Oregon
ESPN College GameDay: Picks for Week 7, Ohio State at Oregon
There’s a gigantic, first-time conference showdown inside the Big Ten between Ohio State and Oregon taking place in Week 7, so ESPN had to bring College GameDay to Eugene on Saturday afternoon.
Both teams are undefeated, so the showdown will have giant College Football Playoff implications. Outside of Autzen Stadium, other clashes like the Red River Rivalry between Texas and Oklahoma, as well as Penn State traveling to the West Coast to face USC will adorn screens throughout America.
Before all the action takes place, the College GameDay crew made their selections for Week 7’s slate. Joining the desk as the Celebrity Guest Picker was none other than Kaitlin Olson of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia fame, who was born in Portland in 1975, and is an Oregon graduate from 1997. Check out all of their picks below.
ESPN College GameDay Picks for Week 7:
Ohio State at Oregon: Herbstreit and Saban are on the Buckeyes, while Howard, McAfee and Olson are on the Ducks to get the job done in Autzen Stadium on Saturday evening.
Red River Rivalry — Texas vs. Oklahoma: Kirk Herbstreit is calling the game so he’s not picking, but the rest of the crew had to make their selections known. Everyone is on the Longhorns though.
Kansas State at Colorado: Coach Prime made an appearance on College GameDay, would that help the Buffaloes’ case? The Wildcats are favored, but the whole crew is on Colorado.
Ole Miss at LSU: Olson dropped a Joey Freshwater reference while picking the Rebels, and Saban and McAfee agree, but Howard and Herbstreit are on the Tigers.
Penn State at USC: Nobody is a believer in the Trojans on the College GameDay set.
Florida at Tennessee: The whole crew is on the Volunteers on Saturday.
California at Pittsburgh: Olson and Herbstreit believe in the Golden Bears over the Panthers.
Arizona at BYU: Olson is the lone dissenter, riding with the Wildcats in Week 7.
Iowa State at West Virginia: Howard, Saban and Herbstreit are on the Cyclones, while Olson and McAfee are on the Mountaineers.
Washington at Iowa: Another interesting Big Ten clash for the Huskies. They weren’t very popular in Eugene, or on the desk, as everyone is on the Hawkeyes.
Full CGD analyst picks for Week 7:
Desmond Howard: Texas, Colorado, LSU, Penn State, Tennessee, Pittsburgh, BYU, Iowa State, Iowa
Nick Saban: Texas, Colorado, Ole Miss, Penn State, Tennessee, Pittsburgh, BYU, Iowa State, Iowa
Celebrity Guest Picker – Kaitlin Olson: Texas, Colorado, Ole Miss, Penn State, Tennessee, California, Arizona, West Virginia, Iowa
Pat McAfee: Texas, Colorado, Ole Miss, Penn State, Tennessee, Pittsburgh, BYU, West Virginia, Iowa
Kirk Herbstreit: Ohio State, No pick for Texas/Oklahoma, Colorado, LSU, Penn State, Tennessee, California, BYU, Iowa State, Iowa
Oregon
National report: Oregon great for giving kids health insurance, bad for teaching them how to read
The Annie E. Casey Foundation releases the Kids Count Data Book annually, with its new 2026 edition mainly drawing on data from 2024. State-based organizations work with the Annie E. Casey Foundation on the report, including Our Children Oregon and the Children’s Alliance in Washington.
The report is a snapshot in time of how well the country is supporting its youngest residents in 16 different indicators, including percentage of children living in poverty, kids who lack health insurance and reading proficiency among fourth graders.
David Wieland, policy and advocacy director for Our Children Oregon, said all of the indicators are related and play a role in a child’s well-being.
“We can’t just say that we’ll address reading outcomes through the educational system,” Wieland said. “We actually need to look holistically at child well-being if we want to really improve any one of these single indicators.”
Oregon lags behind the vast majority of states when it comes to educational indicators, ranked at 44 of 50 states. At 31, Washington ranks a bit higher.
But outside of the classroom, the two states fare better. Both Oregon and Washington are in the top 10 of states in health and community indicators.
“These are often the result of policy choices that we make,” Wieland said. “Oregon has prioritized ensuring that children — we should celebrate that.”
But federal changes may hurt states’ progress.
As Children’s Alliance in Washington state mentions in their press release sharing the Kids Count Data, “The numbers do not reflect the current reality for kids and families impacted by federal cuts to vital programs that have already come into effect.”
One policy choice Oregon made allows students to opt out of standardized testing. As a result, Oregon’s testing participation rates are below 95%, the federal requirement.
Wieland said this policy makes Oregon’s outcomes “less reliable.”
“We simply know with less certainty how we compare,” Wieland said.
In addition to rankings, the report calculates index scores for each state, allowing year-over-year comparisons. Both Oregon and Washington’s scores declined compared to their pre-pandemic scores from 2019, and so have the index scores in 45 other states. Only Mississippi and Louisiana saw improvements. South Carolina stayed stable.
Looking Ahead
Through Oregon’s Early Literacy Success Initiative, the state has sent grants to school districts to help improve reading and provide more support for students in elementary school. But it may be a while before those investments show improvement in reports like the Kids Count Data Book, said Our Children Oregon executive director Bridget Dazey.
“We do have to be patient as the state and school districts try new things,” Dazey said. “At the same time, we can confidently say we’re underinvesting in students and so it shouldn’t be so delayed that we wait five to seven years to see how things start to shape up.”
Going forward, Dazey said her organization is working with a coalition of organizations on the next edition of the group’s Children’s Agenda, a list of legislative priorities for lawmakers. Dazey said the state also needs a vision that looks out beyond the legislature’s two-year budget cycle that school districts use to plan spending.
“We need to be thinking long term,” Dazey said. “Our state has gotten really comfortable with thinking about things in the biennium.”
This story comes to you from the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.
Oregon
Oregon Lottery Powerball, Pick 4 results for July 6
The Oregon Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at July 6, 2026, results for each game:
Winning Powerball numbers from July 6 drawing
17-44-63-66-67, Powerball: 04, Power Play: 2
Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Pick 4 numbers from July 6 drawing
1PM: 8-8-0-7
4PM: 4-2-9-2
7PM: 8-2-5-5
10PM: 7-7-2-2
Check Pick 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Win for Life numbers from July 6 drawing
18-28-41-70
Check Win for Life payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Megabucks numbers from July 6 drawing
14-19-20-21-25-38
Check Megabucks payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
When are the Oregon Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 7:59 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 7:59 p.m. on Tuesday and Friday.
- Pick 4: 1 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. daily.
- Win for Life: 7:30 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Megabucks: 7:29 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by an Oregon editor. You can send feedback using this form.
Oregon
Oregon’s Class Surges in Team Recruiting Rankings to No. 3
If you headed to the lake early last week, you missed the best fireworks. Dan Lanning and his staff put on a cup of coffee and closed like the Wolf of Wall Street. Minus the cocaine, probably.
All jokes aside, and believe me, these are jokes, the recruiting this staff is doing is not a joke. From June 28 to July 3, a span of 6 days Oregon added four new commitments and all were four stars or better. If you weren’t paying attention, Oregon landed 12 commits in the months of June and what we’ve had in July so far.
The recruiting class has surged from the teens to No. 9 to start last week to No. 3 overall by Friday afternoon. Only Texas A&M and Notre Dame have better recruiting classes according to Rivals. Oregon has the best class in the Big Ten conference.
The 24 commits sit at an average rating of 90.76 according to Rivals. Additionally 16 of the 24 commits are ranked four-stars or better and that includes the Ducks having a pair of 5-Star commitments. Oregon has 11 defensive commits, 11 offensive commits and 2 listed as athletes.
Up next is a commitment from four-star linebacker Brayton Feister set for Saturday, July 11. I don’t believe that addition will move Oregon up in the rankings but will strengthen their current position.
With five-star wide receiver Xavier Sabb committing, Oregon now has a commitment from 17 different states. Should Feister from Ohio pick the Ducks on Saturday, that would give Oregon an 18th state. The national reach of this program is as good as any school in the country.
Last year Oregon finished with the No. 4 ranked class in the nation. The 2025 class also finished at No. 4 nationally.
The early signing period for the 2027 class begins on December 4 and ends on December 6. The transfer portal window begins on January 2.
Oregon kicks off its 2026 season opener at home on September 5 vs Boise State.
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