Dan Lanning has the Oregon Ducks sitting at 5-0 as the team heads into its bye week.

A 42-6 win over Stanford on Saturday kept the Ducks unbeaten through their first five games for the first time since 2013. It was a slow-to-start day for Oregon, but once it got rolling, it became a dominant performance.

Now, Oregon gets two weeks to prepare for a top-10 showdown with Washington in Seattle.

“We’re not going into bye week, we’re going into work week,” Lanning said after Saturday’s game. “Our guys know what our goals are and what we have to accomplish. A lot of other teams are gonna relax this week, we’re gonna get better. We start exactly how we expect to start. We’re about to go play a real opponent there. Those guys are playing good ball up north. So we gotta bring our best. It’s going to be one of our great preparations.

“We’ve got some really tough teams down the road, so we’ve got to continue to build and play our best ball moving forward.”

Lanning said they’ve adjusted some things in their bye week plan. They’ll work Washington, obviously, and try to do some early work for future opponents. Last season, Oregon went into a bye on the heels of a 49-22 win and came out of it with a 45-30 win over a top-10 UCLA team.

What worked then should work again. Lanning knows what his team needs.

“We’ve really got to self-scout ourselves,” Lanning said. “It’s time to peel back the layers and figure out, OK, what do we have to do to be a dominant team moving forward.”

He said they don’t need to make the Washington game bigger than a game. It will carry Pac-12 title implications. It could serve as a Pac-12 title game preview. Lanning said Oregon will focus on Oregon, though.

“We’re going to pick small details that we can improve schematically, individually, for each person on our team,” he said. “And then we’re gonna try to figure out how to take away other team strengths.”