Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 09, 1999, Page 8, Image 8

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Hockey skates to win, tie with Utah
■ The men’s water polo
team avenges an earlier
loss to Oregon State
with a win Saturday
By Chris Aster and Nick Haselwander
lor the Emerald
In the first set of American Col
legiate Hockey Association rank
ings released last week, the Ore
gon Club Sports hockey team
found itself ranked No. 9 in the
western region and No. 2 in the
Pacific-8 Conference. Last sea
son, the Ducks finished with a
No. 6 ranking, finishing third in
the Pac-8.
The No. 6 Utah Utes came into
town Friday and were greeted
with one of the best defensive ef
forts by the Ducks thus far. Goal
tender Josh Hardin collected 37
saves in the 4-1 win against the
Utes, continuing his consistent
play. Andrew Belcher, a sopho
more forward from West Hart
ford, Conn., provided his first
two goals of the season.
On Saturday, the Ducks
jumped out to an early lead, only
to have the Utes score four goals
in the first and second periods.
Three minutes into the second,
junior forward Tyler Shaffar
scored Oregon’s fourth and final
goal for a 4-4 tie
that held up.
The Ducks
now have a 4-3
1 record and
will likely move
up to No. 7 or
higher in the next rankings.
Oregon next heads to Califor
nia for a three-game series against
two Bay Area teams. The Ducks
play 0-7 Stanford on Thursday
and Saturday in matchups that
shouldn’t be too challenging.
“We should sweep them,”
Shaffar said.
Friday, Oregon battles San
Jose State, which is ranked No. 4
in the region with a 4-5 record.
Water polo sinks Beavers
The Oregon Club Sports men’s
water polo team took an early 2-0
lead and turned it into a 20-14
wire-to-wire victory against Ore
gon State on Saturday.
The victory avenged a loss to
the Beavers earlier in the week in
Corvallis.
“For the first time, we were
thinking and playing like a
team,” Brian Stoody said.
The victory was led by Ben
Gottlieb’s seven goals. He also
added a solid performance in
goal that included four difficult
saves in the third period.
Tyson Lunden added six goals,
and Dave Nelson tacked on five
more.
“We played with a lot more in
tensity than we have been,” Got
tlieb said. “We became a real co
hesive unit.”
The Ducks were never really
challenged, but when Oregon
State scored with just less than
three minutes left in the third pe
riod, the Beavers were within
two at 11-9.
Oregon responded quickly,
however, with three straight
goals to make it 14-9, and the
Ducks never looked back.
Oregon State was led by a
strong performance from James
Owens, who had seven goals for
the Beavers.
“This was a really good tuneup
for our upcoming tournament,”
Gottlieb said.
That tournament is the 16
team event in Federal Way,
Wash., on Nov. 20-22.
But one thing that often ham
pers the Ducks is their smaller
pool. When they go to tourna
ments, they play in pools much
larger than what they are used to.
“Our pool is smaller and other
teams have an advantage,”
Stoody said. “We are as good or
better technically, but we just
don’t get the same practice.”
On Saturday, however, that
seemingly made little difference.
Dodgers, Blue Jays swap Mondesi, Green
By Ken Peters
The Associated Press
DANA POINT, Calif. — The
Los Angeles Dodgers made
Shawn Green one of baseball’s
highest-paid players Monday,
agreeing to a six-year, $84 million
contract to complete a deal that
sends Raul Mondesi to the Toron
to Blue Jays.
The Dodgers acquired Green
and minor league second base
man Jorge Nunez from Toronto in
exchange for Mondesi and pitcher
Pedro Borbon.
Green’s average salary of $14
million per season is the second
highest ever in baseball, trailing
only the $15 million earned by his
new teammate, pitcher Kevin
Brown, in a $105 million, seven
year contract he agreed to with
the Dodgers in December.
It’s the fourth-highest package
ever in baseball, trailing only
Brown, New York Mets catcher
Mike Piazza ($91 million for sev
en years) and New York Yankees
outfielder Bemie Williams ($87.5
million for seven years).
Dodgers general manager Kevin
Malone said Green is a perfect fit
for the team.
“The fact that he hits from the
left side, and I think most impor
tant, his importance and his in
tegrity,” Malone said during a
news conference at the general
managers’ meeting.
Green is a native of suburban
Tustin, some 35 miles from
Dodger Stadium.
“It’s something to get a chance to
play at home in LA,” Green said at
the news conference. “Everybody
who knows baseball knows what a
class organization this is.”
Mondesi, 28, had asked the
Dodgers to trade him last season.
The Dodgers and Blue Jays agreed
to the tentative deal Friday night,
and Los Angeles was given 72
horns by the commissioner’s office
to work out a contract with Green.
“Shawn Green has a chance to
come home to Southern California,
where he went to school and spent
much of his youth,” said his agent,
Jeff Moorad. “Raul Mondesi gets a
chance for a new start in Toronto.”
Moorad, also Mondesi’s agent,
said he had mixed feelings about
the trade because both players
would be leaving the teams they
had spent their entire major
league careers with.
Mondesi, who had been
benched for two straight games,
leveled a profanity-laced tirade
against Malone and manager Dav
ey Johnson on Aug. 11, saying
they were trying to blame him for
the Dodgers’ poor season.
Moorad said Mondesi told him
Monday morning, before the deal
was finalized, that he thought it
was time to move on.
Bob Daly, the former Warner
Bros, executive named the
Dodgers’ chairman, CEO and
managing partner on Oct. 28, pret
ty much agreed it was time.
“I was disappointed that he
didn’t want to be a Dodger,” Daly
said of Mondesi. “We only want
players who want to be here.”
Toronto general manager Gord
Ash believes the deal was a good
one for the Blue Jays.
“We got some power, run pro
duction and speed, and we also got
a left-handed reliever to take the
place of Graeme Lloyd, who proba
bly is going to leave us,” Ash said.
Asked about Mondesi’s lashing
out at the Dodgers last season,
Ash said, “I think there was some
frustration with the club as a -
whole and some personal frustra
tion. He’s a very passionate player
and wants to win.”
Green, an outfielder who turns
27 Wednesday, made $2.9 million
last season, when he hit .309 with
42 homers and 123 RBIs. He was
eligible for free agency after next
season and had turned down a $45
million, five-year offer by Toronto.
He gets a $4 million signing
bonus, $8.75 million in 2000,
$11.5 million in 2001, $12.75 mil- _
lion in 2002, $15 million in 2003
and $16 million in each of the fi
nal two years.
As part of the deal, Moorad said '
Green will donate $250,000 each
year to the Dodgers’ Dreams
Foundation, which refurbishes
youth ballparks in the Los Ange
les area.
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843 E. 13th
Eugene, OR 97401
Phone: 541-343-6613
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