SPORTS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2017 1B FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS PENDLETON Prep Roundup Buckaroos sweep Bulldogs Pendleton shows skill, experience in three-set win Hermiston loses on the road Bulldog volleyball team beat by La Grande By ERIC SINGER East Oregonian East Oregonian In 2016, the Baker Bulldogs were a thorn in the side of the Pendleton Buckaroos. Twice the Buckaroos and Bull- dogs met on Volleyball the volleyball and twice the Bulldogs came away with 3-2 Baker victories. But when the two teams met again for the fi rst time in 2017 on Tuesday Pendleton evening, the Buckaroos showed their experience on the court and fi nally topped the Bulldogs. Pendleton won the match 3-0 with set wins of 25-16, 25-22 and 25-22 at Warberg Court. Pendleton (3-0) senior Rylee Gentner says that a good showing by the Buckaroos in tournament play in Bend over the weekend gave the team a big confi dence boost and carried it into Tuesday’s match. “I think we came in more confi - dent because we started working harder in practices and did well at the tournament for the fi rst time in a while,” she said. “That brought us a lot of confi dence and that’s how we came out really well tonight.” Baker (2-4) started the night quickly and opened up a 9-5 lead on Pendleton in the fi rst set, which prompted a timeout from Buckaroo coach Amanda Lapp to try and calm the team down. What Lapp said in the huddle worked, as Pendleton went on a 20-7 run to fi nish off the fi rst set victory 25-16. “She told us to settle down and work on the things we’re good at,” Gentner recalled. “We weren’t working in quick offenses and when we started doing that we started getting in our groove again and settled into our normal routines.” Gentner, who was not on the team a season ago, was a big-time player for the Buckaroos on Tuesday, smacking four kills and picking up two digs and two aces. Her biggest contribution, though, was a thundering cross-court kill on match-point in the third set. “That one felt really good,” LA GRANDE — The Herm- iston Bulldogs volleyball team made traveled Volleyball down Interstate 84 for a non-league contest, but came home empty- La Grande handed. The Bulldogs fought hard against the La Grande Tigers in the fi rst two sets Hermiston before the Tigers coasted to a third-set victory to hand the Bulldogs a 3-0 loss in the match. La Grande (3-1) won with set wins of 25-23, 25-22 and 25-15. See PREPS/2B 3 0 0 3 MLB Mariners come up short again Verlander pitches well in Astros debut By TIM BOOTH Associated Press Staff photo by E.J. Harris Pendleton’s Ellen Nirschl spikes the ball between Baker’s Carson Lein (5) and Kaylee Burk in the Bucks’ 3-0 win against the Bulldogs on Tuesday in Pendleton. Gentner emphasized. “I was strug- gling in the beginning because I was nervous being back out here, I guess. But ending on that hit really helps.” Pendleton coach Amanda Lapp said that having Gentner back to an already deep and experienced bench is huge for her team. “It’s great to have her back now and she’s always trying to perfect her craft,” Lapp said. “Over the summer she came in and tried to get a four-step approach, which takes a lot of time to get down because of timing of ball ... but she is quicker on the four-step, gets her arm up in the air and is really putting things away for us this year.” After the Buckaroos coasted to a win in the fi rst set, Baker did See BUCKAROOS/2B SEATTLE — Justin Verlander pitched six strong innings and won his Astros debut after Cameron Maybin hit a two-run homer with one out in the seventh for Houston’s fi rst hit Tuesday night in a 3-1 victory Houston over the Seattle Mariners. With all the attention on Verlander’s fi rst game for a team Seattle other than the Detroit Tigers, it was another deadline acqui- sition that sent Houston to its sixth straight victory. Maybin was See MARINERS/2B 3 1 Soccer Wood’s goal helps U.S. salvage crucial game Americans earn key qualifying point By RONALD BLUM Associated Press AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell United States’ Bobby Wood, 9, celebrates with team- mates after scoring his team’s fi rst goal during a 2018 World Cup qualifying soccer match against Honduras in San Pedro Sula, Honduras on Tuesday. SAN PEDRO SULA, Honduras — Bobby Wood scored off a scramble in the 85th minute, and the United States escaped from Honduras with a 1-1 tie and important point Tuesday after nearly falling into a deep hole in World Cup qualifying. World Cup Qualifi er United States Honduras 1 1 “I was thinking we might have an early vacation at the end of this year,” coach Bruce Arena said afterward. Romell Quioto scored in the 27th minute after defender Omar Gonzalez failed to clear the ball with a slide tackle. Quioto was left with an open 11-yard shot that beat goalkeeper Brad Guzan to the far post, causing exuberant fans to stomp and shake Estadio Olimpico Metropolitano. The previously well-behaved fans threw horns and liquids at the Americans as they exited the fi eld. Christian Pulisic was fouled about 30 yards from the goal and Kellyn Acosta took the free kick. Goal- keeper Luis Lopez batted the ball with his left hand, and Matt Besler hooked it to Jordan Morris. He sent a backward header to Wood, a 73rd-minute substitute. Wood chested the ball and scored his ninth international goal, avoiding a huge U.S. embarrassment and defl ating fans who had been cele- brating since the start. “It was tough. Lots of credit to them, they made it tough. The conditions were obviously diffi cult,” Morris said. “I think it shows the mentality of our team, we See SOCCER/2B Sports shorts Elliott’s 6-game suspension upheld SHERMAN, Texas (AP) — Dallas running back Ezekiel Elliott’s attorneys say his six-game suspension over a domestic violence case has been upheld, but he will play the opener because of the timing of the arbitrator’s decision. Elliott attorney Jeffrey Kessler told the judge near the end of a more than two-hour hearing in federal court Tuesday night that Elliott’s suspension was sustained by arbitrator Harold Henderson. At the start of the hearing, NFL attorney Daniel Nash said Elliott Elliott could play Sunday night against the New York Giants because Henderson’s ruling came too late in the day for it to be enforced this weekend. Elliott’s attorneys said they were “extremely disappointed with Mr. Henderson’s inability to navigate through league politics, and follow the evidence.” “Yeah, we’re excited. I mean, it’s a good clubhouse. But we’re the same every day. We know the job that needs to be done. From our pitching staff to our offense, we just keep going.” — Yan Gomes The Cleveland Indians’ catcher after Cleveland beat the Chicago White Sox 9-4 on Tuesday for the team’s 13th straight win. It’s the longest win streak in the majors this season and just one win shy of Cleveland’s franchise record. Red Sox admit to using high- tech watch to steal signs NEW YORK (AP) — The Boston Red Sox have reportedly admitted to Major League Baseball that they improperly used electronic devices to steal signs from their longtime rival New York Yankees. The New York Times reported Tuesday the Red Sox used a high-tech watch to relay signs by the Yankees catchers during a series last month at Fenway Park. The Times said the MLB probe started after Yankees general manager Brian Cashman fi led a complaint with the commissioner’s offi ce that included video. The newspaper said the video showed a member of Boston’s training staff looking at his Apple Watch in the dugout and relaying a message to players. Sign stealing is allowed, but electronic assistance is prohibited. THIS DATE IN SPORTS 1980 — John McEnroe and Jimmy Connors wage perhaps their greatest U.S. Open match. McEnroe edges Connors in the semifi nal 6-4, 5-7, 0-6, 6-3, 7-6 (3). 1991 — In a U.S. Open semifi nal between teenagers, Monica Seles, 17, beats Jennifer Capriati, 15, to advance to her fi rst Open fi nal. Seles wins 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (3). 1995 — Cal Ripken plays in his 2,131st consecutive major league game to surpass Lou Gehrig’s 56-year record. Ripken receives a 22-minute standing ovation and later hits a homer in Baltimore’s 4-2 win over California. Contact us at 541-966-0838 or sports@eastoregonian.com