LIVE 07:12 4th Sep 28
TLSA 13 7.0 o66.5
UNT 52 -7.0 u66.5
LIVE 01:30 4th Sep 28
CHAR 14 4.5 o47.5
RICE 20 -4.5 u47.5
LIVE 06:18 4th Sep 28
STAN 7 24.0 o58.0
CLEM 40 -24.0 u58.0
LIVE 06:00 4th Sep 28
ILL 7 19.0 o48.0
PSU 14 -19.0 u48.0
LIVE 03:23 3rd Sep 28
UGA 15 -2.0 o50.0
ALA 30 2.0 u50.0
LIVE 06:37 4th Sep 28
OSU 38 -23.5 o48.5
MSU 7 23.5 u48.5
LIVE 08:26 4th Sep 28
MTU 7 27.0 o61.0
MEM 24 -27.0 u61.0
LIVE 01:02 3rd Sep 28
USA 10 21.0 o64.5
LSU 35 -21.0 u64.5
LIVE 01:20 3rd Sep 28
UNM 30 -9.0 o54.0
NMSU 17 9.0 u54.0
LIVE 07:35 3rd Sep 28
FSU 9 6.0 o46.5
SMU 28 -6.0 u46.5
LIVE 07:16 3rd Sep 28
CIN 24 3.0 o60.5
TTU 31 -3.0 u60.5
LIVE 02:06 3rd Sep 28
AFA 13 -4.0 o33.0
WYO 21 4.0 u33.0
LIVE 11:23 1st Sep 28
WSU 7 6.5 o66.0
BSU 7 -6.5 u66.0
ARIZ 7.5 o47.0
UTAH -7.5 u47.0
ORE -23.5 o54.5
UCLA 23.5 u54.5
Final Sep 26
ARMY 42 -11.5 o46.5
TEM 14 11.5 u46.5
Final Sep 27
VT 34 17.5 o55.5
MIA 38 -17.5 u55.5
Final Sep 27
WASH 18 1.0 o45.0
RUTG 21 -1.0 u45.0
Final Sep 28
OKST 20 6.0 o58.0
KSU 42 -6.0 u58.0
Final Sep 28
BUFF 3 6.0 o44.5
CONN 47 -6.0 u44.5
Final Sep 28
NIU 17 7.5 o46.5
NCST 24 -7.5 u46.5
Final Sep 28
NAVY 41 -4.5 o56.5
UAB 18 4.5 u56.5
Final Sep 28
MD 28 7.5 o50.0
IU 42 -7.5 u50.0
Final Sep 28
MINN 24 10.5 o34.5
MICH 27 -10.5 u34.5
Final Sep 28
UK 20 15.5 o51.5
MISS 17 -15.5 u51.5
Final Sep 28
BYU 34 3.0 o47.0
BAY 28 -3.0 u47.0
Final Sep 28
NEB 28 -10.0 o47.0
PUR 10 10.0 u47.0
Final Sep 28
WKU 20 7.5 o48.0
BC 21 -7.5 u48.0
Final Sep 28
HC 14 30.5 o59.5
SYR 42 -30.5 u59.5
Final Sep 28
USF 10 4.0 o60.5
TULN 45 -4.0 u60.5
Final Sep 28
BALL 7 22.0 o56.0
JMU 63 -22.0 u56.0
Final Sep 28
TXST 39 -11.5 o55.5
SHSU 40 11.5 u55.5
Final Sep 28
GASO 38 3.5 o57.5
GSU 21 -3.5 u57.5
Final Sep 28
SDSU 21 2.5 o47.0
CMU 22 -2.5 u47.0
Final Sep 28
WMU 20 3.5 o54.0
MRSH 27 -3.5 u54.0
Final Sep 28
FRES 14 2.5 o51.0
UNLV 59 -2.5 u51.0
Final Sep 28
ULL 41 3.0 o59.5
WAKE 38 -3.0 u59.5
Final Sep 28
TCU 38 1.0 o59.0
KU 27 -1.0 u59.0
Final Sep 28
LOU 24 6.5 o45.0
ND 31 -6.5 u45.0
Final Sep 28
WIS 21 13.5 o50.5
USC 38 -13.5 u50.5
Final Sep 28
ARK 17 6.5 o50.5
TAM 21 -6.5 u50.5
Final 5OT Sep 28
MASS 20 15.5 o44.0
M-OH 23 -15.5 u44.0
Final Sep 28
OKLA 27 2.0 o43.0
AUB 21 -2.0 u43.0
Final Sep 28
AKR 10 8.0 o46.5
OHIO 30 -8.0 u46.5
Final Sep 28
COLO 48 11.5 o60.0
UCF 21 -11.5 u60.0
Final Sep 28
EMU 52 -14.0 o46.0
KENT 33 14.0 u46.0
Final Sep 28
UNC 20 -1.5 o55.5
DUKE 21 1.5 u55.5
Final Sep 28
UTSA 20 2.0 o54.0
ECU 30 -2.0 u54.0
Final Sep 28
MSST 13 37.0 o59.0
TEX 35 -37.0 u59.0
Final Sep 28
ODU 30 11.0 o51.0
BGSU 27 -11.0 u51.0
Final Sep 28
UTM 24 -2.5 o45.5
KENN 13 2.5 u45.5
Final Sep 28
LT 10 -2.5 o48.5
FIU 17 2.5 u48.5
Final Sep 28
WAG 10 35.0 o52.0
FAU 41 -35.0 u52.0
Final Sep 28
ISU 20 -16.0 o42.5
HOU 0 16.0 u42.5
Final Sep 28
ULM 13 6.5 o45.5
TROY 9 -6.5 u45.5
Oregon 2nd Pac-1212-2
Washington 1st Pac-1214-1

Oregon @ Washington preview

Allegiant Stadium

Last Meeting ( Oct 14, 2023 ) Oregon 33, Washington 36

The final Pac-12 championship game has it all.

An undefeated team. Two top Heisman candidates. The nation's best two passing attacks. A rematch of a regular-season thriller. A heated regional rivalry. And the winner essentially punches a ticket to the College Football Playoff.

No. 3 Washington (12-0) and No. 5 Oregon (11-1) -- two programs headed to the Big Ten in 2024 -- will meet Friday night in Las Vegas, where a spot in the CFP and the Heisman race could be decided in the Pac-12's high-profile swan song.

And here's one more twist: The Huskies, who won the regular-season meeting 36-33 at home on Oct. 14, were staggering 9.5-point underdogs early in the week.

The reason for that is mostly because the Ducks have surged to six consecutive wins, lead the nation in scoring differential (plus-29.33), and are one of three teams nationally in the top 10 in scoring (second, 45.3 points per game) and scoring defense (seventh, 15.9).

"We've got great energy," Oregon coach Dan Lanning said.

"I don't think it's really my job to necessarily temper the energy, but more so make sure that we maintain the focus on where it needs to be. And our guys have done a great job of that. They realize that energy doesn't win games; execution does."

Oregon quarterback Bo Nix has surpassed Washington's Michael Penix Jr. and LSU's Jayden Daniels to be the new betting favorite for the Heisman. Nix is second to Daniels nationally in passing efficiency (189.8 rating) and has completed 315 of 401 passes for 3,906 yards with 37 touchdowns and two interceptions.

"He's playing at an extremely high level and everybody's seen it right now," Lanning said. "He's gotten better and better every single week of the season."

Penix has slowed a bit since the first half of the season, but he checks in having completed 280 of 427 passes for 3,899 yards with 32 touchdowns and eight interceptions.

With the Ducks steamrolling opponents, there is a sense the programs are on different trajectories, as the Huskies have won three consecutive one-possession games (Utah, at Oregon State, Washington State).

Washington coach Kalen DeBoer said Monday that his team is getting healthier now. That includes wide receiver Jalen McMillan, who caught his first passes in more than two months last week against the Cougars.

"Relative to where we were at in the middle of the season, I think we are healthier," DeBoer said Monday. "The receiving corps is slowly coming back to being intact, and the offensive line is back to where it was at the beginning of the year. I think we are getting to a good spot when it comes to the health of the team."

Penix threw for 302 yards and four touchdowns in the first meeting this season. Two wide receivers went more for than 100 yards -- Rome Odunze (128) and Ja'Lynn Polk (118) -- and now McMillan is back.

Nix had 337 passing yards and two touchdowns against Washington, and he tried to rally the Ducks after a touchdown pass to Odunze put the Huskies up with 1:38 left. Oregon reached the Washington 25 before trying a last-play 43-yard field goal that was no good.

--Field Level Media

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