MONDAY November 30,1998 Best Bet Monday Night Football N.Y, Giants at San Francisco 5:20 p.m., ABC Oregon 63, Wyoming 33 Ducks clinch fourth Pepsi Shoot-out title Oregon has no problem holding down their leads as it goes on to its 100th victory By Joel Hood Oregon Daily Emerald Heading into last weekend, Jody Runge challenged the Oregon women’s basketball team to play better defensive ly than it had in its first four games this season. The Ducks responded with two suffo cating defensive performances, their fourth straight Pepsi Shoot-out title and a coaching milestone for Runge. Oregon (5-1) held Wyoming to just 26 percent from the field and scoreless through the first seven min utes, 11 seconds of the second half en route to a dominating 63-33 victory Satur day night in the championship game of the Pepsi Shoot-out in front of 3,443 fans at McArthur Court. The win was Runge’s 100th coaching victory, a feat only matched by one other head coach in Oregon history. However, it was the Ducks’ performance, not the milestone, that Runge complimented af ter the game. “It feels just like any other game,” Runge said. “Overall it was a good per formance. We defended the ball well, which is something we’ve been focusing in on. We’re concentrating on the little things defensively.” It worked this weekend. After holding explosive Brigham Young to just 25 second-half points in a 74-56 victory on Friday, Oregon stymied the Wyoming attack on Saturday, limit ing the Cowgirls to just six-of-25 shoot ing and forcing 13 turnovers in the final 20 minutes. Jenny Mowe led the Ducks’ defense with four rebounds and two blocked shots in 16 minutes of action. The sophomore center also scored 10 points, while converting all five of her shots from the field. “[Runge] told us that we needed to deny their post players the ball, and I think we did a pretty good job of that,” Mowe said. "This game was a real confi Turn to BASKETBALL, Page 12 Matt Hankins/Emerald Oregon's Sonja Curtis and Nicole Strange fight with Wyoming's Carrie Bacon for a rebound in the Ducks’ 63 to 33 victory Saturday night. Wolvert key figure in victory By Allison Ross Oregon Daily Emerald To say she dominated the 1998 Pepsi Shoot-out would be an understatement, but that is exactly what Angelina Wolvert did. The Ducks walked away champions for the fourth time in five years, and this time, sophomore Angelina Wolvert was named the tournament’s most valuable player. Oregon jumped out to a 12-2 lead against Wyoming on Saturday with four of its first six buck ets belonging to Wolvert. She was seven of nine shoot ing from the field against the Cow girls, leading the team with 15 points. But that was only the tip of the iceberg. WOLVERT li was vvoiven s ability to get better as the game pro gressed that put her ahead of the pack, storming into the second half against Wyoming, as she did against Brigham Young the day before, forcing steals, blocking shots and totally disrupting the opposition. Wol vert's three steals and one blocked shot against Wyoming were the primary reason for the Cowgirls’ second-half woes, in which they failed to score for more than seven minutes after halftime. “Coach Litzenberger always says the first 10 minutes ofthe second half are the most important,” Wolvert said. “It’s im portant to build momentum, and that’s what we tried to do." But Wolvert and company did more than try. They shut Wyoming’s offense down and exploited its defense, widen ing the gap to 44-17 on a full court pass from Natasha O’Brien to Wolvert with Turn to WOLVERT, Page 8 Oregon comes home from Mat-Town with fifth place The Ducks performed well at the Invitational, and three wrestlers bring back third place trophies By Scott Pesznecker Oregon Daily Emerald Seven Oregon wrestlers placed in their respec tive weight classes last Saturday as the Oregon wrestling team placed fifth at the Mat-Town Invi tational in Lockhaven, Pa. However, no championship titles went to Ore gon at the tournament. But head coach Chuck Kearney was pleased with his team’s performance. “Last year we finished sixth at this tournament, and this year we placed fifth,” Kearney said in a re leased statement. “We’re a step ahead of where we were last year.” The Ducks were led by three wrestlers who placed third in their respective weight classes, 165 pound Sean Morgan, 184-pound Doug Lee and 197-pound Chael Sonnen. Morgan, ranked ninth in the nation at 165 pounds, won a 9-2 decision over seventh-ranked Chad Liott of Rider. Lee, ranked No. 10 in the na tion, won by forfeit over ninth-ranked Dave Mur ray of Lock Haven. WRESTLING Fourth-ranked Chael Sonnen also placed third at Mat-Town, but that was more of a disap pointment for the Ducks. Sonnen lost a 6-2 decision to Lock Haven’s unranked Ken Haines. I he only other ranked wrestler in Sonnen’s weight class had been No. 18 Shawn Scanned of Rider. “I told our kids afterwards that these tourna ments are part of the learning process,” Kearney said. “We wrestled extremely hard and we gained a lot of experience today. We are learning how to compete.” Freshman David Watson, wrestling at 141 pounds, again showed his potential to be a major part of Oregon wrestling in the future by finishing in fourth place. In his Oregon debut on Nov. 21 at the Southern Oregon Open, Watson finished sec ond. “Watson wrestled hard and with the intelligence of a fifth-year senior,” Kearney said. “He’s still young, but overall I’m very pleased with the way he wrestled.” Heavyweight Kevin Keeney finished in fourth place after being pinned by Lehigh’s Shawn Laughlin. Keeney is wrestling at heavyweight this season after making the transition from the 167 pound weight class he wrestled in last year. Also placing for Oregon was eighth-ranked, 157 pound Daryl Christian, who lost the decision to Cornell’s Leo Urbinelli to finish sixth. Sean O’Rourke, finished in seventh place at 174 pounds by beating Old Dominion’s Josh Fannon 7-4. The Ducks will have a week off before wrestling in their first dual meet of the season at McArthur Court against UC Davis on Dec. 12. (( Last year we finished sixth at this tournament, and this year we placed fifth. We’re a step ahead of where we were last year. >> Chuck Kearney Oregon head coach