: Autzen Stadium: Full padsThe Ducks invited season-ticket holders to watch their practice Saturday, and the team put on a show in a few periods to cap the second week of preseason camp.The practice, before about 600 fans in the stands of Autzen Stadium, ended with a clutch scenario in which the No. 2 offense tried to run out the clock against the No. 2 defense; if unsuccessful, the No. 1 offense would have a chance to drive to a "game-winning" touchdown against the No. 1 defense.Quarterbacking the twos,showed off some composure, helping bait the defense into jumping offsides and waiting until late in the play clock to snap the ball. But on a third down near midfield,broke through for a sack, andhad an opening to come from behind.Prukop nearly threw an interception on his first play, butcouldn't hang on.broke up a pass on second down, too, but on third down Prukop coolly dropped back and foundon a catch-and-run that netted 42 yards.After three more plays that included asack, Prukop and Brown connected again on fourth down to move the chains again. But the clock was winding down, and on the final play of the scenario Prukop couldn't connect within the end zone.Practice opened with the Ducks' version of the Oklahoma drill. Carlberg had another nice rep in that period, keeping himself in the play long enough to come off a block and tackleThe defense didn't have as much success in a rep against, who shed a block at the line of scrimmage, high-stepped to avoid another attempted tackle and crossed the goal line:Jonsen also used his feet to move the chains later in an 11-on-11 period, showing off his dual-threat potential."I feel real comfortable if I have to get out of the pocket and really run the ball," he said later. "I feel like my feet can do a lot of things – obviously I can make people miss, and get out of sticky situations."So far in camp, Jonsen has appeared to be the most dynamic runner in the quarterback competition. On the other hand, Prukop's overall command of the offense and efficiency have been on point, and Herbert's poise and passing ability have been thestory of week two.That makes the final week of camp, beginning Monday and culminating in a scrimmage scheduled for Thursday, key for Jonsen to cement his status on the depth chart. He seemed to build some momentum Friday and Saturday of this week, throwing with more consistent accuracy."Obviously, he's a name around the team right now, and I can't blame (that); he's doing his thing right now," Jonsen said. "Terry Wilson is right there too; they're both doing really good things. What I have to do is be more consistent. I felt like I ended the week on a great note, so I've just got to keep doing that, thinking about it play by play. Win the day, you could say.": The Ducks did their full-contact special teams "tube drill" again, and had the crowd cheering its approval a couple times.made open-field tackles on both his reps, popping the ball loose for a fumble on one. Dye couldn't bring down the returner on his first, but on his second he wrapped up the ballcarrier and essentially suplexed him to the ground.Like Dye, bothand Springs recovered from missed tackles on their first attempts to make them on their second chance.also had tackles on both his reps, as did, including this one:In the Oklahoma drill, Prevot had tackles both as a lineman and a linebacker.made a tackle in both the Oklahoma drill and the tube drill.: Dye has spent the last couple days with the top defensive group. … The No. 1 offensive line was back together today, withandtaking their familiar positions. That helped the skill guys with the ones, though Hunt's absence at center with the twos was apparent at times. … During drills for the punt return team, players got hands on several punts by the scout team. … Some number changes went into effect this morning, includingmoving from 26 to 82, andgoing from 13 to 30. … Also this morning, veteran walk-on receiverwas added to the 105-man camp roster, on which there was an available spot.