Oregon
Oregon State vs. UCLA Women's Basketball Predictions & Picks – February 16
Friday’s contest at Gill Coliseum has the No. 11 Oregon State Beavers (20-3) matching up with the No. 9 UCLA Bruins (19-4) at 10:00 PM ET ET (on February 16). Our computer prediction projects a close 69-68 win for Oregon State, so expect a tight matchup.
The Beavers won their last matchup 65-59 against Colorado on Sunday.
In their last game on Sunday, the Beavers earned a 65-59 victory over Colorado. The Bruins’ most recent outing on Sunday ended in a 78-45 win against Arizona State. In the win, Talia van Oelhoffen paced the Beavers with 18 points. In the Bruins’ win, Lauren Betts led the way with 18 points (adding seven rebounds and two assists).
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Oregon State vs. UCLA Game Info
- When: Friday, February 16, 2024 at 10:00 PM ET
- Where: Gill Coliseum in Corvallis, Oregon
- How to Watch on TV: Pac-12 Network
- Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo
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Oregon State vs. UCLA Score Prediction
- Prediction:
Oregon State 69, UCLA 68
Top 25 Predictions
Oregon State Schedule Analysis
- In their signature win of the season, the Beavers beat the No. 8 Colorado Buffaloes, 68-62, on January 26.
- The Beavers have tied for the 12th-most Quadrant 1 victories in the nation (five).
- Oregon State has tied for the 13th-most Quadrant 2 wins in the country (five).
- When facing Quadrant 3 opponents, the Beavers are 7-0 (1.000%) — tied for the 11th-most wins.
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Oregon State 2023-24 Best Wins
- 68-62 at home over Colorado (No. 8/AP Poll) on January 26
- 65-59 on the road over Colorado (No. 8/AP Poll) on February 11
- 58-44 on the road over Utah (No. 22/AP Poll) on February 9
- 91-66 at home over Utah (No. 22/AP Poll) on January 28
- 63-56 at home over Villanova (No. 38) on November 12
UCLA Schedule Analysis
- The Bruins’ signature win of the season came in a 77-71 victory against the No. 2 Ohio State Buckeyes on December 18.
- When facing Quadrant 1 opponents, the Bruins are 9-4 (.692%) — tied for the third-most wins.
- Based on the RPI, the Beavers have seven wins against Quadrant 3 teams, tied for the 11th-most in Division 1.
UCLA 2023-24 Best Wins
- 77-71 on the road over Ohio State (No. 2/AP Poll) on December 18
- 78-67 over UConn (No. 15/AP Poll) on November 24
- 76-68 on the road over Colorado (No. 8/AP Poll) on January 19
- 65-54 at home over Oregon State (No. 11/AP Poll) on January 7
- 71-64 at home over USC (No. 10/AP Poll) on December 30
Oregon State Leaders
- Raegan Beers: 18.2 PTS, 11.1 REB, 1.2 STL, 1.3 BLK, 66.5 FG%
- von Oelhoffen: 10.7 PTS, 5.1 AST, 40.1 FG%, 33 3PT% (29-for-88)
- Timea Gardiner: 9.7 PTS, 44 FG%, 40.8 3PT% (42-for-103)
- Kelsey Rees: 6.1 PTS, 1.3 BLK, 47.3 FG%, 37.3 3PT% (19-for-51)
- Donovyn Hunter: 6.5 PTS, 42.2 FG%, 32.8 3PT% (19-for-58)
UCLA Leaders
- Charisma Osborne: 15.2 PTS, 1.9 STL, 42.2 FG%, 36.1 3PT% (44-for-122)
- Kiki Rice: 12.7 PTS, 1.8 STL, 45.7 FG%, 29.5 3PT% (18-for-61)
- Betts: 15 PTS, 8.6 REB, 2.2 BLK, 68.4 FG%
- Gabriela Jaquez: 11 PTS, 46.8 FG%, 28.8 3PT% (17-for-59)
- Londynn Jones: 12.4 PTS, 37.8 FG%, 38.2 3PT% (60-for-157)
Oregon State Performance Insights
- The Beavers average 73.6 points per game (59th in college basketball) while allowing 58.1 per contest (47th in college basketball). They have a +355 scoring differential overall and outscore opponents by 15.5 points per game.
- Oregon State is scoring 67.3 points per game this season in conference action, which is 6.3 fewer points per game than its overall average (73.6).
- The Beavers post 78.6 points per game at home, compared to 60.3 points per game in away games, a difference of 18.3 points per contest.
- Oregon State gives up 56.4 points per game in home games this year, compared to 59 in away games.
- The Beavers have been racking up 69.2 points per game in their last 10 appearances, an average that’s a little lower than the 73.6 they’ve scored over the course of the 2023-24 campaign.
UCLA Performance Insights
- The Bruins put up 80.7 points per game (18th in college basketball) while allowing 62.3 per contest (136th in college basketball). They have a +422 scoring differential and outscore opponents by 18.4 points per game.
- In conference play, UCLA is averaging fewer points (71.6 per game) than it is overall (80.7) in 2023-24.
- The Bruins average 82.1 points per game at home, and 74 on the road.
- UCLA is giving up fewer points at home (56.3 per game) than on the road (72.9).
- The Bruins have performed worse offensively in their previous 10 games, tallying 71.3 points per contest, 9.4 fewer points their than season average of 80.7.
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Oregon
Dan Lanning Opens Up About the Oregon Ducks’ Superpower
The Oregon Ducks’ 2025 season has looked a lot different from when they went undefeated in the 2024 regular season and won the Big Ten Conference Championship. The Ducks entered the postseason with a loss on their record and a handful of young players gaining their first College Football Playoff starts in the first round vs. Jams Madison.
The path for Oregon to make a deep postseason run is still there. Coach Dan Lanning went on The Pat McAfee Show on Tuesday and revealed what he thinks his team’s biggest superpower is ahead of their quarterfinal matchup against Texas Tech.
What Dan Lanning Said About Strength in Numbers
The Ducks’ regular season didn’t lack adversity. Between a high-pressure overtime game, having to comeback with two minutes left on the road and a plethora of injuries, Lanning’s squad has had a lot to overcome. Throughout all the adversity, the team stuck together.
“I think our superpower is our love for our teammates,” Lanning said. “I think our superpower is the amount of guys that make an impact on this team.”
Quarterback Dante Moore said after the Ducks’ first-round win that the group has grown throughout the season because of the way they’re connected.
With players like wide receivers Dakorien Moore and Gary Bryant Jr., as well as various players on the offensive line, coming in and out the lineup, the offense has barely missed a beat. Other players have stepped up when their number has been called.
“I think strength in numbers has really been a superpower for us. We’ve been down players and then we’ve had players available,” Lanning said. “We’ve had guys that you didn’t expect to make an impact, make a huge impact. So, I think really our superpower is the strength in numbers and the buy in from our players.”
Lanning’s roster seem to be getting healthy at the right time. Moore and Bryant both returned to the field vs. the Dukes after missing over a month of action. Wide receiver Evan Stewart and defensive back Trey McNutt have both been seen practicing in the past week despite not playing yet this season.
The Ducks should become harder to scout with more players returning from injury. The way that players like wide receiver Jeremiah McClellan have stepped up for Oregon when its needed creates a variety of options for the coaching staff to choose from, and it makes the team more unpredictable.
MORE: Oregon Ducks vs. Texas Tech Playoff Betting Odds Make A Clear Statement
MORE: Oregon Loses Two More Players to Transfer Portal Amid College Football Playoff Run
MORE: Dan Lanning’s Frustration Could Ignite Oregon vs. Texas Tech
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The Team’s Trust in the Coaching Staff
The players on the Ducks may have a lot of chemistry and trust in one another, but part of their “superpower” seems to be the trust they have in the coaching staff.
After Oregon had a lackluster second half against JMU, Moore said that he’s confident the team will clean up its mistakes because he knows his coach is going to continue to push them in practice.
“Coach Lanning’s our leader. We go as he goes,” Moore said. “He’s going to make sure that he’s going to push us very hard next week. We’re going go watch film. Of course, he’s proud of us for us making it this far.”
Oregon
The longest whale migration in the world is passing Oregon. Here’s how to see it
The great gray whale migration is back on the Oregon coast.
The massive migration of eastern North Pacific gray whales — the longest mammalian migration in the world — sees thousands of whales traveling roughly 12,000 miles from their Arctic feeding grounds to breeding grounds in Baja, Mexico. That migration will once again pass Oregon this month.
Oregon whale watchers will celebrate the peak of the migration from Dec. 27 to 31, when the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department hosts Winter Whale Watch Week at parks up and down the coastline.
Park rangers and volunteers will be stationed at 14 park sites, there to help visitors spot the big cetaceans as they swim past the shore. Park officials said they expect 13,000 whales to pass by Oregon on their way south this season.
The parks department also celebrates Spring Whale Watch Week when the gray whales make their migration north in March.
While there are many good places to go whale watching on the Oregon coast, the town of Depoe Bay, called the Whale Watching Capital of Oregon, is easily one of the best. The central coast town is home to the Whale Watching Center, which will be open 10 a.m.-4 p.m. every day of Winter Whale Watch Week.
Depoe Bay is a popular stop for some of the Pacific gray whales, which sometimes break off their migration to spend the summer months feeding in the kelp beds just offshore. Several whale watching tours are available in town to see the animals up close.
Those staying on shore can more easily spot the animals with binoculars. Scan the ocean slowly and look for the whale’s spout, which will appear as a vertical spray of mist. You can also look for a tail, called a fluke, which sometimes emerges from the water as the whale dives. If you’re lucky, you might see the whale breach, or jump out of the water, though gray whales do so less frequently than some other species, like humpbacks.
Oregon
Oregon Leads Federal Lawsuit to Preserve Transgender Care for Minors
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Oregon hit back in the battle over transgender health care Tuesday, leading a coalition of states suing to block a proposed Trump administration policy that would cut off federal funding to institutions that provide gender affirming care to minors.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced that rule change Dec. 18, with a declaration that condemned “sex-rejecting procedures” for minors as “neither safe nor effective”—putting the force the the U.S. federal government on the side of a mounting global movement that sees medical interventions, ranging from puberty blockers to hormone therapy to surgery, as plainly inappropriate treatments for youth diagnosed with gender dysphoria.
In the new suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Eugene, Oregon and 18 other plaintiffs states say the declaration is not only wrong—”research and clinical data support gender-affirming care as a safe and effective treatment for gender dysphoria in adolescents”—but in violation of multiple federal laws.
The declaration violates laws banning the federal government from intervening in certain ways in the practice of medicine, the plaintiffs say. They also argue it violates laws governing how new federal rules are established. And though the declaration says it is issued “pursuant to the authority vested in” HHS secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the plaintiffs say he does not in fact have the authority to declare the standard of medical care in the United States.
The suit also notes the way federal guidance conflict with the laws of certain plaintiff states. For example, Oregon law guarantees that the Oregon Health Plan cover gender-affirming care. If systems like Oregon Health & Science University and Legacy Health cease to provide this care, the plaintiffs say, patients under the Oregon health plan will lose access to gender-affirming care for which they are statutorily guaranteed coverage.
The legal battle comes as different countries, and U.S. states, issue divergent policies governing medical treatment for transgender youth.
Compounding the confusion is the fact that gender affirming care is a rather capacious term. It can refer to social affirmation of someone’s chosen gender identity, or legal affirmation, where government documents reflect that identity (the Trump administration has moved to restrict this too).
The term can also refer to medical treatments, such as puberty blockers, which are generally reversible, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics. It says other treatments like hormone therapy are partially reversible, while surgery is not reversible. The AAP endorses carefully-administered gender-affirming care in minors with gender dysphoria as a way to promote their physical and social well being.
The stakes in this debate are high for Oregon because OHSU has in recent years become a major provider of such care. The university’s press office hasn’t offered details on the scope of its patient base but, in a 2023 report, OHSU described its Transgender Health Program as one of the “largest and most comprehensive” in the United States.
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