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RUN FOR THE ROSES
Oregon, dizzying offense turns back Wisconsin 45-38
spt ap Rose Bowl
Wisconsins Montee Ball (28) goes over Oregons John Boyett (20) and others as he is stopped during the second half of the Rose Bowl on Monday night in Pasadena, Calif. - photo by The Associated Press

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — The Oregon Ducks had waited 95 years to win another Rose Bowl, and the last few seconds stretched for an eternity. The players in mirrored helmets held each other back on the sideline, waiting on tiptoes for video review to confirm Wisconsin was out of time.
The call went Oregon’s way. The Ducks stormed the hallowed field.
The most futuristic team in college football had buried another bit of history, and that revolutionary offense finally has a shiny trophy that will look right at home among those eye-catching uniforms.
Darron Thomas passed for three touchdowns, De’Anthony Thomas scored on runs of 91 and 64 yards, and the No. 6 Ducks earned their first bowl victory under coach Chip Kelly, holding off the Badgers 45-38 Monday night in the highest-scoring Rose Bowl ever played.
“We had no doubt this year that we were going to come out and do big things,” said Darron Thomas, who passed for 268 yards. “It’s a big statement for the Oregon program.”
Indeed: The last time Oregon won the Rose Bowl, beating Penn 14-0 in 1917, the players wore leather helmets, not those shiny numbers that exemplify every innovation the Ducks have created during Kelly’s three-year tenure.
Oregon (12-2) showed off that creativity with 621 total yards — second-most in Rose Bowl history — against the tough Badgers, playing at its usual frantic pace until the final whistle. Lavasier Tuinei caught eight passes for 158 yards and two TDs for the Ducks, who had no postseason success to show for Kelly’s otherwise wildly successful three-year tenure until this landmark offensive performance.
“None of us were around 95 years ago, and we never talked about it,” Kelly said. “We’re a forward-thinking operation, and we’re always looking ahead.”
Maybe so, but it’s unlikely anybody from Oregon will forget how this one ended.
With two long passes, Russell Wilson moved the Badgers to the Oregon 25, but with two seconds left and no timeouts. After waiting for the ball to be set, he spiked it to set up a last-ditch heave to the end zone, but the clock hit zeros while he did it.
The Ducks were winners after video review,.
“It would have been nice to have a chance there,” said Wilson, who passed for 296 yards and two scores. “With one second left, I think we could have capitalized.”
The Ducks don’t doubt it: The 98th Rose Bowl was that kind of game. The Granddaddy of Them All had never seen this many points, beating the record 80 scored by Washington and Iowa (1991).
“We knew we had to score almost every time we touched the ball,” Wisconsin tailback James White said.
Montee Ball rushed for 122 of his 164 yards in the first half for the Badgers (11-3), who lost the Rose Bowl for the second straight year despite managing 508 yards of their own. Ball tied Barry Sanders’ FBS record with his 39th touchdown of the season, but the Heisman Trophy finalist was held to three carries for no yards in the fourth quarter.
Wisconsin had two drives to tie it after Oregon kicked a field goal with 6:50 to play, but Jared Abbrederis fumbled near the Oregon sideline after making a long catch. The ball plopped onto the turf without even bouncing, and Oregon’s Michael Clay jumped on it with 4:06 left.
That video review went the Ducks’ way, too.
The Ducks and Badgers produced the highest-scoring first quarter (14-14) and first half (28-28) in Rose Bowl history, eventually surpassing the 80 scored in Washington’s 46-34 win over Iowa in 1991. Oregon’s yardage fell just short of USC’s 633 yards against Illinois in 2008.
Tuinei was named the Ducks’ offensive player of the game, but their flashiest star was electric freshman De’Anthony Thomas.

ROSE BOWL

No. 6 OREGON 45,
No. 9 WISCONSIN 38
Wisconsin      14     14    10     0   —  38
Oregon          14     14     7    10   —  45
First Quarter

Wis—Abbrederis 38 pass from Wilson (Welch kick), 11:48.
Ore—James 1 run (Maldonado kick), 9:41.
Wis—Wilson 4 run (Welch kick), 5:55.
Ore—De.Thomas 91 run (Maldonado kick), :00.
Second Quarter
Wis—M.Ball 3 run (Welch kick), 10:52.
Ore—Barner 54 pass from Da.Thomas (Maldonado kick), 10:36.
Wis—Nzegwu 33 fumble return (Welch kick), 3:26.
Ore—Tuinei 3 pass from Da.Thomas (Maldonado kick), :30.
Third Quarter
Ore—De.Thomas 64 run (Maldonado kick), 14:11.
Wis—FG Welch 29, 10:50.
Wis—Toon 18 pass from Wilson (Welch kick), 4:44.
Fourth Quarter
Ore—Tuinei 11 pass from Da.Thomas (Maldonado kick), 14:35.
Ore—FG Maldonado 30, 6:50.
A—91,245.
                                  WIS    ORE
First downs                   23    22
Rushes-yards        46-212      40-345
Passing                       296    276
Comp-Att-Int         19-26-1    18-24-1
Return Yards               44     4
Punts-Avg.            2-44.5        3-46.0
Fumbles-Lost             1-1    2-1
Penalties-Yards        3-20            7-56
Time of Poss.          35:42         24:18
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING —
Wisconsin, M.Ball 32-164, White 8-30, Wilson 6-18. Oregon, James 25-159, De.Thomas 2-155, Barner 7-30, Da.Thomas 6-1.
PASSING — Wisconsin, Wilson 19-25-1-296, Team 0-1-0-0. Oregon, Da.Thomas 17-23-1-268, Bennett 1-1-0-8.
RECEIVING — Wisconsin, Toon 9-104, Abbrederis 4-119, M.Ball 4-51, Pedersen 1-17, Ewing 1-5. Oregon, Tuinei 8-158, De.Thomas 4-34, Barner 2-52, Huff 2-14, Paulson 1-10, Da.Thomas 1-8.