Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, August 13, 1996, Page 6, Image 6

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r
Practice: Veterans of team
realize their job is to lead
■ Continued from Page 5
you are both mentally and physi
cally,” he said. “You have to get
over all the aches and pains of
going twice a day. You need it to
get ready for a season. Physically
it tells you whether or not you
are in shape and can handle it.”
Both players were also in
agreement when asked if fall
camp became easier with time.
"It doesn’t matter how many
years you’ve been here,” Wiggins
said. "You are going to get tired
during two-a-days and it is going
to wear you down.”
Wheaton took it a step further,
saying that older players have a
responsibility to take leadership
roles in practice.
“It’s harder as you get older,”
he said. "You have the freshman
guys looking up to you so you
have to work harder because you
have to set an example and get
them up to the level of Pac-10
play.”
“I think they have to set exam
ples,” concurred Bellotti. “Not
only helping younger players
learn specific things but also
work ethic. How they practice,
the intensity they need, the fo
cus, the concentration, every
thing.”
try to win a starting role.
“We got four good tailbacks
right now and another one com
ing in,” claimed Latimer. “I
know that the coach is going to
put the best one out there. So I
have to do what I got to do dur
ing practice to get the spot."
And Bellotti was quick to re
mind that the roster has not been
cast in stone just yet.
“I hope that the attitude and
the effort and the energy is the
same for both of them,” he said.
“I asked the team to do that and
told them there were no guaran
tees and that all positions were
open. The depth chart won’t be
made until we put the pads on
and see who can play football. I
am hoping and expecting and I
think am seeing great effort by
everybody.”
The pressure, the heat, the
sweat, all lead to high intensity
level that at times has caused
tempers to flare. Just a natural oc
currence during two-a-days ac
cording to Wiggins.
“That is just everybody work
ing hard,” he said. “We want to
fly around and we want to hit
each other.”
And quarterbacks and kickers
take notice. Wiggins, who is 6-4
and 315 pounds, and the rest of
his offensive line buddies are
well aware that their group
seems to be involved in the more
taxing contact drills a bit more
often than others.
“We always joke about that,”
Wiggins said. “It is harder for
some of us who are out here
banging together more than other
positions. But everybody works
hard. If one position hits a little
more often than so be it. Some
positions will run a little more.”
But not all players look at two
a-days as torture. Some look at it
as opportunity. For Wiggins and
Wheaton, two veteran players
with starting positions locked
up, fall camp is a necessary evil.
But to players like freshman run
ning back Derien Latimer, this is
the time to impress coaches and
Wheaton’s approach was a lit
tle rougher.
“We’re together all day and we
get tired of each other,” he said.
“So any little thing can piss you
off.”
Bellotti keeps this in mind as
he tries to keep the monotony of
the two-a-days to a minimum
and reward the players for work
ing hard.
“There are a lot of things we
do,” he said. “Some of it fun and
some of it not so fun. You try to
vary practice a little bit. But you
also try to challenge them by re
minding them that the season is
only three weeks away. Remind
them of what we need to do to
get better.”
“Or,” added Bellotti, “you re
mind them of the second half of
the Cotton Bowl.”
The Ducks open their season
Aug. 31 on the road against Fres
no State.
NFL Rookie scores only Dallas TD
■ Continued from Page 5
“We most definitely have to get
serious now,” Smith said. “We
need to get the first units to start
working together.”
Dallas placekicker Chris Boniol
missed field goal attempts of 49
and 32 yards in the first half.
Third-string quarterback Jason
Garrett finally got the Cowboys on
the board in the fourth period
with an 18-yard scoring pass to
rookie Stepfret Williams.
The replay rule experiment
was used once by Dallas coach
Barry Switzer late in the first half
on a sideline pass. Referee Bemie
Kukar ruled the 9-yard catch by
Graham stood as called.
New England coach Bill Par
cells successfully challenged an
incompletion ruling in the third
quarter on a 33-yard pass to Gra
ham.
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