Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 25, 1993, Page 10, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Oregon Daily Emerald S ports
UW big plays beat Ducks
By Scott Simonson
OtS0O° f rrH#&td
With eight minutes remaining in tin*
third quarter. Oregon was in the game. ()re
gon had every chance to win it. hut Wash
ington was a little stronger and a little
faster, and Washington made the big plays
All Oregon made were mistakes
The Huskies beat the Ducks 21-ti in
Seattle on Saturday by being the only
team able to execute on offense for an
entire drive Oregon committed seven
turnovers ns its record fell to 1 t in the
Pacific- H) Conferent e and 40 overall
With 8:4f> left in the third quarter, a
win was still within Oregon's reach
Tommy Thompson had |ust kicked a 44
yard field goal to make the score 7-8
Washington The Duck defense had
forced a turnover and allowed only one
first down in Washington's first two pos
sessions of the set olid half
But Washington's running game was
getting stronger as the game went on Six
Dm k defensive starters left the game with
injuries, and the Huskies ( ontinued to
rotate their tandem of talented tailbai ks,
Napoleon Kaufman and Beno lirvant
Instead of relying on a passing game to
manufacture the game-breaking big plav.
Washington was < untent to pound away
with Bryant and Kaufman. Bryant had
supplied the Huskies' only touchdown in
the first half with a .15-yard run. < upping
an HO yard drive on seven running plays.
In the third quarter, it was Kaufman's
turn. He burned the Ducks on a 58-yard
turn hdown run down tin* left side that
>nad<> !hr score 14 fi Washington I he
Huskies had 290 yards rushing for the
game
■‘He looks quit k whim you wall h him
on film, but when he's out on the field,
he's that much quicker.' Oregon strong
safely Chad Cota said "He’s a fast guv
that's really explosive He's a great run
ner.”
However, the Ducks looked ready to
respond Quarter)mi k IMnny O'Neil moved
Oregon 4 4 yards on four plays On first
and-K) from the Washington 47. O'Neil
threw for the end zone He threw his fourth
i ompletion inside the Washington 10
all to Washington players
O'Neil finished with six interceptions
"A few were had reads, a few went bad
Iih k and a few were stupid. O Neil said
"I'm sure I could think of a thousand
excuses, but I just didn't make the play s
"He had a lot of pressure and got sacked
a lot. but you still have to do a better job
of managing the football." head i oach Kii h
brooks said "Whatever opportunity we
had to win. we didn't hang on to the ball
well enough to do anything.
Oregon still wasn't finished The Dm ks
had the ball to begin the fourth quarter,
tint a fumbled exchange lietween O'Neil
and tailback Ri< ky Whittle gave Wash
ington the ball hat k
Looking to put the final nail in the cof
fin. Husky quarterbm k Damon Huard
dropped back and threw a short pass —
into the arms of Oregon t ornerback Isaac
Walker — but Walker dropped tfie pass
and may have missed a chance to return
an intercept ion deep into Washington ter
ritory
- JEFF PASl AY f
Oregon safety Jeff Sherman gets a hold of Washington s Napoleon Kaufman during the
Huskies 21-6 victory over the Ducks on Saturday.
1 should have i aught it." Walker said.
"It's something vou dream about. He flat
out threw it right to me "
With Oregon's defense wounded and
getting weary, Washington went back to
its rushing attack High! rushing plays
and two fourth-down conversions later.
Kaufman scored on a one-vard dive to
make the score 21-6.
Oregon had 10 minutes to make a
i harge. but one never materialized.
" The worst thing you i:an do to a Wash
ington team at home is get behind,"
brooks said. "When they got their tl ird
touchdown, vve were in real trouble
because they could kind of turn it loose
on defense and not respect the running
game."
"We ran the ball well enough but we
weren't throwing it well, and that’s the
strength of our offense," he said.
CALL 346-4343 BEFORE 1 p.m. TOD A Y TO PUT US TO WORK FOR YOU TOMORROW!
HaKrutUU.n Greetings Appear GCTGG£R 2() in the
Oregon Gailg Lmerald Glac,sifie.de,
1.
5 0 pe.r hnei (S owctdfinfi)
>4ktiAk V&
Art $2.00
3- . A A ■
4.
1
HfM__rmm
fUHMOfl__MTU
tKMATJ ___
bLbbUNL: Thorn., bet. 28, 1 I'M
r. -T—T—.T—T—I—1—T- .1
(de re uartina for you.
Rrn 300 or (JO ftootctore
or on (he ffilU Terrace
(tied. Oct 27 noon V.no
ft Thuro, Or.f 28, 10-1.00
150 BIRTHDAY GREETINGS
To tfH> Brtttstar,
vViV'i^vg you 4 happy .:4!h birthday*
U B»c
Caaay XU
Today <» tfw* Day.
Now You wvis MM».
Vlv C>» O &*yS»* •> Kh*
* YBS \U
105 PERSONALS
HELP! For achool profact W»H pay a
davout MtrxJu to t*x*:h m« about y<X>»
*a<th Ptaaaa cafl Ere at 4*66846
l «d*i? maaaaga T har.fc you
u of o si mo m ft
1 BOO 44? 70BC e*t 187
Call ToH Froa
110 LOST i FOUND
Loat cockar mt* dog (tSth/M*#)
Groan cottar, butt co*o» wtuta spot on
noaa Kan. M3 0450
110 LOST S FOUND
tost Sh#m#. (looks lilts small colli#)
sable colored Neutered male Kiss
<ng s*nce MorxJay (October T9tb Last
seen at 17th A Patterson It you've
seer my dog pleas# call 343 65*97
ns TYPING SERVICES
A! >44-0739. ROBIN «» GRAD SCHOOL
approve D ?0 yeui/thesra'dist back
ground Term paper vFui; '«v;me ser
v<e (d.»ng laser p« ON CAMPUS1
TYPlffG/EDITtNO
f fee p*ckuprdel'very Call Mc>nda
at 93?> 169? #ver,v«f>gs'weekertds
"|T| «M IMIHIVII
»«ih«r4 I And 4AV1VU
;fw I t ! •-*»* f IVA ’
CALL US FIRST FOR
WRITING HELP
MN • Wrtgng AmMmi • Typing
A« wrung tfytee end eubyecte we*c«rn*
Ptp/EdH 343-2747
'QuaiaMM Ena f Profsata*
115 TYPING SERVICES
JO THE TYPING PRO
Word Processing/!: dft»ng
Tarm Paper* These* Dissertations
Cart 683-6068 Anytime
Word Processing
and Editing
/ jsf ,ind Low Lost
Fcxit notes
EMU Room 14 • J46-28S1)
130 FOR SALE MISC
Beautiful Floral loveseat Hide-A*
Bad. Great corx*t>on $t 50 663 852t _
King size waterbed «or sale $4C or
h^hesi otter CaM Tommy at 686-4435
135 BUY OR TRADE
O.P. Equipment Swap
Buy salt, or trade experience
the madness*
Tuesday. Oct. 26. 7:30 p m
EMU Ballroom
uo PETS
Large Iguana for tala. 3 years ow
Complete let up $300 invested. «nl>
set) to $150 344 0415
BULLREGARD
by James Stoeckl
/MD ~ V
/
✓
you &ou6nr a gin
yoo'RL ACTUALLY <jL»*I6
~rv try tv Hi Pi it.
1/
yi*H' if you SUCH UP
Mi PL. X LL MUQCtL TV£
SiftT _
--
SKAKlf"
emi?'