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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (April 5, 2016)
SPORTS THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 2016 9A Gulls reel in another Fish Invite The Daily Astorian The Daily Astorian Seaside’s Aaron Richardson hits his second shot on the 14th hole of the Fish Invitational at the Astoria Country Club last year. WARRENTON — The team in search of its third straight state title is off to a hot start, as the Seaside boys golf team — for the third time in a row — took ¿rst place in the annual Fish Invitational, Monday at the Astoria Golf & Country Club. Seaside racked up 160 points in the two-man, best ball tournament, which used Stableford scoring. Scappoose was a distant second at 143, followed by Tillamook (140), Ilwaco (138), Astoria (132) and Banks (101). The Tillamook duo of Car- ter Lee and Austin Weeks com- bined to take ¿rst with a score of 96. Lee scored all 96 points by himself, as he ¿nished with two Eagles on his way to a 2-under par 69. After that, it was Seaside’s Aaron Richardson and Josef Barbic, who carded an 84 score for second. There was a tie for third between Astoria’s team of SCOREBOARD PREP SCHEDULE TODAY Baseball — Scappoose at Asto- ria, 5 p.m.; Valley Catholic at Sea- side, 5 p.m.; Knappa at Gaston, 4:30 p.m. Softball — Astoria at Rainier, 4:30 p.m.; Taft at Warrenton, 4:30 p.m.; Knappa at Gaston, 4:30 p.m. THURSDAY Baseball — Astoria at Scap- poose, 5 p.m.; Seaside at Valley Catholic, 5 p.m.; Naselle at War- renton, 4:30 p.m. Softball — Clatskanie at Astoria Arthur Clark and Kirk Fau- sett (76), and the Gulls’ Jack- son Kunde and Berkley Posal- ski (76). Also scoring high for the Fishermen were Ron Schum- acher-Brian Wilder (56) and Andy Justo-Taylor Palmberg (52). Seaside’s Connor Merrell and Chase Januik ¿nished with a 20. “We made a big improve- ment from our last tourna- ment,” said Astoria coach Rangers win with 1 hit Villanova comes out on two errors by the Mariners in top in NCAA tourney a three-run ¿fth inning put the By SCHUYLER DIXON AP Sports Writer ARLINGTON, Texas — Prince Fielder shrugged and smiled after his bloop sin- gle was the only hit the Texas Rangers needed to hand Felix Hernande] his ¿rst opening day loss. “I’ve never won like this,” the burly slugger said after a 3-2 victory over Seattle on Monday. “Only way you can go is up.” Actually, it was a pretty good way for the defending AL West champs to start, with Cole Hamels overcoming a shaky ¿rst two innings and keeping Texas close before three walks by Hernandez and Rangers in front. “However we can win a game, especially against Felix Hernandez, I’m good,” said Adrian Beltre, whose potential double-play grounder ended up scoring the go-ahead run when short- stop Ketel Marte misplayed it. Seattle had a chance to join the Boston Beaneat- ers (1887-96) as the only major league clubs to win 10 straight openers. Robinson Cano and Kyle Seager hom- ered early for the Mariners, but the midgame mistakes cost them in the debut of man- ager Scott Servais. By EDDIE PELLS AP National Writer HOUSTON — Some plays you can’t draw up. Other plays you can. The double-clutch 3-pointer North Carolina’s Marcus Paige made came right off a play- ground. It might go down as col- lege basketball’s most spectacular footnote ever. The buzzer-beating 3 that Vil- lanova’s Kris Jenkins poured in on top of that was the result of months, even years, of practice making perfect. It might go down as the sport’s most memorable game-winner. Two huge buckets in the span don’t think he has ever had a round with four birdies before, but this should give him some con¿dence to start throwing a few into each round he plays. “Aaron, Josef and Jackson each added a birdie of their own to help us win this tour- nament,” he said. “Aaron was 1-over on the back nine which helped him be the only player in the ¿eld in the 70s.” Poetsch added, “Carter Lee’s 69 was pretty impres- sive. Josef played well down the stretch after a rocky start and Jackson actually got into the 80s, but signed for a higher score on a hole. While that is legal, I’m guessing he learned a valuable lesson, even though it only cost him one stroke.” Moving forward, said the Gulls’ coach, “Winning in April is nice, but we need to keep working to compete in May. So far we have improved each time we have stepped on the course and the kids are working hard to continue that trend.” of 4.7 seconds Monday night turned a back-and-forth, edge-of- your-seat national title game into something even better. Jenkins walked away the win- ner. His 3 at the buzzer, two steps behind the arc and with a 6-foot-9 defender Àying in his face, gave Villanova a 77-74 victory and the second national title in program history. “I think every shot’s going in,” Jenkins said, “and this one was no different.” ‘Nova coach Jay Wright barely Àinched when Jenkins’ shot fell with the buzzer blaring. “Bang,” he said, calmly, before walking to midcourt to shake Car- olina coach Roy Williams’ hand. (2), 4 p.m.; Warrenton at Seaside (2), 4 p.m. Track — Warrenton at Portland Christian, 3:30 p.m. Girls Golf — Astoria, Seaside at Valley Catholic, 1 p.m. Boys Golf — Seaside at Asto- ria, 2 p.m. FRIDAY Baseball — Gaston at Knappa (2), 3 p.m. Softball — Gaston at Knappa (2), 3 p.m. Track — Seaside at McKenzie, 10 a.m. Kevin Goin. “If you take our raw score, we were 74 strokes better, and that’s a huge dif- ference. So we’re going in the right direction.” The Gulls have won two straight state titles, and they’re showing that they could be a major player for a third. The team’s depth is coming right along. “Birdies are at a premium in this format, and Berkley had a bunch of them today,” said Seaside coach Jim Poetsch. “I Astoria girls win Tillamook Invite The Daily Astorian TILLAMOOK — The Astoria girls track team — already in state title form — are just getting warmed up for the 2016 season, as the Lady Fishermen set one more school record and dominated the Tillamook Invitational Saturday. Astoria won the nine-team invite with 248 points (Banks was second, with 119), while the boys placed fourth, behind Molalla, Banks and Tillamook. As they will in every meet or invitational this year, the Lady Fishermen went unchal- lenged in their half of the meet, winning the 100 meters (Natalie Cummings), 200 meters (Cumming again), 400 meters (Kaylee Mitch- ell), 1,500 meters (Mitch- ell again), 100-meter hurdles (Andrea Harris), 400-meter relay, shot put (Skadi Freyr), high jump (Damian Hage- man, who cleared 5-6 to tie Katrinka Jackson’s school record), long jump (Hage- man), triple jump (Hageman) and pole vault (Hageman). For the Astoria boys, Lucas Caruana placed second in the 1,500 meters. CLASSIFIEDS The Daily Astorian 503-325-3211 CALL JAM IE TO D AY TO PLACE Y O UR AD CL ASSIF IE D IN DEX W E GE T RESU L TS THE D EAD LIN E FO R C LASSIFIED AD S is 1p .m . the d a y b efo re yo u r a d is sched u led to ru n All cla ssified a ds require pre-pa ym ent TO PLACE YOUR AD CALL JAMIE AT THE DAILY ASTORIAN : 503-325-3211 x231 or 800-781-3211 x231 Web: www.dailyastorian.com E-mail: classifieds@dailyastorian.com 35 Lost & Found N EW TOD AY! Look a t these a ds first FOUND CAT 10th & Franklin Please provide any info if you recognize this nice cat. Needs home if not reunited! Call Jan 503-440-0886 CARTM hiring 2 FT positions. Line attendant, starting @ $10.72/hour. Trash attendant, building trades knowledge required. We train. ed@cartm.org/503-368-7764. Home share: 1 furnished bedroom, $600. First/last month, $300 security deposit. No pets/smoking. (503)338-0703 Part-time Maintenance needed MUST have painting, small plumming and electrical, wood working and landscaping skills. 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Call 503-338-9193 W e ca n pla ce your a d in a ll of these publica tions: • The Da ily Asto ria n • Chin o o k O b server • Co a st M a rketp la ce • Co a st W eeken d • S ea sid e S ig n a l • Ca n n o n Bea ch Ga zette Our own Goss ip Column! Fridays in THE DAILY AS TORIAN 30” GE Slide-In Self Cleaning Range-$100 Garage Refridgerators 12-18 cu. ft $50 each Call 503-440-0775 Budget Ads All items $1000 or less can be sold in the budget section. $9.00 for 11 words. Specialty Services We urge you to patronize the local professionals advertising in The Daily Astorian Specialty Services. To place your Specialty Services ad, call 325-3211. If you have items to sell, give us a call today. (503)325-3211 ext. 231 or e-mail us at classifieds@dailyastorian.com G o . D o . coastweekend.com dining • the arts • music • shopping • museums • classes • movies CRYPTOQUIP One of the Pacific Northwest’s great small newspapers • gardening • news • blogs • more