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NCAA FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD: Recap
Recap | Box Score | This Week's Scoreboard
Oregon 29, UCLA 10
Posted: Saturday September 23, 2000 09:30 PM ET
UCLA
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Oregon
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EUGENE, Oregon (Ticker) -- Maurice Morris and Oregon took the top-10 ranking of UCLA and ran it right down the Bruins' throats.

Maurice Morris ran for 139 yards and two scores and Oregon handed mistake-prone and eighth-ranked UCLA its first loss of the season, 29-10, in the Pac-10 Conference opener for both schools.

Oregon (3-1, 1-0 Pac 10) gained 208 yards on the ground to extend its home winning streak to 17 games while defeating a top-10 team for the first time since wins over Arizona and Washington in 1994.

"We didn't pay any attention to the hype coming into the game with UCLA," Morris said. "We knew what we had to do, we just went out and played our game today."

Morris scored on runs of one and six yards, quarterback Joey Harrington went over from one yard out and Josh Frankel kicked three field goals for the Ducks, who posted one of the biggest wins in five-plus years under coach Mike Bellotti.

"We took care of the little things that make a difference in a game like this," Bellotti said. "Our kids hit, we ran the ball, we stopped the run. In all regards, I am extremely proud."

UCLA (3-1, 0-1) vaulted nine spots to eighth in the latest poll after last week's 23-20 win over Michigan that completed a season-opening three-game homestand. UCLA surprised then-No. 3 Alabama in its season opener and beat Fresno State the following week.

But the Bruins were not the same team at 41,000-seat Autzen Stadium, one of the louder venues in college football. The Bruins had minus-nine rushing yards on 26 carries and committed three turnovers.

"I don't think we were shell shocked, we just didn't perform," UCLA coach Bob Toledo said.

UCLA's DeShaun Foster, who entered the game averaging 140 yards, was held to 49 on 19 carries. The rushing total was the lowest in school history, worse than a total of zero yards on six other occasions, most recently against Oregon State in 1978.

"If you stop DeShaun Foster, then you shut down the UCLA offense, and if he isn't running the ball, then their offense isn't running either," Oregon cornerback Rashad Bauman said.

The Bruins have lost seven straight road games since winning at Washington on November 14, 1998. UCLA was the last team to defeat Oregon on the road in 1997.

The deafening crowd forced the Bruins into numerous false-start penalties in the first half and Ryan McCann, making his first road start, seemed frazzled by the surroundings. McCann completed 13-of-31 passes for 152 yards with an interception and three sacks.

It carried over to the rest of the Bruins, who made a series of mistakes and failed to capitalize on a few by Oregon.

On the verge of a touchdown, Oregon fullback Josh Line fumbled just short of the goal line, but left guard Josh Jones alertly bounced on the ball ahead of a few Bruin defenders. Harrington forced his way into the end zone on the next play for a 7-0 lead 7:38 into the game.

UCLA squandered a huge opportunity in the second quarter when split end Jon Dubravic got behind a defender and dropped a long pass from McCann in the end zone.

"We've had adversity in the past and we've come back from it," McCann said. "We had that today, and we didn't execute when we had to."

The Ducks increased the lead to 10-0 on a 26-yard field goal by Frankel 84 seconds before halftime.

A questionable call in the third quarter may have cost the Bruins a touchdown when Freddie Mitchell caught a pass in the corner of the end zone and appeared to have one foot in bounds.

But the officials ruled otherwise and UCLA settled for a 46-yard field goal by Chris Griffith that made it 10-3.

UCLA tied it when Toledo inserted Drew Bennett at quarterback for one play in the third quarter. Bennett went down the line scrimmage as if to run, stopped and threw a 54-yard TD pass to Mitchell to make it 10-10.

Mitchell caught six passes for 158 yards.

But Oregon continued to control the ball, taking advantage of the absence of star defensive end Kenyon Coleman to run effectively. Coleman tore cartilage in his knee against Michigan and will be sidelined at least four weeks.

Frankel kicked field goals of 24 yards in the third quarter and 28 yards in the fourth to put the Ducks in front, 16-10.

A junior college transfer, Morris scored both of his TDs in the fourth quarter. His second score came after McCann fumbled a poor snap from center and Oregon recovered.

Harrington completed 15-of-34 passes for 153 yards for the Ducks, who likely will move into the national rankings.

The victory was especially sweet for Oregon receiver Keenan Howry, who is from the Southern California area but was not recruited by UCLA after attending the school's summer camps while in high school. He caught five passes for 43 yards.


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