Page 2B SPORTS East Oregonian MLB M’s fall to split squad By JOSE M. ROMERO Associated Press PEORIA, Ariz. — Avisail Garcia homered among his three hits and drove in four runs, Jose Abreu added to his sizzling spring training with two more hits and a Chicago White Sox split squad beat the Seattle Mariners 12-4 on Wednesday. Abreu raised his spring t r a i n - SPRING ing-lead- TRAINING ing batting average to .518 (29 for Chicago 56). Garcia and the White Sox are looking forward to Seattle getting the regular sea- son start- ed. “I’m ready, and thanks to God I’m healthy,” Garcia said in Spanish. “It was a fastball high and away,” Garcia said of his home run off Mariners starter James Paxton. “I turned on it and it got out.” Melky Cabrera added a two-run double, Jeremy Far- rell had four hits including a two-run home run and White Sox second baseman Carlos Sanchez, who will be on the opening-day roster after a very good spring at the plate, had four hits and two RBIs. Gordon Beckham went 3 for 4 with two RBIs for the White Sox. “It’s good to see what we did with a split squad,” Beckham said, “against a guy who’s pretty good. It was good to get some knocks and GRRXUWKLQJ:H¶OOGH¿QLWHO\ take a day like this, building momentum going into the season.” Chicago teed off on Pax- ton, who’ll be in Seattle’s rotation. Paxton allowed sev- en runs on 10 hits in 3 1-3 innings. “Just one of those days,” Paxton said. “It’s going to feel good to get back to Se- attle and get that real game- time adrenalin pumping.” Seth Smith drove in Seat- WOH¶V¿UVWUXQZLWKDWZRRXW single in the third. BIG WINNER Tyler Olson, a rookie left-handed reliever from Spokane, Washington, made the Mariners’ opening-day roster. Mariners manager Lloyd McClendon has Ol- son’s name on a board in his RI¿FH WKDW OLVWV WKH PDQ roster. “Take a look at the board,” McClendon said when asked about Olson. “Shows a lot of poise and the ability to get right-handers and left- handers out. Holds runners, works fast, throws strikes, ¿HOGVKLVSRVLWLRQ,VDLGHY- ery year I’m looking for sur- prises, and he’s a surprise.” Olson, who’d never pitched above Double-A, has not allowed an earned run and has 15 strikeouts in 10 games (12 2-3 innings) this spring. Starting pitcher Taijuan Walker is also on that list af- ter posting a 0.36 ERA (25 innings) in six starts, though LW¶VQRWRI¿FLDOZKHUH:DONHU will fall in the rotation order. 12 4 BLAZERS: Two wins from division title Continued from 1B the Blazers (48-26) have al- ready secured a place in the SOD\RIIV QRZ WKH\¶UH ¿JKW- ing for home-court advan- tage. Both teams, as well as San Antonio, are locked in a battle behind Golden State, Memphis and Houston for one of the top four spots. The Clippers have played two more games than the Blazers. Even if Portland clinch- es the Northwest Division, home-court advantage in the playoffs goes to the teams with the best records. How- ever, the division title is a tie- breaker if the two teams vy- LQJIRUWKHIRXUWKVSRW¿QLVK with identical records. Thursday, April 2, 2015 NCAA Men’s Tournament Krzyzewski adapts to ‘1-and-done’ world Duke dependent upon strong freshmen class By AARON BEARD Associated Press DURHAM, N.C. — There was a time when Duke’s Mike Krzyzews- ki led Final Four teams built around players who stayed for years to grow into tournament-tested veterans. No longer, not in today’s one- and-done world in which top players rarely stick around long. The Blue Devils enter this week’s Final Four relying on more fresh- man starters than John Calipari at Kentucky’s NBA factory. They have three freshmen players facing stay- or-go NBA decisions after the sea- son. “What Coach K has done in my judgment, and I think Calipari has done the same thing, they’ve adapt- ed to the landscape, and they are dealing with it in a positive way,” said Jay Bilas, an ESPN analyst who SOD\HG RQ .U]\]HZVNL¶V ¿UVW )LQDO Four team in 1986. “Now people want to use val- ue judgments to it and say, ‘This is not the way it’s supposed to be’ and ‘This is antithetical to college.’ Well, says who?” Krzyzewski, the Hall of Famer in his 35th season at Duke and the win- ningest coach in men’s Division I history with 1,016 wins, didn’t have a player go pro early for nearly two decades until three left in 1999. El- WRQ%UDQGZDVWKH¿UVWWKDW\HDUDIWHU his sophomore season, followed by fellow sophomore William Avery and then freshman Corey Maggette a few weeks later as Krzyzewski’s ¿UVWRI¿YHRQHDQGGRQHSOD\HUV ,WWRRN¿YH\HDUVIRU/XRO'HQJWR become the next freshman to leave, but Duke has now had three in four seasons: No. 1 overall pick Kyrie Ir- ving in 2011, Austin Rivers in 2012 and Jabari Parker last year. AP Photo/Bob Leverone, File Duke freshman Jahlil Okafor (15) dunks against Notre Dame during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in the semifinals of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in Greensboro, N.C. It’s forced the 68-year-old Krzyzewski to adjust his approach compared to the days when Christian Laettner, Bobby Hurley and Grant Hill were four-year guys or even when Jay Williams, Carlos Boozer and Mike Dunleavy stayed for three. “It actually starts before they get here,” Krzyzewski said. “We try with the kids, especially if they com- mit early, to develop even a deeper relationship with them than we did 10 years ago. You had time (then). You want to know them even better because you’re only going to have them for a shorter period of time.” Duke (33-4) is built around star freshman big man Jahlil Okafor, a possible No. 1 overall pick who chose Duke jointly with point guard Tyus Jones. Forward Justise Winslow is the other every-game freshman starter. Their arrival comes a year after Parker arrived as an all-but-certain one-year player. The reality is it isn’t all that differ- ent — except maybe for the smaller numbers — than what Kentucky’s Calipari often is criticized for do- ing with his “succeed and proceed” approach, a response to the NBA’s requirement for players to be at least one year out of high school before entering the draft. As Bilas sums it up, Krzyzews- ki “has been playing against these players, and if some of them want to come to Duke, why not take them?” And considering college should help prepare someone for a job, there’s nothing wrong with a play- er leaving school to start a lucrative career. “I really get tired of this dis- cussion of basically people — and they’re not just fans, they’re NCAA member administrators — their view is ‘Our one-and-done is a great kid that had a wonderful opportunity he couldn’t turn down, and your one- and-done is a threat to the integrity of this enterprise,”’ Bilas said. “You can’t moralize about that. You take one, you’re in the same boat. There’s not one negative thing about a young person going to col- lege for any amount of time. Not one negative thing.” To that point, Krzyzewski said the program’s ability to develop players is “obvious” but his pitch in- cludes that the university itself “has a chance to develop you, too.” Okafor said knowing Krzyzews- ki had “coached the best of the best” was key in his decision, though he and Winslow said getting to the NBA wasn’t a big part of the recruit- ing conversations. “He always knew that the NBA could be a part of my eventual path,” Winslow said. “But all our discus- sions were about me becoming the best player I could at Duke, not real- ly any conversation about the NBA.” Bilas was part of the recruit- ing class that got things rolling for Krzyzewski, Bilas, Stanford head coach Johnny Dawkins, Mark Alarie and David Henderson were the se- nior core of a 37-win team that lost to Louisville in the 1986 title game. But in today’s game, Bilas said, Dawkins would’ve probably gone to the NBA in a year or two and Alarie in maybe two years. The only constant in the radically different equation is Krzyzewski. LPGA Tour Ko takes aim at record for consecutive rounds under par at 8 a.m. when the morning dew will make the tangled ORQJJUDVVPRUHGLI¿FXOW “It will be more catchy,” By JOHN NICHOLSON Ko said Wednesday. Associated press Ko started the streak in WKH ¿UVW URXQG RI KHU YLF- RANCHO MIRAGE, tory last year in the sea- Calif. — The rough is a lit- son-ending CME Group tle longer at Mission Hills, Tour Championship. Add giving Lydia Ko an add- in her win in the Ladies ed challenge in her bid to European Tour’s New Zea- break Annika Sorenstam’s land Women’s Open, and record for consecutive her worldwide streak is 31 rounds under par. rounds. A year after Lexi “Obviously, because I’m Thompson blasted her way so close, it will be at the to victory in the LPGA back of my mind because 7RXU¶V ¿UVW PDMRU RI WKH there’s been so much talk season, the thick primary about it,” Ko said. “I’m rough is about 3 inches at sure that thought is going the event now called the to come up within those 18 ANA Inspiration. holes, but I’m just going to ³,WGH¿QLWHO\LVSOD\LQJD try and have fun.” lot different than last year,” Ko also has 10 straight Thompson said. “The rough WRS ¿QLVKHV DQG KDV is up, which, I mean, major made the cut in all 48 of her championships should be.” career LPGA Tour starts, Thompson is paired WKH¿UVWDVDQDPDWHXU with the top-ranked Ko, the “A lot of people ask 17-year-old New Zealander me what the strong point who will try to match So- is about her game,” Mi- renstam’s 2004 record of 29 chelle Wie said. “I think straight rounds under par the strong point is that she Thursday. They will tee off really doesn’t have a weak- Teenager looks to continue hot streak ness.” Ko has six LPGA Tour victories — winning the Women’s Australian Open in February the week be- fore her New Zealand vic- tory — and 10 worldwide titles in professional events. “I always say the most exciting thing about Lydia Ko is she’s 17 going on 18,” LPGA Tour Commissioner Mike Whan said. “And I’ve met a lot of 22-year-olds going on 40 because this job, this career, grows you up in a hurry.” Ko is winless in 12 starts in majors. “That’s really what she’s missing at the moment,” said Sorenstam, working the event as an analyst for Golf Channel. “At that young age, you would think she’d be missing a lot more.” Ko tied for 25th at Mis- sion Hills in 2013 and tied for 29th last season, break- ing par once in four rounds a year ago and four times in eight rounds overall. She expects the conditions WR JHW PRUH GLI¿FXOW DV WKH week progresses. “I’m pretty sure it’s go- ing to dry up in the next couple days,” Ko said. ³,W¶V GH¿QLWHO\ JRLQJ WR EH different from today to to- morrow. I think the rough around the greens is one of the toughest parts, so I re- ally need to position myself well and just be patient.” The greens were recep- tive Wednesday than 2011 winner Stacy Lewis would like. “You’re not having to land balls short and kind of let them roll up,” Lewis said. “There’s a little less, I’d say, thinking involved. , KRSH LW ¿UPV XS EHFDXVH I would much rather see it playing a little bit hard- er than it is right now. ... :KHQWKH\¶UH¿UPDQGIDVW that’s when this golf course plays the hardest.” Already the youngest LPGA Tour winner, Ko is trying to become the young- est major champion. Mor- gan Pressel set the record in 2007 at Mission Hills at 18 years, 10 months, 9 days. As an amateur, Ko won the 2012 Canadian Women’s Open at 15 years, 4 months, 2 days, and successfully de- fended her title in 2013. The third-ranked Lew- is matched Ko and third- ranked Inbee Park with three victories last year. Lewis tied for 15th last week at Carlsbad after tying for second in Thailand and ¿QLVKLQJWKLUGLQ6LQJDSRUH and second in Phoenix. She has 11 career victories. “I’ve been building on this tournament really since February,” Lewis said. “It’s kind of been in the back of my mind. We’ve kind of been progressing with my golf swing and just working on little things every single week and working on my golf swing. I’ve still played some pretty good golf lead- ing up to it. I like where my game is at.” All Nippon Airways is LQ LWV ¿UVW \HDU DV WKH WLWOH sponsor after Kraft Nabis- co’s ended its 33-year run last season. The tournament name is based on ANA’s “Inspiration of Japan” slo- gan. CLASH: Kelly will play volleyball at CBC, others undecided Continued from 1B right angle triple to give the Oregon team a 66-59 lead with four minutes remain- ing. “I haven’t touched a ball since the state tournament,” said the 5-foot-11 hot shoot- ing forward. “But, I was in my comfort zone, it was nice.” Headings and the Oregon team went ice cold for the re- mainder, going scoreless for the last four minutes. Wilson and McKeown would com- ELQHWRVFRUHWKHJDPH¶V¿QDO 11 points to lead the northern invaders to victory. “It took a little bit of time getting used to each other,” said Wilson. “Once we start- LQJ ¿QGLQJ RXU VKRRWHUV ZH were able to get it.” McKeown led Team Washington with 21 points. 7KH DI¿OLDWLRQ ZLWK WKH northern state will be short lived for now for Wilson, she said. She expects to re- join the Oregon All-Stars for tonight’s contest versus the Staff photo by Kathy Aney Kelly Wilson, of Hep- pner, drives to the bas- ket Wednesday at Blue Mountain Community College during the Clash at the Border All-Star Showcase. Idaho All-Stars which will tip at 6 p.m. at BMCC. However, Wilson will be continuing here athletic ca- reer above the state line. Fol- lowing graduation from Hep- pner this spring, Wilson will move north to attend Colum- bia Basin College in Pasco, Washington as a member of the school’s volleyball team. Donning the Mustang EDVNHWEDOOMHUVH\IRUWKH¿QDO two times this week caught her by surprise. Following WKHWHDP¶V¿QDOJDPHDORVV to Weston-McEwen at the CBC district tournament, Wilson assumed her basket- ball playing days were over. “I thought I was done,” she said. “I gave away my uniform, and then I got told I was going to be put it on again. It was pretty special.” Headings and Bodmer each plan to play collegiate basketball. Neither has de- cided upon a school yet. Headings has narrowed her selections down to Cor- ban, George Fox, Northwest University and Northwest Christian. She’s in the midst of visiting all four schools. Bodmer is considering Walla Walla Community College, Mt. Hood Commu- nity College and the home- town Blue Mountain Com- munity College. Staff photo by Kathy Aney Hermiston’s Tavin Headings prepares to shoot Wednes- day during the Clash at the Border All-Star Showcase as Kelly Wilson, of Heppner, defends.