Neither Dan Lanning nor Kalen DeBoer has to say much to their teams this week to get them ready to roll. Hate is enough sometimes.

“There is no love lost in this game, and that’s something that’s exciting,” Lanning said this week.

Added DeBoer: “It’s a big rivalry game. It’s a fun game to be a part of. There’s a different vibe, a different feel to it. It is a huge game, but our process needs to be something where it’s consistent with what we do and how we prepare each and every week.”

Oregon and Washington are getting together on Saturday under the lights for another chapter in this heated rivalry.

The Ducks are 15-2 against the Huskies since 2004, and they’re 8-1 in Eugene over that time. Winners of eight straight games, Oregon has been on an absolute tear coming into this latest matchup. The Ducks have averaged 48.1 points a game during the win streak. They’ve scored 40-plus points in eight straight games for first time since 2014. They’re the only FBS team this season with eight games scoring at least 40 points. And they’ve won seven of the eight by at least 15 points.

The Ducks are getting it done by dominating the ‘Middle Eight’ — the last four minutes of the first half and the first four of the second half. Oregon is an FBS-leading plus-8.9 points a game in the ‘Middle Eight’ this season.

Washington’s Michael Penix Jr. has led an equally potent offense on Montlake. The Huskies are scoring 38 points a game this season, powered by a pass game that leads the nation. Penix has an FBS-best 3,232 passing yards. UW ranks sixth in passing success rate.

The Huskies have a group of receivers as deep as any in the country — with Jalen McMillan, Rome Odunze, Ja’Lynn Polk, and Giles Jackson all posting 100-yard games this year. Odunze’s 858 yards lead all Pac-12 receivers.

The last time Oregon welcomed a prolific offense to Autzen for a top-25 matchup, Lanning and the staff dialed up a timely onside kick to steal a possession midway through and power a 15-point win over UCLA. Given the offensive firepower that’ll be on display Saturday, this one could come down to a handful of timely plays as well.

Here’s everything you need to know for the game.

TV info and kickoff time

Kickoff time: 4 p.m. PT

TV network: FOX; fans can also watch the game live on FOX Sports with a cable or satellite provider login

Location: Autzen Stadium, Eugene

Betting odds

Line: Oregon -12.5

Total: 72.5

Money line: Oregon -530, Washington +390

Via FanDuel

Expert predictions

ESPN’s FPI gives the Ducks a 77.2% chance of beating the Huskies.

Bill Connelly’s SP+ is calling for a 37-26 Oregon win, writing this on the game:

Washington’s defense has been dreadfully inefficient this season, and the Huskies’ best chance of making stops comes from big-play prevention and taking advantage of some Oregon red zone inefficiency. Oregon’s run defense is excellent, but Washington barely runs and might never choose to run instead of throwing on an Oregon pass defense that has, to put it politely, been lacking to date.

DuckTerritory’s Matt Prehm picked Oregon to win 49-34:

Offensively, this is going to be a game where Bo Nix entrenches himself as a Top 3 Heisman Candidate the rest of the year. He’s going to account for five or more touchdowns in this game and he’s going to have some ‘wow’ moments that are of the good and awesome kind.

The Seattle Times’ Mike Vorel picked the Ducks to win 41-30:

Quarterback Michael Penix Jr. and his parade of pass-catchers will be familiarly efficient inside Autzen Stadium — but it won’t be enough. Not against one of the nation’s premier offenses and rushing attacks. Not against a dual threat quarterback with a skill set that has consistently stymied the Huskies. Not against a team that inarguably has the Huskies number. An argument could be made — if the Huskies score enough, force a rare turnover and somehow slow the run — that Washington could walk away with a stunning upset. But we’ll have to see it to believe it. Check back on Saturday night.