• Arcade • Novelties • Games New Releases weekly VHS&DVD 5-day Rentals Over 3,000 DVDS ADA accessible ^ avaiiable HE & SHE I HE & SHE II ALBANY 290 River Rd., Eugene 720 Garfield, Eugene 1-5 EXIT 233, 3404 Spicer Dr. 688-5411 345-2873 541-812-2522 1 You define the family ... we provide the food... I Join us for mediterranean cocktails! Mediterranean Rustica Call for reservations 2435 Hilyard ► 684-8400 ► www.iraila.com ■sJmslMzJi srerurni lu lu dj m m ijrn/ ^ oi^f^rurnrufj LjgjgjBjaiEil Feed Your Mind (r Fill Your Belly ...without emptying your wallet! "Bowls, Burritos, & Beyond” Fresh, home-made whole foods with lots of veggie S vegan options ...mixed with goofy artwork, snappy tunes £ an oxygen-based atmosphere Organic Juice S Smoothie Bar Scrumptious Home-made Vegan Baked Goods Micro-brews on tap 760 Biair Blvd (e 8th Ave $ Monroe, just west of downtown) Open Mon-Sat 11-1 Opm; Sun 11-9pm 868-0668 ■ Men's basketball Erik R. Bishoff | Photographer Superstar recruit Malik Hairston averaged 13.1 points and 5.0 rebounds per game in his debut season in Eugene. The freshman from Detroit, Mich., earned a spot on the Pac-10 All-Freshman Team. Inexperience drives Ducks to season of underachievement Oregon started the season with high aspirations, but couldn't meet expectations BY JON ROETMAN SENIOR SPORTS REPORTER Hype. With it comes the potential for glo ry. Consequently, the possibility of dis appointment lurks in the background. The 2004-05 version of the Oregon men’s basketball team received am ple attention before it ever stepped foot on McArthur Court. The Ducks were ready to unveil their best re cruiting class in school history. Aaron Brooks was supposed to make a Luke Ridnour-esque transition from his freshman year to his sophomore campaign as the team’s point guard, and Ian Crosswhite was going to be the glue holding everything together as a dominant low-post scorer. After Oregon defeated Southern California in its Pacific-10 Conference opener Dec. 31, the hype seemed jus tified as the Ducks started the season with a 9-1 record. The next two months proved otherwise, however, as competition stiffened and Oregon (14-13 overall, 6-12 Pac-10) dropped 12 of its last 17 games. Each member of the four-man, all star recruiting class hit the wall at some point. Brooks never quite matured the way head coach Ernie Kent had hoped, and Crosswhite was dismissed from the team for an unspecified violation of Athletics Department policy, after 19 games worth of underachievement. Things got so bad down the stretch for Oregon that it failed to qualify for the Pac-10 Tournament. The Ducks finished in a tie for the eighth and fi nal spot with California, but lost in a tiebreaker with the Golden Bears. Road losses to Cal and Oregon State and home losses to Washington and Stanford were particularly painful as Oregon let victory slip away in a cloud of inexperience. Oregon’s season can be viewed as a disappointment or a building block for a bright future. Impressive young talent It’s easy to see why so many ex pected so much from a team with five frp^hjnen, ^qphpp\ofes^ three ( Danielle Hickey | Photo editor Oregon head coach Ernie Kent led an inexperienced Duck team this season and suffered his first losing season in Pac-10 play in four seasons. juniors and no seniors on its presea son roster. The recruiting class of swingman Malik Hairston, guards Bryce Taylor and Chamberlain Oguchi and forward Maarty Leunen was a talented group expected to play like seasoned veterans. Most of the Ducks’ preseason hype was a direct result of landing Hairston. Rated the No. 7 prep recruit in the country by Rivals, the 6-foot-6 Detroit, Mich., native was considered the Sqhppl’ s biggest ,recr\ii( §ince the days of Ron Lee and Greg Ballard. Hairston didn’t wait long to solidify himself as a legitimate offensive threat, scoring 30 points in just 19 minutes of play during Oregon’s exhibition opener against Trinity Western on Nov. 7. That would be his biggest perform ance of the year, however, as Hairston struggled to find his place in the offense at times. Hairston ended the season as the REVIEW, pagq 5B