2020 Pac-12 Conference football season

Summary

The 2020 Pac-12 Conference football season was the 42nd season of Pac-12 football taking place during the 2020 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The season was originally scheduled to begin on September 26, 2020, and end with the 2020 Pac-12 Championship Game on December 18–19, 2020, at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada. On July 10, 2020, the Pac-12 announced that all competition in fall sports, including football, will be played exclusively in-conference due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] On August 11, 2020, the Pac-12 Conference suspended all fall sports competitions due to the ongoing pandemic.[3] On September 24, 2020 the Pac-12 Conference announced that the postponement of fall sports was to be ended and teams will return to play with a six-game Conference-only season to begin on November 6, and the Pac-12 Championship Game on December 18 with the rest of the conference seeded for a seventh game.[4]

2020 Pac-12 Conference football season
LeagueNCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision
SportFootball
DurationNovember 7, 2020
January 2, 2021
Number of teams12
TV partner(s)Fox Sports Media Group, (Fox, FS1), ESPN Family, (ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU), and Pac-12 Networks
2021 NFL Draft
Top draft pickOT Penei Sewell, Oregon
Picked byDetroit Lions, 7th overall
Regular season
North championsWashington
  North runners-upOregon
South championsUSC
  South runners-upColorado
Pac-12 Championship
ChampionsOregon
  Runners-upUSC
Finals MVPKayvon Thibodeaux, Oregon
Football seasons
← 2019
2021 →
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  • t
  • e
  • Conf Overall
    Team   W   L     W   L  
    North Division
    Washington x   3 1     3 1  
    Oregon y$   4 2     4 3  
    Stanford   4 2     4 2  
    California   1 3     1 3  
    Washington State   1 3     1 3  
    Oregon State   2 5     2 5  
    South Division
    No. 21 USC xy   5 0     5 1  
    Colorado   3 1     4 2  
    Utah   3 2     3 2  
    Arizona State   2 2     2 2  
    UCLA   3 4     3 4  
    Arizona   0 5     0 5  
    Championship: Oregon 31, USC 24
    • $ – Conference champion
    • x – Division champion/co-champions
    • y – Championship game participant
    • Note: Due to COVID-19, the Pac-12 suspended the season on August 11, but later decided to begin play on November 6. In addition to the title game on December 18, the conference seeded all remaining teams for a game during that weekend.[1]
    Rankings from AP Poll.

    The Pac-12 is a Power Five Conference under the College Football Playoff format along with the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Big 12 Conference, Big Ten Conference, and the Southeastern Conference. The 2020 season is the tenth for the twelve Pac-12 teams to be divided into two divisions of six teams each, named North and South.

    Previous season edit

    The Oregon Ducks defeated Utah Utes 37–15 in the Pac-12 Football Championship Game.

    Seven teams participated in bowl games, finishing with a record of 4–3. Washington defeated Boise State in the Las Vegas Bowl, 38–7. USC lost to Iowa in the Holiday Bowl, 24–49. Washington State lost to Air Force in the Cheez-It Bowl, 21–31. Arizona State defeated Florida State in the Sun Bowl, 20–14. Utah lost to Texas in the Alamo Bowl, 10–38. California defeated Illinois in the Redbox Bowl, 35–20. Oregon lost to Iowa State in the Fiesta Bowl Game, 34–17.

    Preseason edit

    2020 Pac-12 Spring Football and number of signees on signing day:

    North Division

    • California –
    • Oregon –
    • Oregon State –
    • Stanford –
    • Washington –
    • Washington State –

    South Division

    • Arizona –
    • Arizona State –
    • Colorado –
    • UCLA –
    • USC –
    • Utah –

    Recruiting classes edit

    Rankings
    Team ESPN[5] Rivals[6] Scout & 24/7[7] Signees
    Arizona - 63 71 15
    Arizona State 27 24 24 18
    California 39 32 36 26
    Colorado 31 34 33 23
    Oregon 13 8 13 23
    Oregon State - 43 48 20
    Stanford 20 25 22 18
    UCLA 34 30 29 29
    USC - 64 56 12
    Utah - 42 34 17
    Washington 15 13 15 22
    Washington State - 50 61 19

    Pac-12 Media Days edit

    The Pac-12 will conduct its 2020 Pac-12 media days at the Loews Hollywood Hotel, in Hollywood, California, in July on the Pac-12 Network.

    The teams and representatives in respective order were as follows:

    Preseason Media polls edit

    The preseason polls was to be released in July 2020 but due to delaying the season it was released on October 7. Since 1992, the credentialed media has gotten the preseason champion correct just five times. Only nine times has the preseason pick even made it to the Pac-12 title game. Below are the results of the media poll with total points received next to each school and first-place votes in parentheses. For the 2020 poll, Oregon was voted as the favorite to win both the North Division and the Pac–12 Championship Game.[8]

    North
    Predicted finish Team Votes (1st place)
    1 Oregon 222 (35)
    2 California 176 (3)
    3 Washington 161
    4 Stanford 105
    5 Oregon State 76
    6 Washington State 58
    South
    Predicted finish Team Votes (1st place)
    1 USC 220 (32)
    2 Arizona State 181 (2)
    3 Utah 168 (4)
    4 UCLA 109
    5 Colorado 63
    6 Arizona 57
    Media poll (Pac-12 Championship)
    Rank Team Votes
    1 Oregon 21
    2 USC 15
    3 Arizona State 1
    4 Utah 1

    Preseason awards edit

    Preseason All Pac-12 edit

    Activism edit

    On August 2, 2020, a few days after the Pac-12 announced a conference only season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a group of 13 Pac-12 football players from 10 schools released a list of demands including health and safety protections, guaranteed medical coverage for players, elimination of excessive salaries for staff, end to racial injustice in sports and society, and a profit-sharing arrangement whereby 50% of the conference revenues will be distributed evenly among athletes. The players threatened to boycott practices and games unless the demands are met.[9]

    List of Pac-12 student-athlete activists
    Player Position School
    Treyjohn Butler DB Stanford
    Jake Curhan OL Cal
    Valentino Daltoso OL Cal
    Joshua Drayden DB Cal
    Nick Ford OL Utah
    Jaydon Grant DB Oregon State
    Elisha Guidry DB UCLA
    Malik Hausman DB Arizona
    Dallas Hobbs DL Washington State
    Jevon Holland DB Oregon
    Ty Jones WR Washington
    Cody Shear OL Arizona State
    Joe Tryon-Shoyinka LB Washington

    Head coaches edit

    Coaching changes edit

    There were three coaching change following the 2019 season, Karl Dorrell (Colorado), Jimmy Lake (Washington) and Nick Rolovich (Washington State).

    Coaches edit

    Note: Stats shown are before the beginning of the season.

    Team Head coach Years at school Overall record Record at school Pac–12 record
    Arizona Kevin Sumlin 3 95–58 9–15 6–12
    Arizona State Herm Edwards 3 15–11 15–11 9–9
    California Justin Wilcox 4 20–18 20–18 10–17
    Colorado Karl Dorrell 1 35-27 0–0 35-27
    Oregon Mario Cristobal 4 48–54 21–7 13–5
    Oregon State Jonathan Smith 3 7–17 7–17 5–13
    Stanford David Shaw 10 86–34 86–34 58–22
    UCLA Chip Kelly 3 53–24 7–17 7–11
    USC Clay Helton 7 40–22 40–22 31–12
    Utah Kyle Whittingham 16 131–63 131–63 42–39
    Washington Jimmy Lake 1 0–0 0–0 0–0
    Washington State Nick Rolovich 1 28–27 0–0 0–0

    Rankings edit

      Pre Wk
    2
    Wk
    3
    Wk
    4
    Wk
    5
    Wk
    6
    Wk
    7
    Wk
    8
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    10
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    11
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    12
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    13
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    14
    Wk
    15
    Wk
    16
    Final
    Arizona AP
    C
    CFP Not released
    Arizona State AP RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV
    C RV RV RV RV RV RV
    CFP Not released
    California AP RV RV RV RV
    C RV RV RV RV RV RV
    CFP Not released
    Colorado AP RV 21 RV
    C RV RV 22 RV RV
    CFP Not released 21 25
    Oregon AP 9 14 12 12 13 14 12 11 11 9 21 25
    C 9 17 16 15 15 14 12 13 11 20 RV RV RV
    CFP Not released 15 23 25
    Oregon State AP RV
    C
    CFP Not released
    Stanford AP
    C RV RV RV RV RV
    CFP Not released
    UCLA AP RV
    C
    CFP Not released
    USC AP 17 RV RV 25 24 21 20 20 20 19 17 16 13 21
    C 17 RV 24 23 20 20 20 19 18 16 15 13 19
    CFP Not released 18 20 15 13 17
    Utah AP 22 RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV
    C 20 RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV
    CFP Not released
    Washington AP RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV 23 RV RV RV
    C RV RV RV RV RV RV 23 RV RV RV
    CFP Not released 22
    Washington State AP
    C RV
    CFP Not released
    Legend
        Improvement in ranking
      Drop in ranking
      Not ranked previous week
      No change in ranking from previous week
    RV Received votes but were not ranked in Top 25 of poll
    т Tied with team above or below also with this symbol

    Schedules edit

    Index to colors and formatting
    Pac-12 member won
    Pac-12 member lost
    Pac-12 teams in bold

    All times Pacific time. Pac-12 teams in bold.

    Rankings reflect those of the AP poll for that week.

    Regular season edit

    The regular season was originally scheduled to begin on September 26, 2020, and end on December 5, 2020. The Pac-12 Championship Game was scheduled for December 18–19, 2020. It was announced on July 10, 2020 that all non-conference games would be canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Week 1 edit

    Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
    November 7 9:00 a.m. Arizona State No. 20 USC LA Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles,CA FOX  USC 28–27   1
    November 7 12:30 p.m. Arizona Utah Rice-Eccles Stadium • Salt Lake City, UT ESPN2  No Contest[10]    
    November 7 4:00 p.m. UCLA Colorado Folsom Field • Boulder, CO ESPN2  COLO 48–42   554
    November 7 4:30 p.m. Stanford No. 12 Oregon Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR ABC  ORE 35–14   0
    November 7 7:30 p.m. Washington California California Memorial Stadium • Berkeley, CA ESPN  No Contest[11]    
    November 7 7:30 p.m. Washington State Oregon State Reser Stadium • Corvallis, OR FS1  WSU 38–28   0
    #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Pacific Time.

    Week 2 edit

    Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
    November 14 12:30 p.m. Colorado Stanford Stanford Stadium • Stanford, CA ESPN 2  COL 35–32   1
    November 14 12:30 p.m. No. 20 USC Arizona Arizona Stadium • Tucson, AZ FOX  USC 34–30   1
    November 14 4:00 p.m. No. 11 Oregon Washington State Martin Stadium • Pullman, WA FOX  ORE 43-29   0
    November 14 7:30 p.m. California Arizona State Sun Devil Stadium • Tempe, AZ ESPN2  No Contest[12]    
    November 13 7:30 p.m. Utah UCLA Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA FOX  No Contest[13]    
    November 14 8:00 p.m. Oregon State Washington Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA FS1  WASH 27-21   294
    November 15 9:00 a.m. California UCLA Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA FS1  UCLA 34-10   0
    #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Pacific Time.

    Week 3 edit

    Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
    November 21 12:30 p.m. UCLA No. 11 Oregon Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR ESPN2  ORE 38-35   0
    November 21 12:30 p.m. California Oregon State Reser Stadium • Corvallis, OR FS1  OSU 31-27   0
    November 21 5:00 p.m. Arizona Washington Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA FOX  UW 44-27   253
    November 21 7:00 p.m. Arizona State Colorado Folsom Field • Boulder, CO ESPN 2  No Contest[14]    
    November 21 7:30 p.m. No. 20 USC Utah Rice-Eccles Stadium • Salt Lake City, UT ESPN  USC 33-17   1
    November 21 7:30 p.m. Washington State Stanford Stanford Stadium • Stanford, CA FS1  No Contest[15]    
    #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Pacific Time.

    Week 4 edit

    Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
    November 27 4:00 p.m. No. 9 Oregon Oregon State Reser Stadium • Corvallis, OR (Civil War) ESPN  OSU 41–38   0
    November 27 1:30 p.m. Stanford California California Memorial Stadium • Berkeley, CA (123rd Big Game/Stanford Axe) FOX  CAL 26–23   0
    November 27 7:30 p.m. Washington Washington State Martin Stadium • Pullman, WA (Apple Cup) ESPN  No Contest[16]    
    November 28 5:00 p.m. Arizona UCLA Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA FOX  UCLA 27–10   0
    November 28 12:30 p.m. Colorado No. 19 USC LA Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA ABC  No Contest[17]    
    November 29 N/A Utah Arizona State Sun Devil Stadium • Tempe, AZ N/A  No Contest[18]    
    November 28 4:30 p.m. Utah Washington Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA ABC  UW 24–21   259
    November 28 2:00 p.m. San Diego State Colorado Folsom Field • Boulder, CO P12N W 20–10   0
    #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Pacific Time.

    Week 5 edit

    Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
    December 5 4:00 p.m. Colorado Arizona Arizona Stadium • Tucson, AZ FS1  COLO 24–13   0
    December 5 7:30 p.m. UCLA Arizona State Sun Devil Stadium • Tempe, AZ FS1  UCLA 25–18   0
    December 5 1:00 p.m. Stanford No. 23 Washington Husky Stadium • Seattle, WA FOX  STAN 31–26   278
    December 5 4:00 p.m. No. 21 Oregon California California Memorial Stadium • Berkeley, CA ESPN  CAL 21–17   0
    December 5 7:30 p.m. Oregon State Utah Rice-Eccles Stadium • Salt Lake City, UT ESPN  UTAH 30–24   0
    December 6 4:30 p.m. Washington State No. 17 USC LA Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles,CA FS1  USC 38–13   1
    #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Pacific Time.

    Week 6 edit

    The game between Stanford and Oregon State was moved from Stanford to Corvallis due to a ban on contact sports in Santa Clara County.

    Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
    December 11 4:00 p.m. Arizona State Arizona Arizona Stadium • Tucson, AZ (Territorial Cup) ESPN  ASU 70-7   0
    December 12 9:00 a.m. Utah No. 21 Colorado Folsom Field • Boulder, CO (Rumble in the Rockies) FOX  UTAH 38-21   0
    December 12 7:30 p.m. California Washington State Martin Stadium • Pullman, WA FS1  No Contest[19]    
    December 12 7:30 p.m. Oregon State Stanford Reser Stadium • Corvallis, OR ESPNU  Stanford 27-24   0
    December 12 4:30 p.m. No. 16 USC UCLA Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA (Victory Bell) ABC  USC 43-38   0
    December 12 1:00 p.m. Washington Oregon Autzen Stadium • Eugene, OR FOX  No Contest[20]    
    #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Pacific Time.

    Week 7 edit

    Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
    December 18 5:00 p.m. Washington No. 13 USC Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA (Pac-12 Championship) FOX  No Contest[21]    
    December 18 5:00 p.m. Oregon No. 13 USC Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA (Pac-12 Championship) FOX  ORE 31-24   1
    December 19 10:30 a.m. Washington State Utah Rice-Eccles Stadium • Salt Lake City, UT FS1  UTAH 45-28   0
    December 19 5:00 p.m. Stanford UCLA Rose Bowl • Pasadena, CA ESPN2  STAN 48-47 2OT  0
    December 19 6:00 p.m. TBD Colorado Folsom Field • Boulder, CO FS1  No opponent scheduled    
    December 19 7:30 p.m. Arizona State Oregon State Reser Stadium • Corvallis, OR ESPN  ASU 46-33   0
    December 19 N/A Arizona California California Memorial Stadium • Berkeley, CA  No Contest[22]    
    #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Pacific Time.

    Pac-12 Championship Game edit

    The Pac-12 Championship Game, the conference's tenth championship game, will be played on December 18, 2020, at the home stadium of the division champion with the best record. It was planned to be contested by the winners of the North and South divisions. The remaining Pac-12 teams will play a series of seeded games during this week; each team will play against the cross-divisional opponent that finished in the same place in the standings. Washington, the North Division winner, was scheduled to play USC, the South Division winner, in the championship game, but COVID issues forced it back out, allowing the second-best team by record in the North, Oregon, to take their place instead.

    Date Time Visiting team Home team Site TV Result Attendance
    December 18 5:00 p.m. Washington No. 13 USC Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA FOX  No Contest[23]    
    December 18 5:00 p.m. Oregon No. 13 USC Memorial Coliseum • Los Angeles, CA FOX  ORE 31-24   1
    #Rankings from AP Poll released prior to game. All times are in Pacific Time.

    Canceled regular season games edit

    The following non-conference games were canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic:

    Aug. 29

    Sep. 3

    Sept. 5

    Sept. 12

    Sept. 19

    Oct. 10

    • Stanford at Notre Dame

    Nov. 28

    Postseason edit

    Bowl games edit

    Legend
      Pac-12 win
      Pac-12 loss
    Bowl game Date Site Television Time (PST) Pac-12 team Opponent Score Attendance
    Alamo Bowl December 29 AlamodomeSan Antonio, Texas ESPN 6:00 p.m. Colorado No. 20 Texas L 23–55 10,822
    New Year's Six Bowl
    Fiesta Bowl January 2 State Farm StadiumGlendale, Arizona ESPN 1:00 p.m. No. 25 Oregon No. 10 Iowa State L 17–34 0

    Rankings are from CFP rankings. All times Pacific Time Zone. Pac-12 teams shown in bold.

    Selection of teams edit

    • Bowl eligible: Arizona State, Colorado, Oregon, Stanford, USC, Utah, Washington
    • Bowl-ineligible: Arizona, California, Oregon State, UCLA, Washington State

    Arizona State,[24] Stanford,[25] USC,[26] and Washington[27] declined to pursue bowl game opportunities. UCLA[28] and Utah[29] opted out of playing in a bowl before their final regular season games and with their eligibility still in doubt.

    Awards and honors edit

    Player of the week honors edit

    Week Offensive Defensive Special Teams Offensive line Defensive line Freshman
    Player Team Position Player Team Position Player Team Position Player Team Position Player Team Position Player Team Position
    Week 1 (Nov. 9)[30] Jarek Broussard Colorado RB Merlin Robertson Arizona State LB Michael Turk Arizona State P Ryan Walk Oregon G Marlon Tuipulotu USC DT Jayden de Laura Washington State QB
    Week 2 (Nov. 16)[31] Sam Noyer Colorado QB Nate Landman Colorado LB Champ Flemings Oregon State WR/KR/PR T. J. Bass Oregon G Zion Tupuola-Fetui Washington LB Ayden Hector Washington State DB
    Week 3 (Nov. 23)[32] Jermar Jefferson Oregon State RB Jordan Happle Oregon S Jesiah Irish Oregon State WR Luke Wattenberg Washington C Zion Tupuola-Fetui (2) Washington LB Dylan Morris Washington QB
    Week 4 (Nov. 30)[33] Jermar Jefferson (2) Oregon State RB Nate Landman (2) Colorado LB Thomas Booker Stanford DE Nathan Eldridge Oregon State C Zion Tupuola-Fetui (3) Washington LB Dylan Morris (2) Washington QB
    Week 5 (Dec. 7)[34] Jarek Broussard (2) Colorado RB Kuony Deng California LB Jadon Redding Utah K Drew Dalman Stanford LT Tyler Johnson Arizona State DT Ty Jordan Utah RB
    Week 6 (Dec. 14)[35] Kedon Slovis USC QB Talanoa Hufanga USC S Jadon Redding (2) Utah K Dohnovan West Arizona State G Drake Jackson USC LB Ty Jordan (2) Utah RB
    Week 7 Simi Fehoko Stanford WR Jamal Hill Oregon S Will Shaffer Arizona State LB Nick Ford Utah C Kayvon Thibodeaux Oregon DE Ty Jordan (3) Utah RB

    Pac-12 Individual Awards edit

    The following individuals received postseason honors as voted by the Pac-12 Conference football coaches at the end of the season

    Award Player School
    Offensive Player of the Year Jarek Broussard Colorado
    Defensive Player of the Year Talanoa Hufanga USC
    Offensive Freshman of the Year Ty Jordan Utah
    Defensive Freshman of the Year Noah Sewell Oregon
    Scholar Athlete of the Year
    Coach of the Year Karl Dorrell Colorado

    All-conference teams edit

    The following players earned All-Pac-12 honors. Any teams showing (_) following their name are indicating the number of All-Pac-12 Conference Honors awarded to that university for 1st team and 2nd team respectively.

    † Two-time first team selection

    Honorable mentions

    All-Americans edit

    Currently, the NCAA compiles consensus all-America teams in the sports of Division I-FBS football and Division I men's basketball using a point system computed from All-America teams named by coaches associations or media sources. The system consists of three points for a first-team honor, two points for second-team honor, and one point for third-team honor. Honorable mention and fourth team or lower recognitions are not accorded any points. College Football All-American consensus teams are compiled by position and the player accumulating the most points at each position is named first team consensus all-American. Currently, the NCAA recognizes All-Americans selected by the AP, AFCA, FWAA, TSN, and the WCFF to determine Consensus and Unanimous All-Americans. Any player named to the First Team by all five of the NCAA-recognized selectors is deemed a Unanimous All-American.[36][37]

    Position Player School Selector Unanimous Consensus
    First Team All-Americans
    DB Talanoa Hufanga USC AP, TSN, WCFF  Y
    Position Player School Selector Unanimous Consensus
    Second Team All-Americans
    Position Player School Selector Unanimous Consensus
    Third Team All-Americans

    *AFCA All-America Team (AFCA)
    *Walter Camp All-America Team
    *AP All-America teams
    *Sporting News All-America Team
    *Football Writers Association of America All-America Team (FWAA)
    *Sports Illustrated All-America Team
    *Report All-America Team (BR)
    *College Football News All-America Team (CFN)
    *ESPN All-America Team
    *CBS Sports All-America Team
    *Athlon Sports All-America Team (Athlon)
    *The Athletic All-America Team
    *USA Today All-America Team

    All-Academic edit

    National award winners edit

    2020 College Football Award Winners-->

    Home game attendance edit

    On September 24, 2020, the Pac–12 announced that it would only allow student-athlete families to attend football games this season, subject to local public health authority approval and in accordance with NCAA guidelines. Each individual university will determine what will be allowed in terms of family member attendance on that basis.[38] The conference is keeping track of attendance, although the accuracy is in question.[39] Each team will play three home and three road games, with the possibility of hosting a fourth home game based on where each team finishes within their division, with the top seed from each division playing in the Pac-12 Title Game in Las Vegas.

    Team Stadium Capacity Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Game 4 Total Average % of Capacity
    Arizona Arizona Stadium 55,675 1† 0 0 1 0.33 0.00059%
    Arizona State Sun Devil Stadium 53,599 0 0 0 0%
    California California Memorial Stadium 62,467 0 0 0 0 0%
    Colorado Folsom Field 50,183 554† 0 0 554 185 0.36%
    Oregon Autzen Stadium 54,000 1† 0 1 0.5 0.00092%
    Oregon State Reser Stadium 43,154 0 0 0 0 0 0%
    Stanford Stanford Stadium 50,424 1† 1 1 0.0019%
    UCLA Rose Bowl 80,616 0 0 0 0 0 0%
    USC Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum 76,750 1† 1† 2 1 0.0013%
    Utah Rice-Eccles Stadium 45,807 1† 0 0 1 0.33 0.0007%
    Washington Husky Stadium 70,083 294† 253 259 278 1084 271 0.38%
    Washington State Martin Stadium 32,952 0 0 0 0%

    Bold – Exceed capacity
    †Season High

    NFL Draft edit

    The following list includes all Pac–12 Players who were drafted in the 2021 NFL Draft.

    Player Position School Draft
    Round
    Round
    Pick
    Overall
    Pick
    Team
    Penei Sewell OT Oregon 1 7 7 Detroit Lions
    Alijah Vera-Tucker OG USC 1 14 14 New York Jets
    Joe Tryon-Shoyinka OLB Washington 1 32 32 Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    Jevon Holland S Oregon 2 4 36 Miami Dolphins
    Levi Onwuzurike DT Washington 2 9 41 Detroit Lions
    Walker Little OT Stanford 2 13 45 Jacksonville Jaguars
    Davis Mills QB Stanford 3 3 67 Houston Texans
    Osa Odighizuwa DT UCLA 3 11 75 Dallas Cowboys
    Paulson Adebo CB Stanford 3 12 76 New Orleans Saints
    Nahshon Wright CB Oregon State 3 35 99 Dallas Cowboys
    Elijah Molden CB Washington 3 36 100 Tennessee Titans
    Jay Tufele DT USC 4 1 106 Jacksonville Jaguars
    Amon-Ra St. Brown WR USC 4 7 112 Detroit Lions
    Drew Dalman C Stanford 4 9 114 Atlanta Falcons
    Camryn Bynum RB California 4 20 125 Minnesota Vikings
    Keith Taylor CB Washington 5 22 166 Carolina Panthers
    Deommodore Lenoir CB Oregon 5 28 172 San Francisco 49ers
    Simi Fehoko WR Stanford 5 35 179 Dallas Cowboys
    Talanoa Hufanga S USC 5 36 180 San Francisco 49ers
    Frank Darby WR Arizona State 6 3 187 Atlanta Falcons
    Marlon Tuipulotu DT USC 6 5 189 Philadelphia Eagles
    Roy Lopez DT Arizona 6 11 195 Houston Texans
    Gary Brightwell RB Arizona 6 12 196 New York Giants
    William Sherman OT Colorado 6 13 197 New England Patriots
    Demetric Felton RB UCLA 6 27 211 Cleveland Browns
    Brady Breeze S Oregon 6 31 215 Tennessee Titans
    Thomas Graham Jr. CB Oregon 6 44 228 Chicago Bears
    Jermar Jefferson RB Oregon State 7 29 257 Detroit Lions

    Total picks by school edit

    Team Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Round 4 Round 5 Round 6 Round 7 Total
    Arizona 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2
    Arizona State 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
    California 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
    Colorado 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
    Oregon 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 5
    Oregon State 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 2
    Stanford 0 1 2 1 1 0 0 5
    UCLA 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2
    USC 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 5
    Utah 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    Washington 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 4
    Washington State 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    Total 3 3 5 4 4 8 1 28

    References edit

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    34. ^ "Pac-12 Football Players of the Week - Week Five" (Press release). Pac-12 Conference. Retrieved December 7, 2020.
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    External links edit

    • Game statistics at statbroadcast.com