SPORTS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2017 1B FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS HERMISTON Bulldog trio to continue respective careers Line, Nitz, Garcia sign to play collegiate athletics Herimston seniors (seated left to right) John-Henry Line, Clarissa Nitz and Alysia Gar- cia sign National Letters of Intent with college programs on Thursday at Hermiston High School. Line signed with Eastern Oregon football, Nitz joined Warner Pacifi c volley- ball and Garcia signed her let- ter with Southwest Oregon Community College soccer. The players’ high school coaches are standing behind them (left to right) David Faaeteete, Elizabeth Fleming and Danielle Turner. By ERIC SINGER East Oregonian Hermiston senior Clarissa Nitz cele- brated her birthday on Thursday, and she earned herself perhaps one of her best gifts ever. A college scholarship. Nitz along with fellow Hermiston seniors John-Henry Line and Alysia Garcia signed their letters of intent to play college Staff photo by Eric Singer athletics at a signing party at the Hermiston High School commons. Nitz signed to play volleyball at Warner Pacifi c University, while Line signed with Eastern Oregon football and Garcia with Southwest Oregon Community College women’s soccer. “This is really exciting,” Nitz said while grinning ear-to-ear on Thursday. “I’ve wanted to play in college since the sixth grade ... I’ve just always loved the sport.” Warner Pacifi c was Nitz’s fi rst choice and the only school she really considered because of the school’s Christian affi liation. “It was really important to me because I’ve gone to church all my life,” Nitz said, See BULLDOGS/2B PENDLETON PENDLETON Buckaroos grind past Eagles Bucks go undefeated in CRC Pendle- ton’s Kalan McGlothan grabs a rebound in front of Hood Riv- er’s Emily Curtis (4) and Lau- ren Orr in the Bucks’ 48-39 win against the Eagles on Thursday in Pendleton. Pendleton closes league slate with win over Hood River By ERIC SINGER East Oregonian Tuesday’s league title-clinching win over Hermiston was one of the most effi cient, complete, and emotional games the Pendleton girls basketball team had put together all season. Thursday’s regular season fi nale against Hood River Valley was the opposite of that. Girls’ Hoops Pendleton shot just 27 percent from the fl oor and turned the ball over 19 times en route to a sluggish 48-39 Hood River victory over Hood River at Warberg Court. Buckaroos (12-7, 8-1 CRC) coach Kevin Porter said after the game that he was bracing for Pendleton a possible emotionally-fl at effort coming into this one. “You’re always worried about it,” Porter said, “because when you have a game like (Herm- iston) with the signifi cance that it had, some times it’s hard to follow up. But we knew and talked about it ahead of time.” Porter also credited some disjointedness to a shakeup in rotations and playing time, as he started the three seniors Tatum Fell, Haley Greb and Kale’a Broker — as well as sophomore guard Elli Nirschl and junior guard Jaiden Lemberger — giving the seniors as much playing time as possible in their fi nal home regular season game. “Sometimes when you change lineups it causes some struggles and that’s what it did tonight I think,” he said. “The girls knew we were going to do a senior-heavy game and they prepared for it, but for some reason we had a Staff photo by E.J. Harris Pendleton cruises past Hood River East Oregonian HOOD RIVER — The Buckaroos started fast, then put it in cruise to Boys Hoops control hold off Hood River 51-41 on Thursday in Pendleton their Columbia River Confer- ence fi nale. Pendleton coach Kyle Tedder said he Hood River wasn’t quite sure what led to the Bucks’ fall-off after outscoring the Eagles 22-5 through the fi rst eight minutes, but suspected it had something to do with Pendleton’s 29- and 17-point wins over Hood River in their prior games this season. “We came out hot, forcing the issue and creating turnovers, and it just went away in the See BUCKS/2B 51 39 41 48 NBA Lillard rallies Trail Blazers See BUCKAROOS/2B By TERRANCE HARRIS Associated Press Prep Basketball Arlington’s Hauner, Patnode named to fi rst team All-BSL East Oregonian Three locals were named to the All-Big Sky League girls basketball fi rst team the league announced on Thursday. Arlington seniors Megan Hauner and Joely Patnode, and Condon/Wheeler senior Brooke Dyer were the selections, as voted on by league coaches. Four more locals were honored with placement on the second team and honorable mention list. It was the second time making the fi rst team for Hauner, and the fi rst for both Patnode and Dyer, who were second team and honorable mention last season, respectively. Horizon Christian junior Paulina Finn, a second-team selection as a sophomore, was voted the BSL Player of the Year after leading the Hawks to fi rst place in the district tournament. Also garnering all-league recognition for local teams were second-teamers Annika Reitmann (Condon/Wheeler) and Shelby Collins (Arlington), and honorable mention picks Maggie Flynn (Ione) and Rileigh McClure (Arlington). Arlington’s four representative were the most of any team, and South Wasco and Horizon Chris- tian each had three. No locals were named to the BSL Boys All-League fi rst team, and Condon/Wheeler junior Bryce Harrison was the only player on the second team. Anthony Valdez and Benjamin Evans of Arlington, and Hunter Winslow of Condon/ Wheeler were honorable mention picks. Sherman senior Max Martin was voted Player of the Year, and the district-champion Huskies landed four players on the fi rst team. ——— 2016-17 Girls BSL All-League First Team Paulina Finn, jr., Horizon Christian (Player of the Year) Megan Hauner. sr., Arlington Brooke Dyer, sr., Condon/Wheeler Jodee Hicks, sr., Horizon Christian Joely Patnode, sr., Arlington Second Team Annika Rietmann, jr., Condon/Wheeler Kaitlin Wenz. so., Horizon Christian Allie Noland, jr., South Wasco Emily Hill, sr., Sherman Shelby Collins, sr., Arlington Alexus Outlaw, jr., Dufur Desiree Winslow, so., Sherman Honorable Mention Abby Birman, so., South Wasco Maggie Flynn, jr., Ione Rileigh McClure, sr., Arlington Anastasia Popchock, jr., South Wasco Jaelyn Justesen, fr., Sherman 2016-17 Boys BSL All-League First Team Max Martin, sr., Sherman (Player of the Year) Kyle Fields, sr., Sherman Isaiah Coles, sr., Sherman Jacob Justesen, jr., Sherman Connor Uhalde, sr., Dufur Second Team Ian Walker, sr., Horizon Christian Ty Herlocker, sr., South Wasco Treve Martin, jr., Sherman Bryce Harrison, jr., Condon/Wheeler Bailey Keever, sr., Dufur Honorable Mention Kolbe Bales, sr., Dufur Anthony Valdez, sr., Arlington Derek Johnston. so., Horizon Christian Benjamin Evans, sr., Arlington Hunter Winslow, so., Condon/Wheeler Haven Stephenson, sr., South Wasco ORLANDO, Fla. — Damian Lillard scored 33 points, C.J. McCollum added 22 and Portland the Portland Trail Blazers beat the Orlando Magic 112-103 on Thursday night Orlando to snap a three- game losing streak. A f t e r trailing for much of the game, the Trail Blazers rallied in the fourth quarter behind Lillard’s 17 points. Recently acquired center Jusuf Nurkic also had 12 points and 12 rebounds during See BLAZERS/2B 112 103 Sports shorts Broncos cut Okung after 1 season Gonzaga clinches WCC title ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Russell Okung bet on himself and lost. The former fi rst-round pick signed what basically was a one-year tryout last year with Denver. Serving as his own agent, Okung structured his contract so that only his $8 million salary in 2016 was guaranteed. He needed to have a big year to trigger the fi nal four years and $48 million. He didn’t, and on Thursday the Broncos informed the former Okung fi rst-round pick they wouldn’t be picking up his $1 million option bonus next month that would have guaranteed him another $21 million. The Broncos’ decision not to exercise Okung’s option saves Denver nearly $11 million against the cap this season, giving the Broncos north of $40 million in cap space. SAN DIEGO (AP) — Josh Perkins and Jordan Mathews scored 15 points apiece, and Johnathan Williams had 14 points and 19 rebounds for No. 1 Gonzaga, which overwhelmed San Diego 96-38 on Thursday night to improve to 29-0 and clinch the West Coast Confer- ence title. The 58-point victory margin was the biggest of the season for Gonzaga, which also has won games by 47, 46 and 39 points. And it was merely the latest laugher for Gonzaga (17-0 WCC), the only unbeaten team in Division I. It has won all 17 confer- ence games by double digits. Nigel Williams-Goss scored 14 points and Zach Collins had 12 for Gonzaga. Olin Carter III scored 15 for USD (12-17, 5-12), which has lost six straight and 39 of its last 42 games to Gonzaga. “Obviously we have a great deal of interest, and we’ve said it for a long time, in a playmaker.“ — David Griffi n Cleveland Cavaliers General Manager when asked about former All-Star guard Deron Wil- liams, who was released by Dal- las on Thursday and told ESPN he intends to sign with Cleveland after he clears waivers, which is expected to take 48 hours. THIS DATE IN SPORTS 1967 — Wilt Chamberlain of Philadelphia shoots 18-for-18 from the fi eld against the Baltimore Bullets, an NBA record for fi eld goals in a game without a miss. 1985 — Jim Kelly of the Houston Gamblers passes for a USFL-record 574 yards and fi ve touchdowns in a 34-33 come- back-win over the Los Angeles Express. Kelly, completes 35 of 54 passes, including three for touch- downs in the fi nal 10 minutes. 2013 — Jimmie Johnson wins his second Daytona 500, beating Dale Earnhardt Jr., his Hendrick Motorsports teammate. Danica Patrick, the fi rst woman to win the pole, becomes the fi rst woman to lead the race. Contact us at 541-966-0838 or sports@eastoregonian.com