Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 14, 1983, Page 8, Image 8

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sports
Ducks sweep District 8
Men edge Arizona, women top Stanford
By Todd Fletcher
and Rich Skeen
Of (he Emerald
Oregon's cross country teams had a double dose
of victory Saturday at District 8 Championships at
Lane Community College, as the women held off a
potent Stanford University team while the men
avenged a Pac-10 Championship loss to University of
Arizona.
The men used All-American Jim Hill's individual
victory and a strong team effort to capture their half
of the meet. Oregon finished with 42 points, and
Arizona was second with 65 on a muddy, rain-soaked
course. UCLA was third with 82; all three teams go to
nationals Nov. 21 in Bethlehem, Pa.
Oregon placed five runners in the top 15 and all
of its scoring runners ahead of Arizona's third,
fourth, and fifth runners. Finishing behind Hill were
Mike Blackmore (5th), Chris Hamilton (10th), Brad
Simpson (11th), and Dan Nelson (15th).
"Hamilton and Simpson's improvement made
the difference, and Mike Blackmore established
himself as our number two runner," said Oregon
coach Bill Dellinger.
In the individual race, Hill passed Oregon State's
Gid Rysdam at the three-mile mark and never looked
back. His winning time was a slow 30:08:04, but he
had an explanation.
"The course was really tough," said Hill. "It was
one of the muddiest courses I've ever run."
Meanwhile, Oregon's women went in a favorite
and came out a winner Saturday.
With Kathy Hayes and Lisa Martin finishing 1-2,
the Ducks knocked off No. 1 ranked Stanford 33-71
and reversed last year's decision. The Cardinal
defeated Oregon 33-55 in 1982.
Stanford, University of California-lrvine and
Washington State University will join Oregon at na
tionals Nov. 21 in Bethlehem, Pa. as the top four
teams from Region 8.
Although Oregon won the meet, Stanford was
without top runner Ceci Hopp, who sat out the race
with a bad hip.
"Stanford will still be favored at nationals if Hopp
runs, but I think this shows that we're more com
petitive than anyone in the country gave us credit
for," said Oregon coach Tom Heinonen.
Behind Hayes and Martin, Oregon scored points
from Kim Roth's sixth, Kim Ryan's eighth and Gret
chen Nelson's 16th.
Stanford scored most of its points in one fell
swoop as the trio of Alison Wiley, Patti Sue Plumer
and Regina Jacobs finished third, fourth and fifth.
Hayes captured her first District 8 championship
with a 16:55 over a sloppy and soggy 5,000 meters,
but took more pleasure from her team's perfor
mance than her own
"We knew they would be up there (Stanford run
ners), and I'm just happy Lisa and I were able to
break them up," she said.
Another breaking up Stanford's contingent was
freshman Ryan, who probably ran her best race of
the year on her way to an important eighth-place
finish.
"Ryan says she loves pressure, and she showed
that today," said Heinonen.
Netters nab league playoff berth
After losing to 19th-ranked University ot Califor
nia Friday, Oregon's volleyball team stunned 13th
ranked San Jose State University the following night
to earn the fourth and final spot in the NorPae Con
ference playoffs Nov. 18-19.
The Ducks beat the Spartans 17-15, 11-15, 15-10,
12-15, 15-12, in a two-hour marathon match to earn a
trip to Stockton, Calif., and the league playoffs Fri
day. Oregon plays the NorPac's No. 1 seed and the
nation s No. 1 team, University ot racitic.
Sophomore Sue Harbour and junior Lisa Gemoya
were nothing short of incredible in Oregon's upset,
one of the biggest wins in Oregon volleyball history.
Harbour had 41 kills and Gemoya 80 assists in
what Oregon coach Chris Voelz called the best
games of their respective careers.
“The win over San )ose State was a great win,"
said Voelz in an understatement.
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