©regonV€meral& MONDAY November. 23,1998 Best Bet Monday Night Football Miami at New England 5:20 p.m„ ABC Beavers upend Ducks after hard-fought battle Matt Hankins/Emerak Wide receiver Damon Griffin pulls in one of his game high 10 catches during the Saturday civil war game at Oregon State's Parker Stadium. Oregon State bangs on and conies away with its fifth win of the season after a tough matchup with Oregon By Rob Moseley Oregon Daily Emerald CORVALLIS — It was chaos in Corvallis on Saturday night. Two in-state rivals, two overtime periods and even two instances of Oregon State stu dents rushing the field, and in the end, two Parker Stadium goal posts being torn down. OREGON FOOTBALL rushing touchdown of the evening, a 16-yard run on the Beavers' second play of the second overtime period, capped a wild game that gave Oregon State a 44-41 win and its first tive-win season since 1971, and virtu ally assured the Ducks of spending Christ inas in Hawaii. After three-straight heartbreaking losses, by a total of nine points, Oregon State again took its opposition to the brink, this time prevailing on a cold, windy night in Corval lis. Turn to FOOTBALL, Page 13 Oregon State celebrates victory, renewed rivalry Opinion Joel Hood CORVALLIS — Let's call it celebra tion...the sequel. It lasted for nearly an hour after Oregon State’s wildly entertaining 44-41 Civil War victory against Oregon, and fans didn’t know it was over until Parker Stadium’s south- end goal posts came crashing to the turf. The only difference from this one and the evening’s first bleacher-clearing malay: These fans were allowed to stay until the end. But this deliriously happy ending almost never happened for Beaver fans. Their first celebration was cut short by a pass interfer ence penalty on Oregon State cornerback Andrae Holland, who appeared to illegally haul down Oregon receiver Tony Hartley just seconds before a sea of orange and black covered the field. Trailing 38-31 in the first overtime peri od, Oregon faced fourth down and 12 from the Oregon State 27 yard line. The entire outcome of the game hinged on this one play and it would take nearly 30 minutes to Turn to HOOD, Page 13 Oregon dismantles the Vandals on its way to victory The Ducks rely heavily on Jenny Mowe and Angelina Wolvert on their way to a sound beating of Idaho By Joel Hood Oregon Daily Emerald Angelina Wolvert’s spinning lay-in with 10 minutes, 45 seconds to go in the second half capped a 20-2 Oregon run and pro pelled the Ducks to a rousing 76-58 victory against Idaho on Sunday afternoon in front of 3,222 fans at McArthur Court. Wolvert scored a game-high 16 points and sparked a furious second-half rally by Oregon that turned a 40-32 halftime lead into 62-40 blowout midway through the period. Playing for the first time since the heart breaking 72-70 loss to Colorado State in the second round of the Women’s National In vitational Tournament at Mac Court a week ago, the Ducks (2-1) jumped out to an early 5-2 lead on a Natasha O’Brien three-point bucket two minutes into the game. Led by Jenny Mowe’s eight first-half points, Oregon was able to keep in front of the streaking Vandals, who sliced the Ducks’ lead to just one point five minutes before halftime. Oregon converted 11 of 12 free-throw attempts down the stretch to ex tend it lead at the half. Idaho (2-2) cut the Ducks’ lead to just 42 38 with back-to-back three pointers by guards Rikki Jackson and Susan Woolf just minutes after the break. But Oregon responded with a 15-foot jump shot by Mowe and a fast break pass from O’Brien to guard Lisa Bowyer who slid past two Van dal defenders to the hoop. The Ducks blew the game wide open by scoring the next eight points in a row. “I’m very much pleased with our effort in the second half," Oregon head coach Jody Runge said. “We played a lot harder, and we showed much more intensity run ning the fast break and setting up our of fense in the second half. “We talked at halftime about how our guards needed to step up and run the of fense. They weren’t listening in the first half, so we ran a lot of broken plays and had a lot of missed opportunities.” Oregon shot a season-low 28 percent from the floor in the first half, but out-re bounded the Vandals 26 to 14. The Ducks continued their domination on the boards in the second half, posting a 25-18 advan tage. “We were a lot closer to where we want to be defensively this week than we were last week,” said Mowe, who played 18 minutes and finished with 14 points and 10 rebounds. “Our timing is still a little off, but were getting better. We’re still trying some different things on both offense and defense.” A big key, Runge said, was free throw shooting. The Ducks hit 30 of 39 in the game and six of nine down the stretch in the second half to seal the victory. Idaho was in foul trouble throughout much of the first half, tallying 17 personal fouls in just the first 20 minutes of plav. Turn to BASKETBALL, Page 12 JA WOLVERT