GeoffThurner Oregon Media Services Brandon Holliday takes the baton from Santiago Lorenzo Saturday in a heat of the 4x400 relay. The Ducks finished second overall. Men's continued from page 7 some endurance work,” Kent said. “I knew I needed to be patient and be smart in my training, and it would come around eventually.” Parker’s victory was also a land mark for the sprinter, and not just because of his speedy time of 10.25 seconds. Parker also beat the socks off two Washington State sprinters who taunted him and disrupted his concentration at the Pacific-10 Con ference Championships, where he finished third behind the two WSU runners. Anthony Buchanon, the Cougar who won that Pac-10 race, didn’t make the regional final, and Bennie Chatman finished third be hind Parker and California-State Northridge’s Rashad Allen. “I said the same thing after Pac 10s; I wanted to go out and just take care of business and just worry about myself,” Parker said. After Kent’s run, hurdler Brandon Holliday felt the need to complete Oregon’s quad-fecta of sprinters in the NCAA Championships. “Coach said at that point we only had three sprinters qualified,” Holli C PHOTO SPECIALS JUNE 2-8 $2.00 OFF PREMIUM PROCESSING: 24 exp. (4x6/5x7) $6.17/^8.48 36 exp. (4x6/5*7) $10.23/$12.56 FUJICOLOR UNIVERSITY OF OREGON BOOKSTORE www.uobookstore.com ) day said. “So we needed a fourth so Samie could have a roommate at NCAA’s, so I’m glad I could accom modate him.” Holliday did indeed accommo date Parker by taking fifth in the 400 hurdles final. He finished with a time, 50.79 seconds, that was almost a half-second better than his previ ous best from this season. In other hurdling action, freshman Eric Mitchum finished third in the 110 hurdles to qualify for NCAAs. Scherer’s performance in the 400 was the biggest surprise of the meet for the Ducks. Scherer, a freshman, was ranked 12th in the event head ing into the weekend, but finished fourth in 46.59 seconds, a personal best by .28 of a second. The 4x400 relay team of Scherer, Kent, Holliday and freshman Travis Anderson also pulled the upset, shooting from ninth heading into the meet to sec ond at the meet. “They were again forced to run in the slow section (like Pac-lOs) in what was ultimately a time trial by themselves — yet still advanced by running faster than almost every team in the fast section,” Smith said. In the distances, the Ducks were led by Eric Logsdon’s third-place fin ish in the 5,000 and Brett Holts’ fifth place finish in the steeplechase. On the field, Adam Kriz continued his budding hammer rivalry with Stan ford’s Nick Welihozkiy, who barely lost to Kriz at the Oregon Invitation al and Pac-10 meets. Welihozkiy got the best of Kriz and took first Satur day, and Kriz finished second so they will meet&gain at NGAAs. Also on the field, former NCAA Champion John Stiegeler, who has struggled to come back from a knee injury that kept him out last year, qualified for the NCAAs by finishing fourth at the regional meet with an eight-foot season best of 228 feet, 2 inches. Stiegeler’s fellow thrower, Adam Jenkins, heaved a personal best of222-4 but finished seventh. Jenkins waits with Woods as Ducks who might have an outside chance to make the NCAA finale. The wild-card entry is based on sea son marks, and Jenkins’ throw might just get him in. The NCAA Championships are scheduled for June 11-14 in Sacra mento, Calif. Contact the sports editor atpeterhockaday@dailyemerald.com. Hager continued from page 7 That’s 25 years of tradition. Twen ty-five great years of close finishes, many different conference champi ons, and fielding some of the best damn players college sports can’t buy. Get it? Adding any teams would erase this grand tradition that the Pac-10 holds. The conference already has an anti-expansion stance, as Oregon Athletic Director Bill Moos and Pac 10 Commissioner Tom Hansen have already been quoted by the Los An geles Times as saying they are not in favor of expansion right now. But who’s to say that doesn’t change five years from now, or even next year when the Big East or Conference USA is obliterated by other confer ences’ expansion efforts? Speculation has it that this will soon be the case, even if conference members are opposed to adding more teams. But the aforemen tioned money discussion weighs heavily in collegiate athletics, ce mented by Miami’s possible move — the ACC needs more cash. Just a case of getting too big for the britches? Maybe, but whatever the case, the Pac-10 needs to look at these conferences and remember what it has. Ten (now) is the loveliest number. Contact the sports reporter at hankhager@dailyemerald.com. 942-8730 484-1927 STUDENT SPECIAL , GOLF 9 HOLES *10 * Students Only. Must show ID. 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