B2 East Oregonian Thursday, January 24, 2019 SPORTS Staff photo by Annie Fowler/ Hermiston’s Sydney Stefani signed a letter of intent Wednesday to play softball at Idaho State University. Hermiston’s Stefani headed to Idaho State for softball Staff photo by E.J. Harris By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian Sydney Stefani began her career on the diamond with the boys, playing Lit- tle League baseball in Ione. She started playing softball in the sixth grade, and her game has blos- somed from there. The Hermiston senior shortstop signed a letter of intent Wednesday to play Div. I softball at Idaho State University. “College softball is something I have wanted to do,” Stefani said. “Where I was originally going to go (Montana) didn’t work out, but coach (Kate) Gree- nough has a lot of connec- tions and got me in with Idaho State.” Greenough played at Utah State for Cindi Letts, who now is the coach at ISU. “Sydney is a stud,” Greenough said. “She works so hard, and it’s nice to see that hard work pay off.” Stefani, who moved to Hermiston in the eighth grade, is coming off a spectacular junior year, where she was named co-MVP of the Colum- bia River Conference with Hood River Valley junior outfielder Haylee Baker. The Bulldogs finished 17-10 and reached the 5A state quarterfinals, where they lost 11-8 to Lebanon. Stefani also was a Class 5A first-team all-state selection as an infielder. “As the season pro- gressed, it was within my reach,” Stefani said of the CRC honor. “I was shocked. They couldn’t discredit one over the other.” Stefani hit .571 last sea- son as the Bulldogs’ lead- off hitter. She also had nine RBIs, 13 runs scored, five stolen bases, and let’s not forget the six home runs. “She’d run through a wall for you,” Greenough said. “Not only is she a good athlete, but she’s a team leader. She is a shin- ing light, always ready to do anything for her team- mates. She is always up for a challenge.” That will come this spring when the Bull- dogs enter the Mid-Co- lumbia Conference, where the likes of Kamiakin and Richland have domi- nated the softball scene for years. “It will be great,” Gree- nough said. “She will walk into this conference and be one of the best. But that would be the same for any conference.” Stefani said she will miss the CRC. “The programs are so tough,” she said. “Each game we had to show up and play our best game. The bus rides were so much fun. I’m going to miss going to the The Dalles and Hood River. This could have been our year.” Stefani will be famil- iar with some of the play- ers in the MCC after play- ing with the Washington Angels club team the past eight years. She will fin- ish her last season with the team this summer. “I’m really privileged to have awesome parents (Dennis and Misti) who made sure I had what I needed for club, and they got me to where I needed to go,” she said. Stefani didn’t start playing softball until the sixth grade, and still has fond memories of playing baseball. “My last year, I played on the John Day All- Stars,” Stefani said. “My team played Hermiston, which had Andrew James, Jordan Ramirez and Wyatt Noland. I struck out Jor- dan in that game. He still denies it.” Boys: Nixyaawii will have its hands full with Kittitas Continued from Page B1 Nixyaawii (16-1), ranked fifth in the Oregon Class 1A coaches poll, is led by 6-foot junior Mick Schimmel, who is averag- ing 19 points per game. “He averaged more last year, but we are more well- rounded this year,” said Rivera, whose team beat Elgin 106-34 last Friday. “Mick usually guards the other team’s best player, so I image that will be the case Friday.” That matchup would have Schimmel guarding 6-1 senior Brock Ravet, who has signed to play at Gonzaga. Ravet, who averages more than 30 points per game, had 30 points, 13 rebounds and eight assists in Kittitas’ 77-52 victory over Class 4A Kentlake on Monday at the King Showcase Basketball Invi- tational at ShoWare Center in Kent, Washington. Ravet needs 89 points to tie and 90 to surpass the Washington scoring record of 2,851 points, held by Lance Den Boer. “He is good, but they are not a one-man show,” Rivera said. “They are a well-rounded team. We are a good team. I’m hop- ing our reputation is solid enough for them.” Coach Ravet said he watched film of Nixy- aawii, and that they will have their hands full. “The Schimmel kid looks solid,” Ravet said. “They look good. It will be fun to see different faces and a different style of game. You have to adjust to the speed of their game, their kids and the offici- ating. It’s a late start, but it’s like a district or state game. I hope I feel the same way after the game.” The game will have a shot clock, which Nixy- aawii is not used to play- ing with, but Rivera welcomes. “There is entertain- ment value to be had,” Rivera said. “It will be a good small-school basket- ball game.” Pendleton’s Blake Davis drives Hood River Valley’s Preston Armstrong into the mat during their 145-pound match of the Bucks’ 72-6 win over the Eagles on Wednesday in Pendleton. Bucks: Make quick work of HRV in IMC match Continued from Page B1 Senior Alex Rendon made quick work of Jayton Munzer at 126, registering a pin in 1:06. Chris Chambers needed just 46 seconds to pin Skyler Munce at 132, and after Dan- ner Hamilton picked up a forfeit at 138, the Bucks had a commanding 36-0 lead. HRV’s Preston Arm- strong made Blake Davis put in a full 6 minutes in their 145-pound match. Davis led 5-3 after the first period, then gave up a point on an illegal hold to make it 5-4. He quickly got his points back with a 2-point near fall, and another takedown with 17 seconds left for a 9-5 lead. Davis led 13-6 late in the match, but an escape by Armstrong with 7 seconds remaining left Davis with a 13-7 victory. Shawn Yeager (152), Aiden Patterson (160), and Isaac Urbina (170) all fol- lowed with pins for a 57-0 lead with four matches remaining. At 182, HRV’s Beto Rojas had a 4-2 lead over Ian Ban- nister midway through the second round, but an escape and a takedown by Bannis- ter in the final 54 seconds of the round gave him a 5-4 lead. Bannister recorded another takedown, and Rojas an escape for a 7-5 victory for Bannister. A HRV forfeit at 195, and Henderson’s victory at 220, put the Bucks out front 72-0. The Eagles got their only win of the night at 285, as Cody Durham pinned Tra- vis McGee in 1:48 of the first round. “We are excited to have that happen,” Phillips said of his team’s convincing vic- tory. “We got some quick pins from our kids. We didn’t let them hang around. We took the doubt out.” The Bucks will wrestle at the Rex Putnam Tournament on Saturday. Match Scores Team scores — Pendleton 72, Hood River Valley 6. 106 — Collin Primus (P) won by forfeit. 113 — Kellen Hanson (P) p. Miles Lee, 1:27. 120 — Caleb Temper (P) won by forfeit. 126 — Alex Rendon (P) p. Jayton Munzer, 1:06. 132 — Chris Chambers (P) p. Skyler Munce, :46. 138 — Danner Hamilton (P) won by forfeit. 145 — Blake Davis (P) d. Preston Arm- strong, 13-7. 152 — Shawn Yeager (P) p. Tristan Keely, 5:15. 160 — Aiden Pat- terson (P) p. Javier Galvez, 1:00. 170 — Isaac Urbina (P) p. Tim Fletcher, :53. 182 — Ian Bannister (P) de. Beto Rojas, 7-5. 195 — Kirk Liscom (P) won by forfeit. 220 — Aiden Henderson (P) p. Joe Kahler, :40. 285 — Cody Durham (HRV) p. Travis McGee, 1:48. BMCC: Women take home first conference win Continued from Page B1 game right out the gate. Walla Walla put the first half away at 65-25. And Blue Mountain’s deficit only increased from that point. The Timberwolves were held scoreless for the first four minutes of the sec- ond half, while Walla Walla took a 13-point run. The Warriors led by 61 points with 9:41 left to play. A 3-pointer from Bryson Wolters at 1:25 narrowed the gap to 58 points to finish the scoring. Mehki Foreman sunk a game-high 25 points and shot 8 of 9 from the field to lead Blue Mountain. Dante Clayton and Hayden Hib- bard-Brooks each added 11. Damen Thacker had 23 points, including four 3-pointers for the Warriors. The Timberwolves (2-8, 2-4 NWAC) travel to Big Bend on Saturday. Womens’ Box Score Blue Mountain 25 18 13 15 — 71 Walla Walla 18 19 13 8 — 58 BLUE MOUNTAIN — Broncheau 17, Ger- linger 15, Wheeler 14, Morrison 13, Munoz 5, Lee 5, Hill 2 WALLA WALLA — Cheney 15, Gunter 13, Liefke 10, Golenor 7, Genzer 5, Die- tritch-Denton 4, Stoddard 2, Wilwand 2 Mens’ Box Score Walla Walla 65 59 — 124 Blue Mountain 25 41 — 66 WALLA WALLA — Thacker 23, How- ard 20, Hardin 19, Villarreal 16, Smith 14, Albright 8, Young 7, Clarke 5, Anderson 4, Gallegos 3, Costello 3, Clark 2 BLUE MOUNTAIN — Foreman 25, Clay- ton 11, Hibbard-Brooks 11, Hillard 8, Hardman 6, Wolters 3, Garza 2 SCOREBOARD Portland at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Minnesota at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m. Friday’s Games Washington at Orlando, 4 p.m. Miami at Cleveland, 4:30 p.m. New York at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Chicago, 5 p.m. Sacramento at Memphis, 5 p.m. Toronto at Houston, 5 p.m. Charlotte at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m. Detroit at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Minnesota at Utah, 6 p.m. Phoenix at Denver, 6 p.m. Saturday’s Games San Antonio at New Orleans, 3 p.m. Indiana at Memphis, 5 p.m. Golden State at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Denver, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Portland, 7 p.m. LOCAL SLATE THURSDAY, JAN. 24 Boys Basketball Umatilla at Irrigon, 7:30 p.m. Girls Basketball Umatilla at Irrigon, 6 p.m. Boys Wrestling Walla Walla at Hermiston, 7 p.m. Girls Wrestling Walla Walla at Hermiston, 6 p.m. FRIDAY, JAN. 25 Stanfield at Heppner, 6 p.m. Enterprise at Weston-McEwen, 6 p.m. Echo at Horizon Christian, 6:30 p.m. Pendleton at The Dalles, 6:30 p.m. Hanford at Hermiston, 7 p.m. Ione at Dufur, 7:30 p.m. Helix at Joseph, 7:30 p.m. Grant Union at Pilot Rock, 7:30 p.m. Riverside at Umatilla, 7:30 p.m. Nixyaawii vs. Kittitas (at Hermiston), 8:30 p.m. Girls Basketball Hanford at Hermiston, 5:30 p.m. Dufur at Ione, 6 p.m. Helix at Joseph, 6 p.m. Grant Union at Pilot Rock, 6 p.m. Riverside at Umatilla, 6 p.m. The Dalles at Pendleton, 6:30 p.m. Stanfield at Heppner, 7:30 p.m. Enterprise at Weston-McEwen, 7:30 p.m. Boys Wrestling Mac-Hi/Weston-McEwen at Ontario, 1 p.m. Girls Wrestling Riverside at Hood River Valley, 12 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 26 Boys Basketball Baker at Mac-Hi, 3 p.m. Pilot Rock at Stanfield, 4 p.m. Heppner at Grant Union, 4 p.m. Echo at Sherman, 5:30 p.m. Elgin at Helix, 5:30 p.m. Nixyaawii at Wallowa, 5:30 p.m. Hermiston at Richland, 7:30 p.m. Girls Basketball Echo at Sherman, 4 p.m. Elgin at Helix, 4 p.m. Nixyaawii at Wallowa, 4 p.m. Baker at Mac-Hi, 4:30 p.m. Pilot Rock at Stanfield, 5:30 p.m. Heppner at Grant Union, 5:30 p.m. Hermiston at Richland, 5:45 p.m. Men’s Basketball Blue Mountain at Big Bend, 4 p.m. Women’s Basketball Blue Mountain at Big Bend, 2 p.m. Girls Wrestling Riverside at Hood River Valley, 12 p.m. NFL CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS Sunday, Jan. 20 NFC L.A. Rams 26, New Orleans 23, (OT) AFC New England 37, Kansas City 31, (OT) PRO BOWL Sunday, Jan. 27, at Orlando, Fla. AFC vs. NFC, noon (ABC/ESPN) SUPER BOWL Sunday, Feb. 3, at Atlanta New England vs. L.A. Rams, 3:30 p.m. (CBS) NHL EASTERN CONFERENCE AP Photo/Alex Gallardo, File In this Tuesday, July 10, 2018, file photo, Seattle Mariners’ Ichiro Suzuki, of Japan, smiles during warm ups before a baseball game against the Los Angeles Angels in Anaheim, Calif. Suzuki agreed to a minor-league deal with the Mari- ners paving the way for the 45-year-old to play in Seattle’s season-opening series in Japan. Suzuki’s agent, John Boggs, confirmed the agreement on Wednesday. NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Toronto Philadelphia Boston Brooklyn New York Southeast Charlotte Miami Washington Orlando Atlanta Central Milwaukee Indiana Detroit Chicago Cleveland W 36 32 30 26 10 W 23 22 20 20 15 W 34 32 21 11 9 L 14 17 18 23 36 L 24 24 26 28 32 L 12 15 26 37 40 Pct .720 .653 .625 .531 .217 Pct .489 .478 .435 .417 .319 Pct .739 .681 .447 .229 .184 GB — 3½ 5 9½ 24 GB — ½ 2½ 3½ 8 GB — 2½ 13½ 24 26½ WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Houston San Antonio New Orleans Dallas W 27 27 22 21 L 20 22 26 26 Pct .574 .551 .458 .447 GB — 1 5½ 6 Memphis 19 29 .396 8½ Northwest W L Pct GB Denver 31 14 .689 — Oklahoma City 29 18 .617 3 Portland 29 20 .592 4 Utah 26 22 .542 6½ Minnesota 23 24 .489 9 Pacific W L Pct GB Golden State 33 14 .702 — L.A. Clippers 26 22 .542 7½ L.A. Lakers 25 23 .521 8½ Sacramento 24 24 .500 9½ Phoenix 11 38 .224 23 ——— Wednesday’s Games Indiana 110, Toronto 106 Boston 123, Cleveland 103 Brooklyn 114, Orlando 110 Houston 114, New York 110 L.A. Clippers 111, Miami 99 Atlanta 121, Chicago 101 Charlotte 118, Memphis 107 Detroit 98, New Orleans 94 Philadelphia 122, San Antonio 120 Thursday’s Games Golden State at Washington, 5 p.m. New Orleans at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Atlantic GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 49 37 10 2 76 199 140 Toronto 49 30 17 2 62 174 140 Montreal 51 28 18 5 61 154 149 Boston 49 27 17 5 59 143 128 Buffalo 48 24 18 6 54 140 144 Florida 48 20 20 8 48 152 170 Detroit 51 19 25 7 45 145 172 Ottawa 50 19 26 5 43 156 187 Metropolitan GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Islanders 49 29 15 5 63 147 122 Washington 50 27 17 6 60 171 162 Columbus 48 28 17 3 59 154 146 Pittsburgh 48 26 16 6 58 169 146 Carolina 49 23 20 6 52 135 147 N.Y. Rangers 48 21 20 7 49 139 164 Philadelphia 48 19 23 6 44 139 169 New Jersey 48 18 23 7 43 140 164 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central GP W L OT Pts GF GA Winnipeg 48 31 15 2 64 167 134 Nashville 52 30 18 4 64 161 135 Minnesota 50 26 21 3 55 142 142 Dallas 49 24 21 4 52 126 128 Colorado 50 22 20 8 52 169 162 St. Louis 49 22 22 5 49 139 149 Chicago 51 18 24 9 45 156 190 Pacific GP W L OT Pts GF GA Calgary 51 33 13 5 71 190 145 San Jose 52 29 16 7 65 187 167 Vegas 52 29 19 4 62 157 140 Vancouver 50 23 21 6 52 145 156 Anaheim 51 21 21 9 51 120 153 Arizona 50 23 23 4 50 132 142 Edmonton 50 23 24 3 49 144 163 Los Angeles 50 20 26 4 44 114 150 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Top three teams in each division and two wild cards per confer- ence advance to playoffs. Wednesday’s Games Montreal 2, Arizona 1 Toronto 6, Washington 3 Minnesota 5, Colorado 2 Nashville 2, Vegas 1 St. Louis 5, Anaheim 1 Saturday’s Games Central All-Stars vs Pacific All-Stars: Central vs. Pacific at San Jose, Calif., 5:15 p.m. Metropolitan All-Stars vs Atlantic All-Stars: Metropolitan vs. Atlantic at San Jose, Calif., 6:15 p.m. All-Star Game Final: TBD vs. TBD at San Jose, Calif., 7:15 p.m.