Sports 8A — THE OBSERVER 8A Saturday, December 12, 2020 Mountie women wrestlers have a new head coach Local schools react to postponed sports season By Kaleb Lay By Kaleb Lay The Observer The Observer LA GRANDE — Eastern Oregon Univer- sity in November wel- comed a new head coach to the Mountaineers wom- en’s wrestling squad with the hiring of Carlene Sluberski. Formerly at the University of Providence in Great Falls, Montana, where she led Sluberski the Argos to a top-10 ranking and a third-place conference fi nish last year, Sluberski brings experi- ence and enthusiasm to the Mounties grappling squad. “I am very excited to be at Eastern,” Sluberski said. “It’s been awesome. Obviously, coming in at this time is kind of crazy, and (I’m) just trying to keep my head above water. It’s not a bad thing at all, it’s just crazy. I’m really excited to be at Eastern. It’s a good place, and I think they do things the right way.” While taking the reins UNION COUNTY — The Oregon School Activi- ties Association on Monday, Dec. 7, announced it pushed back the start of high school sports to February 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Local school offi cials met the news with frustration and acceptance. The OSAA’s decision moved the start of a six- week season for the tra- ditional fall sports of football, volleyball and cross-country to Feb. 22, though football teams can start practice earlier. Spring sports will play during the following six weeks, and winter sports will play in the six weeks after that. Jeffrey Rysdam, ath- letic director and head foot- ball coach in Elgin, said the OSAA’s move was predictable. “I wasn’t really sur- prised by it,” Rysdam said. “I had a feeling they were gonna push things back just because of county cases, cases rising not only here but across the state.” Rysdam struck a cau- tiously optimistic tone about the prospect of six-week sporting sea- sons returning to area high schools, saying “six games is still better than no games.” Students in Elgin have been frustrated, he said, that play continually eludes them. “We’re in person out here and I’ve been talking to them at the start of each day in class,” he said. “I talk to them and tell them what’s going on. They’re disappointed and, I guess, they’re basically tired of the goalposts getting moved. We get close and we have to move it again, and they just want to get back to normal.” At the other end of the Grande Ronde Valley, Cove School District Superin- tendent Earl Pettit has been vocal about his dissatisfac- tion with state restrictions on school sports. “With the latest shift in goalposts today, we are currently not allowed to have any indoor sports at all — this despite the fact that we are allowed to have PE classes, be in school, ride buses, etc.,” Pettit wrote in a Dec. 3 press release predating the OSAA announcement. “Expressing my frustration here, this goes clearly against the con- cept that activities are a part of school and an important part of the educational process.” He also criticized Gov. Kate Brown for changes to Cove’s ability to provide sporting opportunities to students. Under Brown’s risk and protection frame- work, K-12 sports now are prohibited in counties with 60 or more cases of COVID-19 in the previous two weeks. Pettit expressed a similar frustration with the OSAA’s decisions. “We have said for years and continue to say that activities are an integral part of the educational experience for secondary students, for high school students, and (we’re) still waiting for that to happen this year,” the Cove super- intendent said. While action on the court, fi eld and track has widely been put on hold in 2020, some sports did take place earlier in the fall. Imbler Athletic Director Mike Mills said he felt his school was fortunate to squeeze in an early volley- ball season, adding it was Kathy Aney/East Oregonian, File Israel O’Reilly of Union/Cove leads the 2A/1A boys dis- trict cross-country championships Friday, Nov. 1, 2019, at Community Park in Pendleton. O’Reilly won with a time of 16:43.6. The Oregon School Activities Association has moved the start of tradition fall sports season to February 2021 due to the corona pandemic. good for the students. Mills, though, expressed his own frustration with the delay in sports but said it was a necessary sacrifi ce in SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2020 LABEL a diffi cult year. “I’m a little disap- pointed, but I can under- stand why they (OSAA) are doing that,” he said. of a new team during the COVID-19 pandemic has been challenging, she said she was thrilled to help grow both Eastern’s pro- gram and the sport of women’s wrestling as a whole. Sluberski had high praise for EOU athletics and for the athletes on her team. “It’s not like a huge team, but there’s a lot of good character there, good people,” she said. “They’re focused, very driven. I think the individuals have high standards for them- selves and high expecta- tions. ... It’s a good group.” Drive, focus and high personal standards are a facet of women’s wres- tling, Sluberski said, adding that one of the rea- sons she loves the sport is the constant challenges it provides. “You know, when you step out on the mat, it’s only you. You can’t hide anything. You can’t hide that you didn’t put the work in — it shows,” she said. “It gives you a sense of personal responsibility for yourself and you fi gure out a way to get things done and how to do your best.” A native of upstate New York, Sluberski became involved in women’s wrestling in elementary school. She credited her own coaches during her younger years with seeing the potential not only in her but in women’s wres- tling as a sport. Women’s wrestling has rapidly grown in the last decade as more and more schools expand their ath- letic programs to include women in the sport. “I graduated high school in 2009, and I think there were about 10 col- leges in the entire U.S. that offered women’s wres- tling, and now there’s over 80, I believe,” Sluberski said. More states have offi - cially sanctioned and rec- ognized women’s wres- tling in that time as well. Sluberski said that while only a handful had sanc- tioned the sport a decade ago, 23 to 25 states have done so since then. it’s too late! HURRY! OFFER ENDS 12/18/20 LIMITED TIME ONLY EXPIRES Dec. 18, 2020 Mention Code: 20DecWanted LA GRANDE BAKER CITY ENTERPRISE 111 Elm Street La Grande, OR 97850 2021 Washington Ave. Baker City, OR 97814 113-1/2 Front E. Main St. Enterprise, OR 97828 541-239-3782 541-239-3877 541-605-2109