Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 28, 2000, Page 12A, Image 12

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FIND THINGS IN ODE CLASSIFIEDS (BICYCLES, PETS, CARS, JOBS,
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’ Fee ley
continued from page 9A
Feeley was again given the start
the next week at home against Ari
zona State, but he only completed
nine of 25 for 134 yards in the first
half. And again Bellotti handed
the ball over to Harrington in the
second half.
And as all Duck fans remember,
Oregon won a wild 17-13 affair in
which Harrington found Tucker in
the end zone with only nine ticks
on the clock.
Harrington ended up taking over
the starting job, and Feeley was
back on the sidelines—the spot he
had occupied for the previous three
years — one as a redshirt. and two
as a third-string quarterback be
hind Akili Smith and Jason Maas.
Questions surrounding his arm
crept into some people’s minds,
but most were more caught up
with Harrington and the team’s as
tonishing success.
Feeley was left behind in the
shadows for the rest of the season.
And sure enough, in the winter it
was determined that the quarter
back — who had waited so long for
his turn to shine — had some
painful nerve damage in his elbow.
Feeley was required to wear a
cast during the winter, and he was
unable to work out. It was yet anoth
er challenge that stood in his way.
“That was really frustrating,”
Feeley said. “I didn’t know what
was going on. I wasn’t sure if I was
going to have to have surgery or if
it would heal on its own. It’s fine
now, but it’s still not where I want
it to be.”
But that’s not stopping the On
tario, Ore., native from engaging in
yet another Oregon spring quarter
back battle. Last spring it was the
heated battle between Feeley and
Harrington that drew plenty of
spotlight, but this spring things
aren’t exactly the same.
“Probably the main difference
between this spring and last is just
the media,” Feeley said. “Just hav
ing to deal with questions day in
and day out. ‘How did you do to
day compared to Joey?’
“So it’s been less competitive in
that aspect, but as far as on the
field, it’s still really competitive
between the two of us. ”
The quarterback duel will cer
tainly still be one of the major fo
cuses of Saturday’s annual Spring
Game at 1 p.m. in Autzen Stadi
um, for which admission is free.
“Joey Harrington is the starter
based on the way we finished the
season,” Bellotti said. “But we
have two great quarterbacks, and
as I’ve said for many, many months
now, I’m pleased with that.
“We’re very fortunate and very
blessed.”
It would be easy for Feeley to feel
the exact opposite of his coach. But
the soon-to-be senior is not com
plaining. Rather, he’s competing.
In the scrimmage last Friday,
Feeley looked impressive in com
pleting seven of 10 passes for 68
yards and a touchdown.
“I’m always confident,” Feeley
said. “I don’t look at this spring as
a chance to prove myself because
people know what I can do. ”
Teammates are amazed at how
well Harrington and Feeley han
dle such a delicate circumstance.
“I’m surprised with how well
they do,” fullback Josh Line said.
“It’s a really weird situation. Either
one of them could probably start
at any other Pac-10 school.”
But instead both QBs are in Eu
gene, and that’s fine with Feeley.
He is as excited as ever just to get
back on the field on Saturday and
get his arm back to where he
knows it can be.
“I’m really excited to play in
front of a crowd again at Autzen,”
Feeley said. “I’m going to get
through this and get back on
course.”
Softball
continued from page 9A
how well we played them at their
home field,” Custer said.
Confidence is the underlying
theme for Oregon this homestand,
both at the plate and in the circle.
Connie McMurren (13-13) and An
drea Vidlund (16-4) are coming off
good outings against Portland
State. Vidlund is currently boasting
a team-leading earned run average
of 1.90, while McMurren leads the
squad in strikeouts with 117.
“Andrea has started to work
hard and keep her mind open to
the mental aspect of pitching,”
pitching coach Tom Royder said.
“Connie has been very stable for us
this year. She is very smart. She is
able to work the count and use the
break on the ball to her advantage.”
Royder would like to see Mc
Murren repeat her performance
from the previous encounter with
the Wildcats when she threw
eight strong innings, giving up
only three runs.
Royder added that the Ducks
won’t change their strategy all that
much the second time around.
“Same game plan — try to throw
as much variety at them as possi
ble,” Royder said. “The key to
pitching is to keep the batter off
balance. As the old saying goes,
‘the best hitters are only successful
three or four times out of ten.’ So
we keep that in mind and not let
the hitters get settled at the plate.”
Both Arizona and Arizona
State’s rosters feature some of the
best hitters in the nation, let alone
the conference. The Sun Devils
are led by a pair of sophomores,
Nicole Thompson and Erica
Beach, who are both hitting well
over .300. Thompson is hitting at
.367 clip, and Beach is right be
hind her with an average of .357.
The Wildcats are no slouches at
the plate either, featuring a Pac
10-leading team average of .344.
The Arizona charge is led by
Nicole Giordiano who is fifth in
the nation at .452.
“We’ll try to go after whatever
minimal weakness each batter
has,” Royder said. “These are the
best hitters in the country so
there’s not a lot of weak spots.”
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