E AST O REGONIAN Thursday, May 23, 2019 FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS | FACEBOOK.COM/EOSPORTS A7 5A STATE PLAYOFFS Bucks rally to quarterfinals Pendleton softball, baseball teams claim round one of 5a state tournament By BRETT KANE East Oregonian Thurston tried, but they could hardly keep Kirah McGlothan’s bat silent on Wednesday. The Bucks second baseman hit a two-rBI double and a three-run dinger mid-game to help bury the visiting Colts for a 12-7 victory in round one of the 5a softball state playoffs. Before McGlothan brought the firepower, the Bucks were grasp- ing to a 1-0 advantage for two innings. “It changed our mojo a little bit,” McGlothan said of her home run. “as soon as anyone hits a home run, everyone on the team gets excited.” The Bucks, ranked fifth in the 5a division, got on the board in the bottom of the second inning when sam spriet sent a 3-2 pitch over the center field fence for a solo homer. after a runless third inning, spriet doubled and scored again on Carissa Coooley’s sacrifice fly on the next at-bat. McGlothan dou- bled and reached third on an error, driving in two runs for a 4-0 lead. “My first couple of at-bats weren’t very good,” McGlothan admitted, “but sami’s homer got us going.” Freshman sauren Garton held strong in the circle, collecting five strikeouts to keep the Colts without a run for the opening four innings. Thurston couldn’t manage a base hit until the top of the fourth, when Olivia Jegtvig singled. she would steal second and take third on a sacrifice bunt with just one out on the board, but the Bucks knocked down the last two outs to strand her. Staff photo by Kathy Aney Sami Spriet, of Pendleton, bumps fists with head coach Tim Cary after hit- ting a home run during Wednesday’s state playoff game against Thurston. “They’re a never-say-die team,” Pendleton coach Tim Cary said of Thurston. “They certainly weren’t going to give up, and they showed that with their bunts. They made it tough for us to get our outs.” The Colts swiftly put up three runs with harmony stevens’ three-run homer in the top of the fifth, narrowing the gap that the Bucks had opened. Pendleton was quick to rem- edy the issue — Josie Wilson hit a two-rBI double in the bottom of the inning, and Elli Nirschl drove a runner home on her single during the next at-bat. With Wilson and Nirschl on base and in scoring position, McGlothan homered over left field on a 1-2 count to round out the sev- en-run inning. “That was gigantic,” Cary said. “That opened the game up.” The Bucks wouldn’t score another run for the remainder of the game, but no matter. They had already put up enough distance to survive four more Colts runs, and punch their ticket to Friday’s state quarterfinals. McGlothan’s 2-for-4 perfor- mance at the plate brought in one run and five RBIs to lead Pendle- ton’s offense. spriet went 3-for-4 with three runs and an rBI, and Nirschl hit 2-for-4 with two runs and a pair of runners driven in. “you can never overlook any- one,” McGlothan said. “you could be playing a No. 20 team who hap- pens to have a really good game, while you have a bad one.” On Friday, the Bucks will hit the road to West albany for the 5a quarterfinals. “We still have some things to clean up, but we’ll be ready to roll on Friday,” Cary said. “We’re going to give ‘em heck.” Baseball When the Bucks were down 3-2 in the bottom of the seventh inning on Wednesday’s state play- off game, Ty Beers knew it was a live-or-die situation. The sophomore first baseman had just singled to score Gabe umbarger and tie with the visiting Wilsonville Wildcats. he then took advantage of three critical Wilson- ville errors to clinch a 4-3 victory. “There was no room to hes- Staff photo by Kathy Aney Ryan Stahl, of Pendleton, pitches during Wednesday’s state playoff game against the Wilsonville Wildcats. itate,” Beers said. “I just had to make the decision and go.” Pendleton held a 2-0 lead until the top of the fifth, when Wilson- ville’s Cole Kleckner singled to right field and drove in two runs to even things out. Kleckner drove another runner home in the top of the seventh to pull ahead. “Wilsonville has a quality pro- gram,” Pendleton coach TJ hague- wood said. “They do every year. any team in the playoffs is going to be good. you have to play with your emotions under control in games like this. during the play- offs, emotions are running high.” after umbarger scored for the game’s second tie, Beers took sec- ond on a wild pitch, and stole third on the following at-bat. he scored on an error at third base to slip past Wilsonville once and for all. “This was a team win,” hague- wood said. “We had a lot of guys doing great things. We executed beautifully.” Intermountain Conference Pitcher of the year ryan stahl may have only benched two Wil- sonville batters, but scattered just three runs across six innings on the mound. “Wilsonville is a tough team,” stahl said. “They know the game really well; we just played better. It was exciting to see kids step up in tough situations like this.” On Friday, Pendleton will travel to Crescent Valley for a 5a state quarterfinals contest. The Raid- ers are coming off a 10-2 win over Crook County. CLASS 3A PLAYOFFS Taft knocks Irrigon out in the first round Knights finish the season with a 20-5 record By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian One bad inning derailed Irri- gon’s season Wednesday. The Knights gave up five runs in the top of the fifth inning as Taft rallied for a 5-3 victory over Irri- gon in the first round of the 3A state baseball playoffs at henrichs Field. “I’m proud of them no matter what,” Irrigon coach randy hen- richs said. “I just want them to walk away with their heads up. I hope they know this isn’t the end of the world.” The Tigers (17-10) move into the quarterfinals, where they will face santiam Christian on Friday. “We just had to stay with it,” Taft coach Matt hilgers said of his team’s early deficit. “We knew we would break through and do what needed to be done.” The Knights (20-5) opened the scoring in the first inning as Mat- thew Moreno scored on a Zack henrichs’ double. Irrigon added two more runs in the bottom of the third. Moreno scored on an rBI single by Keith Fleming, while Fleming was sent across the plate on a Lino Covar- rubia double down the third-base line. While the Knights were putting runs on the board, Zack henrichs was keeping the Tigers at bay. he allowed two hits and three base runners over the course of three innings, striking out five. henrichs reached 42 pitches at the end of three innings, and if the Knights needed him Friday, he could not go past 45. Moreno came on in the fourth and promptly sat down all three Taft lead. “Matthew came in and did good,” coach henrichs said. “I feel for him; he’s such a competitor. he came in and did well the one inning, then lost control.” “I’M PROUD OF THEM NO MATTER WHAT.” Irrigon coach Randy Henrichs batters he faced. The fifth inning was differ- ent story. Moreno struggled with his control, walking two to start the inning. Of the six batters he faced, four scored before henrichs went back to the mound. a misplayed ball allowed one more run to score for a 5-3 henrichs, who has signed to play at Blue Mountain, faced just seven batters over the next two innings, keeping the Tigers from increasing their lead. “he threw well,” hilgers said of henrichs. “he’s tough to hit. I’m glad they took him out. By the time they put him back in, we had our runs, and I’m glad we did.” The Knights had success against Taft starter Eli deMello, but after he was pulled in the middle of the fourth, Irrigon had a hard time against left-handed reliever Bleiz Kimbrough, who did not give up a hit. “That’s the first lefty we have seen all year,” coach henrichs said. “It’s difficult to adjust to. They played their tails off, and so did we.” despite the loss, Zack henrichs said there is much to celebrate. “It was a fun season,” he said. “We had the best record in school history, we were league champs and district champs. We would have liked to walk away with a (championship) ring, but it is what it is.” rangers complete 3-game sweep of slumping Mariners By STEPHEN HAWKINS AP Baseball Writer AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Marco Gonzales throws to the Tex- as Rangers in the first inning of a baseball game in Arlington, Texas, on Wednesday. arLINGTON, Texas — hunter Pence homered, adrian sampson had another impressive long outing for a victory after not starting, and the Texas rangers beat the slumping seattle Mar- iners 2-1 on Wednesday to com- plete a three-game sweep. The Mariners have lost 27 of 37 games to fall to the bottom of the aL West standings since starting the season 13-2. seattle lefty Marco Gonzalez (5-4) limited the rangers to one earned run over seven innings, but dropped to 0-4 with a 4.56 Era in five starts in May. He was 5-0 after his first seven starts this season. Sampson (2-3) went 5⅓ innings and gave up one earned run after the rangers used a reliever to start the game, the same as the right-hander did when he got his first big league victory in his last appearance last Friday against st. Louis. Jesse Chavez got the first five outs against the Mariners. shawn Kelley worked the ninth for his fourth save in five chances, his second in less than 24 hours since coming off the injured list following the removal of two lumps from his throat that were determined to be benign. In his five actual starts this sea- son, sampson is 0-2 with a 7.66 Era and hasn’t gone more than five innings. Pitching in relief, he is 2-1 with a 1.48 Era. Pence put the rangers up 2-0 in the sixth with his solo homer, his 10th of the season. Texas got an unearned run in the first when Pence reached on an error by first baseman Edwin Encarnación and scored on a dou- ble by Nomar Mazara. Jay Bruce had a double and scored on J.P. Crawford’s single in the seattle seventh. UP NEXT Mariners: seattle will be in Oakland on Friday night for the opener of a weekend series against the a’s. Rangers: Texas starts a series Friday night at the Los angeles angels.