Oregon
Oregon 4-0 in Pac-12 after taking down Washington State
Brennan Rigsby scored 18 points and Jadrian Tracey hit a critical 3-pointer Saturday night as Oregon stayed unbeaten in the Pac-12 Conference with an 89-84 win over Washington State in Pullman, Wash.
The Ducks (11-3, 4-0) led 84-82 when Tracey took advantage of a brief defensive lapse at the end of the shot clock, squeezing off a long 3-pointer that swished with 40 seconds left. It was Oregon’s 14th 3-pointer in 24 attempts.
Myles Rice, who scored a game-high 22 points and added seven assists for the Cougars (10-5, 1-3), hit a driving layup with 10.9 seconds remaining to pull them within three points. But Keeshawn Barthelemy sealed the outcome by canning both ends of a one-and-one with nine seconds on the clock.
Jermaine Couisnard added 16 points for the Ducks, while Kario Oquendo came off the bench for 15, hitting 4 of 4 3-pointers. Jackson Shelstad chipped in 14 points.
Jaylen Wells tallied 15 points off Washington State’s bench, while Andrej Jakimowski contributed 13. Isaiah Watts and Isaac Jones each added 10 points.
The Cougars converted nearly 54 percent from the field but couldn’t match Oregon’s hot hand. The Ducks made 58.2 percent of their attempts in a well-played game.
Oregon got off to a fast start, establishing a 10-2 lead less than four minutes into the game as Couisnard canned a mid-range jumper. Rigsby set the tone for his big shooting night by starting the game with a 3-pointer and a mid-range shot.
The Ducks maintained a two-possession lead most of the half until Washington State found traction offensively. Rice’s 3-pointer capped a 9-2 spurt that gave the Cougars their first lead at 31-30 with 7:20 left.
Oregon made another run after that and got the margin back to seven, settling for a 46-41 edge at the break as Mookie Cook converted a layup with 35 seconds remaining.
The Ducks finished the half at 69.2 percent from the field, which offset Washington State’s 15-4 advantage in free throw attempts.
—Field Level Media
Oregon
Oregon Freshman Tristan Phillips Reveals Jersey Number
Oregon Ducks freshman linebacker Tristan Phillips revealed that he will be wearing No. 25 with a social media post of his locker and the jersey number.
Tristan Phillips to Wear No. 25
The jersey No. 25 was worn by two Oregon players during the 2025 season: freshman kicker Rocco Graziano and redshirt senior defensive back Kilohana Haasenritter. With Haasenritter out of eligibility, the number became available for anyone on defense.
How much Phillips sees the field as a true freshman remains to be seen. The Ducks’ linebacker corps is expected to be led by Devon Jackson and Jerry Mixon with an opportunity for younger linebackers like Brayden Platt, Dylan Williams, and Gavin Nix to take the next step.
Oregon has not often thrown young linebackers into the starting defense, but Ducks coach Dan Lanning has consistently proclaimed, “If you’re good enough, you’re old enough.” While Phillips might not see the field right away, that scenario gives the young linebacker time to develop and learn the defense. More than likely, Phillips will be a rotational piece and could see action later in games if the Ducks hold a lead.
Phillips enters the Oregon program as a rather underrated recruit, rated as a three-star prospect by the Rivals’ Industry Ranking. Per 247Sports, though, Phillips was a four-star linebacker and the No. 26-ranked recruit out of California.
Alongside Phillips, the Ducks signed one other linebacker recruit in the class of 2026, four-star prospect Braylon Hodge our of Cherry Creek in Colorado.
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What Chris Hampton Said About Tristan Phillips
During a National Signing Day special, Oregon defensive coordinator Chris Hampton spoke briefly about all of the defensive recruits in the Ducks’ class. What he said about Phillips in particular should excite Ducks fans about Oregon’s newest linebacker:
“Tristan Phillips, this guy’s Bryce Boettcher 2.0 He will he will tattoo you,” said Hampton. “He was the leader of our class, I would say, recruiting a bunch of guys, helped get guys in the boat. He’s been a Duck through and through from Ventura, California. He’s a great kid. He’s about 220 pounds right now. He’s gonna be a 230, 235-pound linebacker that will knock you backwards.”
“Size, speed, he’s got a great combination, and he’s got a great disposition about him when you talk to him,” Hampton continued to rave about Phillips.
If Phillips can match the production of Boettcher, the Ducks should be set at the linebacker position for years to come. A former walk-on safety, Boettcher totaled 136 tackles in his senior season, following a junior season with 94 total tackles. Perhaps more importantly, Boettcher emerged as one of the leaders of the Oregon defense under Lanning.
Boettcher has already been selected by the Houston Astros in the MLB Draft, but he could also be taken by an NFL team in April’s draft.
Oregon
Most Oregonians were born somewhere else: Here’s where we came from
A little more than half of Oregonians moved here from out of state.
California, Texas, New York, Latin America. People come from all over.
And we move around a lot. Census data shows that, across all states, a little more than 40% of Americans live in a state other than the place where they were born.
Migration is economically vital to Oregon because more people die here each year than are born here, and because it has the oldest population of any state in the West. Unless Oregon draws from elsewhere, its workforce will dwindle and there will be fewer people and resources to care for our aging population.
Oregonians tend to come from big states close by. More than 600,000 arrived from neighboring California, the most populous state in the union. Another 200,000 Oregonians came south from Washington.
Can’t see the table? Click here.
Texas, New York and Illinois each contribute about 60,000 Oregon residents. Those states aren’t close by but, like California, they’re among the largest states and so have more to give.
Nearly 500,000 Oregon residents moved here from other countries. The census numbers don’t tell us, specifically, which countries but they do tell us which region. The top ones are Latin America (43%), Asia (33%) and Europe (15%).
Migration into Oregon has been slow since the pandemic. The state’s population growth was among the lowest in the U.S. during 2025.
That’s a big switch. Oregon — like other western states — used to be a big draw for people seeking a fresh start. That’s why Oregon still has a relatively high share of people who moved here from elsewhere, even though it hasn’t drawn as many recently amid rising housing costs and a dwindling labor market.
Can’t see the map? Click here.
Oregon ranks No. 10 nationally for the highest share of residents who moved in from out of state. Nevada is No. 1 (73%), followed by Florida, Arizona and New Hampshire (all around 60%).
The places with the highest share of residents who were born in the state where they live today are a mix of the upper Midwest and deep South. More than 70% of people living in Louisiana, Michigan, Ohio, Mississippi, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin were born in those states.
This is Oregon Insight, The Oregonian’s weekly look at the numbers behind the state’s economy. View past installments here.
Oregon
No. 11 Oregon State loses 9-4 to No. 20 Southern Miss
One of Oregon State’s starters proved not to be infallible, and its bullpen dug a deeper hole.
Ethan Kleinschmit retired 14 straight, but gave up the go-ahead home run in the sixth and the No. 11 Beavers’ bullpen allowed five more runs in a 9-4 loss to No. 20 Southern Miss Saturday night in the Round Rock Classic at Dell Diamond.
Kleinschmit allowed a solo shot in the first but was otherwise nearly untouchable through the first five innings.
Jacob Krieg hit a three-run home run in the fourth to give Oregon State the lead.
The Eagles (5-1) rallied in the sixth with a one-out triple by Joey Urban, who scored on a single by Matthew Russo. Davis Gillespie followed with a two-run blast to make it 4-3 and ended the day for Kleinschmit, who allowed four runs on five hits and one walk and struck out 10.
Grayden Harris allowed three runs, two earned, on six hits and one walk and struck out eight over five innings in the win for USM. Camden Sunstrom allowed an unearned run on four hits and struck out eight over four innings for the save.
Urban added a two-run single and Gillespie drove in another run in the seventh, as OSU (4-2) used four relievers in the inning.
Nyan Hayes hit an RBI single in the bottom of the seventh to make it 7-4.
Jack Giordano issued a bases-loaded walk in the eighth and USM plated another run in the ninth.
The Beavers wrap up the weekend against Purdue on Sunday at 9 a.m. PT.
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