SPORTS THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 2018 1B FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS PREP FOOTBALL Hermiston Bulldogs (0-0) Pasco Bulldogs (0-0) Friday, 7 p.m., at Kennison Field, Hermiston Battle of the Bulldogs Hermiston ready for WIAA debut with Pasco By BRETT KANE East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Official Tom Humphreys throws the coin during the opening coin toss of Hermiston’s 42-15 win against Pendleton on October 27, 2017, in Pendleton. The Blue Mountain Football Officials Association has an extreme shortage of officials this season, forcing games to be moved to different days while some games may get canceled. Officials stretched thin OSAA facing extreme shortage of football officials, forcing schedule changes By BRETT KANE East Oregonian T he number of officials working OSAA football games in Eastern Oregon this year is critically low, so much so that games are having to be rescheduled to days other than the stan- dard Friday night to accommodate for the smaller staff. And some might face can- cellation altogether. “It’s at a point where I have enough to cover two of the eight Friday night games, and for the other six, I have to ask teams to move their games or ask the OSAA if they have any extra officials to send to us,” said Blue Mountain Football Officials Associ- ation commissioner Michael Lieuallen. So far this year, several schools have had to move Friday night games to Thurs- day nights just to adjust for the shortage in the number of officials. Pendleton, Irrigon and Stanfield did so this week, as Pendle- ton’s season opener with La Grande and Irrigon’s opener against Stanfield were both moved to Thursday. A specific number is needed for each game. Football requires at least five offi- cials in Class 6A-4A, and four for smaller classes. Baseball, softball and basketball require two. If that number can’t be met, the game won’t happen. “If La Grande and Baker were both home on the same day, I couldn’t cover anything else,” said Northeast Oregon Basketball commissioner Dave Comfort in a press release. “At some point, this will affect the ability of schools to even sched- ule games.” Lieuallen says this shortage isn’t just a statewide issue – where officials par- ticipation is down 18 percent over nine years, says Oregon Athletic Officials Association executive director Jack Fol- liard — it’s nationwide. According to a study conducted by the National Associa- tion of Sports Officials, over 70 percent of new referees and officiates quit their jobs within their first three years. “Younger people don’t like the idea of coaches and fans yelling at them. It comes down to sportsmanship,” he said. “They can’t take the abuse.” When a new official signs on for the season, they agree to a three-month deal. They then receive training and are paid $40-$60 per game, depending on the level. Lieuallen says the Blue Mountain Football Officials Association — which See OFFICIALS/2B “Younger people don’t like the idea of coaches and fans yelling at them ...” When the Friday night lights shine over Kennison Field, they’ll usher Herm- iston into a new era with brand-new opponents and brand-new stakes. Friday marks Hermiston’s first game as a member of the WIAA and its Mid-Co- lumbia Conference, when the defending OSAA Class 5A state champions host Pasco High School for a Bulldog versus Bulldog showdown at 7 p.m. “The guys are excited to play, and the coaches are anxious,” said Hermiston football coach David Faaeteete follow- ing Wednesday’s practice. “We want to kick off the kids’ senior year with a good start.” There’s a lot at stake here, and it’s not just to prove which school are the stronger Bulldogs. Even though Pasco is coming off of a 0-10 record last sea- son, the school has three state champi- onships to its name and a first-year head coach in alumnus Leon Wright-Jackson that should have the team more competi- tive. And Hermiston knows it needs to be ready for a fight. “Pasco is full of energy. I know the coach very well, and their kids are excited about the game of football,” Faaeteete said. “They’re a tradition-rich school and one of the teams to beat this year.” Faaeteete says Hermiston has a lot to prove going into this season, being the — Michael Lieuallen, Blue Mountain Football Association commissioner See BULLDOGS/2B MARINERS BASEBALL Lucchesi, long balls carry Padres to win over Mariners It’s Seattle’s fifth loss in seven games MLB By BERNIE WILSON Associated Press SAN DIEGO — Hunter Renfroe homered and drove in four runs, Manuel Margot had a homer among his three hits and prized rookie Luis Urias had his first three hits for the San Diego Padres, who beat the Seattle Mariners 8-3 Wednesday for a two-game sweep. The offensive outburst made a winner of rookie left- hander Joey Lucchesi (7-7), who stayed in the game after needing a few minutes to recover from Ryon Healy’s comebacker that glanced off his glove and then his groin. Lucchesi fielded the ball and Padres Mariners 8 3 threw to first for the out, and then went down in a heap. He was tended to by the training staff for a few minutes, threw a few warmup pitches and remained in, striking out the next two batters. The big southpaw held the Mariners to one run and six hits in a career-high 6⅔ innings, matched his career- best with nine strikeouts and walked two. The teams, deemed natu- ral rivals by MLB, meet again in Seattle on Sept. 11-12. The Mariners lost their third straight and for the fifth time in seven games. “Disappointment might be an understatement,” Seattle manager Scott Servais said. “We just didn’t play good baseball here at all. We didn’t swing the bat particularly well. Obviously we strug- gled on the mound today early in the ball game. It is very frustrating.” Eric Hosmer also had three hits for the Padres, who worked over Mariners starter Erasmo Ramirez (1-3) for seven runs and nine hits in three innings. San Diego took a 7-1 lead after three innings. Hosmer had an RBI single and Renfroe a sacrifice fly in the first. Margot homered into the second deck in left field with one out in the second, his seventh, and Renfroe drove a three-run home run into the balcony on the third level of the brick warehouse in the left- field corner. Urias was aboard on his first big league hit, a single to right, and Hosmer on a double to the left-center gap. San Diego loaded the bases on three straight singles and Luc- chesi hit a sac fly for his first career RBI. Urias, promoted Tuesday from Triple-A El Paso, hit a drive to right leading off the fourth that was initially ruled a home run. But the umps hud- dled and then went to video review, and it was ruled a foul ball. Urias then grounded out. Urias doubled leading off the sixth and singled in the eighth to finish 3 for 5. He went 0 for 3 with a walk in his debut Tuesday night. Margot’s third hit was an AP Photo/Gregory Bull San Diego Padres’ Hunter Renfroe, right, celebrates with teammate Austin Hedges (18) after hitting a three-run home run in the third inning. RBI double in the fifth. Robinson Cano and Nel- son Cruz hit RBI singles and Kyle Seager had a run-scoring double for the Mariners. UP NEXT Mariners: LHP Wade LeB- lanc (7-3, 3.92) is scheduled to start the opener of a four- game series Thursday night at Oakland, which is second in the AL West behind Houston. The Mariners remain in third place. Sports shorts THIS DATE IN SPORTS U.S. great Clint Dempsey retires from soccer SEATTLE (AP) — Former U.S. national team captain and Seattle Sounders striker Dempsey announced Wednesday that he’s retiring at age 35 after 15 years of playing professionally, effective immediately. He was mostly a sub with the Sounders this summer, and that, combined with age and injury, prompted him to decide now was the time to walk away even with two months left in the MLS regular season. Dempsey is tied with Landon Donovan as the greatest U.S. goal scorer, scoring 57 international goals in 141 appearances. He cap- tained the U.S. in the 2014 World Cup in Brazil when the Americans reached the knockout stage before losing to Belgium in the round of 16. Dempsey had a decorated career overseas in England, most notably with Fulham, before returning to MLS in 2013 with the Sounders. He missed the second half of the 2016 sea- son with a heart con- dition that put his career in jeopardy, but returned to Seattle the next season after being cleared by doctors. Dempsey was the MLS Comeback Player of the Year last season when he again became the leading scorer for the Sounders and reclaimed a place on the U.S. national team. 1937 — Joe Louis wins a 15-round unanimous decision over Tommy Farr at Yankee Stadium in the first defense of his heavy- weight title. 1981 — Bill Shoemaker becomes the first jockey to win a $1 million race when he rode John Henry to a nose victory over The Bart. 2001 — Ashley Martin becomes the first woman to play in a Divi- sion I football game, kicking three extra points without a miss. Contact us at 541-966-0838 or sports@eastoregonian.com