It took two overtimes, but No. 6 Oregon came onto No. 3 Penn State’s turf and emerged triumphant, stunning the Nittany Lions with a 30-24 double-overtime win. The Ducks overcame a slow first half and a late Penn State comeback to seal it with a wild interception in the second OT.

Following a go-ahead Oregon touchdown to open the second overtime period, Ducks defensive back Dillon Thieneman played hero, intercepting PSU quarterback Drew Allar to shock the Nittany Lions and silence the crowd.

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The Ducks appeared to have the game wrapped up much earlier when they took a 17-3 lead on a pair of second-half touchdowns. But the Nittany Lions, who had fielded boos from the crowd throughout the game, overcame their offensive struggles to score 14 unanswered points in the fourth quarter to tie the game in front of a deafening crowd.

The energy from both teams kept moving into overtime. Penn State opened the first OT with a quick score on Kaytron Allen’s 4-yard touchdown run. Oregon matched with Dante Moore’s shovel pass to Jamari Johnson.

In the second OT, the Ducks went on offense first and scored on one play as Moore connected with Gary Bryant Jr. for a 25-yard score.

Though Oregon failed on its required two-point attempt, that didn’t matter when Thieneman leapt up to pick off Allar’s pass attempt to seal the Ducks’ win.

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It was a pretty brutal first half for both offenses, with each team picking up a field goal to send the game to halftime with a 3-3 score. Oregon had a field goal miss and a turnover on downs; Penn State had three three-and-outs in the first three quarters.

In the third quarter, Penn State appeared to show life, for just a moment, as freshman defensive end Chaz Coleman punched the ball out of Oregon running back Noah Whittington’s hands, and safety Zakee Wheatley came up with it for a major turnover. But the play was called back after video replay showed Whittington’s knee just grazed the grass, with the officials marking him down.

With the ball still in the Ducks’ hands, Dante Moore then found Dierre Hill Jr. in the end zone to get the first touchdown of the game.

After the Nittany Lions went three-and-out again — prompting another round of boos from the stands — Oregon scored another touchdown, going for it on fourth-and-1 to seemingly pull the game out of reach.

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But Penn State wasn’t going to let the Ducks ruin white-out night lying down. Allar led the Nittany Lions on a massive response, storming down the field in less than two minutes before connecting with Devonte Ross to score a touchdown.

Oregon stumbled on the next drive, and was forced to punt. With the chance to tie, the Nittany Lions played boldly, pulling off two fourth-and-1 conversions on their final drive before Allar found Ross again for the game-tying touchdown with 30 seconds remaining.

It’s a major milestone for Oregon coach Dan Lanning, who not only pulls off the win in Happy Valley but records his first win over a top-five team on the road.

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For Penn State coach James Franklin, however, it’s a brutal disappointment. Franklin is now 4-21 against top-10 opponents, as the trend continues for his team in big games.

Oregon moves to 5-0 on the season and 2-0 in Big Ten play while Penn State falls to 3-1 after losing its conference opener.