A6 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 2021 ON THE AIR SCOREBOARD WEDNESDAY SOCCER Premier League, Burnley vs. Leicester City Deutsche Pokal, RB Leipzig vs. VfL Wolfsburg Mexico Primera Division, Tijuana vs. América BASKETBALL Women’s college, Pac-12, California vs. Oregon St. Women’s college, ACC, Boston College vs. Pitt NBA G League, Agua Caliente Clippers vs. G League Ignite Women’s college, SEC, Auburn vs. Florida Women’s college, Iowa at Indiana Women’s college, Pac-12, Arizona St. vs. USC Men’s college, Missouri at Florida Men’s college, Connecticut at Seton Hall Men’s college, Minnesota at Penn State Men’s college, Providence at St. John’s Men’s college, Oregon State at Utah NBA, Brooklyn at Houston Women’s college, Pac-12, Utah vs. Washington St. Men’s college, Mississippi State at Texas A&M Men’s college, Creighton at Villanova Men’s college, Maryland at Northwestern Men’s college, San Diego State at UNLV Men’s college, UCLA at Oregon NBA, Golden State at Portland Men’s college, Stanford at USC Women’s college, Pac-12, Washington vs. Colorado BASEBALL MLB preseason, Seattle at Chicago MLB preseason, Cincinnati at L.A. Dodgers HOCKEY NHL, Washington at Boston NHL, St. Louis at Anaheim Time TV 9:55 a.m. NBCSN 11:30 a.m. ESPNEWS 7 p.m. FS2 11 a.m. 11 a.m. Pac-12 Root noon ESPNU 1 p.m. SEC 1:30 p.m. Big Ten 2 p.m. Pac-12 3:30 p.m. SEC 3:30 p.m. FS1 4 p.m. Big Ten 4 p.m. CBSSN 4 p.m. ESPNU 4:30 p.m. ESPN 5 p.m. Pac-12 5:30 p.m. SEC 5:30 p.m. FS1 6 p.m. Big Ten 6 p.m. CBSSN 6 p.m. ESPN2 7 p.m. ESPN, NBCSNW 7:30 p.m. FS1 8 p.m. Pac-12 noon 5 p.m. 4 p.m. 6:30 p.m. ESPN MLB NBCSN NBCSN THURSDAY GOLF LPGA Tour, Drive On Championship at Golden Ocala 7 a.m. PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational 11 a.m. BASKETBALL Women’s college, SEC, Mississippi St. vs. LSU 8 a.m. Men’s college, Atlantic 10, Duquesne vs. Richmond 8 a.m. Women’s college, Maryland at Michigan 9 a.m. Women’s college, ACC, Wake Forest vs. North Carolina 9 a.m. Men’s college, Atlantic 10, TBD vs. Massachusetts 10 a.m. Women’s college, SEC, TBD vs. Kentucky 10:30 a.m. Women’s college, Pac-12, TBD vs. Oregon 11 a.m. NBA G League, Rio Grande Valley Vipers vs. G League Ignite noon Women’s college, WCC, Pepperdine vs. Loyola Marymount 12:30 p.m. Men’s college, Atlantic 10, Rhode Island vs. Dayton 12:30 p.m. Women’s college, South Florida at UCF 2 p.m. Women’s college, Pac-12, TBD vs. Stanford 2 p.m. Men’s college, Atlantic 10, TBD vs. George Mason 2:30 p.m. Women’s college, ACC, Miami vs. Virginia Tech 3 p.m. Women’s college, SEC, Missouri vs. Alabama 3 p.m. Men’s college, Michigan St. at Michigan 4 p.m. Men’s college, Oklahoma St. at Baylor 4 p.m. Women’s college, Pac-12, TBD vs. Arizona 5 p.m. Women’s college, ACC, Clemson vs. Notre Dame 5:30 p.m. Women’s college, SEC, Ole Miss vs. Arkansas 5:30 p.m. NBA, Miami at New Orleans 5:30 p.m. Men’s college, Nebraska at Iowa 6 p.m. Men’s college, Texas at Oklahoma 6 p.m. Men’s college, Arizona St. at Colorado 6 p.m. Men’s college, UCF at East Carolina 6 p.m. Men’s college, Wyoming at Utah St. 6:30 p.m. NBA, Sacramento at Portland 7 p.m. Women’s college, Pac-12, TBD vs. UCLA 8 p.m. BASEBALL MLB preseason, Washington at N.Y. Mets 10 a.m. MLB preseason, N.Y. Yankees at Philadelphia 1 p.m. MLB preseason, Chicago Cubs at L.A. Dodgers 5 p.m. SOCCER Women’s college, Purdue at Nebraska 11 a.m. Italian Serie A, Parma vs. Inter Milan 11:30 a.m. Golf Golf SEC NBCSN Big Ten Root NBCSN SEC Pac-12 ESPNU Root NBCSN ESPNU Pac-12 NBCSN Root SEC ESPN ESPN2 Pac-12 Root SEC TNT Big Ten ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU FS1 NBCSNW Pac-12 ESPN MLB MLB Big Ten ESPN2 Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV stations. SPORTS BRIEFING COLLEGE BASEBALL Beavers surge in rankings — The Oregon State Beavers, who entered the season out of the Top 25, surged into the rankings in three major college baseball polls on Monday fol- lowing a dominant 10-day run in Arizona. The Beavers de- buted at No. 19 in the USA Today Coaches Poll, No. 20 in the D1Baseball.com Top 25 and No. 21 in the Collegiate Baseball Top 30. They remain unranked in the Baseball America Top 25. The Beavers (7-1), who on Sunday completed a 10-day, eight-game season-opening trip in Arizona, have won seven in a row, their longest winning streak since opening with 10 victories to start the 2019 season. Oregon State has outscored opponents 61-15. The pitching staff has been especially impres- sive, allowing two or fewer runs in six of eight games, boasting a Pac-12 Conference-best 1.62 ERA and recording 74 strike- outs this season. Oregon State opens a three-game home stand Thursday against Brigham Young in its opener. PAC-12 SOFTBALL Oregon’s Brooke Yanez named pitcher of the week — Oregon’s Brooke Yanez was named Pac-12 pitcher of the week for her play in leading the Ducks to a win over then-No. 1 UCLA and a save against Utah on Sunday in Tempe, Arizona. Yanez struck out 10 while giving up one run on six hits and a walk in a complete game win over the Bruins. She retired 11 straight at one point and ended the 3-1 Ducks win with back- to-back bases-loaded strikeouts. The Ventura, California, na- tive struck out six in three innings of relief to earn the save in a 7-2 win over the Utes. Yanez (4-0, 1.93 ERA) has 46 strikeouts to only four walks over 28 innings this season. — Bulletin wire reports MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn Tuesday night are: 4 8 13 34 64 18 x 2 Oregon Lottery results The estimated jackpot is now $43 million. As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites PREP SPORTS BASKETBALL Boys soccer NBA Tuesday’s Game Mountain View vs. Redmond, late Girls soccer Tuesday’s Games Bend 5, Redmond 2 Madras vs. Molalla, late Volleyball Tuesday’s Games Redmond vs. Hood River Valley, late Harrisburg vs. La Pine, late HOCKEY NHL \East GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 21 12 5 4 28 73 69 N.Y. Islanders 22 12 6 4 28 58 50 Boston 19 12 5 2 26 59 50 Philadelphia 19 11 5 3 25 63 59 Pittsburgh 21 12 8 1 25 65 67 N.Y. Rangers 20 8 9 3 19 53 54 New Jersey 18 7 9 2 16 46 54 Buffalo 20 6 11 3 15 46 60 Central GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 20 15 4 1 31 71 39 Carolina 22 15 6 1 31 76 60 Florida 21 13 4 4 30 67 60 Chicago 23 12 7 4 28 73 68 Columbus 24 9 10 5 23 66 78 Nashville 22 10 12 0 20 51 68 Detroit 25 7 15 3 17 52 82 Dallas 17 6 7 4 16 46 47 West GP W L OT Pts GF GA Vegas 18 13 4 1 27 56 40 St. Louis 22 12 8 2 26 72 71 Minnesota 19 12 6 1 25 61 49 Colorado 19 11 7 1 23 57 48 Los Angeles 20 9 7 4 22 60 56 Arizona 21 9 9 3 21 56 64 San Jose 19 8 9 2 18 59 73 Anaheim 22 6 11 5 17 46 66 North GP W L OT Pts GF GA Toronto 23 17 4 2 36 81 55 Winnipeg 22 14 7 1 29 74 59 Edmonton 24 14 10 0 28 79 72 Montreal 21 10 6 5 25 68 61 Calgary 23 10 11 2 22 59 70 Vancouver 26 9 15 2 20 74 90 Ottawa 25 8 16 1 17 67 95 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. The top four teams in each division will qualify for playoffs under this season’s temporary realignment. Monday’s Late Games St. Louis 5, Anaheim 4 Toronto 3, Edmonton 0 Vegas 5, Minnesota 4, OT San Jose 6, Colorado 2 Tuesday’s Games N.Y. Rangers 3, Buffalo 2 Columbus 4, Detroit 1 Montreal 3, Ottawa 1 N.Y. Islanders 2, New Jersey 1 Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 2 Winnipeg 5, Vancouver 2 Carolina 4, Nashville 2 Tampa Bay 2, Dallas 0 Wednesday’s Games Washington at Boston, 4 p.m. Toronto at Edmonton, 5 p.m. St. Louis at Anaheim, 6:30 p.m. Arizona at Los Angeles, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Vegas, 7 p.m. Colorado at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct 23 12 .657 23 13 .639 21 14 .600 18 17 .514 17 17 .500 18 18 .500 17 18 .486 16 18 .471 15 18 .455 15 18 .455 15 20 .429 14 21 .400 13 20 .394 13 22 .371 9 25 .265 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Utah 27 8 .771 L.A. Lakers 24 11 .686 Phoenix 22 11 .667 L.A. Clippers 24 13 .649 San Antonio 18 13 .581 Portland 19 14 .576 Denver 20 15 .571 Golden State 19 16 .543 Memphis 16 15 .516 Dallas 17 16 .515 New Orleans 15 19 .441 Oklahoma City 14 20 .412 Sacramento 13 21 .382 Houston 11 22 .333 Minnesota 7 28 .200 Monday’s Late Games Brooklyn 124, San Antonio 113, OT Cleveland 101, Houston 90 Portland 123, Charlotte 111 Tuesday’s Games Memphis 125, Washington 111 Atlanta 94, Miami 80 Boston 117, L.A. Clippers 112 San Antonio 119, New York 93 Denver 128, Milwaukee 97 Detroit at Toronto, ppd. Phoenix at L.A. Lakers, late Wednesday’s Games Detroit at Toronto, 4 p.m. Indiana at Cleveland, 4 p.m. Utah at Phila., 4 p.m. Brooklyn at Houston, 4:30 p.m. Atlanta at Orlando, 5 p.m. Charlotte at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Chicago at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Golden State at Portland, 7 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Sacramento, 7 p.m. Phila. Brooklyn Milwaukee Boston Toronto New York Miami Charlotte Indiana Chicago Atlanta Cleveland Washington Orlando Detroit Men’s college GB — ½ 2 5 5½ 5½ 6 6½ 7 7 8 9 9 10 13½ GB — 3 4 4 7 7 7 8 9 9 11½ 12½ 13½ 15 20 Monday’s Late Box Score Trail Blazers 123, Hornets 111 CHARLOTTE (111) Co.Martin 4-9 0-0 8, Washington 1-8 1-2 3, Biyombo 3-4 0-2 6, Ball 10-18 5-6 30, Rozier 8-17 1-1 20, Bridges 4-8 1-1 9, Ca.Martin 4-8 0-1 11, McDaniels 2-3 0-0 5, Monk 7-13 2-4 19. Totals 43-88 10-17 111. PORTLAND (123) Covington 8-11 0-0 21, Jones Jr. 1-2 0-0 3, Kanter 5-7 1-2 11, Lillard 8-21 1-2 23, Trent Jr. 7-11 1-1 17, Anthony 10-19 3-3 29, Hood 3-6 0-0 8, Little 4-7 1-2 11, Simons 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 46-86 7-10 123. Charlotte 33 26 24 28 — 111 Portland 27 32 33 31 — 123 3-Point Goals—Charlotte 15-34 (Ball 5-7, Ca.Martin 3-5, Monk 3-7, Rozier 3-9, McDaniels 1-2, Co.Martin 0-2), Portland 24-46 (Anthony 6-10, Lillard 6-15, Cov- ington 5-7, Hood 2-3, Little 2-4, Trent Jr. 2-4, Simons 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Charlotte 37 (Co.Martin 9), Portland 38 (Kanter 11). Assists—Char- lotte 25 (Ball 8), Portland 26 (Lillard 10). Total Fouls— Charlotte 16, Portland 15. A—0 (19,393) PAC-12 CONFERENCE Conference All Games W L Pct W L Pct UCLA 13 4 .765 17 6 .739 Oregon 12 4 .750 17 5 .773 Southern Cal 13 5 .722 19 6 .760 Colorado 13 6 .684 19 7 .731 Arizona 11 9 .550 17 9 .654 Stanford 10 9 .526 14 11 .560 Oregon St. 9 9 .500 13 11 .542 Arizona St. 7 8 .467 10 11 .476 Utah 7 10 .412 10 11 .476 Washington St. 7 12 .368 14 12 .538 Washington 4 16 .200 5 20 .200 California 3 17 .150 8 19 .296 Wednesday’s Games Oregon St. at Utah, 4 p.m. UCLA at Oregon, 6 p.m. Stanford at Southern Cal, 7:30 p.m. Thursday’s Games Arizona St. at Colorado, 6 p.m. Monday’s Late Box Score Oregon 80, Arizona 69 ARIZONA (17-9) A.Tubelis 4-10 4-7 12, Koloko 3-5 0-0 6, Akinjo 6-14 4-4 19, Kriisa 2-6 0-0 6, Mathurin 2-8 3-3 9, J.Brown 2-3 1-3 5, D.Terry 1-2 0-0 3, T.Brown 2-2 0-0 4, Lee 2-3 1-2 5. Totals 24-53 13-19 69. OREGON (17-5) Omoruyi 5-14 8-9 21, Williams 2-3 5-7 9, Duarte 7-10 4-4 22, Richardson 4-10 1-2 12, Figueroa 6-11 0-0 14, Lawson 0-5 0-0 0, Kepnang 1-2 0-0 2, Hardy 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 25-55 18-22 80. Halftime —Oregon 40-36. 3-Point Goals —Arizona 8-23 (Akinjo 3-7, Kriisa 2-5, Mathurin 2-5, D.Terry 1-2, A.Tubelis 0-4), Oregon 12-22 (Duarte 4-5, Omoruyi 3-6, Richardson 3-7, Figueroa 2-3, Lawson 0-1). Re- bounds —Arizona 28 (Mathurin 7), Oregon 32 (Duarte 7). Assists —Arizona 16 (Akinjo 8), Oregon 13 (Richard- son 5). Total Fouls —Arizona 18, Oregon 15. TOP 25 SCORES Tuesday’s Games No. 4 Illinois 76, No. 2 Michigan 53 No. 3 Baylor 94, No. 6 West Virginia 89, OT No. 8 Alabama 70, Auburn 58 No. 12 Arkansas 101, South Carolina 73 No. 15 Texas 81, Iowa St. 67 No. 18 Texas Tech 69, TCU 49 No. 23 Purdue 73, No. 25 Wisconsin 69 Women’s college COACHES TOP 25 POLL Record 1. Conneticut (29) 21-1 2. Texas A&M (2) 22-1 3. Stanford 22-2 4. North Carolina St. 17-2 5. Louisville 21-2 6. Baylor 20-2 7. South Carolina 19-4 8. Maryland 19-2 9. UCLA 14-4 10. Indiana 16-4 11. Arizona 15-4 12. Michigan 13-3 13. Arkansas 15-4 14. South Florida 13-3 15. Gonzaga 19-7 16. Tennessee 14-2 17. Missouri St. 21-3 18. Oregon 13-7 19. Kentucky 16-7 20. Ohio St. 13-6 21. Georgia 18-5 22. South Dakota St. 21-2 23. West Virginia 18-4 24. Florida Gulf Coast 21-2 25. Northwestern 13-6 Dropped out: No. 23 DePaul (14-7). Pts 772 725 723 671 652 619 586 559 516 493 436 407 369 318 280 262 243 240 231 220 219 143 127 77 58 Pvs 1 3 2 4 5 7 6 8 10 11 9 12 16 13 19 21 19 15 17 14 18 24 22 26 25 Continued from A5 Oregon State Continued from A5 Oregon State’s Pac-12 home games are Washington (Oct. 2), Utah (Oct. 23), Stan- ford (Nov. 13) and Arizona State (Nov. 20). The Beavers face Arizona State in Reser Stadium for a third consecu- tive year, the first time OSU has played a conference op- ponent at home three consec- utive years since 2004-06. Oregon State 2021 football schedule Sept. 4: at Purdue Sept. 11: Hawaii Sept. 18: Idaho Sept. 25: at USC Oct. 2: Washington Oct. 9: at Washington State Oct. 16: Bye Oct. 23: Utah Oct. 30: at California Nov. 6: at Colorado Nov. 13: Stanford Nov. 20: Arizona State Nov. 27: at Oregon PAC-12 CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT Games in Las Vegas FIRST ROUND Wednesday’s Games California vs. Oregon St., 11 a.m. Southern Cal vs. Arizona St., 2 p.m. Washington St. vs. Utah, 5 p.m. Colorado vs. Washington, 8 p.m. DEALS Transactions FOOTBALL National Football League HOUSTON TEXANS — Waived CB Mark Fields II. Re- leased CB Brandon Williams. Agreed to terms with RB David Johnson on a one-year contract. LAS VEGAS RAIDERS — Signed DE Kendal Vickers to a one-year contract. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Released TE Kyle Rudolph. NEW YORK JETS — Released DL Henry Anderson. HOCKEY National Hockey League NHL — Suspended F Alex Chiasson from Edmonton for one game for cross-checking in a game against To- ronto on March 1. BOSTON BRUINS — Assigned RW Karson Kuhlman to Providence (AHL). BUFFALO SABRES — Recalled D Jacob Bryson from the minor league taxi squad. Assigned F Casey Mittelstadt to the taxi squad. CALGARY FLAMES — Waived C Derek Ryan. COLORADO AVALANCHE — Assigned F Ty Lewis to Utah (ECHL) from Colorado (AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS — Recalled C Michael Rasmussen from Grand Rapids (AHL). Reassigned D Gustav Lindstrom to the minor league taxi squad and G Kaden Fulcher to Grand Rapids (AHL) from the taxi squad. EDMONTON OILERS — Placed G Alex Stalock on COVID-19 injured reserve. LOS ANGELES KINGS — Assigned G Troy Grosenick, C Rasmius Kupari, Lias Andersson and Austin Strand to On- tario (AHL). Recalled G Matthew Villalta from Ontario (AHL). MONTREAL CANADIENS — Recalled C Cameron Hillis from Laval (AHL) loan. NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Placed D Ryan Ellis on in- jured reserve. NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Recalled RW Oliver Wahl- strom from the minor league taxi squad. NEW YORK RANGERS — Recalled RW Ty Ronning from Hartford (AHL) from the taxi squad. OTTAWA SENATORS — Recalled G Filip Gustavsson from Belleville (AHL) loan. Recalled LW Michael Haley and D Erik Brannstrom from the minor league taxi squad. PHILADELPIA FLYERS — Recalled C Connor Bunnaman from the minor league taxi squad. PITTSBURGH PENGUINS — Recalled RW Josh Currie from the minor league taxi squad. SAN JOSE SHARKS — Recalled D Nick DeSimone and Nicolas Meloche, RW Sefan Noesen, C Joel Kellman, G Josef Korenar and Alexei Melnichuk from San Jose (AHL) loans. Assigned C Noah Gregor to San Jose (AHL). SOCCER Major League Soccer MINNESOTA WILD — Signed F Juan Agudelo to a one- year contract. PHILADELPHIA UNION — Named Frank Leicht assistant coach, Yaseen Khan assistant athletic trainer/strength and conditioning coach, Marlon LeBlanc head coach of Union II and Garrison Draper vice president of player health and performance. COLLEGE TENNESSEE UNIVERSITY — Named Kur Schmidt foot- ball’s director of competition development. “I want to keep doing what I’ve been doing and keep giving kids hope that anything they do is possible. Just because you go to HBCU or a small school, that doesn’t necessarily mean you don’t have a chance to make it.” Covington “That’s a big confidence boost for me,” Covington said. Damian Lillard said when Covington is active on defense, he makes the Blazers a better team. But when his shot is also falling, he makes them dan- gerous. When teams attempt to dou- ble Lillard, he said it’s huge to have Covington help pick up the slack by making shots. “I think tonight, him mak- ing shots and him being all over the place, the way he was rebounding the ball, I think it was a huge part of why we won the game,” Lillard said. Players have been looking forward to the All-Star break, which begins Friday. But Cov- ington’s rest and relaxation will be disrupted by his partici- pation in the Skills Challenge during the NBA All-Star week- end in Atlanta. The NBA will be celebrating Historically Black Colleges and Others receiving votes: Rutgers (12-3) 53; DePaul (14-7) 22; Rice (15-2) 12; Marquette (17-5) 11; Iowa (14- 7) 7; Dayton (13-2) 6; North Carolina (13-9) 4; Oklahoma St. (17-7) 3; Georgia Tech (14-7) 3; Oregon St. (9-6) 2; Mississippi St. (10-8) 2; Houston (15-5) 2; Seton Hall (14- 6) 1; Central Florida (13-2) 1. Note: One ballot is missing. Diane Richardson of Towson could not be reached before the voting dead- line. — Robert Covington Steve Dykes/AP Portland Trail Blazers’ Robert Covington, right, grabs the ball away from Charlotte Hornets’ Cody Martin, left, during a game in Portland on Monday. Universities during the week- end. Covington, out of Ten- nessee State, is the only NBA player from an HBCU. “That’s the reason why I had to do it,” Covington said. Oregon State plays a traditional schedule, with its three non-conference games coming first, followed by Pac-12 play. The Beavers face Hawaii on Sept. 11 and Idaho on Sept. 18 at home. OSU opens conference play on the road against USC, a team it hasn’t faced since 2018. The conference misses on OSU’s schedule are Arizona and UCLA. Oregon State’s bye is Oct. 16. Game times and television partners will be released at a later date. The Beavers are coming off a 2-5 season that was short- ened by the pandemic. In its last full season, Oregon State went 5-7 in 2019. OSU enters its fourth year under coach Jonathan Smith, who is 9-22 during his Bea- vers tenure. “I’m the only guy in the NBA now. For them to come to me and to highlight what they’re planning on doing, and me being the only athlete from an HBCU in the NBA, it’s only Oregon Continued from A5 Oregon will play at UCLA on Oct. 23, which will be the first time Chip Kelly gets to host his former team at the Rose Bowl after losing the meetings against the Ducks at Autzen in 2018 and 2020. The Ducks’ other Pac-12 road games are at Stanford (Oct. 2) and Utah (Nov. 20). After a bye week, Oregon hosts California on Friday, Oct. 15. The Bears defeated the Ducks 21-17 last season in Berkeley, Calif. Mario Cristobal hired defen- sive coordinator Tim DeRuyter and safeties coach Marcel Yates away from Cal in the offsea- son. Keith Heyward left Ore- gon to join Justin Wilcox’s staff at Cal. The Ducks’ other Pac-12 home game is against Wash- ington State on Nov. 13. Ore- gon won last year’s meeting 43- 29 in Pullman, Wash. Oregon’s nonconference schedule, which was previ- ously announced, begins with the opener on Sept. 4 against Fresno State. DeRuyter was right that I do it. It’s a great op- portunity.” Covington said he hopes children will use him as an ex- ample of someone who made it to the NBA from an HBCU. “I want to keep doing what I’ve been doing and keep giv- ing kids hope that anything they do is possible,” he said. “Just because you go to HBCU or a small school, that doesn’t necessarily mean you don’t have a chance to make it.” Oregon Ducks 2021 football schedule Sept. 4: Fresno State Sept.. 11: At Ohio State Sept. 19: Stony Brook Sept. 25: Arizona Oct. 2: At Stanford Oct. 9: Bye Oct. 15: California Oct. 23: at UCLA Oct. 30: Colorado Nov. 6: At Washington Nov. 13: Washington State Nov. 20: At Utah Nov. 27: Oregon State the Bulldogs’ head coach from 2012-16. The Ducks will play Big Ten champion and national run- ner-up Ohio State on Sept. 11 in Columbus, Ohio. The Buck- eyes were scheduled to play at Autzen last season, but the marquee nonconference game was canceled due to the pan- demic. Oregon also hosts Stony Brook, an FCS program, on Sept. 18 before beginning Pac- 12 play.