Oregon will be throwing it back this weekend against No. 5 Washington, as the Ducks wear their "Webfoots" uniform.

The jersey will be recognizable to anyone who tuned in for Oregon's spring game, but the rest of the uniform is different.

The shoulders have the school's fight song lyrics written on them, while the chest will read "Webfoots," which is what the program was known as during its first three decades of existence. According to the university, the word Webfoots -- despite popular belief -- wasn't a nickname for a duck.

It was rather a term that had originated in Massachusetts during the 1700s to describe locals who lived in wet conditions. The term was proliferated by miners coming northward from California as a pejorative descriptor of the locals of the waterlogged Willamette Valley and had grown in popular usage by the 1860s. By the time the University of Oregon began forming sports teams for intercollegiate play in the last decade of the 19th century, the term Webfoot had become synonymous with Oregonians.

Certainly, the Ducks wanted to invoke history in this game as they hold a 12-game win streak over the Huskies. Two seasons ago when these schools played, Oregon sported 1994 throwback uniforms to pay homage to its '94 win over the Huskies, which featured Kenny Wheaton and the play that became known as "The Pick."