It's too early in the college football season to make these sorts of declarations, but already there's talk that Oregon might have its best team yet.
Better than the 2010 team that lost the BCS Championship Game to Auburn on a last-second field goal. And even better than last year's team, which went 12-1, the only loss coming by a field goal against Stanford.
Those two teams were coached by Chip Kelly, who brought his high-speed offense to the NFL's Philadelphia Eagles. But so far, this year's team hasn't lost a step under new coach Mark Helfrich, who had been the Ducks' offensive coordinator.
With a Heisman Trophy candidate at quarterback, in sophomore Marcus Mariota, Oregon began stating its case two weeks ago, with a 45-24 win over then-No. 16 Washington. And the Ducks will have more chances to impress the next two weeks, against No. 12 UCLA on Saturday and at No. 6 Stanford on Nov. 7.
On this week's Pac-12 teleconference, Helfrich wasn't about to look ahead. He was too consumed by the challenge coming from linebacker Anthony Barr and UCLA's defense.
"He's phenomenal, and the thing is, he's not the only one," Helfrich said. "I think they play about six guys at linebacker that are like that. They're outstanding."
Second-year UCLA coach Jim Mora has the joy of preparing for high-flying Oregon, one week after a 24-10 loss to Stanford's smash-mouth offense.
"It's certainly a real contrast," he said. "You're talking about polar opposites, in terms of the way they approach their offense."