Photos by Tom Coyner
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON'S Dan Egolf "flutters" through the Leighton Pool water Tuesday en route
to second place in the intramural 100-yard butterfly championship. Egolfs finish, coupled with an
other second place in the 100-yard backstroke, helped the SAEs claim the team title.
McHugh fops IM swimmers
SAEs go wet, win title
Riley McHugh, a letterman on the Oregon ski
team, showed prowess in another sport Tuesday
night by winning two individual events and lead
ing Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity to the 1970
intramural swimming championship.
McHugh took the 50-yard freestyle in 24.05 sec
onds and the 100-yard free in 56.02 seconds as the
SAE’s racked up 50 points to edge Alpha Tau
Omega, which finished with 46.
Chi Psi scored 30 points to place third. The
Byes, an independent team, scored 28 points for
fourth by winning both relays, and two dormitory
squads—Hale Kane and Boynton—finished in a
fifth place tie with 14 tallies apiece.
ATO had a pair of first place winners in Pat
Hagerty, 1:05.2 in the 100-yard butterfly, and
Charles Young, 1:06.1 in the 100-yard backstroke.
Other champions were Mike McDermott, Boyton,
2:17.04 in the 200-yard free; Wayco Kopra, Doug
lass Highs, 1:04.5 in the 100-yard individual med
ley; and Jim Stoneman, Chi Psi, 1:11.0 in the 100
yard breaststroke.
The Byes won the 200-yard medley relay in
1:55.5 and the 200-yard free relay in 1:40.07.
Absence of team thoughts
hurt Webfoot baseball squad
Dy JUni^
Of the Emerald
Oregon Baseball Coach Jack
Roche was reminiscing on the
past season.
“If we could have played all
year like we did in the last two
games,” mused Roche, “we would
have been all right.
“But I got the feeling we
weren’t playing as a team all
through the year until then. We
had a lot of players of equal
ability, and some of the kids who
weren’t playing felt they should
have been. We had too big a
squad, and it caused individual
rather than team thoughts. We
just couldn’t play everyone.
“I can understand it, but I
don’t condone it.”
The Ducks finished with a 16
14 record—so-so in most annals—
but for Oregon it was one of the
poorest seasons on record. Only
one other time since 1951 have
the Ducks finished with a won
lost percentage (.533) that low.
And not since 1932 has the school
fielded a losing team.
The team placed third in the
Pac-8 Northern Division with a
5-9 mark.
But the Ducks faced a lot of
frustrations—primarily surround
ing the illness and death of Head
Coach Don Kirsch, one of the
nation’s most greatly-admired and
highly-respected baseball coaches.
Kirsch underwent treatment for
Parkinson’s disease at the Stan
ford Veteran’s Hospital from
early April until his May 7 death.
“Don’s being at Stanford had a
definite effect on the club’s per
formance,” said Roche. “They had
a great concern for him.”
Roche cited other areas where
the team could have seen some
improvement.
“We had trouble hitting good
pitching,” Roche noted, “but we
also had trouble hitting poor
pitching real good.”
"And the rain bothered us. It
kept our pitchers from being in a
rotation or planned assignment
situation.” Rain forced postpone
ment or cancellation of 13 sched
uled or rescheduled Oregon
games.
With the untimely loss of
Kirsch and the graduation of nine
lettermen, six of them regulars,
the Duck diamond squad would
appear to be in for rough times
next year.
But Koche doesn t see it that
way.
“True, we lose quite a few,”
he admitted. “But the club can
be pretty much set with return
ees. The guys can play better if
they know where they’re playing.
“This year we were playing
guys down to the JVs, and that’s
wrong. We should reward a
guy to come up to the varsity.
We’ll have a definite squad next
year, and we can start out with
it that way.”
Graduation losses this year in
clude four everyday starters —
centerfielder Phil Bushman, sec
ond baseman Roger Schiewe,
shortstop Jim Van Wyck and
third baseman Colby Howe. Catch
er John Dye saw more action
than any other backstop, and
Fred Cardwell won six games as
the staff’s top pitcher. Departing
reserves are first baseman Bob
Ossey, outfielder Dave John
son and first baseman - mana
ger Ron Molony.
FINAL OREGON SEASON STATISTICS
BATTING G AB R H Avg. 2B 3R HR Rbi HP BB SO SB
Jim Officer . 7 14 1 6 . 429 0 0 0 3 0 0 2 0
Andy Jones - 3 5 3 2 .400 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 0
Jim Van Wyck . 30 106 24 34 .321 4 4 2 18 1 15 9 4
Colby Howe ..—.... 30 99 20 31 .313 5 1 5 28 2 17 18 0
Mike Bubalo . 30 111 21 34 .306 2 2 1 16 0 15 6 0
Roger Schiewe . 27 80 8 24 .300 0 0 0 9 0 11 12 1
Phil Bushman .. 29 120 13 33 . 275 3 3 0 12 1 8 19 7
Greg Brosterhous . 8 11 0 3 .273 1 0 0 2 0 0 4 0
Bruce Maxwell .. 10 28 4 7 .250 30130351
Rick Mealey . 9 12 1 3 .250 0 0 0 1 0 1 5 0
Dave Dingman.. 6 8 2 2 .250 00001210
Bill Lawrence .. 21 57 7 14 .246 2 0 1 12 0 8 10 0
Gary Nall --— 10 30 5 7 .233 2 0 0 3 1 1 6 0
Steve Greenough - 9 14 2 3 .214 10000030
Earle Wicklund _ 19 45 11 9 .200 00130784
John Dye - 14 36 2 7 .194 0 1 0 6 0 4 5 1
Dick Whitman .. 21 53 7 10 .189 3 1 0 5 1 9 7 0
Bob Claydon _ 15 16 4 3 .188 1 0 0 4 0 4 2 0
Dave Johnson 18 44 6 8 .182 31060862
Don Knapp 11 28 3 5 .179 1 0 0 2 3 3 3 0
Bob Ossey 11 18 4 3 .167 1 0 0 2 0 7 5 0
Dave Roberts . 9 16 3 1 .063 00000150
Fred Cardwell 10 18 2 1 .056 0 0 0 1 1 3 14 0
Fred Massar . 4 3 1 0 .000 00000000
Ron Molony 1 2 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Rich Haderer 2 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
OREGON TOTALS 30 974 154 250 .257 33 13 11 136 11 129 156 20
OPPONENTS TOTALS 30 947 138 221 .233 26 6 8 109 11 154 192 24
PITCHING
GP CG W L Pet. IP H R ER BB SO WP HP ShO ERA
Brosterhous 1 0 0 0 .000 6-2 4 1 1 8 3 0 1 0 1.35
Massar . 4 0 1 0 1.000 6 5 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 50
Cardwell.. 10 4 6 2 .750 57-2 44 24 14 31 52 4 2 0 2 19
Claydon 12 2 2 1 .667 40-1 34 22 10 19 20 0 2 0 2 23
Mealey .. 9 1 1 4 .200 37-2 34 19 13 20 22 3 1 0 3 11
Greenough - 9 1 3 3 .500 43 37 22 16 31 43 4 2 1V4 3 35
Officer.. 7 3 2 2 .500 34-2 28 26 19 25 37 6 2 Vi> 4 93
Jones .. 3 1 1 1 .500 14-1 12 8 8 13 10 1 0 1 5 02
Van Wyck 4 0 0 1 .000 9 14 10 10 6 5 1 1 0 10 00
Haderer - 2 0 0 0 .000 2 6 5 5 0 0 0 0 0 22 50
OREGON TOTALS 30 12 16 14 .553 251-1 218 138 97 154 143 20 11 3 3 48
OPPONENT TOT. 30 8 14 16 .467 249 250 154 115 129 156 17 11 4 4.16
PB—Oregon 8 (Knapp 3, Dye 2, Maxwell 2, Dingman 1), Opponents 3.
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