EUGENE SKY DIVERS STUDENT TANDEM SPECIAL $100 Video Taping Available Call Today: 895-3029 Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Limit one jump per coupon per customer. t 003966 Expires 12/7/98 Musi have current valid student 11) at time of purchase AMERICAN MATTRESS 003802 M ANUFACTUR TNG / year same as cash. \« iloien payment on approved credit. RE-BUILT MATTRESS SETS Price includes mattress and box springs: Full & Twin Size Sets....$79 Queen Size Sets.$119 King Size Sets.$179 NEW INNER SPRING SETS Price includes mattress and box springs: • TWIN Size, Reg $259.SALE price $139 • FULL Size, Reg $319.SALE price $159 •QUEEN Size, Reg $419.SALE price $189 • KING Size, Reg $1,100.SALE price $389 Bring in this ad for FREE DELIVERY Financing Available Mon - Fri 9-8 Saturday 9-6 Sunday 11-5 HUF3 VV. I I in 343-2690 Droughns takes long route to Eugene rirst recuitea by Oregon m 1996, Reuben Drougbns takes the field this season By Joel Hood Oregon Daily Emerald The punts blast off. First there is one, then another, and then another. It has been three days since tail back Reuben Droughns torched Michigan State’s defense for an in credible 202 yards on just 17 car ries — marking the sixth highest single-game total in school histo ry, and undoubtedly, the single most impressive debut by any player ever associated with Ore gon football. Even so, Droughns is not wast ing one minutia of strength during this twilight practice to boast about his accomplishments. In stead, Droughns is standing with a small group of players in a semi circle, shagging punts and talking game strategy with special teams coach Tom Osborne. The balls rocket into the sky, then bend forming a soft arch, and spiral back toward earth. They fall like arrows: one after the other, af ter the other. It is now more than 30 minutes after practice and Droughns is alone catching punts against the silver sky. Although his coaches and teammates have already left toward the locker room, and mindful of the fact that he is keep ing members of the media waiting, Droughns continues because he is still more comfortable fielding punts in this fading light than he is talking about his opening-day heroics. To people outside Droughns’ inner circle of friends, his success has been both immediate and sud den. The local media only began reporting that Droughns had earned the No. 1 tailback spot a few weeks before the Sept. 5 date with Michigan State. But those on the inside know that every on- and off-the-field success Droughns has ever en joyed has helped to get him to this practice field at this time in his life. And to them, it’s no wonder that Droughns stays on this field as long as he does. “I’m just happy to finally be here,” Droughns says. Oregon is finally happy as well. Originally recruited by the Ducks in 1996, Droughns failed to score high enough on the Scholas tic Achievement Test to be admit ted to Oregon as a freshman. He then failed the final math class during his senior year at Anaheim High School which meant this blue-chip California recruit was LAURA GOSS/Emerald Reuben Droughns ran for202yards in his Oregon debut on Sept. 5 forced to attend a small junior col lege in Merced, Calif., to make up some of the credits he missed. Droughns admits that it was painful for him to have to start out at the junior-college level, but as he looks back on it now, the time he spent at Merced JC proved to be more valuable then he ever could have imagined. “It would have been nice to come up here right after high school,” Droughns says, "but to tell you the truth, I don’t think I FOOTBALL would have been ready.” What Droughns learned, and what he still takes with him today, is the im poriance oi education — tne im portance to grow as a man both on and off the football field. And that is one lesson, Droughns admits, that many from his old neighbor hood in Southern California could never fully understand. Droughns grew up along one of the “bad stretches” of Anaheim, Calif., just a few miles from Los Angeles’ turbulent inner city. His mother, Crystal, bounced in and out of work for most of his young adult life, never fully able to pro vide for Reuben or his three broth ers. Reuben’s older brother, like many of his friends, got caught up SPORTS AU ""a— Ban f ^D°^pi°£f^Se5 fL5E 7th • Eugene . •yVEM( 6o°d Times Benefit fa Locoted in i (Openfr^ He Mot SATURDAY ER GARDEN -P0TOiilHEr^. __ —1!TS4llL«T«E.Aasm - liys^ods with gangs and violence at an ear ly age. Droughns admits that it would have been real easy to get caught up in that lifestyle himself. “My family struggled for a long time,” he says, “and they’re still struggling. There have been tough times for all of us. For a while at the JC I couldn’t afford any rent, and it wasn’t as if I could call up my family and ask them for mon ey. “It was hard for me. There were times when I felt like I should just drop football and drop out of school so I could get a job and help them out.” But football had always meant much more to Reuben than he was willing to admit. Having never re ally known his father, Droughns says he has always sought guid ance from his coaches. And in stead of turning further away from his dream to play “big-time” col lege football, Reuben was told to hit the books. Reuben never excelled in the classroom at Merced, but with the help of his coaches and some close friends, he earned enough credits to be eligible to transfer to Oregon. “I have seen a lot of punks walk ing down the street that have come out of the same environment,” said Tony Lewis, the head coach at Merced who tutored Droughns Turn to DROUGHNS, Page 22E Oregon daily emerald worldwide you can read the emerald from anywhere in the world. WWW. uoregon.edu/~ode