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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 2003)
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We are also taking applications for other areas* Call University Housing at 346-4277 for more information, or fill out an application online at: www.housing.uoregon.edu ^ ^ | UNIVERSITY OF OREGON An EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity. Hartzell heads Oregon's efforts in season-opener Oregon opened its season in Wyoming Saturday with eight wrestlers placing in the team’s first match By Scott Archer Freelance Reporter Oregon began its 2003-04 wrestling season Saturday in the Cow boy Open in Laramie, Wyo., with eight Duck wrestlers placing in the open event. Freshman Cyle Hartzell headlined the finishes by the Oregon wrestlers. _ He finished v*%a « second in his 149-pound WRESTLING weight class - The next best perform ance on the Oregon side was by soph omore Chet McBee, who finished third in the 174-pound weight class. Sophomore Skyler Woods finished fourth in the 140-pound weight class, while his brother, redshirt freshman Scott Woods, also placed fourth in his 15 7-weight class. The Ducks remained competitive on the day despite some finishes Ore gon would like to see improved upon. Sophomore Jacob Boyles took his Boise State counterpart Clint Wolfley into double overtime before losing to Wolfley, 8-5. Boyles placed fifth in the 125 weight class. In open tournaments, much like the one Oregon competed in Saturday, it is not uncommon for teammates to go head-to-head, as junior Luke Lar win and sophomore Joey Bracamonte did in the 165-pound weight class. The elder Duck, Larwin, came out on top of his teammate 3-2, in the triple overtime match. Larwin finished the day third, while Bracamonte was fourth in the 165-pound weight class. "Today was our first competition, and it showed," head coach Chuck Kearney said. 'There are definitely some things we need to get better on. Fortunately, we also saw some really positive things. I think if we can im prove on the things we need to im prove on, we'll have a really good year." Oregon was without the services of one of its steadiest wrestlers, Jason Harless. He was out during Saturday's competition because of personal rea sons but should begin practicing with the squad early this week in anticipa tion of Oregon's next meet Saturday in Medford. The Ducks will participate in the SOC Best of the West Tournament in the southern Oregon city. Oregon will then have several weeks off before the schedule picks up the rest of the year. After Saturday's second meet in as many weeks for the Ducks, the team will wait several weeks before it heads to Corvallis in an early season Pacific-10 Conference match-up against rival Oregon State on Dec. 13. Scott Archer is a freelance sports reporter for the Emerald. HARRIERS continued from page 7 "I'm glad it's over because it was not an easy race," Sandoval said. "The plan was to get out fast and be up with the contenders and fight as long as I could. Now, I'll have another few days of nervousness as I wait and see if I make it or not." Finishing behind Sandoval was fel low senior Erin Macdonald with a time of 21:22, which earned her a 27th place finish. No. 1 Stanford easily won with 45 points. No. 15 UCLA claimed second place and an automatic invite to the NCAA Championships with a team score of 69. No. 12 Oregon men finished the regional fifth Saturday, leaving their chances of an NCAA Championship invite to the at-large points the team has accumulated throughout the year. No. 1 Stanford dominated the re gional, while No. 15 Cal Poly finished second overall. No. 27 Arizona, No. 20 Washington and No. 12 Oregon rounded out the top five team finishes. Oregon was led by juniors Eric Logsdon and Ryan Andrus, two of it's three All-American runners. Logsdon finished in 30:07 and 12th overall. Andrus finished at 30:11 for 14th. The third All-American in Oregon's line-up, senior Brett Holts, came in 34th with a finish timed at 30:30. Holts was followed by teammate J John Lucas, who placed 37th in a time of 30:35. "We would have liked to have placed a spot or two higher," Oregon men's head coach Martin Smith said. "But, we had to big a gap from our fourth to our fifth runners. Eric and Ryan ran patient races and moved up fairly well and Lucas hung in there as well. Hopefully, we'll still get a bid for nationals (today), so we can give it an other go." Scott Archer is a freelance sports reporter for the Emerald. * SPORTS BRIEF Bellotti files for divorce Oregon football head coach Mike Bellotti and his wife, Colleen, filed for divorce Thursday in Lane County Court. "It is understood that the competi tive environment of Division 1 foot ball makes for long hours and person al sacrifices," Bellotti said in a statement late Thursday. "Any occupa tion that mandates a similar invest ment of time, energy and travel has similar drawbacks. These elements can, and do, take their toll on person al relationships." The two have been married for 25 . years. They have three children: 18 year-old Luke, a non-scholarship player with the Ducks; Keri, 17, and Sean, 9. In the statement, Bellotti said he would honor his commitment to the Oregon program. "We will both continue to reside in the Eugene community and share joint legal custody of our three chil dren," he said. "I am totally dedicated to honoring my commitment to the University of Oregon, my current players as well as the student athletes I am now recruiting." — Hank Hager Every Thursday only in the Oregon Daily Emerald SMASH SMOOTHIES • WRAPS • SOUPS • SALADS