The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, March 28, 2016, Page 7A, Image 7

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    THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, MARCH 28, 2016
SPORTS
7A
Syracuse, Washington
women head to Final Four
Oregon State
plays Baylor
tonight
Daily Astorian/File Photo
Seaside´s Dylan Wallis connects on a pitch during the
first inning of a baseball game at Broadway Field in 2015.
Wallis scored twice and had two RBI’s in the last game of
the Coach Bob Invitational in Arizona on Friday.
*XOOVÀ\VRXWKWR
sunny weather, play
a little baseball
By GARY HENLEY
The Daily Astorian
3+2(1,; $UL] ² 7KH
Seaside baseball team spent a
nice week in the sun, having
fun and playing a little ball,
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break in Arizona.
Seaside took part in the
“Coach Bob Invitational,”
an annual tournament named
after former coach Bob Wein-
heimer, a one-time St. Louis
Brown who coached profes-
sionally and at the high school
levels in New York, Ohio, Ari-
zona and Colorado.
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nix Monday, and arrived back
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ment was held in and around
ballparks in Phoenix, and
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school teams from all over
the country, from Virginia to
Oregon.
“It was a great experience,”
said Seaside coach Joel Dier-
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time to play a little, we saw a
couple Major League spring
training games … it was a
wonderful experience.”
Competing in the “Open”
division, Seaside played four
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Pueblo Central (of Colo-
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High School in west Phoenix.
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came back and capped their
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with two runs scored and two
RBI’s, while Brent Walsh was
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Dawson Blanchard had two
hits, and Otto Hoekstre added
a double and two RBI’s.
“We had lots of singles, and
Payton Westerholm played a
stellar shortstop in that game,”
Dierickx said. “I can’t say
enough about him, stepping up
as a freshman and playing at a
high level.”
Walsh pitched into the sev-
enth inning, and had three
strikeouts.
“We played really good
defense,” Dierickx said.
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played real solid behind him,
defensively, and he pitched
well.”
Oklahoma beats Oregon
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By GREG BEACHAM
AP Sports Writer
ANAHEIM, Calif. —
Buddy Hield hit eight 3-point-
ers while scoring 37 points,
and Oklahoma advanced to
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Oregon in the West Region
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on Saturday.
Jordan Woodard added 13
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who streaked to an 18-point
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let the Ducks back in it.
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monument to the formida-
ble talent of Hield, the Soon-
ers’ senior star. He produced
a dynamite performance on
his biggest stage, carving the
Ducks’ defense from all dis-
tances with his smooth outside
shot and a knack for momen-
tum-swinging buckets.
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points for the Ducks (31-
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streak ended one game shy
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school history.
“I thought he had a phe-
nomenal game,” Oregon coach
By DOUG FEINBERG
AP Basketball Writer
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Syracuse and Washington.
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teams, who are now headed
to Indianapolis. Each had to
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team to get there, with Syracuse
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ington topping Stanford.
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to knock off top-seeded Vir-
ginia and will join the women
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that two women’s teams will
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in the same season. If Oregon
State can knock off Baylor on
Monday night, there will be
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Who said there’s no parity
in women’s basketball?
“We’re not done yet,” Wash-
ington coach Mike Neighbors
said. “‘What’s Next?’ has been
our motto. It’s going to con-
tinue to be all the way through
Indy.”
No team still playing had
a tougher road to the national
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Maryland and Kentucky on
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which is only the second sev-
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twice in the tournament.
Syracuse, which played its
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“We did what we had to
do,” Syracuse coach Quentin
Hillsman said. “We knew we
had to control the paint, and we
did a good job of that. We knew
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the key to the game.”
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Baylor plays Oregon for the
other two spots in next week-
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Here are other tidbits from
the tournament:
Another step for OSU
Mark J. Terrill/AP Photo
Oregon forward Elgin Cook
dunks against Oklahoma.
Dana Altman said. “And every
time I felt like we were get-
ting ready to do something,
he would jump up and make a
shot.”
Oregon had beaten six
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teams by double digits during
its winning streak, but Okla-
homa’s outside shooting and
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hole that was too deep for the
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the highest-scoring perfor-
mance against the Ducks all
season.
Oregon State coach Scott
Rueck and his players have a
term for the steps forward the
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wins three years ago to within
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“It’s natural progression,
and each year we’ve gone fur-
ther and further,” said guard
Jamie Weisner, part of the
senior group that as freshman
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“It’s just fun to be part of.”
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season, a year after going to the
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then won the conference tour-
nament. Now they are in their
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knock off two-time national
James Crisp/AP Photo
From left to right, Washington’s Alexus Atchley, Talia Walton and head coach Mike
Neighbors react with the trophy after winning a regional final women’s college basket-
ball game in the NCAA Tournament against Stanford in Lexington, Ky., Sunday. They
play again Sunday.
champion Baylor, which has
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So would that be a natural
next step?
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the schedule,” said Rueck, in
his sixth season. “It’s the next
game and you do that by play-
ing possession-by-possession
and preparing the same way
that you have. So yes, that
would be natural.”
Gettying beyond Elite
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secutive appearance in a wom-
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that point each of the last two
years, thus their “Eight is Not
Enough” motto this season.
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lets with that phrase since last
summer.
“Each team you have to
have a theme. You have to
have some goal, something to
get their attention every day
in practice and eight is not
enough,” coach Kim Mulkey
said. “It’s something to moti-
vate them, nothing more than
that. But it’s not weighing on
us.”
Baylor has lost three of its
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Along with losses to Notre
Dame the past two seasons,
the Lady Bears lost their only
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the American Airlines Cen-
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Playing through pain
Syracuse star Alexis Peter-
LM Otero/AP Photo
Oregon State guard Jamie Weisner (15) shoots past
DePaul guard Jessica January (14) during the second
half of an NCAA college basketball game in the regional
semifinals of the women’s NCAA Tournament Saturday,
in Dallas. Oregon State won 83-71.
son dinged her hip when she
stumbled and fell late in the
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No way was that going to stop
her from scoring a season-high
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said, ‘You’ve got to suck it
up, you’ve got to play tough,
because we need you,”’ Peter-
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I have to play through, you
know, being hurt or being
injured, that’s what I was
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“It feels good to play the game on the level
you want.”
Servais called Cano “a special, special
MESA, Ariz. — After Robinson Cano hom-
HUHGLQHDFKRIKLV¿UVWWZRDWEDWV6HDWWOH0DU- player” who was bothered by injuries at times
iners manager Scott Servais heard a fan throw last season.
“He’s got that bounce in his step back,” Ser-
out a challenge:
“You hit one to right, you hit one to left. Let YDLV DGGHG ³7KLV JX\ LV RXW WR SURYH VRPH-
thing. It’s been fun to see.”
me see you hit one to center.”
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“And he did,” Servais said.
Cano had three home runs and seven RBIs starter James Paxton.
One came from Jason Heyward in the third
to help the Mariners outlast the Chicago Cubs
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several minutes by a swarm of bees in center in center to avoid the bees. Addison Russell
added a three-run homer in the third, and Dex-
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Cano had a two-run and a three-run homer WHU)RZOHUZHQWGHHSWROHDGRIIWKH¿UVW
Chicago’s Matt Szczur hit a solo homer in
off Cubs starter Jason Hammel, who allowed
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“Wow,” Servais said. “It was a pretty spe-
cial day.”
Bee attack
Cano, who had a variety of ailments last sea-
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son, said, “I feel different now. I feel I’m able to the third inning.
use my hips.
Heyward, his hands swatting continually,
The Associated Press
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climbed up on the fence to avoid them. At the
end of the inning, Cubs’ relievers abandoned
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“It was wild,” Hammel said. “I’ve never
seen anything like that before.”
Trainer’s room
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that has gone around the clubhouse recently.
Cubs: Jake Arrieta, who has been bothered
by a blister, threw on the side Sunday.
“Everything went great,” pitching coach
Chris Bosio said.
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day and should be ready for opening day April
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“He felt great,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon
said. “It was like it never happened. I anticipate
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going to do. I didn’t want to
let them down. So at that point
it was just a will, overcoming
everything I was being faced
with.”
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didn’t bother her as the game
progressed. She said Hillsman
told her to use her judgment
about whether she would keep
going.
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have to give it all you have,”
Peterson said. “I’d rather win
and be advancing than worry
about a minor injury.”
SCOREBOARD
PREP SCHEDULE
TODAY
Softball — Corbett at Astoria, 5 p.m.
Boys Golf — Seaside at Valley Catholic, 2 p.m.
TUESDAY
Baseball — Seaside at Estacada, 4:30 p.m.; Knappa at
Neah-Kah-Nie, 4:30 p.m.; North Beach at Ilwaco (2), 3 p.m.
Softball — Estacada at Seaside, 5 p.m.; Knappa at Neah-
Kah-Nie, 4:30 p.m.; North Beach at Ilwaco (2), 3 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Baseball — Astoria at North Marion, 4:30 p.m.
Softball — Astoria at North Marion, 4:30 p.m.
Track — Astoria at Banks, TBA; Seaside at Scappoose,
3:30 p.m.; Lewis & Clark League Preview, TBA
THURSDAY
Baseball — Warrenton at Tillamook, 5 p.m.
Softball — Seaside at Corbett, 5 p.m.; Ilwaco at North
Beach, 3 p.m.
Girls Golf — Tillamook Scramble, 10 a.m.
Boys Golf — Scappoose at Astoria, 2 p.m.
FRIDAY
Baseball — Neah-Kah-Nie at Knappa (2), 3 p.m.
Softball — Neah-Kah-Nie at Knappa (2), 3 p.m.
Girls Golf — Astoria at Seaside, 10 a.m.
SATURDAY
Baseball — Sandpoint, Idaho at Astoria, 2 p.m.; Warrenton
at Willamina (2), Noon; Ilwaco at Ocosta (2), Noon
Softball — Ilwaco at Ocosta (2), Noon
Track — Tillamook Invitational, 11 a.m.