SPORTS Saturday, May 12, 2018 East Oregonian Page 3B HERMISTON Hermiston’s Arnold signs to continue lacrosse career Bulldogs standout will play at Montana By ALEXIS MANSANAREZ East Oregonian HERMISTON — Tayler Arnold never thought he’d be going to a Division I school for lacrosse. In fact, he only picked up the sport in fifth grade after getting bored on the baseball field and having some friends already in the sport. From there, he played throughout middle school and at Hermiston High with his father, Jacob Arnold, as his coach. “It was just getting started in Hermiston,” Tay- ler Arnold said. “So, I fig- ured what the heck, I’ll try it. I was getting kind of bored just standing around in baseball and I was hooked pretty much as soon as I started playing it.” His talent on the field didn’t come naturally, though. Jacob Arnold remembers the learning curve his son had to go through in the first couple years in the sport. “When he first started playing, his first two years were — it was funny,” Jacob Arnold remembered. “He was the big, tall kid out Staff photo by Alexis Mansanarez Hermiston’s Tayler Arnold (bottom right) signs his Letter of Intent to play lacrosse at the University of Montana alongside his coach, and father, Jacob Arnold (bottom left) and the rest of the Arnold family. there trying to make his way around all these kids. His third year is when he really took off and that’s when I think he really started to know he could do very well with this game.” Now getting ready to play at the collegiate level, Tayler Arnold was first introduced to Montana because of its wildlife biol- ogy program. After further research and a visit in Feb- ruary, the Arnold’s decided UM was the right fit. “We were looking at the football team and the lacrosse team and then we were looking at all the things the lacrosse team has done and it seemed pretty fun, so we put in to them and they said, ‘Yeah, we’d love to have you down there,’” the two-sport ath- lete said. Montana is graduating a couple of their defenders and have liked what they’ve seen in the Bulldog. Tayler Arnold will be joining the Grizzles, who compete in the Pacific Northwest Col- legiate Lacrosse League. UM won the national cham- pionship in 2007 and the Copper Cup in 2015. ——— Contact Alexis at aman- sanarez@eastoregonian. com or 541-564-4542. Follow her on Twitter @ almansanarez. SOFTBALL: Loss snaps 22-game win streak for Pendleton Continued from 1B When Noland batted in the seventh, though, she was 0-for-3 on the day — but head coach Kate Greenough had no doubt that Noland could come through. “She is so competi- tive and she will do any- thing; she can to give you her best,” Greenough said. “She’s had so many roles to fill on this team, but she just says ‘OK coach’ and she will do whatever she can. I think her teammates love that. She’s awesome.” Hermiston’s seventh-in- ning rally got started with Smith’s one-out single, fol- lowed by Stefani reach- ing on a Buckaroo (23-2, 11-1) error to put the win- ning run on base. Sam Ati- lano then followed up with a perfect sacrifice bunt, which brought Noland to the plate. “We just told them to stick to our plan,” Gree- nough said. “We talked all week about making plans in your at-bat, and those last four kids completely bought in to what they needed to do.” Pendleton’s offense was rather lethargic for most of the game, with five of the seven innings seeing four batters or less at the plate. The Buckaroos did score the first runs in the game in the third inning on an RBI single by Richards and a two-run home run off the bat of Kalan McGlothan for a 3-0 lead. Hermiston then got its offense going and tied the game in the fourth inning on a two-run double by Jan- nelle Almaguer and a RBI single from Kylie Green. The Buckaroos took the lead right back in the fifth when Kirah McGlothan scored following a ground- out to shortstop from Alexi Brehaut for a 4-3 lead. But for the most part, the bats were stymied by Hermiston pitching. Noland picked up the win in the circle as she threw three innings of shutout relief with only one hit allowed. She gave up a one-out double in the sev- enth to Kirah McGlothan, but stranded her with a strikeout and a groundout to end the inning. Noland relieved senior Julissa Almaguer, who returned Friday after miss- ing most of the season with a knee injury and tossed four innings with three strikeouts and allowed four runs. Greenough was thrilled to see Almaguer back in the circle, on senior day no less. “This team trusts her so much and it’s nice to see them relax when she can play for them,” Greenough said. “Just having her back whether she’s full-go, whether she’s a little here and there, she’s just so valuable to this program.” The loss for Pendleton also snaps its 22-game win streak this season, though coach Tim Cary did not appear to be too upset with the defeat. “It might be the best thing for us,” Cary said. “I think that our focus in practice has been kind of ho-hum; I think things have been relatively easy for us for quite some time and sometimes when you win, win, win you forget you have to work hard for it. “This might be good to get us refocused, get back to hard work and under- stand that anybody can beat any team on any given day, and Hermiston proved that today.” It’s a momentous win for the Bulldogs, who will hit the road next week for a road play-in game, the kind of win that can lift a team to do some special things in the postseason. But until then, the Bull- dogs are going to enjoy the long-awaited victory over Pendleton. “We beat the No. 1 team,” Noland said in dis- belief. “We finally did it.” ———— R H E PHS 003 010 0 — 4 6 2 HHS 000 300 2 — 5 7 1 (P) L. Richards and K. Solomon. (H) Ju. Almaguer and B. Noland, B. Noland (5) and H. Pennington. W — Noland, L — Richards. 2B — Ki. McGlothan (PHS); S. Ati- lano, Ja. Almaguer (HHS). HR — Ka. McGlothan (PHS). ———— Contact Eric at esinger@eastoregonian. com or 541-966-0839. Follow him on Twitter @ ByEricSinger. Staff photo by Kathy Aney Hermiston’s Sydney Stefani whips the ball to first during Friday’s upset against Pendleton. Staff photo by E.J. Harris Pendleton’s Daniel Naughton slides into home plate under Hermiston pitcher Daniel Gossler in the Bucks’ 10-6 win against the Bulldogs in Hermiston. BASEBALL: Bucks win season series Continued from 1B ing leg and was replaced in favor of Daniel Gossler. Right out of the gate, Dan- iel Naughton brought in a run to start the seven spot that gave the Bucks (16-8 overall, 10-2 Columbia River Confer- ence) the lead for good. Nick Bower took a pitch to the body and with the bases loaded was awarded the walk to tie the game at six runs apiece, and then a balk advanced all runners to give Pendleton its first advan- tage since the top of the first inning. “We kind of got fortunate that he (Tolan) came out of the game and capitalized on it,” Jerome said. Jerome was the last player on either team to score, and his three-RBI triple to right field was what changed the ball game. For Jerome, it was just a matter of stepping back and finding the sweet spot. But for the Bulldogs (7-17, 3-9) it was a game ender. It took Gossler out of the game, and stained his record with the loss after just 2/3 innings of work. “Daniel has been splendid. He hasn’t pitched very much on the mound, but he came in and he competed and that’s all you can ask for,” Hermiston head coach Kevin Moor said. Staff photo by E.J. Harris Hermiston pitcher Lukas Tolan throws from the mound in the Bulldogs’ 10-6 loss to Pendleton on Friday. “Unfortunately, he didn’t get the calls and he didn’t get the outs when we needed outs and when that happened Pend- leton — that’s why they are the CRC champs, they took advantage of our mistakes and blew the game open and we couldn’t get the momen- tum back.” Andrew James closed out the game for Hermiston, allowing only one hit while striking out four and walking three in 3 1/3 innings toeing the rubber. Pendleton’s Ryan Rus- sell started the game for the Bucks but after surrender- ing six runs on five hits while walking two and striking out none, Ryan Stahl came in for five innings of relief. Hermiston answered Tyler Chichester’s two-RBI single in the top of the first inning with effective base running and smart at bats. Jordan Ramirez got the Bulldogs on the board by scoring on a passed ball after getting on base with a dou- ble to left field. Landon Jones followed that up with an RBI single and Gossler hit a sacri- fice fly to give Hermiston its first lead over the Bucks since that win back in April. A balk called on Russell advanced the lone base runner on third and ended the scoring with Hermiston taking a 4-2 lead. Tucker Zander kept things close with an RBI single in the next inning, but again the Bulldogs responded and doubled their edge over the Bucks. Trevor Wagner and Caden Schwirse each brought in runs in the second to push the lead to 6-3, but it would only last 1 1/2 more innings. SENIOR GOODBYES Before the start of the game, Hermiston’s eight-man senior class was honored. The Bulldogs that suited up for the last time include Brylee Dufloth, Dustin Maddox, Joel Mendez, Garron Anderson, Joey Gutierrez, Schwirse, Tolan and Gossler. “Sometimes good things have to come to an end, and tonight it came to an end,” Moore said. “So, I just hope those seniors learned a little bit more about baseball. I’m happy that A) I got to know them personally and B) I got to coach them. “Each one brought some- thing special to the table and that’s all you can ask for. All of the seniors were special, and to me that’s the most important thing. ... For some, it’s the end of their baseball career and for others, a couple of them might go on so I hope the best adventures for them.” ——— R H E PHS 210 700 0 — 10 9 0 HHS 420 000 0 — 6 8 1 (P) R. Russell, R. Stahl (3) — J. Duso. (H) L. Tolan, D. Gossler (4), A. James (4) — W. Noland. W — Stahl, L — Gossler. 3B: S. Jerome (P). 2B: Q. Doherty, D. Naughton, S. Jerome (P); J. Ramirez 2 (H).