Sports Editor:
Adam Jude
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- Oregon Daily Emerald
Monday, June 3,2002
NCAA Championships
Harris earns All-America honors; UO men 35th
■ LSU becomes the first team since Oregon in 1984
to win the NCAA track championship on its own oval
By Peter Hockaday
Oregon Daily Emerald
It only takes two to tango at the nation’s best track meet,
and the Ducks found that out the hard way Saturday.
This past season, the Oregon men’s track and field team
got 20 points from two athletes and finished ninth at the
NCAA Championships. This season, both those athletes
— decathlete Santiago Lorenzo and javelin thrower John
Stiegeler — missed the meet with injuries, and the Ducks
scored seven points to finish 35th.
Louisiana State won the NCAA title on its own track.
The Tigers scored 64 points, edging second-place Ten
nessee by seven points. Southern
Methodist was third with 42 points.
Only two Oregon athletes of the sev
en Ducks who made the trip to Baton
Rouge, La., scored points at the national
meet. One of those athletes was senior
Micah Harris, who finished seventh in
the 110 hurdles race Saturday.
“I felt relaxed coming in, and every
thing went pretty well technique-wise,” Harris said. “I
would have loved to finish higher, but (the other hurdlers)
showed how good they were.”
Harris got to the finals after two close heats on Thurs
day and Friday. In Thursday’s quarterfinal, Harris finished
fourth in his heat but 11th overall. Friday he finished fifth
in his semifinal, but his time was 0.06 seconds faster than
the fifth-place finisher in the other semifinal. He was the
ninth and final member of the final race.
“Making it through the finals and building toward this is
a big achievement,” Harris said.
Harris earned All-American honors, a title that eluded
him last year when he failed to make the finals.
“It’s great to be an All-American, and bottom line, that
was what I was here for,” Harris said.
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Senior Micah Harris (center), seen here at the 2001 NCAA Championships at Hayward Field, earned All-American honors Saturday with a
seventh-place finish in the 110-meter hurdles. The school record-holder finished the race in 13.78 seconds.
Courtesy Washington State Media Services
Junior Mary Etter ended Oregon’s season by placing eighth in the discus on Friday. The one point
earned in the event gave the Ducks nine points at the NCAA Championships.
Oregon women nab top-30 hnish
at NCAA for first time since 1995
■ Four women score nine points in Baton
Rouge to lead the Ducks to 27th overall,
a big improvement from 2001
By Hank Hager
Oregon Daily Emerald
Going into the 2002 NCAA Championships in
Baton Rouge, La., the Ducks had high hopes,
sending five capable athletes to the Bayou.
After three days of intense competition that
ended Friday, Oregon took home four All-Ameri
can honors and nine points, good enough for 27th
place. The overall point total was the highest the
team had earned since 1995 when Oregon
amassed 10 points.
It is also the first time since that season that the
Ducks finished in the top 30.
“I think we competed hard and four-out-five of
our athletes competed well,” head coach Tom
Heinonen said of Oregon’s contingent. “Four out
of the five either met or exceeded expectations.”
Overall, South Carolina earned its first champi
onship in school history by earning 82 points, 10
points ahead of second-place UCLA. Pacific-10 Con
ference powerhouse USC finished with 57 points
behind Angela Williams’ win in the 100—a record
setting fourth NCAA title for the departing senior.
Host Louisiana State finished fourth with 43
points.
Junior Mary Etter finished the 2002 season for
Oregon on Friday, coming through in the discus
and finishing in eighth place. The finish earned
Oregon one point, giving the squad its final total.
Etter’s final throw of 173 feet, 2 inches was a
foot behind Florida’s Rachel Longfors for seventh
place, and less than nine feet behind eventual
winner Chaniqua Ross of UCLA (182-0).
“I came in ready to go and make it happen,” Et
ter said. “I told Sally (Harmon, Oregon assistant
coach) beforehand that I was going to throw at
least 170 feet today and make the finals, and I did
that on my first throw.”
Entering the meet with a top throw of 177-5 dur
ing the season, Etter was ninth in the nation. She bet
tered that by one spot, earning her second All-Amer
ican honor. Her first came as a freshman in 2000.
The Everett, Wash., native is the first discus
thrower to earn two All-America honors at Ore
gon since Quenna Beasley in 1985.
“I improved a spot from where I was seeded, but
I’m still frustrated,” Etter said. “I’ve changed my
technique the past two weeks — I’m trying to speed
it up—and have been throwing 180 feet pretty regu
larly in practice. I know there’s so much more there,
and was hoping that it would come out today. ”
Heinonen was impressed with Etter’s resiliency to
come back and compete well at the Championships
after finishing 19th in the discus a season ago.
“Last year, Mary just tried too hard in Eugene,”
he said.
Etter’s final legal attempt in the discus, a throw
of 173-2 — the day’s best for the junior — capped
off a successful season for the Ducks. While the
squad finished 27th — not normally an impres
sive finish for a collegiate squad — Oregon im
proved greatly from a 60th place finish in 2001.
The year before that, the Ducks were 45th, and in
2000, placed 51st. The Ducks have traveled a long
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