USC defenders spent most of the night chasing down Oregon RB Kenjon Barner, who ran for a school-record 322 yards and five touchdowns in the Ducks' 62-51 win over the Trojans. (US Presswire)

Pac-12 scoreboard 

No. 2 Oregon 62, No. 18 USC 51: If you blinked, went to the bathroom or walked your dog, you might have missed something in this game. The Ducks (9-0, 6-0 Pac-12) and Trojans (6-3, 4-3) combined for 113 points, 1,357 total yards and only two punts in a wild one. Duck RB Kenjon Barner ran for a school-record 322 yards and five touchdowns on 38 carries, which just might be enough for him to enter the Heisman conversation. Not to be outdone, freshman QB Marcus Mariota threw for 306 yards and four touchdowns, including two to junior WR Josh Huff. Mariota also rushed for 91 yards. Oregon wasn't the only team putting up video game numbers though, USC QB Matt Barkley was 35 of 54 for 489 yards and five touchdowns, but he threw two interceptions, including a costly first-half one that Oregon's Ifo Ekpre-Olomu picked off in the end zone. Marqise Lee had another big game with 164 yards receiving and two touchdowns, but he was almost overshadowed by teammate Nelson Agholor, who had 163 yards on six catches (27.2 ypc). (For more on the game, check out CBSSports.com's Eye on College Football blog)

No. 15 Stanford 48, Colorado 0: It wasn't a bad Saturday for Stanford: S Ed Reynolds scored for the second straight week, backup QB Kevin Hogan had a breakout game and the defense pitched a shutout, marking the first time Colorado (1-8, 1-5 Pac-12) has been shut out at home since 1986. Josh Nunes started at quarterback for Stanford (7-2, 5-1) but he didn't finish. After two scoreless drives by Nunes, coach David Shaw put Hogan in the game and he led the Cardinal to touchdowns on four consecutive drives. Hogan was 18 of 23 for 184 yards and two touchdowns. Besides Nunes and Hogan, there were five other quarterbacks used in the game -- seven total -- as Colorado starter Jordan Webb was 4 of 10 for 19 yards and threw the pick-6 to Reynolds. Stanford RB Stepfan Taylor rushed for 43 yards and scored two touchdowns. (For more on the game, check out CBSSports.com's Eye on College Football blog)

Utah 49, Washington State 6: Two weeks ago, the Utah offense was left for dead on a side road in Salt Lake City. The Utes (4-5, 2-4) were 0-4 in the Pac-12 and only averaging 14 points per game in conference play. However, that's all changed now. For the second week in a row, Utah put up 49 points, routing Washington State (2-7, 0-6). Utah RB John White rushed for 101 yards and two touchdowns and caught a touchdown pass. Utah is 11-0 all-time when White reaches 100 yards rushing. KR Reggie Dunn returned a kick 100 yards for a touchdown. Utah QB Travis Wilson was 17 of 21 for 171 yards and two touchdowns. Washington State QB Jeff Tuel went 23 of 45 for 232 yards and a touchdown. 

No. 13 Oregon State 36, Arizona State 26: Cody Vaz was bewildered, befuddled and downright bad early against the Sun Devils (5-4, 3-3). His teammates kept the Beavers in it, though. Then Vaz settled down and Oregon State (7-1, 5-1) rose up. The Beavers kept the score close through the first half, heading into hafltime tied at 19, before outsprinting the Sun Devils with a 17-7 second half. Vaz threw for 267 yards and three touchdowns, including two to Markus Wheaton, to help Oregon State rebound from its first loss of the year.  (For more on the game, check out CBSSports.com's Eye on College Football blog)

No. 25 UCLA 66, No. 24 Arizona 10It was a matchup of two high-powered offenses. One team forgot their copper-tops. Instead, it was the Bruins (7-2, 4-2) that electrified in snazzy new "L.A. Lights" jerseys, rolling up the Wildcats (5-4, 2-4) in a game that was decided after roughly five minutes. Senior RB Johnathan Franklin took center stage, breaking the school rushing record on a 37-yard touchdown on the Bruins' first drive. He finished with 162 yards, besting Arizona's youngster Ka'Deem Carey by 107. The kid, Brett Hundley, meanwhile, won the quarterback battle with elder stateseman Matt Scott. The Bruins' Hundley passed for 287 yards and three touchdowns and rushed for a score, and the Wildcats' Scott passed for 123 yards before exiting the game with an injury.

Bruins running back Johnathan Franklin celebrates his 37-yard scoring run in the first quarter that made him UCLA’s all-time leading rusher. (AP)

Friday

Washington 21, Cal 13: Ball security was missing for both teams Friday night as Cal (3-7, 2-5) and Washington (5-4, 3-3) combined for 10 fumbles in the Husky win. Washington RB Bishop Sankey ran for a career-high 189 yards and two touchdowns. Sankey didn't have the only career day for UW, though, TE Austin Seferian-Jenkins had a career-high 152 receiving yards. Huskies QB Keith Price went 16 of 29 for 235 yards and a TD, which went to Seferian-Jenkins. Cal QB Zach Maynard left the game in the fourth quarter after suffering a knee injury. Maynard was 15 of 29 for 175 yards before exiting. 

Play of the weekend: If you don't know who Dunn is, you might after this weekend because he's the new NCAA record holder for kickoff return touchdowns. The Utah kick returner took the opening kickoff of the second half 100 yards against Washington State, giving him three 100-yard kickoff return touchdowns in two weeks. He had two last week against Cal. The return touchdown was also the fourth of Dunn's career, setting an NCAA record.

He said what? "If five of our guys went into an alley and got in a fight with two of theirs, we would have gotten massacred," said Mike Leach, describing his offensive line's performance following the Cougars' 49-6 loss.

RapidReports offensive star of the day: RB Barner, Oregon. Barner's kind of gone unnoticed on the national scene because Chip Kelly usually benches him for the second half. That's what happens when you blow out every time you play. So what happens when Barner plays all four quarters? Just look at the box score for the USC game. The senior scored five touchdowns and rushed for 322 yards, both school records. Barner also had 46 receiving yards for 348 total yards in the game. 

RapidReports defensive star of the day: DB Reynolds, Stanford. Going into Saturday's game with Colorado, Reynolds was tied for fifth in the country in interceptions (5), tied for second in touchdowns (2) and second in interception return yards (169). Reynolds will be moving up in all those categories this week. The junior safety scored Stanford's first points with a 52-yard interception return for a touchdown in the first quarter. It was Reynolds' second straight game with a touchdown, as he had a 25-yard pick-6 against Washington State last week. 

His seat is getting uncomfortable: Jeff Tedford, Cal. Tedford's seat is so hot right now, pouring lava on it might cool it down. Thanks to Friday's loss to Washington, the Bears will be missing a bowl game for the second time in three years. With only Oregon and Oregon State left on the schedule, Cal could be looking at 3-9 and the end of the 11-year Tedford era.

A possible spot on the bench for: QB Nunes, Stanford. Coach David Shaw gave Nunes two drives to do something Saturday, but the junior quarterback was unable to produce any points even though he was going up against a Colorado defense ranked last in the Pac-12. Nunes was replaced by backup Kevin Hogan, who went 18 of 23 for 184 yards and two touchdowns. Nunes better get used to the bench because after Hogan's performance, he might be spending the rest of the season there. 

Why you care about these three stat lines:

  1. UCLA holds Arizona offense to 255 yards: The UCLA defense went into the matchup with the high-flying Wildcats with a chip on its shoulder after hearing all about a shootout this week. They made sure to keep QB Scott holstered and allowed just five passing first downs.
  2. Kenjon Barner rushes for five touchdowns: The electrifying Oregon back has had to share the masthead for most of his career. Not Saturday afternoon. He firmly placed himself in the Heisman picture with more than 300 rushing yards and five scores against the reeling Trojans defense.
  3. Stanford QB Hogan passes for two touchdowns: Hogan took the reins from Nunes, and he might not give it back. Hogan's numbers came against Colorado, of course, but now it may be Hogan who becomes the guy after Andrew Luck.

Key number: 150. Before Stanford shut out Colorado on Saturday, the Buffaloes had not been shut out at home since Nov. 15, 1986, a period of 150 games. 

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