SPORTS Rose Bowl hopes die as Huskies pound Ducks By Ashley Conklin Emerald Sports Editor SEATTLE — Oregon’s Rose Bowl hopes died hard here Saturday when the Washington defense smothered the Duck running game and left Oregon for dead. -10 Football— trim \\;«ihin«ton use Oliiomu UCtA An.i.nj Oregon St Stanford Washington st An/ona St Oregon Cunt W-t-T WMI Ml m-u Mil •-Ml 1 10 t.’-n I Mi 0 .’-0 0-241 Otnall Wl-T % Ml 1 to »:« t-i-0 4 .*-0 ISO *■441 J 441 2 Ml 4-2-0 The Husky defense was the top ranked rushing defense in the nation go ing into the game and the 17th-ranked Huskies lived up to it. allowing the Ducks only seven net yards in a 3H-17 win. For Oregon, ranked 19th coming in, the Rose Bowl is a virtual impossibility at this point as the Ducks sit 0-2 in Pa cific-10 Conference play. 4-2 overall. Washington improved to 3-0 in confer ence play and 5-1 overall. "I think it's going to lie tough to make it to the Rose Bowl with two losses." Oregon quarterback Bill Musgrave said, “so we'll just concentrate on getting back on the winning track against ASU and be 5-2 after next week " Musgrave was sacked five times for minus 47 yards, but the running game didn't get much from tailback Sean Burwell or fullback Ngalu Kelemeni ei ther as they gained only 29 and 25 yards, respectively. It wasn't only the running game, or lack of. that hurt Oregon. Three turn overs also aided the Husky cause, some thing that the Ducks couldn’t have hap pen if they were to win. “I said earlier this week that if we're going to give the ball away we might as well stay home." Oregon Coach Kich Brooks said. "You have to give Wash ington credit for creating those turn overs. There were some reasons for them but you can't turn the hall over." It was a total domination on both sides of the ball by the Huskies, some thing Musgrave has rarely had happen to him as Oregon's quarterback "I felt like we were beaten and I don't remember many times where we were actually' beaten." he said "I feel beaten today." Musgrave was intercepted twice in the first half but only one of the miscues resulted in a Washington score The Ducks trailed only 14-10 at halftime and had the momentum going into the lew k erroom. It looked like the Ducks would st ore early in the third quarter after Burwell took the second-half kit koff 42 yards to the Washington 4-1 yard line and Mus grave hit Anthony (ones for seven yards to the :»7. The drive stalled and the Ducks were forced to punt "We came out and returned the open ing kit koff so well and I thought, boy that will open the door for us," Mus grave said. "But we dido t take advan tage of it." The teams exchanged punts twice af ter that stalled drive and the Ducks got the ball back .it their own 42-yard line "I thought one of the big things there was that we had been keeping our field position and not giving it up when the teams traded punts.” Oregon offensive coordinator Mike Bellotti said “When we had the ball there, in good field position, and in their territory I thought we could do anything with it that we wanted," he added. Three Musgrave-!o-|ones completions gave Oregon the ball on the Husky .19 yard line, but two plays later Musgrave was back to pass and Washington s Mark Jones came in to sack Musgrave and force a fumble Tyrone Rodgers recovered all the way back on the Duck 37 and three plays lat er, Husky quarterback Mark Brunell scrambled into the end zone from 12 yards out for his second rushing touch I_L Photo b» Mark VU Washington quarterback Mark Brunell's second touchdown run in the third quarter nave the Huskies a 31-10 lead as Oregon’s Jeff Cummins looks on in dismay. down of the game t» K'v*! Washington a 21-10 load The sack and fumble was the turning point of the game, the point where the Ducks had a chance to go ahead with a touchdown but fell behind even further and could never recover "At 11 if? start of tin* second half we had two or three possessions with great field position and not only did it not re sult in taking the lead or getting another field goal or getting points." 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