Emerald Archives With a 16-3 record, junior Doug Lee is making a convincing case to repeat as Pac -10 champ in the 184-pound weight class. 008205 Room toV- You' Due to popular demand, a second section of CIS 120, Concepts of Computing: Information Processing, has been added to the Winter 2000 time schedule. Please check Duck Hunt forCRNs and schedule details. Virtual Office Systems Inc. In Partnership with The University of Oregon Bookstore 3131 West 11th Ph. 343-8633 Open Mon-Sat 10-6 The AMD K7 Athlon 550 $1449.99 Microstar MS 6167 Board 8 MB Diamond AGP 10 GB Western Digital 64 MB 100 MHz SDRAM 17”.28 SVGA Monitor W/Athlon 500 $1379.99 W/Athlon 600 $1629.99 Upgrade to a 13 Gig Drive $20 We’ll build it with the upgrades you want! 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Wrestlers ready for pair of meets ■ This weekend, Oregon travels to Portland State and then tangles with Simon Fraser in Eugene By Brett Williams Oregon Daily Emerald Following some impressive in dividual performances last week at the Great Plains Invitational, the Oregon wrestling team at tempts to improve its record at Portland State Saturday and at home against Simon Fraser on Sunday at 3 p.m. The Ducks (2-1 Pacific-10 Con ference, 2-2 overall) are coming off a tournament in which Oregon head coach Chuck Kearney be lieves two of his wrestlers gave the best performances in their col lege careers. Freshman Tony Overstake finished third at 149 pounds, and redshirt freshman Eric Webb placed fifth in the heavyweight division. Kearney said his young team is coming along fine at this point in the season. “We are where we want to be, and maybe a touch ahead,” said Kearney, in his second season as Ducks head coach. “We need to find more consistency, but we’re ahead of where I thought we would be six weeks ago.” One Oregon wrestler who is ex ceeding expectations every match is sophomore Eugene Harris. Af ter competing at Lassen Commu nity College in Susanville, Calif., last season, Harris is quickly • adapting to the Division I-A level. Harris has already beaten four na tionally-ranked opponents, and he is doing an excellent job filling the void left at 157 pounds by the graduation of last season’s NCAA qualifier Daryl Christian. “As far as Eugene is concerned, it is only a matter of him believing he is as good as he actually is,” Kearney said. Harris’ strong wrestling perfor mance as of late is proof that he is almost fully recovered from a knee injury that hampered him early in the season. Harris said he is almost 100 percent healthy and is now able to do things he was incapable of doing when injured. “It was rough at the beginning, but I’m coming back right, and now I can do stuff like shooting and other things I couldn’t do ear lier,” said Harris, who was voted wrestler of the year in Nevada during his senior season at Cima roon Memorial High School. Harris wrestles a familiar face Saturday. He already defeated his opponent at 157 pounds at the Southern Oregon Tournament earlier in the season and also beat him during his high school days. Junior Doug Lee is continuing to dominate at 184 pounds. Lee, who won the Pac-10 in his weight class last season, appears due to repeat. At 16-3, Lee is currently the highest ranked wrestler in his division in the Pac-10. Portland State’s Jeremy Wilson has his hands full when he takes the mat with Lee. Wilson, who is the Vikings’ top performer, is 6-6 and ranked fourth in the Pac 10. “Jeremy Wilson is their tough est wrestler,” Lee said. “Portland State’s dang tough, but they’re certainly not the toughest in the Pac-10.” According to Kearney, the Ducks have dominated Portland State for quite some time. “In the last 40 years, we’ve beat them pretty regularly. I can’t re member the last time we lost to them,” said Kearney, who was an assistant as well as a wrestler at Oregon prior to being promoted to head coach last season. “We need to get our intensity up like we did against Oklahoma State.” Simon Fraser is an unfamiliar foe for Oregon. None of Oregon’s wrestlers have competed against the Clan from the Pacific West Conference. The Ducks have not competed against Simon Fraser since Oregon’s 34-10 victory dur ing the 1995-96 campaign. Kearney said the Clan have a wide range of talent that could make the contest interesting if the Ducks don’t stay focused. “They have a few extremely good wrestlers, and some that are not good at all,” Kearney said. “If they sneak a few wins, it could be a competitive dual meet.” Top-rusher Watters practices for Seahawks KIRKLAND, Wash. — Ricky Watters, who is still hampered by a sprained right knee, practiced for the first time in two weeks on Thursday as the Seattle Seahawks continued to get ready for their first playoff game in 11 seasons. Watters had his sixth career 1,000-yard rushing season for the AFC West champion Seahawks, but was ineffective in their regular season finale on the road against the New York Jets last Sunday. He had 30 yards on nine carries in a 19-9 defeat in which Seattle couldn’t score a touchdown. The Seahawks play the Miami Dolphins on Sunday in the King dome. Wearing a brace, Watters looked impressive and appeared to be his old self in Thursday’s practice af ter being held out of Wednesday’s workout. “I feel a lot better and I’ve still got some days to go,” Watters said. “It was veiy encouraging. Actual ly, I wasn’t supposed to do as much as I did. They just wanted, me to run around a little bit and see how it felt.” Watters said he wanted to dis card the brace or use a smaller, less restrictive one, but team doc tors told him he would have to wear it. “It was all vetoed,” he said with a smile. “Every doctor said, ‘No,’ ‘No,’ ‘No.’ ‘Next question. You have to wear the brace. OK?”’ Coach Mike Holmgren said Wednesday that Watters would start against Miami, but Holmgren didn’t think Watters would be 100 percent for his 11th career playoff game and his first since 1996. “I’m definitely going to be ready,” Watters said. “I felt good today, but I’m even going to be feeling better because it’s going to be getting stronger and stronger. If I get out there, I’m going to go fast and go hard.” The Associated Press