Page 2B SPORTS East Oregonian Friday, December 8, 2017 College Football Mike Riley returns to Beavers as assistant coach By ANNE M. PETERSON Associated Press Mike Riley is returning to Oregon State. The former Beavers coach was named an assistant on new coach Jonathan Smith’s staff on Thursday. Most recently head coach at Nebraska, Riley was coach at Oregon State twice, from 1997-98 and 2003-14. He will serve as an assistant head coach with a “to-be-determined” position assignment under Smith. Smith, a former Beavers’ quar- terback, was a graduate assistant at Oregon State under Riley in 2003. Also joining Smith’s staff are assistants Jim Michalczik, Brian Lindgren, Jake Cookus, and Mike McDonald. Michalczik, who has been an assistant at Arizona for the past five years, was named associate head coach, serving as the run game coordinator and offensive line coach. Lindgren, an assistant at Colorado, will serve as the Beavers’ offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. Cookus was promoted from within the program to special teams coordinator and McDonald, who comes to the Beavers from Washington, will be strength and conditioning coach. Dan Van De Riet, who was Nebraska’s director of football operations, is also returning to Oregon State as the chief of staff AP Photo/Troy Wayrynen, File Former Oregon State coach Mike Riley was named an assistant on new coach Jonathan Smith’s staff on Thursday. Riley, most re- cently head coach at Nebraska, was coach at Oregon State twice, from 1997-98 and 2003-14. and director of football operations. Nebraska dismissed Riley last month after three seasons. The Cornhuskers finished this season 4-8 for the program’s fewest wins since going 3-6-1 in 1961. Riley was 19-19 overall with the Huskers and lost 12 of the last 18. Nebraska had losing records two of Riley’s three seasons. During his time with the Beavers, Riley developed a reputation for developing quarter- backs and pulling the occasional big upset. With a stint in the NFL as coach of the San Diego Chargers, he also showed a knack for recruiting players that were successful at the pro level. “Current and former players thriving in the NFL and in life are proof of Coach Riley’s tremendous ability to recruit outstanding young men,” Smith said in a statement released by Oregon State. “He understands what it takes to win in this conference, and how to eval- uate and develop student-athletes. There is no one better to have represent OSU in the homes of recruits as we build this program.” Over 14 total seasons at Oregon State, Riley had a 93-80 record and wins in six of eight bowl games. His Beavers famously knocked off No. 3 Southern California at home in 2006, No. 2 California on the road in 2007, No. 1 USC at home in 2008 and No. 9 Arizona on the road in 2010. Riley grew up in Corvallis, and his father Bud was an assistant at Oregon State. Smith came to the Beavers from Washington, where he was quar- terbacks coach under coach Chris Petersen. A walk-on at Oregon State, he helped lead the Beavers to a Fiesta Bowl victory following the 2000 season. Smith filled the vacancy left by Gary Andersen, who surprisingly parted ways with the Beavers in early October after a 1-5 start. Cornerbacks coach Cory Hall served as interim head coach for the rest of the season, and the Beavers finished 1-11. Could regional flavor of playoff cause fans to tune out? By ERIC OLSON Associated Press Hardcore college football fans across the country undoubtedly will be tuned in for the College Football Playoff. But what about casual fans outside SEC, ACC and Big 12 country? With the Pac-12 and Big Ten not represented in the four-team playoff, a TV sports viewership analyst said interest could be tempered on the West Coast, upper Midwest and Northeast. The campuses of Clemson, Georgia and Alabama are in close proximity in the Southeast — Clemson and Georgia are just 75 miles apart. Oklahoma is the outlier, a good day’s drive west of Alabama. “I think it’s too regional this year,” said Jon Lewis, editor of Sports Media Watch. “That hurts in every sport — unless it’s the Super Bowl.” That said, Lewis expects a potential loss of viewership could be offset because the semifinals will be played on New Year’s Day, the traditional college football holiday. The last two years the semifinals were on New Year’s Eve, when the games competed with parties and other celebrations. An additional boost might come from the Alabama-Clemson semifinal in the Sugar Bowl being a rematch of the last two national championship games. But, Lewis said, “I still think the numbers are going to be well short of the first year of the playoff.” In 2015, the inaugural playoff semifinals matching Oregon-Florida State and Ohio State-Alabama each drew better than 28 million viewers on ESPN, according to the Nielsen company. The Oregon-Ohio State title game had 33.4 million. Viewership the last two years ranged from 15.5 million to 19.8 million for the New Year’s Eve semifinals, and the Clemson-Ala- bama title games drew 26.7 million in 2016 and 26 million in 2017. Los Angeles sports radio host Petros Papadakis acknowledged the regional flavor of the playoff — “I hope Oklahoma can at least strike a blow for the people west of the Mississippi,” he joked — but said he didn’t think it would put a damper on fans’ enthusiasm nationally. “Call me crazy, but I think we’ve reached a point in our society where football fans put football on,” Papa- dakis said. “If there is live football and it’s a big game that’s on, people are watching. ... I really do feel like the College Football Playoff is transcendent like the Super Bowl, where people are just going to watch because it’s championship-level football.” Still, Lewis said it can’t be over- looked that much of the nation is left with no rooting interest. He noted the Big Ten and Pac-12 have larger geographic footprints (never mind the Big 12’s eastern outpost of West Virginia) and there is some overlap between the SEC and ACC. “It’s good to have the SEC repre- sented. I don’t know that it’s good to have two SEC teams represented,” Lewis said. “And when you talk about the conferences, the Big 12, ACC and SEC are very similar in terms of their makeup, in terms of their regions. You don’t want it to be too regional.” An interesting test will be the Rose Bowl, where the traditional Big Ten-Pac-12 matchup gives way to the playoff semifinal between Oklahoma and Georgia. Papadakis said the Rose Bowl obviously would have more local interest if Southern California or UCLA were participating, but the fact the game is a playoff makes it intriguing. “The key for the Rose Bowl is that they’re big, blue-blooded tradi- tional college football programs,” he said. “As long as it’s a big blue blood, people will come out to Los Angeles and the game will feel big. There are so many transplants in LA, and I would argue there are more Georgia and Oklahoma people in this town than Oregon people who would come to the game.” Brandon Heideman, who bartends at The Lodge Sports Grille in Seattle, said there was stand- ing-room only at his establishment last year when the hometown Wash- ington Huskies were in the playoff. The absence of a Pac-12 team in this year’s playoff, let alone the Huskies, probably will temper enthusiasm. “As long as someone in the Pac-12 is playing in a game, we’re very busy,” Heideman said. “We’ll have more people than usual in here for the playoff, but it won’t be like it was last year.” Ali Jones, a bartender at Bunkers Sports Bar and Grill in Dayton, Ohio, said she and her patrons are disappointed Ohio State didn’t make the final four. Still, she expects a full house for the semifinals and the Jan. 8 final and that folks probably will be pulling for Oklahoma, which beat the Buckeyes in the regular season. What about Alabama, the team that edged out the Buckeyes for a playoff spot? “We won’t be rolling any Tides over here,” Jones said. Soccer Hope Solo to run for president of US Soccer By ANNE M. PETERSON Associated Press Former national team goalkeeper Hope Solo has announced that she’s running for president of the U.S. Soccer Federation. Solo declared her candidacy Thursday night on Facebook. It comes less than a week after current U.S. Soccer Federation President Sunil Gulati said he will not seek a fourth term. His decision came in the wake of the October failure of the U.S. men’s team to qualify for the 2018 World Cup. “I know exactly what U.S. Soccer needs to do, I know exactly how to do it, and I possess the fortitude to get it done,” Solo said in her post. “I have always been willing to sacrifice for what I believe in and I believe there is no greater sacrifice then fighting for equal opportunity, integrity and honesty, especially in an organization like the USSF that could give so much more to our communities across the nation.” She joins a crowded field of nine candidates. She is the second woman to announce a bid for the job. The 36-year-old Solo anchored the U.S. team in goal during its 2015 Women’s World Cup championship run. Her tenure with the national team ended following last year’s Olympics in Brazil, when the Americans were ousted by Sweden in the quarterfinals. Afterward, Solo called the Swedish team “cowards” for their defensive style of play. She was suspended from the team shortly thereafter and has not returned. For her career, Solo has made 202 total appearances with the national team, with 153 wins and an interna- tional-record 102 shutouts. But she’s also been dogged by a Former national team goal- keeper Solo says she’s running for president of U.S. Soc- cer. Solo made the announce- ment Thursday night on Facebook. AP Photo/Chris Szagola, File number of off-the-field controversies. Notably, a domestic violence case stemming from a 2014 altercation at a family member’s home in Wash- ington state. Solo joins Soccer United Marketing President Kathy Carter, who announced her candidacy on Tuesday. Other candidates include former national team players Paul Caligiuri, Eric Wynalda and Kyle Martino as well as USSF vice president Carlos Cordeiro, Boston lawyer Steve Gans, New York lawyer Michael Winograd and Paul LaPointe, Northeast Conference manager of the United Premier Soccer League. The election will be held in February. Solo said she is campaigning on four core principles: She aims to create a winning culture in U.S. Soccer, starting with youth develop- ment; she’ll push for equal pay for the women’s national team and all women within U.S. Soccer; she’ll address the “pay-to-play” model to make soccer accessible to all; and she’ll stress transparency within the federation. “What we have lost in America is belief in our system, in our coaches, in our talent pool, and in the gover- nance of US Soccer,” she said. “We now must refocus our goals and come together as a soccer community to bring about the changes we desire.” The 58-year-old Gulati had been a driving force in the USSF for more than 30 years. During that time, the U.S. won the women’s World Cup in 1991, 1999 and 2015. He helped put together the successful bid that brought the 1994 World Cup to the U.S. and served as executive vice president and chief international officer of the U.S. organizers for the tournament. He was deputy commissioner of Major League Soccer from its launch until 1999; and president of Kraft Soccer Properties, which operates the New England Revolution of MLS. Gulati was a unanimous pick in March 2006 to succeed Bob Contiguglia, who served two terms. Gulati replaced Chuck Blazer on FIFA’s executive committee in 2013 and continues to serve on the renamed FIFA council. He also is chairman of the joint U.S-Mexico-Canada bid committee, hoping FIFA will pick North America to host the 2026 World Cup. Pac-12 addresses scheduling issues for 2018 season By JANIE MCCAULEY Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — No Pac-12 football team that plays a Saturday road game will be required to play away from home again the following Friday in a revamped 2018 schedule. Commissioner Larry Scott said Thursday that the Pac-12 Confer- ence has discussed scheduling changes with its member univer- sities to find a better solution for next season given concerns and scrutiny over the challenges of 2017. “We’re going to have an improved schedule next year,” Scott said in a phone interview Thursday. Holiday Bowl-bound Washington State won a night game at Oregon on Oct. 7 then returned to the road and took a 37-3 thumping at California in Berkeley that following Friday, Oct. 13 — exactly the kind of issue the Pac-12 is looking to remedy. Conference champion USC also had that happen: the Trojans won at Cal on Sept. 23, a Saturday, then lost in Pullman, Washington, to the Cougars the next Friday, Sept. 29. Questions arose about whether scheduling affected the confer- ence’s overall success and ability to land a team in the College Football Playoff. USC will face Big Ten champ Ohio State in the Cotton Bowl with the Rose Bowl hosting a national semifinal this season. Both teams were left out of the College Football Playoff by the committee. In addition, the Trojans played 12 straight games before their bye leading into the Pac-12 title game. That won’t happen again either, Scott said. “The big thing you’ll notice differently in next year’s schedule is no team’s got 12 in a row, No. 1,” Scott said. “And, we agreed with our campuses that no team is going to have to play back-to- back road games if they have a Friday night game. Specifically, no one’s going to have to play a road game on Saturday and then turn around and play a road game on a Friday. This past year, most of those teams lost those games — Washington State lost at Cal, USC lost at Washington State, so I think it was a real hot topic this year, and that will change.” ———— AP Sports Writer Anne M. Peterson in Portland contributed to this story. GORDON: Has 3 years, $37 million left on contract Continued from 1B They traded a minor leaguer to Minnesota for $1 million in additional bonus allocation on Wednesday. It just so happened that the money from Miami also came with Seattle’s presumptive new center fielder. “He’s a terrific athlete and I don’t think the transition to center field will be a terribly difficult one for him,” Dipoto said. “He’s up for the chal- lenge and actually doesn’t live too far from Ken Griffey Jr., so I think he’s already planning on reaching out for a little assistance.” For his part, Gordon said he was “shocked” to learn of the trade and the Mariners desire to move him from second base to center field. Gordon’s agent, Nate Heisler, released a statement saying the Mariners did not receive Gordon’s approval for the position switch prior to the trade being finalized. Gordon said he’ll accept the position switch, but maybe not with the most enthusiasm. “I had honestly never heard of a situation where a guy who was a Gold Glove-caliber player at his position turning over to a new positon,” Gordon said. “I was definitely shocked, but at the end of the day I’m a team player and if that’s what I have to do for the Seattle Mariners, if that’s what is best for them then that’s what I’ve got to do.” Gordon did play center field briefly during winter ball in the Dominican Republic during the 2013-14 offseason and thought he “played pretty well,” during the limited opportunities. Seattle is adding significant speed and a knack for getting on base to its batting order. Gordon has led the National League in stolen bases three of the past four seasons and led the NL in batting in 2015. He served an 80-game suspension in 2016 after a positive test for exogenous testosterone and Clostebol, substances he said he took unknowingly. Gordon hit .308 with a .341 on-base percentage last season, when he scored 114 runs and topped the major leagues with 60 stolen bases. Gordon’s contract calls for salaries of $10.5 million, $13 million and $13.5 million in the next three seasons. His deal includes a $14 million team option in 2021 with a $1 million buyout, a salary that would become guaranteed if he has 600 plate appearances in 2020 or 1,200 in 2019-20 combined, and he finishes 2020 on the active major league roster. “We want to be more athletic, we want to be faster. We want to be more dynamic on the bases,” Dipoto said. “There are very few players on the planet more dynamic on the bases than Dee Gordon. ... We did add an impact force on the bases here. We did add a really athletic defender who has got some gold on his shelf.”