SPORTS TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 2017 1B FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS College Football Clemson dethrones top-ranked Crimson Tide Watson fi nds Renfrow in fi nal second to win championship By RALPH D. RUSSO Associated Press TAMPA, Fla. — College football’s fi rst national cham- pionship rematch was even better than the original, with NCAA Championship #2 Clemson 35 #1 Alabama 31 an incredible twist at the end. Deshaun Watson and Clemson dethroned the champs and became the fi rst team to beat Nick Saban’s Alabama dynasty in a national title game, taking down the top-ranked Crimson Tide 35-31 Monday night in the College Football Playoff. Watson found Hunter Renfrow for a 2-yard touch- down pass with a second remaining to give the Tigers their fi rst national champion- ship since 1981. A year after Alabama won its fourth title under Saban with a 45-40 classic in Arizona, Clemson closed the deal and denied the Tide an unprecedented fi fth championship in eight seasons. The lead changed hands three times in the fourth See CHAMPIONSHIP/2B AP Photo/David J. Phillip Clemson’s Ben Boulware kisses the championship trophy after the NCAA col- lege football playoff championship game against Alabama Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2017, in Tampa, Fla. Clemson won 35-31. HERMISTON Prep Wrestling Bulldogs eying a move up Hermiston likely moving to OSAA’s highest classifi cation in 2018 Heppner’s Flynn wins Jo-Hi title Antonucci second for Mustangs East Oregonian By ERIC SINGER East Oregonian According to a 2016 report by the Oregon Department of Educa- tion, Hermiston School District is the second-fastest growing school district in the state, ranking 29th overall out of the 212 total districts. And because of that increase, the Hermiston High School athletics programs will likely be moving to the highest classifi cation in the OSAA beginning in 2018. The OSAA began its reclassi- fi cation meetings and evaluations for the 2018-22 classifi cation block in October, 2016, and with three meetings adjourned and numerous proposals submitted, Hermiston has been slated to move to the highest level each time. Hermiston athletic director Larry Usher said the likely move comes with mixed emotions within the school district. See BULLDOGS/2B EO fi le photo A 400-pound bronze bulldog statue stands guard just inside the gates of the Kennison Field Com- plex at Hermiston High School. The most recent plans for the 2018-22 OSAA classifi cation block has Hermiston competing in Class 6A in the Mt. Hood Conference. Final recommendations won’t be made until later this year, but Hermiston Athletic Director Larry Usher is moving forward under the assumption the Bulldogs will be playing a lot more games in the Portland area in the near future. JOSEPH — Despite road closures around the region, the Heppner/Ione and Echo/ Stanfi eld wrestling teams were able to make their way across the mountain for the two-day Jo-Hi Tournament which began on Friday. Heppner’s Cord Flynn pinned his way to the 195-pound championship for his third tournament win in a row, and Mustangs 113-pounder Trevor Antonucci placed second to lead Heppner to an 11th place fi nish out of 17 teams. Echo also had two placers as Kyle Ranger took fourth at 120 and Mason Smith was sixth at 170. Flynn’s title bout came against a familiar opponent as he would meet Culver’s Jaiden Jones, who had pinned him to See WRESTLING/2B NFL Just in time, Seahawks fi nd their running game to start playoffs Rawls sets franchise playoff record for yards By TIM BOOTH Associated Press SEATTLE — It was the most obvious question in the aftermath of Thomas Rawls and the Seattle Seahawks running their way to another playoff victory. Where has that kind of a run game been hiding for most of the season? “I really had a sense it was AP Photo/Stephen Brashear Seattle Seahawks running back Thomas Rawls, left, is greeted by wide receiver Paul Richardson, right, after Rawls scored a touchdown against the Detroit Lions in the second half of an NFL football NFC wild card playoff game, Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017, in Seattle. going to happen,” Seattle coach Pete Carroll said wryly after the Seahawks 26-6 win over Detroit on Saturday night. “No, I didn’t. But I’m telling you, that’s the game we’ve been looking for.” Nothing has been more inconsistent for Seattle than its run game. Hampered by injuries, blocking issues and plain inef- fectiveness, the belief was if the Seahawks were going to make a run in the playoffs it would be because of Russell Wilson’s arm and the passing game. There was no evidence the kind of performance Saturday night was about to happen. In the fi nal three games of the regular season, Seattle averaged 79 yards per game rushing, 2.9 yards per carry. That included a lackluster 87 yards in the regular-season fi nale against San Francisco, the worst rush defense in the NFL. So what changed against the Lions to where Rawls got 27 carries and set a franchise playoff record with 161 yards rushing? “Nothing magic,” Seattle right tackle Garry Gilliam said. “It was the same scheme that we’ve run all year. It was the same people running the same plays. It was a matter of locking in.” See SEAHAWKS/2B “It was the same scheme that we’ve run all year. It was the same people running the same plays. It was a matter of locking in.” — Garry Gilliam, Seattle Seahawks right tackle Sports shorts Beard’s double-double helps OIT to double-overtime win KLAMATH FALLS — Former Pendleton Buckaroo Bryan Beard came up big for his current team on Saturday with a double-double to help Oregon Tech to a 93-84 double-overtime win over Walla Walla on Saturday. Beard, a 6-foot-10 senior forward, scored 14 points and added 10 rebounds. He was 8-of-9 at the free throw line, and added a block as well for the third straight game. Beard is averaging 8.4 points Beard and 8.1 rebounds a game for the Hustlin’ Owls (13-5, 6-2 CCC), and has 13 blocks. Oregon Tech is scheduled to play games in the region twice in the next month — at Walla Walla University on Feb. 4 at 8 p.m. and at Eastern Oregon on Feb. 11 at 7:30 p.m. “I know that you know that I know there’s defi nitely some of that. … The fun part about it is come kickoff time the guys between the white lines are the ones playing it.“ — Dan Quinn Atlanta Falcons head coach and former Seattle Seahawks coordi- nator on the behind-the-scenes strategy and gamesmanship that goes into playing his former bosses. The Falcons host the Seahawks in the NFL Divisional Playoffs on Saturday. Baylor receives historic ranking (AP) — Baylor is No. 1 in The Associated Press men’s basketball poll for the fi rst time. The Bears (15-0) have made a meteoric rise in the poll, going from a team that didn’t receive a vote in the preseason poll to one that received 55 fi rst- place votes from the 65-member national media panel on Monday. Villanova, which received one fi rst-place vote, had been No. 1 for the last fi ve weeks, but the Wildcats (15-1) dropped to third after losing at Butler last week. Kansas (14-1), which was No. 1 on eight ballots, moved up from third to second, giving the Big 12 the top two teams in the poll. UCLA (16-1), which got the other fi rst-place vote, stayed fourth. Gonzaga (15-0), the only other unbeaten Division I school, and Kentucky remained fi fth and sixth, respectively. THIS DATE IN SPORTS 1972 — The longest winning streak in major professional sports 33 games ends when the Bucks beat the Los Angeles Lakers 120-104 behind 39 points by Milwau- kee’s Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. 1982 — Joe Montana’s third touchdown pass of the game, a 6-yarder to Dwight Clark, with 51 seconds remaining, lifts the San Fran- cisco 49ers to 28-27 victory over the Dallas Cowboys in the NFC title game. 2006 — Bruce Sutter is elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, the fourth reliever and fi rst pitcher elected with no career starts. Contact us at 541-966-0838 or sports@eastoregonian.com