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- Oregon Digital
E merald
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vol. 112, issue 20
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ZONING IN
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
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dailyemerald.com/multimedia
friday, october 1, 2010
DIVERSE LIFE BENEFITS
FOR COLLEGE ATTENDEES
news | page 3A
COFFEE: A FICKLE LOVER
opinion | page 2A
SAFET Y
First responders
Connecting Eugene seeks Lariviere’s
involvement to discuss development
Franklin bains
news reporter
Connecting Eugene, a local group working with ASUO President Amelie Rousseau,
is changing its tactics in its opposition of the
Riverfront development.
During the summer, Connecting Eugene
tried to appeal a Riverfront development permit extension with the city and the Oregon
Land Use Board of Appeals.
The permit extension granted those working on the development an additional three
years to the 20 years they had previously.
The group lost both appeals to the permit extension and withdrew based on the
LUBA’s decision, which concluded that a
23-year-old permit was not significantly different from a 20-year-old permit. Paul Cziko, a
University graduate student and member of
the group, said Connecting Eugene abandoned
its appeal because fighting administrative
systems wasn’t worth its time and money.
This year, Connecting Eugene will instead
focus its attention on making sure the plans
comply with land use laws and checking the
contract between the University and the Oregon
University System.
A big part of the group’s plan this
year will be to include University President Richard Lariviere in the discussion.
Riverfront
continued on page 4A
nick cote photographer
Eugene firefighter Carolyn McCann checks equipment in the morning at Fire Station 13, University Station.
Fire Station 13 responds to University and neighborhood calls for assistance
Mat Wolf
news reporter
Last Wednesday at 8 a.m., the garage
doors of Eugene’s Fire Station 13 flew up. A
red fire engine roared out the driveway with
its flashers blazing, and an onboard crew
prepped for action.
This was no reason for alarm, however, because after pulling out of the
driveway about five feet, the engine
slowly pulled back in and had it systems checked, and all the equipment on
board accounted for by the station’s oncoming
crew. It was only a test, a routine done every
morning by oncoming engine crews
to ensure that, in the case of a real
emergency, the engine company can
respond appropriately.
STATE
Tests and routine checks of gear and
equipment are how Fire Station 13 stays
prepared to deal with any situation to
which it may be called. From immediate
medical responses and paramedic duties
to the duties traditionally associated with
fire Station
continued on page 4A
HIGHER EDUCATION
Candidates debate for Oregon governorship Expensive
Kitzhaber and Dudley both hold
textbooks
their first televised debate in
Portland; second debate may occur
need solution
and endorsing the idea of an open primary
in Oregon.
ian geronimo
news reporter
The drums of partisanship were audible
Thursday night in Portland as gubernatorial candidates John Kitzhaber and Chris
Dudley fortified their cases to be Oregon’s
next governor.
The first and possibly only debate between the candidates found them somewhat
antagonistic toward one another in their
talking points, with Dudley trying to frame
Kitzhaber as a defender of the status quo,
and Kitzhaber attempting to portray Dudley
as a new face beholden to the interests of
the wealthy.
The two men did agree on a number of
issues, such as establishing a rainy-day fund
for the state, modifying the capital gains tax
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Dudley characterized himself as the
candidate of change and job development
through private-sector investment and the
reduction of government. Dudley summarized his main philosophical difference from
former governor Kitzhaber by referencing
the age-old private investment versus public
investment argument.
“My opponent John believes politicians
and government create jobs; I believe it’s
business owners and entrepreneurs,” Dudley said. “Our past two governors have had
more than 60 years in political experience,
and yet look where we sit.”
Kitzhaber redoubled his effort to establish himself as the candidate of the middle
class, environmental conservation and
clean energy. He made a dedicated effort to
portray Dudley’s economic stance as not unlike those that caused the federal economic
crisis of 2008.
read our blogs
Visit blogs.dailyemerald.com
for extended coverage of
campus and community news
John
kitzhaber
chris
dudley
democratic
candidate
republican
candidate
“(Dudley) is proposing an $800-million
tax cut that benefits the wealthiest of Oregonians and won’t create a single job for
the 200,000 Oregonians who are out of work
today,” Kitzhaber said. “(W)e need to create
a climate ... that keeps more Oregon dollars
being reinvested in Oregon.”
The debate was formatted in two parts,
the first of which was led by designated
questioners: The Oregonian’s Jeff Mapes and
KGW’s Laural Porter. In the second part, the
OSPIRG, state representative and
ASUO Vice President discuss prices
stefan verbano
news reporter
Oregon Student Public Interest Research
Group is reaching out to students and lawmakers about the high cost of textbooks and are
trying to fight it.
OSPIRG Board Representative Charles Denson, along with State Representative Michael
Dembrow, ASUO Vice President Maneesh
Arora and Duck Store General Manager Jim
Williams spoke Thursday on the second floor
Debate
Textbooks
continued on page 3A
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OPINION
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Editor
Tyree Harris
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541-346-5511 x321
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friday, october 1, 2010
stirring up debate and stimulating discussion on campus
The Dirt Mopper | mark costigan
Experiencing globalization first-hand is eye-opening
The safari-style truck took three
hours to trudge through the sand dunes.
We arrived at Cabo Polonio at midday, with the sun directly overhead. Surrounded on three sides by the Atlantic
Ocean, the town seemed to have been
plucked out of an ’80s foreign flick.
Each building was constructed with old
plywood and recycled lumber, using vibrant paintings to cover every blemish.
Each dwelling had a name.
There were no power lines.
Running water was 40 miles away.
Not a single American product or
advertisement was in sight.
Cabo Polonio exhibited a pure, raw
culture: the fact that they will miss
the newest episode of “Jersey Shore”
is as strange a thought as math to
a journalist.
The single bar in town was made out
of plants — its owner a blind, bearded
old man who waited on customers by
candlelight. The fish served in the restaurants were caught and filleted within hours of dinner. The townspeople
sifted through each other’s garbage
daily — making treasure out of another
person’s trash.
My arrival in Rosario, Argentina,
was met with a different feeling. Unlike Cabo Polonio, a fantasy paradigm
sustained by a tourist economy, Rosario has undoubtedly been tainted by the
big, yellow arch and the orange swoosh.
However, it has not completely conformed. If Rosario were a person, it
would be someone going through a
midlife crisis.
Arriving to live with my host family introduced the first of cultural paradoxes. Dinner was genuine — decorated
with homemade “tartas” and “carne
lunas” (fried bread with cheese and
meat). Frequent conversation reduced
my self-assured American gulps to more
modest and reasonably paced helpings.
Following the feast, I encountered
an episode of “Family Guy” in the living room. The show was broadcast in
English with Spanish subtitles.
I couldn’t believe Stewie Griffin followed me all the way to Argentina;
I turned to my host brother Ezquiel
in confusion.
“People love (“Family Guy” here),
except it is difficult to translate the
pop-culture references and many of
the jokes, so there are often awkward
moments,” he said.
My host-brother has an intriguing, grounded, Argentine mojo. After
a month in Eugene at the Knight Law
School and trips to New York and San
Francisco, his bilingual proficiency enables him to talk in one language and
laugh in another. I envy his ability to
transcend the limits of his native tongue.
That night we went out to Berlin, a
popular bar in town.
At first I was humbled by the Italian
architecture, the heavily distilled Fernet
liquor, and my grave inability to speak
the native tongue. Trying to talk to a
girl in broken grammar and cavemanlike Spanish has a way of putting you
in your place.
Then the English chorus started
resounding from all directions.
The crowd, numbering around 300
people, was singing the Red Hot Chili
Peppers’ “By the Way.”
Right after was Incubus.
Then Beck.
And then the Black Eyed Peas.
My world became flat and small, altering the complexion my cross-cultural
experience had exhibited.
Leaving the club didn’t do much to
save me from this feeling.
Strolling down Cordoba Street is like
walking through Valley River Center. On
the left is Nike. On the right is Ross. McDonald’s is situated on the first floor of
perhaps the most elegant building, with
prices unaffordable for the majority
of Argentines.
The youth venture up and down, window-shopping with mannerisms that
could be compared to Lindsay Lohan
and Paris Hilton. It appears that purchasing from American companies is a
sort of status symbol.
“Kids today in Argentina pronounce
some words without an accent to make
them seem more American,” said Gaston Santhia, a communications specialist for Vision Media. “When I was
a kid, we used to wait for ‘El Nino Dijos’ to bring us presents. After 1983,
we started waiting for Santa Claus.
Even places with indigenous roots
such as Salta and Patagonia started to
celebrate Christmas.”
Sunday in Rosario, there will be an
“asado.” Friends and family will gather
and cook meat on a parilla barbecue,
talk about soccer and argue over politics. At night, the youth will take to the
“discos” and dance to “cumbia” music.
Newly formed couples will meet in the
park the next day to drink “mate” and
kiss each other as the sun sets over the
Rio de Panama.
But the next day, more of their bands
will write songs in English. More of
their children will ask their parents for a
Big Mac. More of their college students
will purchase a knock-off iPod; more of
their 15-year-olds will go to Walt Disney
World for their birthday.
We are in a bold new world — shrinking in both size and identity — with
Cabo Polonio quickly becoming nothing
more than a tourist attraction.
MARK
COSTIGAN
is a junior from
New Canaan,
Conn., majoring
in journalism,
business and
environmental
studies. Aside
from writing a
weekly
environmental
issues column
for the Emerald,
he is the K W VA
88.1 news
director and
hosts the weekly
show “Dir t
Mopper Radio.”
In his spare
time, he enjoys
hiking,
backcountr y
skiing, playing
drums and
talking to
strangers.
mcostigan @ dailyemerald . com
blogger commentary | Baylea o’brien
Romance with coffee leaves bitter taste in one’s mouth
is a sophomore
from Billings,
Mont., majoring
in journalism
and
international
studies. This is
her first year on
staff at the
Emerald, where
she is writing
the college life
blog called
“College Ruled.”
Aside from
writing, Baylea
loves to work
out, listen to
music, read,
drink coffee and
meet a variety
of different
people on
campus and
in Eugene.
make your ideas known
Have something to say about an
article we wrote? Comment online
at dailyemerald.com
relationship out a little bit longer.
Sophomore Jennah Stillman is one
of coffee’s many lovers. Not only
does she involve herself romantically with him — she works two
jobs for him.
“I think being a barista gives
you the ability to help others and
bring a smile to their face,” Stillman said. Working at both Marche
Cafe and Hideway Bakery, Stillman admits to still drinking two to
three cups of coffee daily.
“Some days I have my own
natural energy to get through the
day without it — but at the same
time I’m not naturally endowed to
keep up with the pace of life at all
times. I don’t need it, but I love it,”
Stillman said.
Stillman simply refers to
coffee as “the dance with the
liquid devil.”
“Coffee give s me the chance
to sit and slow down from my
day and take a look at the world
around me,” Stillman said.
Accepting his love makes her
relationship with coffee one of
enjoyment — not. Jennah Stillman will be embracing her love of
coffee as frequently as she desires,
but I will spend this year fighting
my lingering temptation of my
love/hate relationship.
I spent my summer far
from Oregon enjoying my
independence from coffee and
even started seeing other beverages. My friends have always raved
online opinion blogs
brian morton illustrator
about the health benefits of tea,
and they urged me to give him a
chance. It would be absurd to say
there wasn’t some curiosity floating through my head, and in the
end their opinions persuaded me.
Although we were only in the early
steps of a relationship, we could
never make it anything real.
Tea was only a rebound, and
although he was much more
Look for a new opinion blog
every day of the week at
blogs.dailyemerald.com/opinion
affordable and not as clingy, I never felt the same connection with
him that I did with coffee. I said it
was me, not him, and we decided
it wasn’t meant to be.
Coming back to Eugene and
breaking my attachment to coffee
will be trying. Late-night studying
will be more difficult, and making
plans to have coffee with friends
may be less frequent. I’ll probably
got something to say?
Send guest commentaries
and letters to the editor to
opinion@dailyemerald.com
editorial board
Baylea
O’Brien
Last year my love life took an
unexpected turn.
Following high school, freshman year of college marked a
new beginning. After getting out
of a two-year relationship, I knew
the last thing I wanted was a
serious commitment.
That was, until I met coffee.
It started out simple — a flirtatious cup every other morning, a
cool frappuccino on a hot day —
you know, casual dating. But the
relationship quickly gained momentum, and before I knew it, that
one cup every other day became
at least two a day. No longer did
I order a 12-ounce single-shot vanilla latte with no foam. My orders
became more and more complex.
Before I even knew it, my
single, proactive mission turned
into a dependent and exclusive relationship. We were in
love — but I couldn’t bear being so dependent on anyone. So
much so, that at times, I actually
hated being with coffee.
Like most girls, I confided in
my friends; to my surprise, almost
half of them were dancing around
the same cycle. This love/hate relationship would have to stop, and
I held on to summer as my only
opportunity for freedom.
So I waited … and after nine
long months of dragging out
the relationship, summer finally
granted me closure.
But some chose to stretch the
meet with coffee (if he is willing,
that is) occasionally to reminisce
on the good times and remember
how naive I once was.
As my wallet recuperates and
my heart mends, it seems I’ll soon
realize I did the right thing.
And I’m sure, one day, coffee
will too. Jennah is a much better fit
for him than I could ever be.
bobrien @ dailyemerald . com
Nora Simon
Kaitlin Kenny
editor in chief
scene editor
Lauren Fox
Greg Dewar
managing editor columnist
Tyree Harris
Thomas Kyle-Milward
opinion editor
columnist
Friday, October 1, 2010 Oregon Daily Emerald 3a
NEWS
Textbooks
HIGHER EDUCATION
continued from page 1A
Benefits of college degree
extend further into society
stefan verbano
news reporter
Attaining a college degree may
benefit more than just your pocketbook, says a new College Board
report released last week.
The third and final installment
of “Education Pays: the Benefits
of Higher Education for Individuals and Society,” released on Sept.
21, finds that bachelor’s degreeholders will be better off throughout their lives in terms of salaried earnings, healthy lifestyles,
job satisfaction, employment
opportunities, health care and
pension benefits, and even
parenting abilities.
The general findings of the report go further than the 2004 and
2007 installments, delineating
how a college-educated workforce is more likely to vote, send
their children to college and ease
the burden on fellow taxpayers
by keeping in good health.
According to the report, the
median income of bachelor’s
degree-holders working yearround, full-time jobs in 2008
was $55,700, while the median
yearly income of a similar worker
holding only a high school diploma was $33,800. In terms of
job satisfaction, 58 percent of
college graduates and individuals with some four-year college
education, along with associate
degree-holders, reported being
“very satisfied” with their current employment in 2008. Comparatively, 50 percent of high
school graduates and 40 percent
of individuals without a high
school diploma reported having
enjoyable occupations.
The College Board report also
said that a college degree may
correlate to healthier diets and
lifestyles. Between 1998 and
2008, college-educated adults
were less than half as likely to
be smokers (around 10 percent)
The report, titled “A Cover
to Cover Solution,” notes
that increasing textbook
prices can deter students of
lower socioeconomic statuses from attending college and often places an
unfair amount of power into
the hands of large, wealthy
book publishers.
Percent of parents who
read to their children
daily in 2007 based
on degree
Bachelor’s Degree: 68 percent
Associate Degree: 57 percent
College education but no degree: 47 percent
“The average student
spends $900 per year on
textbooks, which increases
at roughly four times the rate
of inflation,” Denson said.
High school graduates: 41 percent
No high school diploma: 26 percent
than high school graduates (almost 30 percent). Degree-holders
are less likely to be obese in every
age group, and even children living in households with more educated parents are less likely than
their peers to be obese.
Jessica Wilson, a nutritionist
with the University Health Center, said recreational activities and
nutrition awareness on college
campuses helps students develop
and maintain healthy habits.
“There are far more opportunities in post-secondary education to learn about healthy eating for little or no cost compared
to the general public,” Wilson
said. “Universities and colleges
provide a lot of opportunities to
access information to help students create behavior changes
like one-on-one nutrition education, nutrition courses, emotional
and spiritual health services, and
free recreational activity services,
and these can contribute to creating healthier lifestyles and
behavior changes.”
Sandy Baum, co-author of the
report and policy analyst for the
College Board, is quick to note
that the report’s purpose is not
to convince all potential college
students that a post-secondary
degree is necessary. Baum simply wanted to provide data
and point out overall trends so
that people can make up their
own minds about pursuing
additional education.
“Nobody is saying everybody
should get a bachelor’s degree
... we need all kinds of people in
all kinds of jobs,” Baum said in
the report. “Our goal is not to be
convincing people of something
so much as it is to provide solid
information to which people
can refer in order to reach conclusions that are based not on
anecdotes but on evidence.”
Some members of the
University
administration
share the report’s sentiment
in that the pursuit of higher
education benefits more than
just individuals.
“There is no question in my
mind that a college education is
one of the most important investments an individual and a society can make,” Vice President
for Finance and Administration
Frances Dyke said. “Education is
the very foundation on which a
strong and free society is built.”
At the same time, Dyke
feels that the group of potential students who can reap the
benefits associated with a college degree is shrinking due to
declining
publicly-sponsored
educational opportunities for the
middle class.
“The challenge (surrounding)
the rising price of tuition is that
public support has declined dramatically and below acceptable
levels,” Dyke said. “The unfortunate consequence of (this) is
that students also must acquire
additional loans ... and universities must make prudent decisions that ensure both quality
and access.”
The speakers presented
the current status of federal
and state textbook affordability laws, including the
federal Higher Education
Opportunity Act of 2008 and
Oregon State Senate Bill 365,
adopted by the legislature
in 2007. This legislation requires college textbook publishers to afford professors
Debate
continued from page 1A
moderator took questions
from audience members
and questions submitted by
citizens online.
During the second part
of the debate, when a more
spontaneous atmosphere was
created by the involvement
of the audience, Kitzhaber
challenged Dudley to a second debate at the City Club
of Portland on Oct. 8. Dudley’s response wasn’t to accept or deny, but instead to
I teach,” Dembrow said.
“Sometimes their textbooks
cost more than the tuition
for their actual classes.”
challenge Kitzhaber to a debate
in Medford.
Jeff Mapes, one of the debate’s questioners and a reporter for The Oregonian, said
in a post-debate interview that
he thought both candidates did
a good job making their cases.
“Kitzhaber came across
as very knowledgeable, as
usual,” Mapes said. “Dudley
did a good job of returning to
his talking points ... he maybe
faltered a couple of times.”
1994 debate in which Kitzhaber “carved up” opponent
Denny Smith. Mapes said he
was surprised that political
newcomer Dudley held his
own the way he did against the
seasoned politician.
“I watched Kitzhaber in
1994 ... and I recall him almost wielding his surgeon’s
scalpel. And he wasn’t
able to do this. That
was
striking
to
me,”
Mapes said.
Mapes also compared
Thursday night’s debate to a
igeronimo@dailyemerald.com
The OSPIRG press conference marked the first in a series of events to bolster OSPIRG’s presence on campus.
OSPIRG came under fire
during the 2008-2009 academic year when the ASUO
discontinued its contract after
the Athletics and Contracts
Finance Committee decided
the group sent too much incidental fee money towards offcampus issues that did not directly pertain to students. The
group attempted to regain
student funding last year, requesting a new $117,000 budget contract from the ASUO,
but was denied. OSPIRG has
since worked to redevelop its
image in the eyes of students.
According to its website, OSPIRG’s mission is to amplify
student voices on topics including health care, environmental issues and consumer
protection in legislation.
higher education
sverbano@dailyemerald.com
city & state politics
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Eugene
springfield
27 E 27th
333 Q St.
342-3941
746-7142
27540
Median income of
those with bachelor’s
degrees is $55,700
in the Duck Store about a
newly released report delineating their ongoing efforts
to promote more moderate
coursebook prices.
the option of ordering each
component of book bundles
separately, which works to
save students from buying
unnecessary supplementary
course materials.
Other cost-saving strategies were discussed in the
conference, including the
prospect of state-wide bulk
book purchasing, used book
exchanges and open-source
course materials.
“The next step to making
textbooks more affordable is
to support open-source textbooks,” Arora said. “However, since three-quarters
of students surveyed (in
the report) prefer print textbooks, it is important to
have both print and digital
formats available.”
In addition to his work in
Oregon politics, Dembrow
has also taught English literature classes for the past
two decades at Portland
Community College, where
he has witnessed the problems surrounding textbook
affordability firsthand.
“This is a huge issue,
especially for the students
www.waynesgarage.com
higher education
sverbano @ dailyemerald . com
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HEALTHY LEADERSHIP
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Smith
explained
the
range of calls the station
typically receives.
“We get a lot of alcohol
poisoning, and on campus a
lot of anxiety calls, and you
know, they probably seem
like real emergencies for
them, but they’re really not
that serious for us,” Smith
said. “You just calm them
down, get them through it
and then provide whatever
assistance they need.”
The station is always
staffed with at least three
firefighters who take a full
24-hour shift before being
relieved by another crew of
three the next morning at 8
a.m. They have the next two
days off before going back
on shift.
“It’s impossible to say
there will always be the
same number of people
there,” Potter said. “People
will always be going on vacation and there’ll be a need
for personnel at another station and they’ll get rotated
around, but we like to keep
three people on a crew.”
Part of the reason for testing the operations of the station’s two fire engines is to
ensure they are still in proper
working condition from the
previous day’s shift. This
includes all of the stations’s
equipment, not just the engines: defibrillators, radios,
thermal imaging devices,
hoses, air tanks and breathing masks. Smith estimates
both of the station’s engines
combined have well over a
million dollars worth of investment of equipment and
training behind them.
All of the medical equipment onboard the engines is
also checked every morning.
Cziko said.
Senate resolution read.
ASUO Environmental Advocate Nathan Howard is
working on a resolution for
the University Senate. Over
the years, ASUO Senate
has passed resolutions condemning the non-transparent method of simply renewing the permit for the
lease without consulting
student input.
A large part of the group’s
opposition to the development is based on the fact
that the proposal was originally permitted in October
1989 and was approved for
an extension last year for
three more years while they
feel the community was not
allowed comment.
“The Campus Planning
Committee serves as the primary mechanism for student
voice with regards to University Development, and
was not properly consulted
with regards to this specific
4.2-acre site,” a 2009 ASUO
Rousseau
and
former
ASUO presidents Emma Kallaway and Sam Dotters-Katz
have worked with Connecting Eugene, but ASUO involvement began in October
1989 with the original permit
request. There was an ASUO
ballot measure at the end of
BE HEARD.
This is especially important
because most of the calls
Fire Station 13 responds to
are medical in nature, and
usually involving fires.
Some of the medicine and
painkillers onboard have to
be accounted for at all times
because of their controlled
substance status. Fire Station 13 also adheres to a
strict code for everything to
be put in its place. First responders in Lane County are
required to store all medical
equipment and substances in
the exact same quantity and
location on every engine.
As a result, any and all personnel know exactly where
something is when they
need it.
Smith eagerly demonstrated some of the tools firefighters have at their disposal.
He demonstrated a thermal
imaging camera (TIC) that
displays human body heat
as bright white light. All
of the hair on the body is
invisible, but the outlines
of the eyes and mouth can
still clearly be seen because
they give off less heat. The
result is an image of a human figure that looks like a
ghostly skeleton.
the 1989-90 school year that
was passed to discourage development place north of the
railroad tracks.
Rousseau said she does
not oppose the purpose of
the building, but the location
of the proposal. She would
like to see a plan to redesign
the building to promote a
better use of space.
“We’re not against research, but it shouldn’t be in
our precious green spaces,”
she said.
Cziko went to a meeting
of the Oregon State Board
of Higher Education in June
with Rousseau and attorney
Jan Wilson of the Western
“If you saw that laying on
the floor or something, you’d
definitely know what it was.
You could definitely identify the human features,”
Smith said.
They also operate with
customized
self-contained
breathing apparatuses. Theoretically these hold enough
air to provide a half-hour’s
worth of air to their wearer,
but this may not always be
the case. After a firefighter
dons 40 pounds of equipment, and has to perform
work that’s physically exhausting, the air supply might
be substantially reduced.
Once his day is done,
Smith and his crew will hand
off the responsibilities of
the station to the next day’s
crew, and be back on the job
two days later to begin their
routine all over again.
Ideally, their route will be
an uneventful and safe affair, but in the event it’s not,
Fire Station 13 makes sure
it’s overly prepared to respond to their community’s
unique emergencies.
crime & safety
mwolf @ dailyemerald . com
Environmental Law Center. They
were not on the official agenda
for the meeting but presented
anyway in an attempt to get the
attention of and put pressure
on Lariviere.
Their intentions with the
meeting in June and the
University Senate proposal
have been to compel Lariviere into some action on the
proposed development.
“Connecting
Eugene
is
trying to keep the conversation going,” Rousseau said.
“Why are they building the
structure that the entire
community doesn’t want?”
campus & federal politics
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“This is a student voice issue ... (Former University
President Dave) Frohnmayer
paid no attention to student voice on this issue,”
Cziko said. “This president has an opportunity to
do better.”
Cziko said the University is trying to construct
a building in the development area and then hold the
Oregon University Systemmandated review process,
and
Connecting
Eugene
opposes this completely.
“We need to be included
before you build anything,”
“There was no one
brought out on a stretcher,”
Arnold said.
Eugene Fire & EMS Department
spokesperson
Glen Potter, said there is
never an exact number of
personnel stationed at any
given station.
The Town
The Expendables
Let Me In
Capt. Ray Smith, one of
three captains who operate
the three engine crews assigned to the station, said
80 percent of his calls are
medical in nature and often
involve students. His station
responded to the Gerlinger
Annex fire in June, but the
majority of fire alarms, like
the recent spate at the EMU,
are false alarms.
Earlier Thursday morning
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(3D)
Fire Station 13 is located
near the intersection of the
East 17th Avenue and Agate Street. It’s immediately
across from Hayward Field
and next door to the University’s ROTC program offices. Because of its close
proximity to campus, it has
the unique responsibility of
covering an area with some
of Eugene’s oldest historical buildings, while also responding to the variety of
medical emergencies usually
associated with some of the
city’s youngest population —
college students.
Smith relieved a crew headed
by Capt. Mike Arnold. Arnold’s Tuesday was relatively uneventful, but his crew
did respond to a medical
call
at
Friendly
Hall.
This event wasn’t serious; nonetheless, Arnold’s
crew responded to the call
once notified.
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drukarev: football not only exciting team
Volleyball is 14-0 and about to embark
on a road trip against top-ranked competition
sports | page 6A
your home for oregon sports news
VOLLEYBALL
s
SPORTS
Editor
Lucas Clark
sports@dailyemerald.com
541-346-5511 x322
friday, october 1, 2010
Win streak on the line
No. 11 Ducks are undefeated heading into a weekend road trip against No. 1 Stanford and No. 8 California
ANDY DRUKAREV
SPORTS REPORTER
Sitting pretty at 14-0 after the first week
of Pac-10 play, the Oregon women’s volleyball team is set to face its biggest test of the
young season.
This weekend, the Ducks will visit
the Bay Area to take on a pair of national
powers, No. 8 California and No. 1 Stanford.
And even though Oregon has achieved
its fair share of early season success, Duck
coach Jim Moore knows his squad is in
for a challenge.
“It’s going to be real tough,” Moore
said. “People want to make a big deal
of what happened in the past, but that
doesn’t matter.”
That’s not to say that Oregon’s undefeated start and home sweep of Washington and
Washington State are totally irrelevant.
With only one upperclassman in its
playing rotation, Oregon is one of the
youngest teams in the conference, and a
hot start has given the Ducks a needed
confidence boost.
“I think that’s the biggest thing, it
proved to (the team) that they could be
competitive,” Moore said.
The win over the highly-rated Huskies
also gave Oregon more insight into what it
needed to improve upon to be competitive
in Pac-10 play. Several Washington players
had big nights hitting, and the Ducks know
they will need a better defensive effort to
stick with the Bay Area schools.
”If we can block and play defense better,
we’re going to have a better opportunity to
win some more games,” redshirt sophomore
Alaina Bergsma said.
At the same time, the Ducks hope to build
off an offensive attack that was clicking on
all cylinders last weekend. Bergsma, who
earned American Volleyball Coaches Association National Player of the Week honors
for her 33-kill weekend, said Oregon’s passing was on target.
“We passed really well and that helped
(setter) Lauren Plum open up the offense and distribute the ball really well,”
Bergsma said.
Oregon will need to repeat that feat
to have a shot at knocking off two of the
nation’s premier teams.
Despite the loss of last season’s Pac-10
Player of the Year, Hana Cutura, Cal is 12-0
and leads the conference in hitting percentage (.347). Oregon split its two meetings
with the Bears last year.
To beat Cal, the Ducks will have to
slow down the powerful combination of
setter Carli Lloyd and outside hitter Tarrah Murrey. Lloyd ranks fourth in the Pac10 in assists, while Murrey checks in at
No. 3 in kills.
That said, Moore has no plans of changing his team’s approach to combat such a
dynamic opponent.
“(To beat) Cal, it’s the same thing it is
with everybody,” Moore said. “We’re going to have to serve and pass really well,
and if we pass, then we can run our offense. We have to block better and keep
digging balls.”
The same will hold true on Saturday
against the nation’s best team, Stanford,
who ended Penn State’s 109-match winning
streak earlier this year.
Stanford has excellent depth, but is
best known for its senior outside hitter,
Alix Klineman. Klineman made the AllPac-10 team in each of her first three college seasons, and presents a challenge for
any defense.
“I don’t know that you can control
Klineman,” Moore said.
Although the Ducks were able to contain
the Pac-10’s kill leader, Washington State’s
Meagan Ganzer, over the weekend, Klineman poses a different kind of threat.
“Ganzer at Washington State, I said we
had to be able to slow down, but (Klineman)
is a kid who touches 11 feet, so she basically
renders the block non-existent because she
can go right over the top of it,” Moore said.
And though the Ducks can take some
consolation in a 3-2 home defeat of Stanford
last season, leaving Palo Alto with a victory
will be a tall task.
“They’re very hot right now,” Moore said.
“We can try to do some things defensively
we were able to do that last year up here,
but its another thing to be able to do that
down there.”
adrukarev @ dailyemerald . com
jack hunter photographer
Oregon freshman Lauren Plum sets the ball during Oregon’s 3-1 win against Washington at McArthur Court on Sept.
25 . Plum leads the Pac-10 in assists, registering 12.23 per set.
SOCCER
Oregon women look for an upset win against No. 4 Portland
Pilots have won annual matchup
12 times in a row; Ducks hope
to end streak in Portland
already Coach Erickson has mulled over
the game film.
CHRIS FITZGERALD
Oregon is an even .500 on the year
after dropping its fourth match to No.
13 Santa Clara in Northern California.
On paper, the match was just another
loss, but the flow of that game gives
Oregon reason to think they can beat
some of the nation’s best teams.
In Santa Clara, the Ducks outshot the
Broncos 12-9, the ninth time this season
that Oregon has outshot an opponent.
“We controlled that second half (and)
gave them a good match ... we are on
the road to becoming a dangerous team
FREELANCE REPORTER
Oregon soccer head coach Tara Erickson expects to learn a great deal about
her team on Friday night.
The unranked Ducks (4-4-2) will take
on No. 4 Portland (10-1) in an annual
clash which has gone Portland’s way for
the last twelve years. The Pilots’ lone
defeat this season came in Palo Alto to
the nation’s best, the Stanford Cardinal.
That contest was just last week, but
game day coverage
“They’re good. We want to play these
big games though,” Erickson said.
For a complete recap of Saturday’s
football game against Stanford,
visit dailyemerald.com
read our blogs
this year,” Erickson said.
Senior forward
Jen Stoltenberg
controls the ball
during Oregon’s
2-0 win against
Boise State on
Aug. 20.
Stoltenberg
became the
Ducks’ all-time
leader in assists
this season
with 17.
Last year when Portland squared
off with Oregon, it was all Pilots. Portland opened its 2009 season with a 3-0
grounding of the Ducks, the first of 21
wins for the program, which made it all
the way to the NCAA quarterfinals before losing to UCLA. The Pilots spent
the majority of the 2009 season ranked
in the top three nationally.
Portland’s last national championship was in 2005, but they have been
hot on the trail of another for the last
half-decade.
Offensively,
freshman
Visit blogs.dailyemerald.com
to find extended analysis
of Duck sports news
soccer
continued on page 7A
follow us on twitter
Get breaking news updates
and live game commentary
@ODESPORTS
ivar vong photo editor
pick up game day
Look for the Daily Emerald’s
special football section
today in Section B
6A Oregon Daily Emerald Friday, October 1, 2010
SPORTS
Oregon Daily Emerald Board of Directors
unbeatable
experience
Oregon fans
come out in
droves to cheer
on Duck football,
but volleyball
does not have
the same large
fanbase despite
its stellar
performance
this season.
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ANDY
DRUK AREV
is a junior
journalism
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Los Altos,
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working as
spor ts repor ter
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Emerald, he did
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graduation from a team that finished 20-10 and earned an NCAA
tournament berth.
To put those losses in perspective, that trio essentially made
Oregon volleyball during the past
few years.
Newcombe finished her Oregon career as the career leader
in points (1,852) third in attacks (4,318) and digs (1,233),
and fourth in kills (1,580).
She was named a second-team
All-American her senior year.
Enesi is No.1 in Oregon history
with 389 block assists, third in
points (1,315.5), and fifth in total
blocks (436). She was a third-team
All American her senior year.
Djordjevic is Oregon’s career
leader in assists with 4,400. She
earned
All-Pac-10
honorable
mention honors her senior year.
So, yeah. That’s a lot of talent to replace. To make matters
worse, there’s only one upperclassman (Heather Meyers) in the
Ducks’ regular playing rotation to
replace the massive void.
Because of that, logic would
dictate Oregon would regress
this season.
Instead, the Ducks have taken
a step forward. Sophomore Katherine Fischer has continued to
improve from her All Pac-10 freshman campaign, checking in at No.
4 in the conference in aces per
set (.42 per) and No. 8 in points
per set (4.57).
Redshirt sophomore Alaina
Bergsma has been a revelation
since arriving on campus as a
transfer from Loyola Marymount.
She recently earned both Pac-10
Campus
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Printing
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Player of the Week and National
Player of the Week honors for
her play last weekend against the
Washington schools.
Sophomore libero Haley Jacob
ranks sixth in the Pac-10 in digs,
freshman middle blocker Ariana
Williams is No. 6 in hitting percentage, and sophomore outside
hitter Jocelyn Levig and sophomore Kellie Kawasaki have made
strong contributions.
Heck, a few months ago freshman setter Lauren Plum was navigating the halls of Poway High
School in Southern California.
Now, Plum leads the Pac-10 in
assists per set with 12.23.
The team’s lone upperclassman, Meyers, has also been excellent, leading the Pac-10 in service
aces with .78 per set and checking in at No. 7 in points, but is
only a part of the Ducks’ success
this season.
You get the point. With the
exception of Meyers, the players on this Ducks squad will be
around for a while. If the team
matures like you could reasonably expect, look out. Some of
the Pac-10’s premier players
will be lost to graduation after
this year. I’m looking at you,
Stanford outside hitter Alix Klineman. That means the conference
should be up for grabs for the next
several seasons.
And if the early returns are
any indication, the Ducks will be
right there in contention. So why
not jump on the bandwagon now,
while there’s still space and front
row seats to be had.
adrukarev @ dailyemerald . com
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Like it does every fall, football
fever has overtaken the University
of Oregon campus.
The Ducks are ranked No. 4
in the nation and are set to take
on No. 9 Stanford in prime time
tomorrow. The ESPN GameDay
crew is here, and the University
again finds itself in the national
spotlight. A win over Stanford
would likely catapult the Ducks
into the national title discussion — and might even allow
Oregon to move past the blue
turf-lovin’ Boise State Broncos in
national polls.
But you already knew that.
So, fellow Oregon students, a
piece of unsolicited advice:
If you’re struggling to find
something to do during your
lengthy pre-game tailgate Saturday, I’d recommend paying attention to another highly touted
Oregon team you might not know
so much about.
The No. 11 women’s volleyball
team finds itself 14-0 after a historic upset of then-No. 7 University of Washington on Saturday.
In that game, the Ducks topped
the Huskies in Eugene for the first
time in a decade.
On the surface, that’s impressive, but not all that remarkable.
After all, the Pac-10 is the strongest volleyball league in the country with six schools ranked in the
top 12 nationally.
But many expected the volleyball team to encounter its
fair share of struggles this season. The Ducks lost seniors
Neticia Enesi, Nevena Djordjevic and Sonja Newcombe to
On campus in 19 EMU, between the Computer Lab and The Break
Friday, October 1, 2010 Oregon Daily Emerald 7a
SPORTS
CROSS COUNTRY
Duck men and women to compete at Notre Dame Invite
The third-ranked men’s team and fifth-ranked
women’s team are set to race in South Bend
The Oregon men’s and
women’s cross country seasons
begin in earnest today as the
No. 3 Duck men and the No.
5 Duck women compete at the
Notre Dame Invitational, held
at the Notre Dame Golf Course
in South Bend, Ind.
Four of the top five women’s
teams, as ranked by the U.S.
Track & Field and Cross Country
Coaches Association poll, are
among 11 ranked schools in the
24-team women’s field.
The
men’s
team
features 19 schools, eight
of which are ranked in a
competitive early test for
the Ducks.
Five Oregon cross country
All-Americans — junior Luke
Puskedra, senior Matthew
Centrowitz and senior Danny
Mercado for the men, and senior
Alex Kosinski and sophomore
Jordan Hasay for the women —
will make their season debuts in
South Bend, along with program
veteran seniors A.J. Acosta and
Zoe Buckman.
The women’s race will begin
at 1:15 p.m., encompassing
5,000 meters. The men’s 5-mile
race follows at 5 p.m. Eastern.
Seven Ducks to compete
at Charles Bowles
soccer
continued from page 5A
ivar vong photo editor
Oregon midfielder Kirstie Kuhns dribbles the ball against Boise State on
Aug. 20. Kuhns’ four-goal game against Butler put her second on the
Ducks in scoring this season.
Micaela Capelle paces the
Pilots. She has six of the
team’s 22 total goals. Fellow freshman Erin Dees is
the Portland anchor in net.
Over eight starts, her goalsagainst average is well below
one per contest (0.500).
Oregon will have to contend with a Portland team
that has won its last 30 home
matches dating back to the
very first match of the 2008
season. So far this season,
the Pilots have outscored opponents 11-3 in Portland, but
within those same scoring
numbers exists a quandary.
by senior Ken Scoggin, juniors
Spencer Carter and Travis
Stanford, sophomore Walker
Augustyniak and freshmen
Tim Costin, Mitch Hunt and
Hank Morrison.
In the same way the Ducks
got off to a slow start in
Santa Clara, the Pilots have
been slow starters throughout this season. Opponents
are outscoring Portland by a
6-5 margin through the first
45 minutes of play, a statistic
which Coach Erickson plans
to exploit.
Despite outscoring the
opposition 17-2 in the second half of matches, Portland’s skewed goal-scoring
numbers give the Ducks a
well-defined plan of attack.
Senior forward Jen Stoltenberg headlines Oregon’s
offense. The veteran has
six goals this season, which
is good for fourth in the
conference.
Senior
midfielder Kirstie Kuhns has
launched her way into the
upper echelon of Oregon
scorers; she netted all of her
four goals on the season in
a convincing 6-1 win over
Butler two weeks ago. The
onslaught of production
echoes the senior’s effectiveness all season long on
the field.
“Kirstie (and Linsday Parlee) do a lot to motivate us
on the field,” Stoltenberg
said. “They’re both very
helpful in that way.”
Oregon’s plan of attack is
no secret — they want to get
ahead quickly against the Pilots. The Ducks will do their
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The change was made in
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best to prey on Portland’s
tendency toward lackluster
first halves. Having won two
of their last three contests
and having outscored opponents 9-3 over that same
stretch, the Ducks finally appear to have established concrete momentum in the 2010
season. The momentum they
have and the fact the match
will be Oregon’s final primer
before Pac-10 play begins
makes the Friday night contest all the more intriguing.
Kickoff at Merlo Field in
Portland on Friday is slated
for 7 p.m. The contest can
also be seen live streaming
at portlandpilots.com.
sports @ dailyemerald . com
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The 2010 Bill Dellinger
Invitational, to be held on
October 16, has been moved
from
Springfield
Country
Club to Pre’s Trail in Alton
Baker Park.
TM
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Dellinger Invitational
moved to Pre’s Trail
release. Part of the funds
raised from the OTC event
goes toward maintenance of
Pre’s Trail.
Oregon will face off against
No. 6 Wisconsin and No. 9
Portland in the men’s race,
along with Idaho, Portland
State, Willamette and the
University of Guelph (Ontario,
Canada). The Duck women
will compete against Idaho,
Portland,
Portland
State,
Willamette and Guelph.
The 6,000-meter women’s
race will begin at 11:45 a.m.,
with the 8,000-meter men’s race
following at at 12:30 p.m.
The Lane County School District No.
4J (SD 4J) is requesting sealed proposals from qualified Proposers for
the ACQUISITION OF THE CIVIC
STADIUM PROPERTIES including
land and improvements. RFP packages, which include submittal requirements, may be secured in person from Facilities Management, 715
West 4th, Eugene, OR 97402, or by
e-mail request to Kathi Hernandez,
Hernandez@4j.lane.edu, on or after
October 1, 2010. All Proposals are
to be submitted to Kathi Hernandez,
Management Assistant, Facilities
Management, at the above address,
by 2:00 p.m. February 3, 2011. Any
questions about this solicitation are
to be directed to civicrfp@4j.lane.
edu.
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sports reporter
In addition to the Ducks at
the Notre Dame Invitational, a
seven-man cadre will compete at
the Charles Bowles Invitational
on Saturday. Hosted by Division
III
Willamette
University
in Salem, the 8,000-meter
men’s race will take place in
Bush Park and Willamette’s
McCulloch Stadium.
All three NCAA divisions,
the NAIA and the NJCAA will
be represented in the Charles
Bowles field, with 13 men’s
teams
competing.
Seven
Division-I schools, including
Portland and Portland State,
will field runners in the
men’s race.
Oregon will be represented
Dr. William MacMaster
217 Division Avenue
Eugene, OR 97404
OpiniOn
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Robert Husseman
Head cross country coach
Vin Lananna, in his quest
to determine the Ducks’ top
five men’s and women’s
runners, has a stable of
freshmen looking to make
cases for themselves. Oregon is
expected to run five freshman
women (including redshirt
freshman Lanie Thompson)
and five freshman men
(including redshirt freshman
Ben DeJarnette).
daily in the Emerald
8 Oregon Daily Emerald Friday, October 1, 2010
Game Day
o r e g o n
WEAR YOUR BLACK
On Saturday, trade in your yellow and
green gear to blackout Autzen Stadium
dailyemerald.com
d a i l y
e m e r a l d
vol. 112, issue 20
friday, october 1 , 2010
PREVIEW
forecast
Partly cloudy, with a low
around 50 degrees
at a glance
Who: No. 9 Stanford
at No. 4 Oregon
What: Week two
Pac-10 game
When: Saturday,
5 p.m. ABC
Where: Autzen Stadium
summary
With ESPN College
GameDay rolling into town
this week, Oregon (4-0)
looks to avenge lasts year’s
51-42 loss in Palo Alto as
Heisman
hopeful
Andrew Luck and the
Stanford
Cardinal
(4-0) visit Autzen Stadium.
Oregon has a 3-1 record
when the GameDay crew
comes to Autzen Stadium.
INSIDE
game preview
No. 4 Oregon faces its
first ranked opponent of the
season as No. 9 Stanford
visits Eugene
PAGE 2B
oregon notes
looking for
an option
ivar vong photo editor
Darron Thomas and his Oregon offense are back to their old tricks with a zone-read running attack
Robert Husseman
Sports Reporter
It’s Nov. 21, 2009.
The No. 11 Oregon Ducks are facing third and
goal to go from the 1-yard line. Alex Zendejas’ 41yard field goal to open up double-overtime put the
Arizona Wildcats ahead, 41-38. The Ducks responded with a 23-yard strike from Jeremiah Masoli to
Ed Dickson on first and 10 from the 25-yard line. A
sense of inevitability creeps over the ZonaZoo — at
least, those that remained from prematurely rushing
the field at Arizona Stadium.
Oregon has three wide receivers in the formation;
Dickson is split out in the left slot. LaMichael James
is positioned just behind Masoli’s left shoulder in the
backfield. Arizona has seven defenders in the box;
each receiver is single-covered.
Center Jordan Holmes snaps the ball. As Masoli
extends his arms, placing the ball in James’ chest,
Wildcat linebackers crash the offensive line. The
left outside linebacker and left defensive end move
outside as the middle linebacker and right outside
linebacker travel inward.
Masoli then pulls the ball away from James, freezing the left-side defenders momentarily. That moment was all he needed. The now-former Ducks
quarterback scored his third rushing and sixth overall touchdown on the night.
Oregon 44, Arizona 41, Final, two overtimes.
Yet another example of zone-read legerdemain
from the Ducks knocked one contender out of the
Pac-10 Conference title race. Oregon would do
the same thing 12 days later to the Oregon State
Beavers, reaching the Rose Bowl for the first time
in 15 years.
Head coach Chip Kelly installed the zone-read
spread option offense in 2007 with some growing
pains and many successes. Paired with a fast tempo,
the zone-read has made Oregon’s running backs and
zone-read
continued on page 8B
The Ducks look to keep up
their high-scoring ways by
breaking down Stanford’s
vaunted defensive line
PAGE 3B
stanford notes
The versatile Owen
Marecic enters Autzen
Stadium with the task of
dominating the Ducks on
both sides of the ball
PAGE 3B
pac-10 season
Washington and Jake
Locker look to take down
USC for the 2nd straight
year, this time on the road
PAGE 6B
2B Oregon Daily Emerald Friday, October 1, 2010
GAME DAY
game preview
Seeking revenge for last year’s 51-42 loss
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When asked by reporters to
describe the versatile Stanford
offensive attack, cornerback Anthony Gildon summed it up by
explaining, “You never know
what you’re going to get.”
As it turns out, Gildon’s description also proves apt at predicting the outcome of Saturday’s matchup between No. 9
Stanford (4-0) and No. 4 Oregon
(4-0). Bloggers and pundits may
come up with their own projections, but the truth is, no one
knows quite how this game will
turn out.
What Chip Kelly and the
Ducks do know, however, is
that Stanford may provide the
toughest competition they face
all season.
“(Stanford’s) got quality
depth on both sides of the ball,”
Kelly said. “(They are) really
well coached, and they’re a good
special teams team, that’s why
they’re a top-10-ranked team
coming in.”
Indeed, a quick look at the
numbers backs up Kelly’s description. The Cardinal ranks
fourth in the nation in points per
game (48.0) and 24th in total offense (457.50 yards per game).
Stanford’s attack is evenly divided between the run and pass, as
the team averages 223.3 rushing
yards per game to go along with
234.3 passing yards.
Priority number one for
head coach Jim Harbaugh and
his offense, however, is the
running game.
“Stanford’s a run first team,”
Gildon said. “So they like to establish the run and then hit you
with play action fakes over the
top. So we’ve gotta stop the run
and we’ve gotta stop the pass.”
Stanford’s statistics on defense
may be even more impressive.
The Cardinal gives up just 13.8
points per game, and ranks 11th
in the nation in total defense (256
yards per game). Against a squad
that allows just 144.25 passing
yards per game, Oregon quarterback Darron Thomas knows that
he has his work cut out for him.
“It’s going to be a competitive
game,” Thomas said. “I think it’s
the hardest game we’ve played
this year, so it’s going to be
a challenge.”
One thing the Ducks will not
lack on Saturday will be motivation. No one has forgotten the
51-42 beating the Cardinal put on
Oregon last season in Palo Alto,
and revenge will be on the mind
come Saturday night.
“We’ve just got to make sure
simon warby stanford daily
Stanford head coach Jim Harbaugh has rebuilt the Cardinal program over his three-plus years in Palo Alto. Harbaugh’s
defense ranks 11th in the nation in total yardage and has given up an average of 13.8 points per game in 2010.
we come out better prepared
that we were last year,” defensive tackle Brandon Bair said.
“Because they wanted to win it
more than us then. So this year is
a whole new year.”
Led by All-American running
back Toby Gerhart, Stanford
racked up 254 rushing yards in
last year’s matchup. Gerhart may
have departed for the NFL, but
the Cardinal still clogs the line
with up to seven offensive linemen looking to pound opponents
on the ground.
“We knew they were a six offensive linemen, seven offensive
linemen scheme last year going
into the game,” Kelly said. “We
just need to do a better job getting lined up and tackling … We
didn’t do a good job of tackling
against them last year and that’s
going to be the key.”
Bair
echoed
K el l y ’ s
sentiments, and sounded confident that this year’s story will be
quite different.
“We’ll handle whatever comes
our way,” Bair said. “Seven offensive linemen, five, two, I don’t
care what they put up there, we’ll
get ready for it, we’ll handle it.”
Of course, the running game
is far from the only thing the
defense has to worry about.
Redshirt sophomore quarterback Andrew Luck has quickly
emerged as one of the top passers
in the country, and could be the
difference maker on Saturday.
“I think he’s one of the smarter quarterbacks we’ve ever
faced,” Kelly said. “Because
he’s got a great understanding
of what they’re doing … He’s the
total package.”
As one of the cornerbacks
charged with stopping Luck,
Gildon was effusive in his praise.
“He can make all the throws,
and he’s a smart player,” Gildon
said. “So you’ve gotta account for
that, and he can run, so he can
basically do it all.”
Tight ends have also proven to
be key weapons in Stanford’s attack, as Gildon discovered while
watching film.
“One thing about Stanford is
they run a lot of tight ends,” Gildon said. “So they get a lot of max
protect … The receivers get a lot
of time to run routes, but they run
really nice routes, and they’ve got
some good speed on them.”
The Oregon defense will have
to rely on varying schemes designed to fluster Luck. Whether
they work or not will not be
known until Saturday.
“We’ll see, won’t we?”
Gildon said.
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Friday, October 1, 2010 Oregon Daily Emerald 3B
GAME DAY
OREGON NOTES
Ducks see similarities in Cardinal defense
Oregon’s high-pace attack faces an opponent with
a familiar 3-4 defense, giving the team an advantage
sports reporter
Through four games, the No. 9
Stanford Cardinal has proven to
be far more than just quarterback
Andrew Luck and a physical
running attack.
They are playing a lot better on the defensive side of
the ball,” Oregon head coach
Kelly said.
“They’ve changed their
scheme defensively, and are really playing very hard on the defensive side of the ball. (They’re)
really well coached,” he said.
Stanford head coach Jim Harbaugh hired Baltimore Ravens
defensive assistant Vic Fangio
last offseason to help upgrade
a defense that finished ninth in
the Pac-10 Conference in total
defense and last in third-down
and red-zone defense. Fangio, a
26-year veteran of the NFL and
USFL, replaced the Cardinal’s
4-3 defensive scheme with a
base 3-4 defense.
“They play a lot of odd, a lot
of 3-4, a lot of three big guys,
‘backers lock down, stuff like
that to just try to use their defensive scheme to their advantage,” Ducks offensive tackle
Mark Asper said. “You don’t
know who’s coming or where
pressure is coming from each
play to throw off your offensive
blocking scheme.”
Thus far, Stanford is 11th in
the country in total defense (256
yards per game) and passing defense (144.25 yards per game)
and is tied for 12th in scoring
defense (13.75 points per game).
The team that tallied 21 sacks
all of last season has 14 this season, tied for sixth in per-game
statistics nationally.
“They’re big, they’re fast and
they’re, well, Stanford. They look
smart,” Asper said.
While the revamped Cardinal
defense has caught opponents
off guard this season, Oregon
players expressed confidence in
their preparation. After all, the
Duck offense sees similar looks
in practice.
“It’s very similar to our defense. Their scheme is very similar to our scheme,” center Jordan
Holmes said. “Since we’re so familiar with it, we know what to
look for. We need to make sure
we know where they’re coming
from blitz-wise, and how many
people they bring.”
One of the familiar aspects of
the Cardinal defense is the presence of Thomas Keiser. The junior from Wexford, Pa., started
all 13 games at defensive end for
Stanford last season, racking up
a team-high 15.0 tackles for loss.
Kaiser will encroach upon the
line of scrimmage in the same
fashion as Oregon’s “drop end,”
a defensive end who often blends
into coverage.
“They have their Kenny
Rowe,” Holmes said. “That’s
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Oregon right tackle Mark Asper pass protects against Portland State on
Sept. 18. Asper said the Stanford defense runs the same hybrid 3-4 defense that
the Ducks do, giving his team an edge in preparation for Saturday’s game.
what we refer to other teams
when they have a drop end.”
Stanford’s two inside linebackers, senior Owen Marecic
and sophomore Shayne Skov, are
dynamic players that command
attention in the film room.
“Against Notre Dame, a couple
of times I saw those guys time up
the cadence,” Asper said of the
Cardinal’s 37-14 victory over the
Fighting Irish last week. “They
figured out the other team’s cadence, so they were in the backfield before the offensive line was
even up. They run downhill and
fill really hard. And, I’ve also
seen them power through some
of those Notre Dame offensive
linemen, so they’re strong.”
Marecic (pronounced maREE-sick) has plenty of power in
reserve, pulling double duty as
the team’s starting fullback on offense. Skov was third on the team
with 62 tackles as a true freshman, and has a reputation as a
fierce hitter.
oregon
continued on page 7B
STANFORD NOTES
Portland native leads dominant defense
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sports editor
With 7:58 remaining in the
fourth quarter in Stanford’s
game against Notre Dame last
Saturday, senior Owen Marecic scored two touchdowns in
a 13-second span to extend the
Cardinal’s lead over the Fighting Irish and helped the Cardinal improve to 4-0 on the year,
marking the programs best
start since the 1986 season.
On his first score, Marecic
capped an 11-play, 49-yard
drive with a one-yard scoring
charge through the middle of
the stout Stanford offensive
line. After the ensuing kickoff,
Marecic then intercepted Irish
quarterback Dayne Crist’s first
pass of the possession and returned it 20 yards for another
Cardinal score.
Stanford 37, Notre Dame 14.
Bring on Oregon.
Now in his senior season as
Stanford’s starting fullback and
linebacker, Marecic has gained
national attention as one of the
few dominant two-way players in Division-I football. A
biology and pre-medicine student, Marecic has all the right
tools to disrupt any opposing
game plan.
“Just a will, the indomitable
will and a great work ethic,”
Stanford coach Jim Harbaugh
said in his weekly sit-down
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Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck runs past multiple Notre Dame defenders on Sept. 25. Luck had 251 passing yards
and two touchdowns in the Cardinal’s 2009 upset of Oregon, although he completed only 12 passes.
with gostanford.com’s Bruce
MacGowan. “He’s blessed with
ability, strength, and quickness and a great mind to understand these complex defensive
and offensive schemes.”
Marecic will experience a bit
of a homecoming this Saturday when he and the Cardinal
return to Autzen Stadium. A
graduate of Jesuit High School
in Portland, Marecic will be
back in Oregon yet again to
try and come away with his
first-ever win in Eugene.
Oregon has taken seven of
the last eight matchups between the two schools, the
lone Stanford win coming
last year in Stanford Stadium
— Oregon’s only conference
loss — by a count a 51-42. The
headliner in that game, Toby
Gerhart, has since departed to
the NFL to play for the Minnesota Vikings. But through
four games it appears Stanford
hasn’t lost a beat offensively.
“We’ve got to stop the run,”
Oregon senior linebacker
Casey Matthews said. “Force
them to pass a little more. Because if they have some success with the run it’ll make our
(defensive backs) play closer,
which we, we can’t have that.”
That combination of a lethal running game and timely
passing attack was the winning recipe for the Cardinal
last November. Stanford tallied
254 rushing yards (Gerhart
accounted for 223 of those)
on 52 attempts, while thenfreshman quarterback Andrew
Luck completed just 12 passes
that went for 251 yards and
two scores.
Eight of those receptions
were split between wide receivers Chris Owusu (four for
111 yards) and Ryan Whalen
(four for 72 yards), who both
returned this season. In 2010,
however, senior Doug Baldwin
has stepped up as the team’s
leading receiver, pulling in 12
stanford
continued on page 7B
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4B Oregon Daily Emerald Friday, october 1, 2010
GAME DAY
no. 9 stanford
@ no. 4 oregon
0
1
2
3
4
arizona state
@ oregon state
Lucas
Clark
andy drukarev
Robert Husseman
Patrick Malee
0
1
2
3
4
ucla
@ washington state
LUCAS CLARK
andy drukarev
ROBERT HUSSEMAN
PATRICK MALEE
0
1
ATT
yds
Avg
TD
LONG
L. James
58
475
8.2
4
72
R. Alston
43
209
4.9
2
38
passing
cmp
att
PCT
YDS
TD
D. Thomas
58
106
54.7
822
10
receiving
cat
YDS
AVG
TD
LONG
J. Maehl
18
254
14.1
3
47
L. Tuinei
10
95
9.5
1
29
D. Davis
9
79
8.8
-
17
Defensive
Tkl
ast
INT
TFL/YDS
sacks
J. Boyett
15
10
1
1.5-3
-
E. Pleasant
10
7
-
1.5-7
-
C. Matthews
9
7
2
1.5-13
1.0-7
T. Jackson
12
4
1
-
-
S. Paysinger
9
6
-
1.5-2
1.0-2
2010 stanford schedule
2
3
4
September
4
vs. New Mexico (W, 72-0)
11
at Tennessee (W, 48-13)
18
vs. Portland State (W, 69-0)
at Arizona State (W, 42-31)
25
October
2
vs. Stanford, 5 p.m.
at Washington State, 2 p.m.
9
vs. UCLA, 6 p.m.
21
30
at USC, 5 p.m.
september
4
vs. Sacramento State (W, 52-17)
11
at UCLA (W, 35-0)
18
vs. Wake Forest (W, 68-24)
at Notre Dame, (W, 37-14)
25
October
2
at Oregon, 5 p.m.
vs. USC, 5 p.m.
9
vs. Washington State, 2 p.m.
23
30
at Washington, TBA
November
6
vs. Washington, TBA
13
at California, TBA
26
vs. Arizona, 4 p.m.
December
4
at Oregon State, TBA
November
6
vs. Arizona, TBA
13
at Arizona State, 4:30 p.m.
20
at California, 12:30 p.m.
vs. Oregon State, TBA
27
LUCAS CLARK
andy drukarev
ROBERT HUSSEMAN
PATRICK MALEE
0
1
2
2010 stanford statistical leaders
3
4
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The paper was published
from the basement of the
journalism building until
staff moved to a small
quonset hut outside the
journalism school in 1947.
In 1953, it moved to
another temporary hut
outside Deady Hall, and
then moved again to the
third floor of Allen Hall,
the then-new journalism
building.
We’ve been based in
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since 1974.
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ODE factoid:
2x18p_1
Rushing
2010 UO Schedule
no. 20 USC
@ washington
PICK T H E PAC
2010 Oregon Statistical leaders
LUCAS CLARK
andy drukarev
ROBERT HUSSEMAN
PATRICK MALEE
Rushing
ATT
Yds
aVG
TD
Long
S. Taylor
59
265
4.5
1
81
A. Luck
17
163
9.6
1
52
passing
CMP
ATT
PCT
YDS
TD
A. Luck
64
102
62.7
912
11
receiving
CAT
YDS
AVG
TD
LONG
D. Baldwin
12
222
18.5
3
81
R. Whalen
10
113
11.3
1
30
K. Reuland
8
104
13.0
-
26
Defensive
TKL
AST
INT
TFL/YDS
sacks
D. Howell
14
5
-
-
-
C. Thomas
12
7
-
4.0-30
-
M. Bergen
10
8
-
1.0-4
-
M. Thomas
13
3
-
3.0-5
-
J. Bademosi
12
1
-
-
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Friday, October 1, 2010 Oregon Daily Emerald 5B
GAME DAY
26.8
3-1
Average margin
of victory for
Oregon in
previous four
matchups with
Stanford
Oregon’s record
when ESPN College
GameDay comes
to Eugene
.25
Sacks per game
allowed by Oregon
offensive line, best
in the nation
3.5
Sacks per game
averaged
by Stanford
defense this year
9
570
Consecutive Pac-10
wins for Oregon
at Autzen Stadium
Total yards
gained by Oregon
offense last year
against Stanford
3
Wins over ranked
opponents
for Stanford
last year (3-0)
starting lineups
OREGON
stanford
SPECIAL TEAMS
PK: Rob Beard
KOS: Rob Beard
P: Jackson Rice
KR: Kenjon Barner
PR: Kenjon Barner
LS: Drew Howell
HLD: Nate Costa
OFFENSE
WR: Jeff Maehl
TE: David Paulson
LT: Bo Thran
LG: Carson York
C: Jordan Holmes
RG: C.E. Kaiser
RT: Mark Asper
WR: Lavasier Tuinei
WR: D.J. Davis
QB: Darron Thomas
RB: LaMichael James
DEFENSE
DE: Kenny Rowe
DT: Brandon Bair
DT: Zac Clark
DE: Terrell Turner
OLB: Josh Kaddu
MLB: Casey Matthews
OLB: Spencer Paysinger
CB: Anthony Gildon
FS: John Boyett
ROV: Eddie Pleasant
CB: Talmadge Jackson III
OFFENSE
WR: Doug Baldwin
LT: Jonathan Martin
LG: Andrew Phillips
C: Chase Beeler
RG: David DeCastro
RT: Derek Hall
TE: Konrad Reuland
WR: Chris Owusu
QB: Andrew Luck
FB: Owen Marecic
RB: Stepfan Taylor
PLAYERS TO WATCH
hall photo by jenn pegg stanford daily
james photo by jack hunter photographer
DEFENSE
DE: Matt Masifilo
DT: Sione Fua
DE: Brian Bulcke
OLB: Chase Thomas
ILB: Owen Marecic
ILB: Shayne Skov
OLB: Thomas Keiser
CB: Richard Sherman
FS: Michael Thomas
SS: Delano Howell
CB: Johnson Bademosi
SPECIAL TEAMS
PK: Nate Whitaker
KOS: Nate Whitaker
P: Daniel Zychlinski
KR: Chris Owusu
PR: Doug Baldwin
LS: Zach Nolan
HLD: Daniel Zychlinski
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To force plays from Stanford
quarterback Andrew Luck,
Oregon must stop the Cardinal’s north-south rushing attack, an unenviable task. That
means going through a stout
offensive line that has paved
the way for 223.25 yards per
game on the ground (19th
nationally). The 6-foot-5-inch,
303-pound Hall, a fifth-year senior from Overland Park, Kan.,
will look to erase Turner from
running plays. Oregon’s senior
defensive end from Los Angeles
has nine tackles (1.5 for loss)
and 1.5 sacks for the Ducks this
season and must be a disruptive force for an Oregon defensive line that will need all the
help it can get.
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Sunday, Sept. 26:
Friday—Saturday, Oct. 1-2:
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Following the 7:30pm Student Mass
Wednesday, Sept. 29:
Student Welcome Back Mass 9:00pm
Saturday: 5pm
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6B Oregon Daily Emerald Friday, october 1, 2010
GAME DAY
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PAC-10 ROUNDUP
Huskies ready to take on No. 18 Trojans
Andy Drukarev
sports reporter
Washington at No. 18 USC
(5:00 p.m. Saturday)
While this battle between
two teams led by former Pete
Carroll assistants (Lane Kiffin of USC, Steve Sarkisian
of Washington) looks like a
mismatch on paper, the final
score might be closer than you
think. Until last week’s 50-16
drubbing of awful Washington
State, the Trojans had yet to
establish a rhythm, narrowly
edging a trio of subpar nonconference opponents. While
USC’s offense is strong both
on the ground (21st nationally in rushing) and in the air
(38th nationally in passing),
the Trojan defense lacks depth
and is susceptible to the big
play, as exhibited by Hawaii’s
36 points in the season opener.
That defense is especially
vulnerable to a true dualthreat quarterback like the
Huskies’ Jake Locker. Although Locker has struggled
in the early going, completing only 51.1% of his passes,
he’s still projected to be a
first-round NFL draft pick this
spring and has plenty of talent.
With playmaking receivers in
Jermaine Kearse and Devin
Aguilar, and star running back
Chris Polk, the Husky offense
certainly has the potential to
have a big game.
But even if Locker plays up
to his potential, it’s unlikely
the Washington defense would
slow down the Trojan offense.
In its last game, Washington
surrendered 56 points to a
Nebraska team that only mustered 17 against South Dakota
State. How will the Huskies
fare against a high-octane
attack
like
the
Trojans possess?
Key Stat: Washington’s 1613 defeat of the Trojans last
year marked the first Husky
win over USC since 2001.
Washington State at UCLA
(12:30 p.m. Saturday)
UCLA returns home to take
on Washington State, riding a
wave of momentum from last
weekend’s shocking upset of
then-No. 7 Texas. The Bruins (2-2, 0-1) overwhelmed
the Longhorns with a powerful running game (UCLA had
264 yards on the ground) and
stout offense and will look to
do the same against the woeful
Cougars (1-3, 0-1).
After a respectable showing against SMU two weeks
ago, Washington State was
horrid in a 50-16 blowout loss
to USC. The defense allowed
613 yards of total offense and
Cougar quarterback Jeff Tuel
threw three interceptions. It
will be a challenge for Washington State’s offense to take a
step forward against a stacked
UCLA defense that limited
Texas to only 349 yards of
total offense and forced
five turnovers.
The Cougars’ best chance
to pull the road upset is a lowscoring, sloppy affair. UCLA’s
offense has been known to be
dormant at times, including
in a 35-0 loss at home to Stanford a few weeks ago, and Tuel
may possibly find a few openings in the Bruin secondary.
Key Stat: Washington
State hasn’t won a Pac-10
conference game since Nov.
22, 2008 when the Cougars
edged rival Washington 16-13
in overtime.
Arizona State
at Oregon State
(3:30 p.m. Saturday)
Finally done with one of
the most difficult non-conference schedules in the nation,
Oregon State returns home
from a loss at Boise State to
take on a better-than-expected Arizona State squad. The
biggest reason for the Sun
Devils’ apparent improvement from last year’s disappointing 4-8 campaign is the
addition of Michigan transfer
Steven Threet into the starting lineup. Threet, who beat
out Brock Osweiler and Samson Szakacsy in fall camp, has
helped the Arizona State passing attack reach No. 5 in the
nation. The Devils (2-2, 0-1)
BE HEARD.
had strong showings against
two top-25 teams, losing 4231 to No. 4 Oregon and narrowly missing a road upset of
No. 11 Wisconsin.
Oregon State enters Saturday’s tilt on weak footing.
Although the Beavers had
respectable performances in
their three non-conference
games (a close win against
Louisville and narrow losses
to national powers TCU and
Boise State), new quarterback Ryan Katz is unproven,
and the defense has yet to
find its rhythm. Of more immediate concern is the status
of star wide receiver James
Rodgers, who was knocked
out of last Saturday’s
game against Boise with
a concussion.
Then again, Oregon State
historically is a much better team the second half of
the season than the first,
and maybe a Pac-10 game
against a beatable opponent is just what the Beavers need to begin their
traditional ascent up the
conference standings.
Key Stat: Through three
games, Oregon State quarterback Ryan Katz is only completing 46.8% of his passes,
a big drop-off from former
Beaver quarterback Sean
Canfield’s 67.9% last season.
adrukarev @ dailyemerald . com
Write a letter to the editor
letter@dailyemerald.com
the book arts and professional
practices for artists series
Fall 2010
Journal in Words and Images
CRN 16908; 1 credit; $320; Saturdays, 10/2
and 10/9
Hardback Books
Preparing to Hang Art
CRN 17445; 1 credit; $305; Fridays, 10/8
and 10/15
Exhibit Construction
CRN 16905; 1 credit; $320; Saturday, 10/9
Weekend Letterpress
CRN 16906; 1 credit; $320; Saturday, 11/6
and Sunday, 11/7
CRN 17442; 1 credit; $315; Friday, 10/22
and Saturday, 10/23
Hanging Practices for Art
CRN 17447; 1 credit; $305; Fridays, 11/5 and 11/12
Evening and weekend workshops. Register via DuckWeb.
Questions? Call 541-346-5614.
http://center.uoregon.edu/arts/
EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity. © 2010 University of Oregon
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The Original Since 1987
Friday, October 1, 2010 Oregon Daily Emerald 7B
GAME DAY
Catching up with...
josh huff
Oregon Daily Emerald: As a
oregon
continued from page 3B
“When they get a downhill
run — I think that’s the strength
and conditioning program at
Stanford, because that’s the way
Toby (Gerhart) was,” Asper said.
“You got a head of steam heading
downhill, it’s hard to stop them.
It’s going to take a lot of oomph to
stop that charge.”
Few BCS-conference teams
base their defenses in a 3-4
scheme, and Cal is the only other
Pac-10 school to do so. Nevertheless, the Oregon offensive line
stanford
continued from page 3B
catches for 222 yards and
three scores.
Stanford’s behemoth
starting front line of junior
Jonathan Martin (6-6, 304),
senior Andrew Phillips (65, 302), senior Chase Beeler
(6-3, 285), junior David
DeCastro (6-5, 310) and senior Derek Hall (6-5, 305)
has given up just one sack
in 240 minutes of action
freshman, how have you been
adjusting to college life?
Josh Huff: Well, I’ve only
had two days of classes, but
I’m feeling pretty well with the
classes and what not. On the
football field, I’m feeling real
comfortable.
ODE: You’re from Texas, so
how does it feel living Eugene?
JH: It’s a lot different, but
hey, this is where I’m going
to be living for the next four
years, so why not get used to
it?
ODE: Are you enjoying Eugene? Do you like
the atmosphere?
JH: Yeah, especially on
game days. It’s real nice.
ODE: Where are you living
at right now?
JH: Barnhart.
ODE: How’s that going? Are
you liking the dorms?
JH: Yeah, real nice.
ODE: What about the food?
JH: No, only breakfast
has been schooled in how to
handle the multifaceted attack.
“From a tackle standpoint,
you’re always looking at the defensive end because he’s usually
right on top of you,” Asper said.
“You can pace your decisions off
of that. If he widens, he’s probably coming outside. If he tightens
in, he’s probably coming inside.
Also, you’re looking at the linebacker that’s stacked over him.
If he widens, he’s probably coming outside. If he tightens in, he’s
probably coming inside. You can
play off the two of them. Somebody has to control the outside,
this season.
Matthews still vividly remembers last years trip to
Palo Alto and the imposing
Stanford blocking scheme.
“It was one of the more
physical games I’ve ever
played in,” Matthews said.
“It was just a bad feeling,
but fortunately we recovered
and won the rest.”
Stanford hopes to repeat
its success from a year ago,
but hasn’t faced an opposing
is good.
ODE: What do you like to do
in your free time?
JH: Before school started, I’d
probably go home and go hang
out with my teammates, we
play the (video) games, have
tournaments with the games.
ODE: What kind of video
games do you play?
JH: Just Madden 11 and
NCAA (Football) 11.
ODE: Who’s your favorite
team to play with on Madden?
JH: Houston.
ODE: What classes are
you taking?
JH: FHS (Family and Human Services, Huff’s major)
199, Writing 121, and Art 111.
ODE: What are you looking to do with the Family and
Human Services major?
JH: I just want to help out
with the community, and be
as much of a factor with the
community as I can.
— Patrick Malee
jack hunter photographer
Oregon freshman wide receiver Josh Huff had a breakout game at Arizona State, reeling in a 54-yard touchdown pass in the
third quarter against the Sun Devils on Sept. 25. Huff is the only true freshman to receive significant playing time this year.
and somebody has to control the
inside. If they both go outside,
somebody’s got to come back in.
“Coach Kelly always says,
‘Anticipate the hard, react to the
easy.’ The hard would be the
linebacker running downhill
fast, so you anticipate that. If
he doesn’t, then just lock onto
the end.”
Stanford, of course, must
stop a rushing attack that ranks
fourth in the nation on its home
turf. The offensive linemen
don’t intend to give the Cardinal
anything easy.
go ducks!
With a 2010 freshman class
including the likes of Lache
Seastrunk, Dontae Williams,
Curtis White and Ricky Heimuli, few would have expected
wide receiver Josh Huff to be
first-year player earning the
most snaps four weeks into
the season. Yet the 5-foot-11inch freshman has made a
difference for the Ducks with
his game-breaking speed and
nose for the ball. Huff came up
with one of the mot spectacular plays in last week’s contest
against Arizona State, hauling
in a 54-yard touchdown pass
from Darron Thomas in the
third quarter to give Oregon
an 11-point lead. Showing off
his versatility, he also rushed
for a touchdown against Portland State. The Emerald caught
up with Huff after practice
Wednesday to see how he is
adjusting to life as an Oregon
student-athlete.
rhusseman@dailyemerald.com
crowd nearly as raucous as
Autzen Stadium faithfuls.
“It’s going to be tough.
It’s going to be fun,” Luck
said in the same interview
with Harbaugh. “You know,
this is definitely the game,
I guess people say, why we
play college football. For
games like these in a tough
atmosphere like its going to
be. We’re very excited.”
And then go to A CAmpus museum. It’s free!
Visit us on home game weekends during the 2010
ducks football season and receive free admission!
Jordan schnitzer
museum of Art
museum of natural
and Cultural history
find us at facebook.com/
JordanschnitzermuseumofArt
find us at facebook.com/uofomnch
1430 Johnson Lane
541-346-3027
jsma.uoregon.edu
1680 east 15th Avenue
541-346-3024
natural-history.uoregon.edu
Jesse Davis 04.03.09
sports @ dailyemerald . com
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8B Oregon Daily Emerald Friday, October 1, 2010
GAME DAY
zone-read
continued from page 1B
quarterbacks consistent and
notorious threats.
Beyond individual performances, the most impressive
element of the zone-read to
the untrained observer is the
ease at which the Ducks pull
off misdirection.
“We depend on deception in our offense,” running backs coach Gary
Campbell said. “We run a
lot of zone stuff and we run
some options.”
Oregon practices zoneread fakes regularly during
fall camp and occasionally
devotes extra time during
the season. Each quarterback
works with each running
back to develop a sense of
timing and feel. The goal: a
believable and technically
sound ball fake, every time.
“The coaches have pounded that idea into our heads so
much that it’s like, now, it becomes second nature to us,”
running back Remene Alston
said. “We still need to get better at our fakes, but it seems
to work against defenses.
They pound it in our heads
every day: ‘Good fakes! Good
fakes! Good fakes!’”
Repetition is valuable to
the quarterbacks because, as
starter Darron Thomas said,
“each running back is a little
bit different.”
“You’ve got to get the feel
of each running back,” said
Thomas, who has tucked the
ball and gained 102 yards
on 19 carries this season.
“Kenjon (Barner) and LaMichael are about the same,
though. They’re about the
same height.”
Quarterbacks treat each
zone-read play the same, regardless of the ultimate decision that is based on the read
of the opposing defensive
tackle. Their arms are fully
extended — bent elbows give
the fake away — and their
eyes are always focused on
the clean exchange. Following through is critical — the
longer the ball remains in
the “pocket” created by the
running back’s arms and
chest, the longer the defense
reacts to the handoff, allowing a quarterback to spring
the trap.
“Make it look the same as if
you were running a run play,”
quarterback Nate Costa said.
“A lot of guys rush it because
they don’t trust it. You’ve got
to trust the fake.”
Running backs are encouraged to “be actors” according
to Campbell. (The ultimate
decision to execute a fake, after all, rests with the quarterback.) They will come from
the quarterback’s immediate
right and left sides, behind
him from both directions or
in front from both directions.
The opposite arm (right arm
from the left side, and vice
versa) is raised up to create
the pocket that the quarterback places the ball into.
“They have to hold it tight
enough that if the quarterback lets it go, they can hold
on to it, and if he wants to
pull it out they can release
it,” Campbell said. “It’s body
language. They’ve got to be
moving at the speed they’d be
moving if they had the ball.”
Running the play at full
speed is the most important
facet, according to offensive
coordinator Mark Helfrich.
“You’re running as hard
as you are with the ball as
without the ball,” he said.
“(Masoli) ran as hard as he
did without the ball as if he
had the ball. If you were doing that when the tailback has
the ball — if the tailback’s doing that when you have the
ball — that’s deceiving.”
Masoli was featured in a
segment for ESPN’s College
GameDay show on Oct. 30,
2009, that exhibited his ability to execute ball fakes like
a magician performs simple
card tricks. The program returns to Eugene this week as
the No. 9 Stanford Cardinal
attempts to resist the sleight
of hand of the No. 4 Ducks,
who are fourth in the country with 316.8 rushing yards
per game.
Thomas will get no such
treatment. Kelly did, however, offer praise when asked
about Thomas’ performance
within the zone-read option
game after Oregon’s home
victory against Portland State.
“I think he’s been
outstanding,” Kelly said.
rhusseman@dailyemerald.com
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