Sports Editor Peter Hockaday peterhockaday@dailyemerald.com Friday, June 6,2003 Oregon Daily Emerald Sports Best bet NBA Finals: New Jersey at San Antonio, Game 2 5:30 p.m., ABC Ridnour readies for Chicago draft ramp Luke Ridnour's participation at the NBA pre-draft camp Saturday may not hurt much, but it could help him Hank Hager Sports Reporter The biggest decision Luke Rid nour has ever had to make in his basketball career has already passed. Now it’s time for the former Ore gon guard to put his skills to the test at the NBA’s pre-draft camp in r Chicago. Ridnour, along with a whole host of prospects for June’s draft, will start the physical portion of the camp Saturday, even though it opened Tuesday. In essence, said ESPN.com’s Andy Katz, the tryouts in Chicago could most benefit players who are consid ered second-round material. “The play of those invited to Chicago will affect at least the late, if not second half, of the first round on June 26,” he wrote earlier this week. “And that is why the atmosphere Tuesday through Friday will be in tense, and at times anxious, for the 65 players who know every high profile NBA executive is deciding whether they are worthy of a guar anteed contract.” From Saturday to Monday, Rid nour — along with LeBron James, Kirk Hinrich, and a number of po tential lottery picks — will be evalu ated on the NBA’s physical-only por tion of the camp. This same group was also invited by the NBA to be evaluated by teams off the court. For Ridnour, where he goes in the draft will most likely not be influ enced by the Chicago workouts. Be cause most points guards attending the week-long session are below him in draft predictions, his first-round status should not change. However, his exact status may be in question. Chad Ford, who writes an NBA draft insider column for ESPN, has Ridnour going in the lot tery, and at the very least, as a mid first round selection. He also writes that Milwaukee, expected to lose point guard Gary Payton in the off season, has been working out a num ber of collegiate point guards. The Bucks draft eighth, although NBADraft.net has the team select ing Central Michigan center Chris Kaman. That leaves Ridnour to be selected by Boston with the 16th overall pick, even though he at one point was projected to go 10th to Washington. Confused? Well, until his name is posted on the board, Ridnour could Turn to Ridnour, page 9A END Of THE Heinonen Tom Heinonen retires after almost 30 years and leaves Oregon as one of its greatest coaches Track and field Jesse Thomas Sports Reporter On the back comer of the window sill in Tom Heinonen’s of fice is a green and yellow card that reads, in glitter, “Who’s the BEST coach around, TOM.” Picture frames line the walls with pictures of past and pres ent stars he has coached. Annette Peters, former Olympian and American record hold er at 5,000 meters is shown with a large bouquet of flowers and her son at her side. Kathy Hayes has her special spot on the wall as Oregon’s first woman to win an NCAA Championship. All are a representation of milestones that Heinonen has seen come and go with the Oregon women’s track and field program since 1977. After 27 years as head coach, Heinonen will soon reach his final milestone: retirement. “Yeah, it’s time,” Heinonen said. “I’ve had eight or 10 months to get ready for this, and we’re getting down to where each time I do somethingfor the last time, it’s something that’s pretty important.” The men’s and women’s track and field teams will merge into one program at the conclusion of the 2003 season. “It’s a logical step, virtually everybody in the country has done it,” Heinonen said. “It makes sense to simplify things, it makes sense to have six coaches using their expertise across both gen ders rather than having two people who are really good hurdle coaches or two people who are really good long jump coaches. ” Heinonen leaves Oregon without regret, as he has thought about retirement for five years. “He’s comfortable with the fact that it’s his time to go,” as sistant coach Mark Stream said. “I think, in a sense, he’s go Adam Amato Emerald Tom Heinonen has spent almost 30 years coaching at Oregon and he won't stop now; he's slated to coach UO Club Running next year. ing to be able to leave it behind, but he will never leave track and field behind.” The 57-year-old has done it all as a coach. He has led his teams for nearly three decades and won every award and honor there is. As the women’s cross country head coach and in track and field, Heinonen’s distance crews have accounted for 86 All-American honors, 33 Pacific-10 Conference titles and seven NCAA crowns. “At some point or another, we won about everything you can win,” Heinonen said. “At the same time we haven’t been very good lately, and that’s been hard, but we try really hard.” On the track this season, no runners advanced to next week’s NCAA Championships. Heinonen’s harrier squad finished fifth in the conference in 2002-03 after taking eighth the year before. But despite limited success recently, Heinonen has had a personal impact on his athletes of today. Freshman Nicole Feest recently finished her first track sea son as a Duck and was attracted to Oregon because of the two time Pac-10 Track and Field Coach of the Year. “That was the biggest, if not generally, the reason why I came here,” Feest said of Heinonen’s stature. “I knew that coming here to walk on, Tom would take me to the level I needed to be at. “I had great confidence in him, he’s very successful, and when I think Tom Heinonen, that’s women’s track and field right there.” Feest improved from a 10 minute 59 second personal best in the 3,200 meters as a prep to running 16:57.94 in the 5,000 meters on the track. So what makes Heinonen a good coach? Turn to Heinonen, page 12A Santiago Lorenzo (88) takes a baton at a meet earlier this year. Lorenzo is ranked third in the nation heading into NCAAs and says he'll need a personal best next week to take the national title. Emerald Lorenzo shoots for NCAAs The senior decathlete says he’ll need to score 8,100 points to win his second NCAA title Men’s track and field Peter Hockaday Sports Editor In between the first day and the second, that’s when Santiago Lorenzo wins a decathlon. Well, not completely. He wins a decathlon by running faster, jumping higher and throwing longer than his competition. But in the 10-event, two-day decathlon, his best events are mostly on the second day. “Being able to be behind and come back the sec ond day, it takes a lot of brain,” Lorenzo said. And LQrgnzo has brain coming out his .ears... but we’ll get to that. Without further ado, we pres ent the final events in the 10-item, two-day story of Santiago Lorenzo. Event 6: Killer quad After winning the 2001 NCAA decathlon title, Lorenzo was the key component in a 2002 Duck squad that was shooting for a Pacific-10 Confer ence title. With Lorenzo’s virtually-guaranteed 10 points at nationals, the Ducks looked like they could again make a top-10 finish at the national meet like they did in 2001. But then Lorenzo injured a quadricep muscle in February. He tweaked it again several weeks later. Then John Stiegeler, the Ducks’ other national champion in 2001, went down with a knee injury. Tu rn to Lorenzo, page 9A