SPORTS Saturday, June 15, 2019 Track: All-EO Track and Field Continued from Page B1 Her season best was 114-3, and she missed out on a trip to state by one place. She fi nished third at the District 8 meet. Romero also throws the shot put, but she said she’ll leave that for teammates Paige Palzinski and Kendall Dowdy. “We have strong shot put throwers, but coach will have me throw it in the smaller meets to get points for the team,” Romero said. “Javelin and discus are my main focus if I want to throw at the col- lege level.” Yes, there is an if. Romero’s fi rst love has always been basketball, but her success in track may be pushing the needle to the other side. “I have always grown up with basketball, and that is super important to me,” Romero said. “But I have grown to love track. I will have to decide. If I choose basketball or track, I will be happy either way.” It also will decide what level of school Romero would like to attend. For track, she could go Div. I, but with bas- ketball, it might be Div. II, NAIA or junior college. “I have gotten a lot of let- ters and questionnaires for track,” she said. “LSU, Princ- eton, WSU, Texas A&M and others.” Strot, who threw shot put, discus and javelin in college at Kentucky and UC Berkeley, will be able to guide Romero through the process. “This has been a great year for her, not only in track,” Strot said. “If she contin- ues with the high level of work ethic, she will do great things. She has bought in and trusts in what I and the other coaches ask. We are working on putting together an athlete profi le and video, and getting it out to schools and see what happens.” But for now, her focus is on basketball. Romero plays for the Oregon Elite out of Lake Oswego, and the next two months are packed with prac- tices and tournaments. “Basketball consumes my summer,” she said. Catch me if you can Hands down, Heppner had the top distance crew in the Columbia Basin this spring, and Nichols was the leader of the pack. He ran everything from the 400 to the 3,000 during the season, and with great success. There were only two meets where he did not win the 3,000 — the Sandy Invita- tional and the Centennial Invi- tational. He won the state title by nearly 3 seconds, clocking an 8:59.29. In the 800, he edged Wyatt Smith of Oakland by a cou- ple of steps for the state title. He turned in a time of 2:01.09, which was off his school record time of 1:57.50. “I was pretty confi dent going into the 800 after run- ning a 1:57,” Nichols said. “It was my last meet, I gave it everything I had. The 3,000 is more tactical and there is more time for stuff to happen. You can put a lot more tactical race together, whereas in the 800, it’s who can gut it out the longest — who has the heart and who can take the pain.” That’s all fi ne and good, but it the 4x400 relay that Nichols seems to enjoy most. “They save the best for last,” he said. “It’s a crazy race. I like the pressure of the anchor leg. I can hold off most people. It’s my senior year, my last race, I wanted them to give it (the baton) to me.” The Mustangs obliter- ated the school record in the mile relay at state, clocking a 3:30.94. The previous record was 3:34.10. When Nichols broke the school record in the 800 on April 12, it was the lon- gest-standing record at the school. Tim Driscoll’s time, set in 1965, was 1:59.30. Nichols could have made a clean sweep of the distance events, but he chose not to run the 1,500, leaving that event to teammate Trevor Antonucci, who placed third at state. “That was one thing I never had to worry about,” Russ Nichols said. “They all put team fi rst.” Nichols is headed to East- ern Oregon University, where he will run cross country and track. He’s not sure what events he will run during the track season. “I have no idea,” he said. “I can run a decent 5K, but I can also run a decent 800. It will be a new experience for me, but I’m ready.” Nichols said he will miss running for his dad, but he will not miss running up Water Street by the school every day. “You have to run up that hill whether you want to or not,” he said. Russ Nichols said he too will miss their time together, but that his other son Trevor will be a freshman this fall. “Trevor is faster than Hunter was when he was in middle school,” Russ Nichols said. East Oregonian We’re all part of Umatilla County history. SHARE YOUR PHOTOS The East Oregonian is proud to announce its partnership with Athena Public Library, City of Echo, Milton-Freewater Area Historical Society, Pendleton Round-up, Tamástslikt Cultural Institute, Umatilla County Historical Society and our readers on a new pictorial history book, “Umatilla County Memories: The Early Years.” YOU’RE INVITED We are excited to invite you, our readers, to participate in this unique project. Please bring your photos to one of our scanning sessions listed here — and be sure to check our submission guidelines. Photos will be scanned on-site and given right back to you. In order to keep things speedy, please fill out our simple photo submission form prior to the session. Forms can be downloaded at Umatilla.PictorialBook.com. Please plan to fill out one form for each photo you’d like to submit. Download submission forms and pre-order at Umatilla.PictorialBook.com EAST OREGONIAN TRACK AND FIELD TEAM Girls MVP: Jazlyn Romero, jr., Hermiston Boys MVP: Hunter Nichols, sr., Heppner Romero Javelin/Discus Nichols 800M/3000M Young 100M/LJ Patterson 100M Zacarias 200M Walchli 200M Hoisington 400M Luke 400M Christman 800M Antonucci 1500M Sanchez 3200M Nichols 1500M Cardenas 100H Maher 110H/300H Palzinski Shot put/TJ Howard Shot put/ Discus Reynolds HJ Jennings Javelin Yeager HJ Ibarra PV House 300H Vescio PV Linares LJ/TJ Girls fi rst team 100M — Kaylee Young, so., Hermiston. 200M — Ana Zacarias, sr., Irrigon. 400M — Muriel Hoisington, fr., Pendleton. 800M — Hannah Christman, sr., Griswold. 1500/1600M — Madelyn Nichols, so., Heppner. 3000/3200 — Cydney Sanchez, fr., Hermiston. 100H — Abigail Cardenas, so., Umatilla. 300H — Elisabeth House, sr., Pendleton. Shot put — Paige Palzinski, so., Hermiston. Discus — Jazlyn Romero, jr., Hermiston. Javelin — Jazlyn Romero, jr., Hermiston. HJ — Rebecca Reynolds, jr., Stanfi eld/Echo. PV — Katie Vescio, sr., Weston-McEwen. LJ — Kaylee Young, so., Hermiston. TJ — Paige Palzinski, so., Hermiston. Girls second team 100M — Patty Burres, jr., Umatilla. 200M — Kaylee Young, so., Hermiston. 400M — Ellie Scheibner, jr., Weston-McEwen. 800M — Madelyn Nichols, so., Heppner. 1500/1600M — Kaylee Cope, jr., Griswold. 3000/3200 — Kaylee Cope, jr., Griswold. 100H — Kendall Bonzani, so., Pendleton. 300H — Bryce Thul, sr., Weston-McEwen. Shot put — Kendall Dowdy, so., Hermis- ton. Discus — Eseta Sepeni, fr., Hermiston. Javelin — Lexie Cox, sr., Stanfi eld/Echo. HJ — Sarah Knop, jr., Ione. PV — Regina Thede, jr., Pendleton. LJ — Ellie Scheibner, jr., Weston-McEwen. TJ — Tymesha Doug- las, jr., Umatilla. Boys fi rst team 100M — Aiden Patterson, sr., Pendleton. 200M — Garrett Walchli, jr., Hermiston. 400M — Aaron Luke, jr., Pendleton. 800M — Hunter Nichols, sr., Heppner. 1500/1600M — Trevor Antonucci, sr., Heppner. 3000/3200 — Hunter Nich- ols, sr., Heppner. 110H — Lane Maher, jr., Pendleton. 300H — Lane Maher, jr., Pendleton. Shot put — Derek Howard, sr., Heppner. Discus — Derek Howard, sr., Heppner. Javelin — Sam Jennings, fr., Pendleton. HJ — Shawn Yeager, sr., Pend- leton. PV — Anthony Ibarra, sr., Umatilla. LJ — Edwin Linares, jr., Pendleton. TJ — Edwin Linares, jr., Pendleton. Boys second team 100M — Garrett Walchli, jr., Hermiston. 200M — Cam Sandford, sr., Pendleton. 400M — Freddy Mendoza, sr., Hermiston. 800M — Freddy Mendoza, sr., Hermiston. 1500/1600M — Sisay Hurty, so, Stanfi eld/ Echo. 3000/3200 — Zayne Troeger, sr., Umatilla. 110H — Mathias Patrick, jr., Pendleton. 300H — Saber Harp, sr., Pilot Rock. Shot put — Sam Carlson, sr., Gris- wold. Discus — Sam Carlson, sr., Griswold. Javelin — Christian Haskell, sr., Pilot Rock. HJ — Julian Gutierrez, sr., Umatilla. PV — Seth Buck, sr., Hermiston. LJ — Anthony Ibarra, sr., Umatilla. TJ — Donovan Wilson, so., Hermiston. SUBMISSION GUIDELINES General interest photos, such as: commerce, industry, transportation, rural life, public service, etc. Photos taken between the 1800s and 1939. Photos only — preferably original (no newspaper clippings or photocopies). Photos taken in Umatilla County. Limit 10 photos per family. No appointment necessary. If you’re a private collector, call 360-723-5800 to set up an appointment. SCANNING SESSIONS Saturday, June 22 10 a.m. – 1 p.m. Tribal images only Tamástslikt Cultural Institute 47106 Wildhorse Boulevard, Pendleton Sunday, June 23 2 p.m. – 4 p.m. Echo Bank Building and Historical Museum 230 W. Main Street, Echo Monday, June 24 3 p.m. – 5 p.m. Athena Public Library 418 E. Main Street, Athena Wednesday, June 26 10 a.m. – noon Umatilla County Historical Society Heritage Station Museum 108 SW Frazer, Pendleton Thursday, June 27 2 p.m. – 4 p.m. Milton-Freewater Area Historical Society and Frazier Farmstead Museum 1403 Chestnut Street, Milton-Freewater Not all photos submitted or used in ads will appear in the final book. B3