EUGENE Jhuj^/a£ue. HARDWARE • Hardware • Electrical • Plumbing • Paint • Lawn & Garden • Housewares 013573 342-5191 2825 Willamette - Eugene, Oregon Save money! Use your Duck Bucks" Money-saving coupons published in the Emerald every term! Oregon Daily Emerald Coaches would like a reduced schedule ■ Several Pac-10 coaches say they would welcome scheduling changes for next season By Hank Hager Oregon Daily Emerald Ever since the Pacific-10 Confer ence began sponsoring women’s college basketball in 1986, the con ference schedule has included an 18-game slate. In this schedule, each team plays the other nine Pac-10 schools twice — once at home and once on the road. Now that the inaugural confer ence tournament is here, many of the conference’s coaches would like to see that schedule abbreviated — possibly to as few as 14 games. “I’m very much in favor of a shorter conference schedule,” Ari zona State head coach Charli Turn er Thome said. “Much like the Big 12 (Conference) and (Southeastern Conference) where we would have more flexibility in our scheduling.” Only one Pac-10 squad has been continually ranked this season. Stanford, which has been in the top 10 since the season started, has be come a rock at No. 2 in the nation. Some believe that the parity that has made the Pac-10 a competitive league has also hampered its abili ty to gain national recognition. Of ten teams such as Arizona State are on the cusp of a national rank ing, only to lose that possibility be cause of a conference loss. If a 14- or 16-game league sea son were to be adopted, this would open up time for additional nonconference games, which some believe would enhance the Pac-lO’s image. The 18-game schedule “doesn’t give you a lot to mess with,” USC head coach Chris Gobrecht said. However, Gobrecht did add that she would rather play a conference opponent if she had to choose. Gobrecht said she was a propo nent of keeping with the 18-game schedule before the season, but be cause of the conference’s parity and the shortened amount of time to play the games, she may change her mind. “Having been through the expe rience this year, I could see going to 16,” she said. “It was hard to play Pac-10 teams when we played them.” Turner Thorne agrees with this sentiment. “When we are ranked and lose in conference, we fall out of the rank ings every time,” she said. “The biggest way we can help ourselves is to get away from the double round-robin and have more presea son nonconference games. It would help our national image. “We’d use them the right way.” There is, however, some dissent among the ranks on the issue of a shortened season. UCLA head coach Kathy Olivier, who guided the Bruins to a 4-14 record and No. 8 seed in the tourna ment, said she has wavered on the issue. Whereas at the beginning of the season she would have pre ferred the shortened season, she now questions that possibility. “At the beginning, when we were doing all this voting and try ing to figure out the best way to have the tournament, I was think ing more of a smaller conference (season) and to not play everyone twice,” she said. “When I thought of that, how do you do that? I think that would be difficult. The reality of it is, to be a champion, you need to play everyone twice. “I’m still trying to find out what the best solution is.” E-mail sports reporter Hank Hager at hankhager@dailyemerald.com. Parity reigns in Big Ten women’s tournament By Rick Burchfield Daily Collegian (Pennsylvania State U.) UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (U WIRE) — With the Big Ten women’s basketball regular season now over there is still one last chance for teams to impress the NCAA selection committee. That chance started Thursday when the Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tour nament began in Indianapolis. One can usually count on an up set or two in any tournament, but this one could have more than its fair share. The Big Ten has seven teams with at least .500 records in the conference and only one that is below the break-even mark overall. The following are the teams who will be competing in the first half of the conference bracket. No. 9 Michigan The Wolverines were picked by many experts to win the conference and in the beginning of the season it looked like that would prove to be true. They won 10 out of their first 11 games and were ranked as high as No. 12 in the nation. Then came conference play. Michigan fell in six of its first sev en Big Ten games and never seemed to fully recover. No. 8 Illinois Illinois was one of the rare teams in the conference that got worse as the season went on. Illinois fin ished the regular season with three straight losses and went from a con tender to a basement dweller in the Big Ten. Still, Illinois is 14-12 over all and could shake things up in the tournament. No. 5 Indiana The Hoosiers might be the senti mental pick this year. On Sunday, Indiana head coach Kathi Bennett coached just her first game since the car accident that broke the sec ond vertebra in her neck. The team has rallied around Ben nett and closed the season with three straight wins. Bennett will coach Indiana at noon on Friday in a game against Iowa. She said she has been impressed with her team. No. 4 Iowa Iowa comes into the tournament as the conference’s second-highest scoring team after Minnesota. The transition game that the Hawkeyes use has given them the edge in some key games, including one each against the top two teams in the con ference (Purdue and Penn State). No. 1 Purdue Purdue has now won the regular season conference crown in con secutive seasons and has been the most consistent team in the Big Ten this year. However, the Boilermak ers lost to Minnesota and defeated Penn State in the last minute, showing that they can be beaten.