Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 21, 1985, Page 17, Image 16

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    Swimmers whip Beavers in Civil War meet
By Manlon Beachy
Of the Emerald
The Oregon men’s swimming team won the
first 11 events and the Duck women swimmers
won 12 out of 13 events to build an insurmoun
table lead over Oregon State in posting a dual
meet victory over the Beavers Friday night at
Leighton Pool.
"We’re glad to be home,” said Oregon coach
Dan Cole after four consecutive road meets.
“Long road trips can take a lot out of you. 1 think
that's one reason for the good swims tonight, the
kids are finally getting back home."
Babette Brundage led the women’s team to a
71-44 victory over OSU. Brundage, last week’s
NorPac Athlete of the Week for swimming, won
the 100-yard backstroke in 1:04.86. and the
400-yard individual medley with a personal best
of 4:37.21. Chris Moses also scored ten points
with victories in the one meter and three meter
dives.
“1 felt really strong in the 400 IM (individual
medley)," said Brundage. “I haven’t felt that
strong in a long time. 1 was kind of surprised
because I haven't been feeling very well in
workouts. The workouts before this have been
really tough and that’s probably why I’ve been
feeling kind of tired. But, 1 had a good night’s
rest, and I was ready to compete.”
Cole also praised the work of Patricia Lorys,
Kristen Read, Jeri Flinn and Moses.
Photo by Steven Well
Oregon women’s swimmer Babette Brundage posted victories
in the 400-yard individual medley and 100-yard backstroke in
the Ducks’ win over Oregon State University at Leighton Pool
Friday.
“Chris looked good — real good,” Cole said.
“As a matter of fact, she qualified for the NCAA
Zone Championships on both boards.” Divers
must score well at a zone meet in order to qualify
for the NCAA Championships.
On the men’s side, Mark Cannard sparked
the Ducks to a 70-42 victory with wins in the
200-yard freestyle and the 100-yard butterfly.
Darrin Lajoie won the 500-yard freestyle in
4:50.52. Oregon’s Russell Waggoner won the one
meter dive and took second in the three meter.
“We were able to pretty well dominate what
we wanted to,” said Cole. “It’s kind of nice to be
able to do that once in awhile, and it’s a good way
to conclude our dual-meet season”.
The women’s team finished dual-meet com
petition with a 5-1 record and the men ended up
with a 3-2 mark.
“Now we’re into the championship meets
from here on out.... It’s the championship
season that really counts,” said Cole.
The Ducks will open championship play at
home Jan.25-27 with the 22nd annual Dolphin In
vitational which features 20 teams.
Cole hopes for at least third place by the
women’s team at the NorPac meet (Feb. 28-March
2) as well as a step forward for the men’s team
when the Pacific-10 Championships begin in
Portland, March 7-9.
Montana-led 49ers blitz Miami in Super Bowl
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Joe Mon
tana, making a shambles of the quarter
back showdown with Dan Marino, shat
tered the Miami Dolphins' defense with
his passing and scrambling and led the
San Francisco 49ers to a 38-16 victory in
Super Bowl XIX Sunday.
Montana passed for three
touchdowns, ran for another and set
Super Bowl records with 331 yards
passing and 59 on scrambles. He kept
the 49ers totally in control, leading
them to scores on five straight posses
sions in the second and third quarters to
make the Dolphins, who had the Na
tional Football League's second-best
record at 16-2, look like overmatched
losers,
it was the second Super Bowl victory
in four years for the 49ers, who finished
with an NFL-record 18 victories against
one loss.
Montana was voted the game's most
valuable player, matching the award he
won in San Francisco’s 26-20 victory
over Cincinnati in Super Bowl XVI.
He had exemplary help from Coach
Bill Walsh’s bag-of-tricks offense; from
fullback Roger Craig, who caught two
TD tosses and ran for a record third
score, and from a defense whose
pressure on Marino exceeded anything
a Dolphin opponent had been able to do
in this record-breaking season.
Marino was intercepted twice and
sacked four times. In two NFL seasons,
Marino had not been sacked more than
three times; he had been dumped only
13 times in 18 games this season and not
at all in two playoff games.
The game was portrayed as a dream
contest between the NFL’s two best
teams, but the 49ers were clearly better.
And for this day at least, so was
Walsh in his “genius” match with
Miami’s Don Shula.
In fact, the game was competitive on
ly in the first period.
Miami took a 3-0 lead on the first of
three field goals by Uwe von Schamann,
lost it on a 33-yard TD pass from Mon
tana to reserve running back Carl
Monroe, then got it back again on a
brilliantly executed six-play, 70-yard
drive engineered by Marino.
But that 10-7 first quarter lead lasted
only until Montana got the ball back. By
halftime it was 28-16, by midway
through the third period 38-16. That
was fine with most of the 84,059 fans in
Stanford Stadium, just 30 miles south of
the 49ers’ home base at Candlestick
Park.
But there were other heroes besides
Montana.
His offensive line allowed him to be
sacked only once and more often than
not, he could have been in a rocking
chair, looking around for receivers.
When there were no receivers open, he
simply took off.
The 49er defense, meanwhile, did
what few teams did this season against
Marino in a season in which he shat
tered NFL records with 48 touchdown
passes and 5,084 yards.
With few exceptions — once on that
first-quarter drive in which the
Dolphins operated twice without a hud
dle to keep San Francisco from running
its multiple defenses — Marino was
forced to dump off rather than throw his
customary deep patterns to the Marks
Brothers, Clayton and Duper.
Much of the credit went to a secon
dary that forced Marino out of his quick
release rythm and forced him to hold
the ball a second longer as Fred Dean,
Dwaine Board and the | rest of the
defense poured in on him, ^
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