Leader Of the Pac
Oregon held off Oregon State to get its first Rose Bowl bid in 37 years
By Austin Murphy
At long last they can party with the people who created their
defiantly ludicrous mascot. The Oregon Ducks are going to Disneyland.
The world's most famous theme park will be on the Rose Bowl-week
agenda of college football's least likely 1994 conference champion.
Oregon's first Rose Bowl bid in 37 years wasn't assured until the
penultimate play of last Saturday's rainy Civil War, as the Ducks'
annual battle with Oregon State is known, when a last-gasp pass by
Beaver quarterback Don Shanklin splashed down, incomplete. The Ducks
took over on downs, ran out the clock and then scattered, ecstatic,
to the four corners of Parker Stadium, Oregon State's home field in
Corvallis. Sprinting along the edge of the bleachers, tailback Kevin
Parker bellowed at the crowd, which had trouble understanding him
because of the long-stemmed rose clinched in his teeth. On the field,
wide receiver Cristin McLemore used his one unmangled hand, the
right, to shake a yellow rose in a reporter's face as he shouted,
"We're going to Pasadena, and nobody can tell us we don't deserve
it!"
Chill out, Cris. No one said the Ducks haven't earned the right to
have their gizzards eaten by Penn State on Jan. 2. The new Pac-10
champs came into the season with average talent and an underachieving
quarterback, Danny O'Neil, whose unpopularity among Oregon supporters
was exceeded only by that of his coach, Rich Brooks. For the first
month of the season Duck fans were baying for Brooks's head. Now he's
a finalist in everyone's Coach of the Year contest.
O'Neil, a senior from Newport Beach, Calif., was booed by Oregon
fans as the Ducks lost two of their first three games this season, at
which point he was 0-16 in games in which Oregon trailed at halftime.
O'Neil's circle of friends began expanding a few weeks later, on Oct.
22, when he drove the Ducks 98 yards late in the fourth quarter for
the game-winning touchdown against Washington. In the fourth quarter
a week later, against Arizona -- in a matchup of SI's preseason No. 1
and No. 74 teams -- he hit tight end Josh Wilcox with a game-winning,
15-yard TD pass. Successive routs of Arizona State and Stanford, in
which O'Neil threw for nine touchdowns, left Oregon on the brink of
winning the conference. All it had to do was beat Oregon State.
But the Ducks had lost two of the last three Civil Wars. Although
lacking the jihadlike passions of the Alabama-Auburn Iron Bowl, the
little rivalry in Oregon is nonetheless a testy one, at the core of
which lie genuine differences in lifestyles and philosophies. Bob
Baum, Oregon class of '73, who now writes for the Associated Press,
says, "When I was at Eugene, there were antiwar protests pretty much
every day. We knew the war was getting really unpopular when they
finally had a protest in Corvallis."
On Thursday afternoon David Thorn, managing editor of the
student-run Oregon Daily Emerald, paced the paper's offices as he
composed the Top 10 reasons that Oregon is better than Oregon State.
The Emerald had just seen The Barometer's list of its Top 10 reasons
that Oregon State is the better place, including "Protesting is not
a college sport" and "The only acid we drop is in chem class."
Among the ripostes Thorn and his staff sent zinging back were
"Nothing cool rhymes with Beaver," "The main topic of debate on
our campus isn't 'Ford vs. Chevy' " and "Alice in Chains would
never play in Corvallis."
The Beavers raised the stakes on Friday, covertly distributing in
Eugene the Emeroid, The Barometer's annual lampoon of the Emerald,
featuring a photo of the "varsity Hacky Sack team" and a
sophomorically suggestive story on the Duck football team headlined
GANG GREEN SHARES THE SECRET OF SUCCESS: PLAYER BONDING. The Emerald
exacted revenge by running a catalog of Beaver jokes, including the
one about Oregon State's being the only school offering a dual major
in biology and agriculture "so its students can graduate knowing
their asses from a hole in the ground."
"They criticize us for protesting," says Thorn, "but a lot of
people here think protesting is an important part of living in a
democracy." Indeed, Oregon students proudly point out that Mother
Jones magazine recently recognized theirs as the nation's top
activist campus and claim that no school in the nation registered a
higher percentage of its students to vote than the 39.2% signed up
by the Oregon student government for the Nov. 8 elections.
This preoccupation with political causes also helps explain why
Oregon students are fair-weather football fans. Says Duck offensive
tackle Steve Hardin, "Too many hippies." While the Grateful Dead
sold out a Saturday show at 41,678-seat Autzen Stadium last summer,
Oregon's game against Iowa on Sept. 24 drew only 29,287. But once the
Ducks started stringing wins together, the students started coming to
games. "You could call us fair-weather fans," said student body
vice president Mark Rhinard last week. "I prefer to call it subdued
enthusiasm."
And despite the exchange of barbs in print, the enthusiasm
remained subdued on the Oregon campus last week, even in the face of
the biggest football game in nearly four decades, but this time the
restraint may have had less to do with apathy than it did with
uncertainty. O'Neil's theory was that "the students have never
experienced this kind of success. People aren't sure what to do."
That much was apparent at Friday's blink-and-you-missed-it pep
rally in a student bookstore. A dozen band members, four cheerleaders
and the Duck mascot took a lap around the store before stopping at
the magazine rack, where the unholy racket drove away several
disgusted browsers. Fourteen minutes after the music had started, it
stopped. The band filed out. People had classes, it was explained by
a drummer.
More seasoned Duck fans were simply too scared to celebrate.
"I've lived in this state 20 years," said Thorn. "This team has
broken my heart before." In his paper's offices Thorn posted a memo
that decried the premature bandying about of "the R word." If you
must speak of it, said the memo, "say only 'postseason action' or
'the bowl that shall remain nameless.' "
There were other things to deal with, anyway. Among Friday night's
cultural offerings around Eugene were a production of the Seven Keys
to Baldpate at the Very Little Theater, concerts by the Oregon String
Quartet at Beall Hall and Skankin' Pickle at WOW Hall, and a Civil
War bonfire in a parking lot outside Autzen Stadium.
It was a bonfire with a Eugene flavor. Because of strict city
ordinances, bonfires are forbidden. Barbecues, however, are quite all
right, so an hour before the conflagration, a fire marshal told
Rhinard, "Look, I'm on your side here. But you've got to make it
look like a barbecue." Rhinard forthwith dispatched several
underclassmen to a grocery store for weenies and marshmallows.
The barbecue was a huge success, at least by Oregon standards.
Forgetting himself, Rhinard seized the microphone and announced to a
delighted crowd of more than 300, "This is the school's first
bonfire since 1962!"
Said a 40-ish man at the edge of the pyre, "It is not, however,
the school's first fire since then." The speaker was Jim Noel, class
of '74, who pointed out that during the Vietnam war, Oregon's ROTC
building had been torched.
A day before the celebratory bonfire, Noel, a lawyer for ESPN and
still a devoted Duck fan, had been en route to Australia from
Connecticut with his wife and three children for a vacation that had
been a year in the planning. But when the Noels got to San Francisco,
he told his family, "See you in a couple of days," and got on a
plane for Oregon. "When the New York Rangers won the Stanley Cup
last spring, someone held up a sign that said, NOW I CAN DIE IN
PEACE," Noel said. "That's how I'll feel if we win tomorrow."
It was certainly no lock. The Beavers, with a wishbone offense
that is the bane of every defensive coordinator in the Pac-10, came
into the Civil War flush with confidence after dominating Washington
State 21-3 the week before. Oregon had had just two touchdowns
against Oregon State in the last four years.
The Ducks eked out two more on Saturday. Both were pass receptions
by tailback Dino Philyaw, the second of which had been set up by
wideout McLemore, whose adventure-filled second half also included a
guided tour of the Beavers' campus and a taste of the ill manners
that attend the Civil War.
With his left hand ballooning after it was crushed by tailback
Ricky Whittle's helmet in the third quarter, McLemore was taken by
golf cart to the Oregon State infirmary for X-rays. "It took a good
10 minutes, and then they couldn't find an X-ray technician," said
McLemore, who was jeered during the journey. "Their students were
saying stuff like, 'There goes that great receiver. He's not so great
-- he's sorry. You suck, McLemore.' I was thinking, like, You guys
are mean."
McLemore returned to action after his delayed X-rays came up
negative. Trailing 13-10, the Ducks took over on their own 30-yard
line with 4:42 to go. On first down O'Neil called a play-action pass
designed for McLemore, who trapped the ball against his chest --
sparing his bad hand -- for a 31-yard gain. Two plays later O'Neil
uncorked his prettiest pass of the day, a 21- yarder to McLemore on
the left sideline. Two plays after that, with the defense overly
conscious of McLemore, O'Neil lofted a screen pass to Philyaw, who
bolted 19 yards for the winning score.
On its final possession Oregon State drove from its 15 to Oregon's
21 -- converting a fourth-and-one in the process -- before losing the
ball on downs. While most Ducks grabbed roses, several seized Brooks
and bore him across the field. Brooks looked sheepish about the whole
business and relieved when his players put him down. "One week
you've got rope burns on your neck," he said, "the next you're
somebody's hero."
O'Neil, the other Duck whose public-approval rating soared over
the course of the season, was being interviewed by ABC and ESPN. And
over in the north end zone, with his right hand clamped to his
forehead as if he were in shock, stood a balding, middle-aged man. It
was O'Neil's father, Dan, and he was a basket case. The O'Neils'
house is 45 miles from the Rose Bowl. The game was five weeks off,
but it wasn't too early to make plans. "We'll take the 405 right up
to 5, then the 57 up to the 210," said Dan. His hand never left his
forehead as he spoke in an unsteady voice for a generation of Duck
fans: "We won, and we're going to the Rose Bowl. I was there. I saw
it."
Issue date: November 28, 1994