Sports Editor Peter Hockaday peterhockaday@dailyemeraId.com Tuesday, March 4,2003 -Oregon Daily Emerald Sports Best bet NCAA men's basketball: Florida at Georgia 6p.mv ESPN Wrestlers take fifth in Pac-10 tourney Shane Webster leads the way with a second-place finish, while Oregon has five other wrestlers finish 3-5 in their weight class Wrestling Mindi Rice Freelance Sports Reporter The Oregon wrestlers wrapped up the Pacific-10 Conference tournament Mon day with six wrestlers placing in the top six in their respective weight class. Shane Webster led the Ducks with a second-place finish at 174. Webster lost a 3-1 decision to Arizona State’s Curtis Owen. Owen took a 10-4 decision from Webster when the Ducks and Sun Devils met in a January dual meet. Webster earned a second-straight trip to the NCAA Championships with his second-place finish. He won two major decisions on Sunday on his way to the ti tle match. The sophomore improved on a third-place conference finish during his freshman season. As a team, the Ducks finished fifth in the conference with 68 points. Arizona State won the team title with 134 points and six individual champions. Senior Casey Hunt won his first match over Oregon State’s Mike Unger at 141. The 5-3 decision marked the third time in three matchups that Hunt beat Unger this season. In the match to decide third and fourth place, Hunt faced Cal State-Fullerton’s Juan Mora. Hunt was seeded No. 3 in the tournament, while Mora was the No. 4 seed. The high-scoring match followed the seeding order, giving Hunt the third place victory with a 13-10 decision. Hunt earned a trip to the national tour nament with his finish and improved over his fourth-place Pae-10 finish last season. Redshirt sophomore Luke Larwin, at 165, faced Cal Davis’ Michael Font for the right to wresde for third place. Larwin won a decision, 5-3, setting up a fourth match this season against Oregon State’s Matt Ellis. Ellis knocked Larwin out of the cham pionship bracket Sunday with a 3-2 deci sion, and took the third-place match with a 3-1 decision. Larwin received fourth place with the loss, earning a trip to the NCAA Championships. At 125, sophomore Martin Mitchell battled another Beaver, Michael Delaney, to a 5-3 decision in Delaney’s favor. Mitchell then faced Stanford’s Nathan Pe terson in the match to decide fifth and sixth place. Mitchell pinned his opponent at the 1:03 mark for fifth place and his ninth pin of the season. Facing Cal Poly’s Nate Ybarra, redshirt junior Jason Harless lost a 8-3 decision in his first match Monday, sending him to the battle for fifth place at 133. Against Cardinal wresder Brad Metzler, Harless won a close battle by tiebreaker after the two wrestlers finished the regu lation tied at one. Harless earned fifth place for the second consecutive year. Junior Branson Phillips also started Monday with a loss. Boise State’s Ben Cher rington won a 9-3 decision over Phillips to bounce him to fifth place match. Phillips then faced No. 1-seeded Matt Gentry of Stanford. Phillips ran up the match with an 11-4 decision over Gentry. Turn to Wrestling, page 12 Cradle ’till the grave The lacrosse men were not threatened by the promotion of women’s lacrosse to varsity— the guys love the sport too much Jon Roetman Sports Freelancer The Feb. 3 announcement that women’s lacrosse would become a varsity sport at Ore gon in 2004 could easily have led to bitter ness from the men’s club lacrosse team. Instead, the Ducks saw the move as a plus for lacrosse in general at Oregon and hope that one day it leads to a men’s varsity program. “I think it’s great,” said student coordina tor Jim O’Neill of the addition of women’s lacrosse to the varsity roster. “I just hope it paves the way for a future varsity program for the men.” Men’s lacrosse would bring an entirely different game to the table. Contact is al lowed and sticks feature a pocket to help cradle the ball during contact. With contact, players patrolling different zones and on the-fly substitutions, men’s lacrosse is simi lar, in ways, to ice hockey. The Oregon men play in the Pacific North west Collegiate Lacrosse League, which is a member of the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association. With more than 170 teams, varsity and club, the USILA provides a high level of competition. “(The USILA) is really well organized,” jun ior attack Jon Opet said. “Kids can play and still focus on academics.” With lacrosse being a mysterious sport to many on the West Coast, Opet said college coaches from the East Coast — where lacrosse is a monster sport — choose not to recruit out west. He said the USILA gives those players a chance to show their skills. “(The USILA) is great athletes and great Jeremy Forrest Emerald Goalkeeper Nate Cordova (right) tries to stop Jon Opefs behind-the-head shot at the turf field Monday. lacrosse players,” Opet said. “It’s taken pretty seriously.” The Ducks are off to a 5-2 start this season, including a win over No. 19 Gal Poly on Fri day. Oregon’s 3-1 conference record is good for third place, a game behind Simon Fraser and Pacific Lutheran. “(Simon Fraser) has been kicking ass in our league for about six years,” Opet said. “They are the standard of lacrosse in the Northwest.” Opet, who had two assists against Gal Poly, is considered a team leader. “Jonny’s a real good player,” O’Neill said. “A lot of the time he’s our go-to guy. He has a really good idea of how the game works.” Along with Opet, who is tied for third on the team in scoring, the Ducks feature Turn to Lacrosse, page 12 Danielle Hickey Emerald Will Conroy and the Huskies need to sweep this weekend to assure a spot in the Pac-10 Tournament, but a split could get them in. WSU deals Washington blow to Pac-10 chances Marcus Moore comes back from injury to bury the Huskies and complicate the Pac-10 picture before the conference tourney Men’s Pac-10 notes Peter Hockaday Sports Editor Talk about drama. The bottom of the Pacific-10 Conference standings is a group of high schoolers. They just keep stabbing each other in the back. That’s what happened this weekend, as Washington State destroyed Washing ton in a key game for the Huskies. Cougar star Marcus Moore, supposedly out for the season after ankle surgery Jan. 24, came back and scored a game high 23 points in Washington State’s 98 76 win in Pullman. Washington State’s coaches learned Moore was available to play on Friday night. Moore was listed as “injured” in the game’s program, and his return caught everyone in the arena, especial ly the Huskies, by surprise. “Give (Moore) credit,” Washington head coach Lorenzo Romar told the Seattle Times after the game. “It shows what kind of player he is, to sit out and have a dynamic game like he had.” The win leaves the Cougars to won der what could have been for this sea son. If Washington State wins both games against UCLA and USG this weekend, the Cougars will fall one game short of the Pac-10 Tournament, which takes the top eight teams from the conference. Meanwhile, the loss sends the Huskies reeling as they head into the Los Ange les weekend. And whoa nellie, the sce narios are complicated. We’ll put it in terms of cleaning the floor. If Washing ton sweeps this weekend, the Huskies are in the tournament. Get swept, and they’re out. Split, and there are eight dif ferent scenarios, all conditional on Washington State’s performance and even the result of the Stanford-Califor nia game (don’t ask). Four of those sce narios put Washington in the tourna ment while four put UCLA in. The same mantra applies to UCLA. Sweep and get in, get swept and stay home, or split and enter into a world of mind-boggling scenarios. All of this, of course, makes for an ex citing final weekend in the normally-dull Pac-10 basement. Biggest game They call the football version of the Stanford-Cal rivalry “The Big Game.” But Saturday’s basketball version is, well, bigger. When the No. 17 Cardinal and No. 22 Golden Bears clash in Palo Alto’s Maples Pavilion on Saturday, the winner Turn to Men's, page 10