East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, May 22, 2019, Page A10, Image 34

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    A10
SPORTS
East Oregonian
BMCC places 5 on
East Region team
O’Donnell hit .333 with
seven doubles, 21 RBIs
and 13 stolen bases.
Manderbach
also
earned a gold glove as an
infielder, recording 128
assists and had a hand in
By ANNIE FOWLER
12 double plays.
East Oregonian
Salsman had a .287
average with a team-high
Five Blue Mountain 43 RBIs and six home
baseball players earned runs, while Young hit .318
NWAC East Region hon- with 21 RBIs.
ors when the teams were
Grogan had a 3.21
announced Friday.
ERA over 61⅔ innings of
Freshman
infielder work. Grogan struck out
Carsten Mander-
84 and boasted a
bach, sophomore
6-1 record in 10
outfielder Micah
starts.
O’Donnell, sopho-
Matt
James
more pitcher Dylan
of Yakima Val-
ley was named
Grogan (Stanfield),
East Region MVP,
freshman catcher
while Spokane’s
Gage Young and
Grogan
Bryan
Winston
sophomore utility
was named Coach
player Alex Sals-
man were named to the of the Year.
second team.
The
NWAC
East
Manderbach hit .303 Region softball team was
with a team-leading 54 announced Thursday.
hits (11 doubles), 17 RBIs
No BMCC players were
and 11 stolen bases, while chosen.
Manderbach
also earns gold
glove honor as an
infielder
Stahl, Haguewood
earn top IMC
baseball honors
Kyle Field, senior out-
fielder Matt Demianew,
and senior designated hit-
The Pendleton Bucka- ter Quinn Doherty were
roos have made their pres- all selected as honorable
ence known on this year’s mentions.
Inter mountain
Stahl
was
Conference
all-
named the IMC
league teams.
Pitcher of the Year.
The Bucks have
Bucks head coach
placed four players
TJ
Haguewood
in the first team,
received the Coach
two in the sec-
of the Year honor.
ond team, and four
Stahl
Player of the
in the honorable
Year was awarded
mentions.
to Hood River Val-
Senior pitcher
ley senior infielder
Ryan Stahl, senior
Caden Leiblein.
catcher
Justin
The Bucks fin-
ished the IMC
Duso, sophomore
with a 12-3 record
first baseman Ty
Beers, and senior Haguewood to take the top
spot in the stand-
center fielder Gabe
Umbarger were all first- ings. They currently hold
team honorees, while a 15-8 overall record, and
junior pitcher Cooper Rob- are ranked at No. 9 in
erts and junior outfielder the OSAA’s 5A division.
Tanner Sweek are on the They’ll start their play-
off run today with a home
second team.
Senior pitcher Chris game against the 5A’s No.
Large, sophomore infielder 7 seed Wilsonville.
By BRETT KANE
East Oregonian
Raptors rout Bucks
to even East finals
By IAN HARRISON
Associated Press
TORONTO — Kyle
Lowry scored 25 points,
Kawhi Leonard had 19 and
the Toronto Raptors beat
the Milwaukee Bucks 120-
102 on Tuesday to even the
Eastern Conference finals
at two games apiece.
Serge Ibaka had 17
points and 13 rebounds
for the Raptors, who
improved to 7-2 at home
this postseason.
Reserve Norm Powell
scored 18 points, and Marc
Gasol had 17 points and a
team-high seven assists.
The home team has won
all four games in the series
so far. Game 5 is Thursday
night in Milwaukee.
Giannis Antetokoun-
mpo had 25 points and
10 rebounds for the top-
seeded Bucks. Khris Mid-
dleton scored 30 points.
Milwaukee lost its sec-
ond straight following a
six-game winning streak.
It dropped consecutive
games just once during the
regular season, at Utah on
March 2 and at Phoenix on
March 4.
Toronto’s Fred VanV-
leet, who missed 16 of 20
shot attempts through the
first three games of the
series, went 5 for 6 from
the field in Game 4. He
made each of his three
3-point tries and finished
with 13 points.
Ahead 94-81 to start
the fourth, the Raptors
extended their lead with a
10-3 spurt, including seven
points from VanVleet.
Powell’s fast-break layup
with 8:35 left put Toronto
up 104-84.
Antetokounmpo shot 5
for 8 in the opening frame-
but went 4 for 9 the rest of
the way.
Leonard missed three
of his four attempts in the
first but Lowry scored 12
points for the Raptors,
who rallied from an early
seven-point deficit to lead
32-31 after one.
After scoring the final
four points of the first
quarter, the Raptors wid-
ened their lead with a 9-0
run to begin the second.
Leonard and Pascal
Siakam, who both played
more than 50 minutes in
Game 3, looked sluggish
in the opening half. Leon-
ard missed the only shot he
took in the second, while
Siakam played fewer than
three minutes in the sec-
ond after picking up his
third foul. Siakam had two
points at halftime.
Leonard came up limp-
ing after dunking early in
the third, but remained in
the game. Siakam com-
pleted a three-point play
that put Toronto up 73-60
with 8:43 left.
Ilyasova missed a 3 with
3:50 remaining in the third
that could have cut the
deficit to four points. Pow-
ell replied with a 3 and,
following miss by Mal-
colm Brogdon, Leonard
drained a jumper to push
Toronto’s lead to 86-74.
Wednesday, May 22, 2019
Mariners tailspin continues in Texas
ARLINGTON,
Texas
(AP) — Lance Lynn allowed
two runs over seven innings
and Shawn Kelley earned
the save hours after learn-
ing that two lumps removed
from his throat last week
were benign as the Texas
Rangers beat the Seattle
Mariners 5-3 on Tuesday
night.
Lynn (6-3) gave up five
singles and one walk and
had a season-high 11 strike-
outs and one walk in his
200th career start. Kelley,
who was activated from the
10-day injured list on Tues-
day, allowed a ninth-inning
homer to Omar Narváez,
who had three hits, in earn-
ing his third save of the
season.
The loss continued a tail-
spin for Seattle, which is
10-26 since a 13-2 start.
Nomar Mazara had three
hits, an RBI and scored one
of two runs on a sacrifice fly
after initially being ruled out
at the plate before a success-
ful Texas challenge. Joey
Gallo hit a two-run home
run, his 15th of the season,
in the eighth inning.
Lynn had a shutout going
into the seventh and, with
the tying run at second base
and one out, struck out Tim
Beckham and J.P. Crawford
to hold the lead.
The Rangers have won
six of their last seven games
to reach .500 at 23-23. Last
AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez
The Rangers’ Nomar Mazara steals third as Mariners third baseman Tim Beckham is unable
to field the throw to the bag during the fourth inning of a baseball game in Texas on Tuesday.
season, they were at .500
once en route to finishing
last in the American League
West at 67-95.
Left-hander
Tommy
Milone (0-1) allowed two
runs on three hits in five
innings in his first major
league start of the sea-
son. Milone’s contract was
selected from Triple-A
Tacoma earlier in the day.
Mazara scored on a
fly to hit to centerfielder
Mitch Haniger by Asdrúbal
Cabrera in the fourth inning
after a video review showed
Mazara touched the plate
with his left hand before
being tagged by catcher
Narváez.
The Mariners played
without second baseman
Dee Gordon and third base-
man Ryon Healy, each
placed on the 10-day injured
list before the game. Gordon
has a right wrist contusion,
and Healy has lower back
inflammation.
Rookie Shed Long,
recalled from Tacoma,
replaced Gordon and sin-
gled in the sixth inning for
his first major league hit in
his 11th big league at-bat.
Up next
Mariners: In the series
finale on Wednesday after-
noon, LHP Marco Gonza-
les (5-3, 3.65 ERA) will seek
to end a three-game losing
streak during which he has
a 5.93 ERA.
Rangers: RHP Adrian
Sampson (1-3, 4.79 ERA)
earned his first major league
win last Friday, limiting the
St. Louis Cardinals to one
earned run in 5 1/3 innings.
Wagner not participating in Seahawks activities
By TIM BOOTH
Associated Press
RENTON, Wash. —
Bobby Wagner will be
present for the Seattle Sea-
hawks’ optional offseason
activities.
Just don’t expect him to
take part.
That was the message
delivered by the All-Pro
middle linebacker on Tues-
day as Seattle continued
the first week of organized
team activities. Wagner’s
contract is up after next
season and he indicated
there had been preliminary
talks regarding a new deal.
But until one is in place, he
will be a spectator during
the optional workouts.
“I will be here. That will
be my participation,” Wag-
ner said. “I will be here
helping the young guys,
doing whatever I can.”
Wagner’s contract sit-
uation is one of Seattle’s
remaining loose ends this
offseason. Defensive tackle
Jarran Reed is still also
playing under a deal that’s
up after the upcoming sea-
son. The Seahawks took
care of quarterback Rus-
sell Wilson with a massive
AP Photo/Elaine Thompson
Seattle Seahawks’ Bobby Wagner, right, talks with defensive
coordinator Ken Norton Jr. during an NFL football practice
on Tuesday in Renton, Wash.
new deal and traded Frank
Clark to Kansas City to
obtain more draft picks.
For now, Wagner has to
prepare as though this is
his final year in Seattle.
“I am honoring the con-
tract. I am here, participat-
ing, helping the young guys
to be the best they can be,”
Wagner said. “So I am here
and that’s what I want to
do. This is my decision. So
as of right now there is no
other years for me left here
so that was just a very hon-
est opinion that if I don’t
get a deal done, that’s it.
But I believe there is some-
thing that can happen.”
Wagner’s
position
doesn’t create the distrac-
tion of a contract holdout
but it does make it clear he
doesn’t intend to take any
risks. He saw both sides of
what can happen in his own
locker room with two play-
ers entering the final year of
their deals.
Earl Thomas held out
last year, appeared to create
friction with the front office
and left in free agency fol-
lowing an injury that ended
his season early. Mean-
while, K.J. Wright showed
up for the offseason pro-
gram, missed significant
time with a knee injury, but
was still rewarded with a
new deal.
Wagner said balancing
all those different scenarios
is playing into his decision
now.
“It’s a tricky situation
and this is a business. You
get hurt, they don’t pay you,
so you’ve got to be mind-
ful of that,” he said. “You
all know I’m a professional,
I’m going to be in shape, I
work out every single day so
you all don’t have to worry
about me being in shape and
my mind is going to always
be sharp.”
The 28-year-old is rep-
resenting himself in nego-
tiations, bypassing an agent
for the first time in his
career. He does have a tar-
get for the kind of contract
he’s seeking after C.J. Mos-
ley signed with the New
York Jets this offseason for
an average of $17 million
per season.
“I mean, the number is
the number, the market is
the market,” Wagner said.
“That’s the top linebacker
market. That is the stan-
dard and so that is the plan
to break that.”
SCOREBOARD
LOCAL SLATE
WEDNESDAY, MAY 22
Baseball
Taft at Irrigon, 4 p.m.
Wilsonville at Pendleton, 4:30 p.m.
Softball
Thurston at Pendleton, 4:30 p.m.
Stayton at Mac-Hi, 4:30 p.m.
THURSDAY, MAY 23
Track and field
Hermiston at State Championship Meet
(Mount Tahoma HS)
Pendleton at State Championship Meet
(Mt. Hood Community College)
FRIDAY, MAY 24
Softball
Hermiston at Bonney Lake, noon
Track and field
Hermiston at State Championship Meet
(Mount Tahoma HS)
Pendleton at State Championship Meet
(Mt. Hood Community College)
SATURDAY, MAY 25
Track and field
Hermiston at State Championship Meet
(Mount Tahoma HS)
Pendleton at State Championship Meet
(Mt. Hood Community College)
NBA PLAYOFF
CONFERENCE FINALs
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Eastern Conference
Milwaukee 2, Toronto 2
Wednesday, May 15: Milwaukee 108,
Toronto 100
Friday, May 17: Milwaukee 125, Toronto
103
Sunday, May 19: Toronto 118, Milwau-
kee 112, 2OT
Tuesday, May 21: Toronto 120, Milwau-
kee 102
Thursday, May 23: Toronto at Milwau-
kee, 5:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 25: Milwaukee at Toronto,
5:30 p.m.
x-Monday, May 27: Toronto at Milwau-
kee, 5:30 p.m.
Western Conference
Golden State 4, Portland 0
Tuesday, May 14: Golden State 116, Port-
land 94
Thursday, May 16: Golden State 114,
Portland 111
Saturday, May 18: Golden State 110 Port-
land 99
Monday, May 20: Golden State 119, Port-
land 117, OT
FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Golden State vs. Milwaukee/Toronto
winner
Thursday, May 30: Golden State at Mil-
waukee/Toronto, 6 p.m.
Sunday, June 2: Golden State at Milwau-
kee/Toronto, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, June 5: Milwaukee/Toronto
at Golden State, 6 p.m.
Friday, June 7: Milwaukee/Toronto at
Golden State, 6 p.m.
x-Monday, June 10: Golden State at Mil-
waukee/Toronto, 6 p.m.
x-Thursday, June 13: Milwaukee/Toronto
at Golden State, 6 p.m.
x-Sunday, June 16: Golden State at Mil-
waukee/Toronto, 5 p.m.
NHL PLAYOFF GLANCE
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Boston 4, Carolina 0
Thursday, May 9: Boston 5, Carolina 2
Sunday, May 12: Boston 6, Carolina 2
Tuesday, May 14: Boston 2, Carolina 1
Thursday, May 16: Boston 4, Carolina 0
WESTERN CONFERENCE
St. Louis 4, San Jose 2
Saturday, May 11: San Jose 6, St. Louis 3
Monday, May 13: St. Louis 4, San Jose 2
Wednesday, May 15: San Jose 5, St. Louis
4, OT
Friday, May 17: St. Louis 2, San Jose 1
Sunday, May 19: St. Louis 5, San Jose 0
Tuesday, May 21: St. Louis 5, San Jose 1
STANLEY CUP FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Boston vs. St. Louis
Monday, May 27: St. Louis at Boston,
5 p.m.
Wednesday, May 29: St. Louis at Bos-
ton, 5 p.m.
Saturday, June 1: Boston at St. Louis,
5 p.m.
Monday, June 3: Boston at St. Louis,
5 p.m.
x-Thursday, June 6: St. Louis at Boston,
5 p.m.
x-Sunday, June 9: Boston at St. Louis,
5 p.m.
x-Wednesday, June 12: St. Louis at Bos-
ton, 5 p.m.
MLB
NATIONAL LEAGUE
All Times PDT
East
W
L
Pct
GB
Philadelphia
28 20 .583
—
Atlanta
26 22 .542
2
New York
22 25 .468
5½
Washington
19 29 .396
9
Miami
14 31
.311 12½
Central
W
L
Pct
GB
Chicago
28 18 .609
—
Milwaukee
28 22 .560
2
Pittsburgh
24 21 .533
3½
St. Louis
24 23
.511
4½
Cincinnati
22 26 .458
7
West
W
L
Pct
GB
Los Angeles
32 17 .653
—
Arizona
25 23 .521
6½
San Diego
24 24 .500
7½
Colorado
21 25 .457
9½
San Francisco 20 26 .435 10½
———
Tuesday’s Games
Kansas City at St. Louis, ppd.
Chicago Cubs 3, Philadelphia 2
Colorado 5, Pittsburgh 0
L.A. Dodgers 7, Tampa Bay 3
Miami 5, Detroit 4, 11 innings
N.Y. Mets 6, Washington 5
Cincinnati 3, Milwaukee 0
Wednesday’s Games
Cincinnati (Castillo 5-1) at Milwaukee
(Davies 5-0), 10:10 a.m.
Kansas City (Keller 2-5) at St. Louis (Wain-
wright 3-4), 10:15 a.m., 1st game
Arizona (Kelly 4-4) at San Diego (Lauer
2-4), 12:40 p.m.
Colorado (Gray 3-4) at Pittsburgh (DuRa-
pau 0-0), 4:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Hill 1-1) at Tampa Bay
(TBD), 4:10 p.m.
Miami (Urena 1-6) at Detroit (Norris 2-2),
4:10 p.m.
Washington (Scherzer 2-5) at N.Y. Mets
(deGrom 3-5), 4:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Bailey 4-4) at St. Louis (TBD),
4:45 p.m., 2nd game
Philadelphia (Irvin 2-0) at Chicago Cubs
(Hamels 4-0), 5:05 p.m.
Atlanta (Fried 6-2) at San Francisco
(Samardzija 2-2), 6:45 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Washington at N.Y. Mets, 9:10 a.m.
Colorado at Pittsburgh, 9:35 a.m.
Miami at Detroit, 10:10 a.m.
Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m.
Atlanta at San Francisco, 12:45 p.m.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
All Times PDT
East
W
L
Pct
GB
New York
30
17
.638
—
Tampa Bay
27
18
.600
2
Boston
25
23
.521
5½
Toronto
20
28
.417
10½
Baltimore
15
33
.313
15½
Central
W
L
Pct
GB
Minnesota
31
16
.660
—
Cleveland
25
22
.532
6
Chicago
21
26
.447
10
Detroit
18
27
.400
12
Kansas City
16
31
.340
15
West
W
L
Pct
GB
Houston
33
16
.673
—
Texas
23
23
.500
8½
Oakland
24
25
.490
9
Los Angeles
22
25
.468
10
Seattle
23
28
.451
11
———
Tuesday’s Games
Kansas City at St. Louis, ppd.
Oakland 5, Cleveland 3
N.Y. Yankees 11, Baltimore 4
Toronto 10, Boston 3
L.A. Dodgers 7, Tampa Bay 3
Miami 5, Detroit 4, 11 innings
Texas 5, Seattle 3
Houston 5, Chicago White Sox 1
Wednesday’s Games
Oakland (Montas 5-2) at Cleveland
(Rodriguez 1-3), 10:10 a.m.
Kansas City (Keller 2-5) at St. Louis (Wain-
wright 3-4), 10:15 a.m., 1st game
Seattle (Gonzales 5-3) at Texas (Sampson
1-3), 11:05 a.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 2-1) at Baltimore
(Straily 1-3), 4:05 p.m.
Boston (Porcello 3-4) at Toronto (San-
chez 3-4), 4:07 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Hill 1-1) at Tampa Bay
(TBD), 4:10 p.m.
Miami (Urena 1-6) at Detroit (Norris 2-2),
4:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Bailey 4-4) at St. Louis (TBD),
4:45 p.m., 2nd game
Chicago White Sox (Nova 2-4) at Hous-
ton (Cole 4-4), 5:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Perez 6-1) at L.A. Angels
(Harvey 2-3), 6:07 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore, 9:35 a.m.
Boston at Toronto, 9:37 a.m.
Miami at Detroit, 10:10 a.m.
Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 3:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Houston, 5:10 p.m.