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The name means a GREAT DEAL! 2020 Franklin Blvd., Eugene • 465-3588 • Open Mon-Fri 7:30-5:30 Specials Available All You Dinner Can Eat 5pm 10 Texas butter 'nbread i, honey 95—served with cor Sunday: BBQ P°* Ul beans and Cole slaw h°7buna -Oregon Daily Emerald GAME DAY Friday, September 5, 2003 Sports Editor: Hank Hager Adam Amato Emerald Linebacker Kevin Mitchell recorded two unassisted tackles and five assisted tackles against the Bulldogs in Oregon’s opening win. Ngata-less Ducks welcome Wolf Pack in home opener Nevada invades Autzen Stadium for Oregon’s second game of season By Hank Hager Sports Editor The 42-34 win over Mississippi State last week was a case of Oregon's best and worst. The good: A 28-0 lead after one quarter and more than 500 yards of offense. The team's two quarterbacks — sophomore Kellen Clemens and senior Jason Fife — combined to pass for more than 300 yards. And to top it off, the Oregon running game barely missed 200 yards rushing. The bad: The Bulldogs came with in eight points of tying the game in the waning moments of the contest, and Mississippi State had more than 400 yards of total offense. "We made some plays and the of fense put some points on the board," seniorlinebacker Kevin Mitchell said. "On defense we had a lot of three and-outs, but there were times where we had them third-and-10, third-and 15. We ended up blowing a 28-point lead. If you want to be successful, you can't do that." Lessons have been learned: The Ducks now square off Saturday at 12:30 p.m. against Nevada (1-0) in the first game of the season at Autzen Stadium. While the Ducks are sitting at 1-0 this season, a symbolic 1-1 sits in their minds. Sophomore Haloti Ngata will miss at least the first month of the sea son after suffering damage to his an terior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments in last week's game. And the 345-pound defensive line man will be sorely missed. "We've talked about it all along where somebody gets hurt, we'd like to look at it as an opportunity instead of a loss," head coach Mike Bellotti said. "For us, Haloti obviously is a big part of our plan and I feel very badly for him." Senior Junior Siavii and junior Rob by Valenzuela are now expected to step into Ngata's shoes. 'They're all solid defensive linemen," junior Igor Olshansky said. "Losing Haloti kills our depth at defensive line, but Robby and Junior are more than ca pable of picking up the slack." Olshansky, who played defensive tackle last season, opened the Missis sippi State game at defensive end. However, by the second half, he had moved back to tackle. Olshansky said he expects Nevada to have the same type of game plan that the Bulldogs brought to the table With the Wolf Pack throwing into the fire an inexperienced sophomore quarterback, Jeff Rowe the Nevada running game is expected to take full opportunity of Oregon's depleted line That means Chance Kretschmer, who ran for 170 yards in the Wolf Pack's 24-23 victory over Southern Utah to start the season, will get a large portion of the team's carries. He had 26 last week. "Basically, we've got to do our own jobs within the defense and as long as everyone does their own job, we should be okay," Mitchell said. Turn to PREVIEW, page 9 Duck comers could leam well from Bauman's Oregon days Let's take a look back into the Ore gon time capsule. Rashad Bauman, Oregon corner back, steps in front of a Jonathan Smith pass, cementing the Ducks' vic tory in the Civil War in December 2001. It ends Oregon's regular season at 10-1, giving the Ducks a shot at Colorado in the Fiesta Bowl. Why, you ask, would that play stick out any more than a Joey Harrington i touchdown pass or a Maurice Morris run that season? The answer, of course, being Bau man himself. The 5-foot-9 corner back, who now plays for Washington in the NFL, was everything Oregon needed and wanted in his five years in Eugene. He left last season, and for the first time in a long time the Ducks had Hank Hager Behind the dish question marks in their defensive backfield. Those question marks swelled as the season wore on and Steven Moore, Aaron Gipson and company, couldn't cut the mustard. Knowing that, head coach Mike Bellotti recruited junior college and high school players — Rodney Woods and Ryan Gilliam, respectively — who bring to the table credentials and more question marks alike. Woods, of course, came close to never stepping foot on the Oregon campus until a felony charge was re duced to a misdemeanor. Gilliam is a true freshman — question mark No. 1. Secondly, he stands only 5-foot-9, very short for a West Coast comerback. Bauman was able to overcome that, but it has yet to be seen how Gilliam will do against the Pacific-10 Conference's bigger receivers. The Ducks will need one of these two — or someone else — to be the next Bauman. They need the brash, aggressive attitude that Bauman brought to the field. Turn to HAGER, page 5