2002 Pac-10 Women’s Basketball Tournament Bracket Friday, March 1 Saturday, March 2 Sunday, March 3 Monday, March 4 No. 7 Oregon 6:30 p.m. No. 10 Washington State_ Noon No. 2 Washington No. 6 UCLA No. 3 Arizona State 2:15 p.m. No. 6 Arizona No. 1 Stanford 6 p.m. No. 4 USC No. 5 Oregon State 8:15 p.m. 12:30 p.m. Fox Sports Net 7:30 p.m. Fox Sports Net Tournament Champion 3 p.m. Fox Sports Net Scouting the Pac 10. Washington State Record: 2-26 overall, 0-18 Pac-10 Scoring offense: 55.8 ppg Scoring defense: 78.5 ppg Watch: Brittney Hawks, C, 12.9 ppg, 9.3 rpg At least the Cougars will have a big crowd watching them. Washington State gets the unenviable task of opening the Pac-10 Tournament against host Oregon at 6:30 p.m. tonight. The Cougars began the season with two wins in their first five games. Since then, they’ve lost 23 straight, including all 18 league games — the only Pac-10 team to ever do so. Against the Ducks, Washing ton State lost 76-47 on the road and 88-47 at home. There is a bright spot to playing at McArthur Court for the Cougars, as it is the site of their biggest win in recent memory. On Feb. 15, 2001, Joanna Smith scored with five-tenths of a second left to lift Washington State to a 77-76 victory at Oregon. Smith has now departed, and if the Cougars are going to have any chance of shocking Oregon at the Pit, they’ll need big games from Brittney Hawks and Whitney Martindale. Hawks leads the Pac-10 with 12 double-doubles and became the first Cougar to lead the league in rebounding. In both games against the Ducks this season, Mar tindale has led Washington State in scoring with 14 and 13 points, respectively. Washington State’s closest Pac-10 loss this season was a 75-68 defeat at home against the rival Huskies. Should Washing ton State upset Oregon, the Cougars would play Washington at noon on Saturday. —Jeff Smith HAWKS Record: 15-12 overall, 10-8 Pac-10 Scoring offense: 71.3 ppg Scoring defense: 66.7 ppg Watch: Shaquala Williams, G, 17.4 ppg, 4.2 apg The Ducks have had a frustrating season under first-year head coach Bev Smith, but with home-court advantage for the Pac-10 Tournament, Oregon could erase any blem ishes this year may have caused. Oregon has already secured its ninth consecutive winning season, but the Ducks need a strong showing here this weekend in order to make a ninth consecutive trip to the NCAA Tournament. The backcourt of Williams, and seniors Edniesha Curry and Jamie Craighead, lead the Ducks into the first game of the tournament tonight against Washington State, a team Oregon beat twice this year by an average margin of 35 points. “What better opportunity to start the tournament off right — we just have to take advantage of it,” Smith said. Assuming the Ducks can get by the Cougars, they’ll face Washington at noon Saturday. Oregon split the season series with the Huskies, with Washington win ning 88-80 in Seattle last weekend. —Adam Jude 2. Washington Record: 17-10 overall, 12-6 Pac-10 Scoring offense: 73.4 ppg Scoring defense: 65.5 ppg Watch: Giuliana Mendiola, G, 12.0 ppg, 5.6 rpg Coming into the Pac-10 Tournament, the Huskies have won seven of their last nine games, with the losses coming against No. 1 seed Stanford and an overtime loss against Oregon State on Feb. 21. Washington, known for their offense, features a balanced scoring attack, with four players averaging in double figures in scoring — Loree Payne (14.1 ppg), Mendiola (12.0), Andrea Lalum (11.6) and Emily Autrey (10.1). Seven different players have led the team in scoring this year, including a 31-point game by Men diola against Oregon in the final regular season matchup. The Ducks are the probable opponent for Washington, as the Huskies will face the winner of the No. 7 Oregon/No. 10 Washington State game on Saturday. Washington has not won at McArthur Court since 1993. In the two regular season meetings be tween the two Washington schools, the Huskies defeated the Cougars 98-64 on Dec. 21 in Seattle and 75-68 on Jan. 25 in Pullman. Against Oregon, the Huskies lost the first meeting this year in Eugene, 69-56, Dec. 28, and then avenged the loss in Seattle, 88-80, last Saturday. In the second game, the Huskies won without Lalum, who had injured her ankle two days ear lier against Oregon State. The injured an kle may still be a factor in the throughout the tournament. Chris Cabot