SPORTS TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 2017 1B FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS NBA Trail Blazers bow out early Durant returns as Golden State eliminates Portland By ANNE M. PETERSON Associated Press PORTLAND — Stephen Curry had 37 points before sitting out the fi nal quarter and the Golden State Warriors welcomed back teammate Kevin Durant with a 128-103 victory over which is tied Game 4 the Portland at 2. Trail Blazers Golden on Monday State played night to Golden State Portland for the second sweep their straight game first-round without coach playoff series. • Golden State wins 4-0 Steve Kerr, T h e who has been Wa r r i o r s experiencing advanced to the conference a fl are-up of symptoms semifi nals, where they’ll stemming from back surgery face the winner of the series a couple of years ago. Assis- between the Utah Jazz and tant Mike Brown has served the Los Angeles Clippers, as head coach in Kerr’s 128 103 absence. Durant hadn’t played since Game 1 because of a strained left calf. He started and the Warriors built a 72-48 lead by the end of the opening half. Golden State pushed the margin to 33 points in the second half. Curry swished a 31-foot 3-pointer that made it 104-77 late in the third quarter and the Blazers couldn’t catch up. See BLAZERS/2B AP Photo/Craig Mitchelldyer Portland Trail Blazers from left, forward Noah Vonleh, guard CJ McCollum, guard Damian Lillard, guard Evan Turner, and forward Al-Farouq Aminu react after the Golden State Warriors score during the fi rst half of Game 4 of an NBA basketball fi rst-round playoff series, Monday, April 24, 2017, in Portland. PENDLETON Hergert punctuates Pendleton split Pendleton’s Payton Hergert smiles as she rounds third after hitting a home run Saturday against Hood River in a softball game at Steve Cary Field in Pendleton. Buckaroos remain locked in tie with Hood River atop CRC standings By ERIC SINGER East Oregonian When Pendleton’s Payton Hergert went down with a knee injury in April 2016, it left a big void in the Buckaroos’ offensive and defensive lineups for the remainder of the season. Though she’s admittedly not quite 100 percent in her return from knee ligament surgery, Hergert showed in Saturday’s doubleheader against Hood River just how important she is to the Buckaroos again this season. Hergert went a combined 6 for 8 at the plate with three home runs on the day, while also turning in a double and eight RBIs to help the Buckaroos manage a split with the Eagles. Pendleton won the fi rst game 12-2 in fi ve innings, but made too many defensive miscues and put themselves in too big of a hole in Game 2 and fell 9-8. The split means that the Buckaroos (16-3, 4-1) and the Eagles (10-8, 4-1) stay tied atop the Columbia River Conference standings. While Pendleton’s pitching duo of Lauren Richards and Alexis Brehaut were not at their best Saturday, Pendleton’s offense was. Between the two games the Buckaroos cranked out 28 hits to go with their 20 runs, which was a pleasant sight for coach Tim Cary. “We did a real nice job of hitting today, everybody one through nine contributed in some way,” Cary Staff photo by Kathy Aney PENDLETON Buckaroos fall short in twin bill with Eagles Pendleton baseball falls behind in league title hunt By ERIC SINGER East Oregonian Saturday presented a big opportunity for the Pendleton baseball team. Going into the double- header with Hood River, the Buckaroos and Eagles were tied atop the Columbia River Conference standings after the fi rst weekend of league play. The Buckaroos have a Baseball goal of winning coach T.J. the league this Haguewood season and said after the Saturday was a games. “But chance for the Hood River Pendleton now there’s team to take no reason why advantage. we can’t go Instead, back down to Saturday showed that Hood Hood River and take two from River is still the team to beat them now. I think that as far as in the CRC, as the Eagles put league goes, we’re still in the away the Buckaroos twice mix if we continue to put runs 12-9 and 4-2 at Bob White across and play defense. Park. Pendleton coach T.J. Our league is notorious for Haguewood said he thought having good baseball teams his team let one, if not both, and you have to bring it every games slip away from them. day.” “It’s tough getting swept on In the fi rst game of the day, home fi eld for sure,” Pendleton Pendleton (6-12, 2-3 CRC) 12-4 9-2 had just scored a pair of runs in the fi fth to cut Hood River’s lead to 4-2 until the Eagles (12-6, 4-1) exploded for eight runs in the sixth and seventh innings to take a commanding 12-2 lead. But the Buckaroos did not quit when they came to bat in the bottom half of the seventh. Daniel Naughton led off the inning with a single which started a run of seven hits and seven runs for the Buckaroos to get within 12-9 with two outs and a runner on third base. But the rally would end there as Ryan Russell struck See BASEBALL SWEPT/2B Softball Hood River Pendleton 2-9 12-8 said. “That’s the whole name of the game is to hit up-and-down the lineup.” In Game 1, Pendleton got a two-out rally going and jumped on the Eagles with a fi ve-run fi rst inning. Hergert started the rally with a double and then was brought in by Kalan McGlothan with an RBI single for a 1-0 lead. Later, Rylee Gentner had an RBI single of her own, and then a fi elding error on a pop fl y from Aspen Garton sent two more runs in for a 4-0 lead. Garton then scored from third on another error for the 5-0 lead. “To put something together with two outs and nobody on is outstanding,” Cary said. “Anything can happen when you put the ball in play, try to force the other team to make plays and we forced them into a few mistakes and took advantage of it.” The Bucks piled on more in the fi fth inning to end the game early. After a leadoff double by Rich- ards, Hergert smacked a two-run home run up into the wind and over the right fi eld fence. Then a double by Brehaut and a single by Gentner set up the game-ending See SOFTBALL SPLIT/2B Pendleton’s Ryan Russell gets ready to launch a pitch during the second of two games against Hood River in a baseball game on Saturday at Bob White Field in Pendleton. Staff photo by Kathy Aney Sports shorts Johnson grabs rare Bristol win BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) Jimmie Johnson has won consecutive races for the 11th time in his career with a rare victory at Bristol Motor Speedway. The seven-time NASCAR champion doesn’t consider Bristol to be his best track, and Monday’s victory was only the second at Thunder Valley in his career. But Johnson’s Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports was strong enough to contend with Kyle Larson, the points leader and most dominant driver of the day. A Johnson speeding penalty on Larson late in the race allowed Johnson to make it look easy in the end. Clint Bowyer fi nished second and Stew- art-Haas Racing teammate Kevin Harvick was third in the race postponed a day by rain. Matt Kenseth was the highest fi nishing Toyota driver with a very quiet fourth. Joey “I really didn’t know how to feel. I was like numb. I felt like something was taken away from me before I had a chance to experience it.“ — D’Onta Foreman NFL draft prospect from Texas during an interview with NFL Network in which he revealed that while he was leading the nation with 2,028 rushing yards in 2016 he was playing through the pain of losing his infant son, who was born prematurely and died at seven weeks old on the same day Fore- man rushed for 341 yards and three touchdowns in a win over Texas Tech. Seahawks GM downplays chances of trading CB Sherman RENTON, Wash. (AP) — Seattle Seahawks general manager John Schneider said Monday that a trade involving star cornerback Richard Sherman is unlikely and that any offer at this point would have to go beyond anything the team has heard so far. Schneider is not closing the door on a deal involving Sherman but sounded pessimistic something will happen. Schneider said the team has mostly moved past the conversations regarding Sherman. “If somebody calls and goes crazy with something then we’ll discuss it again,” Schneider said. Schneider said Sherman, Earl Thomas and Kam Chancellor were all on site Monday as the Seahawks began the second week of their offseason condition program. THIS DATE IN SPORTS 1950 — Charles Cooper, an All-American from Duquesne playing with the Harlem Globetrotters, becomes the fi rst black player chosen in the NBA draft when he’s taken by the Boston Celtics. 1974 — The NFL adopts the 15-minute, sudden- death overtime to avoid ties. The league also moves the goal posts to the back of the end zones. 1995 — Major league baseball returns after a 257-day players’ strike as the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Florida Marlins 8-7. Contact us at 541-966-0838 or sports@eastoregonian.com