Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current, July 15, 2016, Page PAGE A11, Image 11

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    JULY 15, 2016, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A11
and picked up his second save.
Game 2: Vancouver 9,
Volcanoes 3
The Canadians blew the
game open with six runs in
the fi rst inning. Starter Victor
Concepcion lasted only two-
thirds of an inning and took
the loss.
Biggio walked and went
to second as Orozco was safe
on Concepcion’s missed-catch
error at fi rst base. A wild pitch
moved both runners up. A
passed ball by catcher Zack
Bowers scored Biggio and put
Orozco on third. Woodman
walked. Williams hit a sacrifi ce
fl y to center, scoring Orozco
and letting Woodman reach
second. Woodman stole third.
Lizardo walked. DJ McKnight
scored Woodman and moved
Lizardo to third with a single
to right. Lizardo scored on a
balk. Andres Sotillo hit a two-
run homer to left center.
CJ Gettman relieved Con-
cepcion and retired the side as
the next batter popped out.
Vancouver scored again
in the second. Biggio led off
with a single to right, reached
third as Orozco doubled to
right, and scored on a passed
ball.
Rayan Hernandez took the
mound for Salem-Keizer in
the fourth and pitched two
scoreless innings. Carlos Diaz
pitched the last two innings
for the Volcanoes.
The Volcanoes did not have
a baserunner until the fourth.
Facing Andrew Ravel, who
had replaced starter Michael
Ellenbest, Brusa cleared the
right fi eld fence with the bases
empty for his second round-
tripper. Zack Bowers ground-
ed out to end the inning.
Rivera led off the Salem-
Keizer sixth with a single to
center, reached second on a
wild pitch, and went to third
as Fulmer hit an infi eld sin-
gle. An errant throw by third
baseman Lizardo put Fulmer
on second. Brusa walked, and
a pitch from Ravel hit Leo
Rojas to force Rivera home.
Jackson McClelland took the
mound and struck out Gus-
tavo Cabrera to retire the side.
Vancouver added two runs
in the top of the seventh. In
the bottom of the inning,
Chase Compton walked and
Rivera got him home with a
single to left.
That was as far as the Vol-
canoes got.
After praising the come-
from-behind effort in the
fi rst game, Volcano manager
Kyle Haines said the start in
the second game proved too
rough to overcome.
“We just put ourselves in
a hole,” he said. “We need to
make it to where we don’t
need to get too many hits.”
He attended San Jacinto
College in Pasadena, Texas,
just about an hour away from
his house. He had one goal:
have two successful years on
the mound.
“I was there to play base-
ball,” Riggs said. “There are a
lot of good guys at a JC, and
it was something different. We
had fun. I ran a lot, more than
I had ever run in my life.”
After two years at San Ja-
cinto, Riggs transferred to Sam
Houston State. He pitched
one season and was signed as
a free agent by the Giants in
2014. With aspirations to be a
closer Riggs has really found
his role in the bullpen.
“The bullpen has done a
great job keeping the game
close late in games,” he said.
“Our starters are getting deep
into games, and making it
pretty easy on us.”
Though they seem like all
business all the time, the bull-
pen still fi nds time to joke.
“We go to the store and
fi nd the girliest backpack
that we can,” Riggs said. “We
make the new guy carry it out,
packing it full of gum, seeds,
Gatorade, all the essentials for
the bullpen pitchers. It is really
fun for the fans, and it always
gets their attention.”
57, to win its fi rst Pac-12 tour-
nament title.
As a 2-seed, the Lady Bea-
vers blew out St. Bonaventure
69-40 to advance to the Sweet
16 for the fi rst time in program
history.
OSU then topped DePaul
83-71 to play No. 1 seed Bay-
lor for a shot of the Final Four.
Hunter pulled down seven re-
bounds in a 60-57 win for the
historic berth.
Up next was undefeated
and three-time defending na-
tional champion UCONN.
Like all the other teams
that had tried to dethrone
the Lady Huskies, OSU fell
80-51 in front of more than
15,000 people in Indianapolis
and millions more around the
world watching on ESPN.
In the title game, Syracuse
didn’t have any better luck,
losing to UCONN 82-51.
“Their starting fi ve is amaz-
ing,” Hunter said of the cham-
pions. “The game didn’t go
the way we wanted it to but it
was defi nitely a good learning
experience and just making it
to the Final Four was an awe
moment.”
Hunter fi nished her career
with 893 rebounds, good for
fourth in Oregon State history
and tied for 31st in Pac-12 his-
tory. She scored 946 points, had
262 assists, 86 steals, 46 blocks
and played in every game over
the course of her four-year ca-
reer, starting 132 of 135.
She was three times named
Pac-12 Academic Honorable
Mention.
“It’s crazy what we were
able to accomplish over four
years,” she said. “It’s still so
surreal, even to this day, like it
never happened, defi nitely a
shock.”
Last week, Hunter was back
in a high school gym watch-
ing her old AAU team, Oregon
Elite, and her younger sister,
Sydney, who has her own col-
lege basketball career ahead of
her.
In August, Hunter will
travel to Puerto Rico to play
professionally for three months
with former OSU teammate
Ali Gibson. She would then
like to play in Europe.
SWIM: Holiday tops Northview SPLIT,
continued from Page 10
(Contiued from Page 10)
The same four girls also
won the medley relay.
Alex Beard won the IM and
breaststroke. Antonia Gonzales
took fi rst in the backstroke.
Claire Hicks dominated the
Under-6 division, winning
the fl y, back and free. She also
swam on the winning 7-8 free
relay team with Ella Gerig,
Kaiya Turner and Cassidy
Kerner. Individually. Gerig
also won the IM for Holiday.
In the 9-10 division, Alex
Willcoxen fi nished fi rst in the
freestyle and Erika Robinett
won the breaststroke. The two
joined Kyra Norstrom and
Maya Privratsky to win the
free and medley relays.
Emma Privratsky was the
fi rst to reach the wall in the
13-14 free and Kassy Winters
had the top time in the back-
stroke. They joined Hannah
Williams and Bella Grantham
to win the free and medley
relays.
Northview’s girls were led
by Kristine Thomas, who won
the 11-12 fl y, free and breast-
stroke. Ashley Stucker won
the 8-and-under fl y and back-
stroke. Anna Kosiewicz fi n-
ished in the 15-18 free and fl y.
Mary Ann Halliday, Abby
Youngblutt, Carly Castaneda
and Ally Castaneda won the
8-and-under medley relay.
Youngblutt also touched the
wall fi rst in the free and Halli-
day had the fastest time in the
breaststroke.
Lily Castaneda, Issy Kosie-
wicz, Maey White and Madi-
son Hoffmeister won the 11-
12 free relay. Issy also had the
fastest time in the 9-10 IM
and Lily placed fi rst in the
9-10 fl y.
Ava McNeely and Sydney
KEIZERTIMES/Derek Wiley
Indy Gauthier swam on the winning 9-10 medley and free relay
teams Thursday, July 7 for Northwood Swim Club.
Smith won the 9-10 and 11-
12 backstroke, respectively.
Anna Sponable, Erin Sey-
fried, Lauren Prin and Hannah
Halliday had the fastest time
in the 11-12 medley relay.
Northwood Park Swim
Club narrowly lost to Ma-
drona last Thursday as the girls
fail 155-135 and the boys lost
157-139.
Leading the girls were Paris
Boyd and Emily Alger.
Boyd won the 11-12 but-
terfl y and breaststroke and also
swam on the winning free and
medley relay teams with Kai-
ley Wilcke, McKenna Olson
and Ellie Auvinen. Individu-
ally, Wilcke placed fi rst in the
backstroke as well.
Alger had the fastest times
in the 15-18 IM, free and fl y.
She also joined Haley Hughes,
Madi Alt and Bella Walker
to win the medley relay and
Walker, Alt and Kennedy Buss
to place fi rst in the free relay.
Walker also won the 13-14
butterfl y.
Kaitlyn Roop, Indy Gauth-
ier, Avery Buss and Rosella
Cogar won the 9-10 medley
relay. Gauthier, Buss, Cogar
and Molly Eisele had the fast-
est time in the free relay.
Swimming for the North-
wood boys, Zander Rhoades
won the 11-12 free and but-
terfl y and swam on the win-
ning 13-14 free relay with
Bryce Junker, Ethan Whalen
and Brennan Whalen. Junker
also had the fastest individual
time in the backstroke.
In the 9-10 division, Ca-
leb Skipper won the free and
swam on the winning med-
ley relay with Riley Auvinen,
Grant Schaffer and Pierce
Walker as well as the fastest
free relay with Walker, Kel-
son Whalen and Elijah Clen-
dening. Walker won the 9-10
backstroke.
Derek Howard, Jabez
Rhoades, Grant Biondi and
Brock Wyer had the fastest
time in the 15-18 medley relay
while Biondi, Jabez Rhoades,
Brock Wyer and Jake Wyer
won the free relay.
The summer swim season
will continue through July
until the All-City meet on
Saturday, July 30 at Holiday.
HUNTER,
continued from Page 10
KT on vacation
Submitted photo
Caroline Allison (left) with her daughter Cari Freeman (right),
a 1988 graduate of McNary High School, and granddaughters
Katherine and Savannah at 10,000 ft in Crested Butte, Colorado.
You too can have your photo in the Keizertimes. SImply take
the paper to your destination, snap a picture with you and your
group holding it, and send the photo along with everyone’s fi rst
and last names to kt@keizertimes.com.
Hunter recorded a double-
double of 11 points and 10 re-
bounds in just 15 mintues to
open the 2015-16 season with
a easy win over Longwood.
After losses to Tennessee,
Notre Dame and UCLA, the
Lady Beavers swept rival Or-
egon 60-33 and 59-45.
On Jan. 1, OSU hosted
Stanford, who it hadn’t beat
since 2001.
Hunter made sure to put an
end to that losing streak, lead-
ing the Lady Beavers with 19
points, highlighted by a career-
high fi ve 3-pointers, and 12 re-
bounds in a 58-50 victory.
On March 6, OSU got re-
venge on the Lady Bruins, 69-
puzzle answers
In the Volcano fourth, four
runs followed two outs. Ryan
Howard and John Riley sin-
gled, Rivera walked, and Ash-
ford Fulmer hit a grand slam
over the left fi eld wall.
Fulmer, not noted so far
as a long ball hitter, said after
the games that he was not sure
whether his future was as a
leadoff type or a power hitter.
Salem-Keizer now led 6-5.
“I’ll play wherever they put
me,” he said.
Facing a new pitcher, Evan
Smith, in the fi fth, Brusa led
off with a home run to right
center.
Brusa, who joined the
Volcanoes straight out of the
University of the Pacifi c, said
he had plenty of experience
with wooden bats because his
father trained him that way
from the start.
Jeff Burke pitched the sixth
inning for the Volcanoes and
gave up the Canadians’ last
run. Hernandez walked, went
to third on a ground out, and
scored on a single by Biggio.
In the Volcano seventh, Ri-
ley led off with a homer to left
off Jackson Lowery.
Cesar Yanez set Vancouver
down in order in the seventh
RIGGS,
continued from Page 10
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