SPORTS TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 2016 NFL 1B FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS Umatilla senior Juan Coria (23) starts to spin out of a double team of Vale’s Jake DeLong (22) and Brock Mat- tos during Umatilla’s 47-38 win Saturday at The Pit. Boys Basketball Roundup Seattle New lineup lifts Viks picks Umatilla beats Vale at home up chip Seahawks’ exit from playoffs mirrored season By TIM BOOTH Associated Press RENTON, Wash. — The ending to the Seattle Seahawks season was a microcosm to the year as a whole. $KRUUL¿FIRUJHWWDEOHDQG unexpected s t a r t , followed by a furious ¿QLVK DQG ultimately falling short of what the end goal was all along. “It gives us something to reach for, something to play for,” Seattle linebacker Bobby Wagner said on Monday. ³'H¿QLWHO\DGGVDFKLSWR our shoulder, and you know, we’re not a team that needs a chip on our shoulder.” The Seahawks did not get back to the Super Bowl for a third straight season after Sunday’s 31-24 loss at Caro- lina when a second-half rally IURPDGH¿FLWIHOOVKRUW They were not able to UHDFK WKDW ¿QDO 6XQGD\ DQG try to erase the bitter feelings of what took place a year ago when the Seahawks ended up 1 yard short of a second consecutive Super Bowl title. The two-time NFC champs are done with foot- EDOO LQ -DQXDU\ IRU WKH ¿UVW time since the end of the 2012 season when this group of Seahawks were experi- encing the postseason for the ¿UVWWLPHDQGIHOOVKRUWLQWKH divisional round at Atlanta. Back then Seattle was on the rise. Now they are a team still with a young and talented core, but facing important free agent decisions and an offensive transition to be based more around quarter- back Russell Wilson. Seattle coach Pete Carroll acknowledged again on Monday the aftereffect Super Bowls create, both when Seattle won two years ago and the crushing nature of last year’s loss to New England. The loss to the Patriots was a legitimate burden that took time for Seattle to shake and by the time the Seahawks found a path to success this season, just getting to the playoffs was the goal. “We were trying to catch up the whole time,” Carroll said. “It was very much like yesterday. We were catching up the whole season.” :,/621¶6 (92/8- TION: Seattle made a clear shift at midseason to become less run-oriented and based more around Wilson and the pass game. The results were UHFRUGVHWWLQJ2YHUWKH¿QDO seven games of the regular season, Wilson had 24 touch- down passes, one intercep- tion and a 132.8 passer rating. He set franchise records for yards passing in a season at 4,024 and touchdown passes with 34. Wilson is now the focal point of Seattle’s offense and will be even more so with the potential that Marshawn /\QFK¶V WLPH LQ 6HDWWOH LV nearing its end. 1(;7,1/,1(7KRPDV Rawls rolled his way through the Seahawks locker room on Monday as he continues to recover from a broken left ankle suffered in December. 5DZOV ÀDVKHG HQRXJK DV D rookie that if Seattle does PRYHRQIURP/\QFK5DZOV will be the one to take over. Rawls, who rushed for 830 yards, said he expects to be ready in plenty of time for next season. and Tristen Sanguino came off the bench in favor of freshman Sebastian Garcia, sophomore Seth Cranston and freshman Trent Durfey By SAM BARBEE in an effort to improve East Oregonian the offensive production. Umatilla (8-9, 1-2) was yet 80$7,//$ ² WR VFRUH SRLQWV LQ (2/ Desperate for a win, the play and hadn’t scored 40 Umatilla boys basketball since a 40-29 win over WHDP¿QDOO\JRWLWGRZQLQJ Mac-Hi two weeks ago. the Vale Vikings 47-38 “We were just trying Saturday night at The Pit. WR PDNH D FKDQFH´ /HWH Umatilla coach Derrek said. “We just weren’t /HWHXVHGDGLIIHUHQWVWDUWLQJ producing. We hadn’t had lineup Saturday, leaving the any offensive production. seniors on the bench. Juan We scored 30-something Coria, Aaron Simmons points the last couple of games and just went with some younger kids to kinda send a message to the older kids that, ‘Hey, you’re job’s on the line,’ kinda thing. “I just wanted to see them respond, and I thought they responded well today.” With the Umatilla starters on the bench, Vale (2-12, 0-3) jumped to a quick 6-2 lead, but a 6-0 run WRFORVHWKH¿UVWTXDUWHUJRW the home Vikings in front 8-6 heading into the second period. There, Umatilla built a Staff photo by Sam Barbee See BOYS HOOPS/2B Girls Basketball Roundup Umatilla takes lead in EOL Umatilla junior guard looks for a team to pass to as Vale’s Daillie Johnson defends during Umatilla’s 36-25 win Saturday at The Pit. Defensive battle leads to low-scoring win over Vale By SAM BARBEE East Oregonian 80$7,//$ ² 7KRXJK WKH 8PDWLOOD Vikings girls basketball scored only six points LQ WKH ¿UVW TXDUWHU 6DWXUGD\ DJDLQVW 9DOH DQG MXVWLQWKH¿UVWKDOIGRQ¶WWHOOWKHPLWZDVD slow start. “It was just two great teams going at it,” senior Sidney Webb said. In all, the blue and orange-clad Vikings used an exceedingly rare six-point play in the third quarter to down the black and silver-clad Vikings 36-25 at The Pit despite having no VFRUHUVLQGRXEOH¿JXUHV Vale’s Alisa Burkhardt led all scorers with 10 points, and Aleesha Watson led Umatilla with eight. With the win, Umatilla (13-4, 3-0) takes a one-game lead over Vale (10-6, 2-1) in WKH (DVWHUQ 2UHJRQ /HDJXH DQG KDV ZRQ IRXU straight games. 1HLWKHUWHDPFRXOG¿QGDQ\IRRWKROGVHDUO\ RQ 7KH\ FRPELQHG WR VKRRW LQ WKH ¿UVW TXDUWHU DQG QHLWKHU WHDP PDGH D ¿HOG JRDO LQ the second quarter. Umatilla shot 15 percent in that half and Vale shot just 14 percent. Both teams were heavily pressuring the ball and not allowing either offense to be comfortable or get good looks. 7KHQ 8PDWLOOD¶V RIIHQVH ¿QDOO\ JRW LQWR D groove in the third quarter. “We’re usually a second half team,” Webb said. $OHHVKD:DWVRQ KLW D SRLQWHU ² WKH ¿UVW of the game — with 5:52 on the clock, and two See GIRLS HOOPS/2B Staff photo by Sam Barbee NBA Prep Wrestling Blazers bounce back, beat Wizards Bulldogs win Oregon Classic By STEPHEN WHYNO Associated Press WASHINGTON — Damian /LOODUG MRNHG ZLWK FRDFK 7HUU\ 6WRWWV that the Portland Trail Blazers should ÀXVKWKH¿OPRIDQHPEDUUDVVLQJORVV to the Philadelphia 76ers. Then he sat down and watched it. What he saw wasn’t pretty, and other teammates made sure they Portland didn’t forget. When they got onto the court Monday against the Wash- ington Wizards, the Trail Blazers showed it with a Washington 108-98 bounce-back victory to close out their road trip. “We just really thought about it more, not from a basketball side just how you approach the game and you’ve got to respect each team,” VDLG 0H\HUV /HRQDUG ZKR VFRUHG points. “Winning three (in a row) and then getting beat by a team that only had four wins — the ability to come back and lock in and not dwell on what had happened is big for us.” Not every problem that surfaced Saturday night in Philadelphia was solved, and Mason Plumlee said a 25-point loss to any team leaves a bad taste. But losing by that much to the NBA’s worst team served as something of a wake-up call for the Trail-Blazers. Against the Wizards, the shots were falling, especially from 3-point range, and there was more attention to detail and less hesitation. The result was a dominant performance from the back- FRXUW RI /LOODUG SRLQWV DQG &- Five Hermiston wrestlers go undefeated for the weekend East Oregonian 108 98 AP Photo/Alex Brandon Washington Wizards forward Jared Dudley (1) has his shot blocked by Portland Trail Blazers forward Al-Farouq Aminu (8) in the first half of an NBA basketball game, Monday, Jan. 18, 2016, in Washington. McCollum (25) and Portland’s fourth ZLQLQ¿YHJDPHV “We played with energy from the jump and we competed,” said Plumlee, who recorded his 12th double-double of the season and added a career-best seven assists. “Energy, just a mindset defensively, getting stops. I think if you take the second quarter out of it, this was one of our better defensive games on this road trip.” The Blazers’ defense took a toll on Eastern Conference player of the week John Wall, who lit up the Boston Celtics for 36 points Saturday. Wall scored just nine points on 4-of-17 shooting. “I was frustrated,” Wall said. “I had some good looks that I had from the last games, and I wasn’t making them. It was frustrating to me because I feel like I was letting my team down.” Garrett Temple, who addressed the crowd before the game to commem- RUDWH0DUWLQ/XWKHU.LQJ-U'D\OHG Washington with 18 points. Marcin Gortat had 16 points and 10 rebounds. The Wizards fell victim to two big runs by the Blazers and had one of their own. Portland took a 17-point lead in the second quarter before the Wizards chipped away and took the lead early in the second half. 7KHQ /LOODUG KLW EDFNWREDFN 3-pointers and the Blazers went on a 23-1 run to take a stranglehold of the game. It slipped away quickly for the Wizards. “In the third quarter we reverted EDFNWRWKH¿UVWTXDUWHU´:DOOVDLG REDMOND — The Hermiston Bulldogs domi- nated the weekend competi- tion at the Oregon Classic in 5HGPRQG WDNLQJ ¿UVW SODFH in Class 5A. Hermiston came into Saturday’s competition as the top seed in 5A and defeated Central 71-6 and then Crater WRJHWWRWKH¿UVWSODFH match, where the team defeated Hillsboro 45-12 for the title. “Our guys wrestled hard, exactly how we want to,” ¿UVW\HDUFRDFK.\OH/DUVRQ said. “We want to dominate and we want to put pressure on guys and break ‘em, and thats what they did this weekend.” Of the eight wrestlers who WRRN WKH PDW VL[ WLPHV ¿YH went undefeated and two did it without forfeits. Valen Wyse (four pins), Andy Wagner (four pins, technical IDOO DQG &- +HQGRQ ¿YH pins) each went 6-0 to lead Hermiston. 6DP &ROEUD\ ¿YH See WRESTLING/2B