A3 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 2021 SPORTS BOYS BASKETBALL Knappa pounds Heppner, 70-32 The Astorian Corey Conant At the district meet last week, team champion Warrenton qualifi ed nine wrestlers for the unoffi cial state tournament. The Warriors have since added a 10th wrestler to the list. District champ Warriors hope for state title By GARY HENLEY The Astorian The Warrenton Warriors are the new kings of Dis- trict 2 wrestling. And with the youth on this year’s ros- ter, Warrenton’s district title last week could be the fi rst of many. Warrenton district cham- pionships were common in the 1970s, when the War- riors won fi ve straight from 1973 to 1977 (under three diff erent coaches). Dennis Warren took the Warriors to additional district titles in 1988 and 1990. That marked the end of Warrenton’s district champi- onships, until the 2021 War- riors won last Saturday’s District 2 title at Clatskanie, topping a fi eld of eight teams. The Warriors fi nished with 230.5 points, ahead of second-place Rainier (214), with Yamhill-Carlton (177) a distant third. Defending champion Dayton fi nished back in the pack with 115 points. “We knew that we had a shot because we were as deep as any team in our league, but our league is very deep,” said Warrenton coach Corey Conant. “Rainier, Willamina, Yamhill-Carl- ton, Dayton and Taft all have competitive programs, and Amity and Clatskanie have some very high-talent indi- viduals on their teams.” Meanwhile, Warrenton’s highest fi nish at state is sec- ond place, accomplished in 1976, ‘77 and ‘89. If all goes right, the Warriors will break through with a state champi- onship later this week, when 3A schools meet for the sea- son-ending tournament Sat- urday in Redmond. As the champion from the state’s toughest district — why not Warrenton? Last year’s District 2 champion, Dayton, fi nished second at state in 2020. Warrenton had just fi ve wrestlers in the 2020 state tournament, and the War- riors doubled that and will be well-armed with 10 ath- letes this year. (Only La Pine, with 12, will have more wrestlers). The group is led by senior Sam Irwin, the huge favorite at 195 pounds. The defend- ing state champion would be Warrenton’s fi rst two-time state champion in over 50 years of school records. Irwin had to wrestle a lit- tle over a minute to win his district title. The bracket at 195 only had four wrestlers, with Irwin scoring victories by fall in the semifi nals over Yamhill-Carlton’s Hunter McAvoy in 23 seconds, then pinned Yamhill’s Hunter Stephenson in 56 seconds for the title. Warrenton’s other two- time champion was senior Nic Pior at 145. He pinned wrestlers from Clatskanie and Willamina in his fi rst two matches, then defeated Dayton’s Jimmy Larsen 8-5 in the fi nale. At 170, sophomore James Mickelson pinned No. 1 seed Parker Cavan, of Wil- lamina, (5:18) and won by fall over Rainier’s Donovan Smith (1:51) to reach the fi nals, where he would have faced junior teammate Alex Tapia. The Warriors opted “to save that match for the state tournament,” Conant said, as Tapia was given the victory by forfeit. Tapia pinned Eli Jones, of Taft, in 23 seconds, then topped No. 2 seed Andrew Allen, of Willamina, 4-2, to reach the fi nal. Elsewhere, junior Jorge Lopez took third at 138, fi n- ishing 3-1 and beating high- er-seeded wrestlers along the way. Freshman David Niehu- ser was third at 152, where he pinned Yamhill’s Eli Pot- ter and Kyle Troutman, of Dayton, before a loss in the semifi nals. Warrior junior Josh Nie- huser (3-1) was third at 182, where senior Duane Falls (2-2) took fourth, and also earned an at-large spot at state. Niehuser defeated Falls 10-4 in the third-place match. And at 220, junior Josh Smith was third, “and contin- ues to show huge improve- ment and toughness in his second year,” said Conant, who was voted district Coach of the Year, “which is a huge honor and testament to our staff and the work we have put in together. Trent Klebe, Steve Stratton, Len- nie Wolfe and I all share the award.” Early this week, the tour- nament added the 10th and fi nal Warrior, Austin Atwood, to the 126-pound bracket. The Warriors “needed contributions from up and down the lineup, and we needed to earn bonus points from falls, which is exactly what the kids went out and did,” he said. “It was satis- fying to see their hard work pay off . Not every wrestler met their goal, but we set very high goals for ourselves and can live with the results of our best work.” The Knappa boys bas- ketball team sent the stron- gest statement Monday night to the rest of the 2A fi nalists — the Loggers are on a roll. It wasn’t even close, as Knappa jumped out to a 15-0 lead over Heppner, on its way to a 70-32 win, in a game played at Rockwood Commons in Portland. It was the most lopsided win of the fi rst round. The Loggers advanced to the fi nal eight, where they were scheduled to play Wednesday at Salem Academy. After losing the season opener to 4A power Sea- side, Knappa has won 11 of its last 12, including the last seven straight. Tanner Jackson and Shane McMahan scored 18 points apiece for the Log- gers, but “the story was our defense,” said Knappa coach Paul Isom. “We were about to jump on them early, starting the game on a 15-0 run fueled by our defense and creating turnovers. “Tanner particularly was just a monster tonight,” he said. “He was fl ying around making plays all over the court. And everyone fed off that. Every guy who played came in with a ton of energy and we were able to pres- sure basically the whole game and make everything diffi cult for Heppner.” Still, Isom said, “Credit to Heppner. They came out in the third and made a run like we knew they would. They are a well-coached team with a bunch of great athletes. But it seemed like every time they went on a four- or six-point run we would come down and hit a big shot or create a turnover and get an easy bucket. Just a great team win.” Seaside qualifi es fi ve wrestlers for state The Astorian The Seaside wrestling team qualifi ed fi ve wres- tlers for the 4A state tour- nament later this week. Tillamook cruised to the District 1/4A title with 353 points last week, followed by Estacada (223), Banks (214), Woodburn (161.5), North Marion (135), Sea- side (103.5), Molalla (45) and Astoria (21). Leading the way for the Gulls will be junior Law- son Talamantez, the district champion at 220 pounds. Talamantez wrestled just twice in the district tourna- ment, pinning Woodburn’s Axel Avendano in 3:27 in a semifi nal, then pinning Tillamook’s Jackson Con- treras in 50 seconds in the title match. Junior Everett Roll- ins placed third out of fi ve wrestlers at 160 pounds, and the Gulls had three wrestlers take fourth, with sophomore Xander Knox (113), freshman Robert Howes (126) and senior J.J. Stanley (285) all qual- ifying for state. Former Astoria runner competes in US Olympic Track & Field Trials The Astorian Astoria had a connection in this year’s U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials, which continues this week at Hay- ward Field in Eugene. Kaylee Mitchell, who recently completed her red- shirt sophomore year at Ore- gon State University, ran in Sunday’s fi rst heat of the wom- en’s 3,000-meter steeplechase. Wearing her Oregon State uniform, Mitchell fi nished 32nd in 10 minutes, 26.69 seconds. Heat 1 was won by Emma Coburn, of New Bal- ance, in 9:21.32. Mitchell was off her per- sonal best pace of 9:48.30, which she set May 14 at the Katherine B. Loker Stadium in Los Angeles. “I’m incredibly proud of this journey that Kaylee has been on,” said Louie Quin- tana, Mitchell’s coach at Ore- gon State. “It’s certainly not Oregon State University Former Astoria runner Kaylee Mitchell running a steeplechase event earlier this season for Oregon State University. the result she was looking for, but just gaining the experience of competing at the Olympic t rials is huge. She is a soph- omore and she will be back and better at these big meets. There are big things ahead for the Beavers.” Mitchell’s personal best was accomplished at the Pac- 12 Championships, and set a new Oregon State school record. Mitchell attended Asto- ria High School in 2015 and 2016, before transferring to Sprague High School after her sophomore year. 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