Oct 28, 2023; Tucson, Arizona, USA; Oregon State Beavers quarterback DJ Uiagalelei #5 makes a pass against Arizona Wildcats defensive lineman Isaiah Ward #90 during the second half at Arizona Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Zachary BonDurant-USA TODAY Sports

No. 16 Oregon State shifts focus to Colorado after deflating loss

If No. 16 Oregon State is still thinking of what might have been last week at Arizona, there’s a good reason.

The Beavers’ 27-24 loss was punctuated by a failed fake field goal on the final play of the first half as well as settling for a field goal on an earlier possession after getting inside the Wildcats’ 20-yard line.

Oregon State has to move forward, though, starting with a matchup against Colorado on Saturday in Boulder, Colo.

“We should have won the (Arizona) game,” Beavers quarterback DJ Uiagalelei said, “but we left stuff out there. We’ve got to clean that up.”

Uiagalelei would like to be more efficient this week. He was just 16 of 30 against the Wildcats for 218 yards and two touchdowns. He had connected on fewer than 50 percent of his attempts until completing his final four throws on a late scoring drive that got Oregon State within three points.

It was a potentially damaging loss for the Beavers (6-2, 3-2 Pac-12). They had a controllable path to the Pac-12 Conference championship game before the defeat but now will need to win out and perhaps get some help to reach Las Vegas the first week in December.

Oregon State coach Jonathan Smith said after the defeat that he was eager to call the fake field goal from the Arizona 16. The problem was the play started with three seconds left and that kicker Atticus Sappington was asked to run about 20 yards to the end zone against faster, more athletic players.

“I was just champing at the bit to get the thing called,” Smith said. “What we anticipated, really what we got, was a pretty good look. I just rolled the dice on that one and hindsight was not good … a bad call.”

The Beavers were without two starters in the defensive backfield against the Wildcats. That could make them very vulnerable against a precise passer such as the Buffaloes’ Shedeur Sanders.

Although Sanders was held to 217 yards on 27-of-43 passing in a 28-16 loss at UCLA last week, he has completed 71.1 percent of his attempts for 2,637 yards and 22 touchdowns. In 346 passes, Sanders has tossed only three interceptions.

However, he didn’t have his usual gaudy numbers at UCLA because the Bruins’ front seven had their way with Colorado’s offensive line. Sanders was sacked seven times for 51 yards and the Buffaloes couldn’t generate enough of a rushing attack to keep Sanders upright.

“The hardest thing to acquire is linemen,” Colorado first-year coach Deion Sanders said. “When people have a good one, you rarely see linemen jump and go to different schools. I think we have some guys that is gonna be good with a little seasoning, but overall, we just don’t have the fight or passion to do what we want to do.”

At 4-4 overall and 1-4 in the conference, Colorado needs two wins from its final four games — Arizona, at Washington State and at Utah are its last three opponents — if it is to convert its 3-0 start into a bowl game.

The Buffaloes have lost four of their past five, but Smith wouldn’t categorize his upcoming foe as “struggling.”

“This league is tough and competitive. They have been competitive throughout,” Smith said. “Dramatically different than, let’s face it, last year. And so, this is a good football team. They can score in bunches. One of the best quarterbacks we’re going to play, defensively flying around, the home atmosphere they’ve created, you can see it on tape. It’s a tough place.”

Oregon State owns a 7-6 lead in the all-time series, including a 42-9 win last year in Corvallis, Ore.

–Field Level Media

Sep 16, 2023; Corvallis, Oregon, USA; Oregon State Beavers quarterback DJ Uiagalelei (5) warms up before the game against the San Diego State Aztecs at Reser Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Soobum Im-USA TODAY Sports

No. 18 UCLA continues tough stretch at No. 15 Oregon State

No. 18 UCLA will face its third consecutive top-15 opponent when the Bruins visit No. 15 Oregon State on Saturday in Pac-12 Conference action in Corvallis, Ore.

UCLA (4-1, 1-1) opened that stretch with a 14-7 setback at then-No. 11 Utah on Sept. 23. The Bruins returned from a bye week to beat then-No. 13 Washington State last Saturday, 25-17.

Despite the diverging results, UCLA allowed only one offensive touchdown to both the Utes and Cougars.

The Cougars came in averaging 45.8 points per game and had not scored less than 31 points in any of their four previous contests. Meanwhile, the 17 points Washington State finished with were the most the Bruins have allowed this season.

“Our defense played outstanding. The effort that whole group played the entire game, and it was at all levels,” UCLA coach Chip Kelly said Monday. “Our guys did a great job containing a very mobile quarterback.”

The Bruins allowed just 216 total yards of offense, including 12 rushing yards.

UCLA heads into Saturday’s matchup ranked third nationally against the run at 64.6 yards allowed a game, and eighth in points given up at 12.2 a contest — though the latter statistic is skewed by both Utah and Washington State scoring touchdowns off of interceptions by Bruins freshman quarterback Dante Moore.

Oregon State (5-1, 2-1) will counter UCLA’s standout defense with an offense scoring an average of 38.5 points per game.

The Beavers rebounded from a 38-35 loss at Washington State on Sept. 23 by winning their lowest-scoring game of the season thus far, a 21-7 grinder Sept. 29 at Utah, then held off Cal 52-40 last weekend.

Oregon State ran for 203 yards against Cal with the running-back tandem of Damien Martinez and Deshaun Fenwick combining for 165. The Beavers average 205 rushing yards per game, good for No. 16 in the country.

However, D.J. Uiagalelei set the pace last week with his best passing performance of the campaign. He completed 19 of 25 attempts for 275 yards with five touchdowns and no interceptions against the Golden Bears.

“Not just completing the pass, but hitting them in stride. You see some of the catches and the yards gained after it — thinking about the two third-down throws to Anthony Gould, how accurate down the field those were,” Oregon State coach Jonathan Smith said Monday.

Protecting Uiagalelei against a UCLA defense that Smith described as “long, athletic” with “as good of pass-rushers as we’ve seen” should prove crucial in this conference matchup, the last between the programs before the Bruins join the Big Ten next season.

UCLA defensive end Laiatu Latu has five sacks this season, with linebacker Darius Muasau boasting four. The Bruins rank No. 14 nationally in total team sacks with 18, and No. 12 in tackles for loss with 44.

Oregon State has allowed only six sacks in six games but has given up 30 tackles for loss.

–Field Level Media

Sep 16, 2023; Corvallis, Oregon, USA; Oregon State Beavers quarterback DJ Uiagalelei (5) looks to throw during the second half against the San Diego State Aztecs at Reser Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Soobum Im-USA TODAY Sports

No. 15 Oregon State expecting a challenge at Cal

No. 15 Oregon State looks to continue its rise up the rankings when the Beavers travel to Cal for a Pac-12 game on Saturday night.

Oregon State (4-1, 1-1 Pac-12) climbed four spots after defeating then-No. 10 Utah last Friday, causing the Utes to plunge to No. 18 in this week’s rankings.

This marks the first time in program history that Oregon State has been ranked the first six weeks of a season.

The Beavers’ 21-7 win against the Utes followed a three-point loss at Washington State on Sept. 23, so they aren’t taking anything for granted on the road against the Golden Bears (3-2, 1-1).

“We’ve got a big-time challenge this weekend,” Oregon State coach Jonathan Smith said. “That program down at Cal has played us tough when you look at the battles the last three or four years. … Always plays stout defense, they’ve got a good running back that’s carrying the ball and that’ll be a challenge down there and we’re looking forward to it.”

Oregon State quarterback DJ Uiagalelei and wide receiver Silas Bolden remain a dangerous combination.

Uiagalelei, a junior transfer from Clemson, surpassed the 1,000-yard mark on the season against Utah, while Bolden caught six passes for a career-high 100 yards and a touchdown.

Bolden also had two carries for 52 yards, including a 45-yard touchdown on fourth-and-1 early in the fourth quarter that stretched the lead to 21-0. The Beavers earned just one first down over their final four drives, however.

“On the offensive end, we want to be able to finish better,” Smith said.

Defensively, linebacker Easton Mascarenas-Arnold has led the Beavers in tackles the past four games. He was named Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Week after totaling nine tackles, a sack and an interception against Utah.

“Easton is playing at a high level,” Smith said. “That showed up a ton on tape.”

Oregon State’s run defense is ranked fourth nationally, but the Beavers will be without linebacker Calvin Hart Jr. and defensive lineman James Rawls for the first half on Saturday. Both were ejected for targeting against Utah.

Cal held off visiting Arizona State to win 24-21 last Saturday. The Golden Bears were coming off a 59-32 loss at Washington in their conference opener the week before.

“We will never minimize winning in this conference,” Cal coach Justin Wilcox said. “It’s tough.”

Wilcox has not settled on a No. 1 quarterback after TCU transfer Sam Jackson V started last week and NC State transfer Ben Finley started the week before in the loss to the Huskies.

Wilcox spoke of the need to eliminate the mistakes that have made things more difficult on both sides of the ball.

“We have to learn how to eliminate some of these things that are giving us so much trouble,” he said. “Offensive penalties. Defensively, it’s like we’re playing good, playing good, and then we have a bust.”

Cal holds a 39-36 edge in the all-time series. Oregon State has won three of the past four.

–Field Level Media

Nov 26, 2022; Corvallis, Oregon, USA; Oregon Ducks running back Jordan James (20) runs with the ball during the first half against the Oregon State Beavers at Reser Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Soobum Im-USA TODAY Sports

No. 21 Oregon State rallies from 21-point hole to edge No. 9 Oregon

Isaiah Newell scored on two fourth-quarter touchdown runs — his only carries of the game — as host No. 21 Oregon State rallied from a 21-point, second-half deficit to defeat No. 9 Oregon 38-34 Saturday afternoon in Corvallis, Ore., preventing the rival Ducks from clinching a berth in the Pac-12 Conference championship game.

Damien Martinez had his sixth consecutive 100-yard rushing game, gaining 103 yards before leaving with an apparent leg injury for the Beavers (9-3, 6-3 Pac-12), who clinched their first nine-win regular season since 2012.

A hobbled Bo Nix completed 27 of 41 passes for 327 yards and two touchdowns for Oregon (9-3, 7-2).

The Ducks were 0-for-5 on fourth-down attempts, with three of those coming in the fourth quarter.

Leading 34-31 with 9:39 remaining, the Ducks went for it on fourth-and-1 from their own 29-yard line. Nix was stopped for a 1-yard loss on a keeper.

Oregon State took advantage, with Newell scoring on a 6-yard run with 8:11 left to give the Beavers their first lead of the second half.

The Ducks marched to Oregon State’s 3-yard line with three minutes left, but Nix’s fourth-down pass for Troy Franklin fell incomplete and the Beavers ran out the clock.

Ben Gulbranson, who started his seventh straight game at quarterback with Chance Nolan sidelined by a neck injury, completed just 6 of 13 passes for 60 yards with two interceptions.

But Gulbranson scored on a pair of 1-yard runs, the latter with 12:31 remaining, to pull the Beavers within 34-31.

Nix threw a 9-yard scoring strike to Franklin with 14 seconds remaining in the second quarter to give the Ducks a 14-10 lead following a back-and-forth half, sparking a run of 24 unanswered points.

The Ducks seemed to pull away in the third quarter on short touchdown runs by Jordan James and Noah Whittington.

Camden Lewis added a 42-yard field goal to give the Ducks a 31-10 lead with 4:46 left in the third quarter.

The Beavers rallied — entirely on the ground.

Oregon State got a 4-yard TD run from Deshaun Fenwick to stop the Ducks’ run before Lewis kicked a 24-yarder to make it 34-17 with 14:57 to go.

Newell scored on a 15-yard run and the Beavers got the ball back on Oregon’s 2-yard line after Ducks punter Alex Bales bobbled a snap. That set up Gulbranson’s second TD.

–Field Level Media

Nov 19, 2022; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Trenton Bourguet (16) against the Oregon State Beavers during the first half at Sun Devil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Damien Martinez helps No. 23 Oregon State sail past Arizona State

Damien Martinez rushed for 138 yards on 22 carries with two touchdowns to lead No. 23 Oregon State to a 31-7 victory Saturday over Arizona State at Tempe, Ariz.

Oregon State (8-3, 5-3 Pac-12) has won five of its last six games.

Arizona State (3-8, 2-6) has lost four of its last five.

Oregon State’s Ben Gulbranson completed 15 of 21 pass attempts for 188 yards and a touchdown.

Tristan Gebbia entered with 5:20 left and completed all three of his passes for 33 yards.

Trenton Bourguet started for Arizona State after suffering a lower-leg injury at Washington State last week that forced him to an early exit.

Bourguet completed 20 of 32 pass attempts for 122 yards without a touchdown or interception.

Xazavian Valladay rushed for 109 yards on 13 carries for the Sun Devils.

Oregon State had touchdown drives on possessions to end the first half and open the second to take a 21-7 lead.

Gulbranson’s 21-yard pass to Jack Velling with one minute left in the first half concluded a 75-yard possession and Martinez capped an 83-yard, 10-play drive to start the second half as the Beavers took a 21-7 lead.

Martinez opened the scoring with a 5-yard rush on Oregon State’s first possession of the game.

Xazavian Valladay tied the game at 7 with an 11-yard rushing touchdown with 1:53 left in the half.

Oregon State then took only 53 seconds, capped by Gulbranson’s touchdown pass to Velling. Gulbranson completed a 35-yard pass to Velling during that drive.

Velling finished with three receptions for 74 yards.

Gulbranson’s 8-yard touchdown run with 10 seconds left in the third quarter increased the lead to 28-7.

Everett Hayes’ 26-yard field goal with 9:38 left capped the scoring.

Arizona State finished with 276 yards of total offense and had only 13 first downs compared to 28 for the Beavers. Oregon State had 443 yards.

The Sun Devils had only 70 yards of total offense in the second half with three first downs.

Arizona State did not go beyond the Oregon State 41-yard line in the second half.

–Field Level Media

Oct 1, 2022; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) catches a touchdown pass against Oregon State Beavers linebacker Cade Brownholtz (29) in the first quarter at Rice-Eccles Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-USA TODAY Sports

No. 12 Utah proves to be too much for Oregon State

Cameron Rising totaled four touchdowns, Clark Phillips III intercepted three passes, and Utah’s red-zone defense stepped up to power the No. 12 Utes to a 42-16 Pac-12 Conference win over visiting Oregon State on Saturday at Salt Lake City.

Utah (4-1, 2-0 Pac-12) jumped to a 21-7 lead early second quarter on a pair of Rising touchdowns: A 19-yard pass to Jaylen Dixon and a 24-yard run for the quarterback’s first rushing score of the season. Those scores bookended a Phillips interception of Oregon State’s Chance Nolan that was returned for a TD.

The 38-yard scoring return was Phillips’ second interception of Nolan in the first quarter, leading to the quarterback’s replacement by freshman Ben Gulbranson.

Oregon State (3-2, 0-2) mounted three consecutive drives with Gulbranson behind center, but could not reach the end zone. Utah’s defense allowed only a trio of Atticus Sappington field goals.

The Beavers moved into the red zone a fourth time and were threatening at the 8-yard line in the third quarter, but Gulbranson was intercepted by R.J. Hubert in the end zone. Hubert returned the pick 70 yards to change the completely of the game.

Utah capitalized on the short field with Dixon carrying for a 22-yard score, changing a potential one-possession game into a 35-16 lead over the course of three snaps.

The Utes defense then made a fourth-down stop on the ensuing Oregon State drive, and Rising punctuated his standout day with a 4-yard touchdown pass to Dalton Kincaid six plays later.

Rising completed 19-of-25 passes for 199 yards, spreading his three scoring tosses to three different targets. Devaughn Vele, who had a game-high 94 receiving yards on seven catches, hauled in his 16-yard score from Rising in the third quarter.

Rising also rushed for a game-high for 73 yards on seven carries. Phillips capped his day stymying yet another Oregon State red-zone opportunity with an interception of Gulbranson in the fourth quarter.

–Field Level Media

Sep 24, 2022; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Utah Utes defensive tackle Junior Tafuna (58) celebrates after tackling Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Emory Jones (5) during the second half at Sun Devil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports

No. 12 Utah hosts dangerous Oregon State

After a near-upset of then-No. 7 Southern Cal, Oregon State will have another opportunity for a statement victory within the Pac-12 this Saturday but must do so on the road against No. 12 Utah.

The Beavers (3-1, 0-1) lost 17-14 to the Trojans last week while the Utes (3-0, 1-0) opened conference play with a 34-13 victory at Arizona State.

Oregon State could not overcome the four interceptions thrown by Chance Nolan against Southern Cal. His last interception came on the Beavers’ final possession at their 46-yard line.

“You play quarterback and have a couple errors, those stand out,” Oregon State coach Jonathan Smith said. “We’ve got to be able to be smarter with the football.”

Nolan was hit by a Southern Cal defender while passing on three of the four interceptions.

“We’ve got to protect him better,” Smith said. “Also need to understand the situation. Sometimes a sack is better than an interception.”

Utah was triumphant at Arizona State in the Sun Devils’ first game without terminated coach Herm Edwards, but the Utes suffered a major blow when all-conference tight end candidate Brant Kuithe went down with a season-ending lower-leg injury.

In 51 career games, Kuithe caught 148 passes for 1,882 yards and 16 touchdowns. He ranks eighth overall in school history in receptions, marking the most by a Utah tight end since 1996. This season, Kuithe led the Utes in catches (19) and was No. 2 in receiving yards (206), with three touchdowns.

“That’s a big blow for our offense,” Utah coach Kyle Whittingham said. “He was a huge part of what we do offensively. … We’ll miss him. He’s a great leader and a great person. It breaks your heart to see something like that happen to a senior.”

Whittingham mentioned that Kuithe is within the four-game redshirting window (one-third of the season) and has the option to return for a fifth season.

Dalton Kincaid, who caught two touchdown passes against Arizona State, becomes the No. 1 tight end. He has 16 receptions for 240 yards with four touchdowns this season.

Two matters of concern for Oregon State include the Utes’ pass rush and rushing defense.

Nolan struggled when he was under pressure from the Trojans’ defensive line, as Oregon State rushed for a season-low 153 yards against them.

Utah, meantime, sacked Arizona State’s Emory Jones five times, two by Gabe Reid. The Utes held Arizona State to 6 rushing yards.

The Beavers often rotate running backs Deshaun Fenwick, Jam Griffin and Damien Martinez, who have accounted for 499 yards rushing and seven TDs in the four games.

“Early in the game, we do like to get a little rotation going so they cannot get worn out in the second half, if we get a guy with a hot hand,” Smith said. “I don’t think it’s a hindrance. If a guy continues to separate the next three, four games, then we’ll have the one back. But we feel good with all three guys.”

–Field Level Media

Sep 17, 2022; Los Angeles, California, USA; Southern California Trojans quarterback Caleb Williams (13) carries the ball against the Fresno State Bulldogs] in the first half at United Airlines Field at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

No. 7 USC, Oregon State clash in battle of unbeatens

Seventh-ranked Southern California heads to Corvallis, Ore., on Saturday for a meeting with undefeated and upset-minded Oregon State in Pac-12 Conference play.

USC (3-0, 1-0 Pac-12) was impressive again last week, rolling past Fresno State 45-17. The Bulldogs are a mutual opponent shared with Oregon State (3-0, 0-0).

USC balanced its passing attack, which has been prolific on the arm of quarterback Caleb Williams, with an effective ground game against Fresno State.

Running backs Austin Jones and Travis Dye each rushed for more than nine yards per carry en route to 110 and 102 yards, respectively. Their combined efforts marked the first time USC had two 100-plus-yard rushers in the same game since November 2018 – when Aca’Cedric Ware (205 yards) and Vavae Malepeai (101) starred in the Trojans’ last visit to Oregon State’s Reser Stadium.

The 38-21 USC win in 2018 came against a much different Beavers team in the program’s first year under coach Jonathan Smith. Oregon State snapped its eight-year bowl-game drought last season, is currently off to its best start since 2014, and last September, the Beavers ended a pair of losing streaks against the Trojans.

The 45-27 Oregon State romp stopped a skid of four straight losses to USC and marked their first win at Los Angeles since 1960. That night was a breakout performance for Oregon State combo linebacker-running back Jack Colletto, who rushed for a pair of touchdowns out of goal-line Wildcat sets.

“They do a very good job with their personnel groupings,” first-year USC coach Lincoln Riley said. “They’re very creative with the personnel they use. They’ve certainly got a system they believe in and style of offense they believe in.”

Colletto remains a weapon in the Beavers’ offense this season, most notably scoring out of the same set on the final play of Oregon State’s 35-32 Week 2 win at Fresno State. However, expect plenty of entirely new looks between Oregon State and USC this time around.

“The quarterback (Williams) can be accurate, move his feet,” Smith said. “The receiver play (is) dangerous, bunch of different weapons. Got a couple good backs. So this is the best offense we’ve played so far.”

Each of those position groups contributing to USC’s 50.7-point per game output (6th in FBS) feature prominent transfer talent: Williams and receiver Mario Williams from Oklahoma, reigning Biletnikoff Award-winning receiver Jordan Addison out of Pitt, Jones and Dye coming into the backfield from Stanford and Oregon respectively.

The influx of new skill-position talent has USC in pursuit of its first 4-0 start since 2017, as well as its dominance in the turnover battle. The Trojans have 10 takeaways with no turnovers, the best margin in the nation.

USC aims to continue its clean offensive play with “a big plus,” on the line according to Riley. Left tackle Courtland Ford returned to practice Tuesday from an injury sustained Week 2 at Stanford.

However, the Trojans lost wide receiver Gary Bryant Jr., who Riley revealed plans to redshirt this season. Oregon State, whose offense ranks 13th in FBS with 45.7 points per game, will be without tight end Luke Musgrave.

–Field Level Media

Sep 17, 2022; Portland, Oregon, USA; Oregon State Beavers wide receiver Tre'Shaun Harrison (0) is grabbed by Montana State Bobcats safety Jeffrey Manning Jr. (5) during the first half at Providence Park. Mandatory Credit: Soobum Im-USA TODAY Sports

Oregon State cruises to 68-28 win over Montana State

Oregon State steadily built a 34-14 halftime lead against Montana State on the strength of a big passing night from quarterback Chance Nolan, and the Beavers cruised from there to win 68-28 in Portland, Ore., Saturday evening.

In a neutral setting at Providence Park, Nolan completed 19-of-25 passes for 276 yards and four touchdowns, while teammate Tre’Shaun Harrison caught eight of his passes for 133 yards and a touchdown.

The Bobcats were paced offensively by Tommy Mellott, who rumbled for 135 yards on 18 carries, and Sean Chambers, who scored three times.

Each team was also lifted by plays on special teams, with the Bobcats’ Marqui Johnson returning a kickoff 98 yards for a touchdown with his team trailing 21-7 in the second quarter.

Not to be outdone, the Beavers’ Anthony Gould scored on an 80-yard punt return touchdown in the third quarter, and teammate Silas Bolden added an 80-yard kick return to set up Damien Martinez’s 7-yard touchdown run later in the period, putting the Beavers up 47-21.

Gould finished with two receiving touchdowns to go along with the punt return TD.

The teams traded scores early.

Oregon State drove 90 yards in seven plays on its first drive of the game, scoring on a Deshaun Fenwick 25-yard run.

Montana State answered in 10 plays, finishing a 66-yard drive with a Chambers 7-yard run.

The Beavers went up 14-7 when Nolan connected with Harrison on a 6-yard touchdown pass after a 14-play drive.

A Ryan Cooper Jr. interception set up a Nolan 1-yard touchdown before Johnson’s return made the score 21-14.

Nolan tossed two touchdowns to close the first half, 24 yards to Bolden and 9 yards to Gould.

At 40-14 with 7:21 left in the third, Chambers scored again on an 8-yard rush.

Gould grabbed his second touchdown reception from 17 yards out with 1:09 left in the third.

Jam Griffin ripped off a 23-yard touchdown run, Chambers scored from a yard out and Kanoa Shannon had a 3-yard TD run to complete the scoring in the fourth.

–Field Level Media

Dec 18, 2021; Inglewood, CA, USA; Utah State Aggies wide receiver Deven Thompkins (13) scores on a 62-yard touchdown reception against the Oregon State Beavers in the first half of the 2021 LA Bowl at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Cooper Legas leads Utah State to victory over Oregon State in LA Bowl

A quarterback who entered the game having never thrown a collegiate pass turned the tide in the LA Bowl. Utah State backup quarterback Cooper Legas replaced injured Logan Bonner in the second quarter, and his first career pass went for a game-tying 62-yard touchdown pass to Deven Thompkins.

Legas went on to finish 11 of 20 passing for 171 yards and led Utah State to a 24-13 win over Oregon State.

In the process, the Aggies (11-3) tied their school record for wins in a season and capped off Blake Anderson’s first season as head coach with the program’s first bowl win since 2018.

Utah State running back and Oregon State transfer Calvin Tyler Jr. also played a crucial role, rushing for 120 yards and a touchdown against his old team.

Oregon State (7-6) got off to an explosive start by driving 71 yards for a touchdown in just three plays on the opening possession, but the offense stalled out from there. Quarterback Chance Nolan did complete passes to 10 different receivers for 263 yards, but a limited running game and consistent struggles blocking Utah State’s pass rushers — the Aggies finished the game with four sacks — handicapped the Beavers on offense.

Utah State overcame the early Oregon State score to tie the game on Legas’ touchdown pass to Thompkins, and it took the lead for good on Tyler’s 15-yard touchdown run with 4:24 remaining in the second quarter. Another field goal extended the lead to 17-10, and then Legas found Brandon Bowling for a 5-yard touchdown pass that doubled the lead in the third quarter.

The Beavers made a dent in the deficit with a field goal early in the fourth quarter and got three more possessions with the score at 24-13, but all three resulted in turnovers. A fumble, a fourth-and-13 attempt that fell short and resulted in a turnover on downs and an interception clinched the game for Utah State.

The game was Oregon State’s first trip to a bowl game since 2013.

–Field Level Media