Sports Editor Peter Hockaday peterhockaday@dcdlyemercild.com Friday, February 28,2003 -Oregon Daily Emerald Sports Best bet NCAA men's basketball: Arizona at Stanford 4 p.m. Saturday, ABC Love fest at The Pit turns into UO win Adam Amato Emerald Fans show their love for Henry Bibby with signs and masks as he walks onto the court for the first time Thursday. The Ducks pay back USC with a 13-point win and pay back coach Henry Bibby with some ‘affection’ Men’s basketball Peter Hockaday Sports Editor Valentine’s Day was 14 days ago, but there was a whole lotta love at McArthur Court on Thursday night. There was love for USC head coach Henry Bibby (one sign asked Bibby “Will you marry me?”), love for Luke Ridnour (fans chanted “One more year” at the possible NBA draftee) and, finally, love for the Ducks as a team. In a rousing effort, Oregon toppled USC 79-66 in front of a sold-out Mac Court crowd. The win gave Oregon 19 victo ries on the season, and took the Ducks one step closer to the March Madness golden number of 20. And they couldn’t have done with out the love of the fans. “It was awesome out there,” Rid nour said with a smile after the game. “The fans just gave us that extra boost to get going.” That boost came late in the first half, after Oregon went down early to a USC squad that came out firing. Trojan jun ior Desmon Farmer connected on four straight three-pointers to start the game, and USC played aggressive de fense on Oregon to keep the lead throughout the first 14 minutes. But with 5:58 left and the score 39 27, Luke Jackson hit a lay-up to cut the Trojan lead to 10. Robert Johnson added a put-back lay-in on a miss. On the next possession, Ridnour led a fast break and found Jackson, who threw down a thunderous dunk to bring the crowd to its feet for the first time in a while. “That’s the kind of basketball I love to play,” Jackson said. “Physical, up and down the floor, and shooting a lot of shots.” Soon after Jackson’s dunk, Ridnour led another fast break, but this time the junior guard pulled up and hit a three-pointer to tie the score at 42. Ridnour was visibly pumped as he ran back on defense, and the Pit Grew broke into the “One more year” chant. “We gotta show emotion, get every one going, because we need these games more than anything,” Ridnour said. “If it’s yelling after you hit the shot, whatever it is, we just need to get the team going to get it done.” That run was enough to give Oregon the momentum and, eventually, the game. The teams battled early in the second half, and USC held leads at 56 54 and 58-56, but the Ducks used an other emotional run like the one in the first half to put the Trojans away mid way through the second frame. Ridnour led all scorers with 23 points and Jackson followed with 22. Oregon’s two seniors played well — Robert Johnson had 12 points and sev en rebounds while Brian Helquist added six boards — and the Ducks ad equately made up for the absence of suspended guard Andre Joseph. Ridnour matched USG’s physical game play with his own brand of tough-guy basketball, hitting the floor often for loose balls and flying through Trojan double-teams. “He’s be the first guy in the cold whirlpool tonight,” head coach Ernie Kent said. Ridnour set the tone with only three turnovers in the game. The Ducks, who committed 26 turnovers in their 91-76 loss at USC on Feb. 2, had only 11 Thursday. But, with the end of the season and the NCAA Tournament looming, the most important statistic for Oregon on Thursday night was the little “x” in the win column. “It was just a tremendous victory,” Jackson said. The Ducks moved into a tie for fourth in the Pac-10 with Arizona Turn to Men's, page 14 Major Overstake Senior Tony Overstake leads the Oregon wrestling squad into Sunday's Pac-10 tournament with a record of 18-8 this season, including eight major decisions Wrestling Mindi Rice Freelance Sports Reporter As the first wrestler Oregon head coach Chuck Kearney re cruited, Tony Overstake was the beginning of Oregon’s bright wrestling future. Kearney knew Overstake was the kind of wrestler he wanted in the program, and Overstake knew Oregon had a lot to offer. “He’s been the heart and soul of what we’ve been trying to do here,” Kearney said. Overstake, now a redshirt senior, leads the Ducks into the Paeific-10 Conference Tournament, which begins Sunday. “He’s a success story,” Kearney said. “Each year he has worked real hard and made big gains.” Overstake began his final collegiate dual meet season with the dual resting on his match. The meet against Oregon State was tied at 15, after the Ducks came back from a 12-point deficit to tie the Beavers. “I was pretty confident he could pull out the win,” Kearney said that night. Overstake’s match went like the meet — he was down early, came back, and finally dominated. Overstake won the 149 match 9-3, giving the Ducks the 18-15 victory in front of a home crowd of 939. “It was exciting (being the deciding match),” Overstake said that night. “The pressure’s on me to get the job done.” Turn to Wrestling, page 13 Jeremy Forrest Emerald Tony Overstake (left) has Oregon's best record heading into Pac-10s. Oregon’s victory over USC clouds Pac-10 picture The women beat USC, making Saturday^ game against UCLA much more important for postseason posturing Women’s basketball Hank Hager Sports Reporter What a wild and wacky season it has become for the Oregon women’s basketball team. And with just one game left in the Pacific-10 Conference sea son, it seems to be at just the tip of the iceberg. The Ducks got 19 points from junior Cathrine Kraayeveld to narrowly defeat USC, 75-70, in front of a paltry 547 fans Thurs day at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. The win gives Oregon four in its last five games, but more im portantly, pushes the Ducks into a fifth-place tie with Oregon State. The Beavers were 81-72 losers to UCLA on Thursday. “It’s a tremendous victory,” Oregon head coach Bev Smith told KSCR-AM. “We had a good game plan, and our players stuck to it.” As mentioned, the Oregon win now muddles the middle of the Pac-10. The Ducks (12-14 overall, 8-9 Pac-10) stepped closer to at least a sixth-place finish with the win, even though they are cur rently tied for fifth. If Oregon and Oregon State both win or lose Saturday — the Ducks against UCLA and the Beavers against the Trojans — Oregon State would win the tiebreaker. Turn to Women's, page 12