Oregon golf places 10th Oregon, needing to finish 11th or better overall fora bid in the NCAA Championships, finished 10th in the first round tying with San Jose State. Tulsa, Arizona and Standford took first, second and third place. Page 13 Scoreboard Track and Field Event Schedule (tentative) Oregon Twilight Saturday, May 13, 2000 5:30 p.m. Hammer (Women fol lowed by Men) 5:45 Shot Put (W followed by M) 5:45 Javelin (W) 6:10 400H (W) 6:15 High Jump (M followed by W) 6:15 800m (M) 6:20 100m (W) Middle School Mile (girls) 6:30 Discus(M followed by W) 6:30 Pole Vault (M and W) 6:30 Long Jump (W) followed by Triple Jump (W) 6:35 Middle School Mile (boys) 6:45 400m (W) 6:55 3000m Steeplechase (M) 7:05 Oregon Track Club Ser vice Pin Presentation 7:15 100H (W) 7:25 1500m (W) 7:35 800m (W) 7:40 5000m (W) 8:00 Bill McChesneyJr. Memorial Twilight Mile (M) 8:10 Seniors’ Last Lap Best Bet NBA Playoffs, Los Angeles 7:30 p.m., TNT Friday May 12,2000 Volume 101, Issuel 51 Emerald ■\v>svMvjys&v>VA*-J Scott Peszneckef'Emerald Santiago Lorenzo begins the Pac-10 Championships Saturday at noon in the 100 hurdles. Sophomore Santiago Lorenzo is motivated to improve an already steep learning curve atthePac-10 Decathlon Championships By Scott Pesznecker Oregon Daily Emerald To say that Santiago Loren zo’s talent is one-in-a-million is quite the understatement. Try one in 11 million. The decathlete standout on the Oregon men’s track and field team came to college from the densely populated city of Buenos Aires, Argenti na in 1998 and is one of the Ducks’ three NCAA quali fiers this season. His resume included a sec ond-place finish at the 1997 Junior Pan-American Games, the 1998 South American Championship title, his country’s national decathlon record and, on top of that, plenty of room for improve ment. While the rest of the Ducks compete in the Oregon Twi light this Saturday starting at 5:30 p.m., Lorenzo — along with teammates Billy Pappas and Doug Sells — will work his 10-event magic in the two-day Pacific-10 Confer ence Championships for combination events. Pac-10 action begins at noon Satur day, and Sunday’s events Turn to Santiago, page 14 Women want Pac-10 marks at Twilight ■Jenny Kenyon hopes for success at her Pac 10s, while her teammates hope for qualifying standards at the last regular season meet By Mirjam Swanson Oregon Daily Emerald It’s Pacific-10 Conference Championship time for one Duck. Jenny Kenyon, Oregon’s only heptathlete, is hoping for some semblance of decent weather as she strives for at least 5,000 points and a conference title over the course of seven events beginning with the 100-meter hurdles at noon on Saturday and ending with the 800 meters at 3:30 p.m. Sunday. It’ll be Kenyon’s second taste of the conference heptathlon championship. Last season, the sophomore from Newbury Park, Calif., totaled 4,432 points and finished sixth. This time, Keny on enters competition with a ca reer-best of 4,793, third-best in the Pac-10 this season. “ She’s going to have her work cut out for her, ” head coach Tom Heinonen said. “But she had a great meet last Sunday at Irvine, so if we get any kind of weather, she’ll have a great chance to put a [personal record] on the board.” True, at the Steve Scott Invi tational last weekend, Kenyon PR’d in the long jump (18 feet 9 3/4 inches) and the 100 hurdles (14.82 seconds). And furthering Kenyon’s chances this weekend is the fact that none of last year’s top-five finishers will be competing this weekend. “Last year, I kind of felt like it was just more of an experience that I was going to compete, but I didn’t know what to expect,” said Kenyon, also a sophomore in heptathlon time. “Now I know what to expect, and I’m ready.” As are the Ducks core of un derclassmen. It was hard for anyone to Turn to Track, page 17 it Our freshmen have made lots of progress, and we’ve needed them to. Many of them are the backbone of our team for many years to come, yy Tom Heinonen head coach UO makes final impression on the road ■ No.19 Oregon knows this weekend is its last chance to impress the selection committee By Matt O'Neill Oregon Daily Emerald Three games. That’s all there are before the No. 19 Oregon softball team leaves its fate in the hands of the NCAA selec tion committee. And those games will be no easy task, as the Ducks (34-24 overall, 6-12 Pacific 10 Conference) travel to Seattle and Los Angeles to take on the No. 1 Huskies (54-6,14-3) today at 2 p.m. and No. 3 Bruins (36-10-1, 11-6) on Saturday in a dou ble header. Last time Oregon faced these teams, the Ducks got swept. But, that is all in the past, according to senior Jill Robinson. All the team can do now is focus on this weekend and not worry about the past or the future. “These games are really important,” Robinson said. “Getting a win or two can only help us out in impress ing the committee.” Last season, the Ducks were the last team called. Second baseman Andre Gustafson, for one, does not want to got through that feeling again. “I was a 1 1 stressed out and nerv ous,” Gustafson said. “I want to be relaxed and have fun, so a couple of wins will help us a lot.” The Ducks are coming into this weekend’s play on a winning note, having beaten No. 9 California, 4-0 Sunday. That win ended a four-game losing streak and kept Oregon one game ahead of the Bears and out of the Pac-10 cellar. “I wished we played that well on Saturday [when the Ducks lost 4-0],” Robinson said. Against Washington and UCLA, “we’ll need to come out like we did on Sunday.” Washington is coming into the weekend riding high, having defeated the Bruins, 4-0. Oregon is hoping to con Turn to Softball, page 15 Nobody expects us to win. We have everything to gain and nothing to lose. These are our games to win. Jill Robinson #23, senior