Sports Editor Peter Hockaday peterhockaday@dailyemerald.com -Oregon Daily Emerald Sports Best bet NBA Playoffs: Lakers at San Antonio, Game 2 6:30 p.mv TNT Wednesday, May 7,2003 Heinonen runs from past, future Erik Heinonen will run this weekend. Whatever. I’ll run this weekend. You’ll run this weekend. My 80-year-old aunt will run this weekend. This is Track Town, for crying out loud. Someday they’re going to hire traffic cops to direct all the runners. But Heinonen’s run at the Cardinal Qualifier is worth watching. Because the redshirt fresh man hasn’t run since 2001. Be cause back then, he was a super stud and could yet be a super-stud as a Duck. Because he’s tried this before, this comeback, and fallen flat. But this weekend is different. Maybe because his dad, legendary track coach Tom Heinonen, is once again embracing track for track as he heads for retire ment. Or because Erik’s just a little old er and a little wiser. Or because if he gets one more ticky-taek injury, they’ll devote an Erik Heinonen wing at the new Springfield hospital. Peter Hockaday Two minutes for crosschecking Erik Heinonen will run this weekend. Watch out. “I’m nervous and anxious,” Heinonen said. “I’d say I’m more nerv ous than anxious.” Back in the day, Heinonen wasn’t of ten nervous about racing because he was king of the preps. Galling him a “phe nom” would be like calling Michael Jor dan a “basketball player.” The recipe was perfect. He was from Track Town. His dad was a well-respect ed distance coach who helped build Eu gene’s running legacy. He was — still is — coat-hanger wirey. He was a self-pro claimed “track geek,” a surprisingly nec essary ingredient in becoming a distance runner. By his junior year, he was starring in cross country and track. He finished fifth that year at the national high school cross country championships, right up there with big names like Alan Webb, who went on to break the high school mile record at the Prefontaine Classic. In his last year at South Eugene, he reached the peak of his high school ca reer with a shocker at the Stanford Invi tational. He ran the 10,000-meters in 31 minutes, 26.05 seconds and led the na tion’s high schoolers in the event. He signed to come to Oregon because, well, that’s what you do when your dad coach es a school to three national titles. Then his body started breaking down like an old Chevy. “I may have been overzealous in my training because I wanted to prove that what I’d done wasn’t a fluke,” Heinonen said. “I made some sacrifices, just push ing my body, pushing the envelope and risking going too far. That’s not the best way to do things.” He suffered a strained calf. A bout of bursitis in his hip. A problem with his achilles. Every time, he came back too early from one injury, and that led to the next one. He calls himself his own worst Turn to Hockaday, page 12 Ducks anticipate NCAA berth Oregon has three conference games remaining before learning its regional destination and opponent Sunday Softball notes Mindi Rice Sports Reporter For the first time since the 2000 season, the Ducks are looking to the upcoming an nouncement of the NCAA regional brackets with anticipation. After wrapping up regular-season play with a doubleheader against Stanford, No. 18 Oregon will wait until Sunday evening to learn its re gional destination. “Knowing that they can’t put two teams from the same conference at a regional is wonderful,” head coach Kathy Arendsen said. Eight locations were selected by the NCAA Di vision I Softball Committee to host a regional tournament, with each location hosting eight teams. Only one Pacific-10 Conference school — No. 1 Arizona — was selected as a host school for regionals. The other regional hosts selected were No. 3 Texas, No. 6 Cal State Fullerton, No. 11 Nebraska, No. 14 Michigan, No. 16 Alabama, No. 25 Florida and unranked Fresno State. Host schools are not guaranteed a bid to the tournament. “I’d rather take on the Texases and Okla homas. As good as they are, I’d rather go take on those than these guys any day,” Arendsen said of the Pac-10. The Ducks won four preseason games against teams currently ranked in the top 25. They also hold an 8-10 Pac-10 record, with six of those wins against teams ranked ahead of Oregon in current polls. Games at all eight regionals are scheduled for May 15-18. The tournament will be played in a double-elimination format. The 64 teams are selected two ways. Twenty six teams receive an automatic berth from their conference as season champions. The other 38 teams are chosen by an at-large selection. This is the first time the field was expanded to 64 teams as well as the first time regional sites were announced prior to team selection. Oregon will find out its fate Sunday at 7 p.m., when first-round pairings are announced. Oregon Stale secures winning record Unranked Oregon State guaranteed itself a winning record when it upset then-No. 4 Wash ington on Friday. The 4-2 win in Seattle gave the Beavers their 31st victory of the season and only their second-ever victory at Washington. Adam Amato Emerald Lindsey Kontra and the Ducks will find out which regional site they're headed for when it's announced Sunday. Despite Friday’s victory, the Beavers remain State is also the only team in the conference eighth in the Pac-10 with an overall record of not ranked in either top-25 poll. 31-27 and a conference record of 4-14. Oregon Turn to Softball, page 13 Panova named Pac-10 Player of the Year Daria Ranova won both the indoor and outdoor individual Pac-10 Championships this season. Adam Amato Emerald Manuel Kost and Courtney Nagle are also honored as the Pac-10’s yearly awards are announced Tennis Mindi Rice Sports Reporter Three NCAA Championship-bound Ducks were given postsea son honors by Pacific-10 Conference tennis coaches Tuesday. Sophomore Daria Panova was named Pac-10 Women’s Tennis Player of the Year, while teammate and doubles partner Courtney Nagle was selected as an All-Pac-10 honorable mention. Sophomore Manuel Kost earned a spot on the men’s second team. Panova won Oregon’s first Player of the Year award for ten nis since 1988. “It’s a great honor for her and the program,” women’s head coach Nils Schyllander said. “She’s proven throughout the whole year why she’s deserving of the award.” The Moscow, Russia, native swept the Pac-10 singles titles this year, winning the indoor and outdoor championships. Turn to Tennis, page 14