Oregon Feature Mike Bellotti credits much of the Ducks' success this season to Nathan Villegas and Josh Bid well who rank near the top of college football at their positions MICHAEL CRISP/E merald Biduell is one attempt shy of leading the nation in punting average. By Rob Moseley .nso- £~vmc It was possibly the most endearing im age. beyond even Pat Johnson's diving touchdown grab against Washington, of Oregon's 1997 football season. The Ducks' junior kicker, a three-year starter, knelt alone on the sidelines of the L.A. Coliseum staring plaintively into nothing. The image of the stadium's score board loomed above him as Southern Cal ifornia's fans celebrated their just-com pleted victory. The final score, 24-22. was glaringly displayed over the young man who had iust missed a 36-yard field goal as time expired. The difference between the kick sailing through the uprights and falling short, which it did. was small. But the missed kick's effect on the team's season, which ended at the Las Vegas Bowl instead of the more prestigious Aloha Bowl, was profound. It was enough to urge head coach Mike Bellotti to initiate open try outs in spring practice for the 1998 kick er. and even recruit two new kickers to battle the incumbent senior for the job. Enter junior Nathan Villegas, a transfer from Southern California's Citrus Junior College who replaced Josh Smith. In three games this season. Villegas has teamed with senior punter Josh Bidwell to form the most prolific kicking combo in the na tion thus far. “It s kind of cool that we re doing our jobs and getting recognition for it. so that's kind of nice." Bidwell says. “Obviously Nathan's job is to make every kick, and then mine is to try and keep my net aver age as high as I can. because that means I'm helping the team out as much as I can.” If Bidwell's descriptions of the kickers' jobs are accurate, then each is doing his job to perfection. Villegas has indeed made every kick he’s attempted this sea son. including each of his 16 extra points and all nine field goals, tops in the coun try. And Bidwell is averaging 49.3 yards per punt, six hundredths of a yard better than the national leader. Unfortunately, Bid well is one punt short of having enough kicks to qualify for the national leader board. “There's no question that they are di rectly responsible, or have been a great part, of our three victories this season," Bellotti says. “It’s a good sign that we haven't had to punt that much, but when we do I think [Bidwell] is very effective, and Nathan Villegas kept us in the LTEP game." Villegas kicked four field goals, one short of the school record, in Oregon's 33 26 win over the Miners. Included among those kicks was a boot of 49 yards, the longest successful try by a Duck kicker in five years. Before Herman Ho-Ching's three-touchdown outburst in the fourth quarter. Villegas single-handedly kept the score close for Oregon. “We rode his foot fix three quarters and finally got it on track and got the ball into the endrone," Bellotti says of his kicker, .whose four field goals kept the Ducks within seven points at 19-12 entering the final quarter. Of particular importance to the success of any kicker is his holder, which for \H MICHAEL CRISP/Emerald Bidweil prepares to take the snap and place the boldfora Villegas attempt. MDttH. BS5P :-enc Piacekicker l 'iliegas leads the nation in field goal accuracy sofar this season iegas and Oregon fans is a familiar face: B i dwell's. “I think that's why I’m doing so well on my field goals, because he's out there with me.” Villegas says. "Tm not saying I don't hare confidence in anybody else holding, but I think I would have more with him because I know him personally. Most kickers, they look at the snap, see if it’s coming bark, see if they get the hold right. All 1 do is look for his hands to mme out and catch it and that’s when I go. cause I know it’s going to get down. I know it’s going Id be there." Bidweli's own kicking has been even more impressive than his holding, as the 6-foot-3, 240-pound player routinely gar ners praise from his coaches with the hang time, length and accuracy of his punts. "I enjoy hearing people have confi dence in me. just because it reassures my confidence," the Winston native says, “it doesn’t put any pressure on me at all." It's a down-to-earth attitude from a guy who has teamed with Villegas to form a kicking tandem that so far has been out of this world. The mantra in college football says that kickers are only noticed when they screw up. That kind of pressure would seem to be more than any college-age athlete should be expected to handle. Tm in the spotlight, but I'm doing the same thing everybody else is doing," Vil legas says. “I'm just doing my job." An even more telling sign of the Oregon kickers' laid-back attitude came as Bid wall strolled through the Casanova Center with an interviewer trailing him. “Did you tell him how we saved your career by not letting you play basketball?” Oregon assistant basketball coach Greg Graham yelled to Bidwell, who played hoops in high school. "Hey, all Tm saying is you would have had a way better season last vear." an swered Bidwell. the nation's top punter continuing to be unfazed by the sudden attention garnered by the country's best kicking combo. The mystery of our hatred goes unsolved I hate Stanford. I hate the University. I hate its ath letic department. I hate its students. I hate the color “Cardinal.” I hate that Stanford has won the Sears Director’s Cup the last two years. I hate the arro gance. I hate the smugness. I hate the stench of insolence. This I know. Even if, for the life of me, I can’t tell you why. What is it about Stanford that the people of Eugene hate so much? 1 have a hunch that it goes a lot deeper than simply Oregon Joel Hood vs. California, the haves vs. the have-nots. I have a hunch it goes beyond all of this. On the trail to find the answers to these ques tions, I found myself on the hunt for a guy named “Buck.” I had phoned the Duck Booster Club in search of a man who could help me to under stand why the city ol Eugene, and in partic ular the University campus, has such con tempt for Stanford. I was told “Buck” was the man I was after but to never speak a word of my encounter with him to anyone. Following up on a tip I had received from a guy selling fake handicap parking passes along 13th Street, I made my way to a secluded little bar across from a wood processing plant in the heart of Eugene’s industrial mecca. The bar’s old wooden door opened with a creak, and as I slowly walked into this blackened smoke hole, my eyes burned shut. When 1 awoke I was sitting at an old oak coffee table in an even darker comer of the bar. Across from me, outlined in smoke, was a grizzled, mountain of a man. His face and hands were cracked and worn like old leather. His immense body was suffocating beneath a faded Dan Fouts jersey from 1972. He spoke in deep, choking breaths of air. This was it, I thought. I grabbed my pen. “We all know that Oregon has won 33 conference games over the past four seasons, which is better than every team except Wash ington,” Buck moaned. “And be cause of this, Ore gon acts as if it has finally made it to the top of college football. “But 1 got news for you, rookie — it hasn’t. The Ducks aren’t even close.” Tell me more, 1 said. "More so than Washington, more ((You d think that ivith so many brilliant scientists that hai>e graduated from Stanford someone would figure out the Universe does not reiolve around them. ” so man ulla, cer- _ tainly more so than those pathetic Beavers, Stanford has owned the Ducks in the 1990s. The Cardi nal has won six of its last seven encounters with the Ducks dating back to 1991. But there's more, much more. “Oregon, both the football team and the state, has always taken into battle a 'me against-the-world' attitude. A iet's-get-out there-and-give-them-aU-we’ve-got’ battle cry. Stanford does not. "Be it simple arrogance, or whatever, the Stanford football team does not have this inside them. You'd think that with so many brilliant scientists that have graduated trom Stanford someone would figure out the universe does not revolve around them. Perhaps it's not that Perhaps our hatred Turn to HOOD, Page 6