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Thoughts from yesterday. MY Perspective

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Comments

  • BennyBeaverBennyBeaver Member Posts: 13,346
    Baseman said:

    I logged onto the Fishduck forum this morning, as I have been doing for a number of years now, to read my fellow fan's observations in our most recent loss to the Huskies, and take solace in the age old adage that misery loves company.

    It is a little chilly, cold, and overcast here, accentuating my already overwhelming feelings of depression and disappointment, which I failed to drown last night despite an epic bender I went on with a buddy of mine last night after the game.

    I am an Oregon alum, and a fan, I've been watching the Ducks now for over thirty years, and I can say from the bottom of my heart that this was absolutely one of the most heart rending losses I have ever experienced as a Duck fan; and I have witnessed far too many of them over the years.

    I was in Seattle when they got throttled by the Huskies 38-17 back in October of 1990. I watched a game but overmatched Duck team get shelled by Penn St. 38-20 in their first Rose Bowl in nearly forty years on New Year's Day in 1995. I watched them lose a heartbreaker to UCLA in OT in 1998. I watched them drop three straight and fall out of national championship contention after Dennis Dixon tore his ACL in a painful road loss to Arizona in 2007. I watched them lose yet another desultory and disappointing Rose Bowl after an epic season in 2009, and then lose an utterly heartbreaking National Championship appearance the following year; a game so full of blown calls, missed opportunities, and just plain bad luck I was literally sick to my stomach afterward and convinced my team was cursed.

    This loss was one of the worst ever.

    I wanted this one about as bad as I can ever remember. The revenge match against the Huskies, on the road, with pole position for the PAC Championship in the last year of the conference on the line, and a berth in the National Championship Playoff to boot. College GameDay in town and virtually everyone picking the Huskies. A golden opportunity to prove them all wrong and announce our arrival as the front runner for the PAC Championship a Playoff Contender.

    I thought we had this one. There had to have been at least a dozen moments in this game, or more, where we could have won it. But a bad call here, a bad bounce there, and just plain bad luck seemed to conspire to send us home with a loss: the ref's not throwing the flag on the blatantly obvious late hit on Nix in the 1st half. The uncalled PI on Holden in the endzone. Not kicking the FG to close out the half. Three turnovers on downs, including a first and goal from the Husky 10, a first and ten on the Husky 15, and a first and ten from midfield late in the 4th quarter, where a conversion would have likely salted away the win.

    I yelled, I screamed, and I cursed. I begged the football gods to give us a friggin' break, all to no avail.

    There have been games so emotionally wrenching where, in the wee hours of the morning when I am in the semi-conscious stupor of sleep that sets in when one has had way too much to drink, I actually dream that the game is still on, that this issue is still in doubt, and that the Ducks still have a shot. And then I wake up and realize, after the fogginess dissipates, that reality is still staring at me face stone faced and unflinching, that we lost, and there isn't a damned thing in the world I can do about it.

    There are five stages of grief I am told: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance.

    As I read some of the more strident comments here on the Forum, and the inevitable could, shoulda, woulda armchair, Sunday morning quarterbacking, it strikes me that some of us are still possibly in the Bargaining Stage of Grief, and maybe its best we move on to Depression, and then Acceptance.

    I know that Lanning arguably should have kicked those field goals. Maybe we should have run the ball more inside the red zone. Maybe Nix should have thown the ball to the pylon the second the ball was snapped on that 4th and goal play. And maybe Lanning should have punted at midfield with 2:00 to go in the 4th. Maybe if they did these things they would have won.

    Everyone on this Forum is entitled to handle their grief in their own way and welcome to their own opinion. My personal opinion is the Ducks lost due to bad luck, plain and simple. And you cannot Bargain with bad luck.

    And, as a long suffering Duck fan who's become accustomed to dealing with disappointment over all the heart-rending losses over all these long decades, I am moving on from Depression to Acceptance here.

    They lost. I accept that. And letting go of the burden of bargaining over how we could have won that game, I instead find myself buoyed by what we actually accomplished, and where we are headed as a team and as a program.

    They lost. But I am content they gave it their all and left everything out on the field yesterday. They outgained the Huskies by over a hundred yards, mounted an epic comeback from a double digit deficit, and made an amazing goal line stand from the 1 yard line against one of the best offenses in the country. They never quit.

    They played well enough to win, and were it not for a bounce of the ball here, or a bad call there, they would have won, and the whole world knows it. All the talking heads on TV are talking about this game as an instant classic, and virtually all of them agree that this game could have easily gone either way. There was respect for the Ducks as legit National Championship Contenders this morning. There was even healthy respect from the Husky fanbase, many of whom are giving the Ducks their props for their performance yesterday, which is a rarity in this rivalry.

    I am reminded of how I felt leaving Husky Stadium all those years ago back in 1990, after the Huskies had throttled the Ducks by three touchdowns in a game that was never really competitive. The Huskies were just bigger, stronger, faster. We just didn't have the athletes to compete with them. It's like they were in a different league. A legit National Championship Contender


    "They never had a chance" I thought.

    What I would have given then to have the team we have now. They are bigger, stronger, faster. We have the athletes now. The talent is off the charts. We have the horses to hang with anyone in the country, and the Huskies, fielding one of the best teams they've ever had in the history of their storied program, barely escaped with their lives yesterday by the skin of their teeth, thanks to a handful of lucky breaks and bounces.

    This Duck team is a National Championship Caliber team. And while they may have lost yesterday that was one of the grittiest, gutsiest performances I have ever had the privilege of witnessing in my nearly 35 years as a long suffering Duck fan.

    I don't know if they'll win a National Championship this year. But if they keep bringing it, bringing it the way they brought it yesterday, and if they keep playing with a chip on their shoulder, and leaving it all out on the field, like they did against the Huskies yesterday, they sure as hell have a shot. And that's about as much as anyone can reasonably ask of them.

    And if they do that -win, lose, or draw- they'll be my Champion.

    They'll be OUR Champion

    Disagree
  • jecorneljecornel Member Posts: 9,727
    For the record baseman, there were numerous holds by the Oregon o-line not called and the unsportsmanlike conduct call on Jackson was trash that extended a 3rd and 10 and eventual 8 pts for your beloved ducks.
  • backthepackbackthepack Member Posts: 19,861

    I keep reading about how Oregon played a nearly flawless game.... clearly a national championship-caliber team. A team that excelled in all facets of the game. A team that will surely win out and have a clear advantage in a rematch



    Well, UW played a mediocre game, had some poor execution and playcalling, left points on the field

    AND THEY STILL FUCKING WON. Not only that, but had 2 chances to go up by 3 scores and more or less put the game away.

    They played their A game, we played our B/B- game without our second most dynamic offensive skill player. We were the ones with the chance to make it a laugher. Winners win.
  • longduckdonglongduckdong Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 1,031 Swaye's Wigwam
    Baseman said:

    I logged onto the Fishduck forum this morning, as I have been doing for a number of years now, to read my fellow fan's observations in our most recent loss to the Huskies, and take solace in the age old adage that misery loves company.

    It is a little chilly, cold, and overcast here, accentuating my already overwhelming feelings of depression and disappointment, which I failed to drown last night despite an epic bender I went on with a buddy of mine last night after the game.

    I am an Oregon alum, and a fan, I've been watching the Ducks now for over thirty years, and I can say from the bottom of my heart that this was absolutely one of the most heart rending losses I have ever experienced as a Duck fan; and I have witnessed far too many of them over the years.

    I was in Seattle when they got throttled by the Huskies 38-17 back in October of 1990. I watched a game but overmatched Duck team get shelled by Penn St. 38-20 in their first Rose Bowl in nearly forty years on New Year's Day in 1995. I watched them lose a heartbreaker to UCLA in OT in 1998. I watched them drop three straight and fall out of national championship contention after Dennis Dixon tore his ACL in a painful road loss to Arizona in 2007. I watched them lose yet another desultory and disappointing Rose Bowl after an epic season in 2009, and then lose an utterly heartbreaking National Championship appearance the following year; a game so full of blown calls, missed opportunities, and just plain bad luck I was literally sick to my stomach afterward and convinced my team was cursed.

    This loss was one of the worst ever.

    I wanted this one about as bad as I can ever remember. The revenge match against the Huskies, on the road, with pole position for the PAC Championship in the last year of the conference on the line, and a berth in the National Championship Playoff to boot. College GameDay in town and virtually everyone picking the Huskies. A golden opportunity to prove them all wrong and announce our arrival as the front runner for the PAC Championship a Playoff Contender.

    I thought we had this one. There had to have been at least a dozen moments in this game, or more, where we could have won it. But a bad call here, a bad bounce there, and just plain bad luck seemed to conspire to send us home with a loss: the ref's not throwing the flag on the blatantly obvious late hit on Nix in the 1st half. The uncalled PI on Holden in the endzone. Not kicking the FG to close out the half. Three turnovers on downs, including a first and goal from the Husky 10, a first and ten on the Husky 15, and a first and ten from midfield late in the 4th quarter, where a conversion would have likely salted away the win.

    I yelled, I screamed, and I cursed. I begged the football gods to give us a friggin' break, all to no avail.

    There have been games so emotionally wrenching where, in the wee hours of the morning when I am in the semi-conscious stupor of sleep that sets in when one has had way too much to drink, I actually dream that the game is still on, that this issue is still in doubt, and that the Ducks still have a shot. And then I wake up and realize, after the fogginess dissipates, that reality is still staring at me face stone faced and unflinching, that we lost, and there isn't a damned thing in the world I can do about it.

    There are five stages of grief I am told: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance.

    As I read some of the more strident comments here on the Forum, and the inevitable could, shoulda, woulda armchair, Sunday morning quarterbacking, it strikes me that some of us are still possibly in the Bargaining Stage of Grief, and maybe its best we move on to Depression, and then Acceptance.

    I know that Lanning arguably should have kicked those field goals. Maybe we should have run the ball more inside the red zone. Maybe Nix should have thown the ball to the pylon the second the ball was snapped on that 4th and goal play. And maybe Lanning should have punted at midfield with 2:00 to go in the 4th. Maybe if they did these things they would have won.

    Everyone on this Forum is entitled to handle their grief in their own way and welcome to their own opinion. My personal opinion is the Ducks lost due to bad luck, plain and simple. And you cannot Bargain with bad luck.

    And, as a long suffering Duck fan who's become accustomed to dealing with disappointment over all the heart-rending losses over all these long decades, I am moving on from Depression to Acceptance here.

    They lost. I accept that. And letting go of the burden of bargaining over how we could have won that game, I instead find myself buoyed by what we actually accomplished, and where we are headed as a team and as a program.

    They lost. But I am content they gave it their all and left everything out on the field yesterday. They outgained the Huskies by over a hundred yards, mounted an epic comeback from a double digit deficit, and made an amazing goal line stand from the 1 yard line against one of the best offenses in the country. They never quit.

    They played well enough to win, and were it not for a bounce of the ball here, or a bad call there, they would have won, and the whole world knows it. All the talking heads on TV are talking about this game as an instant classic, and virtually all of them agree that this game could have easily gone either way. There was respect for the Ducks as legit National Championship Contenders this morning. There was even healthy respect from the Husky fanbase, many of whom are giving the Ducks their props for their performance yesterday, which is a rarity in this rivalry.

    I am reminded of how I felt leaving Husky Stadium all those years ago back in 1990, after the Huskies had throttled the Ducks by three touchdowns in a game that was never really competitive. The Huskies were just bigger, stronger, faster. We just didn't have the athletes to compete with them. It's like they were in a different league. A legit National Championship Contender


    "They never had a chance" I thought.

    What I would have given then to have the team we have now. They are bigger, stronger, faster. We have the athletes now. The talent is off the charts. We have the horses to hang with anyone in the country, and the Huskies, fielding one of the best teams they've ever had in the history of their storied program, barely escaped with their lives yesterday by the skin of their teeth, thanks to a handful of lucky breaks and bounces.

    This Duck team is a National Championship Caliber team. And while they may have lost yesterday that was one of the grittiest, gutsiest performances I have ever had the privilege of witnessing in my nearly 35 years as a long suffering Duck fan.

    I don't know if they'll win a National Championship this year. But if they keep bringing it, bringing it the way they brought it yesterday, and if they keep playing with a chip on their shoulder, and leaving it all out on the field, like they did against the Huskies yesterday, they sure as hell have a shot. And that's about as much as anyone can reasonably ask of them.

    And if they do that -win, lose, or draw- they'll be my Champion.

    They'll be OUR Champion

    This asshole has to be trolling. Reads like a Hallmark Card.
  • DerekJohnsonDerekJohnson Administrator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 63,591 Founders Club

    This is the gayest thing I've ever read

    in a lifetime filled with reading gay posts
  • DerekJohnsonDerekJohnson Administrator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 63,591 Founders Club

    An eloquent man in great pain

    Stop plagiarism my shit, fucko
  • DerekJohnsonDerekJohnson Administrator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 63,591 Founders Club
    I don't recall any calls going against Oregon.
  • BeerThirtyBeerThirty Member Posts: 2,465
    My 1st impression is our D sucks dead dick. Changes need to be made
  • dirtysouwfdawgdirtysouwfdawg Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 13,134 Swaye's Wigwam

    My 1st impression is our D sucks dead dick. Changes need to be made

    @trublue can you please define “dead dick” for those of us not in the know?
  • BasemanBaseman Member Posts: 12,366
    edited October 2023
    PurpleJ said:

    pawz said:
    Yeah but how many HEISMANS does UW have????! That’s what I THOUGHT!!!!!
    I forgot about that Quook. J and i were reminding the exiting QUOOKS they had NO NATTYs after the game and some fag drops, "how many Heismans do you have?" Sick Burn!🔥
  • BeerThirtyBeerThirty Member Posts: 2,465

    My 1st impression is our D sucks dead dick. Changes need to be made

    @trublue can you please define “dead dick” for those of us not in the know?


    @trublue is Oliver Stone? Wow
  • DawgDaze71DawgDaze71 Member Posts: 708
    Nice to know but a lot of us shrugging. Not to take anything away from Oregon but that wasn't the best performance we've seen from Washington under this staff. I don't know what Grubb was doing 8 minutes into the 3rd trying to go for the knockout blow when we were doing fine with a pass/run balance.

    I've got zero concerns with playing Oregon. We didn't do a good job with our TE play, we didn't try to mitigate DL pressure with RB wheel routes. Other than 4th Oregon played nearly a perfect game and still lost. Washington was far from playing a perfect game. I'd be more than happy to see and settle it in Vegas.
  • dirtysouwfdawgdirtysouwfdawg Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 13,134 Swaye's Wigwam

    My 1st impression is our D sucks dead dick. Changes need to be made

    @trublue can you please define “dead dick” for those of us not in the know?
    FUCK OFF, FAGGOT!

    You’re the one with the obsession about cadavers, Tacoma Pussy Boy.

    Your boy who murdered his girlfriend and was charged with Tampering with a Corpse actually burned her corpse.

    Mr. FAFO immediately thought it was necrophilia.

    Meet up me in ID. I’m old and feeble.

    We do have firearms and backhoes and know how to use them, though.


    @PurpleBaze
    Speaking of malarkey I’ve resorted to saying shit from the bored IRL to keep my self semi amused with real life. Pretty depressing if you ask me…

    Yesterday I was playing giant jenga with the heathens and I told them I’ll never play with them again because of all their malarkey.

    This morning I was talking with someone who took off Friday and I asked if they were tanned, rested, and ready to go.

    I hate all of you but mostly I hate myself for allowing things to get this far. Oh, well. Anyone have any other great ideas?
  • CFetters_Nacho_LoverCFetters_Nacho_Lover Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 30,432 Founders Club

    My 1st impression is our D sucks dead dick. Changes need to be made

    @trublue can you please define “dead dick” for those of us not in the know?
    FUCK OFF, FAGGOT!

    You’re the one with the obsession about cadavers, Tacoma Pussy Boy.

    Your boy who murdered his girlfriend and was charged with Tampering with a Corpse actually burned her corpse.

    Mr. FAFO immediately thought it was necrophilia.

    Meet up me in ID. I’m old and feeble.

    We do have firearms and backhoes and know how to use them, though.


    @PurpleBaze
    Speaking of malarkey I’ve resorted to saying shit from the bored IRL to keep my self semi amused with real life. Pretty depressing if you ask me…

    Yesterday I was playing giant jenga with the heathens and I told them I’ll never play with them again because of all their malarkey.

    This morning I was talking with someone who took off Friday and I asked if they were tanned, rested, and ready to go.

    I hate all of you but mostly I hate myself for allowing things to get this far. Oh, well. Anyone have any other great ideas?
    You could start abbreviating entire sentences in your work emails

    YCSAESIYWE
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