■ Duck cross country Men third, women seventh in Pac-10 tourney Oregon seniors shine, but Stanford dominates both fields in the Pqc-10 Conference Championships BY BEAU EASTES FREELANCE SPORTS REPORTER In the Pacific-10 Conference Championships, Oregon's three sen iors — Ryan Andrus, Eric Logsdon and Laura Harmon — made their final run at a conference r championship a memorable one. Harmon, who battled a minor hamstring injury earlier in the week, finished fourth overall in the 6K race (20 minutes, 56 seconds) at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, 15 positions higher than her CHINA BLUE Restaurant 879 E. 13th 343-2832 Lunch Special $495 This week: Manderian Chicken with egg flower soup, steamed rice and lemon iced tea. Try our dinners too! vegetarian options M-F: Uam-9:30pm • Sat: 4pm- 9:30pm Sun: 12-9:30 pm 020645 Enjoy Look for Duck Bucks™ in every Tuesday’s Oregon Daily Emerald. previous best showing at the league finals (19th, 2002). “(My hamstring) felt pretty good today, and I’m looking forward to regionals,” Harmon said. “Each race 1 get more and more confident and closer to my goal of getting to nationals.” Harmon’s top-six finish earned her All-Pac-10 First Team cross country honors for the first time. In the following race, Andrus and Logsdon finished eighth (24:39) and 12th (24:44), respectively, in the 8K men’s championship, lead ing the Duck harriers to a third place finish. Their placing in the top-12 garnered both athletes Pac 10 Second Team honors for the sec ond year in a row. “We went through the first mile in 4:42 and were about 20th, then started to gradually move up and were about 12th or 13th with a mile to go,” Andrus said. “Afterwards, I felt pretty good and was happy how it turned out.” Sophomore’s Patrick Werhane and Kyle Alcorn both finished strong for the Ducks, finishing 22nd (25:09) and 25th (25:15), respec tively. Their outings, along with freshman Chris Winter’s 39th place finish (25:41), contributed to the Duck men’s 105-point third-place finish. Two-time defending national champion Stanford won the meet with 37 points, followed by ninth-ranked Arizona State with 64 points. “I’m proud of how they ran today,” head coach Martin Smith said. Smith said the race was the best of the season for the young Duck squad. “This was a tough course and a tough field,” Smith said about the meet, which consisted of four other top-40 teams. "The guys showed patience and determination, espe cially in the critical last one to two miles, where every place is so important.” Logsdon agreed with his coach. “The team ran really well,” Logsdon said. “This conference is so deep that it is always going to be a good field. ” As a team, the women finished seventh (182 points) without two of coach Marnie Mason’s top five run ners. Freshman Katie Leary and Heather Fitz-Gustafson were side lined due to injury, leaving the women’s squad lacking the depth it usually enjoys. Junior Mandi Fitz Gustafson, competing in her first season since 2002, placed 37th (22:17) for the Ducks, her strongest finish of the season. Following Har mon and Fitz-Gustafson were fresh man Sarah Pearson (47th, 22:40), junior Haripurkh Khalsa (56th, 22:46) and freshman Kasey Har wood (72nd, 23:24). Mason said she was disappointed about not finishing in the top half of the conference, but did see several bright spots. “Laura (Harmon) ran a great race, as did Mandi (Fitz-Gustafson),” Ma son said. “Sarah (Pearson) had an other good, consistent effort, and all the freshmen are being challenged by a whole new level of competition Geoff Thurner | Oregon Media Services Oregon's Eric Logsdon and Ryan Andrus (82) helped lead the team to third place. and learning so much every race. We have a lot to look forward to as we mature and add more talent each year. ” No. 1 Stanford won the meet (30 points) with four runners in the top 10. Arizona State (second, 47 points) and Washington (third, 100 points) followed the Cardinal women. The men and women’s teams have an off-week this weekend before they head to Fresno, Calif., on Nov. 12 for the NCAA West Regional Championships. Bean Eastes is a freelance reporter for the Daily Emerald Angela Adams • White & Warren • Mitzi Ben Sherman‘Three Dots‘Angela Adams‘White & Warren • Mitzi Baker * \ Accessorize... £ B D U X 541.485.4891 2827 Oak St. • i www.boux.com • 10:30-5:30 Monday-Friday • 11-4 Saturday • Walker Bags* Ben Sherman ‘Three Dots Roetman: Both sides of ball need strength Continued from page 11A with one of its touchdowns coming late in the fourth quarter when the game was all but decided. For the second straight week, wide receiver Marcus Maxwell cost quarterback Kellen Clemens an in terception by knocking a ball into the air. Midway through the second quarter, Clemens fired a strike to Maxwell in the end zone, which would have given Oregon a 17-3 lead. Instead, the ball bounced off the senior receiver and was inter cepted by Husky defensive back Dashon Goldson. 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