yards and punted on their last six possessions. Tommy Eichenberg had two of Ohio State’s three sacks. “We got a lot to prove. And everyone just played extremely confident, too,” Eichenberg said. The Irish D could only hold up for so long. On a third-and-long, No- tre Dame brought multiple blitzers and Ohio State gave Stroud plenty of time to find Xavier Johnson open down the vacated deep middle for a 24-yard score. That put the Buckeyes up 14-10 with 17 seconds left in the third quar- ter. On its next drive, Ohio State asserted itself. The Buckeyes went 95 yards on 14 plays, killing seven minutes off the clock and making it 21-10 on a 1-yard surge by Miyan Wil- liams. Baker City's Newest Brewery Taproom Hours: Wed-Fri 4pm to 8pm Sat 2pm to 8pm Closed Sun-Tues Snacks | Beer | Cider 541-519-1337 | 1935 1st St, Baker City, OR Williams ran for 84 yards on 14 carries and TreVeyon Henderson had 91 on 15 at- tempts. Ohio State led the nation in scoring and yards per play last season, but for much of the night it was a slog for Stroud. And Day seemed thrilled to see his team endure. “We wanted to be known as something other than tal- ented,” Day said. Playing mostly without star receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba, who took a hard hit on the first series, Stroud threw for 223 yards, including a 31-yard TD to Emeka Egbuka to make it 7-3 in the first quarter. But that was it for the Buck- eyes in the first half. Buchner and the Irish re- sponded with a long drive capped by Audric Etime’s 1-yard touchdown leap in the second quarter to put the Irish up 10-7. CORVALLIS — Chance Nolan passed for two touch- downs and Oregon State’s de- fense forced five turnovers in a season-opening 34-17 vic- tory over Boise State on Sat- urday, Sept. 3. The Beavers, who are hop- ing to build on last season’s first bowl-game appearance since 2013, took control early behind their opportunistic defense and a few big plays offensively. Oregon State snapped its six-game losing streak in sea- son openers. “I mean, getting that first one at home, I think that just kind of puts the season into motion,” said Nolan, who completed 14 of 23 passes for 251 yards and two touch- downs with two interceptions. Boise State received a lift off the bench from backup quarterback Taylen Green, who replaced an ineffective Hank Bachmeier and sparked a second-half comeback. Bachmeier, a fourth-year starter, was pulled in the sec- ond quarter and did not re- turn after tossing two inter- ceptions and losing a fumble. Green showed promise, es- pecially as a runner with 102 yards on the ground. His 74- yard touchdown gallop late in the third quarter cut Oregon State’s lead to 27-10. He also scored on a 4-yard keeper early in the fourth quar- ter that brought Boise State within 27-17. Green completed 19 of 28 for 155 yards with one inter- ception. “We had to make an ad- justment,” Boise State coach Andy Avalos said of replac- ing Bachmeier. “To be able to put Taylen in there and get his opportunity to run the of- fense, he gave us a spark and got us going.” With the Beavers’ offense in neutral, short-yardage specialist Jack Colletto broke loose up the middle on a third-and-2 play for a 41-yard touchdown with 10:39 re- maining to provide the final margin of victory. Oregon State had 470 total yards to 311 for the Broncos. “Defensively, really pleased with the effort, physicality on both sides of the ball, and tackling and running and playing with energy,” Oregon State coach Jonathan Smith said. The Beavers opened the scoring on tight end Luke Musgrave’s 27-yard touch- down catch, which followed Bachmeier’s second intercep- tion of the first quarter. After a three-and-out by Boise State, Nolan hit Tyjon Lindsey for a 47-yard touch- down, giving Oregon State a 14-0 lead at 1:15 of the first quarter. Early in the second quarter, Riley Sharp’s sack of Bach- meier forced a fumble that Colletto recovered at the Broncos’ 6-yard line. Boise State’s defense held and Ev- erett Hayes kicked a 23-yard field goal to increase the lead to 17-0. The Broncos whiffed on their best scoring opportu- nity in the first half when Ashton Jeanty lost a fumble at the Beavers’ 2-yard line. A 74-yard catch-and-run by Anthony Gould set up Deshaun Fenwick’s 12-yard touchdown to increase the Beavers’ lead to 24-0 at the break. Nolan was intercepted early in the third quarter on a sideline pass that he ap- peared to try and throw out of bounds. Despite taking over on the Beavers’ 25-yard line, Boise State settled for a 41-yard field goal by Jonah Dalmas to get on the score- board. A 41-yard pass from wide receiver John Dunmore to Trey Lowe led to Hayes’ 24- yard field goal and a 27-3 Beavers’ lead, but Green’s long touchdown run gave the Broncos life. Oregon State safety Jay- don Grant, who had a forced fumble and interception, said turnovers was the difference. “I think that any time you take the ball away it’s huge,” Grant said. THE TAKEWAY Boise State: Is it time for the Taylen Green era at quarter- back? Backmeier struggled mightily. Green is a work in progress as a passer, but he gives the Broncos another dimension with his running ability and speed. Will Back- meier bounce back or could there be a quarterback con- troversy brewing? Oregon State: The Beavers’ defense was superb in the first half, forcing four turn- overs that were instrumental in building a big lead. Nolan, a returning starter at quar- terback, displayed his big- play capability in the passing game, but he also was inter- cepted twice. Avoiding turn- overs will be a priority for No- lan moving forward. UP NEXT Boise State: The Broncos will play at New Mexico on Saturday, Sept. 10. Oregon State: The Beavers will play at Fresno State on Saturday, Sept. 10. Sean Meagher/The Oregonian Oregon State running back Deshaun Fenwick rushes for a touch- down as the Beavers face the Boise State Broncos in an NCAA col- lege football game at Reser Stadium in Corvallis, Oregon, on Sat- urday, Sept. 3, 2022. Let’s see Eye-to-Eye on your vision care • A great selection of frames to choose to get the look you want. • We carry both regular and prescription sunglasses. • In house repairs and special packages starting at $ 99 • Our patients’ satisfaction comes first! • Quality, trusted, comprehensive eye care. • Great selection of frames for every budget. Eagle Optical 3705 Midway Drive • Baker City 541.523.2020