Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 11, 2005, Page 6, Image 6

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Volleyball: Swoboda's 24 digs impress
Continued from page 5
0-6 conference) took an early 9-4 lead
with four kills by Mira Djuric and one
from Jaclyn Jones. UCLA (9-5, 2-3)
responded with a 8-2 run to take a
12-11 lead that it wouldn’t relinquish.
Game three was much like game
one, with UCLA running off a 5-1
start and Oregon tying the game at 13
before UCLA took the lead for good
and ended the game 30-24.
UCLA received a large boost from
the return of junior outside hitter Col
by Lyman, who missed her previous
five matches with a bone bruise in
her left knee. Lyman totaled 13 digs
and four aces. Nana Meriwether had
nine kills and had helped from Kaitlin
Sather and Nancy Barba, who each
had eight kills.
Djuric led Oregon with 11 kills and
Jones had six.
Less than 24 hours later, Oregon
played No. 17 USC (7-6, 3-2) and
again had a difficult start, as it com
mitted 21 hitting errors in the first two
games and hit 0.000 over that span.
Oregon lost the first two games, 30
20 and 30-19, improved in the third
game, losing 30-23 and upped its hit
ting percentage to 0.159.
Senior Kelly Russell had a team
high 11 kills, Djuric had 10 and Bitter
had nine and an efficient 0.316 hit
ting percentage.
“She hit ... high above the net,”
Moore said of Bitter. “We keep trying
to tell her that she’s got to make it so
that other people don’t get to play
with her.”
Freshman libero Katie Swoboda
had her second-highest dig total of
the season with 24.
Swoboda’s success is part of what
Oregon needs to be win in confer
ence play, Moore said. Her success
was more impressive, he said, con
sidering she was facing USC’s Debora
Seilhamer, who has played with the
Puerto Rico’s National Team.
Seilhamer had 19 digs for USC.
Bibiana Candelas, a one-time Pac-10
Player of the Week, had 11 kills.
“She played unbelievably well,”
Moore said of Swoboda. “We need to
win some little battles before we wor
ry about winning all the big battles.”
Swoboda is No. 4 in the Pac-10
Conference, averaging 4.58 digs per
game, only trailing Arizona State’s
Sydney Donahue, Seilhamer and
Washington State’s Jalen Pendon.
“She is really talented,” Bitter said.
“The sky is the limit with her, there’s
no telling what she’s going to be able
to do.”
Djuric continues to lead the confer
ence in service aces at 0.66 per game.
She had four against UCLA and two
against USC. Her powerful kills have
her fourth in kills per game at 4.34.
Setter Heather Madison is 10th in
assists per game with 6.73.
jdransfeldt@dailyememld. com
Soccer: Abrahamson, Garbin each score
Continued from page 5
for the Sun Devils in the 50th and
56th minutes, respectively, giving
them a comfortable 2-0 lead. Their
front line struck again in the 61st
minute as Elizabeth Bogus tallied
her ninth goal of the season, driving
a shot past Chatfield into the top
right corner of the Ducks’ net. Bo
gus’ goal was the last scored in the
game, ending the toughest 12 min
utes of Oregon’s season thus far.
The Duck offense could not get
past goalkeeper Kim Bingham of
Arizona State, who held Oregon to
just its second scoreless game of the
season. The junior from Pleasanton,
Calif., grabbed three saves, high
lighting her second shutout this
year. Not even Oregon’s leading
goal scorer Nicole Garbin had an
answer for the Sun Devils. The sen
ior forward has been an offensive
juggernaut this season, but was
held to just two shots.
The Ducks have been hindered by
injuries all season, two of which side
lined starters Andrea Valadez and
Cristan Higa on Sunday. The reliable
tandem were not in Erickson’s lineup
because both were injured Friday
against the Wildcats. Erickson turned
to her bench for support, calling upon
freshman Taylor Callan and junior Sab
rina DeMonte to play. DeMonte made
the most of her outing, managing one
shot on goal. Erickson was pleased
with Callan, who started in place
of Higa.
“Taylor had a good game stepping
in and starting for us at the last
minute,” Erickson said.
Oregon may have lost to No. 23
Arizona two days prior, but the
Ducks’ offense did not go quietly.
Garbin and fellow senior Katie
Abrahamson scored against the de
fending Pac-10 champions, who
walked away the victor thanks to
senior Mallory Miller, who recorded
her second hat trick of the season.
The game was hard-fought and
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played physically by both squads,
leading to 31 fouls called. Joining
Higa and Valadez in the trainer’s of
fice after the game was Chatfield,
who was treated after colliding with
Kelly Nelson of the Wildcats during
the game.
Arizona head coach Bill Tobias
was glad to get a win out of the
goal-heavy game, which featured a
combined 35 shots.
“This is good lesson for our team
and especially our young players,”
Tobias said. “Pac-10 play is very
physical. We have to be prepared
for that. No one is going to back
down from anyone. ”
The Ducks look to right their ship
this weekend as the conference’s
Los Angeles schools come to Pape
Field. On Friday, Oregon faces No. 4
UCLA (11-1-0, 1-0-0) at 5 p.m. and
then plays USC (6-4-1, 0-1-0) Sun
day at noon.
sadams@dailyemerald.com
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