LAS VEGAS — This is what the Pac-12 could have always been — both over the last decade and in the future.
For over three and a half hours Friday night, the eyes of the college football world were trained on Allegiant Stadium. They witnessed two national title contenders led by a pair of soon-to-be Heisman finalists — Washington‘s Michael Penix Jr. and Oregon‘s Bo Nix — trade blows in the most high-stakes Pac-12 game of all time.
This was the sport at its best, and more than 11.1 million people tuned in on ABC at its peak as Washington became the first team in conference history to cap an undefeated season with a win in the conference title game, 34-31. Never mind who — or if anyone — was handing Huskies coach Kalen DeBoer the trophy, for these players and this team, the purple and white confetti that fell from the rafters will be a more integral memory for their future selves.
But for those without a vested interest in either team’s success, commissioner George Kliavkoff’s presence on that stage served as yet another reminder of the game’s historical importance: It was the day Pac-12 football was put to rest.
While there were others who contributed significantly to the conference’s downfall, history won’t forget who was in charge when it all came crashing down. That’s why it was awkward to see Kliavkoff involved in the trophy presentation in any capacity. There’s nothing that requires a conference commissioner to hand the trophy to the winning coach, and any idea that some kind of tradition needed to be honored is fantastically ironic given how many of them are about to fade away.
When Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark was booed mercilessly on stage the next day by Texas fans, it was earned given the adversarial tone he’s taken with the Longhorns with their looming departure for the SEC. He wore it like a badge of honor. When his conference was on shaky ground, he charted a path forward. Kliavkoff did not.
It should be noted Washington and Oregon had the power to stabilize the conference. With college football about to expand the playoff, the Huskies and Ducks would have been well-positioned with the looming 12-team format to be regular participants, finishing the season No. 2 and No. 8, respectively, and had that structure been in place this year, they likely both would have been selected.
Yet, despite a future in which they could have been the dominant forces on the West Coast, they essentially looked at where the Pac-12 leadership was taking the conference and decided they were better off taking 50 cents on the dollar within the Big Ten with the bonus of a much more difficult path to the playoff. Maybe the move exceeds even their best internal expectations, but there will also exist a sense of what could have been?
After all, the Pac-12 put on one of the best and most exciting overall conference performances this season.
Either way, there was Kliavkoff on Friday night to hand off the trophy like some kind of going away present.
“I’m wondering why he’s still around, at all,” one longtime Pac-12 staff member told ESPN at the game. “If letting your organization die off isn’t grounds to be fired for cause, I don’t know what is.”
They were only sort of joking.
THIS WAS THE type of season that might have saved the Pac-12 had it occurred even two years ago. That certainly would have been the case had they had come in consistent intervals during the playoff era.
“The league was as tough as — and I’m going based off of what a lot of the people who have been around here and some of the coaches who have been in the league for a long time say too, because I’ve only been in it two years — but they said it’s the best that they’ve ever seen it,” DeBoer said.
This is a conference that began the year with arguably the deepest group of quarterbacks in college football history, had nine different teams spend time in the AP Top 25 and had not only the best collective nonconference winning percentage (.806) of any conference in the country, but the best winning percentage (.583) against Power 5 opposition.
It was such a unique year for the Pac-12 that the coach of the worst team in the conference, Colorado‘s Deion Sanders, was named the Sports Illustrated Sportsperson of the Year after guiding the Buffaloes to a 1-8 conference record. Not only was Coach Prime’s Boulder takeover the biggest story in college football for about a month, it was culturally relevant in a way few college sports stories have ever been.
It was so deep at quarterback that Caleb Williams, the reigning Heisman Trophy winner and projected No. 1 overall pick in the NFL draft, was relegated to an honorable mention on the all-conference team. And it wasn’t because his play necessarily regressed: Williams ranked seventh in the country in passing yards (3,633) and his touchdown to interception ratio (30-to-5) was among the best in the nation. More than anything, Williams’ chance to secure additional accolades was sabotaged by the fact that the rest of the Pac-12 offenses made light work of his team’s defense, and that was never more evident than when USC faced Utah.
Utah, the two-time defending conference champion, spent the offseason preparing as if two-year starter Cam Rising — the first-team All-Pac-12 quarterback in 2021 — would be back from a gruesome knee injury suffered in last year’s Rose Bowl, but that was not the case. His was one of several key injuries that prevented the Utes from mounting a serious bid for a third straight crown, but he will return next season as Utah begins life in the Big 12.
But even a depleted, offensively challenged Utes team without their premier QB remained USC’s kryptonite as backup quarterback Bryson Barnes outdueled Williams in Los Angeles.
“They’ve got a Heisman Trophy winner at quarterback, so they’re gonna make some things, and that’s just the way it is,” Utah coach Kyle Whittingham said after the game. “But we’ve got ourselves a pig farmer at quarterback, so we’re proud of that guy, too.”
With Williams’ Heisman campaign derailed (USC finished the season 7-5), Nix’s and Penix’s campaigns remained strong as the Pac-12 would end up having a pair of Heisman finalists for the first time since 2010, not to mention the award’s likely winner — LSU’s Jayden Daniels — began his career at Arizona State.
Arizona freshman QB Noah Fifita might have also received Heisman consideration had he been the Wildcats’ starter from the season opener. Fifita didn’t start his first game until the Wildcats’ fifth game of the season, but in October and November — as Arizona closed its season with a six-game winning streak — Fifita was among the best players in the country. In those two months, Fifita ranked No. 7 in FBS with 2,214 passing yards and had 20 touchdown passes to four interceptions.
Ahead of Arizona’s move to the Big 12 next season, coach Jedd Fisch is exuding optimism.
“If you just go down the list of guys that played [in 2023] that were a part of [Arizona’s 2022 recruiting class], there should be an ESPN ’30 for 30′ done about it,” Fisch said. “If we all stay together and the amount of games that I think they can win this year and next will be a story of college football.”
If only that hope could have been for the Pac-12.
But for all the on-field highlights, there remains the ongoing lawsuit from Washington State and Oregon State. In September, the conference filed to dismiss WSU and OSU’s lawsuit that would have given them control of the Pac-12 board. Then, after WSU and OSU were granted control in Washington superior court, the conference joined the departing schools — led by UW for jurisdictional reasons — in asking for review in the state supreme court.
As that continues to play out in the courts, this season isn’t quite yet done in regards to the conference’s legacy.
WHILE BOWL SEASON doesn’t carry the same gravitas as it once did thanks to the transfer portal and trend for NFL prospects to sit out less consequential games, Washington’s performance in the playoff will have a major factor in how this season is ultimately remembered.
“Us representing the Pac-12 here in the last year, it’s an honor,” DeBoer said. “It’s something that, obviously, we take a lot of pride in as far as representing, but we’d love to represent the Pac-12 here in this last year in a great way.”
All year, DeBoer stressed the importance of his players being able to enjoy their success.
After the Huskies’ first win against Oregon this season, DeBoer said, “This is what coaching is all about. Trying to have an environment where they can have these types of opportunities and experiences and moments. It’s just super special.”
It’s hard to imagine something more special than what the Huskies have the chance to do now. They are the first Pac-12 team to make multiple playoff appearances having been the last team in the conference to do so, in 2016.
Not since USC won the BCS National Championship game in 2004 has the Pac-12 claimed a national title in football, and while that one was later vacated by the NCAA, how it is officially recognized does nothing to diminish how that Matt Leinart and Reggie Bush-led team is remembered.
Starting with Texas in the Allstate Sugar Bowl on New Year’s Day, Washington is two wins away from what amounts to Pac-12 immortality.
About an hour after Washington cleared the stage and returned to the locker room, Pac-12 conference and network employees gathered on the same spot to take pictures and share a final moment together.
Green Day’s “Good Riddance” played over the stadium speakers as a montage of Pac-12 moments played on the video board, and the raucous, celebratory atmosphere that filled the building was gone. Instead, there were shared elements of a graduation, a going-out-of-business sale, but mostly, a funeral, at which point, it was more bitter than sweet.
The Baltimore Orioles are “very, very hopeful” that star shortstop Gunnar Henderson (intercostal strain) will be ready for Opening Day.
Orioles manager Brandon Hyde told reporters Wednesday that Henderson suffered a mild strain on his right side.
“I’m very, very hopeful. But we’re going to not push a strain there, and we want to make sure that he gets it taken care of. It’s one of those sensitive areas where we don’t want anything to reoccur,” Hyde said.
Henderson departed last Thursday’s 11-8 spring training victory over the Toronto Blue Jays after the first inning with what the team termed “lower right side discomfort.” Henderson made a leaping catch in the top of the first inning and apparently felt soreness after hitting the ground.
Henderson is batting .167 in six plate appearances so far this spring.
The 2023 American League Rookie of the Year earned his first All-Star nod in 2024 batting .281/.364/.529 with 37 home runs and 92 RBIs. He also stole 21 bases. He finished fourth in MVP balloting.
Henderson dealt with a left oblique injury during spring training in 2024 but recovered in time for the start of the regular season.
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – New Houston Astros first baseman Christian Walker was scratched from the lineup for a spring training game Wednesday because of soreness in his left oblique.
Walker missed more than a month last season with Arizona because of a strained left oblique muscle. He joined the Astros on a $60 million, three-year contract during the offseason.
In his first four spring training games for Houston, Walker was 4 for 8 with three doubles. He also had two walks.
Adding a first baseman over the offseason was a priority for the Astros after struggling Jose Abreu was released less than halfway through a $58.5 million, three-year contract.
Walker, who turns 34 on March 28, hit .251 with 26 home runs and 84 RBIs in 130 games for the Diamondbacks last season. He won his third consecutive Gold Glove at first base.
In 832 big league games, Walker has hit .250 with 147 homers. All but 13 of those games came with Arizona over the past eight seasons, after his MLB debut with Baltimore in 2014 and 2015.
Walker had two stints on the injured list because of right oblique issues in 2021. He played 160 games in 2022 and 157 in 2023, hitting 69 homers and driving in 197 runs combined over those two seasons.
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — The Hall of Fame made some small adjustments to its veterans committee system to limit people with relatively little support from repeatedly remaining on future ballots, a decision that could make it harder to gain entry to Cooperstown for steroids-tainted stars such as Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens.
Any candidate on the eight-person ballot who receives fewer than five votes from the 16-member panel will not be eligible for that committee’s ballot during the next three-year cycle, the hall said Wednesday. A candidate who is dropped, later reappears on a ballot and again receives fewer than five votes would be barred from future ballot appearances.
Bonds, Clemens, Rafael Palmeiro and Albert Belle each received fewer than four votes in December 2022, when Fred McGriff was a unanimous pick. Bonds and Clemens were on a hall ballot for the first time since their 10th and final appearances on the Baseball Writers’ Association of America ballot. The rules change could limit reappraisals of their candidacies.
In addition, the historical overview committee appointed by the BBWAA that selects the ballot candidates must also be approved by the hall’s board of directors. The hall said the decisions were made by its board during a Feb. 26 meeting in Orlando, Florida.
In 2022, the hall restructured its veterans committees for the third time in 12 years, setting up panels to consider the contemporary era from 1980 on, as well as the classic era. The contemporary baseball era holds separate ballots for players and another for managers, executives and umpires.
Each committee meets every three years: contemporary players from 1980 on will be considered this December; managers, executives and umpires from 1980 on in December 2026; and pre-1980 candidates in December 2027.
Dave Parker and Dick Allen were elected last December and manager Jim Leyland in December 2023.