Recently, the Oregon football team has been blanketing the
country like Rashad Bauman covering a UCLA wide receiver.
Two days after it was announced that Duck quarterback Joey
Harrington would be featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated and
ESPN the Magazine two weeks ago, the Oregon Athletic
Department confirmed that billboards of cornerback Bauman and
running back Maurice Morris would be erected in San Francisco
and Los Angeles, respectively.
Bauman’s billboard, which graces the road next to an entrance to
the Bay Bridge, sums up the hype perfectly. The picture is of the
defender with hands outstretched over Autzen Stadium, and the
text reads “Covering the Country.” Morris’ billboard, which sits
along Interstate 405 in southern California, features blurry
photographs of the rusher and the word “Momentum” in white
letters, with the “M” and “O” in green.
The billboards, unprecedented simply because they aren’t in the
team’s hometown, are being funded by the same group of donors
that paid for a 100-foot billboard of Harrington in downtown New
York, according to Oregon Director of Media Services Dave
Williford.
Oregon head coach Mike Bellotti said he enjoyed finding out about
the billboards.
“It’s great that [the boosters] think those kids warrant the attention,”
Bellotti said. “Not that Joey doesn’t deserve it; it’s just nice when
other kids get a shot.”
Both Sports Illustrated and ESPN the Magazine feature Harrington
on their college football preview covers, and both name Harrington
and Oregon State running back Ken Simonton as early candidates
for college football’s ultimate individual prize: the Heisman Trophy.
Sports Illustrated ranked Oregon State first in the country in its
preseason poll and chose the Beavers to win the National
Championship, which will be held at the Rose Bowl this year. The
nation’s most-read sports magazine picked Oregon seventh
overall.
ESPN the Magazine picked the Ducks fifth and the Beavers 12th
overall. The magazine rankings came on the heels of the USA
Today/ESPN Coaches Poll, which ranked Oregon seventh, and the
Pac-10 Media Poll, which put the Ducks first in the conference. The
Associated Press ranked Oregon seventh and Oregon State 11th
in the country.
“It’s a reflection of the quality of the team,” Oregon Athletic Director
Bill Moos said. “I’m just tickled and proud.”
“It’s nice to be considered one of the better teams in the nation,”
Bellotti said.
The Oregon schools will soon receive even more hype via the
television. Harrington and Simonton have been followed by ESPN
camera crews recently and will be featured Aug. 25 on “The Life,” a
show that chronicles the lives of athletes.
Bellotti has also been occupying the airwaves, as he chatted
publicly online with ABC analyst Terry Bowden recently. Bauman
and Harrington have also been featured online, as they chatted
with fans on ESPN.com Monday.
Bellotti noted that all this attention won’t matter come January.
“It’s much more important where we stand later in the season,”
Bellotti said. “It’s the postseason poll that really counts.”
But for now, the Ducks will just drink up all the hype and hope it
doesn’t stop until February.
Ducks cover country with billboards
Daily Emerald
August 21, 2001
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