Author Archives | Aaron Alter

Players to Watch as the Ducks face Arizona

Tyrell Crosby / Left Tackle / Oregon

With Justin Herbert at quarterback, Oregon is a run-focused team. With Braxton Burmeister under center, the team leans even more on the run. Left tackle Tyrell Crosby has played well on the offensive line all season. He is ranked in the top 10 nationally in run blocking and pass blocking by Pro Football Focus, and Crosby will need to continue to step up to give his QB a chance. Assuming Burmeister starts, the running game will need to be top-notch, and that means Crosby needs to play well. If Herbert returns, protecting the quarterback will be more important than ever.

Shun Brown / Wide Receiver / Arizona

While Arizona’s offense unquestionably runs through quarterback Khalil Tate, the Ducks would be remiss to ignore the Wildcats’ skill players. Brown is one of the team’s leading receivers and works out of the slot. He doesn’t have size, but he has the speed and elusiveness to give Oregon big problems if the secondary isn’t locked in.

Jalen Jelks / Defensive End / Oregon

Jelks has been a force to be reckoned with as he is second in the Football Bowl Subdivision in quarterback hurries. Going up against one of the most dangerous quarterbacks in college football, Jelks will need to have a big game if the Ducks want to shut down Tate. Jelks’ speed off the edge and length give him the tools he needs to harass Tate. If he can get into the backfield and finish his tackles, he could throw a wrench in Arizona’s game plan.

Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles / Safety / Arizona

One of Oregon’s biggest assets on offense is speed. Players like Taj Griffin and Tony Brooks-James can wreak havoc if they get free. As Arizona’s dominant safety, Flannigan-Fowles will be responsible for shutting down big plays. The 6-foot-2-inch junior is a strong tackler and effective in pass coverage. If he has a big day, the Ducks will struggle to make an offensive impact.

Follow Aaron Alter on Twitter @aaronalter95

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Win against Drake proves Oregon’s offensive power

After locking down CSUN on Friday night with a lights-out defensive effort, Oregon women’s basketball rode its offense to a 110-77 victory over Drake on Sunday in the second round of the Preseason WNIT Tournament.

While the No. 11 Ducks offense was no slouch on offense in their Friday victory, the team’s scoring was on another level on Sunday. By the end of the game, five players were in double figures. The Ducks also made 17 3-pointers and shot 56 percent from the field.

“It was just a good team effort,” Ducks head coach Kelly Graves said. “Everybody contributed. Offensively, we were flowing the whole game. We got great shots the entire night — shared the ball well.”

Once again, it was Sabrina Ionescu who led the way for the Ducks. The sophomore posted her fifth career triple-double with 29 points, 10 rebounds and 11 assists. She was responsible for six of the Ducks’ 3-pointers, and shot 10-of-15 from the field.

Also dominant from 3-point range was Lexi Bando. After scoring the Ducks’ first points from deep in the first quarter, the senior was mostly quiet until the third quarter.

Out of halftime, Bando was electric, draining a trio of baskets from downtown in the opening minutes of the quarter, and went on to finish with 16 points.

The first two of Bando’s 3-pointers came on assists from Maite Cazorla, who had an impressive night with a double-double on 12 points and 11 assists.

Joining her teammates in the double-double category was Ruthy Hebard, with 10 points and 11 rebounds.

One of the biggest offensive performances of the night came from a new face: freshman Satou Sabally.

Sabally, a German international, signaled her arrival with 20 points on 8-of-11 shooting. She was also responsible for the last four field goals of the Ducks’ monster 32-point 3rd quarter. If there were questions about her ability to adapt to the American game, Sunday’s performance likely quieted them.

“It’s a lot of fun,” Sabally said. “We play more free than I’m used to. It’s not as structured — sort of robotic I’d say.”

The performance didn’t escape the notice of her coach.

“She’s so fluid with either hand,” Graves said. “She can finish at the rim, she can hit a couple of jumpers. … that shows a really skilled player.”

While the game had its share of standout scoring performances, Graves points to the team’s 31 assists as the key.

“It starts with those two guards,” Graves said. “Maite and Sabrina are just so unselfish. Those two are a pleasure to have on the court. They’re one of the best backcourts, I think, in college basketball.”

The Ducks will look to keep their offensive streak going when they travel to College Station to face the No.20 Texas A&M Aggies on Thursday, Nov. 16.

Follow Aaron Alter on Twitter @aaronalter95

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Ducks demolish Cal State, Northridge 91-43 in season opener

Oregon women’s basketball kicked off its season with a 91-43 dismantling of California State University, Northridge in the first round of the WNIT Tournament on Friday night.

The No. 11 Ducks (1-0) dominated in all phases of play, shooting 45 percent from the field while holding CSUN to 27 percent. The Ducks also scored 36 points off of 29 turnovers.

“We’re excited to be 1-0,” head coach Kelly Graves said. “I thought defensively we were on point tonight, created a lot of our offense off of our defense early. Everybody contributed tonight.”

It was sophomore guard Sabrina Ionescu who opened things up in the first quarter, draining three 3-pointers in just over two minutes. Ionescu went on to score 15 points, grab six rebounds and seven assists in her 29 minutes on the floor.

“It’s just so fun with such a good team in transition,” Ionescu said. “Being able to put the ball in playmakers’ hands is really wonderful.”

Those playmakers included Matie Cazorla, Satou Sabally, Ruthy Hebard and Mallory McGwire, each of whom finished in double figures.

Cazorla had a streak of her own in the second quarter. In the closing minutes of the quarter, she made back-to-back 3-pointers. Both baskets came on assists from freshman and fellow Spaniard Aina Ayuso.

The Ducks entered halftime with a 53-20 lead.

Forward McGwire made her presence known, and scored six points in the third quarter’s opening four minutes. The Ducks’ defense stifled CSUN for the remainder of the game, only allowing 23 more points through the final two quarters.

Even with the team holding a 53-point lead in the third quarter, the effort of the Ducks was ever-present. At one point, three Oregon starters ended up on the floor after diving for an errant ball.

“That should tell you everything you need to know about this team,” Graves said. “When we get that kind of effort, everybody wins.”

The Ducks used 12 players in the win. With 38 points, the Ducks’ bench signaled its arrival. Graves added that in the future he’s comfortable with “riding the hot hand” when the bench is firing on all cylinders.

Among those making their debuts, the Ducks’ international freshmen trio of Sabally, Anneli Maley and Ayuso stood out.

“They play the game a different way,” Ionescu said. “They bring finesse and move like we’ve never seen. It’s going to be fun having them around.”

While he’s happy with the win, Graves is already looking to the team’s next matchup against Drake in the second round of the WNIT on Sunday at 2 p.m. at Matthew Knight Arena.

“We get to pat ourselves on the back tonight, feel good about it,” Graves said. “Then guess what? It’s Saturday morning 8AM practice. Back to work.”

Follow Aaron Alter on Twitter @aaronalter95

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After four knee surgeries, Oregon soccer’s Caitlyn Wong is stronger than ever

Playing soccer is tough. The beautiful game moves at a lightning fast speed. Players run an average of seven miles a game, all while figuring out the best way to stifle their opponents. It may be easy to pick up and play, but it takes a lifetime to master.

While most soccer players will experience an injury at some point in their career, Caitlyn Wong’s injury report is somewhat stunning.

Wong, a redshirt senior, is a captain of the Oregon soccer team who came to Eugene in hopes of reinvigorating a losing program with culture issues. Along the way, she’s battled through a nightmarish litany of knee injuries. Yet despite the challenges posed by those injuries, Wong remains undeterred.

She’s gone under the knife four times, and four times she’s battled back. Her career at Oregon has hardly gone according to plan, but she’s OK with that. For the Sunnyvale, California native who refuses to quit, there’s more to her soccer career than minutes played and titles won.

Additionally, she’s a stellar student. As if playing on a Division I soccer team wasn’t enough of a time commitment, Wong has maintained a 4.0 GPA in biochemistry — a major that demands tremendous hours of studying.

The Long Journey

The day a high school athlete signs their letter of intent to play for the college of their choice is usually a happy one. Players are preparing for the next big step in their careers, and they’re celebrating the end of what was likely a successful high school run. For Wong, her signing day was the opposite. On Feb. 6, 2013, she suffered a non-contact injury in a high school match and tore her right ACL, along with part of her meniscus. It was her first major injury.

“I actually tore it so hard that it ripped out of the bone really roughly, and I had a severe bone contusion from that,” Wong said. “I freaked out.”

As a result of the contusion, she couldn’t have surgery until the end of March — almost two months after the injury. At the time, Wong said she was focused on the fact that her club soccer experience was over sooner than she had expected. Eventually though, her future as a Duck rose to the front of her mind.

“I’m supposed to start school and training in four months,” Wong said. “Surgery at the end of March [plus] a six-month recovery puts me at the end of September. There was no way I was going to play, so it was pretty much already set in stone that I was going to redshirt.”

The road to recovery was difficult. Wong was forced to re-learn every component of the game, down to running and kicking.

Oregon soccer captain Caitlyn Wong poses at Pape Field (Phillip Quinn/Emerald)

“It was almost humiliating,” Wong said. “How stripped you are of your identity during something like that.”

Through a grueling nine months of rehab and training, Wong eventually made her way back to playing.

She made her debut for Oregon the following year and began to establish herself as a stout defender. Wong ended the season with a bulging disc in her back, but thanks to careful rest and rehab, she was cleared from the injury report on April 1, 2015. Things were looking up for the defender.

That’s the day she tore her left ACL.

“An April Fools joke? I was hoping,” Wong said. “April fools, you’re still injured.”

As far as knee injuries go, the circumstances for Wong’s second ACL tear were ideal. The tear was clean with minimal swelling, and she was in top physical shape following her season. This time, there would be no two-month wait for surgery. She had surgery 10 days later.

Two torn ACLs might be enough to convince an athlete to hang up their cleats. Not Wong, according to her mother Carolyne .

“She never got down,” Carolyne Wong said. “She was determined to get back as quickly as possible.”

Wong began her rehab four months before the start of the next season. The clock was on, and she was determined to come back faster than she did after her last surgery.

“I just kicked butt for five months non-stop,” Wong said.

Through this recovery, Wong focused on keeping herself in the right headspace. She had been riddled with fear and self-doubt during her last ordeal but was not going to allow the same thing to happen this time.

“Your mindset in an injury is the most import thing in your recovery,” Wong said. “I don’t care what resources you have, or how quick you get surgery.”

Sure enough, Wong battled back in five months. She went on to another solid year of play, and her soccer career seemed to be going well when she started her junior season. Halfway through that season, however, injury struck again.

She suffered a severely torn left meniscus against Cal State Fullerton on Sept. 11, 2016. The injury caused her to lose a month of the season. She underwent a scope surgery that month to clean the injury, and doctors removed 40 percent of her meniscus.

Wong bounced back, and just over a month after her injury went on to earn Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Week honors after shutout wins against Arizona and Arizona State.

But injury troubles weren’t behind her yet.

In May 2017, Wong had a scope surgery to remove a screw from a previous ACL surgery and relieve the strong medial pain an inflamed bursa sac was causing; however, this last surgery proved more difficult to come back from than her previous two.

“I don’t know what happened,” Wong said. “My body just couldn’t do it.”

Wong simply couldn’t move the way she used to. Her mind was still sharp and game ready, but her body could no longer keep up. Sometimes, she even worried that she could have done more to recover before coming to accept the reality of her pain.

As a result, Wong spent most of her senior season on the sideline. While she wishes she could have played more, she knows her role as a captain extends beyond the field. Her biggest goals in coming to Oregon were to change a team culture rife with finger pointing and to take the Ducks to the NCAA Tournament.

“I wanted to leave a legacy,” Wong said.

Despite the best efforts of Wong and her team, the Ducks fell short of the tournament. While the disappointment is there, she also knows that the team culture had changed for the better. In a time that brings both good and bad, Wong knows the importance of perspective.

“When you’re in the midst of it, maybe it doesn’t seem like we’ve made strides,” Wong said. “But you have to look at what’s important, and that’s the team culture. We’re in such a good spot now as a team. Having real relationships with each other, truly caring for each other as people. … That speaks to all the work we’ve done over the years.”

Oregon Ducks Defender Caitlyn Wong (17) pushes her way past Colorado Buffaloes Forward Brie Hooks (20) as she makes her way down field.  (Adam Eberhardt/Emerald)

Indeed, after the team’s heartbreaking loss to USC this year, Wong says that there was no finger pointing — a stark difference from her first year with the team. She’s also gracefully ceded her starting spot to sophomore Alyssa Hinojosa. In a toxic culture, Wong says such a thing wouldn’t happen. But true to her goal, she chose to mentor the young defender, rather than harboring spite over her role.

“If she’s on the field kicking ass, we’re gonna win,” Wong said. “She is going to be the next big center back, so it’s about how I can share what I’ve learned.”

For her part, Hinojosa thrives on the support of her mentor.

“She’s a really big role model for me,” Hinojosa said. “I thought the coaches were yelling at me, but it was my teammate, helping me and having my back.”

While she was busy leading her team and rehabbing from injuries, Wong was also earning Pac-12 All-Academic first team honors. She’ll defend her biochemistry dissertation this week.

Wong’s career came to a close on Thursday night in Corvallis, as the Ducks fell to Oregon State 1-0. The team will head into the offseason preparing for life after Wong and her fellow seniors. The impact is felt keenly by Ducks head coach Kat Mertz.

“It’s going to be weird not having Caitlyn on the field and having her leadership,” Mertz said to KWVA after the Ducks’ loss. “I’ve had it for five years now, my whole entire time at Oregon.”

The feeling is mutual, and Wong credits a great deal of her success and growth to Mertz and the rest of the Ducks’ coaching staff.

As she looks back at her time at Oregon, Wong finds herself coming back to her decision to redshirt her true freshman season. Having an extra year on the back end of her career allowed her to follow through on her goals for the team’s culture. Finishing last year would’ve felt incomplete.

Along the way, it was Wong’s unwavering sense of purpose that drove her forward.

“That’s part of the reason, if not the main reason that I’m successful,” Wong said. “It’s really important to me to find purpose. I don’t enjoy putting all of myself into something unless I find purpose in it. So I think I wake up trying to figure that out every day.”

Follow Aaron Alter on Twitter @aaronalter95

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After four knee surgeries, Oregon soccer’s Caitlyn Wong is stronger than ever

Playing soccer is tough. The beautiful game moves at a lightning fast speed. Players run an average of seven miles a game, all while figuring out the best way to stifle their opponents. It may be easy to pick up and play, but it takes a lifetime to master.

While most soccer players will experience an injury at some point in their career, Caitlyn Wong’s injury report is somewhat stunning.

Wong, a redshirt senior, is a captain of the Oregon soccer team who came to Eugene in hopes of reinvigorating a losing program with culture issues. Along the way, she’s battled through a nightmarish litany of knee injuries. Yet despite the challenges posed by those injuries, Wong remains undeterred.

She’s gone under the knife four times, and four times she’s battled back. Her career at Oregon has hardly gone according to plan, but she’s OK with that. For the Sunnyvale, California native who refuses to quit, there’s more to her soccer career than minutes played and titles won.

Additionally, she’s a stellar student. As if playing on a Division I soccer team wasn’t enough of a time commitment, Wong has maintained a 4.0 GPA in biochemistry — a major that demands tremendous hours of studying.

The Long Journey

The day a high school athlete signs their letter of intent to play for the college of their choice is usually a happy one. Players are preparing for the next big step in their careers, and they’re celebrating the end of what was likely a successful high school run. For Wong, her signing day was the opposite. On Feb. 6, 2013, she suffered a non-contact injury in a high school match and tore her right ACL, along with part of her meniscus. It was her first major injury.

“I actually tore it so hard that it ripped out of the bone really roughly, and I had a severe bone contusion from that,” Wong said. “I freaked out.”

As a result of the contusion, she couldn’t have surgery until the end of March — almost two months after the injury. At the time, Wong said she was focused on the fact that her club soccer experience was over sooner than she had expected. Eventually though, her future as a Duck rose to the front of her mind.

“I’m supposed to start school and training in four months,” Wong said. “Surgery at the end of March [plus] a six-month recovery puts me at the end of September. There was no way I was going to play, so it was pretty much already set in stone that I was going to redshirt.”

The road to recovery was difficult. Wong was forced to re-learn every component of the game, down to running and kicking.

Oregon soccer captain Caitlyn Wong poses at Pape Field (Phillip Quinn/Emerald)

“It was almost humiliating,” Wong said. “How stripped you are of your identity during something like that.”

Through a grueling nine months of rehab and training, Wong eventually made her way back to playing.

She made her debut for Oregon the following year and began to establish herself as a stout defender. Wong ended the season with a bulging disc in her back, but thanks to careful rest and rehab, she was cleared from the injury report on April 1, 2015. Things were looking up for the defender.

That’s the day she tore her left ACL.

“An April Fools joke? I was hoping,” Wong said. “April fools, you’re still injured.”

As far as knee injuries go, the circumstances for Wong’s second ACL tear were ideal. The tear was clean with minimal swelling, and she was in top physical shape following her season. This time, there would be no two-month wait for surgery. She had surgery 10 days later.

Two torn ACLs might be enough to convince an athlete to hang up their cleats. Not Wong, according to her mother Carolyne .

“She never got down,” Carolyne Wong said. “She was determined to get back as quickly as possible.”

Wong began her rehab four months before the start of the next season. The clock was on, and she was determined to come back faster than she did after her last surgery.

“I just kicked butt for five months non-stop,” Wong said.

Through this recovery, Wong focused on keeping herself in the right headspace. She had been riddled with fear and self-doubt during her last ordeal but was not going to allow the same thing to happen this time.

“Your mindset in an injury is the most import thing in your recovery,” Wong said. “I don’t care what resources you have, or how quick you get surgery.”

Sure enough, Wong battled back in five months. She went on to another solid year of play, and her soccer career seemed to be going well when she started her junior season. Halfway through that season, however, injury struck again.

She suffered a severely torn left meniscus against Cal State Fullerton on Sept. 11, 2016. The injury caused her to lose a month of the season. She underwent a scope surgery that month to clean the injury, and doctors removed 40 percent of her meniscus.

Wong bounced back, and just over a month after her injury went on to earn Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Week honors after shutout wins against Arizona and Arizona State.

But injury troubles weren’t behind her yet.

In May 2017, Wong had a scope surgery to remove a screw from a previous ACL surgery and relieve the strong medial pain an inflamed bursa sac was causing; however, this last surgery proved more difficult to come back from than her previous two.

“I don’t know what happened,” Wong said. “My body just couldn’t do it.”

Wong simply couldn’t move the way she used to. Her mind was still sharp and game ready, but her body could no longer keep up. Sometimes, she even worried that she could have done more to recover before coming to accept the reality of her pain.

As a result, Wong spent most of her senior season on the sideline. While she wishes she could have played more, she knows her role as a captain extends beyond the field. Her biggest goals in coming to Oregon were to change a team culture rife with finger pointing and to take the Ducks to the NCAA Tournament.

“I wanted to leave a legacy,” Wong said.

Despite the best efforts of Wong and her team, the Ducks fell short of the tournament. While the disappointment is there, she also knows that the team culture had changed for the better. In a time that brings both good and bad, Wong knows the importance of perspective.

“When you’re in the midst of it, maybe it doesn’t seem like we’ve made strides,” Wong said. “But you have to look at what’s important, and that’s the team culture. We’re in such a good spot now as a team. Having real relationships with each other, truly caring for each other as people. … That speaks to all the work we’ve done over the years.”

Oregon Ducks Defender Caitlyn Wong (17) pushes her way past Colorado Buffaloes Forward Brie Hooks (20) as she makes her way down field.  (Adam Eberhardt/Emerald)

Indeed, after the team’s heartbreaking loss to USC this year, Wong says that there was no finger pointing — a stark difference from her first year with the team. She’s also gracefully ceded her starting spot to sophomore Alyssa Hinojosa. In a toxic culture, Wong says such a thing wouldn’t happen. But true to her goal, she chose to mentor the young defender, rather than harboring spite over her role.

“If she’s on the field kicking ass, we’re gonna win,” Wong said. “She is going to be the next big center back, so it’s about how I can share what I’ve learned.”

For her part, Hinojosa thrives on the support of her mentor.

“She’s a really big role model for me,” Hinojosa said. “I thought the coaches were yelling at me, but it was my teammate, helping me and having my back.”

While she was busy leading her team and rehabbing from injuries, Wong was also earning Pac-12 All-Academic first team honors. She’ll defend her biochemistry dissertation this week.

Wong’s career came to a close on Thursday night in Corvallis, as the Ducks fell to Oregon State 1-0. The team will head into the offseason preparing for life after Wong and her fellow seniors. The impact is felt keenly by Ducks head coach Kat Mertz.

“It’s going to be weird not having Caitlyn on the field and having her leadership,” Mertz said to KWVA after the Ducks’ loss. “I’ve had it for five years now, my whole entire time at Oregon.”

The feeling is mutual, and Wong credits a great deal of her success and growth to Mertz and the rest of the Ducks’ coaching staff.

As she looks back at her time at Oregon, Wong finds herself coming back to her decision to redshirt her true freshman season. Having an extra year on the back end of her career allowed her to follow through on her goals for the team’s culture. Finishing last year would’ve felt incomplete.

Along the way, it was Wong’s unwavering sense of purpose that drove her forward.

“That’s part of the reason, if not the main reason that I’m successful,” Wong said. “It’s really important to me to find purpose. I don’t enjoy putting all of myself into something unless I find purpose in it. So I think I wake up trying to figure that out every day.”

Follow Aaron Alter on Twitter @aaronalter95

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Ducks fall to Beavers 1-0 in season finale

Oregon soccer dropped its final match of the season 1-0 to the Oregon State Beavers in the 2017 Civil War Thursday afternoon.

The loss brought the Ducks’ 2017 record to 8-11-0, as the team failed to top head coach Kat Mertz’s career high of eight wins.

The game-winning strike came on a free kick from 19 yards out in the 83rd minute, courtesy of Emma Jones.

For much of the match, the teams fought to a stalemate. Both sides posted five shots in the first half but were unable to score. Senior Michelle Rockey attempted to take the lead with a 45th minute shot, but the ball was deflected.

In a silver lining for the Ducks, goalkeeper Halla Hinriksdottir added three saves, bringing her season total to a career-high 69.

As they head into the offseason, the Ducks will be preparing for life without seniors Rockey, Caitlyn Wong, Miranda Schulz, Abby Morrow, Mia Costa and Jordan Fleming.

Follow Aaron Alter on Twitter @aaronalter95

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Ducks fall to Colorado 2-0 on Senior Day

Oregon soccer ended its 2017 home schedule with a 2-0 defeat at the hands of the Colorado Buffaloes on Senior Day at Papé Field on Sunday.

The loss pushes the Ducks (8-10-0, 2-8-0 Pac-12) out of range of a 10-win season, a goal preached by head coach Kat Mertz since the start of the year. The defeat also ruins Oregon’s hope of making the NCAA tournament.

“Senior day is always emotional,” Mertz said. “Everyone wants to play hard for the seniors. They want to send them out on a good note. … Just a little unfortunate with the goals.”

Colorado’s goals both came in the second half. Tatum Barton struck first, firing a shot across goalkeeper Halla Hinriksdóttir and into the net in the 69th minute.

The Buffaloes second goal came in the 81st minute, when Taylor Kornieck headed the ball home, putting her team up 2-0.

Most of the match was an even affair. The first half, in particular, was a physical, defensive battle. The Ducks only managed three shots in the first half, while Colorado fired off seven. Thanks to rock-solid play and five saves from Hinriksdóttir, the Buffs were held scoreless through the opening 45 minutes.

The highlight of the first half came on a two-part save from Hinriksdóttir in the 37th minute. After diving to stop a Colorado free kick from Kornieck, the keeper managed to stop a follow-up attempt at point blank range.

Oregon delivered more of an offensive push in the second half, notching nine shots. Colorado keeper Jalen Tompkins stepped up with five saves to hold off the attacking Ducks.

For the Ducks, emotions ran high after the game as seniors Mia Costa, Abby Morrow, Caitlyn Wong, Michelle Rockey, Miranda Schulz and Jordan Fleming left the pitch at Papé Field for the final time.

“It’s bad of me to say, but it’s good to see the players sad because it means that we did our job as seniors,” Morrow said. “The emotions are definitely high. They’re good, they’re bad, they’re sad. They’re all over.”

Morrow also noted the amount of change the team went through in her four-year tenure with the Ducks, saying that the culture and closeness shared by her teammates was “awesome.”

The day proved bittersweet for Hinriksdóttir, who has one more year of eligibility due to a redshirt year despite being the same age as many of the seniors.

“I’ve got a lot of mixed feelings right now,” Hinriksdóttir said. “I’m happy I’m coming back. But they’ve had amazing careers — all of them.”

While a loss on senior day is a tough pill to swallow, the Ducks are already looking forward to their season finale clash with the Oregon State Beavers.

“The Civil War — it’s not so civil,” Morrow said. “There’s definitely that component of physicality. Just gotta be strong and get your body in there. Match the intensity, match the physicality and beat OSU.”

The Ducks will take on the Beavers on Nov. 2 in Corvallis at 1:30 p.m.

Follow Aaron Alter on Twitter @aaronalter95

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Ducks run through Utes in 3-0 victory

Oregon soccer snapped its two-game losing streak with a 3-0 win over Utah on fog-covered Thursday night.

The win, which comes on the heels of losses to No. 1 Stanford and No. 16 California, gave the Ducks (8-9-0, 2-7-0 Pac-12) their second conference win of the season. Their performance pushed the team closer to head coach Kat Mertz’s goal of a 10 win season, and their eight wins tie the team’s previous high under Mertz from last season.

The Ducks got on the board in the 40th minute. Miranda Schulz sent a soaring cross into the box, where Nicole Seaman leapt and headed it into the net. The goal was Seaman’s first career score as a Duck.

“It’s amazing,” Seaman said. “To come in, and for me to be able to contribute to our team winning, it’s awesome.”

After halftime, the Ducks came out swinging. In the 47th minute, Schulz showed superb awareness and volleyed a deflection off of Mia Costa cross into the net for her second goal of the season.

The Ducks weren’t done yet.

After streaking up the left sideline, Emma Eddy played a cross to the top of the box and into the path of Seaman, who fired the ball into the net for her second goal of the game and of her career.

“To get two in a game is an incredible feeling,” Seaman said. “I kinda wish there were ten more minutes in that game so we could’ve gotten more.”

Outside of the three goals, the match was a tightly contested affair. After Schulz’s goal, the Utes pushed the Ducks’ back line in a bid to even the score. As they’ve done for much of the season, Oregon’s defense held strong.

The Utes continued to bring pressure for much of the second half, notching six shots after only attempting two in the first half. Ultimately, they were unsuccessful due to strong play from goalkeeper Halla Hinriksdottir and her defenders.

One of the keys for the Ducks going into the game was to get off more shots; the team is 0-7 in games where they fail to reach double digits. They were able to rattle off 12 in the victory over Utah. After two games that saw the offense falter, Mertz said that getting three goals felt great, and boosts the team’s confidence heading into their final two regular season matches.

Due to damp conditions and heavy fog, both teams had to contend with the speed and unpredictability that comes with playing on wet turf. It proved to be a minor obstacle for the Ducks.

“I’m really proud of the effort today, all around,” Mertz said. “It was pretty slick out there, but we’re pretty athletic. We knew the skip, the bounce, and what that would give us. I thought we used that to our advantage for sure.”

Next up for the Ducks is a senior day match at Papé field against the Colorado Buffaloes on Sunday, at 11 a.m.

Follow Aaron Alter on Twitter @aaronalter95

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Ducks shut out by No. 1 Stanford

Oregon soccer fell to an offensive barrage from the No. 1-ranked Stanford Cardinal 4-0 in Palo Alto on Thursday night.

The loss came as the Ducks (7-8-0, 1-6-0 Pac-12) were attempting to build momentum after their first Pac-12 victory of the season on October 13th against Arizona State.

The Cardinal had two goals on each side of halftime. The first came in the 20th minute from Catarina Macario on a free kick. Macario went on to follow that score up with a second goal in the 40th minute, giving her team a 2-0 lead going into halftime.

Stanford struck again in the 57th minute. This time, the goal came on a header from Kyra Carusa. The Cardinal continued their onslaught with a 69th minute goal from Jaye Boissiere for the team’s fourth and final score of the match.

In a continuation of a pattern seen throughout Oregon’s losses, the Ducks were soundly defeated in the shot differential. Stanford dominated that statistic, outshooting the Ducks 22-6. Notably, the Ducks’ starved offensive performance comes on the heels of the team’s 23-shot domination of Arizona State in a 3-0 win over the Sun Devils.

Despite the loss, goalkeeper Halla Hinriksdottir still notched another five saves, moving her season total to 54.

The Ducks will look to rebound against No. 16 California in Berkeley on Oct. 22.

Follow Aaron Alter on Twitter @aaronalter95

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Ducks shut out by No. 1 Stanford

Oregon soccer fell to an offensive barrage from the No. 1-ranked Stanford Cardinal 4-0 in Palo Alto on Thursday night.

The loss came as the Ducks (7-8-0, 1-6-0 Pac-12) were attempting to build momentum after their first Pac-12 victory of the season on October 13th against Arizona State.

The Cardinal had two goals on each side of halftime. The first came in the 20th minute from Catarina Macario on a free kick. Macario went on to follow that score up with a second goal in the 40th minute, giving her team a 2-0 lead going into halftime.

Stanford struck again in the 57th minute. This time, the goal came on a header from Kyra Carusa. The Cardinal continued their onslaught with a 69th minute goal from Jaye Boissiere for the team’s fourth and final score of the match.

In a continuation of a pattern seen throughout Oregon’s losses, the Ducks were soundly defeated in the shot differential. Stanford dominated that statistic, outshooting the Ducks 22-6. Notably, the Ducks’ starved offensive performance comes on the heels of the team’s 23-shot domination of Arizona State in a 3-0 win over the Sun Devils.

Despite the loss, goalkeeper Halla Hinriksdottir still notched another five saves, moving her season total to 54.

The Ducks will look to rebound against No. 16 California in Berkeley on Oct. 22.

Follow Aaron Alter on Twitter @aaronalter95

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