The Oregon women’s basketball program has experienced a lot of notable milestones and great moments during the Kelly Graves coaching era.

Celebrating a win in Corvallis is a box that remains unchecked.

The third-ranked Ducks will try to snap their nine-game road losing skid in the Civil War against No. 9 Oregon State on Monday at Gill Coliseum.

Oregon extended the nation’s longest active winning streak to 17 games with a 77-68 win over the Beavers (20-5, 10-3 Pac-12) in front of a capacity crowd of 12,634 on Friday at Matthew Knight Arena.

“It was great to play in that environment,” Ruthy Hebard said after scoring 21 points on 9-for-17 shooting and grabbing a game-high 11 rebounds in round one. “We screamed over the crowd or tried hand signals (to communicate). Altogether it was super fun. I can’t wait until Monday.”

The Ducks (24-1, 13-0), who lost 85-79 in overtime at Oregon State last season, haven’t won at Gill Coliseum since Jan. 9, 2010.

Oregon is 10-1 in true road games this season, including the program’s first victory over Stanford at Maples Pavilion since 1987.

A capacity “Big Monday” crowd of 9,301 is expected at Gill Coliseum, where the Beavers are 12-1 this season.

Oregon State coach Scott Rueck, who has built one of the nation’s elite programs on a foundation of defense and rebounding, will make some adjustments to combat Sabrina Ionescu.

The reigning Pac-12 player of the year finished with 29 points, nine assists and five rebounds Friday.

Oregon had a 31-30 rebounding edge and scored 17 second-chance points.

“We gave up so many offense rebounds, it seemed like every frickin’ one turned into something positive for them,” Rueck lamented outside of the visiting locker room at Matthew Knight Arena. “Every single one. So that’s an area we’ve got to get better at …

“Sabrina made every play they needed down the stretch, hit huge shots like she does, it’s what she’s going to do. We just didn’t answer quite as often as we needed to.”

Point guard Destiny Slocum scored 19 points in only 25 minutes to lead the Beavers but was 6-for-15 from the field.

Oregon scored 15 points off 10 turnovers and allowed Oregon State to score only six points off three turnovers.

The Beavers, who entered the game ranked third nationally in 3-point shooting (41.7 percent), finished 6-for-21 (28.6 percent) behind the arc.

“I just thought we were flying around. Our communication was good,” Graves said of his team’s defensive effort. “We were switching, so they didn’t have as many mismatches or open lanes.”

During the Bay Area trip, the Ducks handed Stanford its worse loss of the Tara VanDerveer era (88-48) less than 48 hours after the Beavers were blown out by the Cardinal (61-44).

“We knew that they had lost to Stanford, but it was a completely different game. We didn’t base what we were going to do off of the score of their game,” Ionescu said. “We knew they were going to come in and execute, and if we weren’t going to be able to defend the three we weren’t going to win.”

If Oregon is able to win at Oregon State, the defending Pac-12 champion will have a four-game lead on its Civil War rival with four games remaining in the regular season.

“That’s a nice position to be in,” Graves said.

The Beavers will try to prevent the Ducks from celebrating what appears to be an inevitable title repeat on their home floor.