SIDELINED 2020 Gearing up for the title fight 5 QUESTIONS WITH ISAAC URBINA By BRETT KANE For the East Oregonian Favorite sport to play and why? My favorite sport to do is probably wrestling. While I do enjoy the experience of football, I’m pretty good at wrestling, and I like winning a lot. Wrestling is just something that I’m good at and understand fully. P Favorite sport to watch and why? I actually enjoy watching football a lot more than wrestling. Watch- ing wrestling as a spectator sport, even on TV has always been hard for me, because it throws me into competitive mode, and all I can think of is “I’m up next,” or, “I’m on deck.” Foot- ball, on the other hand, has long games that will twist one way, then the other. You can sit there and watch them while relaxing with your friends. Favorite thing to do when you’re not playing sports? Fishing, tubing, and playing spikeball with my friends. I’m actually crazy about spikeball. I’ll play it for hours on end trying to get better. Favorite moment in high school sports so far? Winning the finals at the Muilen- burg tournament. The finals were so hyped up with a walkout and faceoff and everything, and I won a hard-fought battle, and earned a big gold and black belt buckle. A fun fact about you that few people know? I will drink over a gallon milk every two days. I know it’s a lot, but I’m just used to it. ENDLETON — Buckaroo defensive end Isaac Urbina won’t be hitting the gridiron with his teammates this fall. Instead, he’ll be playing fantasy football with his wrestling friends. After the COVID-19 pandemic effectively put an end to the 2019- 20 spring season for all Oregon School Activities Association pro- grams, the fall season was next to catch the fallout of the virus. This year, instead of starting foot- ball practices in the summer, high school athletes across the state, like Urbina, will have to wait until Feb- ruary 2021 to put on the helmet and pads again. “When I first heard about foot- ball being canceled, I was upset,” said Urbina, 17. “Thoughts of no late-night football games, no homecoming, and no pep ral- lies raced through my head. But I believe that everything will work itself out somehow. All I can do is hope that when spring rolls around, I will be playing and that people will be allowed to watch and come show support for our teams.” Not only is Urbina on the start- ing line of the Bucks football team, but he’s also a state title-winning wrestler. At 182 pounds, Urbina won the freestyle and Greco-Ro- man state titles at the junior nation- als meet in Redmond last season, qualifying him for the Oregon National Duals A-Team. He placed fourth at the OSAA state meet last year, and has won titles at the Muilenburg in La Grande, the Lib- erty Tournament in Hillsboro, the Oregon Trail County Champion- ship in Echo, and the Old Guys Tournament in Gresham. And while he waits for his last chance to don the Pendleton foot- ball uniform, he’ll be getting his 4 • S E P T. 2 9 , 2 0 2 0 • E O M E D I A G R O U P Staff photo by Ben Lonergan Isaac Urbina, a Pendleton High School senior, is a two-sport athlete who competes in football and wrestling. football fix online, where he’s in a fantasy league with wrestling friends he’s made on the road. “I’m in a fantasy football league with a friend who is a national champion,” he said. “My favorite parts about wrestling are the con- nections that I’ve made with peo- ple outside of our town.” Urbina’s history of football goes all the way back to the third grade, when he casually accepted an offer to register for youth football on a whim. “My mom came up to me and asked if I wanted to play football,” he recalled. “I told her, ‘Sure, why not?’ I’ve been playing for Pendle- ton ever since. When I was younger, I never really thought about play- ing football. I watched the NFL at the time, and knew how to play, so I figured it would be fun.” Urbina made the varsity cut for the Bucks as a sophomore, and earned a starting spot as a junior. That same year, he was named a 5A all-league honorable mention. “Fall is the time for football,” Urbina said. “We won’t get to have the homecoming game or the steak dinner. Playing in the spring is all wet and rainy. We’ve played in the rain before. I know the team. If all it’s going to do is rain, then we’ll be ready for it.” For his senior season, Urbina’s goals are simple: to make the first team all-league list, and to finish “a lot higher than all of the rank- ing websites think we will,” he said. For wrestling, he’s aiming for a state title. “Isaac is coming off a tre- mendous junior year as a defen- sive end,” Pendleton head football coach Erik Davis said. “He’s really worked hard to change his body physicality, and that hard work has paid off on the field. Isaac has great body awareness and is unafraid to be physical, which I attribute to his wrestling background. Isaac has had a very successful wrestling career, and I believe that he has the talent to have that same success on the football field as well.” In the meantime, Urbina will spend his now-open fall season college searching, applying for scholarships, golfing, washing cars, doing homework, and work- ing out, all of which he has been doing since summer break began. He’s been taking an online com- puter class through Harvard Uni- versity. He also finished his final high school credits online early. “My experience as a Buckaroo has been the best in the world,” Urbina said. “I’ve been shown so much support from the stu- dents, staff, and community. I love Pendleton High School, and you couldn’t pay me to go anywhere else.”