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WATCH: Oregon Ducks Star Marcus Harper Interviews Offensive Lineman Teammates

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WATCH: Oregon Ducks Star Marcus Harper Interviews Offensive Lineman Teammates


Oregon Ducks offensive lineman Marcus Harper II hosts ‘The Big Mark Show’ in the video above. Watch as Harper interviews teammates Nishad Strother and Matthew Bedford about why they transferred to Oregon, injuries they’ve overcome and fun facts that fans would be surprised to know about.

Bedford reveals how Oregon coach Dan Lanning picked him up from the airport on his first visit to Eugene.

Oregon Ducks head coach Dan Lanning with offensive lineman Marcus Harper II

Oct 8, 2022; Tucson, Arizona, USA; Oregon Ducks head coach Dan Lanning with offensive lineman Marcus Harper II (55) against the Arizona Wildcats at Arizona Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images / Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

“It was time for a change and I wanted to win,” said Bedford on why he transferred to Oregon from Big Ten conference foe, Indiana.

“My cousin (Dillon Mitchell) played here… When I hit the portal and places started hitting me up, it led me back here (to Eugene.) It just made the most sense,” Bedford told Harper.

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What was surprising to Bedford about Oregon football?

“I would say, walking around the facility… But let me start with just getting off the plane – Coach Lanning picked me up. That was a first. That set the standard for the connection for the people who are here at Oregon,” Bedford told Harper.

Oregon Ducks Marcus Harper, Nishad Strother, Matthew Bedford

Oregon Ducks Marcus Harper, Nishad Strother, Matthew Bedford /

Harper II stands out in his fifth season at Oregon – a very uncommon path in the rise of the transfer portal – choosing to be a Duck through coaching changes (Mario Cristobal to Dan Lanning.) Harper II also stands out in his excellent interview skills and ability to connect, as seen on the Big Mark Show.

Harper II asked former East Carolina transfer guard Strother about battling an acromioclavicular injury to the shoulder that kept him out from all but five of Oregon’s games during the 2023 season.

“I thought I broke my collarbone or something,” Strother told Harper II. “Ended up running off the field and got the x-ray and everything. And they told me that I got a grade three AC separation.”

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“I was in a sling, just losing a lot of the progress that I had made during camp, my first camp coming out here, just trying to, trying to push for a starting job,” Strother said. “I felt like a lot of my progress was like halted, you know, missing like five weeks, not being a hundred percent, but still going out to practice and stuff just so, just so I can contribute in some way.”

Strother is back and healthy now for the 2024-25 season. More good news for the Ducks -when asked about his confidence level about Bedford playing against Oregon State this Saturday, coach Lanning said he is “Confident he could.”

A vital piece to a Duck offense, Oregon’s offensive line has had early season struggles, allowing seven sacks on quarterback Dillon Gabriel. The Ducks looks to find its rhythm this Saturday against in-state rival Oregon State. The Ducks kick off vs. the Beavers in Reser Stadium on September 14th at 12:30 p.m. PT on FOX.

MORE: Oregon Ducks Quarterback Dillon Gabriel Gets Engaged

MORE: Oregon Ducks’ Dan Lanning Addresses Dillon Gabriel, Offensive Line Inconsistencies

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MORE: How To Watch Oregon Ducks vs. Oregon State Beavers: Channel, Streaming, Preview

MORE: Pac-12 Conference Expansion: Oregon Ducks Still Winners in Big Ten Realignment?

MORE: Oregon Ducks Losing Recruiting Battle for No. 1 TE Kendre Harrison to UNC, Tennessee?

MORE: Oregon Ducks Release Uniform for Oregon State Rivalry Game: PHOTOS



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Oregon State AD Scott Barnes speaks out about Pac-12 rebuild, its timing, and damaging the Mountain West

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Oregon State AD Scott Barnes speaks out about Pac-12 rebuild, its timing, and damaging the Mountain West


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Old-Growth Forests and Oregon’s Healthy Ecosystems

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Old-Growth Forests and Oregon’s Healthy Ecosystems


Oregon’s forests were once full of old-growth, but today, less than 10 percent of old-growth trees still stand, environmental advocacy group Oregon Wild estimates. Despite their essential role in ecosystems and years of controversy over their loss, these forests are often still targeted for logging. 

The National Old-Growth Amendment, open for public comment until Sept. 20, would restrict commercial logging of old growth in every national forest across the country, but it wouldn’t affect old growth managed by the Bureau of Land Management. 

Chandra LeGue, a longtime old-growth advocate for Oregon Wild, says old growth is essential because trees store more carbon as they get older. 

It takes 70 to 80 years of growth for a tree to start storing a level of carbon that’s beneficial to the environment. In the Pacific Northwest, trees are considered old growth if they are more than 150 years old, LeGue says.

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“They have all this mass that is essentially carbon,” LeGue says. “It’s taken from gaseous form to wood form.”

The Northwest Forest Plan, which is currently being amended by the U.S. Forest Service, helps protect old growth in the Northwest, but there are no nationwide regulations in place. 

The intended effects of the NOGA are to increase the amount and improve retention of old-growth forests, strengthen conditions that will help old growth adapt to changes in the climate, incorporate Indigenous knowledge in the management of old-growth and develop local management strategies, according to a report from the Forest Service.

The Forest Service and the BLM control 61 percent of Oregon’s forestland as public federal land, according to Oregon Forest Resources Institute, a forest products industry group. 

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National forests, which are managed by the Forest Service, make up 48 percent of Oregon’s total forestland. BLM manages the other significant portion of federally owned forests in Oregon.  

The U.S. Forest Service is accepting comments from the public about its draft of the National Old-Growth Amendment until Sept. 20.

After the public comment period is over, the Forest Service, which manages 193 million acres of public national forests and grasslands across the county, will make adjustments and finalize the plan before 2025. 

It is estimated to be implemented by Jan. 1, according to the Forest Service.

“What we need to do is look at our forest practices and logging practices, and start to line them up with the real science that has to do with climate,” says Patty Hine, president of climate action group 350 Eugene.

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Hine goes out in Eugene twice a month to educate people about current climate issues.

On April 22, 2022, the Biden Administration issued an executive order requiring the Forest Service and other applicable organizations “to pursue science-based, sustainable forest and land management.” 

The order urged them to conserve America’s federal-land mature and old-growth forests, support traditional Indigenous ecological knowledge and cultural and subsistence practices and respect Tribal treaty rights.

“In addition to just storing carbon, if you’ve ever walked down a shady street with trees on it, you know how much cooler it can be,” LeGue says.

Forests mitigate the temperature and cool the water within the forests that eventually come out of our tap, LeGue says. 

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The McKenzie River supplies Eugene with its drinking water, which originates at Clear Lake, about 85 miles northeast of Eugene, and travels through Willamette National Forest to reach Eugene. 

The majority of Portland’s drinking water comes from rainfall in the Bull Run Watershed in Mount Hood National Forest, according to the city of Portland.

“Forests that have a healthy understory and rich, deep soils do a much better job of filtering water,” LeGue says. “Which can really impact municipal drinking watersheds.”

As climate change causes summers to get warmer and drought seasons to get longer, older forests will provide more water than younger ones, LeGue says.

Old-growth forests are more resilient to fire, so as climate change increases temperatures and the number of wildfires, old-growth is even more essential for ecosystems, she says.

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A small percentage of timber comes from public lands, Sarah Bennett, BLM’s Oregon and Washington spokesperson says. “The vast majority of it is from private lands.”

Thirty-four percent of Oregon’s forests are privately owned.

The BLM manages 16 million acres of public land in Oregon and Washington, and 12 percent of Oregon’s forestland, but doesn’t manage national forests. The agency does its “very best” not to cut down trees that have a diameter larger than 36 inches and that originated before 1850, Bennett says.

In 2020, 14 percent of timber was harvested from federally owned forests, 76 percent of it came from private forestland and 10 percent came from state or county owned forestland, according to Oregon Forest Resources Institute. 

Less than one percent of timber was harvested from Native American tribal forestland, which makes up only two percent of forestland in Oregon.

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The NOGA won’t apply to land managed by the BLM because it doesn’t manage national forests, but to comply with the executive order it is creating policy for old-growth on a location-by-location basis, Bennett says.

Logging kills trees, preventing them from storing additional carbon and instead releasing carbon into the atmosphere, LeGue says. 

“Letting the trees grow is really the best thing for the climate,” LeGue says.

Comments on the National Old-Growth Amendment can be submitted on the U.S. Forest Service’s NOGA project website under the “Get Connected” tab.

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Oregon State sophomore Zachary Miller ties the school record with a 63 in Palouse Collegiate

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Oregon State sophomore Zachary Miller ties the school record with a 63 in Palouse Collegiate


Oregon State’s first tournament of the men’s golf 2024-25 season produced a tie for the lowest round in school history.

Sophomore Zachary Miller shot an 8-under 63 Wednesday at the Palouse Collegiate in Pullman, Washington. The only previous OSU players to shoot 63 are Alex Moore (2011) and Jonas Liebich (2016).

Moore and Liebech’s scores were 9-under. Miller’s 8-under mark ties for third-best in program history, with Tim Mickelson (2000) and Calum Hill (2016).

Miller had nine birdies and a bogey during his 63 at Palouse Ridge Golf Course, finishing in a tie for fifth at 11-under 202 for 54 holes. Miller, who played only one tournament last year as a freshman, was nowhere near the leaders heading into the final round, after shooting 67 and 72 the first two rounds.

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With Miller leading the way, Oregon State shot a team record 28-under par 824, finishing third in the 15-team tournament.

–Nick Daschel can be reached at 360-607-4824, ndaschel@oregonian.com or @nickdaschel.

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