A10 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 2015 SPORTS Knights surge past upset-minded Vikings completed the game on a 33-9 run. “I feel like we (usually) Depth ruled the day for come out and execute well the Irrigon Knights Tues- and compete,” Umatilla (6- day. 5) coach Derrek Lete said. After trading leads with “Tonight, for whatever Umatilla through one half, UHDVRQZHFDPHRXWÀDWLQ reserve guard AJ Timpy got the second half. Irrigon is the nod for a rare second DWHDP\RXGH¿QLWHO\GRQ¶W half start, and the sharp- want to do that to or they’ll shooter didn’t disappoint. light the scoreboard up.” Timpy drilled a trio of Foul trouble hindered three-point shots in the WKH .QLJKWV LQ WKH ¿UVW opening minutes of the half. Junior Fredy Vera second half to blow open was the only Irrigon start- the game, and the Knights er not sidelined with more cruised from there, running than one foul. His eight away to a 67-34 romp of the points helped Irrigon carry 9LNLQJVRQWKH¿QDOGD\RI a diminutive lead into the the Les Schwab Shoot-Out break. at the Pendleton Conven- Vera didn’t slow down tion Center. in the second, scoring The Knights (8-0) held SRLQWV WR ¿QLVK ZLWK D just a 25-21 halftime edge, game-high 24 points. Vera but Timpy’s third consecu- led four Irrigon players tive three-pointer made the LQ GRXEOH ¿JXUHV $GULDQ count it 34-25. Romero had 13, Tipmy 12 “He had a tremendous and Anthony Landeros 11. VXPPHU DQG KH JRW FRQ¿- Umatilla senior guard dent shooting the ball, and Eric Garcia led all scorers with him he’s always ready ZLWK¿UVWKDOISRLQWVEXW to go,” coach Mike Thomp- the Knight defenders held son said of the senior guard. him to four second half EO MEDIA GROUP PHOTO BY E.J. HARRIS The perimeter shooting points on 2-for-8 shooting. prowess placed the mo- Umatilla scored just 13 Irrigon’s Freddy Vera puts up a shot surrounded by a host mentum squarely in the points in the last 16 minutes of Umatilla defenders on Tuesday in the Knights’ 67-34 win against the Vikings in Pendleton. Knights’ corner and they of play. BY ERIK SKOPIL EO MEDIA GROUP GIRLS: continued from page A1 beating themselves with fouls and turnovers. Now 9-2, consistent play is a constant, not a hope. “We’re putting things together for longer periods of time, and we’re do- ing it with a lot of bench support, a lot of role players,” Hoffert said. That bench support, though, is the biggest mark of improvement for Hermiston. In its second game in Lake Oswego, Hermiston played Iolani, a Hawaii Division II power- house from Oahu, and came out on top after two overtimes. The Raiders, according to Hof- fert, were the fastest team Hermiston will see all year and probably the smallest, too. Early on, Hoffert said the Lady Bulldogs were in “survival mode” due to Iolani’s relentless press and dribble drives. The Raiders’ SPORTS: continued from page A1 scholastic sports in Austria aren’t that prevalent or competitive. Most sports are club-based and practice only about three times a week with sporadic games. Schools there, she said, are “mostly for learning and boring” and don’t really have competitive athletics programs. It’s nothing like the athletics schedules for athletes in the States with practices or games six days a week, she said. “I just didn’t expect it,” she said. “I didn’t think about having practice every day af- ter school.” In the fall, Katterbauer was assigned to the junior varsity volleyball team and didn’t get much playing time early on. She admitted she wasn’t as good as her teammates, mostly due to her inexperience. She said it amazed her how competi- tive sports are in this country and how hard people work at them. “Here, people build their life on their sports,” she said. “They’re crazy about sports.” Competing in sports made her transition in Amer- ica easier, however. When she came to Herm- BOYS: continued from page A1 taining that,” McElligott said. Overall, though, the tournament featured one positive. Hermiston dou- bled its win total in Bar- ECHO: continued from page A1 gles stand out. “Those are going to be fantastic basketball games, as they always are,” Bra- depth was also an issue. They went 10-deep, and there was no drop-off in athleticism or skill. “We went with a smaller, quicker lineup, and it slowed them down,” Hoffert said. “It took away some of WKLQJV WKH\ ZHUH GRLQJ LQ WKH ¿UVW half.” Hermiston closed, and Sara Ramirez hit a 3-foot runner at the buzzer to send WKHJDPHWRRYHUWLPH7KH¿UVWH[WUDSH- riod was back-and-forth, with Hermis- ton getting a good look at the buzzer to potentially win it. It didn’t go down, and Hermiston won anyway in the second extra period. “In the second overtime, I thought our conditioning, our bench, our depth won the game for us,” Hoffert said. “We seemed quicker, fresher, quicker to loose balls, quicker to rebounds. We felt good about the fact that we were able WRSUHWW\PXFKRXWODVWWKHPDQG¿QLVK strong with girls who typically don’t get a lot of minutes and get put in that position.” Sandwiched around the win over Io- lani were double-digit wins over North Medford (54-41) and Roseburg (43-28) and the championship completion over Centennial 43-37 on Tuesday. Those size and lineup adjustments will pay huge dividends for the Lady Bulldogs. Against Iolani, Sydney Moore, a reserve guard, played the en- tire fourth quarter and most of the over- times. Rileigh Andreason gave good minutes. “I’ve coached a lot of years,” Hoffert said. “I’ve had a lot of great basketball team, but I’ve never had a team that the bench was more valuable to us than this year. For them to show us that they can do that, that they can come back, it gave WKHP FRQ¿GHQFH ,W JDYH RXU VWDUWHUV FRQ¿GHQFH ,I ZH¶UH QRW SOD\LQJ ZHOO those girls can come in and win games.” Hermiston plays today at Kennewick DWSPDQGKHDGVWR/D*UDQGHIRU a 7 p.m. tilt Tuesday. iston, Katterbauer was not familiar with Oregon. She knew what and where Cal- ifornia is, and a couple of other major, internationally known cities, but had never heard of Oregon or Herm- iston. So when she came, she had no friends, no idea ZKHUH WR ¿QG WKHP9ROOH\- ball, however, gave her that opening. “I had some people to hang out with from the very ¿UVWGD\´VKHVDLG³,WKLQNDV an exchange student it’s kind RIKDUGWR¿WLQWRJURXSVRI friends, but with playing a VSRUWLW¶VZD\HDVLHUWR¿QG friends and to make connec- tions with people.” Wang, an exchange stu- dent from Italy, had a similar experience playing soccer for the Bulldogs. He played club soccer since he was a child, but was also surprised by the sched- ule and also saw differences in athleticism. “I’m not saying it’s tough, but it’s something that’s more into your life rather than just something that you do for fun,” Wang said. “Not that my team back in Italy’s bad, but we do only one, two practices per week, and there are teams that do three, four, ¿YH GHSHQGLQJ RQ WKH OHYHO and the goals of the team.” Wang also sees other dif- ferences between soccer here and in Italy. He said here, players are more disciplined and humble. Back in Italy, he said, “We’re just playing for chill” or fun. “And we go there, and we chill,” he said. “Sometimes our coach gets mad, (but) there is no discipline.” Wang said, instead of soc- cer in the fall, he wished he had played football instead. He acknowledges that some of that desire came from seeing the football team win the state championship, but he also wished he had tried something he’s never done before. “I’ve been playing soccer for so many years,” he said. “And next year when I’m going back (to Italy), I’m not planning on playing soccer anymore. And even this year, if I was still in Italy, I would not have chosen to play soc- cer.” Both Katterbauer and Wang are now dedicated to swimming. “I mainly picked swim- ming because I’m not very good at basketball,” Katter- bauer said. “Because every- body was like, ‘Oh yeah, basketball is the most com- petitive sport ever. If you go for basketball you have to put everything in it.’ But swimming...” “It’s relaxing,” Wang chimed in. “No it’s not relaxing at all,” Katterbauer said with a laugh. “I feel like swim- ming is a sport like running because it’s just ... keep going and long distances and sprinting. I didn’t pick cross country because I’m not good at that stuff... I mean, I enjoy it, though. I enjoy going to practice, go- ing with my friends, stuff like that.” They were, again, stunned by the competi- tive nature of the sport and the amount of training in- volved. Katterbauer smiles when she talks about the heavy 45-minute regimen of daily swim practices, with constant laps and core training. Although she is swim- ming, so far, Katterbauer hasn’t gotten to enjoy one ZLQWHU VSRUW VNLLQJ 6KH¶V from Salzburg in the Aus- trian Alps, and skiing is universal pastime there. Katterbauer hopes to sample the mountains in the U.S. this winter, while Wang from northern Italy, went skiing with the HHS outdoor club. “Back home, I’m a good skier,” Katterbauer said. “My host family, we have some friends who do ski- ing, so they said I could go with them. I will have a chance to go skiing.” low and sit with a record of 2-7. “I think we’ve been headed in the right direc- tion the last four days,” McElligott said. “I think we’re headed in the right direction. We just have to get better in every aspect of the game, offensively and defensively. I think the team we have now that I saw these last few days is still a far cry from where we will be and where we should be.” These next three games for Hermiston will say a lot. It’ll be a jungle for the Bulldogs, as they face Lions, Tigers and a Storm. Today Hermiston travels to Kennewick to take on the Kennewick Lions at SP WRGD\ KHDG WR La Grande to take on the Tigers at 7 p.m. Tuesday, then host the Summit 6WRUP DW SP -DQ 10. zil said. “We’ll probably play again at districts, and that’ll be an epic battle, and we might see them again at Baker (at the state tourna- ment). If we play them four times, I guarantee nobody’s going 4-0.” After a perfect run to open the season, Echo lost LWV ¿UVW JDPH 7XHVGD\ DW the hands of top-ranked Country Christian, but Bra- zil said the Cougars aren’t fazed by the loss. “You never want to lose,” Brazil said. “Yeah, we wanted to win (Tues- day), but we’re not looking at that as ‘Oh, this great undefeated streak has come to end.’ We got off to a hot start, ran into a good team and got beat. But we gave it EO MEDIA GROUP PHOTO BY E.J. HARRIS Irrigon’s A.J. Timpy (3) and Adrian Romero put pressure on Umatilla’s Danny Ayala on Tuesday in the Knights’ 67-34 win against the Vikings in Pendleton. Echo girls no longer undefeated The Echo girls basketball WHDPGURSSHGLWV¿UVWJDPH of the year Tuesday, losing to Country Christian 57-51 in the Cougar Den in Echo. Kelsey Ranger had 17 points and six steals, and Elizabeth McCarty had 15 points and 11 rebounds for Echo. “We gave them a hell of a game,” Echo coach JD Bra- zil said. “They’re a really good team. They’re the No. 1 team in the OSAA rank- ings and No. 2 in the coach- es poll.” Echo (10-1) shot 53 per- cent from 3-point land, sink- ing eight of 15, but shot just SHUFHQW IURP WKH ÀRRU as a whole, going 16 of 56. Meanwhile, Country Chris- tian (8-1) shot 40 percent IURP WKH ÀRRU DQG MXVW percent from 3. Echo also missed 15 free throws and had nine shots blocked. ³:H GH¿QLWHO\ ZRXOG have liked to have made more free throws,” Brazil said. “The blocked shots I’m not concerned about. The free throws missed, yeah, I don’t like that. If we’re going to attack and go to the line, we need to capitalize.” After being tied at the half, Country Christian locked down the defense DQGDOORZHGRQO\¿YHSRLQWV in the third quarter. It was the lowest quarter point total by the Cougars this season. Echo won the fourth quarter 15-14 but couldn’t cut into the seven-point lead. “All in all, it was a good performance,” Brazil said. “I’m not a moral victory guy, but this was a barome- ter game. To be with a team that could very well win it all this year, it makes us feel good about our chances.” Country Christian 2, Echo 8. Free throws — Country Christian 3-8, Echo 11-26 Fouled out — A. Farner (CC). Fouls — Country Christian 24, Echo 11. hell ... It’s not like the sea- sons over. Some days you win. Some days you lose.” Being new to the OOL, as Echo came over from the Big Sky League with Helix and Nixyaawii, the Cougars ar- en’t sure what to expect from the other teams they will play. “I think what we’re go- ing to have for a league title, barring catastrophes, injuries, (whatever), I think we’re going to have a cou- ple teams in the mix,” Bra- zil said. Umatilla girls strong af- ter break The Umatilla girls bas- ketball team is in good shape after holiday break, beating River View (Washington), Lost River, Union, Irrigon, Nixyaawii and losing to sec- ond-ranked Kennedy by just two points. On Dec. 23, Umatilla beat River View 38-26 and followed that up with a 46-38 win over a previous- ly undefeated Lost River team Monday to kick off the Enterprise Tournament in Pendleton. Against the Raiders, Aleesha Watson had 16 points and 10 re- ERXQGV ZLWK ¿YH FRPLQJ on the offensive glass. Sid- ney Webb tacked on another 12 points on 4-10 shooting from 3-point land. In the championship of the Enterprise tournament in Pendleton, Umatilla topped Irrigon 43-18 in a rematch of ERWKWHDPV¶¿UVWJDPHRIWKH year. Watson again led the Lady Viks in scoring with 13 points. Brenda Campos was the other Lady Viking LQ GRXEOH ¿JXUHV ZLWK and Courtney Dohman grabbed 11 rebounds. On New Year’s Day, Umatilla traveled to Salem for the Salem Academy Tournament and drew sec- ond-ranked 2A Kennedy LQ WKH ¿UVW URXQG :DWVRQ had 19 points and nine re- bounds, Dohman had 16 and 8 and Webb had 11 points and three assists. Kennedy led 30-22 at the half, but the Lady Viks stormed back in the third behind 10 points COUNTRY CHRISTIAN 57, ECHO 51 from Watson, with six of CC (8-1, 2-0) 14 17 12 them coming on free throws. 14 57 Echo (10-1, 2-0) 13 18 Umatilla’s fourth-quarter 5 15 51 rally came up just a basket short, however, and Kenne- Country Christian — D. dy handed Umatilla its third Grandle 0, M. Lewandows- loss of the season. Friday, in the consolation ki 12, C. McGrath 8, S. Ross 0, A. Farner 0, A. La Pointe bracket, Umatilla topped 4, K. Nofziger 15, M. Halv- local 1A power Nixyaawii erson 8, M. McGrath 0, A. 51-24 in Pendleton. Umatil- Cunningham 4, A. Barden 6. la had three girls in double Echo — E. Parks 3, K. ¿JXUHV:HEE'RKPDQ Ranger 16, D. Tarvin 0, T. (10) and Iri Campos (10). Swaggert 3, H. McCarty 8, Dohman, Campos and Kas- L. Cox 0, G. Strofe 6, E. sandra Galbraith all had six McCarty 15, L. Wiggins 0, UHERXQGV :DWVRQ KDG ¿YH and Galbraith swiped six B. Millbroot 0, H. Reese 0. SRLQW ¿HOG JRDOV ² steals.