Dante Moore and Kenyon Sadiq connected on two touchdown passes and No. 7 Oregon outmuscled No. 15 USC 42-27 Saturday to push its former Pac-12 rival out of the College Football Playoff picture.

The Ducks (10-1, 7-1 Big Ten) are still alive in the race for the Big Ten title, though they’ll need some help to get to Indianapolis in the form of Michigan upsetting Ohio State next week. More importantly, Oregon seems firmly in control of its path to the Playoff with only rival Washington left to play.

Moore passed for 257 yards and Sadiq, the potential All-America tight end, grabbed six passes for 72 yards. The two hooked up for a 28-yard TD late in the third quarter that put the Ducks up 35-21. After USC pulled within a possession, the Ducks went on an 11-play, 79-yard touchdown drive, capped by Noah Whittington’s 9-yard run with 5:30 left to make it 42-27. Whittington ran for 104 yards on 19 carries and the Ducks totaled 179 on the ground, running behind an offensive line with backups at left tackle and center.

Jayden Maiava threw for 306 yards and three touchdowns for USC (8-3, 6-2 Big Ten). Freshman receiver Tanook Hines had six catches for 141 yards — including a 24-yard touchdown pass from fellow receiver Makai Lemon in the first quarter. Lemon had two touchdown catches of his own. But Oregon held USC to a season-low 52 yards rushing.

The Ducks won the Big Ten title last season and are now 17-1 in conference games since switching leagues from the Pac-12 last year, along with USC, UCLA and Washington.

On Saturday, the former Pac-12 powers combined for 520 yards and 42 points in the first half as both offenses moved with little resistance. Special teams made a huge difference in favor of the Ducks. Oregon’s Malik Benson returned a punt 85 yards for a touchdown to give the Ducks a 21-14 lead with 9:58 left in the second quarter. USC also committed a leaping penalty that wiped out a missed field goal by Atticus Sappington and set up Oregon to take a 28-14 lead on a 1-yard run by linebacker Bryce Boettcher.

USC had a chance to trim the lead right before halftime, but Ryon Sayeri missed a 27-yard field goal.

November to remember for Oregon?

The Big Ten lost a Playoff contender in USC but might have been better off getting the Ducks through with another resume-building win.

The selection committee has shown some skepticism toward Oregon, slotting the Ducks behind several other teams with one loss.

The November schedule set up the Ducks to leave no doubt with four winning teams to face. So far, they are three-for-three, winning dramatically at Iowa, blowing out Minnesota and then taking care of the Trojans.

With the SEC set to produce several double-digit-win teams for the selection committee to sort through, the Ducks would be best served staying above the fray and getting to 11-1 next week with a victory at rival Washington rather than hoping for the best from the committee.

The Ducks were the top seed in last year’s inaugural 12-team CFP, entering with a 13-0 record before getting blown out in the quarterfinals by Ohio State at the Rose Bowl.

It will be difficult for the Ducks to get a bye this year with Ohio State and Indiana marching unbeaten toward a Big Ten title game, but the Ducks could still be in play to host a game at Autzen Stadium by winning out. Austin Mock’s projections for The Athletic give Oregon an 85 percent chance to make the Playoff with a 3 percent chance of a bye as of Saturday evening, while USC fell off the board. — Ralph D. Russo

Can this still be considered a successful season for USC?

If the Trojans beat crosstown rival UCLA next week and finish 9-3, it could be considered a good season and a step forward, at least in the context of the previous two seasons, which were massive disappointments at 8-5 and 7-6.

Is 9-3 where USC aspires to be as a program though? Absolutely not.

But the Trojans are weeks away from signing the No. 1 recruiting class in the country. USC’s season has been good enough so far to keep that class intact. Progress this season plus a major talent infusion in 2026 should create some major optimism for next year.

Lincoln Riley has some serious problems to solve, though. USC’s defense is still not championship worthy. As everyone witnessed on Saturday, the special teams units are still far too inconsistent and actively hurt the team. The team put together an embarrassingly undisciplined first half of football, so attention to detail still needs to be addressed. Riley’s teams lost the three toughest road games this season against Illinois, Notre Dame and Oregon, which will ultimately keep it out of the College Football Playoff. Next year’s schedule features road games at Indiana and Penn State, not to mention home games against Ohio State, Oregon and Washington.

And though the 2026 recruiting class will boost the talent level for the program, counting on freshmen in the Big Ten against that schedule would be a lot to ask of that group.

So while this year has the chance to be a positive one for USC,  it does not at all guarantee 2026 will be some sort of breakthrough the program has been seeking since Riley arrived in Los Angeles four years ago. Riley has been out of excuses. Four years without a Playoff trip is not what anyone expected. This year has been fine, but not great. It feels like 2026 might be a year where he finally has to make good on what he was brought to USC to do. — Antonio Morales

This story will be updated.