SPORTS East Oregonian B2 Saturday, June 26, 2021 The species that long eluded me beating scar tissue in my chest resilient. Unsure who the guy (or the three others in his car) were, I followed him to the nearby parking lot. It was broad daylight, and there were people everywhere, so I fi gured at least there would be witnesses to my murder. Out of the car popped some guy I’d never seen before in my life. In the passenger seat, a woman (I’d later learn this was his wife, Julie) seemed a bit embarrassed and kept apologizing profusely. Figuring this wasn’t the typical behavior of a Bonnie and Clyde-type duo on a murderous rampage, I went up. He introduced himself as Peter Chang, and told me he’d started reading my blog and then my column years before when he fi rst got into fi shing. I was fl oored. It’s not uncommon for me to get recognized in my hometown by people I’ve never met who read my column, but I’ve been writ- ing there for seven years. This seemed almost unreal. I’m horrible with names but great with faces. Here, I was drawing a blank. He told me as I tried not to visibly sigh in relief, “You wouldn’t know me, but I’m a fan of your writing!” I was humbled to rare speechlessness for a moment. We talked for a few minutes, grabbed a picture together, and we parted ways. I followed him on Insta- gram that day, and a few months later, I saw he’d caught my nemefi sh ... As I planned this year’s summer trip, I arranged to meet up with Peter and try for these weatherfi sh on one of my fi rst days on the road. We planned to visit a spot our mutual acquain- tance, Ben Cantrell, had discovered. Peter and Julie graciously invited me to stay with them. Peter and I met up in the early evening and walked to a remote creek on the outskirts of Los Angeles. After catching my fi rst arroyo chub, another fi sh I’d tried and failed to catch a few times, I fi nally hooked my weatherfi sh — and promptly dropped it. It’s OK, because I caught another one. And dropped it. This repeated, comically, for at least half an hour. I lifted no fewer than eight Oriental weatherfi sh/dojo loach/Luke’s nemefi sh out of the water but failed to get one in hand for a picture. I touched several, even got one on land before seeing its snake-like movements propel it from the muddy shoreline into the stream and out of my life forever. Peter was remarkably helpful, spotting the abun- dant fi sh for me and stifl ing most of his laughs as I dropped fi sh after fi sh. Daylight faded with my patience, and he informed me we had about 15 minutes left before we had to move the cars out of the park. In the wan light, I hooked my ninth? Tenth? Eleventh fi sh? I landed it, walked an unnecessary distance from the water and snapped a quick picture as Peter looked on approvingly. I owed him so much; I could barely contain my joy. He helped me close a long, embarrassing chap- ter of failure in my fi shing career, but the good news is that I was experimenting with my GoPro that night, so I immortalized 20 or 30 minutes of that repeated failure on fi lm for future generations. Though I hadn’t released the video, I’m pretty sure his adorable infant daugh- ter, Hailey, must’ve heard about my failings because she seemed pretty uncertain about me when I met her the next morning. Eventually, I won her over the same way I won over the weatherfi sh: with Peter’s help. Grapes admittedly helped, too. After years of repeated failure, Peter helped me solve that problem. So the next step, it would seem, is to have Peter take a look at my online dating profi les, right? ——— Sign up for every single CaughtOvgard column at www.patreon.com/Caugh- tOvgard. Read more for free at caughtovgard.com; Follow on Instagram and Fishbrain @lukeovgard; Contact luke. ovgard@gmail.com. Thank you for your continued support of local journalism. boosters from compensating athletes for NIL use. About a dozen other states have NIL laws that could take eff ect next month and states such as Ohio have legislation pending. “In a strange twist of events, schools in states without laws could have an advantage because they can make any rules they want,” Lawrence said. Most state laws about to go into eff ect restrict schools from being involved in fi nan- cial agreements athletes make with third parties, Lawrence said. Given the ability to make their own policies, some schools might decide to take a more active role. The pivot to a hands- off approach to NIL by the NCAA could be part of a broader strategy following the Supreme Court ruling in the Alston case. The high court said the NCAA cannot limit benefi ts schools provide to major college football and basketball players as long as they are tied to education. The decision also raises the possibility of future antitrust challenges to NCAA compen- sation rules. A lawsuit target- ing proposed changes to the NCAA’s NIL rules was fi led earlier this month by one of the plaintiffs’ attorneys in Alston, and a judge on June 24 denied the NCAA’s motion to dismiss the claim. The NCAA could shift to conferences taking the lead on setting standards for athlete benefi ts as a potential way to avoid lawsuits. LUKE OVGARD CAUGHT OVGARD D ojo loach. Amur weatherfi sh. Pond loach. Orien- tal weatherfi sh. Japanese weatherfi sh. Luke’s nemefi sh. Misgurnus anguillicau- datus, a resilient, eel-like fi sh, goes by many names. The latter is just what I call them. Well, called them until this month. Native to east Asia, the fi sh has been introduced all over the world by aquarists desiring to send it “back to nature” after deciding it’s not the pet for them. As these fi sh can survive in heavily polluted waters, a wide array of temperatures and even barely oxygen- ated puddles until the next rain, they’ve taken a foot- hold — fi nhold? — almost everywhere they’ve been released. The name “weath- erfi sh” allegedly comes from the fi sh’s increased feeding activity before storms, though I wouldn’t know because prior to this month, I’d never seen one in the wild. They’re supposed to exist all over the place, and I’ve investigated almost a dozen locations purported to have populations, from marsh- lands of Astoria to sloughs of Portland to agricultural ditches in Ontario. The one thing all of these locations have in common? I couldn’t fi nd weatherfi sh. Last year, I expanded my search beyond Oregon and tried a pond outside of Salt Lake City where a friend had videotaped several of them feeding during the day. Nope. I tried a ditch in Florida purported to have them. Nada. I even checked the Weather app on my phone. Nothing. So, just as I’ve done with dating during the pandemic, I resigned myself to failure and hoped I’d get another shot some- time before I began to lose my hair. Enter Peter Chang. Peter I met Peter in the old-fashioned way: when he shouted my name from a passing car as I walked down the side of a Califor- nia road. “Luke?” “Luke!” “Luke Ovgard!?” The shock of someone fi ve hours from home in a car I didn’t recognize shout- ing my name as I skirted the edge of a boujee Californian waterfront would’ve killed someone with a weaker heart. Fortunately, repeated heartbreak has made the NCAA: Continued from Page B1 Opendorse CEO Blake Lawrence, whose company is working with dozens of schools to create NIL programming and assistance for athletes, said it “seemed unfathomable” the NCAA would allow this to happen. “But now that might be the best strategy,” he said. Following the template of a recommendation made by six Division I conferences to the D-I Council last week, schools would follow their state NIL laws. To that end, the University of Florida released its NIL guidelines that, among other things, bars school employees and Luke Ovgard/Contributed Photo After years and years of hunting for them, Peter Chang helped Luke Ovgard fi nd and catch his “nemefi sh.” Luke Ovgard/Contributed Photo Luke Ovgard poses with Peter Chang, a reader and now friend whom he met after Peter shouted him down on the side of the road. Your home is only as smart as your Internet. AT&T Internet 40 $ /mo. when bundled, plus taxes & equip. fee. 12 mo agmt, other qualifying service (min $19/mo) & combined bill req’d. $10/mo equip. fee applies. Incl 1TB data/mo. $10 chrg for each add’l 50GB (up to $100/mo). † Cut cable internet and switch to AT&T Internet. Call now! Shame Hockey: Continued from Page B1 a record 25 times — but in this unusual season with teams playing in refor- matted visions that was the case Thursday night. Now the focus turns toward the Cup, and there’s no such hatred toward namesake Lord Stanley. “We got another series coming up,” said Weber, who’s playing in his fi rst Cup fi nal at age 35. “We’ve got to win four more games but definitely proud of everybody in that locker room right now and what we’ve accomplished so far. But defi nitely still work to be done.” The Canadiens are on one of the more surprising runs in postseason history, erasing a 3-1 defi cit against Toronto in the fi rst round, sweeping Winnipeg in the second and shutting down heavily favored Vegas in six games in the third. Only minutes after giving up the series-de- ciding overtime goal to Artturi Lehkonen, Golden Knights netminder Robin Lehner said: “Hell of a team. Works really hard. Sticks with their structure and they have a lot of great players. Everyone underes- timates them.” Three-time Cup winner Patrick Sharp, now an N BC Spor ts analyst, expected Montreal to lose every round. Only after watching Canadiens goal- tender Carey Price and his teammates frustrate Vegas did he realize he and so many others were just wrong. “We should’ve known better,” Sharp said Friday. “It’s a team that’s got some belief, no question about that, and those teams are often the most dangerous this time of year.” The lineup also is a perfect mix of veterans — Price, Weber, Corey Perry and Eric Staal, who have been in plenty of play- off games before, with young players, includ- ing Cauf ield, Jesperi Kotkaniemi and Nick Suzuki. T h e 2 0 - y e a r- o l d Cauf ield was playing college hockey as recently as March, and Suzuki just beat the Vegas organiza- tion that drafted and then traded him in a deal for former Montreal captain Max Pacioretty. Price is the backbone, having stopped 495 of 530 shots to go into the fi nal as a front-runner for the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP. Like Weber, it will be his fi rst fi nal. Credit also has to go to coaching, with Montreal heading into the fi nal with assistant Luke Richardson as the third person behind the bench in the past four months. Interim coach Dominique Ducharme took over when Claude Julien was fi red in Febru- ary, and Richardson is fi lling in after Ducharme tested positive for the coro- navirus last week. The Canadiens made sure Ducharme was on video from afar when they returned to their locker room Thursday night to share in the joy. Now that they’ve guaranteed at least four more games and their jubilant city is poised to celebrate, Ducharme could potentially return midway through the fi nal. With Ducharme on their minds, players quickly shifted from enjoying another series victory to thinking about trying to get another. “They’re not done yet,” Richardson said. “They saw a fire in their eyes. They’re already talking about it. ... Get right back at it. And we’re looking forward to the challenge.” ON THE SLATE SATURDAY, JUNE 26 TUESDAY, JUNE 29 Prep wrestling Riverside at 3A state tournament, Redmond Heppner, Echo/Stanfi eld at 2A state tournament, Sweet Home Youth baseball Ashlee Hodgen Memorial Tourna- ment: Columbia Gorge Hustlers vs. Hodgen Distributing, 10 a.m.; Hills- boro vs. Hodgen Distributing, 3 p.m. Baker Tournament: Pepsi Diamond- jaxx vs. La Grande, 10 a.m.; Pepsi Diamondjaxx vs. Elko, 3 p.m. No events scheduled SUNDAY, JUNE 27 Youth baseball Ashlee Hodgen Memorial Tourna- ment: Hodgen Distributing vs. TBD Baker Tournament: Pepsi Diamond- jaxx vs. TBD MONDAY, JUNE 28 No events scheduled WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30 No events scheduled THURSDAY, JULY 1 Youth baseball Spokane Tournament: Pepsi Dia- mondjaxx vs. Claremont Cardinals, 1 p.m.; Pepsi Diamondjaxx vs. West Valley, 6 p.m. FRIDAY, JULY 2 Youth baseball Spokane Tournament: Pepsi Dia- mondjaxx vs. Yakima Valley Pep- pers, 8 a.m.; Pepsi Diamondjaxx vs. Gonzaga Prep, 1 p.m. SATURDAY, JULY 3 Youth baseball Spokane Tournament: Pepsi Dia- mondjaxx vs. TBD EASTERN OREGON 2021 PHOTO CONTEST Voting for ‘People’s Choice’ NOW OPEN Vote online for People’s Choice from 12:01 am Monday, June 21 through 11:59 pm Wednesday, June 30. The winners will appear in the July 8th edition of Go Magazine; the top 25 will appear online. Gift cards to a restaurant of your choice will be awarded for fi rst, second and third place. • Plans up to 100 Mbps. ‡ • Free Smart Home Manager App 1 with Parental Controls. 2 • The bandwidth to power multiple devices at once. Number of devices depends on screen size/resolution. • Get a seamless whole-home Wi-Fi experience with AT&T Smart Wi-Fi. 3 Limited availability. May not be available in your area. Call to see if you qualify. Iv Support Holdings LLC 888-486-0359 Geographic and service restrictions apply to AT&T Internet services. Not all speeds available in all areas. Call to see if you qualify. $40 INTERNET OFFER: Price for Internet (768k - 100) for new residential customers when bundled with another qualifying AT&T service (DIRECTV, U-verse TV, AT&T TV or AT&T Phone or postpaid AT&T wireless). Prorated ETF ($180) applies if Internet is disconnected before end of 12 months. 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