Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 24, 2003, Page 8, Image 8

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Men's
continued from page 5
the Ducks. “They always have four
guys on the floor that can make
plays. They just took it to us.”
The news wasn’t all good for Ore
gon, though it could’ve been much
worse. Jackson went for a steal late
in the first half but came up with a
deep cut on the index finger of his
right hand and needed stitches to
sew it up. Oregon’s second-leading
scorer at 17.1 points per game,
Jackson will miss Saturday’s game
against Washington State.
Jackson’s absence, however,
was hardly felt. Andre Joseph ate
up much of Jackson’s minutes
and scored a career-high 17
points while matching up with
Wrenn. Ridnour added 15 points
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and 11 assists. James Davis had
18 points, connecting on 6-of-7 3
point attempts.
“This is a big rivalry game,” Rid
nour said. “We knew they were go
ing to come at us — they always
play well down here. We were real
ly excited for this game.”
Wrenn, who was released from
Connecticut after one year, was
double-teamed by the Ducks
throughout the game and had an
other opponent hounding him all
night. The Pit Crew chanted
“UConn reject” at every opportuni
ty, and even teased Nate Robinson,
Washington’s 5-foot-8 freshman
guard who doubles as a starting
cornerback for the UW football
team. Robinson had a team-high
18 points.
The Huskies didn’t score their
first basket until the 12:57 mark of
the first half, and by then, the game
was already out of reach. After 20
minutes, Washington managed just
eight field goals in 24 attempts
(.333) as the Ducks took a 48-25
lead into the locker room, their
largest halftime lead of the season.
After a 9-0 run midway through
the second half, the Ducks led 84
45, their largest lead of the game.
Every Oregon player except fresh
man Tyler York, who played only
one minute, scored as the Ducks
shot 53.1 percent from the field.
Kent compared Thursday’s game
to Oregon’s Dec. 7 win over Kansas.
“The focus was there, the inten
sity was there, and the shot were
falling (against Washington),” he
said. “It was something to see.”
Contact the senior sports reporter
at adamjude@dailyemerald.com.
Women's
continued from page 5
Despite a decent offensive show
ing overall, a concern for the Ducks
is their outside shooting. Oregon
managed to connect on just three
3-pointers in 14 attempts, two by
Ganes. The final trey came from
sophomore Amy Taylor with 4:53,
which pulled the Ducks within 17.
And at that point, it was just too
late.
Sophomore Kedzie Gunderson
pitched in with nine points, while
sophomore Andrea Bills had eight
but was just 2-of-7 from the free
throw line.
The loss drops Oregon to 2-6
without Gathrine Kraayeveld, who
was found to have a staph infection
in her right knee before the Ducks’
first Pac-10 game, a loss to UCLA.
Oregon must now pull itself out
of a hole. The Ducks visit Washing
ton State on Saturday at 7 p.m.
The Cougars have traditionally
been the doormat of the Pac-10,
having failed to post a winning sea
son in conference play since the
1990-91 campaign.
But while the Cougars are win
less this season — nearly pulling off
an upset of Oregon State on Thurs
day night only to be rebuffed, 65-62
— they have played opponents
tougher than usual.
“Washington State is a team that
is playing very hard,” Smith said.
“They are very close to a win. They
can taste it.”
Contact the sports reporter
at hankhager@dailyemerald.com.
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