O’NEIL Continued trom Page 17 nudibl ty.ution. ’* The ono play that typified the maturation of O'Neil was when ho hit Ronnie Harris for a -tR yard touchdown pass for Ore gon's first score of the game. O’Neil was flushed out of the pocket by the Sun Devils' rush O'Neil rolled right and saw a giant hole open up in the Ari zona State line Just when it looked as if O'Neil was ready to tuck the hall away and run for a big gain, he stopped short of the line of scrimmage and fired a pass to a wide-open Harris across the middle During his career at Oregon, O'Neil has always had the rep utation of not showing enough patience to find the open man O'Neil admitted that a year ugo, he may not have seen Harris on that play "The play was supposed to he a rjuii k pass, hut it wasn't there,'' O'Neil said "I was ready to run it. and then Ron nie broke open A year ago, I may have run it " The pass to Harris was the big play of ihe game for O'Neil, but hu had other passes that demonstrated how < nr.fi dent he was feeling In the pocket. In the first quarter, O'Neil threw a picture-perfect pass to tight end Willie Tate down the sideline for a 17-yard gain that sol up the pass to Harris. He demonstrated his scrambling ability again, rolling right and. instead of running, throw an other pass right on the numbers to l ate for a 20 yard gain He even threw a pretty timing pass to Anthony (ones on first down for 2( 1 1 ,NstT5y9.!9B ( **M St M N° \\ d*1' y C1K >N g«m>‘ I, .. Vitt tou ran look -mart ncn when \uu make a |th.!*•* on am railing rani or roller! rail ton make. Il works from pat phones. hotel*. airport*. ofTIrr ami n-*idrnlial phone*. K> rnlrrinic a simple fi>r digit rinlr |0?t»? tour rail i- roun d through Monet Talk" and tou aulomatirallt satr up lo a.IV To makr a rail all tou hate lo do is dial W7h7 + 0 + area rode + the number ton arc railing. kflrr a sprrial lonr rnlrr tour railing rani or nail for operator assislanrr. It’s as simple as lhal. Il s cast lo use Mono Talk'". There an- no frrs. no sign-up has*lrs. no sales rails — unit reward*. So start using Mono Talk'" Indat and sate on long distanrr rails. \»ur parents s* ill In- proud of how smart tou'n- getting. To makr it orn easier, a Monet Talk'" reminder rani i* atailahle. Ju*l rail 1-800-443-t»6al to hate a Monet Talk'" n-minder rani sent to tou lodat. t*r»r «tr>. wlui W r*.Mljml IKl tkdljmnir t jlto M* »wIm »bh- mr. sill *(Hil> I adrr Ihr trdrr*l I. lM.h„n. UprnlM I M-mnrr. Vnxr- lin,,,.,.. m. .i trt id |u- phr«r jad iMrl |'Ih.ii. - jrr rr^mird l. Jrrri. I. »'*? M m rMMMrt Mm Imr imMrdmrl. raaUrl thr |U> ph*1" narr Mdrl uprrul.l M III Ml I iHXIIHHi I imrl B«rrju tnlnfirmrnl Biiiomi. si. VI lislitafifMi IH tt3J4 aa |ft brix kaijtl rMr m VICTORY Continued from Page 17 than 10 minutes, but could only manage to score on the Harris reception. Oregon kicker Tommy Thompson kicked the first of his five field goals early in the second quarter to push the Duck lead to 10-0, hut then the Ducks began to make the kind of mistakes that led to their downfall in the season's first two games. Oregon quarterback Danny O’Neil fumbled a snap at tfie Oregon 15-yard line, and three plays later Arizona State run ning back Jo rone Davison scored on a one-yard run to get the Sun Devils on the score board After another Thompson field goal, the Ducks got the ball track on an Interception by Alex Molden. But two plays lat er, running back Kicky Whittle fumbled and Sun Devil line backer Brett Wallerstedt re turned the ball to the Oregon 20-yard lino. Oregon appeared to have Ari zona State stalled at the 28-yurd line, but an offsides penalty on the Ducks gave the Sun Devils another chance. Throe plays later, Arizona Main quarterDacK Garrick McGoe hit a wide open George Montgomery streaking down the right sideline for a touchdown to glvo the Sun Devils a 14-13 lead with only f>4 seconds left in the half. "The defense messed up," Oregon linebacker )oe Harwell said. "It was a mental mistake on our part." Oregon got a big lift before halftime when kick returner Donovan Moore took the kick off at the goal line and returned it to the Oregon 4B-yard line O'Neil completed passes to Harris and Derrick Deadwiler to sot up a 36-yard field goal by Thompson. Thompson's kick gave the Ducks a 16-14 halftime lead. . "That field goal was a big play," Drixrks said. "After they scored we were a little down, but the kick rescued us. I'm sure it was a downer for Arizo na State." Thompson's five field goals on the day tied an Oregon re cord, but the junior from Lom poc. Calif., said tho team win is more important. "It Is nicu to got so many op portunities to help the team," Thompson said. "Affor I missed my first one, my confidence dropped, but the 51-yarder got my confidence level back up." Thompson, who has made nine of IS field goals this sea son. has struggled when kick ing from the right hash line, but is almost perfect from the cen ter and left side. “For a right-footed kicker the right hash is the toughest be cause you have to hook it loft," Thompson said. "After last woek, I worked on the right hash and my stance, and it paid off today.” "Tommy is the most talented Turn to VICTORY. Pag# 21 WE PRINT BETTER PHOTOS $999 3 3x5'» • Developed & printed • 12.15. 24 exp. •36 exp. $5.99 • 4x6 superprints add $1