Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 10, 1998, Page 8, Image 8

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Soccer
Continued from Page 1
goals.
“(That was] tremendously ex
citing with the crowd and new
field and everything," Steffen
said.
Other highlights included a 3
0 win over Oregon State on Oct. 9
that kept the Ducks undefeated at
3-0 all-time in the Civil War, and
Oregon’s first conference sweep,
which came with consecutive
home victories against the Ari
zona schools on Oct. 30 and Nov.
1.
Senior midfielder Melissa
Sherman is the lone Duck whose
eligibility has expired. She trans
ferred from Portland State after
her freshman year in 1995 and
served as a co-captain throughout
her tenure at Oregon.
The Ducks’ heart returns next
SHERMAN
season in the
form of the 16
member junior
class, which
consists most
ly of players
who have
been with Ore
gon since its
jump to a varsi
ty sport in
1996. Forward Erin Anderson,
who is the program’s all-time
leading scorer with 38 points,
and goalkeeper Amanda Fox,
who has defended the Ducks’
goal in every game, are included
in that class.
Three sophomores and seven
freshmen are also slated to re
turn next season.
With nearly all of his team
coming back, Steffen expects his
team to continue progressing to
ward a first NCAA Tournament
appearance.
“Our ultimate goal is to get
into the playoffs, and I think
we’re getting a better under
standing of what we need to do
to get there,” Steffen said.
Oregon’s greed will not sub
side until that goal is scored.
Sports briefs
Oregon crew
Four top-10 finishes in the
Head of the Lake Regatta in Seattle
last weekend proves the Oregon
men and women Club Sports
crew teams can likely compete
with any school in the country.
Competing against national
powers Washington, Seattle Pacif
ic and Puget Sound on Saturday,
the Ducks scored top 10 finishes
for all four of their varsity boats.
The lightweight men finished sec
ond behind Washington State with
a time of 17 minutes, 37 seconds,
while the lightweight women fin
ished third in their race with a time
of 20:08, only one minute behind
Lake Union Crew, which won the
race with a time of 19:08.
The open-weight men and
women also finished strong, the
men netting a lOth-place finish
in a time of 19.51, and the
women finished ninth with a
time of 48:40.
Men's soccer
During a downpour at South
Bank field Thursday afternoon,
the Oregon men s Club Sports
soccer team tied Lane Communi
ty College 3-3 in the typical fash
ion of a crosstown rivalry.
The Ducks, who improved
their season record to 8-1-3, were
led by goals from Olaf Wolf and
Taka Osawa. The contest against
Lane was the second-to-last test
for the team as it tries to prepare
itself for the national champi
onships next week in Georgia.
Ice hockey
Washington and Western Wash
ington were simply no match for
the high-powered Oregon offense
last weekend as the Ducks cruised
to 1-0 and 5-3 victories over the
Huskies Friday and 10-3 victory at
Western on Saturday.
The Ducks’ 1-0 victory was the
result of a forfeit by Washington,
who provided only one official for
the game. The Huskies must have
wished they had pulled the same
maneuver on Saturday, ratherthan
have to face an Oregon team that
has swept them two years in a row.
“Both teams just didn’t match
up skill-wise,” second-year Ore
gon coach Geoff Norman said.
“We were able to score when we
needed to this weekend. ”
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Check out Rhythm & Reviews
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