Oregon
Live updates: Michigan State vs. Oregon in Big Ten tournament quarterfinals
Michigan State looks to start March tournament play strong, beginning Friday in the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinal against No. 23 Oregon.
No. 7 MSU earned their double-bye and the top seed in the tournament by winning the conference, capping off their 2025 regular season with a dominant 79-62 victory over rival Michigan last Sunday. It was the 11th Big Ten title for Tom Izzo, who also recently earned his fourth Big Ten Coach of the Year award.
The Spartans look to win their first Big Ten Tournament championship since 2019, the same year where they also last reached the NCAA Tournament Final Four. They have yet to make it back to the the Big Ten Tournament finals since winning it, with only one semifinals appearance in 2022.
Meanwhile, Oregon enters as the eighth seed in the tournament, with all eight of their losses coming in conference play. Michigan State won the first match-up in February, coming back from a 14-point halftime deficit and needing all of Jase Richardson’s career-high 29 points to do so.
Follow along here for live updates from Detroit News contributor Kameron Goodwill.
Big Ten Tournament
No. 1 SEED MICHIGAN STATE VS. No. 8 SEED OREGON
▶ Tipoff: Noon, Gainbridge Fieldhouse, Indianapolis
▶ TV/radio: Big Ten Network/760-AM
▶ Records: Michigan State is 26-5; Oregon is 24-8
▶ Last meeting: Michigan State won, 86-74, on Feb. 8, 2025, in East Lansing.
Oregon
Oregon’s Dan Lanning non-committal on injured players for Minnesota game
EUGENE — Whether any of Oregon’s several injured players will return for Friday’s game with Minnesota is unclear.
Oregon coach Dan Lanning was optimistic about the outlooks for receiver Dakorien Moore, tight end Kenyon Sadiq, right tackle Alex Harkey and inside linebacker Devon Jackson following last week’s win at Iowa and didn’t have an update on receiver Gary Bryant Jr.’s apparent foot injury at the time.
Lanning was less forthcoming when asked for an update on those players Monday night.
“If they’re ready,” Lanning said, “they’ll play.”
UO’s leading receiver, Moore suffered a non-contact knee injury during practice last week.
Sadiq has been dealing with an unspecified injury dating back to before the Indiana game. Harkey rolled his ankle last week and Jackson was dealing with a similar issue, Lanning said. Each of those three traveled to Iowa, were listed as questionable, were in full pads but did not play.
With only four scholarship receivers available following Bryant’s injury, Oregon used a greater share of players with two running backs and two tight ends. That has already been a greater part of the offense this season, especially multiple backs, but became a greater necessity when the receiving corps was further depleted.
That could be the case again against Minnesota.
“I think we’ve probably had more (two backs) personnel sets than any other team in the conference this year and that goes back to trying to utilize the personnel that we have,” Lanning said. “I feel really confident about our guys in (two back sets) and really like our guys in (one back sets) too. … We’ll continue to be creative. I’m sure we’ll see some stuff out there that’s different.”
Gernorris Wilson made his first career start in place of Harkey. He committed a false start penalty, but was part of a group that paved the way for 261 rushing yards without allowing a sack.
Lanning felt Wilson played a “complete game” and had areas to improve.
“To be able to keep our quarterback clean in the game was good,” Lanning said. “We obviously didn’t throw it as much, but I thought Gernorris did a good job.”
No. 7 Oregon (8-1, 5-1 Big Ten) vs Minnesota (6-3, 4-2)
- When: Friday, Nov. 14
- Time: 6 p.m. PT
- Where: Autzen Stadium
- TV: FOX
- Stream: DirecTV (free trial) or Fubo (promotional offers) or Sling (college football season pass is just $199). Streaming broadcasts for this game will be available on these streaming services locally in Oregon and Washington, but may not be available outside of the Pacific Northwest, depending on your location.
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Oregon
Oregon is a Paper Tiger? Not Hardly
A lot of conclusions could be drawn from Oregon’s big win over Iowa on Saturday. Calling them a “paper tiger” is not one of them.
There is a bizarre opinion among some members of the national media and opposing fanbases that the Ducks haven’t played anyone. Apparently, September 27th was so long ago that it has completely left their memories.
Oregon has faced three ranked opponents so far this season. They have come away with two wins and a close loss to the #2 ranked Indiana Hoosiers at Autzen. They have faced injuries, torrential downpours, and nationally recognized hostile crowds… but I guess that’s not enough.
Oregon is a Paper Tiger?
They are if you believe Will Brackus of CBS Sports. He wrote, “Oregon will be exposed when it has to match up against one of the 12 best teams in the nation.” This is an interesting opinion. Was Oregon “exposed” against Indiana?
Offensively the Ducks certainly struggled in that game. Defensively they held the Hoosiers to 111 rushing yards and 215 passing yards. This is a team that’s currently averaging 232 yards on the ground and 255 yards for the air. They are 6th in the nation with 487 total yards of offense per game. Exposed?
Brackus continued, “The Ducks don’t have the best résumé thus far. Their admittedly gritty win on the road against No. 20 Iowa Saturday was their first triumph against a ranked team all season.”
I guess in an alternate universe the Ducks faced the #3 ranked Nittany Lions in a white-out at Beaver Stadium. They pulled off a massive win, in overtime, over a top 5 team on the road. They did it in an environment that everyone said was arguably the toughest in college football. That means nothing now, apparently.
His final statement was, “Oregon has done nothing to show that it will compete well on a national stage.”
This Team has Shown Nothing?
We could debate if you think the Ducks haven’t shown enough to prove they’re a true contender this season. To think that they have done nothing to show that they would compete well on a national stage is ludicrous.
Right now the Ducks are the 13th best offense, averaging 471 yards per game. Their passing has fallen off a bit because of weather and injuries to key positions. Their run game, however, is 6th in the nation averaging 240 yards per game.
Against the Iowa Hawkeyes, they put up 261 yards on the ground, averaging 7.3 yards per carry. This was the most total yardage that Iowa has given up since 2022. More impressively, it was the most yards per carry since 2014.
The Hawkeyes entered the game as the 3rd best defense in the nation in total yards allowed per game. They were 5th in passing yards allowed and 4th in total yards allowed. They had the 10th best run defense as well. This team was no pushover and it was on the road in the rain.
The Ducks are a physical, run first offense right now. They’re grinding out opponents and imposing their will in the trenches. This is not the Oregon Ducks of 15 years ago. The rest of college football has not woken up to that fact yet.
The Ducks have an Elite Defense

Even if you’re not ready to concede that Oregon has a solid offense, their defense is truly elite.
The Ducks are currently ranked 3rd in overall yards per game. They are #1 in passing defense, allowing only 126 yards through the air. Oregon is also 6th in points allowed per game at 14. They absolutely have a defense that could win a national championship right now.
PFF grades them as the 15th best defense but gives them the 4th best coverage grade in the nation (92.1). They are just barely behind Ohio State (92.2) and Alabama (92.3) on the season. The Ducks have been a no-fly zone for most of the season. They had a couple lapses against Iowa but overall teams have had a very difficult time throwing the ball.
This is not going to be an easy out for any team… regardless of their ranking.
AP Voters Still Doubt Them

Despite beating one of the best defenses in the country, Oregon fell in the AP poll on Sunday. It was clearly much more impressive that Ole Miss defeated The Citadel Bulldogs 49-0 at home. Those late season FCS opponents are always a good litmus test for how legitimate a team is in the rankings.
Oregon dropped to 7th in the AP, but at this juncture this ranking is completely irrelevant. The only ranking that matters are the playoff rankings and we won’t know those for a couple days. Funny enough, the coaches poll kept the Ducks at 6th.
With #7 BYU losing to #8 Texas Tech, and Oregon defeating the #20 ranked Hawkeyes, it’s likely that the Ducks will move up into the top 8. This is a good spot, as it would secure Oregon a home playoff game as long as they win out.
One thing to keep an eye on is USC for the rest of the season. The Ducks play the Trojans at home in a couple weeks whicch will most likely will be the final ranked team on their schedule. Washington dropped to Wisconsin at home on Saturday and will assuredly fall out of the rankings.
Oregon
Oregon’s Dan Lanning Admits He Was ‘Pretty Nervous’ Watching Game-Winning Kick
Thanks to some special teams heroics, No. 9 Oregon slid past No. 20 Iowa, 18-16, on Saturday — a finish that left Ducks head coach Dan Lanning anything but calm.
Lanning admitted as much after watching kicker Atticus Sappington drill a 39-yard field goal in the rain with seven seconds left to seal the win. Truth be told, the redshirt senior’s composure in the clutch may have exceeded that of his head coach.
“If you want the truth, I was pretty nervous,” Lanning told reporters. “I’m nervous for him because it shouldn’t come down to that moment for Atticus. That guy’s going to feel an unbelievable amount of pressure, however that goes. But, I’m really proud that he’s able to handle a moment like that.”
By now, it’s no secret that it takes a special kind of focus for kickers to lock in and deliver under pressure. Recreating those moments in practice is one thing, but as Lanning put it, “there ain’t nothing like 70,000 fans.”
“Seven seconds left, having to kick that kick. Can’t recreate that in practice, and Atticus handled that like a champ,” added Lanning.
The nail-biting kick capped a game in which Oregon jumped out to a 2–0 lead on a wild safety, then trailed 16–15 after an Iowa touchdown with 1:51 left in regulation. A 24-yard Dante Moore completion boosted the ensuing 10-play, 54-yard series which Sappington closed with the game winner on the road.
After narrowly improving to 8–1 overall and 5–1 in Big Ten play, Lanning’s Ducks have held their own in their second year in the conference. Still, it’s clear the experience is taking some getting used to.
“Well, guys, I guess that’s what they call Big Ten football,” Lanning said to open his postgame press conference. “What an unbelievable game.”
Oregon now turns its attention to its next Big Ten showdown — a road game at Minnesota (6–3, 4–2). Kickoff is set for Friday, Nov. 14, at 9 p.m. ET on FOX.
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