Page 2B SPORTS East Oregonian VIKINGS: College Basketball margin never dipped below 10 in the second half. “We lost, but it’s a win,” Gilbertson said. “It’s a moral win. We’re building. We just want to keep building.” The Pirates start two sophomores and two fresh- men, and while the team never truly challenged the Vikings on the scoreboard, they “battled” throughout, Gilbertson said. “Our ranking doesn’t show the heart our girls have,” he said of his team’s 27th positioning in Class 3A out of 39 teams. “Overall, I can’t complain.” Continued from 1B The other developing hab- its don’t have Bow quite as encouraged, however. “We’re struggling to put the ball in the hoop,” Bow conceded. “I think we’ve had a lot more possessions and better looks than other teams, but we’ve just struggled to put the ball in the hoop. “I really thought we were just going to start running away in the beginning, and they were there to stop us and challenge us and we weren’t In the opening half Uma- tilla forced 22 Riverside (7-8, 0-2 EOL) turnovers, but the added looks resulted in just The Umatilla offense nev- er found its rhythm, shooting just 17 of 50 on the night and 1 of 9 from three-point range. The two EOL league wins provide two of the team’s three lowest scoring out- puts in wins this season. The 37-point average in those games marks a stark contrast from the squad that averaged 57 points per win in its run through non-league play. “We had a lot of shots that kids normally hit that didn’t go down for us,” Bow said. “The last two games have been the same way — the same style — we played well defensively down in Nyssa, we played well defensively tonight, but we just couldn’t Staff photo by Kathy Aney Kasandra Galbraith (24) and Aleesha Watson (40), of Umatilla, battle the Pirates’ Kassidy McCullough for a loose ball Thursday in Umatilla. convert. “We’ve got to do what we’ve got to do to win these games and hopefully at the end of the season we’ll be peaking — back to the way we started the season.” Junior center Courtney - ter points appeared to have the Vikings headed in the right direction, but she only scored twice more on the night. The remainder of the normally potent scorers nev- er got going. And still the Vikings built a 22-12 halftime lead. The rebounds, in “her best game all year”, according to Bow. “They have a 5-11 girl that’s a beast,” Gilbertson said of Dohman. Sophomore forward Alee- sha Watson added 11 points in the win for the Vikings. Lacey Mashos led River- side with eight points. Both sides play again on Saturday. Umatilla hosts Vale, while Riverside will play Nyssa at home. ——— UMATILLA 42, RIVERSIDE 27 RHS (7-8) 8 4 8 7 — 27 UHS (13-3) 12 10 8 12 — 42 RIVERSIDE — Lacey Mashos 8, K. McCullough 2, S. Hasbell 0, P. Pena 0, J. Shimer 6, S. Wightman 5, E. Velasco 2, E. Sanchez 2, A. Hernandez 2. UMATILLA — B. Chavez 2, M. Paz 0, K. Barajas 0, I Campos 3, B. Campos 2, S. Webb 3, K. Galbraith 9, C. Dohman 12, A. Watson 11. 3-point field goals — RHS 1, UHS 1. Free throws — RHS 0-4, UHS 7-14. Fouls — RHS 13, UHS 16. UMATILLA: Long balls give Vikes needed boost Continued from 1B had 12 points, with eight of them coming in the sec- ond half, and Webb hit two three-pointers in the second quarter to provide a needed lift for the Vikings (8-8, 2-0). “That was probably the ex- citement of the night, the en- ergy of the night,” Lete said of Webb’s second quarter spurt. needed to get things going. That’s what he needed. That’s what the team needed.” For Riverside, the story was much different. The Pi- rates (5-10, 0-2) committed 27 turnovers in the game, and were forced into using a largely inexperienced back- court after sophomore guard Noe Madrigal was tagged with some early fouls in the “The guards have to get stronger,” Riverside head coach Clair Costello said. “They’re young, inexperi- enced. They didn’t have any varsity experience starting out the season. We got up and down. Our bigs didn’t play very big.” The Vikings were whistled and turned it over eight times. Just 13 shots in total were tak- - ed in a 9-7 lead for the Pirates. Six of those nine points came from the free throw line. Umatilla came back in the second quarter, but still strug- gled to maintain possession of the ball, and the same went for Riverside. Webb came into the game and hit a three with 5:12 on the clock, then two possessions later hit another three to give the Vikings a 17- 13 lead. It was the biggest lead of the game to that point. “Good thing we had some younger kids, some sopho- mores, some freshmen that really stepped up and decid- ed to play,” Lete said. Umatilla went into the locker room with the 23-17 lead, and broke it open in defense and good enough of- fense. Eric Garcia hit three right out of the gate to give Umatilla 26-17 lead, and the Vikings never looked back. The win puts Umatilla up a game on Vale, who lost Thursday night to Nyssa. “Overall, really disap- pointed, though,” Lete said. “I’m glad we got the win.” Umatilla’s next contest is Saturday, when they host Vale at 7:30 p.m. Riverside next plays Nyssa on Saturday at 6 p.m. ——— UMATILLA 56, RIVERSIDE 38 RHS (5-10) 9 8 5 16 36 — 38 UHS (8-8) 7 16 18 15 58 — 56 RIVERSIDE — N. Madrigal 8, E. Castillo 3, R. Rosales 3, J. Carmona 3, G. Roberts 6, F. Olivera 5, J. Villa 2, F. Aparicio 0, S. Navarro 2, J. Salgado 0, J. Garcia 3, K. Sorenson 3. UMATILLA — D. Ayala 2, J. Ramirez 12, E. Garcia 5, G. Armenta 0, J. Coria 9, K. Webb 9, D. Garcia 4, A. Jamie 6, J. Tejada, S. Sanguino 0, A Simmons 0, E. Morales 7. 3-point field goals — RHS 1, UHS 6. Free throws — RHS 19-29, UHS 8-18. Fouled out — G. Roberts (RHS). Fouls — RHS 17, UHS 23. Technical fouls — Coach Costello (RHS). BUCKS: Pendleton slows the pace in second half start the game. “(La Grande) plays really big and we kind of got in foul trouble early,” said Pendleton coach Michelle Gomez. fense to take a 33-27 lead into the fourth quarter. “We were trying to fast break and it just wasn’t working for us,” Gomez said, “so we just said let’s take a differ- ent approach and slow it down and be more selective.” Darian Lindsey led the Bucks with 13 points and eight assists, and hit a cou- on a 7-0 run to pull within a bucket, but still trailed 24-20 after the second. “We went in at halftime and our goal was to get more rebounds and be more physical underneath the basket and that’s what we did,” Gomez said. The Bucks (10-5) used their physical edge inside and a slowed tempo on of- help ice the win. La Grande rattled off consecu- tive three-pointers to pull within three points, but with just more than a minute remaining was forced to foul Pendleton the rest of the way. Bucks senior Marlene Bodmer (nine points, eight rebounds) also connected Continued from 1B game before the start of league play. The Tigers (8-5) came out in front of from the charity stripe in the last minute. Kristin Williams added 12 points, four blocks and six rebounds for the eight points, nine rebounds. Avery Albrecht led La Grande with 13 points. Pendleton will open Columbia River Conference play on Friday, Jan. 23 at ——— PENDLETON 50, LA GRANDE 45 PHS (10-5) 8 12 13 17 — 50 LGHS (8-5) 10 14 3 18 — 45 PENDLETON — Darian Lindsey 13, K. Williams 12, M. Bodmer 9, K. Sperl 8, S. Greb 4, H. Greb 2, K. McGlothan 2, H. Thompson, C. Hoffman, L. Taylor. LA GRANDE — Avery Albrecht 13, L. Miles 9, K. Collman 8, K. Avila 8, M. Wilcox 3, A. McDaniel-Perrin 3, R. Alexan- der 1, B. Givens. 3-point field goals — PHS 3, LGHS 6. Free throws — PHS 11-17, LGHS 13-17. Fouls — PHS 20, LGHS 15. Fouled out — Sperl (PHS). PAC-12: Utah dominates Arizona State in the desert - ference road game. The Utes led by as many as 28 points to remain the lone unbeaten team in the conference. Gerry Blakes scored 10 points and Savon Goodman had nine points and 10 re- bounds before fouling out for the Sun Devils (8-9, 0-4). Continued from 1B held a 19-15 lead at halftime. separation midway through the second half behind a 10-2 run. After falling behind 27- 26, two free throws from in front. Andrews and Ander- son sandwiched 3-pointers around a layup by Nigel Wil- liams-Goss and quickly the their largest of the game to that point. Oregon State pulled with- in 42-37, but consecutive 3-pointers by Andrews and Anderson and free throws by lead to 10 with 2 minutes left. WASHINGTON STATE 108, OREGON 99 (OT) — At Pullman, Wash., Josh points and 13 rebounds to carry Washington State to an overtime win over Oregon on Thursday night. DaVonte Lacy scored 20 for the Cougars (9-7, 3-1 Pac-12). Ike Iroegbu added 20, and Brett Boese had 16 in WSU coach Ernie Kent’s Joseph Young led Oregon (12-5, 2-2) with 32 points, Friday, January 16, 2015 AP Photo/Young Kwak Oregon’s Elgin Cook (23) takes a shot against Wash- ington State during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Pullman on Thursday. tying his season high. Elgin Cook scored a career-high 26 points for Oregon, and his 10 rebounds led the Ducks. The game was tied at 94 at the end of regulation. The free throws in overtime. There were 23 lead changes and 18 ties. Washington State led 57- 52 at the half. The Cougars shot 72.4 percent from the - gon hit 55.3 percent. For the game, WSU shot 58.9 percent to Oregon’s 49.4 percent. No. 8 UTAH 76, ARIZO- NA STATE 59 — At Tempe, Ariz., Delon Wright scored 21 points and No. 8 Utah re- mained the most dominating team in early Pac-12 play. Jordan Loveridge added 14 points and Brandon Tay- lor had 13 for the Utes (14- 2, 4-0). They shot 54 percent seventh straight heading into Saturday’s showdown at No. 10 Arizona. After routing Southern California by 24 points, UCLA by 32 and Colorado by 25, Utah showed no signs No. 10 ARIZONA 68, COLORADO 54 — At Tucson, Ariz., Stanley John- son scored 22 points, Kaleb Tarczewski added 14 and No. 10 Arizona pulled away from short-handed Colorado on Thursday night. Arizona (15-2, 3-1 Pac- 12) struggled offensively at times without injured guard Gabe York and had a hard time containing Askia Book- er after losing to Oregon State in its last game. The Wildcats pulled out their 31st straight home win by dominating inside, out- scoring Colorado by 16 in the paint while grabbing 15 more rebounds. Booker had a career-high 30 points on 11-of-17 shooting, including 6 of 9 from 3-point range. That helped the Buf- faloes (9-7, 2-2) keep it close early despite playing without Josh Scott (back) and Xavier Johnson (ankle), their second and third-leading scorers. Zags ride over Waves Associated Press after they were late arriving MALIBU, Calif. — Kyle Wiltjer scored 19 of his 24 points in the second half as No. 3 Gonzaga sur- vived a scare before beating Pepperdine 78-76 Thursday night for its 27th straight victory over the Waves. Freshman Domantas Sa- bonis had 18 points and a ca- reer-high 12 rebounds for the Zags (17-1, 6-0 West Coast) in a game delayed 33 minutes that caused lengthy delays on - onis was a career-best 9 of 9 Gonzaga coach Mark Few earned his 200th league win against 24 losses. Jett Raines led four play- career-high 22 points for the Waves (11-6, 4-2), who were off to their best league start since 2002. SCOREBOARD Local Slate Wallowa Echo Joseph Helix PREP BOYS BASKETBALL Today Culver at Weston-McEwen, 5:30 p.m. Baker at Pendleton, 7 p.m. Hermiston at La Salle Prep, 7:15 p.m. Nixyaawii at Helix, 7:30 p.m. Irrigon at Heppner, 7:30 p.m. Stanfield at Pilot Rock, 7:30 p.m. Arlington at Condon/Wheeler, 7:30 p.m. Ione at Mitchell/Spray, 7:30 p.m. Powder Valley at Echo, 7:30 p.m. Saturday Pilot Rock at Culver, 4 p.m. South Wasco County at Ione, 5:30 p.m. Echo at Wallowa, 5:30 p.m. Heppner at Stanfield, 5:30 p.m. Helix at Joseph, 5:30 p.m. Nixyaawii at Pine Eagle, 5:30 p.m. Arlington at Sherman, 5:30 p.m. Vale at Umatilla, 5:30 p.m. Dufur at Condon/Wheeler, 5:30 p.m. Weston-McEwen at Irrigon, 5:30 p.m. Nyssa at Riverside, 6 p.m. PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL Today Culver at Weston-McEwen, 4 p.m. Hermiston at La Salle Prep, 5:30 p.m. Stanfield at Pilot Rock, 6 p.m. Powder Valley at Echo, 6 p.m. Ione at Mitchell/Spray, 6 p.m. Nixyaawii at Helix, 6 p.m. Arlington at Condon/Wheeler, 6 p.m. Irrigon at Heppner, 6 p.m. Saturday Pilot Rock at Culver, 2:30 p.m. Arlington at Sherman, 4 p.m. Vale at Umatilla, 4 p.m. Nixyaawwi at Pine Eagle, 4 p.m. Helix at Joseph, 4 p.m. Echo at Wallowa, 4 p.m. South Wasco County at Ione, 4 p.m. Dufur at Condon/Wheeler, 4 p.m. Heppner at Stanfield, 4 p.m. Nyssa at Riverside, 4 p.m. Weston-McEwen at Irrigon, 4 p.m. PREP WRESTLING Today Hermiston, Pendleton, Mac-Hi, Riverside, Heppner at Oregon Wrestling Classic (Redmond), 8 a.m. Saturday Hermiston, Pendleton, Mac-Hi, Riverside, Heppner at Oregon Wrestling Classic (Redmond), 8 a.m. COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL Today Eastern Oregon at NW Christian, 7:30 p.m. Blue Mountain at Big Bend 8 p.m. Saturday Blue Mountain at Spokane, 4 p.m. Eastern Oregon at Corban, 7:30 p.m. OSAA Class 4A GOL La Grande Baker Ontario Mac-Hi Conf. 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Ovr. 10-4 8-7 3-12 2-10 Class 3A EOL Umatilla Vale Nyssa Riverside Conf. 2-0 1-0 0-1 0-2 Ovr. 8-8 4-8 5-8 5-10 Class 2A CBC Irrigon Heppner Stanfield Weston-McEwen Pilot Rock Culver Conf. 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 Ovr. 11-1 10-1 9-2 5-8 4-6 2-11 Class 1A BSL Horizon Christian Sherman Dufur South Wasco Mitchell/Spray Ione Condon/Wheeler Arlington Conf. 3-0 3-1 3-1 2-2 1-2 1-2 0-2 0-3 Ovr. 11-3 8-2 7-4 6-6 5-6 2-7 3-8 2-11 Class 1A OOL Nixyaawii Pine Eagle Powder Valley Conf. 3-0 3-0 2-2 Ovr. 8-6 4-7 6-7 Conf. 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Ovr. 11-3 10-5 6-6 3-10 Class 4A GOL La Grande Baker McLoughlin Ontario Conf. 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 Ovr. 8-5 5-9 3-9 3-12 Class 3A EOL Umatilla Vale Nyssa Riverside Conf. 2-0 1-0 0-1 0-2 Ovr. 13-3 11-1 5-9 7-8 Class 2A CBC Culver Weston-McEwen Pilot Rock Irrigon Heppner Stanfield Conf. 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 Ovr. 9-4 8-4 5-5 5-6 5-7 4-7 Class 1A BSL Dufur Arlington Sherman Condon/Wheeler Ione Mitchell/Spray Horizon Christian South Wasco Conf. 4-0 3-0 3-1 2-0 1-2 0-3 0-3 0-4 Ovr. 7-4 9-4 5-5 11-1 1-8 5-7 3-9 2-11 Class 1A OOL Echo Powder Valley Nixyaawii Wallowa Helix Joseph Pine Eagle Conf. 4-0 3-1 2-1 2-2 1-2 0-3 0-3 Ovr. 12-2 7-6 9-4 6-7 5-7 3-8 2-8 Pac-12 Wednesday’s Games UCLA 83 USC, 66 Stanford 69, California 59 Thursday’s Games Arizona 68, Colorado 54 Washington 56, Oregon State 43 Utah 76, Arizona State 59 Washington State 108, Oregon 99, OT Basketball Ovr. 8-4 6-7 3-10 1-13 GIRLS Class 5A CRC Hermiston Pendleton The Dalles Hood River NCAA Men Top 25 Thursday’s Games No. 3 Gonzaga 78, Pepperdine 76 No. 7 Wisconsin 70, Nebraska 55 No. 8 Utah 76, Arizona State 59 No. 10 Arizona 68, Colorado 54 Today’s Games No games scheduled COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Today Eastern Oregon at NW Christian 5:30 p.m. Blue Mountain at Big Bend 6 p.m. Saturday Blue Mountain at Spokane, 2 p.m. Eastern Oregon at Corban, 5:30 p.m. Conf. 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 6-7 6-7 4-7 2-10 NBA Thursday’s Games Milwaukee 95, New York 79 Houston 112, Oklahoma City 101 Cleveland 109, L.A. Lakers 102 Today’s Games New Orleans at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Brooklyn at Washington, 4 p.m. Memphis at Orlando, 4 p.m. Detroit at Indiana, 4 p.m. Atlanta at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. Chicago at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Golden State at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Denver at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Portland at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Minnesota at Phoenix, 6 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Utah, 6 p.m. Miami at Sacramento, 7 p.m. Cleveland at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m. PREP SWIMMING Saturday Pendleton, Hermiston at La Grande, Noon BOYS Class 5A CRC Pendleton Hood River Hermiston The Dalles 2-2 2-2 0-3 0-3 Hockey NHL Thursday’s Games Boston 3, N.Y. Rangers 0 Minnesota 7, Buffalo 0 Vancouver 4, Philadelphia 0 Ottawa 4, Montreal 1 Tampa Bay 3, Edmonton 2 Colorado 4, Florida 2 Detroit 3, St. Louis 2, OT Winnipeg 2, Dallas 1 Calgary 4, Arizona 1 San Jose 3, Toronto 1 Today’s Games Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. Vancouver at Carolina, 4 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Columbus, 4 p.m. Washington at Nashville, 5 p.m. Winnipeg at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. New Jersey at Anaheim, 7 p.m. WHL Thursday’s Games No games scheduled Today’s Games Moose Jaw at Swift Current, 5 p.m. Medicine Hat at Saskatoon, 5:05 p.m. Lethbridge at Brandon, 5:30 p.m. Victoria at Red Deer, 6 p.m. Regina at Edmonton, 6 p.m. Portland at Prince George, 7 p.m. Seattle at Kelowna, 7:30 p.m. Tri-City at Vancouver, 7:30 p.m. Spokane at Everett, 7:35 p.m. ATHLETE OF THE WEEK CARLOS CHAVEZ Junior Guard - Echo Echo junior guard Carlos Chavez boosted the Cougars to its second league win over Joseph on Friday night. Chavez drilled six three point shots to finish with a season-best 33 points in the 83-52 victory over the Eagles. P ROUDLY S PONSORED B Y : 2372 N. 1st (Hwy 395) Hermiston, OR 97838 Donn Walls - Principal Broker/Owner 541-567-2121