SPORTS WEEKEND, NOVEMBER 26-27, 2016 1B FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS STANFIELD Stanfi eld at fi nal destination OUT OF THE VAULT Tigers won 1957 title in Hermiston Houk, Gordon, Evans starred in 46-0 win over Powers East Oregonian The No. 2 Stanfi eld Tigers will meet the No. 1 Regis Rams at Kennison Field in Hermiston today at 4 p.m. to decide the OSAA 2A football state champion. It was 58 years, 361 days ago that the Tigers last appeared in a football state championship, which was also played in Hermiston. Stanfi eld proved local prognosticators wrong and brought back the title with a 46-0 romp over Powers after being declared just a slight favorite heading into the game on Saturday, Nov. 30, 1957. See TIGERS TITLE/2B Staff photo by E.J. Harris Stanfi eld quarterback Dylan Grogan, with ball, rolls out looking to pass as Adrian Renner (2) runs a route down- fi eld against Kennedy in the 2A state semifi nals on Saturday, Nov. 19, in Hillsboro. Stanfi eld won 32-13. Running game got Tigers’ 2016 season off to fast start, defense leading the way down the stretch East Oregonian EO fi le photo In this fi le photo from Saturday, Nov. 30, 1957, Stanfi eld assistant football coach Bob Chapman gets carried off the fi eld by two unidentifi ed Ti- gers as quarterback John Houck (21) celebrates the team’s 46-0 win over Powers in the Class B state championship game played in Hermiston. Even before the fi rst day of practice on August 15, football players around the state of Oregon were sweating away the hottest months of the year in the hopes of earning a shot at one of the big blue trophies awarded to OSAA state champions. For the No. 2 Stanfi eld Tigers and No. 1 Regis Rams, that hard work and everything that fl owed from it has paid off with a berth in Saturday’s 2A championship at Hermiston’s Kennison Field. It’s a rematch from Week 4 of the regular season, a game won by Stanfi eld in nail-biting fashion. Regis hasn’t lost a game since. Here’s week-by-week look at how the 2016 season has shaped up for the Tigers, which will kick snaps at quarterback of 2A Football Finals off against the Rams in the season for injured Hermiston at 4 p.m.: senior Dylan Grogan Week 1: Tigers 54, and was 1-for-1 for 11 Enterprise 22 yards. #2 Stanfi eld #1 Regis Tigers Rams The Tigers opened Week 2: Tigers 43, (11-1) (10-2) the season at home and Cascade 20 rushed out to a big early • Today, 4 p.m. It was another big lead with fi rst-quarter • at Kennison Field, game for the Tigers’ Hermiston touchdowns by Mikiah rushers against the team Blankenship and Thyler • Radio: KOHU 1360 AM out of Leavenworth, Monkus. Monkus Washington. Stanfi eld fi nished with 192 yards on 15 carries posted 430 yards on the ground led with two touchdowns and Blankenship by Monkus’ 234 on just 15 carries. He tallied 54 yards on six carries with one scored twice, and Grogan made his score. season debut with 95 rushing yards and Adrian Renner also broke the century 5-of-10 passing for 89 yards. barrier with 143 yards on 11 carries and “Man that was just a tough, physical two touchdowns, and Stanfi eld ran for game overall,” Stanfi eld coach Davie 475 yards. Junior Shayne Keltz took his only See DESTINATION/2B College Football Huskies keep Apple Cup in blowout Pac-12 No. 6 Washington makes statement for playoff committee in win Lillard, McCollum pace Trail Blazers Portland ends Pelicans’ win streak By TIM BOOTH Associated Press PULLMAN, Wash. — Budda Baker was walking to the sideline in the fourth quarter when he was jostled from behind by someone in crimson, who then proceeded to chirp at Washington’s standout safety. Baker heard what was said, turned, and pointed at the closed end of Martin Stadium. “All I had to do was look at the scoreboard,” Baker said. It told the story of a day of dominance by No. 6 Washington in a 45-17 rout NBA AP Photo/Ted S. Warren Washington defensive lineman Vita Vea kisses the Apple Cup trophy after Washington beat Washington State, 45-17 on Friday, Nov. 25, 2016, in Pullman, Wash. of No. 23 Washington State that put the Huskies into the Pac-12 championship game and on the cusp of a spot in the College Football Playoff. Washington (11-1, 8-1 Pac-12, No. 5 CFP) rolled from the outset, using a 28-point fi rst quarter behind three touchdown passes from quarterback Jake Browning to claim the Pac-12 North Washington WSU 45 17 title and keep the Apple Cup in Seattle for a fourth straight year A win in the Pac-12 title game next Friday against Colorado or Southern Cali- fornia would likely land the Huskies in the college football version of the fi nal four. “It doesn’t matter. I’m just glad the (Huskies) are there and hopefully we’ll show up and play our best game of the year,” Washington coach Chris Petersen said. Browning threw for 292 yards but it was the fi rst quarter that set the stage. See APPLE CUP/2B By ANNE M. PETERSON Associated Press PORTLAND — Damian Lillard scored 27 points, CJ McCollum added 24 and the Portland Trail Blazers snapped the New Orleans Pelicans’ four-game winning streak with a 119-104 victory on Friday night. Lillard added 11 assists for the New Orleans Blazers, who were coming off a 1-4 road trip. It was the 2,000th win in franchise history. Anthony Davis, who went into the game ranked second in the league with an average of 31.3 points a Portland game, led the Pelicans with 31 points and 13 rebounds. The Blazers led by as many as 17 points in the third quarter, but the Pelicans closed to 105-101 on Terrance Jones’ dunk 104 119 See BLAZERS/2B Sports shorts Davis breaks FBS receiving record KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) — Corey Davis of Western Michigan has become the career FBS leader in yards receiving, setting the record Friday night against Toledo. Davis broke the mark of 5,005 yards set by Trevor Insley of Nevada from 1996-99. Davis came into the game with 4,987 yards. After only one reception for no gain in the fi rst quarter, he set the record on a touchdown drive late in the second. Davis Davis caught a 13-yard pass from Zach Terrell on the fi rst play of the drive, and a 7-yarder moments later moved him past Insley. The 6-foot-3 Davis has been a starter since his fi rst season at WMU in 2013. He caught 67 passes for 941 yards that year, 78 catches for 1,408 yards and 15 touchdowns in 2014 and last season, he caught 90 passes for 1,436 yards and 12 TDs. “I’m sure you guys know now we’ve been begging for that play for a couple weeks now, trying to get that done. However, I didn’t want it in the red zone. I wanted the target in the red zone.“ — Doug Baldwin Seattle Seahawks WR on giving the middle fi nger to offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell from the huddle before throwing a 15-yard touchdown pass to QB Russell Wilson in a 26-15 win over Philadelphia on Sunday. ESPN report- ed on Friday that Baldwin was fi ned $12,154 by the NFL for the gesture. Cavs set record in rout of Mavs CLEVELAND (AP) — Kevin Love scored 27 points, Kyrie Irving added 25 and the Cleveland Cavaliers led by as many as 45 points in a record-setting 128-90 rout of the Dallas Mavericks on Friday night. After hitting 21 treys against Portland on Wednesday, the Cavs tallied 20 against the Mavs to become the fi rst team with back-to-back regular season games of at least 20 three-pointers, according to Elias Sports Bureau. Love hit seven 3-pointers while Irving, who made his fi rst 10 shots, scored 19 points in the fi rst quarter. Irving’s big quarter came two nights after Love scored an NBA-record 34 in the fi rst against Portland. LeBron James, playing in his 1,000th regular-season game, had 19 points and 11 assists. THIS DATE IN SPORTS 1988 — For the fi rst time in series history, Notre Dame and Southern California enter the game undefeated and occupying college football’s top two spots in the polls.The No. 1 Fighting Irish win 27-10. 2005 — Marek Malik ends the NHL’s longest shootout in the 15th round to give the New York a 3-2 victory over the Washington Capitals. 2010 — Connecticut beats Howard 86-25 to win its 82nd straight game, setting an NCAA women’s record for consecutive victories. Wash- ington University in St. Louis, a Division III school, had won 81 straight previous. Contact us at 541-966-0838 or sports@eastoregonian.com