©regon^Cmeraltr FRIDAY Oct. 30,1998 TRIVA QUESTION Who holds the Oregon women's basketball scoring record for a single game? B1 NFL: Week 9 Denver vs. Cincinnati Miami vs. Buffalo Minnesota vs. Tampa Bay N. Y. Giants vs. Washington Jacksonville vs. Baltimore New England vs. Indianpolis NewOrteansvs. Carolina Tennessee vs. Pittsburgh Arizona vs. Detroit St. Louis vs. Atlanta N.Y.Jetsvs. Kansas City San Francisco vs. Green Bay Oakland vs. Seattle Associated Press top 25 t Ohio State 7-0 2. UCLA 6-0 3. Kansas St. 7-0 4. Tennessee 6-0 5. Florida 6-1 6. Florida St. 7-1 7. Nebraska 7-1 8. Wisconsin 8-0 9. TexasA&M 7-1 10. Penn State 5-1 11. Georgia 6-1 12. Arkansas 6-0 13. Oregon 6-1 14. Virginia 6-1 15. Arizona 7-1 16. Notre Dame 5-1 17. Virginia T. 6-1 18. Tulane 6-0 19. Syracuse 4-2 20. W. Virginia 4-2 21. Missouri 5-2 22. Michigan 5-2 23. Air Force 6-1 24. Georgia T. 5-2 25. Colorado 6-2 Ttivia answer Bev Smith scored 38 points against Montana on Feb. 5, 1981 Best Bet Tennis 1998 Eurocard Open 9 am, ESPN PAC-10 Championships Oregon runners host Pac-10’s best Nick Medley/F.meraU Andrew Bliss, who led Oregon's second team at the Oregon Invitational two weeks ago, hopes to be among the Ducks' top finishers this weekend at the Pac-1 Os. Does cross country still matter at UO? Opinion Oregon cross country has reached the crossroads. It has been eight years since the Oregon men have seriously competed for a nation al title. The Ducks finished third at the NCAA Championships in 1996, finished fifth overall in 1990 and have failed to crack the top seven on four seperate occasions in the 1990s. So on the eve of Bill Dellinger’s final home meet in his 32-year head coaching career, there are those who wonder if the best days of men’s and women’s cross country at Oregon have gone by. And prob ably a lot more who could care less either way. On Wednesday, sitting on a stiff wooden bench sandwiched between the Bowerman Building and the East end of Hayward Field, Dellinger was asked if the sport of cross country still mattered to the Universi ty of Oregon? He gave a refreshingly honest answer. “Cross country is the most successful program in the history of this school,” he said. “But we have never really been recog nized for it in our own community. We’ve Turn to HOOD, Page18A The Ducks arc coming prepared to face the competition in this years championships By Scott Pesznecker Oregon Daily Emerald Call the Pacific-10 Championships the beginning of the final chapter for the Oregon men’s cross country team. up where last season left off. The 1997 The story of this year's team picked L/ui>nj iinuu. (i i tin at the national title but fell short, fin ishing eighth at the NCAA Champi onships in Greenville, S. C. But this season has been a different story. The No. 3 Ducks have the weapons needed to win a ti tle. Oregon is stronger than ever with three all Americans, includ ing Mathew Davis, Oliver Wirz and Steve Fein, who transferred from Women’s X country Marie Davis leads the Ducks into the Pac-1 Os this week end story on Page 19 w isuuiiMii earner in the season. Oregon also has an advantage that no other team has; a team chemistry that is magnified by the fact that this will be head coach Bill Dellinger’s last year coaching the Ducks. On Saturday, the Ducks will run in the Pac-10 Championships at Alton Bak er Park. The meet will be Oregon’s first major stepping stone toward the NCAA Championships, which will be held Nov. 23. The men’s race will begin at 11:30 a.m.. However, every good story has an an tagonist. No. 1 Stanford dominated Ore gon with a score of 80-103 at the Pre NCAA Invitational in Lawrence, Kan., and they would not mind repeating that performance. Turn to CROSS COUNTRY, Page 18A Struggling Ducks aim to break scoring slump Oregon looks to end a five-game losing streak by putting away both Arizona and Arizona State By Tim Pyle Oregon Daily Emerald According to forward T.J. Johnson, going backward is not an option. With that in mind, the Oregon women’s soccer team is determined to break a five game losing streak by defeating Arizona foi the second straight season in a Pacific-lC Conference game that kicks off at 2 p.m. to day at Pape Field. Oregon will close out its home season at 3 p.m. on Sunday by trying to take a step forward against Arizona State which it lost to, 2-0, in 1997. “Our focus has been showing the teams that beat us badly last year that we’re totally different,” Johnson said. “So this weekend it’s not redeeming ourselves with [Arizona], it’s showing them that we deserved it last year. With ASU, we are redeeming our selves because we had a great game on Fri day night against Arizona last year, and then, by the time Sunday came, we were a totally different team.” After beating Oregon State, 3-0, on Oct. 9 to start the Pac-10 season off on a winning note, the Ducks (4-8-2 overall, 1-4 Pac-10) have been shut out in four of the five games that make up their losing streak, including three straight conference games. Head coach Bill Steffen said the scoring drought has weighed heavily upon his attacking play ers. “It almost becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy,” Steffen said. “When you don’t score, people realize you’re not scoring, and then you feel like, ‘I’m scared of trying to score because I don’t want to mess up.’ We have to have individuals step up and say, ‘I’m going to be the person who scores. I’m going to be the one who does it.’” Forwards Chalise Baysa, Erin Anderson SOCCER Turn to SOCCER, Page 24A Nick MedleyftimeraLi Leading scorer Chalise Baysa, a freshman forward who has tallied seven goals for 14 points, will play a big role in Oregon's attempt to end a long scoring drought.