SPORTS TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 2018 1B FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS HERMISTON Staff Photo by Brett Kane The Columbia River Legends division compete in a heat race at the Hermiston Raceway on Saturday evening. FROM HOMETOWN HEROES TO YOUNG GUNS Hermiston Raceway celebrates drivers young and old normal kid; they’re racers.” The Raceway’s main attraction for the night was the Columbia River Legends: a class that races strictly in older cars that run on motorcycle engines. “They’re hard cars to drive. There’s a ton of horsepower in those tiny, little cars,” Walden said. “They’re overpow- ered beasts.” Neena Kik of Hermiston took first place in the division’s main event. The Raceway’s next event will be held on Saturday, Sept. 8 at 6 p.m. ———— By BRETT KANE East Oregonian ERMISTON — It was a celebra- tion of generations young and old at the Hermiston Raceway on Saturday night. The opening ceremonies included an homage to longtime Hermiston racer Ron Van Cleve, who died 13 years ago at the age of 73 after suffering a heart attack. Van Cleve’s daughter Ronda, who took her name from her father, waved a checkered flag as she took a lap around the course. Van Cleve also served as an official at the Tri-City Raceway. “He was one of a kind,” said promoter Greg Walden. “He enjoyed life and was always pleasant.” The heat races soon kicked off, led by the Bandolero division, which con- sists of kids between the ages of eight and 12 driving cars with 6.5 horse- power engines. Ryker Ohler — or as the announcers referred to him, the “Ice- man” — swept the competition, taking first place in both the division’s heat race and main event. H Staff photo by Brett Kane Kaylynn Jeffery, 14, poses with her street stock racecar. Ohler, 10, is from Prosser, Wash., and has only been racing for a couple of months. “I like driving, passing people, and going fast,” he said. Ohler wasn’t the only young racer to steal the show: Yakima driver Kaylynn Jeffery, 14, was the only female in her street stock class, and has been racing since she was eight. “I love the adrenaline rush,” she said. “There’s nothing better than driving fast and turning left.” Jeffery even purchased her current race car on her own when she was 11 — with $2,000 of her own money, earned by selling her first car. She ended up taking third place in the street stock main event. “With these kids, it’s all business,” Walden said. “They don’t resemble a Cano’s homer lifts M’s past Astros By TIM BOOTH Associated press SEATTLE — Robinson Cano hit his first home run since return- ing from an 80-game suspension, a three-run shot in the bottom of the eighth inning and lifted the Seattle Astros 7 4 Mariners to a key 7-4 win over the Houston Astros on Monday night. Seattle won its fifth straight against the Astros, thanks to a huge night from Cano. He dou- bled twice earlier in the game — his first two extra-base hits since coming back from his suspension for violating baseball’s joint drug OSU FOOTBALL Beavers show improvement in second scrimmage By BOB LUNDEBERG Albany Democrat-Herald MLB Mariners HERMISTON RACEWAY RESULTS August 18th races HORNETS 1. (777) Devin Taylor; 2. (77) David Knowles; 3. (18) Karin Pitzer; 4. (17) Kedric Preston; 5. (13) Ryan Rodabaugh; 6. (12) Kris Marlow; 7. (69) Cody McDonald; 8. (21) Owen Berglund; 9. (24) Justus Zamudio; 10. (11) Joe Dunn; 11. (7) Tracy “Snoop” Howell; 12. (5) Andrew Decker; 13. (1) Rob “Ricky Bobby” Cassano; 14. (22) Caroline Barnes; 15. (09) Malorie Whitbeck. BOMBERS 1. (123) Shade Cole; 2. (17) Kedric Preston; 3. (55) Justin Gage; 4. (N21K) Carl Leggett; 5. (2) Brian Calley. STREET STOCKS 1. (46) Terry Osborn; 2. (68) Bart Hector Jr.; 3. (28) Kaylynn Jeffery; 4. (77) Jeff Stremcha; 5. (18) Adam Baker. MINI STOCKS 1. (49) Angel Oseguera; 2. (18) Jeff Mullins; 3. (29) Andy Pierce; 4. (36) Travis Bonney. SUPER MINIS 1. (11x) Patrick Mullins; 2. (11) Chris Kohler; 3. (27) Ron Wilbur. LATE MODELS 1. (3) Ken Bonney; 2. (15) Jeff Whitbeck; 3. (7) Tom Aber- crombie; 4. (37) Charles McDonald. BANDELEROS 1. (13) Ryker Ohler; 2. (77) Jordan Mullins; 3. (5) Brock Genz; 4. (47) Meredith Thompson. COLUMBIA RIVER LEGENDS 1. (3) Neena Kik; 2. (66) Austin Snodgrass; 3. (54) Trace Thompson; 4. (24) Jose Zamudio; 5. (43) Bill Kik; 6. (13) Donnie Rabbit; 7. (2) Jeff Mueller; 8. (01) Brock McDonough; 9. (10) Lloyd Bigler. AP Photo/Elaine Thompson Seattle Mariners’ Robinson Cano, right, points toward the stands as he passes Houston Astros catcher Martin Maldonado at home on his three-run home run in the eighth inning. policy. But those were precursors to his drive to left-center field off Houston’s Collin McHugh (5-2) with one out in the eighth. It was Cano’s fifth home run of the season and his first since May 12 against Detroit. Seattle pulled within 3½ games of Houston in See MARINERS/2B Oregon State held its second scrimmage of fall camp Friday at Reser Stadium. Quarterback Jake Luton felt it was an improvement from the team’s Aug. 11 scrimmage that was open to the public. Friday’s dress rehearsal was closed to fans and media. “On both sides of the ball, I thought we executed well and the energy was good. We got after it,” said Luton, who noticed a height- ened attention to detail during the scrimmage. “You just saw it in a lot of the guys. They were flying around a little bit faster and were able to stop thinking so much and play football.” Wide receiver Trevon Brad- ford agreed with the senior quarterback. “We’ve gotten a lot better in our execution,” Bradford said after Saturday’s practice at Pro- thro Field. The Beavers are two weeks away from their Sept. 1 opener at Ohio State. “We had a meeting today and the coaches said ‘you’ve come a long ways,’ but we are just trying to get better every single day. It was good to compete, get to hit like that.” The defense dominated the first half of OSU’s Aug. 11 scrim- mage as Luton, Jack Colletto and See OSU/2B Sports shorts THIS DATE IN SPORTS A’s Davis has fan sign his jersey, then slugs HR OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Khris Davis asked a young fan from the Make-A-Wish Founda- tion to sign his jersey, then slugged a mighty home run for the Oakland Athletics against the Texas Rang- ers on Monday night. Davis let Anthony Slocumb print his name in blue ink on Davis’ white jersey, then wore the uniform while hitting his 37th home run in the third inning. Slocumb was at the Coliseum with a group from the Make-A-Wish Foundation. Seahawks release longest- tenured player, punter Jon Ryan AP Photo/Elaine Thompson RENTON, Wash. (AP) — The Seattle Seahawks have released punter Jon Ryan, who had been the longest-tenured member of the team. Ryan posted a lengthy goodbye to the Seahawks and their fans on social media Monday morning. “I never wanted this day to come, but knew it would some- day,” Ryan wrote. Ryan’s time in Seattle appeared to be up when Michael Dickson was selected in the fifth round of this year’s draft. The 36-year-old Ryan was among the most popular Seahawks players for his skill as a punter and his personality off the field. He played for three head coaches in Seattle, Mike Holmgren, Jim Mora and Pete Carroll. 1931 — Babe Ruth of New York hits his 600th home run. 1985 — Mary Decker sets the world record in the mile run with a time of 4:16.71 in Zurich. 2010 — Kyle Busch makes NASCAR history with an unprec- edented sweep of three national races in one week, completing the trifecta with a victory in the Sprint Cup race at Bristol Motor Speed- way, the Nationwide race a day earlier and the Trucks race. He was the first to complete the sweep. Contact us at 541-966-0838 or sports@eastoregonian.com