One Game On Oregons 2026 Schedule Changes Everything

As the Oregon Ducks prepare for a potential championship run in 2026, ESPN's analytics offer optimism, favoring them in most matchups with a critical eye on their Ohio State clash.

Fall camp is nearing for Dan Lanning and Oregon, and the computer numbers are already painting a pretty bullish picture for the Ducks’ 2026 season.

ESPN’s analytics have gone through Oregon’s regular-season slate game by game, and the results are strong almost across the board. The Ducks are favored in 11 of their 12 regular-season matchups, with seven of those coming at better than a 90 percent clip.

Here’s how ESPN’s projections break down:

Sept. 5 vs. Boise State Broncos: Oregon favored at 94.8 percent

Sept. 12 at Oklahoma State Cowboys: Oregon favored at 90.8 percent
Sept. 18 vs.

Portland State Vikings: Oregon favored at 99.0 percent
Sept. 26 at USC Trojans: Oregon favored at 67.3 percent

Oct. 10 vs. UCLA Bruins: Oregon favored at 96.7 percent

Oct. 17 vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers: Oregon favored at 92.0 percent

Oct. 24 at Illinois Fighting Illini: Oregon favored at 85.0 percent
Oct. 31 vs.

Northwestern Wildcats: Oregon predicted at 96.8 percent
Nov. 7 at Ohio State Buckeyes: Ohio State predicted at 71.6 percent

Nov. 14 vs. Michigan Wolverines: Oregon predicted at 83.9 percent

Nov. 20 at Michigan State Spartans: Oregon predicted at 93.1 percent
Nov. 28 vs.

Washington Huskies: Oregon predicted at 89.6 percent

The most lopsided forecast on the Ducks’ schedule is the Portland State game, where ESPN gives Oregon a 99 percent shot to win. The toughest call, by far, is the Nov. 7 trip to Columbus, where Ohio State is projected to win and Oregon is given only a 24.8 percent chance.

That Ohio State matchup stands out as the lone game Oregon is not expected to win. If the Ducks were to run the table everywhere else and take just that one loss, they’d still be in excellent shape for a College Football Playoff berth. And even if the result goes against them, the margin in that game could end up mattering for seeding.

ESPN’s Football Power Index also weighed in on Oregon’s bigger-picture outlook. The Ducks sit No. 4 in the preseason FPI rankings, behind Ohio State at No.

1, Texas at No. 2 and Notre Dame at No. 3.

Oregon’s odds from the model include a 64.7 percent chance to make the CFP, a 24.2 percent chance to win the Big Ten, a 17.7 percent chance to reach the title game and a 9.8 percent chance to win the national championship.

The projections don’t decide anything on the field, of course, but they do underline how far the program has come. With quarterback Dante Moore and key returning starters on the defensive line, Lanning has the kind of foundation that can keep Oregon in the thick of the race after last season’s semifinal finish.

For now, the analytics are saying what plenty of observers already believe: Oregon is built to be a major player again in 2026. The Ducks just have to go out and back it up.

In Other News...

Arik Armstead Just Sent A Strong Message About Oregons Defensive Future

Arik Armsteads path has always made him a useful name to keep in mind when talking about Oregons defensive identity. The Jacksonville Jaguars defensive tackle was back in a familiar teaching role at the 2026 Sack Summit in Las Vegas, a clinic built around NFL players sharing technique and mindset with college prospects, and his presence carried extra weight for Ducks fans because of the standard he set during a long career that has already included nine seasons with the 49ers and a Walter Payton Man of the Year honor.

Oregon also had a current defensive lineman in the mix, with Bear Alexander among the players working in the same setting. For a program that keeps trying to stock its front with size, power and pro-level habits, seeing one of its most accomplished alumni in that environment is the kind of reminder that the Ducks defensive future is still being shaped by the same voices that helped define its past. [Read more 🡒]

Oregon Still Has Three Massive Recruiting Battles Left To Win

Oregons 2027 class is already sitting at 24 commits and ranking No. 2 nationally by 247Sports, but the Ducks are still working through three of the most important recruiting fights on their board. Linebacker Brayton Feister, defensive lineman Brayden Parks and running back Landen Williams-Callis all remain uncommitted, and each one carries a different kind of weight for a class that has already built plenty of momentum.

Feister looks like the clearest path for Oregon right now, while Parks appears to be a tougher pull if things were to end today. Williams-Callis is the wild card in the group, a high-end back with national attention and a recruitment that has drawn plenty of speculation from around the industry, leaving the Ducks with one more big test if they want to finish this cycle the way they started it. [Read more 🡒]

Why Oregon Fans Are Already Buying Into Iverson Hooks

Iverson Hooks arrives in Eugene with the kind of background that tends to earn attention quickly. Before becoming a wide receiver at UAB, he was a quarterback and free safety in high school, and that versatility still shows up in the way Oregon views him now. After transferring in, he brings the rsum of a player who found a way to become his former teams leading receiver and the profile of someone the Ducks believe can fit into more than one role.

For Oregon, the appeal is bigger than just another target in the passing game. Hooks is expected to give the Ducks a veteran presence in a young receiver room while also serving as an offensive weapon they can lean on when the offense needs stability. There is also a sense that his path gives him a different kind of credibility with teammates, which is part of why fans are already buying into what he might become in this offense. [Read more 🡒]