Winter 2025

Oregon QB Dante Moore ‘doing everything to glorify Him’ in pursuit of national championship

For more than three decades, Oregon has been one of college football’s model programs. With flashy uniforms, rosters full of future NFL stars, and an imposing home atmosphere, the Ducks have become one of the country’s premier teams.

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In its 108-year history, Oregon has won 14 conference championships and 17 bowl games. The program has been particularly successful during the 2000s, including two national runner-up finishes in 2010 and 2014, and the program’s only Heisman Trophy winner in quarterback Marcus Mariota.

Yet one thing has always eluded the Ducks: a national championship. That’s the drought No. 5 Oregon is trying to end this season as it faces conference-foe and No. 1 Indiana in the Peach Bowl on Friday night.

And if the Ducks are finally going to break through, quarterback Dante Moore will be a central reason why. After transferring from UCLA to Oregon in 2024, Moore sat behind future NFL quarterback Dillon Gabriel last season before taking over the starting job this season. Heading into Friday, he’s amassed 3,280 passing yards with 28 touchdowns (10th in the nation) and nine interceptions in 2025-26.

His breakout season has skyrocketed his NFL stock, with ESPN projecting him as the No. 2 pick in the 2026 draft in its latest mock draft — though he could return to Oregon for another season.

He felt comfortable immediately upon arriving in Eugene, both on and off the field. Shortly after he enrolled, he connected with the team chaplain, where a conversation led to Moore getting baptized.

“Coach (Dan) Lanning asked me ‘what’s my why’ recently, and it’s to glorify God,” Moore said last March on the “Ducks of a Feather” podcast, hosted by former Oregon and NFL players Jonathan Stewart and Kenjon Barner. “God has blessed me with the body I have just to compete and play the game of football that I love, be around people that I’m building connections with for the rest of my life. I’m just doing everything to glorify Him.

“That can be being an athlete, it can be being a student. That’s why recently my Instagram for the past year-and-a-half now has been a lot of verses, a lot of me reading the Bible.”

Indeed, Moore’s social media presence reflects his faith. His Instagram bio says he’s a “Follower of Christ,” and those who follow Moore will often see pictures of what he’s reading in the Scriptures that day. He was also seen praying with his teammates ahead of Oregon’s Orange Bowl win over Texas Tech.

“I just want to do everything He’s blessed me to do,” Moore said on the podcast. “He gave His Son Jesus Christ to die for our sins, so just understand that every day that’s what drives me to be thankful for that situation and the opportunity to be where I’m at.”

 

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His spiritual journey started with a rollercoaster freshman year at UCLA, where he said he quickly learned from some difficult stretches.

“My freshman year, my first three games were amazing. Then everything goes downhill from there and I feel like, I’ve been at the lowest of lows and the highest of highs,” Moore told 247Sports’ Duck Territory blog in October. “Coach (Chip) Kelly did a great job of making sure that I stayed positive as a mindset, but it’s just hard when you’re a freshman and you’re a young guy and you’re 17 years old in L.A. and far away from home, to stay positive and smile through it all.”

For some athletes, a change of scenery can make all the difference. That seems to be the case for Moore. At Oregon, he found not only a fresh start, but a culture that emphasized trust, joy and purpose.

“Being here with Coach Lanning, a great coach who I love to death and who I’m blessed to have him — the way he talks, communicates and calls me, just having a head coach who I trust,” Moore told 247Sports. “He’s just always telling me like code words on the field to remember my childhood self playing football in little league smiling. At the end of the day, I play the game to glorify God and if it’s a loss or a win, it doesn’t matter as long as I play my 100% hardest — that’s where my smile comes from.”

That perspective will be tested again Friday night. Indiana handed Oregon its lone defeat earlier this season, 30-20 in Oregon on Oct. 11. Their rematch comes on the big stage of the College Football Playoff semifinals. The quarterback on the other sideline is Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza, whom many experts believe will be the No. 1 overall pick in the upcoming NFL Draft.

But Moore isn’t approaching the moment with bitterness or pressure — rather, with gratitude and high praise for his counterpart, who is also not shy about sharing his faith in Jesus.

“He’s somebody that works his tail off, a very smart quarterback,” Moore said about Mendoza to reporters this week. “But I think the biggest thing that I take away from him is he gives glory to God through his success, through his accolades, through his wins, he always gives time to glorify God, and that’s something I appreciate. Respect towards him.”

Oregon and Indiana will kick off at 7:30 p.m. ET Friday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. The winner moves on to the national championship game.

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— Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia knows ‘Christ is real’ amid long journey
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