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| PAC-10 CONFERENCE DOLLARS added up BIG for Oregon in 2009-2010. |
The figures will be rendered obsolete when the new deal with ESPN and Fox kicks in for 2012-2013 (2011-2012 are under the old contracts)
The league’s annual distributions come from three primary sources: (1) BCS revenue split evenly among the ten schools after participants expenses. (2) NCAA Tournament proceeds split evenly after participants expenses (3) Football TV revenue was not split evenly (that’s changing after this year). Not all conference income is distributed to the schools. The league keeps a chunk for its expenses, salaries, etc.
FY Conference 2009-2010 Income: TV rights fees $58,248,787, Bowl revenue $26,991,594, NCAA tourney revenue $15,314,738, Other $1,100,502, Total $101,913,230 (includes investment income). School dollar distributions: USC 11,036,549, Oregon 10,946,660, followed by Stanford, Arizona, OSU (8,902,141), Cal, ASU, UCLA, Washington (7,533,396) and WSU. FY 2010-11 (under the old contracts) will include revenue from 2 BCS bowl appearances (Oregon and Stanford) and will be divided by 12.
The above figures provided by LaHawk Duck. |
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| DUCKS OVERWHELM BEAVERS IN CIVIL WAR SERIES |
When you count the head-to-head competition, the Beavers only scored points in Soccer and Women’s Basketball. Oregon’s record against OSU was the best showing by either school since the series started. The Ducks wins included football, men’s basketball and baseball among many sports. |
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| COWBOYS CLASSIC SEPTEMBER 3 TIGER-DUCK DALLAS GAME SOLD OUT |
It is reported only standing room tickets were available which went on sale July 8. LSU has sold its allotment of 37,000 and Oregon 15,000, with a total close to $80 tickets. Last year’s TCU-Oregon State game attracted only 46,138. ESPN’s Game Day will be on hand for this year’s game. |
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| BOLD, INOVATIVE CAMPUS FORD ALUMNI CENTER OPENS |
On June 10 the University of Oregon celebrated the unveiling of the four-story, $33.6 million Cheryl Ramberg/Allyn Ford Alumni Center. Funded by private gifts and state bonds, the center will provide office space, welcome visitors to campus, and tell stories of the University and its alumni. The Ford Alumni Center will also help recruit new students. The Center’s modern, sustainable design compliments the neighboring Matthew Knight Arena and completes the new east campus gateway. It houses the UO Foundation and Alumni Association, student orientation services and development department and features an interpretive area, health facilities, a 3,600-square-foot ballroom, a library, public areas, meeting rooms and offices. |
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| EXPANDED FOOTBALL FACILITIES CASANOVA CENTER EXPANSION |
The price of success often results in an effort to maintain the ensuing momentum. Following two of the most successful seasons in the 115-year history of Oregon’s football program, the next phase of athletic facility enhancements has begun. Construction for the project can be broken down into three different areas: the initial phase will consist of utility relocation of the existing and future properties; the second phase will be construction of a new soccer and lacrosse stadium; the third will be expansion west and north of the Cas Center with a state-of-the-art football operations center. Football parking will be affected.
The entire project will be funded through private philanthropy (thanks Phil and Penny Knight) and will include no use of public, state or general university fund dollars. The Cas 130,000 square-foot expansion is expected to encompass as many six floors in some areas for a football facility that will provide the functionality and advanced technology to carry the Ducks into the future. Included will be coaches offices, nine dedicated football position meeting rooms, two team video theaters, offense and defense strategy rooms as well as a larger conference suite for the entire coaching staff. The centralized area will include an advanced video editing center, a full-service dinning facility to seat about 250 guests as well as a new 25,000 square-foot weight room overlooking a grass practice field and two new synthetic surface fields.
The new championship-caliber women’s soccer and lacrosse complex and stadium facility will feature a synthetic turf playing surface. It will include offices and locker room suites for both teams. The soccer team will play this fall at the current Pape’ Field location. |
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| HARRINGTON INDUCTED INTO HOLIDAY BOWL HALL OF FAME |
Harrington and the Ducks defeated Texas 35-30 in the 2000 Holiday Bowl. He threw for 273 yards and two TD’s, ran for a score and caught a touchdown pass. There are only 29 members of the Holiday Bowl Hall of Fame and this is the first from the Pac-10 (now Pac-12). |
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| LACROSSE |
Lacrosse plays a winter-early spring schedule in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation with Cal, Stanford, St. Mary’s, UC Davis and Denver plus eastern schools in non-conference play under Coach Jen Larsen. The season 8-9 record culminated with a Conference Tournament semi-final win over Denver and a close final loss to Stanford. Four players were named on the conference all-academic team. |
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| ACROBATICS AND TUMBLING |
Acrobatics and Tumbling was the new name and the Ducks team under Coach Felecia Mulkey responded by winning the National Collegiate Acrobatics and Tumbling Association Tournament beating Maryland in April at Mac Court. 10 state of Oregon student athletes are on the roster. |
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| VOLLEYBALL |
Volleyball under Coach Jim Moore will not rest on their last year’s 19-11 record and national ranking of 11th. Losing only one to graduation and recruiting an outstanding incoming class, practice starts in late July with the Ducks kicking of their 44th season, and one of its most exciting ever, on August 26-27 at State College, PA against defending national champion Penn State and Big-10 power Minnesota. The Knight Arena schedule starts September 2. Along with other non-conference matches is the challenging Pac-12 home and home schedule, the nation’s toughest conference. |
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| SOFTBALL |
Softball under Coach Mike White had one of its most successful season this spring with a 42-16 (11-10 Pac-10 3rd place tie) record, winning the University Park, PA NCAA Regional and advancing to a Super Regional losing to eventual NCAA runner-up Florida. At season end the Ducks were nationally ranked 14 or 15 in the major polls. Several student-athlete players receive academic honors. |
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| GOLF |
Golf teams had successful seasons. The Women, led by second year Coach Ria Scott, had one of its most impressive seasons ever, both team wise and individual performances. Scoring well in most tournaments with a strong 7th place in the Pac-10 and in the NCAA Regionals just missed a trip to the NCAA’s finals. Several players received playing recognition and academic honors. The 20th-ranked men, under Coach Casey Martin, tied for first place at the Pac-10’s and in the NCAA Regionals just missed a trip to the finals. Several players received playing and academic honors. |
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| TENNIS |
Tennis teams had busy competitive schedules. Nils Schyllander’s men’s team had a season 11-11 (1-5 Pac-10) record plus good results in several tournaments. Several Ducks received all-academic honors plus freshman Alex Rovello from Portland was named Western Region Freshman of the Year by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association. On the women’s side Coach Paul Weber’s team had a 7-15 season record with tough competition. Four players were placed on the Pac-10 All-Academic Team with three more receiving honorable mention. |
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Sports Notes:
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| New Pac 12 Logo |
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| Civil War Series - Oregon won 15 - 2 |
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| Cowboy Classic September 3, 2011 |
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| Cheryl Ramberg/Allyn Ford Alumni Center |
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| Casanova Center Expansion Project |
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| Casanova Center Expansion Project |
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| Joey Harrington First Pac 10 Member in Holiday Bowl Hall of Fame |
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| Ducks win National Collegiate Acrobatics and Tumbling Association Tournament |
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| Kaitlin Vitek |
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| Alex Rovello |
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