Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 25, 1996, SPORTS EXTRA, Page 4B and 5B, Image 4

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[WARSAW
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in the Lundquist College of Business
Proudly Announces
Michael Schindler
Vice-President, Sales and Marketing,
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Reception to follow
Watch this space for more Warsaw Center information on:
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All College Sports & Pro Football
Great Food Good Times Kegs to Go
3 Blocks West of the Stadium
O 3 Satellites © 12 TVs
Beer Garden & Barbecue
for HHJ home game
(a.m.-close)
484-5480 G 20 Centennial Loop, Eugene
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PACIFIC-10 CONFERENCE STANDINGS
Arizona State
Washington St.
Washington
California
use
Arizona
Stanford
UCLA
Oregon State
Oregon
PAC-10
W L T
4 0 0
3 1 0
3 1 0
2 1 0
2 2 0
1 2 0
1 2 0
1 2 0
1 3 0
0 4 0
OVERALL
WL T
7 0 0
5 2 0
4 2 0
5 1 0
4 3 0
3 3 0
2 4 0
2 4 0
1 5 0
3 4 0
This Week’s Games
Washington at Oregon
Oregon State at Arizona
Arizona State at Stanford
UCLA at California
USC at Washington State
TEAM DEPTH CHARTS
OREGON
UrrcNSE
SE 15 Jibri Hodge
03 Dameron Ricketts
LT 72 Paul Wiggins
70 Andy Petty
LG 52 Bob Baldwin
76 Willy Rife
C 69 Mark Gregg
66 Chad Normoyle
RG 73 Tasi Malepeai
68 Seaton Daly
RT 75 David Weber
63 Stefan deVries
TE 90 Josh Wilcox
82 Blake Spence
81 Jed Weaver
QB 10 Tony Graziani
17 Ryan Perry-Smith
TB 28 Saladin McCullough
24 Kevin Parker
FB 45 Aaron Jelks
31 Eric Winn
FL 05 Damon Griffin
83 Pat Johnson
RETURN SPECIALISTS
KR 24 Kevin Parker
83 Pat Johnson
PR 83 Pat Johnson
DEFENSE
LE 99 Desmond Byrd
97 Richie Thomas
NT 91 Bryant Jackson
98 Joe Donnerberg
RE 54 Mark Schmidt
56 Caleb Smith
LO 47 Reggie Jordan
42 Derek Allen
ML 55 Garth White
46 Ryan Klaasen
IL 39 Chris Vandiver
44 Peter Sirmon
RO 58 Derrick Barnes
49 Jeff Branson
LC 20 Kenny Wheaton
11 LaMont Woods
SS 16 Chris Young
22 Jaiya Figueras
FS 19 Justin Wilcox
26 Ray Brust
RC 23 Ronnie Gipson
08 Kaon-Jabbar East
SPECIALISTS
PK 88 Joshua Smith
P 40 Josh Bidwell
H017 Ryan Perry-Smith
DS 68 Seaton Daly
WASHINGTON
OFFENSE
SE 24 Jerome Pathon
WT67 Tony Coats
WG70 Ben Kadletz
C 77 Olin Kreutz
SG 76 Benji Olson
ST 57 Lynn Johnson
TE 85 Cameron Cleeland
QB 07 Brock Huard
TB 04 Corey Dillon
FB 25 George Keiaho
FL 19 Dave Janoski
RETURN SPECIALISTS
KR 04 Corey Dillon
PR 24 Jerome Pathon
DEFENSE
SL 46 Jason Chorak
DE 35 Chris Campbell
DT 97 David Richie
NT 78 Mac Tuiaea
WL40 Jerry Jensen
IL 54 Ink Aleaga
IL 17 Lester Towns
CB 25 Mel Miller
R0 08 Nigel Burton
FS 07 Tony Parrish
CB 01 Jermaine Smith
SPECIALISTS
PK 18 John Wales
P 14 Geoff Prince
H015 Shane Fortney
DS 40 Jerry Jensen
OREGON INJURIES
Brandon McLemore (shoulder) questionable
Justin Wilcox (knee) questionable
Dameron Ricketts (knee) doubtful
Josh Beckett (knee) out
Jerry Brown (broken hand) out
Michael Fletcher (torn knee ligament) out
Willy Rife (knee) out
WASHINGTON INJURIES
John Fiala (knee) probable
Jermaine Smith (shoulder) probable
Rashaan Shehee (foot) questionable
Bob Sapp (knee) out
Mostafa Sobhi (ankle) out
Memorable Momeots
Since 1948 the Oregon-Washington rivalry has
grown into a war between states.
V,
■ Damon Huard
Quarterback
OCT. 22, 1994
' ■ OREGON 31, WASHINGTON 20
'The Drive' and The Play’. The 1994 Oregon-Washington
match-up had it all.
With 7:40 left in the game, Danny O’Neil and the Ducks
trailed the Huskies 20-17 and had the ball on their own 2
yard line. O’Neil connected with Dameron Ricketts on a 36
yard completion for ‘The Drive’s’ big play. The Ducks kept
marching downfield until Dwayne Jones scored from 12 yards
on an option run,
Washington then got the ball with 2:33 left on the clock
and 75 yards to go for the score. Quarterback Damon Huard
appeared to be leading his team to victory when Washington
had first-and-goal on the Oregon 8-yard line. Huard dropped
back to pass and was looking for Dave Janoski when Oregon
co’rnerback Kenny Wheaton stepped in front of Huard’s pass
and returned it 97 yards for a touchdown.
The win was the first of two-straight for the Ducks.
■ Kenny Wheaton
Comerback
DON JAMES, 1975-92
OCT. 20. 1984
■ WASHINGTON 17, OREGON 10
Washington came into the late-season contest as the No. 1 team in the nation,
but it sure didn’t play like it against Oregon.
The Oregon defense held the Washington offense to three first downs, three
first-half points and 109 yards in total offense, yet lost. Head coach Rich Brooks
called the loss in Seattle “one of the toughest losses we ever had.”
While the Husky offense couldn’t produce the points, it was the Husky special
teams that carried the team. Washington returned a punt for a touchdown and
also blocked a punt.
The win proved crucial to Washington’s season.
“[We] eventually went 11-1 and were second in the nation and beat Oklahoma
in the Orange Bowl,” said Don James, former Husky head coach.
RICH BROOKS, 1977-1994
JIM OWENS, 1957-74
OCT. 27, 1973 — OCT, 26, 1974
■ 1973: OREGON 58, WASHINGTON 0
■ 1974: WASHINGTON 66, OREGON 0
In back-to-back years Oregon and Washington
recorded the two most one-sided victories in the
series’ history.
In 1973 the Ducks couldn’t do anything wrong
in a 58-0 win in Eugene. “It was one of the longest
afternoons of my career I know," said Jim Owens,
former Husky head coach.
Just one year later Washington returned the
favor with a 66-0 rout of the Ducks in Seattle. “It
was really very unusual,” Owens said of the two
year swing.
DON READ, 1974-76
DICK ENRIGHT, 1972-73
HUWAnU ODELL, 1948-52
1948 PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE VOTE
■ OREGON DENIED TRIP TO ROSE BOWL AFTER VOTE
At the end of the 1948 season, Oregon and California were locked
in a tie for the conference title. The Ducks were 7-0 in conference
play, while Cal was 6-0. Oregon said it would travel to the Bay Area to
play a playoff game to decide the conference champion, but the
Golden Bears denied the Ducks offer. As a result, the conference
champion would be chosen by a vote of Northwest schools.
Cal won the “election” by a vote of 7-3 and had its trip to the Rose
Bowl
“Washington had sort of a deciding vote and they voted for Cal,"
said Jerry Allen, the “Voice of the Ducks.” “And so Oregon has natu
rally held that against Washington.”
JIM AIKEN, 1947-1950
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