SPORTS WEEKEND, MARCH 4-5, 2017 1B FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS 2A State Tournament 5A State Tournament Tigers claw into first final Stanfield makes big plays down stretch to beat Life Christian By MATT ENTRUP East Oregonian PENDLETON — The Stan- field Tigers continued to thrive under pressure and came out of Friday’s 2A state semifinals with another gem to knock off the Life Christian Lions 56-41 at Pendleton Convention Center. No. 2 Stanfield started the fourth quarter 6-for-8 from the field and sealed the win during a 39-second stretch in the final minutes that all started when senior Jose Garcia held his ground to draw Boys Hoops charge on Life C h r i s t i a n ’s Zeke Quinlan #2 Stanfield with 2:18 left and Stanfield up 47-39. The Tigers (22-1) were only able to #6 Life Christian get two points out their next possession, but they made it last until the 1:39 mark by grab- bing three offensive rebounds. No. 6 Life Christian (23-7) scored its final points on a pair of free throws by Bo Quinlan with 1:30 left to play, and shot 3-for-10 in the fourth quarter as Stanfield earned its first champi- onship berth in program history. It is the third straight sport the Tigers have reached the cham- pionship in after winning the 2016 baseball title and finishing second in football this past fall. “Before the game we just calmed ourselves down. I don’t think any of us were nervous,” said senior Dylan Grogan. “We’ve been deep in the playoffs so we know how to take it. Some people break down and try to take it individually, we took it as a team and stepped up.” Grogan scored 10 of his team- high 20 points during the fourth quarter and played the final 4:44 with four fouls. “When I was younger I used to get into foul trouble a lot, so I kind of knew how to play off, how to use it,” he said. “It’s tough, you have to play off, but it worked.” Grogan drained three straight shots during an 11-2 run that put the Tigers up for good, and his three-pointer with 4:13 left made it 43-37 to match their largest lead from the first half. Staff photo by Kathy Aney Pendleton’s Caden Smith (23) goes up for a shot Friday during a 5A state championship quarterfinal game against Corvallis at Warberg Court. 56 Bucks are state bound 41 Pendleton advances to Final 8 with 2OT thriller By ERIC SINGER East Oregonian PENDLETON — Pendleton coach Kyle Tedder has raved about senior Johnny Stuvland’s improvement throughout this season, and with good reason. Stuvland showed why on Friday night. With a packed house at Warberg Court, Stuvland put up 17 points and grabbed 15 rebounds and sank the game-winning free throws with just Boys Hoops 2.2 seconds left to send his Buckaroos to the state tournament with a thrilling 69-67 double overtime victory over #7 Pendleton the Corvallis Spartans in the Class 5A first round. “I feel high on life right now,” Stuvland #10 Corvallis said minutes after the game. “It’s a great feeling to get a team win, everybody did their part from defense to offense and got it done.” Stuvland scored all six of Pendleton’s points in the second overtime, including a key breakaway lay-up with five seconds left that put his Bucks on top. Stuvland gave all the credit on that play to soph- omore Tyler Newsom, who set him up for the lay-in. Prior to the play, Corvallis was content on dribbling down the clock See BUCKS/2B 69 Staff photo by E.J. Harris Stanfield’s Dylan Grogan shoots the ball guarded by Life Christian’s Zeke Quinlan and Zac Ross (25) in the Tigers’ 56-41 win against the Lions on Friday in Pendleton. The game was tied six times and had 13 lead changes, but Stanfield made more hustle plays to give it the edge after the game was tied at 30-30 after three quarters. The Tigers finished with 14 offensive rebounds that led to 12 second-chance points, scored 14 points off turnovers, and came up with key defensive stops to frustrate the Lions. “All season we’ve been one hand-length away and keeping the pressure tight,” said senior Thyler Monkus. “This team (Life Christian) plays slow, so we wanted to play our tempo game, and that’s what we did all game.” Monkus came up with his fourth steal of the game with 1:03 left when he ran down Zeke Quinlan at midcourt. He also had a block and four assists. 67 “We just had to hustle after everything,” he said. “No matter if we’re down by a lot, up by a lot, we just have to give 100 percent, and it can change the momentum pretty fast. That’s what we’ve worked on all year.” Brody Woods came off the bench to score 13 points with nine rebounds, and two blocks See STANFIELD/3B 5A State Tournament 1A State Tournament Shorthanded Buckaroos struggle against Kingsmen state championship game Pendleton ousted by Putnam Golden Eagles soar to By ERIC SINGER East Oregonian PENDLETON — After the Pendleton girls basketball team won the program’s first league title in 12 years and clinched a home first round playoff game, the Girls Hoops Buckaroos had high hopes at making a #8 Pendleton state tourna- ment run. But those hopes were dashed even before the #9 Putnam Bucks took the floor for the playoff game, as starting forward and first team all-CRC player Kalan McGlothan had to have emergency gall bladder surgery on Tuesday. The procedure kept her out for the Buckaroos first round game against Rex Putnam on Friday and the Buckaroos surely missed her presence. Staff photo by Kathy Aney Without McGlothan’s rebounding abilities and Pendleton’s Lauren Richards (5) drives to the basket 38 55 See GIRLS/2B past Kanani Kremers (3), of Putnam, Friday in a 5A state championship quarterfinal game at Warberg Court. Nixyaawii puts away Arlington in semifinals 11 boards. The Honkers were the ones that drew first blood on Friday, as Joely Patnode was fouled in the act of shooting a 3-pointer just 30 seconds into the game and then East Oregonian sank all three free throws to give her team a 3-0 lead. But that lead was short-lived as BAKER CITY — For the second time Nixyaawii put together an 11-1 run over in school history, the Nixyaawii girls the next five minutes in the first quarter to basketball team will play for a take control of the game. state championship. Girls Hoops Arlington got the lead back Nixyaawii was able to put under double digits late in the away the Arlington Honkers with second quarter with a 25-17 ease in the Class 1A semifinals deficit, but that was as close as on Friday afternoon with a 51-27 #1 Nixyaawii it could get as the Golden Eagles victory at Baker High School, proved to be too strong. advancing to the state finals for Nixyaawii will now play the first time since 2011. the winner of No. 3 Country Kaitlynn Melton had a big Christian and No. 10 Adrian to game on offense for the No. 1 be played tonight at 6:30 p.m. seed Golden Eagles (25-0) with #12 Arlington for the state championship. 17 points on 6 of 9 shooting to go The Golden Eagles won a state with seven rebounds and three title in their only appearance in steals. Behind her, Mary Stewart 2011, beating Hosanna Christian finished with 16 points on 8 of 25 75-50. shooting with 10 rebounds, eight Arlington will play for third place steals and five assists and Milan Schimmel tomorrow morning against the loser of the added eight points and nine rebounds. Adrian/Country Christian game at 11:30 The Golden Eagles’ defense kept the a.m. No. 12 Honkers (22-6) offense very quiet ———— AHS 9 11 2 5 — 27 in the game, as Arlington shot a meager NCS 18 13 12 8 — 51 14 percent from the floor and made just 8 ARLINGTON — M. Hauner 17, S. Collins 5, J. Patnode 4, E. 1, S. Grady, S. Weatherford, K. McClure, H. Davidson, of 57 shot attempts. Nixyaawii also forced Kirby R. McClure. 24 Honker turnovers. NIXYAAWII — K. Melton 17, M. Stewart 16, M. Schimmel 8, Melton 6, S. Fitzpatrick 2, K. Mountainchief 2, E. Butler, T. Megan Hauner finished as Arlington’s T. Broncheau, S. Patrick, S. Fuentes, A. Tonasket, E. Looney. 3-pointers — AHS 0, NCS 0. Free throws — AHS 11-20, leading scorer with 17 points and added NCS 9-14. Fouls — AHS 13, NCS 20. Fouled out — K. Melton 10 rebounds, and Emily Kirby also added (NCS). 51 27