Courtesy Washington State Media Services
Junior Mary Etter said she was disappointed with her third-place discus performance in the Pac-10 Championships.
Women’s
continued from page 5
Marie Davis was Oregon’s savior in 1999,
winning the 3,000 with a time of 9:38.8.
However, it hasn’t always been this way
for the Ducks.
Oregon saw unprecedented success in
the early 1990s, with the Ducks winning
14 events from 1991-93. Those numbers
coincide with Oregon’s last Pac-10 Cham
pionships when head coach Tom
Heinonen’s squads won the 1991 and 1992
titles. In 1993, the team took second, just
behind UCLA.
Goin’ out in style
Only one senior made the trek to Pullman
for the Ducks, and Jenny Kenyon didn’t
disappoint.
The Newbury Park, Calif., native scored
four points in the heptathlon a week before
the rest of the team showed up in Pullman.
Then, Kenyon, who missed an NCAA provi
sional mark by six points in the heptathlon,
finished her Oregon career by earning one
point in the 100 hurdles after finishing
eighth.
Oregon does have two other seniors on its
roster, although one will be back next sea
son. After redshirting this year, Niki Reed
will team with Holliday to form a lethal one
two punch in the pole vault.
The other?
Daisy Pressley, a two-year letterwinner for
the Ducks after coming over from Chemeketa
Community College during her junior year,
ends her Oregon career after failing to earn a
Pac-10 qualifying mark.
Final thoughts
Junior Mary Etter finished third in the dis
cus, but wasn’t happy to earn only six points
for Oregon. But she’s confident she will suc
ceed when she goes to Baton Rouge.
“I’m kind of upset about Pac-lOs. But I’m
maybe thinking I can knock them off at na
tionals,” she said about the event’s one-two
finishers, UCLA’s Chaniqua Ross and USC’s
Cynthia Ademiluyi.
Then there’s Holliday, again giving her ap
praisal of the Pac-10 experience. This time,
Kirsten Riley, who finished tied for fourth in
the pole vault, gets Holliday’s praise.
“I’m so proud of her,” Holliday said.
And finally, when looking at the score
sheet, analysts can see the athlete who real
ly got Oregon started in the right direction at
the Pac-10 meet.
“Amanda Brown is really the one who got
things going for us,” Heinonen said about the
junior long and triple jumper.
Brown finished eighth in the long jump
and sixth in the triple jump in Pullman.
E-mail sports reporter Hank Hager
at hankhager@dailyemerald.com.
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