A6 The BulleTin • Wednesday, June 9, 2021 ON THE AIR SCOREBOARD WEDNESDAY BASEBALL MLB, San Francisco at Texas MLB, regional coverage MLB, Seattle at Detroit MLB, Kansas City at L.A. Angels TENNIS French Open, men’s quarterfinal SOCCER Copa do Brasil, CR Vasco da Gama vs. Boavista International friendly, U.S. vs. Costa Rica Copa do Brasil, Atletico Goianiense vs. Corinthians SOFTBALL Women’s College World Series, Championship, Game 2, Oklahoma vs. Florida St. HOCKEY NHL playoffs, Boston at N.Y. Islanders BASKETBALL WNBA, Indiana at Chicago NBA playoffs, Denver at Phoenix GOLF European Tour, Scandinavian Mixed Hosted by Henrik & Annika Time 11 a.m. 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6:30 p.m. TV MLB MLB Root ESPN 11 a.m. Tennis 12:20 p.m. 4 p.m. 5:20 p.m. FS2 ESPN2 FS2 4 p.m. ESPN 4:30 p.m. NBCSN 5 p.m. 6:30 p.m. CBSSN TNT 4 a.m. (Thu) Golf 6 a.m. 8 a.m. Tennis NBCSN 9 a.m. noon 3 p.m. Golf Golf Golf 10 a.m. 10 a.m. 4 p.m. MLB Root MLB 11 a.m. 3:30 p.m. NBCSN ESPN2 4 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 7 p.m. CBSSN ESPN ESPN 6 p.m. NBCSN Listings are the most accurate available. SPORTS BRIEFING Prep sports MLB WEDNESDAY Boys basketball: Bend at Madras, 7 p.m.; sisters at newport, 6 p.m.; Trinity lutheran at Rogue Valley ad- ventist, 5 p.m.; north lake at Central Christian, 7 p.m. Girls basketball: newport at sisters, 6 p.m.; Trinity lutheran at Rogue Valley adventist, 3:30 p.m.; north lake at Central Christian, 5:30 p.m. Wrestling: Redmond duals, 6 p.m. THURSDAY Boys basketball: summit at Mountain View, 7 p.m.; Crook County at Redmond, 7 p.m.; Corbett at Madras, 7 p.m.; la Pine at Creswell, 7:30 p.m.; Culver at salem academy, 6:30 p.m. Girls basketball: Mountain View at summit, 7 p.m.; Redmond at Crook County, 7 p.m.; Madras at Corbett, 6 p.m.; la Pine at Creswell, 6 p.m.; Culver at salem acad- emy, 5 p.m. Wrestling: summit at Bend, 6 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Tampa Bay 39 23 .629 — Boston 37 24 .607 1½ Toronto 30 27 .526 6½ new york 31 29 .517 7 Baltimore 22 38 .367 16 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 36 23 .610 — Cleveland 31 26 .544 4 Kansas City 29 29 .500 6½ detroit 25 35 .417 11½ Minnesota 24 35 .407 12 West Division W L Pct GB Oakland 35 26 .574 — houston 34 26 .567 ½ seattle 30 32 .484 5½ los angeles 28 32 .467 6½ Texas 23 38 .377 12 Monday’s Late Game l.a. angels 8, Kansas City 3 Tuesday’s Games Baltimore 10, n.y. Mets 3 detroit 5, seattle 3 Tampa Bay 3, Washington 1 houston 7, Boston 1 san Francisco at Texas, late n.y. yankees at Minnesota, late Toronto at Chicago White sox, late Cleveland at st. louis, late Kansas City at l.a. angels, late arizona at Oakland, late Wednesday’s Games san Francisco (long 0-0) at Texas (Gibson 4-0), 11:05 a.m. arizona (Peacock 2-2) at Oakland (Manaea 4-2), 12:37 p.m. n.y. Mets (Walker 4-2) at Baltimore (harvey 3-6), 4:05 p.m. houston (Odorizzi 0-3) at Boston (eovaldi 7-2), 4:10 p.m. seattle (Flexen 5-3) at detroit (Mize 3-4), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Corbin 3-5) at Tampa Bay (McClanahan 2-1), 4:10 p.m. n.y. yankees (Cole 6-3) at Minnesota (dobnak 1-5), 5:10 p.m. Toronto (Manoah 1-0) at Chicago White sox (lynn 7-1), 5:10 p.m. Cleveland (Mejía 1-0) at st. louis (Wainwright 3-5), 5:15 p.m. Kansas City (Keller 6-4) at l.a. angels (Canning 4-4), 6:38 p.m. Boys basketball Monday’s Late Games santiam Christian 81, la Pine 51 Trinity lutheran 57, north lake 47 Central Christian 50, Prospect Charter 36 Tuesday’s Games Mountain View at Bend, late summit at south eugene, late Pendleton at Crook County, late Redmond at The dalles, late hood River Valley at Ridgeview, late Madras at Corbett, late sweet home at sisters, late Butte Falls at Trinity lutheran, late Girls basketball Monday’s Late Games Mountain View 47, eagle Point 25 Trinity lutheran 22, north lake 21 Central Christian 40, Prospect Charter 21 Tuesday’s Games Bend at Mountain View, late summit at south eugene, late Crook County at Pendleton, late Ridgeview at hood River Valley, late The dalles at Redmond, late Corbett at Madras, late sisters at sweet home, late Wrestling Tuesday’s Results la Pine at Culver, late BASKETBALL NBA playoffs SECOND ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Monday’s Late Game Phoenix 122, denver 105, Phoenix leads series 1-0 Tuesday’s Games Phila. 118, atlanta 102, series tied 1-1 l.a. Clippers at utah, late, Game 1 Wednesday’s Games denver at Phoenix, 6:30 p.m., Phoenix leads series 1-0 BASKETBALL WNBA Nuggets’ Jokic named NBA MVP — Nikola Jokic was se- lected with the 41st draft pick when he entered the NBA seven years ago. Now, he’s No. 1. The Nuggets’ big man was revealed Tuesday as the NBA’s Most Valuable Player for 2020-21, mak- ing him by far the lowest draft pick ever to win the award. Jo- kic got 91 of the 101 first-place ballots cast. Philadelphia’s Joel Embiid was second, Golden State’s Stephen Curry was third, 2019 and 2020 MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo of Milwaukee was fourth and Phoenix’s Chris Paul was fifth. FOOTBALL Jim Fassel, coach who took Giants to Super Bowl, dies at 71 — Jim Fassel, whose bold guarantee of a playoff bid late in the 2000 season seemingly catapulted the New York Giants to a spot in the Super Bowl, has died. He was 71. Son John Fassel, special teams coordinator of the Dallas Cowboys, told the Los Angeles Times his father was taken to a Las Vegas hospital with chest pains and died while being treated Mon- day. Fassel, the 1997 NFL coach of the year, guided the Giants from 1997 to 2003, posting a 58-53-1 record. TENNIS Tsitsipas beats Medvedev, will face Zverev in French Open SF — Stefanos Tsitsipas and Alexander Zverev will meet each other for a berth in the French Open final after straight- set quarterfinal victories Tuesday. The No. 5-seeded Tsitsipas reached his fourth major semifinal — and third in a row — by upending No. 2 Daniil Medvedev 6-3, 7-6 (3), 7-5 . Zverev ousted 46th-ranked Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 6-4, 6-1, 6-1. HORSE RACING Baffert, Medina Spirit owners sue Kentucky racing officials — Trainer Bob Baffert and the owners of Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit have filed a lawsuit against Ken- tucky racing officials. They are seeking a temporary injunction they say is to prevent violation of due process rights and for cus- tody of “remnant” samples of the colt’s urine to prove that traces of the steroid betamethasone found in his system during a pos- itive drug test did not come from an injection. Medina Spirit’s Derby victory on May 1 is in jeopardy after a failed postrace drug test revealed 21 picograms of betamethasone in the horse. COLLEGE SPORTS Gonzaga promotes Chris Standiford to replace Mike Roth as AD — Gonzaga promoted Chris Standiford to di- rector of athletics on Tuesday following the announcement that Mike Roth is retiring at the end of August after 24 years of leading the Bulldogs’ sports programs. Standiford has been a member of the Gonzaga staff for 31 years and currently is the deputy director of athletics, the school said in a statement. Roth announced Monday that he would retire. TRACK AND FIELD gold standard for excellence at Arkansas during his 36 years at the school, has died. He was 82. He died Monday night, according to a family statement released by the university. A cause was not given. McDonnell’s men’s teams produced 40 NCAA championships at Arkansas. McDonnell was the na- tional coach of the year 30 times. — Bulletin wire reports MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn Tuesday night are: 9 22 39 41 54 19 x 3 Oregon Lottery results EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Connecticut 8 2 .800 new york 5 4 .556 atlanta 4 4 .500 Washington 3 5 .375 Chicago 2 7 .222 indiana 1 9 .100 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct seattle 7 2 .778 las Vegas 7 3 .700 Phoenix 5 3 .625 los angeles 4 3 .571 dallas 3 5 .375 Minnesota 3 5 .375 Tuesday’s Games Washington 85, Minnesota 81 dallas at Phoenix, late Wednesday’s Games seattle at atlanta, 4 p.m. indiana at Chicago, 5 p.m. GB — 2½ 3 4 5½ 7 GB — ½ 1½ 2 3½ 3½ NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB new york 29 24 .547 — atlanta 28 29 .491 3 Philadelphia 28 30 .483 3½ Miami 26 34 .433 6½ Washington 24 33 .421 7 Central Division W L Pct GB Milwaukee 34 26 .567 — Chicago 33 27 .550 1 st. louis 31 29 .517 3 Cincinnati 28 30 .483 5 Pittsburgh 23 36 .390 10½ West Division W L Pct GB san Francisco 37 22 .627 — san diego 37 25 .597 1½ los angeles 35 25 .583 2½ Colorado 24 37 .393 14 arizona 20 41 .328 18 Monday’s Late Game san diego 9, Chicago Cubs 4 Tuesday’s Games Miami 6, Colorado 2 l.a. dodgers 5, Pittsburgh 3 Baltimore 10, n.y. Mets 3 Tampa Bay 3, Washington 1 Milwaukee 5, Cincinnati 1 atlanta at Philadelphia, late san Francisco at Texas, late Cleveland at st. louis, late arizona at Oakland, late Chicago Cubs at san diego, late Wednesday’s Games san Francisco (long 0-0) at Texas (Gibson 4-0), 11:05 a.m. arizona (Peacock 2-2) at Oakland (Manaea 4-2), 12:37 p.m. Chicago Cubs (arrieta 5-6) at san diego (darvish 6-1), 1:10 p.m. atlanta (davidson 0-0) at Philadelphia (eflin 2-5), 4:05 p.m. l.a. dodgers (Gonsolin 0-0) at Pittsburgh (anderson 3-5), 4:05 p.m. n.y. Mets (Walker 4-2) at Baltimore (harvey 3-6), 4:05 p.m. Colorado (Gomber 4-5) at Miami (TBd), 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee (anderson 2-3) at Cincinnati (Gutierrez 1-1), 4:10 p.m. The estimated jackpot is now $56 million. As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites NCAA Division I REGIONALS In Eugene Monday’s Late Game Game 7: lsu 9, no. 14 Oregon 8, lsu advances In Stanford, Calif. Monday’s Late Game Game 7: no. 9 stanford 11, uC irvine 8, no. 9 stanford advances In Columbia, S.C. Tuesday’s Game Game 7: Virginia 4, no. 11 Old dominion 3, Virginia ad- vances SUPER REGIONALS (Best-of-3; x-if necessary) In Fayetteville, Ark. Friday: n.C. state at no. 1 arkansas, 3 p.m. Saturday: n.C. state vs. no. 1 arkansas, noon x-Sunday: n.C. state vs. no. 1 arkansas, 3 p.m. In Austin, Texas Saturday: south Fla. at no. 2 Texas, 6 p.m. Sunday: south Fla. vs. no. 2 Texas, 6 p.m. x-Monday: south Fla. vs. no. 2 Texas, 1 or 4 p.m. In Knoxville, Tenn. Saturday: lsu at no. 3 Tennessee, 4 p.m. Sunday: lsu vs. no. 3 Tennessee, 9 a.m. or noon x-Monday: lsu vs. no. 3 Tennessee, 1 or 4 p.m. In Nashville, Tenn. Friday: e. Carolina at no. 4 Vanderbilt, 9 a.m. Saturday: e. Carolina vs. no. 4 Vanderbilt, 9 a.m. x-Sunday: e. Carolina vs. no. 4 Vanderbilt, noon In Tucson, Ariz. Friday: no. 12 Mississippi at no. 5 arizona, 6 p.m. Saturday: no. 12 Mississippi vs. no. 5 arizona, 7 p.m. x-Sunday: no. 12 Mississippi vs. no. 5 arizona, 6 p.m. In Columbia, S.C. Saturday: dallas Baptist at Virginia, 9 a.m. Sunday: dallas Baptist vs. Virginia, 9 a.m. x-Monday: dallas Baptist vs. Virginia, 10 a.m. In Starkville, Miss. Saturday: no. 10 notre dame at no. 7 Mississippi st., 11 a.m. Sunday: no. 10 notre dame vs. no. 7 Mississippi st., 3 p.m. x-Monday: no. 10 notre dame vs. no. 7 Mississippi st., 4 p.m. In Lubbock, Texas Friday: no. 9 stanford at no. 8 Texas Tech, noon Saturday: no. 9 stanford vs. no. 8 Texas Tech, noon x-Sunday: no. 9 stanford vs. no. 8 Texas Tech, noon SOFTBALL Women’s College World Series In Oklahoma City (Best-of-3; x-if necessary) Championship Series Tuesday: Florida st. 8, Oklahoma 4, Fla. st. leads series 1-0 Wednesday: Oklahoma vs. Florida st., 4 p.m. x-Thursday: Florida st. vs. Oklahoma, noon HOCKEY NHL playoffs SECOND ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Tuesday’s Games Tampa Bay 2, Carolina 0, Tampa Bay wins series 4-1 Vegas at Colorado, late, series tied 2-2 Wednesday’s Games Boston at n.y. islanders, 4:30 p.m., n.y. islanders lead series 3-2 TENNIS French Open Tuesday in Paris (Seedings in parentheses) Men’s Singles Quarterfinals — alexander Zverev (6), Germany, def. alejandro davidovich Fokina, spain, 6-4, 6-1, 6-1. stefanos Tsitsipas (5), Greece, def. daniil Medvedev (2), Russia, 6-3, 7-6 (3), 7-5. Women’s Singles Quarterfinals — Tamara Zidansek, slovenia, def. Paula Badosa, spain, 7-5, 4-6, 8-6. anastasia Pavly- uchenkova (31), Russia, def. elena Rybakina (21), Ka- zakhstan, 6-7 (2), 6-2, 9-7. Track “Historic Hayward Field,” antiquated though it was, was a remarkable place of synergy between athletes and passionate fans. The alchemy produced something that became known as “Hayward Magic.” Many of the current UO athletes haven’t experienced it. UO coach Robert Johnson said some aren’t sure what to expect. “They just don’t know,” Johnson said. “I was like, ‘Hey, for you rookies that never experienced that Hayward Field magic, that’s the last thing you need to be worried about. These are some of the most knowl- edgeable fans in the world. They will do their part.’” If the LSU men falter at all, this could get interesting fast. The Ducks have heavy hitters such as mid-distance runners Cole Hocker and Cooper Teare, freshman sprinter Micah Williams and triple jumper Emmanuel Ihemeje. All are potential event winners. Williams is the reigning NCAA indoor champion in the 60 meters. Hocker won NCAA indoor titles in the mile and 3,000. Teare holds the NCAA indoor record in the mile. Both Hocker and Teare are looking up on the UO career bests list at James West, who holds the school record in the 1,500 of 3:34.07. Hocker and West are entered in this Ducks “Your backs are against the wall and you need to use your plays that you’ve prac- ticed to where you can get out of a situa- tion that is a low-percentage time to get out of it,” Oregon coach Mark Wasikowski said. “To sit back and not put those plays on would be giving somebody a tie or a win and we’re never going to give anybody anything. We’re always going to be on the aggressive. We’re going to use the plays that we have that are designed to elimi- nate runs and win games. Tonight it didn’t work out. It’s very disappointing. “We definitely and clearly saw the en- ergy of the runners and where available outs were in that scenario and we were us- ing plays to get that available out and make sure that we won the game.” Aaron Zavala and Matthews hit back-to- back one-out singles to put the tying run SOCCER MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF new england 5 1 2 17 11 Phila. 4 2 2 14 9 Orlando City 3 1 3 12 8 ny City FC 3 2 2 11 13 CF Montréal 3 3 2 11 10 Columbus 3 2 2 11 7 nashville 2 0 5 11 9 atlanta 2 1 4 10 9 new york 3 4 0 9 10 d.C. united 3 5 0 9 8 inter Miami CF 2 4 2 8 8 Toronto FC 1 4 2 5 8 Chicago 1 5 1 4 4 Cincinnati 1 4 1 4 6 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF seattle 5 0 3 18 14 sporting KC 5 2 1 16 15 la Galaxy 5 2 0 15 11 Colorado 4 2 1 13 12 houston 3 3 2 11 11 san Jose 3 5 0 9 11 Portland 3 4 0 9 9 Real sl 2 1 3 9 9 la FC 2 3 2 8 8 Vancouver 2 4 1 7 6 austin FC 2 4 1 7 5 Minnesota united 2 4 1 7 6 FC dallas 1 3 3 6 8 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday’s Game austin FC at sporting KC, noon GA 7 5 4 7 9 6 6 7 10 11 13 12 11 15 GA 3 10 11 8 12 12 11 7 9 9 8 11 11 NWSL W L T Pts GF Orlando 3 0 2 11 7 Portland 3 2 0 9 11 Washington 2 1 2 8 5 Gotham FC 2 1 1 7 2 houston 2 2 1 7 6 Chicago 2 2 1 7 4 north Carolina 1 2 1 4 6 Reign FC 1 2 1 4 2 louisville 1 2 1 4 2 Kansas City 0 3 2 2 2 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. GA 4 4 5 1 6 7 3 3 8 6 DEALS Transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball American League seaTTle MaRineRs — selected the contract of OF dillon Thomas from Tacoma (Triple-a West). designated C Jacob nottingham for assignment. Optioned RhP Kendall Graveman to Tacoma (Triple-a West) on a re- hab assignment. National League san FRanCisCO GianTs — activated 1B Brandon Belt from the 10-day il. Optioned lhP Caleb Baragar to sacra- mento (Triple-a West) on a rehab assignment. FOOTBALL National Football League aRiZOna CaRdinals — signed lB Zaven Collins. MinnesOTa ViKinGs — signed CB amari henderson. neW ORleans sainTs — signed de Payton Turner to a four-year contract. seaTTle seahaWKs — signed WR Travis Toivonen to a contract. Re-signed dB Ryan neal to a contract. TaMPa Bay BuCCaneeRs — signed QB Kyle Trask to a four-yeat contract. HOCKEY National Hockey League nhl — Fined Boston’s head coach Bruce Cassidy $25,000 for public comments critical of the officiating following the June 7 game against the new york island- ers. Fined Boston’s F nick Ritchie $5,000, the maximum allowable under the Collective Bargaining agreement, for elbowing d scott Mayfield during the June 7 game against the new york islanders. announced Colorado’s F nazem Kadri’s eight-game suspension for an illegal check to the head of st. louis d Justin Faulk has been upheld by arbitrator shyam das. SOCCER Major League Soccer PORTland TiMBeRs — signed MF George Fochive from israeli Bnei yehuda Tel aviv FC through 2022. National Women’s Soccer League nWsl — announced that san diego will be home to a nWsl expansion team, set to begin play in spring 2022 and that manager Jill ellis will serve as President, Ron Burke owner and Matt alvarez project leader for the team. week’s 1,500, which also includes the dan- gerous Yared Nuguse of Notre Dame. Hocker and Teare are penciled into the 5,000. In a meet with a 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 scor- ing system, the Ducks bring lots of fire- power. But if LSU holds to form, it’s proba- bly not enough. The Tigers are loaded in the sprints and hurdles, and have two formidable relays. Asked if his team could sweep the short stuff, LSU coach Dennis Shaver said: “That’s kind of the plan. We hope that hap- pens.” He conceded it probably wouldn’t, which is why it’s nice to have packed a margin for error for the trip. “If you win by one point, you’re the NCAA championship team,” Shaver said. “So, that’s all that matters to us.” The Oregon women come in with big- point potential that includes sprinter Kemba Nelson, 2021 NCAA indoor champ and collegiate record-holder in the 60, stee- pler Aneta Konieczek and Carmela Car- dama Baez in the 10,000. Portland-area prep fans will remember former Grant High School star Ella Dona- ghu of Stanford, who figures to contend in the 1,500 and 5,000. Whether the Ducks can score well enough to muscle into position for one of the four women’s team trophies might hinge on whether the new stadium pro- duces the same sort of “Hayward Magic” the old one did. Johnson scoffed at the question, saying the alchemy has nothing to do with the sta- dium’s appearance. “‘Hayward Magic’ at Hayward Field is something special,” the UO coach said. “No matter the building, no matter the stands, no matter the track, no matter the infield layout, no matter any of those things, the people here in Eugene make that magic. “Coming off the Bowerman Tower or the Bowerman Curve, however you seem to want to call it, those things are special. It’s going to be real exciting to see.” aboard in the ninth for Oregon and Josh Kasevich drove in one via a groundout. An infield single by Tristan Hanoian moved the tying run to third and Sam No- vitske battled in a two-strike count before flying out to right to end the comeback at- tempt for the Ducks (39-16), whose season comes to an end. The late dramatics capped what was a spectacular back-and-forth game that, un- til the eighth inning, was going more or less to plan for Oregon. The Tigers (38-23), who advance to a Super Regional at No. 3 Tennessee next weekend, took an early lead on a mam- moth two-run blast by Dugas. Oregon responded in the second with an RBI double by Novitske, who stole third and scored the tying run on a sacrifice fly by Sam Olsson, then Zavala launched a two-run homer in the third to give the Ducks a 4-2 lead. Olsson started a two-out rally in the fourth and scored on a single by Tanner Smith. Dugas led off the bottom of the inning with his second home run of the night and third in two games against UO. Drew Bi- anco singled, stole second, then advanced and scored on back-to-back wild pitches by Mosiello to make it 5-4 after four. Bianco lined a two-run home run to left-center off Ayon to give LSU a 6-5 lead after six, but Oregon responded imme- diately in the seventh as Kenyon Yovan smashed a two-run shot to give the Ducks a 6-5 lead to put in the hand of Somers, who has 11 saves on the season but none for three innings. “We knew that getting to the top of their order in the eighth inning, the game was going to be won in the eighth inning,” Wasikowski said. “We knew that. We needed to prevent them from scoring in the eighth inning and we weren’t able to do that.” Continued from A5 Continued from A5 John McDonnell, mighty Arkansas track coach, dies at 82 — John McDonnell, the track and field coach who set a Washington (Corbin 3-5) at Tampa Bay (McClanahan 2-1), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland (Mejía 1-0) at st. louis (Wainwright 3-5), 5:15 p.m. BASEBALL PREPS THURSDAY TENNIS French Open, women’s semifinals French Open, women’s semifinals GOLF Korn Ferry Tour, BMW Charity Pro-Am PGA Tour, Palmetto Championship at Congaree LPGA Tour, MEDIHEAL Championship BASEBALL MLB, Atlanta at Philadelphia MLB, Seattle at Detroit MLB, Houston at Boston TRACK AND FIELD Diamond League Series, Florence NCAA Division I Outdoor Championships BASKETBALL WNBA, Los Angeles at Washington NBA playoffs, Brooklyn at Milwaukee NBA playoffs, L.A. Clippers at Utah HOCKEY NHL playoffs, Colorado at Vegas ON DECK Timothy Healy/For The Oregonian, file Oregon’s Cooper Teare (left) and Cole Hocker look on after the men’s 1,500 meters race at the Oregon Twilight track and field meet on May 7 at Hayward Field in Eugene.