Author Archives | Maggie Vanoni

Oregon moves up in AVCA poll, Nuneviller earns Pac-12 weekly honor

After taking down the No.1-ranked Minnesota Gophers, the Oregon Ducks moved up six spots to No. 12 in the American Volleyball Coaches Association coaches’ poll.

In addition, Oregon freshman libero Brooke Nuneviller earned Pac-12 freshman of the week, recording a total of 44 digs throughout the team’s two top-5 matches last weekend.

The Ducks defeated now-No. 7 Minnesota Friday evening in four sets at the Big Ten/Pac-12 Challenge. The victory marks the program’s first win over a top-ranked team since the 2012 Final Four. Nuneviller led both teams with a season-high 28 digs.

Nuneviller recorded a team-high 16 digs, in Saturday’s match against No. 5 Penn State.

“Brooke Nuneviller is really good,” head coach Matt Ulmer told Go Ducks after Oregon’s win over Minnesota. “I thought she set the tone right away. She made a couple great digs to start the match, digs that people didn’t think she could make, and I thought that got everyone engaged like, ‘Okay, we’re going to play some defense now.’”

Following the first eight matches of her freshman season, Nuneviller leads the Oregon program with 121 digs and is ranked third in the Pac-12 with 4.65 digs per set. This is her first career Pac-12 honor.

As a team, Oregon is ranked second in the conference with 16.69 digs per set. UCLA ranks first with 17.77 digs per set.

Two other Pac-12 schools are in the top-15 of this week’s AVCA poll. Stanford moved to No. 2 after defeating both then-No. 1 Minnesota and No. 5 Penn State at the Big Ten/Pac-12 Challenge. Washington dropped a spot to No. 13 after losing to Pittsburgh, 3-0, on Saturday.

Oregon will play its final nonconference matches this week against Hawaii, starting with Thursday’s match at 10 p.m. (P.T.) in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Follow Maggie Vanoni on Twitter: @maggie_vanoni

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Oregon moves up in AVCA poll, Nuneviller earns Pac-12 weekly honor

After taking down the No.1-ranked Minnesota Gophers, the Oregon Ducks moved up six spots to No. 12 in the American Volleyball Coaches Association coaches’ poll.

In addition, Oregon freshman libero Brooke Nuneviller earned Pac-12 freshman of the week, recording a total of 44 digs throughout the team’s two top-5 matches last weekend.

The Ducks defeated now-No. 7 Minnesota Friday evening in four sets at the Big Ten/Pac-12 Challenge. The victory marks the program’s first win over a top-ranked team since the 2012 Final Four. Nuneviller led both teams with a season-high 28 digs.

Nuneviller recorded a team-high 16 digs, in Oregon’s loss to No. 5 Penn State on Saturday.

“Brooke Nuneviller is really good,” head coach Matt Ulmer told Go Ducks after Oregon’s win over Minnesota. “I thought she set the tone right away. She made a couple great digs to start the match, digs that people didn’t think she could make, and I thought that got everyone engaged like, ‘Okay, we’re going to play some defense now.’”

Following the first eight matches of her freshman season, Nuneviller leads the Oregon program with 121 digs and is ranked third in the Pac-12 with 4.65 digs per set. This is her first career Pac-12 honor.

As a team, Oregon is ranked second in the conference with 16.69 digs per set. UCLA ranks first with 17.77 digs per set.

Two other Pac-12 schools are in the top-15 of this week’s AVCA poll. Stanford moved to No. 2 after defeating both then-No. 1 Minnesota and No. 5 Penn State at the Big Ten/Pac-12 Challenge. Washington dropped a spot to No. 13 after losing to Pittsburgh, 3-0, on Saturday.

Oregon will play its final nonconference matches this week against Hawaii, starting with Thursday’s match at 10 p.m. (P.T.) in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Follow Maggie Vanoni on Twitter: @maggie_vanoni

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Oregon splits Big Ten/Pac-12 Challenge, highlighted by upset win

With the program’s first victory over a No. 1-ranked opponent in six years, the Oregon Ducks came out even in the first year of the Big Ten/Pac-12 Challenge.

In their last matches against top-ranked opponents for this preseason, the No. 18 Ducks (5-3) ended the weekend with an upset win over No. 1 Minnesota, 3-1, and a three-set loss to No. 5 Penn State.

Oregon opened the tournament with a four-set win Friday evening against the Gophers, with final set scores of 25-23, 25-23, 25-27 and 25-23. The victory gave head coach Matt Ulmer his second win over a top-five team as Oregon’s head coach.

The Ducks outperformed Minnesota by hitting 0.298. The last time Oregon defeated a No.1 team was in the 2012 Final Four against Penn State.

Oregon began the match with heavy speed, getting to a 20-15 lead in set one, thanks to six kills from Lauren Page. A Ronika Stone kill and a Minnesota error allowed the Ducks to earn the first set win of 25-23.

In the second set, Minnesota attack errors once again gave Oregon leeway to pull ahead. With three consecutive kills from Page, Stone and Lindsey Vander Weide, the Ducks took the set, 25-23.

The Gophers (5-1) took set three, for their only win of the day, 27-25.

The teams battled back-to-back points in the fourth set, until Oregon’s Willow Johnson scored three kills on four points to get the Ducks ahead. A Minnesota error and a final kill by Stone secured the Ducks the upset victory with a final set win of 25-23.

“I think our ceiling is really high,” Ulmer told Go Ducks after Friday’s match. “I don’t even think we’re close to it, so I’m excited to see where we go from here.”

Stone led the Ducks with a career-high 19 kills while hitting 0.615. Page followed with a career-high 16 kills, and Johnson earned 16 kills as well. Setter August Raskie had a career-high 66 assists, the most for an Oregon Duck in a single match since Lauren Plum’s 68 in the 2012 Sweet 16.

On Saturday, the Ducks lost Friday’s momentum and fell, 0-3, to No. 5 Penn State, 25-23, 25-23 and 25-19.

The Ducks racked up a total of 21 attack errors during the match with Vander Weide responsible for a third of the errors. Penn State (6-1) held strong on defense with 14.5 successful blocks, while Oregon ended the match with five blocks.

Oregon lost control of the match during the third set, dropping by as much as 10 to Penn State. Even after a late 7-2 run, Oregon couldn’t keep up with the Nittany Lions, losing the third and final set, 25-19.

Johnson led the team with 11 kills, followed by Vander Weide’s nine. Raskie earned her third double-double of the season with 28 assists and 10 digs. And Brooke Van Sickle’s two aces totaled her to 16 so far this season, a number that leads the Pac-12.

The Ducks will take their another road trip to Honolulu, Hawaii next week to complete their nonconference play this season. Oregon will play the Rainbow Warriors on both Thursday and Friday at 10 p.m. (PT).

Follow Maggie Vanoni on Twitter: @maggie_vanoni

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Ducks clinch first season-victory in home opener

Oregon redshirt sophomore Brooke Van Sickle stepped out to serve. She bounced the ball a handful of times before serving it across the net. Moments later, Ronika Stone found the kill.

Van Sickle served again. This time a service ace tied Oregon with Portland State at 5-5. Another serve form Van Sickle was followed by another kill from Stone.

Still on the serve, Van Sickle responded with back-to-back service aces and forced the Vikings into a timeout. When play resumed, she served again and earned her ninth service ace of the match — the second-highest number of aces in a single match in Oregon history.

“Brooke is just such an athlete,” Oregon head coach Matt Ulmer said. “She has been serving really close to the line and she really likes to hit that ball hard …Those balls were humming, those are hard to pass. They’re like attacks.”

Van Sickle’s nine service aces propelled the Ducks to their first season victory; a three-set sweep over Portland State. Oregon defeated the Vikings, 25-15, 25-10, 25-13, Tuesday night for the team’s 2018 home opener at Matthew Knight Arena.

After dropping their first two matches last weekend at the Vert Challenge to No. 3 Texas and No. 2 Nebraska, Ulmer said he emphasized strategy over emotion to the team.

He said he was impressed to see more skill added to plays during Tuesday’s match.

“[I’ve] been really big on these guys to if it’s not a great situation, there is something we can do with the ball other than just trying to get a kill and muscle our way through it,” Ulmer said.

Stone showed she learned the lesson after last week’s matches, leading Tuesday’s match with 15 kills.

“Just realizing that we can’t have the ‘hero’-play every play, you’re not going to bounce the ball every play,” Stone said. “I think because of Nebraska and Texas, I wanted to be the hero of the game and volleyball is not that type of game … just realizing that having the creativity in the game and being able to accept shots is what will ultimately get me to score.”

Following Stone, Lindsey Vander Weide ended with her second double-double of the season with 11 kills and 12 digs. Freshman and starting libero, Brooke Nuneviller also had 12 digs. Senior August Raskie had two serving aces of her own and ended with 39 assists.

In the third set, the Vikings started by leading the Ducks by two, until Van Sickle slammed down her serving aces to tie the set at five. After that, Portland State couldn’t keep up and dropped the set 25-13, ending the match and losing for the ninth straight time to Oregon.

“It’s a great match for us, Portland State is a very good team,” Ulmer said. “They’re different because they’re not as physical but they’ll challenge your block more … I thought it brought a different type of challenge for us tonight.”

The Ducks took the second set quickly, winning 25-10 thanks to a 13-0 run. Oregon ended the set with 17 kills over PSU’s seven.

In set one, Oregon saw a 10-3 run and easily clinched the set, 25-15.

Oregon will take the win and use it for momentum in this weekend’s Oregon Classic. The Ducks start the tournament Friday at 1 p.m. against Utah Valley at Matthew Knight Arena.

Follow Maggie Vanoni on Twitter: @maggie_vanoni

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The mentors behind Cravon Gillespie and his stellar sprinting career

There is no doubt Cravon Gillespie is fast.

In his first season as a Duck, Gillespie won the 100 meters in the Pac-12 Championships. He is already ranked in three events on Oregon’s All-Time lists: fourth in the 100 meters (10.18 seconds), sixth in the 200 meters (20.64) and a part of the second and sixth fastest 4×100 relay teams.

But behind the junior redshirt and his impressive personal bests from sprinting for Mt. San Antonio College (including a wind-aided 20.20-second 200 meters) lies a person who cherishes the importance of an honest mentorship.

Finding a mentor — someone to trust and guide him through life’s tough battles — has always been a priority to Gillespie. From his grandmother to a teammate’s mom, Gillespie would not be the person, the sprinter or the Oregon success he is today without them.

Growing up with divorced parents, living in bad neighborhoods and trying to avoid troubled friends caused Gillespie to move “close to” 10 times before his sophomore year of high school.

“It was definitely tough not having mentors,” Gillespie said. “Obviously I had my family, but just the friends I was around. Just not making the smartest decisions on my part. … We been from apartment to apartment, hotels, my grandma’s, my auntie’s house.”

Through the constant changes, Gillespie found a strong mentor in his grandma. She would drive from Moreno Valley, California to the Gillespies’ home in Pasadena, California every weekend to pick up him and his siblings.

“She was like another mother to me,” Gillespie said.

When she passed away from a heart attack at age 45, Gillespie chose to honor her with a tattoo of her portrait on his chest, over his heart.

“Every time I finish a rep of my workout or before or after I cross the finish line, I always tap my chest and point to the sky just like a remembrance of her,” he said. “She is on this side, so she is close to my heart. I always think about her every day. I know she is watching over me.”

After high school, Gillespie attended Mt. SAC where he earned his Associate’s degree and sprinted for the Mounties’ track team. It was at a track practice during his sophomore year where he met Victoria “Tori” Sandoval.

The two instantly clicked, quickly becoming best friends and it wasn’t long before Tori brought him home to her mom, Judy.

“The way he treated Victoria with respect. He never took her for granted,” Judy said. “And when you see that, you respect that, and you take care of them because there is not a lot of young men like that.”

Gillespie lived in the Sandovals’ guest room for that track season, the summer and part of the following fall. He became part of the family, tagging along on road trips, celebrating the holidays, going to Tori’s little sister’s soccer games and joining family dinners.

“It was just like a brother that I never had,” Tori said. “It was fun. It was like our hanging out never ended.”

With the help of Judy, he improved his grades and his sprint times on the track to transfer out of Mt. SAC. Gillespie became the first in his family to go to a four-year university, earning a spot on the Oregon roster — his dream school and his dream track team.

Gillespie will compete in the 2018 NCAA Outdoor Championships in both the 100 and 200 meters, marking his first ever race on Hayward Field as a Duck.

“Cravon had the tools, he just didn’t know how to use them,” Judy said. “And now that he’s using them, he’s accomplishing all his dreams. And I’m so proud and he’s an inspiration.”

Follow Maggie Vanoni on Twitter @maggie_vanoni

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Mentally Tough: A group of Oregon athletes is trying to normalize mental health conversations in athletics through their campaign, “Duck The Stigma.”

Apple. Elbow. Carpet. Bubble. Room. Saddle.

Jenna Lilley will never forget those words.

After being hit in the face by a rise-ball pitch while at bat, Lilley found herself in a training room at Jane Sanders Stadium going through a concussion protocol test. Her face was beginning to swell and bruise as she tried hard to memorize the words the medical personnel tested her memory with.

Lilley will always remember that moment two years ago during her sophomore season and how it marked a turning point in her battle with mental health.

During the healing process, Lilley was able to step back and re-evaluate her mental well-being. She realized all of the constant pressures of being a collegiate-athlete —  having to balance daily workouts and games with a demanding school load and a personal life — had been building up for months. All the negative thoughts had escalated into severe anxiety and depression.

“As bad as it sounds, it almost took me out of reality,” she said. “I think the worst point was that I questioned how much I wanted to be alive.

Lilley was an Oregon softball infielder for the past four seasons. She is a Third Team All-American and a First Team All-Pac-12. She played on the U.S. Women’s National Team and was the No. 22 overall pick in the 2018 National Pro Fastpitch draft, going to her hometown team, the Cleveland Comets.

She is an example of the one-in-five teens and young adults the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) estimates lives with a mental health condition.

“Being a high-level athlete, you think you are immune to anxiety or depression,” Lilley said. “You don’t ever see yourself as that because you think of those things as being mentally weak. When in fact, they can happen to anybody.”

Annual reports from Penn State University’s Center for Collegiate Mental Health have shown an increase in mental health incidents and treatment in college students since 2015. And according to 2016 NCAA reports, nearly one-quarter of student-athletes struggle with the mental demands of their sport.

UO volleyball player Maggie Scott has worked with the campaign “Duck The Stigma,” to normalize conversations about mental health. (Adam Eberhardt/Emerald)

On April 11 at an Oregon Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) mental health panel, Lilley and four other student-athletes shared their battles with mental health in front of 70 Oregon student-athletes.

The SAAC mental health panel was the first of its kind for the university. It sparked the latest efforts in athlete mental health awareness through the athletic department’s resources and a student-athlete-run campaign, “Duck The Stigma.”

The stigma and the student-athletes who are breaking it

Think of your favorite athlete.

Whether collegiate, professional or even amateur, you probably think of an athlete who is dominant. Someone who shows resistance, power, strength and toughness. Lebron James, Michael Phelps, Serena Williams and Ronda Rousey are just a few.

Now think of how much of that person you don’t know, what you don’t see of their personal lives.

“People had no idea I’m struggling, and I don’t want to be alive,” Lilley said. “Fans wouldn’t know that. They would have no idea. There is so much more to it than just what you do on the field.”

This is the stigma seven Oregon athletes, Caitlyn Wong (women’s soccer), Julia Taylor (women’s lacrosse), Maggie Scott (volleyball), Shweta Sangwan (women’s tennis), Mar’Shay Moore (former women’s basketball), Mick Stanovsek (track and field) and Lilley, are attempting to break in their campaign to normalize mental health conversations.

Oregon women’s tennis player Shweta Sangwan. (Adam Eberhardt/ Emerald)

“There is a culture in all athletics, especially in athletics that excel like Oregon athletics do, that you have to be mentally callous all the time,” Stanovsek said. “The reality is that we are all human beings and there is a massive amount of pressure that goes along with you watching us and the pressure that we put on ourselves, and the pressure the program might put on us.”

Last fall, Wong, Taylor and former track and field middle distance runner Megan Patrignelli (class of 2014) volunteered to share experiences of dealing with mental health struggles on a panel in front of Oregon coaches.

The panel received such great feedback they did it again in the spring in front of student-athletes. Lilley and Stanovsek joined the panelists with the absence of Patrignelli. The athletes stressed the importance of not allowing the stigma around mental health to prevent someone from opening up to friends, teammates or even seeking professional help.

“When every one of us talked, the reaction was, ‘Oh my god, I didn’t know you were going through that. I didn’t know that he was experiencing this, or she was experiencing that,’” Wong said.

During this time, the Division I National SAAC invited all SAACs to participate in a video contest to promote mental health awareness and show how schools were breaking the stigma.  

Scott, Sangwan and Moore joined the panelists and together they submitted a video to the contest, getting inspiration from Oregon State’s “Dam Worth It” campaign launched earlier this year. The video launched the idea of “Duck The Stigma,” showing the realistic side of these athletes through the mental health struggles they’ve faced.

It was through their research working on the video, along with Lilley’s honors sociology thesis, they discovered that in 2017, 10 percent of Oregon student-athletes suffered from a physical injury, while 24 percent were diagnosed and/or treated for mental health.

Even though Oregon did not win the contest, the athletes plan on releasing additional awareness videos.

“Duck The Stigma, to me, means that it is OK to not be OK, and you can always go to someone else for help because everyone is going through struggles and people are more alike than you think,” Taylor said.

Oregon lacrosse mid-fielder Julia Taylor. (Adam Eberhardt/Emerald)

The resources for help

On January 16, Washington State quarterback Tyler Hilinski committed suicide.

A few weeks after Hilinksi’s death, a video resurfaced on Twitter about former Oregon football linebacker Derrick Malone Jr.’s battle with mental health.

Malone partnered with the athletic department in 2017 to create a video about his experience dealing with depression while at Oregon. The video, Breaking Through Depression-Derrick Malone Story, has over 3,500 views on YouTube and was Oregon’s first outward conversation on the topic.

“I really don’t like how someone’s passing had to be the catalyst of my video resurfacing, because there are always signs everywhere and I think that we always pay attention, but all in all I’m happy that the conversation is getting more serious,” Malone said.

In the video, Malone (class of 2014) stressed the importance of finding someone to talk to, whether friend, family, teammate or medical expert, when dealing with mental health struggles.

“I know that people dealing with anxiety or depression, they just want to be alone and be away from people, and that’s actually probably the worst thing you can possibly do,” Malone said. “There are people, whether you acknowledge it or not, that truly care about you, that would go lengths to make sure that you are OK.”

Oregon student-athletes have access to both the university’s health center and Duck Nest, a wellness center located in the EMU that’s free to students, and two local Oregon-contracted practitioners.

At the beginning of every year, athletic department counselors David Mikula and Michelle Brown introduce themselves to each Oregon athletic team. In addition to working at the Jaqua Center or the Hatfield-Dowlin Center, each has a personal practice outside of the University.

“I think we have been much more attentive to raising consciousness [about mental health] across the athletic department and also across the student-athlete population,” Mikula said.

Another resource for athletes is Oregon’s 11 athletic trainers.

Oregon track and field middle distance runner Mick Stanovseck. (Adam Eberhardt/ Emerald)

Trainers, like Heather Halseth, spend every day seeing athletes, working with them through rehabilitation and injury-preventative practices. They get to know the athletes on a personal level and are often the first people athletes choose to confide in.

Halseth says the Oregon athletic staff wants to treat mental health like it treats injuries.

“If you get injured, what do you do?” Halseth said. “You come to your athletic trainer and you get evaluated and treated, rehabilitated and you get back out there. … If something is not right, if you don’t feel good, emotionally, mentally, let’s utilize the resources that we have and get you into that system.”

Being mentally strong

In her freshman season, Lilley was a second team All-American, the Pac-12 Freshman of the Year and a finalist for the NFCA Freshman of the Year.  

But Lilley’s sophomore season was different. Her batting average plummeted along with her scored run count from the previous season. She became anxious and depressed, comparing herself to her performance the season prior. Falling into a downward spiral, she lost her self-confidence.

“When my mom was up here sophomore year, she came up and told me, ‘Jenna, this certain fan just loves you so much. She thinks you are just the greatest thing,’” Lilley said. “And I thought, to myself, ‘I don’t even feel that way about myself. So, why do these people feel that way?’”

It took the pitch to the face, causing eight fractures in her maxillary sinus bone, a complete broken nose, chipped teeth and sitting out five games to expose Lilley to just how bad her internal battle had become.

Lilley found peace through therapy and being open with her teammates and coach. She learned to confront negative thoughts, understanding they aren’t reality.

“I think she can help with those experiences and help other athletes,” Oregon softball head coach Mike White said. “… I think that she has handled it as well as anybody, and she’s a stronger person now and that’s what you want to see as a coach.”

Lilley hopes with more open conversations mental health will become normalized.

“I think it is just a constant process,” Lilley said. “Accepting yourself for who you are. I call them quirks that you might come with. They make you who you are and your struggles who you are too — just remembering that.”

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The mentors behind Cravon Gillespie and his stellar sprinting career

There is no doubt Cravon Gillespie is fast.

In his first season as a Duck, Gillespie won the 100 meters in the Pac-12 Championships. He is already ranked in three events on Oregon’s All-Time lists: fourth in the 100 meters (10.18 seconds), sixth in the 200 meters (20.64) and a part of the second and sixth fastest 4×100 relay teams.

But behind the junior redshirt and his impressive personal bests from sprinting for Mt. San Antonio College (including a wind-aided 20.20-second 200 meters) lies a person who cherishes the importance of an honest mentorship.

Finding a mentor — someone to trust and guide him through life’s tough battles — has always been a priority to Gillespie. From his grandmother to a teammate’s mom, Gillespie would not be the person, the sprinter or the Oregon success he is today without them.

Growing up with divorced parents, living in bad neighborhoods and trying to avoid troubled friends caused Gillespie to move “close to” 10 times before his sophomore year of high school.

“It was definitely tough not having mentors,” Gillespie said. “Obviously I had my family, but just the friends I was around. Just not making the smartest decisions on my part. … We been from apartment to apartment, hotels, my grandma’s, my auntie’s house.”

Through the constant changes, Gillespie found a strong mentor in his grandma. She would drive from Moreno Valley, California to the Gillespies’ home in Pasadena, California every weekend to pick up him and his siblings.

“She was like another mother to me,” Gillespie said.

When she passed away from a heart attack at age 45, Gillespie chose to honor her with a tattoo of her portrait on his chest, over his heart.

“Every time I finish a rep of my workout or before or after I cross the finish line, I always tap my chest and point to the sky just like a remembrance of her,” he said. “She is on this side, so she is close to my heart. I always think about her every day. I know she is watching over me.”

After high school, Gillespie attended Mt. SAC where he earned his Associate’s degree and sprinted for the Mounties’ track team. It was at a track practice during his sophomore year where he met Victoria “Tori” Sandoval.

The two instantly clicked, quickly becoming best friends and it wasn’t long before Tori brought him home to her mom, Judy.

“The way he treated Victoria with respect. He never took her for granted,” Judy said. “And when you see that, you respect that, and you take care of them because there is not a lot of young men like that.”

Gillespie lived in the Sandovals’ guest room for that track season, the summer and part of the following fall. He became part of the family, tagging along on road trips, celebrating the holidays, going to Tori’s little sister’s soccer games and joining family dinners.

“It was just like a brother that I never had,” Tori said. “It was fun. It was like our hanging out never ended.”

With the help of Judy, he improved his grades and his sprint times on the track to transfer out of Mt. SAC. Gillespie became the first in his family to go to a four-year university, earning a spot on the Oregon roster — his dream school and his dream track team.

Gillespie will compete in the 2018 NCAA Outdoor Championships in both the 100 and 200 meters, marking his first ever race on Hayward Field as a Duck.

“Cravon had the tools, he just didn’t know how to use them,” Judy said. “And now that he’s using them, he’s accomplishing all his dreams. And I’m so proud and he’s an inspiration.”

Follow Maggie Vanoni on Twitter @maggie_vanoni

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Oregon softball’s season ends with 4-1 loss to FSU in WCWS

Red eyes, choked-back words with disappointed faces and tears.

It wasn’t the way No. 1 Oregon softball wanted to see the season end. It wasn’t the way the seniors wanted to end their career as Ducks.

Oregon was eliminated from the Women’s College World Series Saturday, falling 4-1 to the No. 6 Florida State Seminoles in Oklahoma City at Hall of Fame Stadium, ending its season.

“It hurts right now, but I’m very proud of my career and my four years and I’m very proud to be a Duck,” Oregon senior Gwen Svekis said through held-back tears at the post-game press conference. “If we came out and played the way I know we can, we wouldn’t be going home tonight. That really hurts.” 

“Unfortunately, this week we weren’t at our best, and I’m getting tired of making that speech,” Oregon head coach Mike White told the media. “We are working hard to find that secret, to find what it takes to bust through that door because we certainly have the ability to be better than what we are doing right now. And that’s what hurts.”

Once again, the Ducks’ poor defense got the best of them. Mixing in passive batting, Oregon quickly became disorganized, falling apart on the infield.

With every slow play and every ball thrown too high or too wide, the Seminoles (54-12) took advantage on the plate.

FSU made its move in the top of the third with an RBI-double to get on the board, 1-0. Cali Harrod, the scored runner, found the first hole within Oregon’s pitching and earned the first walk of the game. Soon after, she successfully stole second base and with Elizabeth Mason’s RBI hit, Harrod ran home and scored from second.

Harrod scored again for FSU two innings later in the fifth. After making her way from first to third during an Oregon error, she crossed home plate once more from Mason and her RBI-single.

The closest Oregon got to the Seminoles was a two-run difference, scoring its lone run in the bottom of the sixth with a two-out RBI-double from Haley Cruse that scored Shannon Rhodes from first base.

But with four errors and two pitching changes, the Ducks fell to the aggression of FSU. Even bringing in young pinch hitters and runners like Cherish Burks and April Utecht, Oregon could not find a spark.

“We tried to do everything,” White told the media. “… I admit it, I had hope until that last swing.”

In the circle, Oregon started with Miranda Elish before briefly switching to Megan Keist and ending with Maggie Balint for the final two innings. Elish (25-2), earned the loss marking her only second loss of the whole season.

“It hurts a lot,” senior Jenna Lilley said at the post-game press conference. “I’m proud of me, myself and my teammates. Committing to Oregon was the best decision of my life and I will always be a Duck no matter what happened today.”

Oregon ended the season with a 53-10 overall record, its fifth Pac-12 title in the last six years and its sixth WCWS appearance in program history.

“We certainly had a lot of fun together, and I hope that’s what they remember,” White told the media. “I tell them a funeral is a celebration of life. They got to be proud of what we accomplished.”

Follow Maggie Vanoni on Twitter: @maggie_vanoni

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Oregon qualifies 12 in first two days of NCAA West Prelims

After the first two days of the NCAA West Preliminaries, at the Hornet Stadium in Sacramento, California, the Oregon Ducks have punched 12 individual tickets for the NCAA Championships.

Oregon qualified eight athletes on Friday, with six from the women’s team and two from the men’s.

In the 400 meters, the Ducks will be the only program at the NCAA Championships with three runners in the race. Sophomores Makenzie Dunmore and Hannah Waller ran the second and third best times of the day, running 51.25 and 51.76 seconds respectively. Waller’s third-place finish was a personal best. Junior Briyahna Desrosiers will join the two, with her sixth-place qualifying mark of 52.06.

Two other Oregon women ran PRs to earn their tickets to the Championships.

In the women’s 100 meters, freshman Jasmin Reed finished fifth and ran a PR of 11.23. The record comes after Reed set a PR of 11.26 the day prior in the event’s prelims. Redshirt-senior Sabrina Southerland once again showed why she is the reigning NCAA Indoor 800-meter and Pac-12 Outdoor 800-meter champion. Southerland won the 800 meters with a PR of 2 minutes and 00.72 seconds, marking the top time in the nation this year.

Alongside Reed, junior Ariana Washington also qualified for the women’s 100-meter with her time of 11.30 seconds, finishing 10th.

On the men’s team, two sprinters will make their first-ever NCAA Championship appearances.

In the men’s 400 meters, junior Orwin Emilien ran a 46.34, finishing 13th and earning his Championship ticket. Redshirt junior Cravon Gillespie finished in fourth in the men’s 100 meters, qualifying with a time of 10.24. Gillespie, the Pac-12 100-meter Champion, ran a PR of 10.12 in Thursday’s prelims.

Oregon’s first qualifying athlete was freshman Keira McCarrell, with her fifth-place finish and 17-foot personal best in the women’s javelin on Thursday. It only took McCarrell two throws to reach the 171-1 (52.15m) mark, placing her fourth on Oregon’s all-time list.

Two Oregon long jumpers qualified for NCAA with first jumps; sophomore Rhesa Foster and senior Damarcus Simpson.

Foster’s first jump, a 20-4 ½ (6.21m), placed third in the women’s long jump — her second straight time qualifying for NCAAs in the long jump. Simpson, the two-time Pac-12 long jump champion, won the event for the men’s competition on his first, and only, jump of the day with a mark of 26-11 ¾ (8.22m).

In Thursday’s final race event, senior Alli Cash surged in the women’s 10,000 meters for a 27-second PR and a time of 33:02.89. Cash finished 12th in the race, earning a chance to test her new time at the Championships.

More Ducks will have the chance to qualify for NCAAs during Saturday’s finals of the 200-meters and the 100-meter and 110-meter hurdles. Eight ducks will be competing for the remaining spots, including Washington and Reed in the women’s 200-meters and Gillespie in the men’s.

Follow Maggie Vanoni on Twitter @maggie_vanoni

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Fotu Leiato dismissed from Oregon football after April arrest

Following his arrest in late April, senior linebacker Fotu Leiato has been dismissed from the Oregon football team, as first reported by 247sports.com.

247sports.com confirmed the removal Thursday afternoon by Oregon’s senior associate athletic director of communications Jimmy Stanton, stating that Leiato was removed a day after his arrest on April 25.

Leiato was arrested on charges of; theft, criminal trespassing and criminal mischief. The charges stem from Leiato removing a parking boot and failing to appear in court for a previous incident, references the Register-Guard. On April 9, a warrant was issued for Leiato’s arrest due to him missing an April court date in part of a November arrest for failing to pay bus fare.

“We are aware of the situation and are in the process of gathering all of the information,” head coach Mario Cristobal offered in a statement after Leiato’s April arrest. “We hold our student-athletes to high standards and will take appropriate action once all of the facts have been reviewed.”

Leiato played in 38 career games for Oregon, finishing with 37 total tackles, one tackle for loss and two pass breakups.

This is Cristobal’s first time dealing with a player arrest as head coach. Oregon’s last player to be dismissed from the team was wide receiver Darren Carrington, after a DUII arrest last July.

Follow Maggie Vanoni on Twitter @maggie_vanoni

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