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Oregon-Stanford Preview =
By ALAN FERGUSON
STATS Writer

No. 8 Oregon (7-1) at Stanford (5-3), 3:30 p.m. EDT

Despite rumors to the contrary, Oregon coach Chip Kelly isn't
ready to reinstate suspended running back LeGarrette Blount this
week.

Thanks to the play of freshman LaMichael James, the
seventh-ranked Ducks haven't missed Blount this season and they
are leading the Pac-10 race going into Saturday's game at
Stanford.

After rushing for 1,038 yards and 17 touchdowns last season,
Blount was expected to be one of the top playmakers for Oregon
(7-1, 5-0) before being suspended for punching Boise State
defensive end Byron Hout following a season-opening loss.

Kelly allowed Blount to practice with the team and said he could
return if he met certain conditions. The Oregon coach targeted
the Stanford game as a possible end to his suspension, and that
speculation was further fueled by a visit from Pac-10
commissioner Larry Scott following last Saturday's 47-20 win
over then-No. 4 Southern California.

Kelly, however, didn't say Monday if Blount would return.

"When we have an announcement, we'll make it," he said.

James has capably replaced Blount as the top tailback, rushing
for 918 yards this season to rank third in the Pac-10. The Ducks
rank eighth nationally with 233.3 rushing yards per game.

"Each week, he keeps getting better and better. That's an
exciting thing for us," Kelly said. "It's really helped spur our
offense to have him back there. "

Last week, James ran for a career-high 183 and his seventh
touchdown as Oregon piled up 613 yards on the Trojans, who
entered with the nation's 16th-best defense. Jeremiah Masoli
threw for 222 yards and a touchdown, and he ran for a
season-best 164 yards and another score.

"I don't know if we made a statement," said Masoli, who leads
the conference's top-scoring offense (35.6 points per game).
"This is just what we planned on doing. If it makes a statement
it makes a statement. That's just Oregon football and how we
roll."

The win moved the Ducks up to No. 8 in the BCS standings,
highest among the nation's one-loss teams, and pushed them 1 1/2
games ahead of second-place Arizona in the Pac-10. They haven't
won a conference title since 2001.

That cause would be helped with an eighth straight victory over
the Cardinal (5-3, 4-2) and fourth in a row in Palo Alto.
Blount's 3-yard run with six seconds left sealed last season's
35-28 home victory.

For this year's matchup, though, Stanford is coming off a bye
and appears to be much improved behind the duo of Toby Gerhart
and Andrew Luck.

Gerhart, the conference's leading rusher, had 125 yards and a
touchdown Oct. 24 as the Cardinal snapped a two-game slide with
a 33-14 win over visiting Arizona State.

That performance not only left him six yards shy of becoming the
second Stanford rusher with consecutive 1,000-yard seasons, but
also 143 short of matching last season's school-record 1,136.
The senior's 13 TDs are two shy of his 2008 total.

However, he has been held to 76 yards on 24 carries in two
meetings with Oregon.

The difference in this game could be Luck, the Pac-10's
top-rated passer (148.5). The freshman has thrown for 1,825
yards and is second in the conference in total offense behind
Washington's Jake Locker.

Luck has thrown nine touchdowns and been intercepted three times
for the conference's second-best offense (435.25 yards per
game). He will face a defense that ranks in the top two in the
Pac-10 in both points (17.1) and yards (300.9) allowed.

"Andrew Luck has been leading our team," coach Jim Harbaugh
said. "He's doing the things a veteran quarterback would do."

Harbaugh's team is looking to become bowl eligible for the first
time since 2001 by staying unbeaten at home. Stanford is 4-0 in
Palo Alto this season and has won nine of 10 there.

Oregon has won back-to-back road games and now tries to win
three straight for just the second time in four years.