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University of Oregon Opens Incredible New Football Training Facility

$68 million and 145,000 square feet. Those are the particulars of the Oregon Ducks’ brand-spanking-new football training facility, a building that looks more like a futuristic space station than a place where football players gather for meetings and workouts. The facility boasts state-of-the-art training equipment, flatscreen TVs, and even a barbershop—in case of a hair emergency. Click through the slideshow to get a virtual tour of the facility, and dream of the day when you commit to play football for Oregon.

If you can’t get enough of Oregon’s cutting edge facilities, let former Ducks running back LaMichael James take you on a tour of the football stadium and alternate training facility.

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Oregon Embraces ‘University of Nike’ Image

university of oregon football facility tour

By Greg Bishop

  • Aug. 2, 2013

EUGENE, Ore. — The Football Performance Center at the University of Oregon features rugs woven by hand in Nepal, couches made in Italy and Brazilian hardwood underfoot in the weight room that is so dense, designers of this opulent palace believe it will not burn.

This is Oregon football . There is a barbershop with utensils from Milan. And a duck pond. And a locker room that can be accessed by biometric thumbprints. And chairs upholstered with the same material found in a Ferrari’s interior. And walls covered in football leather.

Nike football leather, naturally.

The Football Performance Center, which was unveiled publicly this week, is as much country club as football facility, potentially mistaken for a day spa, or an art gallery, or a sports history museum, or a spaceship — and is luxurious enough to make N.F.L. teams jealous. It is, more than anything, a testament to college football’s arms race, to the billions of dollars at stake and to the lengths that universities will go to field elite football programs.

The performance center was paid for through a donation from Phil Knight, a founder of Nike, an Oregon alumnus and a longtime benefactor of the university. During a tour of the complex Wednesday, university officials declined to give a dollar figure, even a ballpark one, insisting they did not know the total cost of a football center where even the garbage cans were picked with great care to match the overall design. (Early design estimates placed the center’s cost at $68 million, which, based on the tour, seemed conservative.)

The tour lasted more than three hours and covered the full 145,000 square feet of the complex (with 60,000 additional square feet of parking). Nike and its relationship with Oregon are obvious early and throughout. One small logo outside the Ducks’ locker room featured the university’s mascot, wearing a top hat adorned with a dollar sign. Oregon football is often viewed through that lens by outsiders, who derisively have christened Oregon as Nike University.

“We are the University of Nike,” said Jeff Hawkins, the senior associate athletic director of football administration and operations. “We embrace it. We tell that to our recruits.”

The center is also an answer to how the Ducks turned a mediocre program into an unlikely powerhouse in a city of just more than 150,000 people. Where other schools, the Alabamas and Notre Dames, sold tradition, Oregon peddled the future. It rolled out a series of uniforms, neon and blinding white and every shade of green, designed to attract both athletes and attention. It ran a spread offense, which it famously practiced without breaks, and has advanced to four straight Bowl Championship Series contests, including the national championship game after the 2010 season.

Now it has the best football operations center Nike can buy, designed by ZGF Architects, Firm 151 and Hoffman Construction. The center is divided into three buildings, all black and shiny rectangular blocks, connected by a sky bridge. Those buildings — and everything around them — are black and boxy by design. Made of black granite, corrugated metal and fritted glass, the elements are arranged like pieces of a Jenga game to show cohesion between units (they also look like the shell of an impenetrable force). A local newspaper quoted an architect who described it as a “Darth Vaderish Death Star.” The designers took that as a compliment.

“The space, flow and efficiency are not excessive,” Hawkins said. “From what we had to what we have now, it fits what we need to teach.”

For Oregon football, black is the new black, down to the black toilets in the locker room that were described, perhaps in jest, as stealth. The athletes wanted it to look cool, and architects balanced their needs — down to the custom green PlayStation consoles and pool tables made by the same Portland company that designed two for Michael Jackson — with those of the coaches, who are older and spend most of their waking hours in the center and wanted, more than anything, a diverse selection of after-shave.

Throughout the tour, Eugene Sandoval, design partner at ZGF Architects, and Randy Stegmeier, principal interior designer at Firm 151, returned often to their favorite buzzwords, which they said guided the design: sleek, bombastic, cutting-edge. They said things like, “the material palate is elevated to a very sophisticated level” and “you will see sequencing of form and function of space.”

In simpler terms, Sandoval explained that “this sports facility has a soul.”

“It’s about not being afraid to make history,” he continued.

The soul of Oregon’s football operations center, then, is an all-black room on a top floor known as both the War Room and Area 51.

There are 22 seats at the table, and they are assigned, with the head coach at head and others placed next to him based on order of importance. The table is German and walnut and 35 feet long. The rug is shaped in an “O” and made in Nepal and weighs 500 pounds. The walls are magnetic and can be written on, part of Oregon football’s goal to eventually operate without paper. (No word on if the seats eject. Or if Coach Mark Helfrich is in possession of nuclear launch codes.)

Oregon’s search for improved facilities started eight years ago. The first trip featured 11 people in a private jet, architects and designers and contractors and school officials, and they visited nine universities in three days. They studied counterparts in the Big Ten, Big 12 and Southeastern conferences. At one point, Sandoval traveled 37 hours to China to find a specific rock quarry, which ultimately produced the stones in the ground floor plaza.

Enough to Make an N.F.L. Team Jealous

View Slide Show ›

The small details stand out. The bathrooms with green stalls and mirrors with painted Ducks slugging conference foes. The extra-large furniture tested to withstand 500 pounds. The elevators decorated with famous plays in Oregon football history, the actual plays, drawn up in Xs and Os by a coach. The room for professional scouts to watch footage of Oregon players. The ticker running sports scores.

On and on, for football’s sake:

The foosball tables from Barcelona in the players’ lounge. The ventilation systems in each locker. The magic shelves that charge phones or tablet devices without the need to plug in. The 250-plus televisions.

The Ring Room, shaped like an O, with rings underneath green neon light and audio created by Finnish engineers using game-day sound from Autzen Stadium. The cafeteria, this being the Pacific Northwest, with the espresso machine and the farm-to-table philosophy and the sign that reads, “Eat Your Enemies — And Other Food Groups.” The terrazzo floors made with recycled glass. The 40-yard electronic track inside the weight room that measures the force of each step and the efficiency of each run.

The coaches have their own locker room, complete with a hydrotherapy pool and steam shower, made from blue stone slate, and, of course, dozens of kinds of after-shave in front of the bathroom mirrors, which feature built-in televisions.

Gary Campbell, one of the longest-tenured assistants in college sports at the same university, with three decades spent at Oregon, once worked with three other coaches in an office the same size as his current one, in the basement of the basketball court. When he inched backward, he bumped into his office mates. “There is no comparison,” he said Wednesday, in front of his couch and his two computer monitors and his three televisions, the office paneled in walnut, the smell somewhere between new car and Pottery Barn showroom.

Welcome to college football, circa 2013, where the best programs build Ritz-Carltons as much as Olympic training facilities and call them football centers, where a university like Oregon, which raised its profile and millions of dollars in revenue through football, must defend its space-age approach.

“People will complain, but this is not excessive,” said Rob Mullens, the university’s athletic director. “This is probably the most complete space in college sports.”

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Incredible photos and video of Oregon's new football facility

Phil Knight's masterpiece has arrived. Follow @SBNationCFB

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And this is just the locker room.

Oregon's new football facility has finally been completed, and yes, it's just as crazy as you have heard . The $68 million, 145,000-square foot facility funded by Phil Knight has been described as, "Darth Vaderish Death Star," "A little elitist," and "...a little bit too much in the intimidating direction," but it's impossible to say it's not an impressive facility.

Here's a closer look at some of the features.

The building lobby

Includes 64 55" televisions that can be linked together to show one image, or all show something different. Absurd on a multitude of levels.

The team cafeteria

The locker room, the barber shop, the team meeting room, the head coach's office, the coaches' hot tub.

Yes, Oregon coaches have their own hot tub.

The weight room

The coaches' war room.

Here's the full gallery, courtesy of GoDucks.com:

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Oregon ducks tour new football facility (video).

By Chris Yuscavage , Complex Sports The University of Oregon's new $68 million football facility is crazy. CRAAAAAAAAAAAAAZY! Like, we can't even believe that it exists. And if we were any good at playing football, we would definitely attend the school just off the strength of the facility. It includes:

  • A 25,000-square-foot weight room that features Brazilian Ipe wood floors
  • A locker room that features German-built lockers equipped with ventilation systems designed to eliminate smells
  • A barbershop
  • A players' lounge that features a pool table, two foosball tables (with kickers made to look like Oregon players), and a large terrace
  • A "War Room" that only 40 people within the football program can access
  • When the Oregon players got their first look at the facility recently, they damn near couldn't contain themselves. Some didn't even look like they could find the words to describe just how happy they were to have such an incredible football facility at their disposal. Peep the video above to see their reactions to it.

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Due to the delay in FAFSA data being supplied to the University of Oregon, the UO is extending the confirmation deadline to June 1, 2024, for first-year students admitted for fall 2024. We are also extending the priority FAFSA filing deadline to April 1, 2024, for all UO students.

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Enjoy our beautiful campus as a student ambassador leads you on a guided campus tour , or explore on your own with our UOregon app or the self-guided tour map . Not coming to Eugene just yet? We've got plenty of virtual visit options too.

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Our interactive, state-of-the-art Student Welcome Center is a starting point for campus tours that encourages exploration and rewards curiosity. Features include lounges, meeting rooms, residence hall showrooms, and a theater for large group presentations.

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While we would love to show you around campus in one of our student-led tours, you have the option to explore on your own. Choose from our UOregon app or the self-guided tour map . You can also pick up a printed tour map and guide at one of the kiosks conveniently located around campus.

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Where we are says a lot about who we are. Our 295-acre campus is smack-dab in the middle of some of the most beautiful places to be outside anywhere. We jog in the morning, bike to school, and roll along 13th Avenue to meet friends. We ski down mountains, float down rivers, and play along the beaches on the weekends. From the moment you arrive, you’ll feel right at home. This place feels familiar, green, and friendly, but also modern, totally connected, and cosmopolitan. It’s kind of perfect—an extraordinary academic community surrounded by a quintessential college town. It’s alive with music, culture, food, art, and just the right amount of weird to keep things interesting.

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If you can't make it to campus or just want to stay connected, we have plenty of options for you. Schedule a one-on-one Zoom meetup, or explore our digital resources to help imagine your life on campus.

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Our team of admissions counselors and student ambassadors are available to schedule one-on-one Zoom meetings. Let us know what you're wondering about and we'll customize each session to your needs.

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Plenty of UO resources exist online, and we wanted to gather them all here for you to explore. From our YouTube playlist, to our Instagram filters, to our plethora of 360 VR content, there's plenty of ways to experience your future life as a Duck.

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Look: new plans, renderings of ducks future indoor practice field take shape, share this article.

The Oregon Ducks announced plans to build a new, multi-million dollar indoor practice field adjacent Autzen Stadium last year, and the university is going through the approval stage for the project.

According to  a release from the school’s website, the school has submitted paperwork to the city to build a 170,000 square foot indoor facility west of Autzen Stadium, between Leo Harris Parkway and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. The location is part of the current outdoor football practice fields the team uses. Oregon’s indoor practice facility, the Moshofsky Center, is 135,000 square feet and will continue to be used for all sports. This new facility will give the Oregon athletic department two indoor facilities for its sports teams to use.

According to a new report from The Oregonian’s James Crepea, the plans are being advanced with the help of the Eugene City Council.

The Eugene City Council moved to authorize City Manager Sarah Medary to negotiate with the University of Oregon to advance the proposed concept of the new outdoor football practice facility into a more detailed proposal for City Council to consider after summer break. — James Crepea (@JamesCrepea) July 13, 2022
If the plan is eventually approved, the new IPF will reroute Leo Harris and there will be some minor adjustments to parking lots pic.twitter.com/awAgu1fhUr — James Crepea (@JamesCrepea) July 13, 2022

The project is slotted to be completed by 2024 and will give the Ducks more room for the football team to work within a controlled atmosphere.

The new facility will be among the region’s most energy-efficient buildings; the goal is to power the building using renewable energy generated onsite.

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Ranking the most intriguing position battles for the oregon ducks this spring, spring position preview: new faces litter ducks' interior defensive line, every big ten team's spring football schedule, 5 things to watch at oregon's pro day on tuesday, projecting the ducks' offensive depth chart ahead of oregon's spring season, projecting the ducks' defensive depth chart ahead of oregon's spring season, 5-star lsu commit dakorien moore is still taking a hard look at oregon.

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Oregon football: Ducks’ sneakiest 2024 transfer portal move

S ince Dan Lanning arrived in Eugene, he has been building something special. Oregon football was already a top-tier program in the country, but Lanning has shown no drop-off from former head coach Mario Cristobal, who left to join his alma mater at Miami. Part of the reason for Lanning’s success with the Ducks is his adept use of the transfer portal .

Over the past two seasons, Lanning has brought in players like running back Bucky Irving, wide receiver Tez Johnson, and last year’s Heisman candidate quarterback Bo Nix, just to name a few. The Ducks’ head coach looks to have added yet another talented transfer portal class in 2024. By the end of the December through January window, Oregon football signed 11 incoming transfers with 14 outgoing, giving them the No. 3 portal ranking, according to 247sports.

For the 2024 Ducks, the portal was mostly about reloading and addressing areas that may have been weakened by players moving on to the NFL. One such area was the quarterback position, to help replace Nix, who revitalized his career at Oregon and made the Ducks one of the elite teams in the Pac-12 in 2023.

With Nix gone, Lanning and his staff quickly pursued former UCF and Oklahoma quarterback Dillon Gabriel. Once he entered the transfer portal, many suspected that Gabriel would land in Eugene, as the fit was too good to pass up given the scheme, need, and even NIL opportunities. The surprise came when Lanning also secured former UCLA quarterback Dante Moore to bolster his quarterback room .

Dante Moore transfers to Oregon football

It was widely expected that Lanning would look to the portal to replace Nix, and while Gabriel’s entry into the portal was a bit surprising, his signing with Oregon was not . However, once he signed, many assumed that Dante Moore, who had also entered the portal, would look elsewhere, especially with the starting quarterback position seemingly filled by Gabriel. This was compounded by the presence of former four-star sophomore Austin Novosad on the roster as well.

Gabriel likely had enough options vying for his talents that he didn’t need to choose Oregon. While it’s unclear if another program, possibly even one in his home state of Michigan, would have been as elite as Oregon, someone would have signed him.

Moore’s challenge is his limited resume, which isn’t impressive, as he struggled in his first season at UCLA. He played in just nine games, completing only 53.5 percent of his passes and throwing 11 touchdowns to nine interceptions.

In hindsight, with recent developments at UCLA, including former head coach Chip Kelly departing for an offensive coordinator job at Ohio State, there may have been more to Moore’s decision than initially known.

Nevertheless, Moore was ranked No. 4 nationally, the No. 3 quarterback in the country , and the No. 1 player in the state of Michigan. Perhaps his initial commitment and familiarity with Lanning and Oregon influenced his decision. Whatever the reason, this was a surprising and unexpected acquisition for Oregon football, one that could pay off handsomely in the future.

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The post Oregon football: Ducks’ sneakiest 2024 transfer portal move appeared first on ClutchPoints .

Oregon football: Ducks’ sneakiest 2024 transfer portal move

IMAGES

  1. Oregon's Football Facility: Behind the Scenes

    university of oregon football facility tour

  2. Inside the OREGON DUCKS' $68,000,000 FOOTBALL Facility

    university of oregon football facility tour

  3. Inside Oregon's Football Performance Center

    university of oregon football facility tour

  4. Aerial View of Autzen Stadium, University of Oregon Ducks Football

    university of oregon football facility tour

  5. Stunning amenities in Oregon's new football facility

    university of oregon football facility tour

  6. Andy Barker News: Oregon Football Stadium

    university of oregon football facility tour

COMMENTS

  1. Facility Tour Information

    Facility Tour Information. The University of Oregon boasts arguably the best athletic facilities in the nation. From the Jaqua Academic Center to the Hatfield-Dowlin Football Complex, our state-of-the-art venues are first and foremost for the use of our Student-Athletes. These are the spaces where they train, sweat, eat, study, lift, learn, and ...

  2. Inside the OREGON DUCKS' $68,000,000 FOOTBALL Facility

    Up next in our "Bowl Season" mini-series of "Royal Key" is the Oregon Ducks. Director of Equipment Kenny Farr opened the doors to Autzen Stadium - and much m...

  3. An inside look at Oregon football's facilities

    A video tour inside Oregon football's facilities provided by COISKI. Alek Arend May 4th, 2019, 2:00 AM. (Photo: 247Sports) The University of Oregon is a world-wide brand for a reason. Now, thanks ...

  4. Inside the OREGON DUCKS' $68,000,000 FOOTBALL Facility, Pt. 2

    On this episode of "Royal Key," we take you back inside the Oregon Duck's football facility; only this time, the storied athletic program gives us access to ...

  5. Touring Oregon'S Insane $70 Million Dollar Football Facility! (Football

    NEW THE ELEVN DROP 10/30 EARLY ACCESS LINK : https://tiny.ps/13RT4P In this new series, we will be touring football facilities to give you an inside look at ...

  6. University of Oregon Opens Incredible New Football Training Facility

    $68 million and 145,000 square feet. Those are the particulars of the Oregon Ducks' brand-spanking-new football training facility, a building […]

  7. Watch: Inside the Oregon Ducks Football Facility

    Earlier this week, YouTube channel ' Sports Dissected by COISKI ' posted a new Oregon football facilities tour video. This time they were granted permission to see the Sports Science Lab. At about the 8:10 mark of the video, Sports Science coordinator Ben McKay talked about his role and some of the unique features of the lab.

  8. Oregon Embraces 'University of Nike' Image

    The University of Oregon's Football Performance Center, paid for by Phil Knight, a founder of Nike, is luxurious enough to make N.F.L. teams envious.

  9. Incredible photos and video of Oregon's new football facility

    By Peter Berkes Jul 31, 2013, 10:00am EDT. And this is just the locker room. Hatfield-Dowlin Complex Oregon Ducks. Watch on. Oregon's new football facility has finally been completed, and yes, it ...

  10. SIDEARM Integrations

    The sparkling indoor facility includes a full-length artificial football surface, a synthetic four-lane 120-meter running track and an attached Duck Shop souvenir retail outlet. Not only is it the ideal solution for the University's football team to work out during inclement weather, but plays host to eight of the 16 intercollegiate sports.

  11. SIDEARM Integrations

    Matthew Knight Arena. Hayward Field. PK Park. Jane Sanders Stadium. Papé Field. Peter & Jan Jacobsen Oregon Golf Teaching Facility. Student Tennis Center. Marcus Mariota Sports Performance Center. John E. Jaqua Academic Center.

  12. Oregon Ducks Tour New Football Facility (VIDEO)

    WATCH: Oregon Players Amazed By Crazy New Team Facility. Aug 10, 2013, 11:40 AM EDT. By Chris Yuscavage, Complex Sports. The University of Oregon's new $68 million football facility is crazy. CRAAAAAAAAAAAAAZY!

  13. Inside Oregon's Football Performance Center

    Sports Illustrated takes a look inside The University of Oregon's brand new football performance center in Eugene, Oregon.Subscribe to http://po.st/Subscr...

  14. Ducks Fan Travel

    Various/Northeast Yankees & Red Sox Tickets Baseball Hall of Fame Tour Boston, New York, & Cooperstown Stops SEE DETAILS! At. Oregon Ducks. At. Michigan. November 1-3, 2024 ... Camp Randall Stadium Mighty Oregon Tailgate Event Tour Welcome Event Gameday Transfers BOOK NOW! Contact. 1.888.714.4373 . Terms and Conditions ...

  15. Dillon Gabriel Gives BTS Look At Oregon's Breathtaking FB Facility

    Dillon Gabriel's Girlfriend Gives Inside Look At Oregon's Breathtaking Football Facility On First Tour. Dillon Gabriel is set to exhaust his final year of eligibility at the University of Oregon this year. The 23-year-old quarterback, who began his career at UCF in 2019, will play his six season of college football in Eugene after two years ...

  16. Visit

    Our interactive, state-of-the-art Student Welcome Center is a starting point for campus tours that encourages exploration and rewards curiosity. Features include lounges, meeting rooms, residence hall showrooms, and a theater for large group presentations. ... 5263 University of Oregon. Eugene, OR 97403. Office: Unthank Hall , Suite 101 . Call ...

  17. Oregon unveils plans for new indoor facility

    Oregon rose to the top of college football by being on the cutting edge of the sport in basically everything -- scheme, uniforms, facilities. And as the cutting edge keeps moving forward, so does Oregon. The university this week unveiled plans for a brand new, football-only indoor facility, to be opened in 2024.

  18. Oregon Football: New plans for Ducks indoor practice field take shape

    The Oregon Ducks announced plans to build a new, multi-million dollar indoor practice field adjacent Autzen Stadium last year, and the university is going through the approval stage for the project.. According to a release from the school's website, the school has submitted paperwork to the city to build a 170,000 square foot indoor facility west of Autzen Stadium, between Leo Harris Parkway ...

  19. Autzen Stadium Gameday Tour

    The walk to Autzen, the fall colors, the marching band, the student section. Nothing ends a solid week of classes like cheering on the Oregon Ducks football...

  20. Facility Friday: Oregon Ducks Practice Facility, $170M Nido and Mariana

    The University of Oregon has shared its plans for a 170,000-square-foot indoor practice facility to be built just west of Autzen Stadium, between Leo Harris Parkway and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. ... Oregon Ducks Practice Facility, $170M Nido and Mariana Qubein Arena, Baker Athletics Fields. ... the University of Kansas football program ...

  21. University of Oregon approves Ducks new indoor football practice center

    6.7.2023. The indoor practice facility is expected to be completed in 2025 Univ. of Oregon. The Univ. of Oregon BOT has approved the "construction for the Oregon Ducks ' new indoor football practice facility," according to James Crepea of the Portland OREGONIAN. The BOT approved a proposal to "lease or license portions of the Hatfield ...

  22. SIDEARM Integrations

    Matthew Knight Arena. Hayward Field. PK Park. Jane Sanders Stadium. Papé Field. Peter & Jan Jacobsen Oregon Golf Teaching Facility. Student Tennis Center. Marcus Mariota Sports Performance Center. John E. Jaqua Academic Center.

  23. OREGON FOOTBALL FACILITIES TOUR

    Cyrus:https://www.instagram.com/cyri3e/CYFY TVhttps://www.instagram.com/cyfytv/Powered by Entitled Networkhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UClK78eJbN_xOCms9aC...

  24. Oregon football: Ducks' sneakiest 2024 transfer portal move

    By the end of the December through January window, Oregon football signed 11 incoming transfers with 14 outgoing, giving them the No. 3 portal ranking, according to 247sports.