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Devils force finale
By Tom Canavan
The Associated Press
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. —
The New Jersey Devils forced a
Game 7 in the Eastern Conference
finals against the Philadelphia
Flyers because they had an an
swer to Eric Lindros.
They had the “Reggie Jackson”
of hockey — Claude Lemieux.
Lemieux scored on a rebound
with 8:34 to play to break a score
less tie, and the Devils overcame
the return of Lindros by beating
the Flyers 2-1 Wednesday night to
inch closer to becoming the first
team to rally from a 3-1 deficit to
reach the Stanley Cup finals.
“Claude, what can you say?
Who else would score?” Devils
defenseman Ken Daneyko said.
“He got his goal. He was working
hard all night. He jumped on the
loose puck but this is his time of
year. You know, he’s the Reggie
Jackson of hockey in May and
June.”
Alexander Mogilny added an
insurance goal for the Devils and
it proved vital when Lindros beat
Martin Brodeur with 30 seconds
to play.
Brodeur only faced 13 shots as
the Devils beat the Flyers for the
second time in three nights to set
up Game 7 in Philadelphia on Fri
day night.
“We don’t have anything yet,”
Daneyko said. “I hope we didn’t
climb back for nothing because
Game 7 is going to be extremely
difficult.”
If that game is as good as Game
6 it will be a wonderful finale to
what has been a great series be
tween these border rivals separat
ed by the New Jersey Turnpike.
“The place will be jumping,”
Flyers coach Craig Ramsay said.
“The building will be alive. We
can feed off of that emotion. We
have a good home record and it
will be a big game.”
“We have to make sure we
make Friday night special in the
dressing room after the game,”
said Lindros, who played 14 min
utes, 47 seconds on 19 shifts.
He played right wing on a third
line centered by Daymond
Langkow.
Golf
continued from page 9A
“A lot of people would never
believe that a Pacific Northwest
team would be leading the Na
tional Championships of golf,”
Baumgartner said.
Pam Sowden, Oregon’s senior
co-captain, brought herself out of
a recent slump by hitting an even
par 72 to lead the Ducks at the
Championships. Sowden has not
had a score better than 74 since
winning the Lady Aztec Invita
tional in March. The Auckland,
New Zealand, native shot a 73
and a 72 to win that tournament.
“We came in with a game
plan,” Sowden said of the Cham
pionships.
Sowden’s game plan worked.
She stands fifth among some of the
best individuals in the country.
Also playing well for the Ducks
is senior Anika Heuser, who fin
ished a stroke behind Sowden with
a one-over par 73. Heuser has been
performing well for the Ducks re
cently, finishing 21st at the NCAA
West Regionals two weeks ago and
11th at the Pacific-10 Conference
Championships before that.
Rounding out the Oregon squad
were senior Angie Rizzo and jun
ior Jerilyn White, who both shot
three-over par 75s.
“They’re playing really confi
dent,” Baumgartner said. “They’re
in control.”
Oregon is in control, and some
of the top teams in the country are
already in the Ducks’ rearview
mirror. No. 2 Duke is eight strokes
behind Oregon; No. 3 USC is 10
strokes behind; and No. 4 Arizona
State, which has won five of the
last seven NCAA Tournaments, is
a whopping 20 strokes behind the
Ducks, in last place.
Some other teams are playing
surprisingly poorly. No. 5 Stan
ford is in seventh; No. 6 Louisiana
State is in 22nd; and No. 11 New
Mexico State is 13th.
Behind Texas and Georgia, No.
16 Purdue and No. 28 Ohio State
are tied for fourth, while Arizona
is two strokes behind the Boiler
makers and Buckeyes.
The Ducks finished one place
behind Georgia at the NCAA Fall
Preview but ahead of Texas.
Leading the tournament indi
vidually is Tulsa’s Stacy Pram
manasudh. She leads Auburn’s
Danielle Downey and Georgia’s
Angela Jerman by two strokes and
Sowden by three strokes. Heuser
is tied for 10th, while Rizzo and
White are locked for 29th.
Baumgartner said her team
would try to get a good night’s
sleep so they can come out and
shoot the same type of round to
morrow.
White, a Salem native, is the
only Duck ranked among the top
100 golfers in the country at No. 77,
and should lower her score instead
of raise it, if history is a guide. At
the Pac-10 Championships and the
West Regionals, White shot high
scores in her opening rounds and
then lowered them to finish ninth
and 21st, respectively.
Baumgartner is proud that her
experience and her team’s experi
ence have helped them to lead the
NCAA Championships. The
Ducks have four graduating sen
iors who are playing in their last
college tournament, three of
which have the lowest Oregon
scores right now.
The Ducks still have three
rounds to go at the NCAA Cham
pionships, which finish Saturday.
Carter
continued from page 9A
playing in front of his home
crowd.”
Should Carter reach the region
al quarterfinals (the round of 16),
he will automatically qualify as
an All-American. No Duck has
ever reached All-American status
in men’s tennis.
In addition to the singles
match, Carter will also participate
in doubles competition with
freshman Leslie Eisinga. The No.
24 team drew the 17th seed out of
32 teams in the tournament and
will play Alabama’s Fransisco Ro
driguez and Maxim Belski at 9
a.m.
Rodriguez, a senior from
Paraguay and Belski, a freshman
from Belarus, are ranked 14th in
the nation and led the Crimson
Tide in doubles wins.
Carter and Eisinga are two wins
away from the school record in
single-season doubles wins.
Should the team advance past the
first round, they could face a fa
miliar foe in Pepperdine’s Sebas
tain Graeff and Anthony Ross, a
team they lost to in March.