Author Archives | Shawn Medow

Oregon softball splits double-header against top-20 opponents

No. 5 Oregon softball (10-2) faced two top-20 teams in its first games of the Mary Nutter Classic, beating No. 18 Oklahoma State 4-1 and falling 3-1 to No. 6 Texas A&M in what is the Ducks’ second loss of the season.

The Ducks went up 1-0 in the second on a Mia Camuso home run, but Oklahoma State tied the game 1-1 in the fourth on a throwing error from Mary Iakopo after a wild pitch allowed Oklahoma State’s Taylor Pence to advance to third.

Oregon took the lead back with a Shaye Bowden home run in the fifth, which was followed by two RBI singles from Shannon Rhodes and Gwen Svekis to give the Ducks the 4-1 lead that pitcher Miranda Elish would hold onto in her fourth win of the season.

The Ducks then turned around to face Texas A&M, the only team Oregon will play that featured in last year’s Women’s College World Series.

With Megan Kleist pitching for Oregon, the Ducks had their most experienced pitcher running the show for them. But, Kleist was unable to hold off the Aggies as Oregon dropped the game 3-1.

The Ducks got on the board first with a run walked in. In the sixth, a single from Texas A&M’s Ashley Walters with two runners on led to an errand throw back into the diamond from center field, allowing all three Aggies to score.

Maggie Balint relieved Kleist in the seventh inning to keep Texas A&M from adding on to its lead. She did so, but in the bottom of the inning with two outs, Oregon hit back-to-back singles and had the winning run come to the plate in the form of Jenna Lilley. She made contact on a pitch but a diving catch in center field secured the win for Texas A&M.

Oregon plays again tomorrow against No. 11 Tennessee followed by a matchup against the Japanese national team.

Follow Shawn Medow on Twitter @ShawnMedow

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With No. 8 Oregon’s win over No. 10 UCLA, the Ducks have one hand on the Pac-12 title

Coming into this weekend’s fixtures, Oregon women’s basketball had Monday night’s game against UCLA locked in its sights.

Win or lose, there would be emotions after the game: The team would honor seniors Lexi Bando and Justine Hall during Senior Day ceremonies. Head coach Kelly Graves said it was arguably the biggest game in the Ducks’ history. With a national TV audience watching on ESPN2, future NCAA seedings and the conference title on the line, Graves wasn’t wrong.

“I wish I drank, I’d already grab a beer,” Graves said following Oregon’s 101-94 nail-biting overtime win over UCLA on Monday night.

With the win, the Ducks now sit alone at the top of the conference and have a Pac-12 regular season title within reach. Almost a year removed from going 8-10 in conference play with a freshman-heavy team that made a run to the Elite Eight, this year’s Ducks now have the chance to finish 16-2 in the Pac-12.

“Nobody saw that run coming but I think it just gave us a ton of confidence, especially these two,” Graves said. “And I’ve always felt that players improve the most between their freshmen and sophomore years — they certainly did that. I think it was the perfect storm last year and it just helped propel us.”

On Thursday, No. 9 Oregon, No. 7 UCLA and No. 14 Stanford were all tied at the top of the Pac-12 standings. Then the Bruins fell at No. 15 Oregon State while the Cardinal fell to Cal on Friday. With wins against USC on Friday and UCLA on Monday, the Ducks would grab sole possession of the top of the Pac-12 standings.

Oregon pulled it off with a close double-overtime win against USC on Friday followed by the Monday night win over the Bruins in front of 7,098 fans.

“It was electric. We needed them tonight,” Graves said.” I thought down the stretch they gave us a huge lift especially late in the game and into overtime. I heard them. There was a couple times I think sound actually had feel. That’s pretty neat.”

That feeling might return to Matthew Knight Arena if the Ducks earn the right to host the first and second rounds of the NCAA Tournament in just over a month’s time.

“This was a great showcase, you guys,” Graves said. “A great national showcase for our fans, our program, for this team.”

The Ducks, now No. 8 in the AP Poll, knew they needed to beat the No. 10 Bruins to get themselves perched atop the standings. They’ve done that.

They still have to beat Arizona State and Arizona on the road, who can both easily play the role of spoiler. But Oregon has a found groove.

Oregon will still travel to Seattle a week from Thursday for the Pac-12 Tournament. There are still two games to play but the Ducks can taste the Pac-12 regular season title, which Oregon last won back when it was still the Pac-10 in 2000.

Now, 18 years later, that title is on track to return.

Follow Shawn Medow on Twitter @ShawnMedow

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Turnovers mar Oregon’s thrilling double-overtime win

Oregon women’s basketball had the first possession of the game on Friday night. Sabrina Ionescu carried it up court and turned it over. USC went the other way to score a basket.

Then, Satou Sabally had possession but gave it up. Once again, USC went down the court to score.

“That’s what they feed off,” head coach Kelly Graves said. “We’re not the quickest team but we can’t be loose with the basketball, we can’t cross it over in front of somebody and expect a different result. It was pick-6 layup.”

The No. 9 Ducks were riddled with turnovers all night long as Oregon surrendered the ball 24 times, in which USC scored 31 points from, in Oregon’s 80-74 double-overtime win over the Trojans.

“It’s really funny, we’re 24-4 and they’re not all going to be pretty,” Graves said. “They’re not all going to be comfortable,you’ve got to win some games like this and we did it.”

As regulation closed, Oregon struggled to inbound the ball on three occasions.

With 30.8 seconds remaining, Oregon had an inbound from its offensive half. It was passed to Lexi Bando, who was locked up and jump ball was called.

The Ducks then inbounded the ball again to Lexi Bando, this time she muffled it and USC stepped out with the ball to give it back to Oregon. The Ducks inbounded the ball once again and this time Ionescu reached for it with a Trojan defender, who was ultimately deemed to touch the ball last after a video review.

Oregon escaped with the ball and found Ruthy Hebard, who was fouled as Oregon finally escaped the backcourt.

Ionescu and fellow guard Maite Cazorla combined for 15 turnovers, which Graves appeared most frustrated by.

“Some of the silly turnovers we’ve got to get rid of,” Graves said. “I don’t know how many times I said ‘you can’t cross over in front, you can’t cross over in front.’ How many times did I say that tonight?”

Hebard responded, “A lot,” to which Graves promptly replied, “8,000.”

The Ducks somehow managed to escape with the win despite the uncharacteristic 24 turnovers. With a big game ahead against No. 7 UCLA on Monday night, the Ducks will have to clean up their passing if they want any chance against the Bruins.

“We average 13 turnovers on the season, we’re actually one of the best in the country at that,” Graves said. “This is an aberration, this is one game. They turned us over a little bit last time too. Is it a trend? No. It was a poor job tonight. We’ll do better next time.”

Follow Shawn Medow on Twitter @ShawnMedow

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Oregon softball beats Houston 1-0 in Puerto Vallarta opener

On Thursday, No. 3 Oregon softball started the Puerto Vallarta Challenge off with a 1-0 win over Houston, improving the Ducks’ record to 7-0 on the season.

Junior pitcher Megan Kleist earned her third win (3-0) in a one-hit, 10 strikeout, complete game as she kept Oregon’s perfect season intact. Her only blemish on her line was the one hit as Kleist did not walk a single player in the 23 batters she faced.

Alexis Mack kept her now 13-game hitting streak intact with a double, the only extra-base hit by any Oregon player, as she was one of five Ducks to earn a hit. Oregon left six runners on base.

The game’s lone run came on a Shannon Rhodes run from a Gwen Svekis RBI single.

The Ducks play Rutgers and Texas in a double-header in the Puerto Vallarta Challenge before they face No. 15 Ole Miss to finish off the tournament and head to California for the Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic.

Follow Shawn Medow on Twitter @ShawnMedow

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Oregon women’s basketball stays at No. 9 in AP Poll

After sweeping the Washington schools on the road this past weekend, Oregon women’s basketball remained No. 9 in this week’s AP Top-25 Poll.

The Ducks were led by Ruthy Hebard, who put up 59 points over the weekend on 25-of-27 shooting while also collecting 23 rebounds. Oregon’s win over Washington State also saw the return of Lexi Bando, who scored nine points in her first game back since injury.

Oregon hosts USC and UCLA this upcoming weekend, which provides a top-10 matchup between the Ducks and the No. 7 UCLA Bruins. USC is not ranked.

The other ranked Pac-12 schools are Stanford at No. 14, Oregon State at No. 15 while Connecticut once again tops the poll.

Here is the full poll:

Follow Shawn Medow on Twitter @ShawnMedow

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From setup to teardown, Oregon rugby teams do it all

It’s 2 p.m. on a recent Friday and Spencer de Urioste and Charles Diemer drive onto Riverfront Field in a black Jeep at the banks of the Willamette River. De Urioste grabs a Bluetooth speaker from the car and plays Luke Bryan’s hit song “Huntin’ Fishin’ & Lovin’ Every Day” —  country music is a favorite of the team.

De Urioste and Diemer will spend the next four hours painting lines and patching holes in the grass ahead of the University of Oregon men and women rugby teams’ matches the next day. Come Saturday, the men’s team will arrive early for its match to set up the goalposts and boundaries. It’s just another match day for them.

“It starts with every guy to make sure that the day goes well, and to do that, everybody’s got to do a little work in setting up the field,” men’s head coach Pate Tuisue said.

Because the rugby teams are club teams and not official UO athletic programs, they have to pay out of pocket, set up the fields themselves and train in their own time. The teams have to deal with heavy equipment and a setup process unlike most other UO club sports.

The financial struggle for a club sports team

Charles Diemer sets rope on the rugby field so he can paint straight lines for the game on the next day. (Adam Eberhardt/Daily Emerald)

The rugby teams have to purchase equipment with money from dues and fundraising events to buy all the balls, jerseys and cones themselves. They even purchase the goalposts and field markers.

Before they set up, the team goes to the Student Recreation Center to buy paint cans to line the field. It costs $48 per box, which holds 12 cans — it took 16 cans to line the field for the matches on Feb. 3.

If the rain doesn’t wash away the lines, an extra layer is applied to make the lines bold enough for the next matches.

This is just one aspect of the financial difficulties the team faces.

The team has a storage area at Riverfront Field. It’s a caged area connected to a backstop used for baseball and softball. There’s nothing covering the top of it — fixed structures aren’t allowed on the field — which allows weather, and even people, to get in. It has a lock, but that was only added recently.

“It gets really frustrating,” Diemer said. “We don’t really have good facilities out here at all. Anyone can easily jump in and take any of our gear easily. So, a lot of our stuff we keep at our homes and try to keep it safe.”

In the fall, someone did get in and steal some of the equipment, including the striper device used to paint the lines, stampers to fill holes in the field and a rope and spool used to trace the lines and keep spectators on the sidelines.

“It’s definitely not the end of the world but it’s definitely inconvenient,” Diemer said.  

All in a day’s work

Charles Diemer paints the try line on Friday, Feb. 2. (Adam Eberhardt/Daily Emerald)

De Urioste is the main man when it comes to getting the field ready for match day. He immediately looks for the holes for the goalposts to begin his measurements for painting when he arrives on Friday.

He’s now experienced, especially with the difficult task of measuring and painting the field. He does it efficiently. But it didn’t always go as smoothly as it does now.

“We ended up with a trapezoidal field because the senior class had graduated and I was a sophomore at this point so I never had any experience with this,” de Urioste said. “We realized we had 63 meters on one side and 57 across on the other side.”

Friday’s four-hour setup is a two-person job. Saturday’s setup requires a full group effort.

Players head to the team’s storage area off to the side of the field to grab the posts and the rope. Some players go to the cars to get field markers while others warm up or get taped up for injuries.

Match day

Vanessa Hufnagel tries to fight off a tackle from a Washington player. (Adam Eberhardt/Daily Emerald)

Kickoff against Boise State for the men’s team is set for 11 a.m. Originally, it was scheduled for 10 a.m. but the men’s B-side had its game canceled after Willamette University was unable to field enough players. This allowed the men’s A-team to get an extra hour of rest in the morning and kick off later.

De Urioste, Diemer and the rest of the team return at 9:45 a.m. on Saturday to finish setting up the field.

With the lines painted, the team just has to put the meter markers into the ground at the back of the try zone, the try zone lines, the 10-meter lines, 22-meter lines and 50-meter line. Then, the goalposts go in.

The players bring the three pieces — two uprights and a crossbar — to designated holes in the field for the posts. They connect them. Then six or seven players hoist the poles into the ground.

At first, they’re a little slanted and somewhat tilted forward on one side.  

They push the posts and add several small wooden stakes to keep the posts in the holes and add the roughly 5-feet-tall pads onto the posts so players don’t run directly into the metal.

The team adds a rope to the sideline to keep spectators from the touchline and field. Now, it’s game time.

The men begin their warm-up as the cloudy Eugene sky looms overhead. It’s ideal rugby weather that imitates the sport’s birthplace in gloomy Rugby, England. Spectators begin to arrive while joggers on their morning runs yell “Go Ducks” in support.

After the official checks the players’ cleats and equipment to make sure they don’t have metal on the underside of them, the teams take the field. Game on.

The men dominate in a physical battle. With hard, crunching tackles and several scrums right in front of the try zone, the players leave bruised and muddied.

The Ducks don’t allow Boise State anywhere near their try zone as Oregon shut out the Broncos 31-0. Once the match finishes, it’s the women’s turn.

The clouds clear and the women gear up and sprint onto the field to warm up. They start the match as fast as possible against their opponents from the University of Washington, who they would go on to beat 52-17.

The work after the whistle

The Oregon women’s rugby team takes down the goalpost after its match against Washington on Saturday, Feb. 3.

Right after the final whistle of the women’s match, several men’s players walk the field to collect the markers while the women’s team gathers underneath the goalposts with its opponents for a group photo. Once they are done, it’s time to dismantle the goalposts.

“It’s a little bit exhausting after playing, but because there’s a lot of us, we split up the roles,” women’s player Mililani Leui said. “[We] try to stay positive after the games.”

The players toss the poles and rope into the storage area, lock it up and head out.

The sun begins to set as players and fans walk across the now torn-up field toward campus. It’s time to recover. They’ll do it all again next week.

Follow Shawn Medow on Twitter @ShawnMedow

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UO student Laurenne Ross takes her shot at 2018 Winter Olympic Games

Laurenne Ross is bringing her 120 film camera, a Polaroid, a GoPro and her smartphone to take photos while she competes at the Olympics in South Korea this month. She says she also has a sketch pad with her at all times.

“I know I’m not going to have these opportunities when I’m done skiing to visit places that I’m visiting right now, and it’s pretty awesome to be able to capture that on camera,” Ross said.

Ross, a 29-year-old alpine skier and art major at the University of Oregon, is representing the United States at the 2018 Winter Olympic Games in PyeongChang, South Korea. She competed in downhill skiing, combined and super-G in the 2014 Sochi Winter Games, seven World Cups and four World Championships, all while aiming to get her degree that, at this rate, she’ll earn in 2022 at age 33.

“It’s tough, and it’s even difficult to go for one term a year because we typically ski some time during that term,” Ross told the Emerald via Skype.

Ross only attends the University of Oregon for one term a year, during spring, while still training to keep fit for the season. Oftentimes, the team has camp in the middle of May so Ross has to miss some of the camp or some of school — or sometimes all of one.

“To me it’s so nice to have that change of lifestyle and to be able to step into the shoes of a student and kind of live that student life,” Ross said. “I get to be creative and get out of the super intensive lifestyle of being a professional athlete.”

Born in Edmonton, Alberta in Canada, Ross moved to Klamath Falls, Oregon, at age 7 where she grew up and went to high school. Late in high school, she decided she would try racing professionally. So after graduation, she moved to Bend, Oregon, to be closer to her “home mountain” — Mt. Bachelor.

When she was in Utah training with the U.S. ski team, she would take classes at Westminster College in Salt Lake City before her move to UO in 2012.

“I love the feeling of spring in Eugene, so I’m really stoked that I started going there,” Ross said. “In Utah, I just didn’t really feel at home, and I feel so much more at home in Eugene.”

As an architecture and allied arts major, Ross has experimented with a multitude of arts, ranging from ceramics to printmaking to photography, which Ross says she’s most passionate about.

Ross says her favorite event right now is super-G because its slower paced and is less harsh on her knees — Ross suffered a severe knee injury last year.

“In downhill, sometimes you’re just going down straight and picking up speed the whole time,” Ross said. “I’ve just been a little bit scared of that since my injury.”

As far as her goals for the Olympics, there is no objective goal. She just wants to remember the experience of being there.

“I just like to try to ski as fast as I possibly can and execute my plan. If I do that and I have a really good run, I could walk away with a medal,” Ross said. “I want to be able to embrace it and record that somehow; you know, take my camera around and make some memories.”

Correction: The original story stated that Ross is an architecture and allied arts major. She is an art major in the School of Art + Design in the College of Design.

Follow Shawn Medow on Twitter @ShawnMedow

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Oregon’s defense dominates in 65-40 win over Washington

As the game clock wound down, Washington looked desperate to grab a basket. They had scored only 38 points. The Ducks defense had shut them down.

One game after Stanford handed Oregon head coach Dana Altman his biggest loss as the Ducks’ head coach, Oregon’s defense held Washington to 28 percent shooting in the Ducks’ 65-40 win over the Huskies, improving Oregon’s record to 16-8 and 6-5 in Pac-12 play. Behind Troy Brown’s 21 points and Kenny Wooten’s seven blocks, the Ducks were looking strong on both ends of the court, but it was the defense that was most improved.

“For me personally I felt like it was a great win,” Brown said. “At this point I feel like the Stanford loss gave us an awakening at this point in time in conference play. Right now we need to get back on board. We needed that win.”

Washington’s 40 points is the second-lowest total the Ducks have held a team to at Matt Knight Arena since they kept Idaho State to 35 in 2012.

In all four of Oregon’s most recent wins, the Ducks have been better in the first half than the second, both offensively and defensively. Against Washington, they were much better on both sides of the ball.

Oregon’s defense held Washington to under 31 percent shooting in the first half, and the second half did not see much better as the Huskies went 25 percent on 7-of-28 shooting.

“That’s always our game plan is to come out playing defense really hard. Just to set the tone,” Brown said. “Earlier in the year we were having some problems with that but as of lately we’ve been coming out strong and just trying to keep that same mentality throughout the whole game, and I felt like we did a good job with that today.”

The Ducks kept Washington’s leading scorer on the season, Noah Dickerson, to 14 points on 5-of-9 shooting. Dickerson scored 23 points against both Arizona schools last weekend.

“Dickerson has been really hurting people inside,” Altman said. “He was the guy we were most concerned about going inside because he did a wonderful job last week.”

The first half saw both teams go on scoring droughts for more than four minutes at a time. In the second half, Oregon figured it out, but Washington still had trouble, missing its final nine field goal attempts while Oregon finished the game on a 17-2 run.

Wooten’s seven blocks were just two shy of Chris Boucher’s Oregon record of nine. He was emulating that blocking presence from last year’s Oregon team that was led to the Final Four by shot-blockers Boucher and Jordan Bell.

“I wanted to learn from them, but then they left,” Wooten said. “I talk to Jordan Bell a lot and he tells me what to do in order to be successful.”

The Ducks allowed just 24 points from inside the paint, much of that thanks to Wooten. Washington went 6-of-22 on layup attempts.

Oregon’s defense will have to stay consistent with a matchup against Washington State on Sunday followed by a trip to Southern California.

Follow Shawn Medow on Twitter @ShawnMedow

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Oregon soccer adds five to 2018 class on national signing day

After going 8-11 last season and graduating five seniors, Oregon soccer added five incoming freshmen to its 2018 roster on national signing day on Wednesday.

The Ducks signed goalkeeper Charlotte Brisley, forward Jordan Wormdahl, defender Claire Watkins, forward Zoe Hasenauer and defender Chai Cortez.

Brisley, from Excelsior, Minnesotta, played her club soccer for Shattuck St. Mary’s Academy in Minnessota.

“I chose Oregon because it offers me the unique combination of high level athletics as well as great academics,” Brisley said in a press release. “The opportunity to play in the Pac-12 Conference against some of the best players in the country really appealed to me because I love competition, and at Oregon I feel like I can really be competitive.”

Wormdahl played at North Eugene High School under her mother and head coach Brandy Wormdahl, who played for Oregon State. Wormdahl was the 5A State Player of the Year in 2017 as the team came runners-up in the state championship. Wormdahl also played for Crossfire United in the ECNL.

Wormdahl joins fellow Eugene native Emma Eddy on the team.

“I really like the trust the players have in the coaches,” Wormdahl said in the release. “And for me, being close to home and family, with the amazing academic and athletic support and facilities that Oregon has was important. Plus the team is an underdog in the Pac-12 and I want to help build the program into a winner.”

Watkins played for Albion and San Diego Surf and was on the 2015-16 Olympic Development Program (ODP) national championship team.

Hasenauer played for Real So Cal in Simi Valley, California. She and Wormdahl could provide that needed edge that Oregon has looked for in forwards in recent years.

“What I really admire about the soccer team is their hunger to learn and improve,” Hasneauer said. “There’s also a never-give-up attitude which goes a long way in attaining team goals.”

Cortez joins fellow Hawaiians Chardonnay Curran and True Dydasco, who will both be sophomores next year. She is from Hawaii, just as Oregon’s greatest scorer (34 goals in 76 games) Nicole Garbin, who was recently added to the UO Hall of Fame.

Cortez has received call ups to the U.S. women’s national team, most recently at the U-18 level.

“From all the schools I visited and researched, nothing came close to the facilities of Oregon,” Cortez said. “The overall support of UO was also a key for me and the area felt like home.”

Oregon’s 2018 schedule has yet to be announced, but the Ducks’ season will kick off in August as head coach Kat Mertz looks to take her team to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in the program’s history.

Follow Shawn Medow on Twitter @ShawnMedow

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AP Poll: Oregon remains in top-10 after loss to Stanford

Following a thumping win over No. 25 Cal on Thursday, Oregon lost to No. 24 Stanford on Sunday, but the then-No. 6 Ducks only dropped to No. 9 in Monday’s AP Top-25 poll.

UCLA possesses the highest ranking of any Pac-12 school at No. 8. Oregon State is ranked No. 16, while Stanford climbed to No. 17 following a sweep of Oregon State and Oregon. The only other Pac-12 school in the top-25 is Arizona State at No. 25.

The Ducks — whose loss to Stanford featured a 31-point second half from the Cardinal’s Brittany McPhee — are now tied with Stanford atop the Pac-12 standings with both team holding 10-2 records in conference play.

Oregon has a road trip this upcoming weekend at the Washington schools.

Following Oregon’s loss to Stanford, head coach Kelly Graves was positive off a return to winning ways for Oregon, which is still without senior Lexi Bando. The only Ducks to score in the loss were the starting five.

“We’ll shake it off,” Graves said. “We lost to Oregon State a few weeks ago and turned right around and played one of the best games we played all year two days later. … We’ve shown the ability to bounce back.”

The full poll is below:

Follow Shawn Medow on Twitter @ShawnMedow

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