Sports A7 Tuesday, April 26, 2022 ON THE SLATE April 23 results COLLEGE BASEBALL College of Idaho 13, Eastern Oregon 8 College of Idaho 8, Eastern Oregon 5 COLLEGE SOFTBALL Eastern Oregon 4, Oregon Tech 3 Eastern Oregon 3, Oregon Tech 2 PREP BASEBALL La Grande 5, Philomath 0 Union/Cove 7, Sherman/Arlington/ Condon 2 Sherman/Arlington/Condon 9, Union/ Cove 6 April 24 results COLLEGE BASEBALL Eastern Oregon 12, College of Idaho 5 Eastern Oregon 8, College of Idaho 5 Tuesday, April 26 PREP BASEBALL La Grande at College Place, 3:30 p.m. PREP SOFTBALL Joseph/Enterprise/Wallowa at Echo/ Stanfi eld (2), 2 p.m. PREP TENNIS Baker/Powder Valley at La Grande, 3 p.m. Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin, File Powder Valley’s Cole Martin (17) runs into the end zone to score during the third quarter of the Class 1A state semifi nal game against St. Paul at Caldera High School in Bend on Saturday, Nov. 20, 2021. Wednesday, April 27 PREP TRACK & FIELD Cove at Pendleton Small Meet Invite, 2 p.m. Final proposal Thursday, April 28 PREP TENNIS La Grande vs. Four Rivers, Treasure Valley Community College, 2 p.m. Friday, April 29 COLLEGE SOFTBALL schools — Cove, Elgin, Enterprise, Imbler, Ione/Arlington, Pilot Rock, Powder Valley, Union and Wallowa — are based in either Union, Wallowa, Umatilla or Morrow counties. By RONALD BOND Eastern Oregon at Carroll College (2), 1 p.m. Wallowa County Chieftain PREP BASEBALL ILSONVILLE — The W La Grande at Ontario (2), 2 p.m. Riverside at Joseph/Enterprise/Wallowa (2), 1 p.m. final recommendation PREP SOFTBALL of the Oregon School Activities La Grande at Ontario (2), 2 p.m. Union/Cove at Grant Union/Prairie City (2), 2 p.m. Elgin/Imbler at Weston-McEwen (2), 2 p.m. Riverside at Joseph/Enterprise/Wallowa (2), 1 p.m. Association football ad hoc committee has been made — and little, if anything, has been changed If approved by OSAA executive board in May, high school football changes will go into eff ect this fall from previous proposals. PREP TRACK & FIELD The committee met Thursday, April 14, and released its fi nal recommendation April 20. The OSAA executive board will vote on the proposal May 2. The fi nal proposal includes support for 1A six-man football — which has been a pilot program for the last four years — being able to play for an offi cial OSAA state championship. Six-man, under the recommendation, will have an eight-team bracket, con- sisting of three teams from the nine-team Special District 1, and fi ve teams from Special District 2, which has 14 teams in it. Joseph Charter School has been among the most dominant during the six-man pilot, having won a de facto championship the fi rst season and playing for a title in the second year. It, along with Echo, Huntington, Pine Eagle and Prairie City/Burnt River, are the six-man schools based in the northeastern corner of the state. If the proposal is approved, eight-man football will also see changes at the playoff s, as the 26 schools slated to play at the larger 1A level will be placed into a 12-team bracket, a change from the 16-team format the schools have had for decades. Four teams will automatically qualify from both SD1 and SD2, with four additional at-large slots being fi lled based on OSAA rankings. Special District 2 has a large local fl avor, as nine of the 14 Elgin, Imbler at Don Walker Invite, 2 p.m. Enterprise at Nike/Jesuit Twilight Relays, Portland, 2 p.m. Saturday, April 30 COLLEGE BASEBALL Corban at Eastern Oregon (2), noon COLLEGE SOFTBALL Eastern Oregon at Carroll College (2), 10 a.m. PREP BASEBALL Union/Cove at Grant Union/Prairie City (2), 11 a.m. PREP TRACK & FIELD La Grande at Legends Invite, Walla Walla, Washington, 10:30 a.m. Cove, Elgin, Imbler, La Grande, Union, Enterprise, Joseph at Union Relays, 11 a.m. Powder Valley at Saint Alphonsus Invitational, noon League shake-up The alignment of the rest of the leagues in Northeastern Oregon will be vastly diff erent as well. The 4A Greater Oregon League is on tap to having more than four teams — not counting the season that featured a 4A/3A hybrid — for the fi rst time since 2005, the year before the state reclassifi cation from four to six classes. The league is slated to include longtime affi liates La Grande and Baker, and will be joined by Pendleton, Crook County, Madras and The Dalles. The six-team league will have three state playoff berths into the 16-team bracket. The 3A Eastern Oregon League will feature fi ve schools — McLoughlin, Nyssa, Vale, Burns and Ontario. Only two of those schools will be guaranteed berths to the 3A state playoff s. The revamped 2A Blue Mountain Conference will include Grant Union, Heppner, Irrigon, Riverside, Stanfi eld, Umatilla and Weston-McEwen. The seven schools will battle for three playoff berths. 1A8-Special District 2, in addition to the nine aforementioned schools includes Adrian, Crane, Dufur, Lyle/Wishram/Klickitat and Sherman/Condon. And 1A6-SD1 has Dayville/Monument, Harper, Wheeler County and South Wasco County, in addition to the above-named schools. The committee has completely done away with an idea it fl oated of banning schools who play down a classifi cation from the postseason, according to a report from The Oregonian. Regionally, that keeps Enterprise, Riverside and Umatilla, as schools playing down, eligible for the postseason. The proposal, if approved by the board, will go into eff ect this fall for the 2022-26 time block. SPORTS SHORT State championship committee supports change in venues for wrestling By NIK STRENG The Oregonian WILSONVILLE — The Oregon School Activities Association’s state championship committee on Monday, April 18, made some changes to the wrestling’s state championships. The OSAA has held every classi- fi cation’s wrestling state champion- ship simultaneously in the Veterans Memorial Coliseum since 2007. But due to an increase in numbers for wrestling, brought on by the imple- mentation of girls wrestling in the 2018-19 school year, the OSAA is having to move the smaller schools to a diff erent venue. The state tournaments for the 6A and 5A classifi cations will remain at Veterans Memorial Coliseum, but the 4A, 3A and 2A/1A tournaments would be moved to a diff erent, to be determined, location. The state championship com- mittee also, again, supported split- ting girls wrestling into two classi- fi cations: a 6A/5A classifi cation and a 4A/3A/2A/1A classifi cation. The girls state tournaments will run at the same location as the boys in the same classifi cation. Earlier in the 2021-22 school year, the state championship com- mittee had said that it does not want to make too many changes coming out of the COVID-aff ected seasons. Many other state championships, like basketball and soccer are largely unchanged. La Grande’s Joshua Collins, left, throws Stayton’s Eli Howard in the fi nals of the 138-pound weight class at the OSAA Class 4A state wrestling championship on Saturday, Feb. 26, 2022, at Cascade High School in Turner. Kenna Collins/Contributed Photo, File An Independent Insurance Agency Associates Reed & Associates for for vice excellent service LOCALLY! 10106 N N. ‘C’ • Island City 541-975-1364 Toll Free 1-866-282-1925 www.reedinsurance.net ance.net Medicare, Auto, Home Insurance and Annuities