Sports Editor Peter Hockaday peterhockaday@dailyemerald.com Monday, March 31,2003 Oregon Daily Emerald Sports Best bet MLB: NY Yankees at Toronto 4p.mv ESPN2 One Luke ...or two? Only they know now NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Like a town sandbagging against a flood, Oregon is bracing for Luke Ridnour’s depar ture to the NBA. This is a trust fall, and we’re not going to catch Rid on his way to the hard floor of the pros. Unless he wants to be caught, in which case we’ll not only catch him, we’ll throw rose petals in his every footstep and feed him grapes until he’s full and all that. But what about the other square in “Luke Squared”? What about Luke Jackson? After Oregon’s loss to Utah in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, Jackson said, “For me personally, I just need to look at where I’m at and make a decision. I feel like I had a good year.” With sure-fire first-rounder Ridnour, we plead “please don’t go.” With Jack son, we wonder “what the what?” Luke Ridnour could not go to the NBA. Luke Jackson should not go to the NBA. We present evidence. Last year, 42 underclassmen and high schoolers declared themselves eligible for the NBA Draft. Exactly half didn’t get drafted. Most of those were from schools like Shelton State or Brown Mackie JG (yes, those are ac tual schools, and yes, their basketball players were stupid enough to think they’d be drafted). But then there’s the case of Adam Turn to Hockaday, page 14 Peter Hockaday Two minutes for crosschecking Men exit Madness early to Utah The Ducks lose in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, ending their season at the hands of the Utes Men’s basketball Adam Jude Senior Sports Reporter NASHVILLE, Tenn. — In the end, the bot tom line is all that matters. The shots didn’t fall. Oregon lost. Season over. That’s basketball, as they say. And it stings. James Davis, the Pacific-10 Conference’s top three-point shooter, missed two potential game-winning shots in the final five seconds as the Ducks were knocked out of the NCAA Tour nament in the first round with a 60-58 loss to Utah on March 21. “It’s real tough knowing how hard you worked to get here, and all of a sudden it’s over,” said Oregon point guard Luke Ridnour, who played what many speculate will be his fi nal game in an Oregon uniform. As they sat in the locker room of the Gaylord Entertainment Center, Ridnour and Davis, two of the last Ducks to leave, sat next to each oth er, staring blankly at the floor, hands shadowing their teary eyes. In the final seconds of the Midwest Region matchup between the No. 8 seed Ducks (23-10) and the ninth-seeded Utes (25-7), Ridnour, as has been the case throughout the season, was given the ball in the waning moments of the game. He drove, then kicked to an open Davis. “That first one I thought for sure was going in,” Oregon head coach Ernie Kent said of Davis’ shot. It didn’t. The rebound bounced back out to Davis, who took a deeper attempt with two Utes running at him. It clanked off the rim, too, and the horn sounded immediately after. “I just didn’t hit the shots,” Davis said. “We gave ourselves a good opportunity to win, the shots just didn’t fall. “It breaks my heart, man, especially the way we lost. I can’t explain it.” Ridnour couldn’t explain it either. The Pacific 10 Conference Player of the Year didn’t score his first field goal until the 13:08 mark of the second half; he finished with 13 points on 3-of-13 shoot ing — no jump shots — with five assists, five re bounds and five turnovers in 39 minutes. “(Utah) did a good job of making him go to his left, but he was missing shots he normally hits,” Kent said. “I would say half of (Ridnour’s struggles) was their defense, and half was him out a rhythm a little.” Jt David Stephenson Lexington Herald-Leader (KRT) Robert Johnson (top) and the Ducks couldn't handle the smothering defense of Tim Drisdom and Utah. Johnson, a senior, scored nine points and added five rebounds in his final game in an Oregon uniform. Davis was 2-for-12 from the field. Both Rid nour and Davis took the blame for the loss, though their teammates said that’s hardly fair. As a team, Oregon shot 34.5 percent (19-of-55); the Utes were even worse at 29.5 percent (18-of-61). “You can’t fault one person,” said junior for ward Luke Jackson, who paced the Ducks with 14 points. “This is a team loss.” Even without Britton Johnsen, their best player who was ruled out of the tournament because of mononucleosis, the Utes built a 51-42 lead with 9:28 left. But three Utes fouled out in the final 10 minutes, and the Ducks went on a 12-2 run to take a one-point lead after a pair of Ridnour free throws with 5:41 remaining. With the game tied 58-58, Utah opted to hold the ball with 46 seconds left. With three ticks left on the shot clock (14 seconds on the game clock) Utah’s Nick Jacobson missed a three pointer, but was fouled by Ridnour on the shot. Turn to Men's, page 14 Mark McCambridge Emerald Kristen O'Neill and Was ungton fell to UWGB in the first round. Four teams shine in Eugene’s segment of women’s tourney LSU comes away unscathed at the McArthur Court sub regional to advance to the third round of the NCAA Tournament Women’s basketball Hank Hager Sports Reporter The LSU women’s basketball team came away from the Eugene sub-region al to advance to the third round of the NCAA Tournament. But not before the Lady Tigers came ex cruciatingly close to being upset by eighth-seeded Wisconsin-Green Bay. LSU won the second-round game, held at McArthur Court on Monday, 80-69, but led by as little as five with under three minutes left to play. “We were very close to shocking the NCAA world, very close,” UWGB head coach Kevin Borseth said. “This year, I knew the players we had were winners. They just don’t give up.” LSU, the top seed in the West region and ranked third in the nation, was led of fensively by Doneeka Hodges, who had 20 points on the strength of 4-of-6 shooting from beyond the three-point line. As a team, the Lady Tigers shot an astounding 63.3 percent from the field. All of that after starting point guard Temeka Johnson left the game with just less than 13 minutes left, after receiving an errant elbow from UWGB center Chandra Johnson. “Any time you lose a player of that cal iber, someone else has to step up,” Hodges said. “We didn’t really have to say anything; we just knew we had to keep playing.” Down 71-62 with three minutes left, UWGB’s Johnson pulled the Phoenix clos er with a tip-in. She was fouled on the play by Seimone Augustus, and sank her only free throw to pinch the score to five. The Phoenix got within six, 73-67, min utes later, but Hodges hit a three with 57 seconds left, then proceeded to sink four straight free throws to ice the game. Johnson had a momentous game for the Phoenix in her final outing for UWGB. She scored a career-high 29 points and grabbed five rebounds. “It was really fun to see Chandra come full-circle and end her career with a great tourney against some real good teams.” With the win, LSU advanced to the third round against Louisiana Tech, played Sun day at Maples Pavilion in Stanford, Calif. No. 8 UWGB 78, No. 9 Washington 65 The Phoenix started the tournament in style, defeating the only Pacific-10 Confer ence representative in the Eugene bracket. Tiffany Mor led UWGB with 15 points, but as a team, the Phoenix were balanced Turn to Women's, page 14