E AST O REGONIAN SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 2021 FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS | FACEBOOK.COM/EOSPORTS B1 HONORING BUCKAROO GREATS 2021 Hall of Fame class of inductees: 1 coach, 2 teams, and 9 athletes By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian P ENDLETON — The Pendleton Linebacker’s Club has been honoring athletes and coaches for the better part of 30 years. It all began with a golf tourna- ment in honor of legendary Buck- aroos coach Don Requa to raise money for scholarships and fi nan- cial support for the high school foot- ball team. For the past 17 years, the Line- backer’s Club has honored foot- ball players, coaches and staff with inductions to the Buckaroo Football Hall of Fame in 2004. In 2017, the club made the move to include all athletes and teams at the high school in the Buckaroo Hall of Fame. This year’s induction class is one of the largest it has had with two teams, one coach and nine athletes. The list includes college champi- ons, Olympic hopefuls and an NFL contract. The Hall of Fame Night is Aug. 20 at the Pendleton Convention Center. Tickets are available at the door. The cost is $35 per person. The auction includes Portland Trail Blazer tickets, University of Oregon and Oregon State Univer- sity football tickets, and Seattle Seahawks tickets. Tyasin Burns is the recipient of the Don Requa Scholarship, while Sam Coleman will receive the Alex Stuvland Memorial Scholarship, and Blake Swanson the Schindler-Bunch Scholarship. Teams The teams being inducted this year include the 1964-65 and the 1954-55 football teams. The 1964-65 team went 9-0 during the regular season, but ran into a tough Corvallis team in the playoff s, falling 39-14. Terry Harri- Pendleton Linebacker’s Club/Contributed Photo Brent Merriman, wearing No. 25, averaged 24.5 points a game during his senior year. He graduated from Pend- leton High School in 1975. He is part of the 2021 Buckaroo Hall of Fame class. son led the state in touchdown passes with 21, while Mike Temple led the state in scoring with 106 points. Requa’s 1954-55 team brought him his fi rst Blue Mountain Confer- ence title with the likes of Ralph Allen, Doug Minthorn and Joe Temple. The Bucks went 9-0 during the regular season, and brought Pendleton its fi rst conference title since 1947. The Bucks lost to Lincoln 25-13 in the state quarterfi nals. Coach Debbie Kishpaugh Pendleton dance coach Debbie Kishpaugh is the lone coach on the induction roster, and she is more than deserving of the honor. In her 35 years directing the school’s highly successful Rhyth- mic Mode dance team, the Bucks have brought home nine state titles, and dozens of dancers have won individual awards. Players Steve Richards (1981-84) Richards was a standout base- ball player for the Bucks, and was selected to play on the Class AAA all-star series. After high school, he went on to play at Blue Mountain Commu- nity College. He was co-MVP in the Northwest Athletic Conference his sophomore year — the fi rst time that a BMCC player earned the award. From Blue Mountain, Richards went to Linfi eld University, where he was the Wildcats’ Most Inspirational Player in 1987-88 and team MVP as a senior. In his fi rst year with the Wildcats, he hit .269 with 42 hits, including seven doubles and 18 RBIs. During his fi nal season in 1988, he hit .374 with 65 hits and 18 RBIs. Richards was the Blue Mountain Community College softball coach from 2015-20. Craig Christianson (1976-79) A talented three-sport athlete for the Bucks, he excelled in football, basketball and track. He was part of the 1977 football team that advanced to the Class AAA state semifi nals against Medford and suff ered a 13-7 loss. It was in track where he excelled. He once held the school record in the high jump and discus. The University of Idaho gave him a full ride for football and track. Inju- ries would derail his football career, but his track career took off . In 1986, he placed fourth in the javelin at the U.S. Champion- ships with a throw of 245 feet, 6 inches. He placed fi fth at the 1988 Olympic Trials, throwing against the likes of Brian Crouser, Mark Babich and Tom Petranoff . Rob Burnside (1977-80) Football, wrestling and track kept Burnside busy during his high school days. He was a four-year letterman in wrestling, and won district titles at 178 pounds in 1977 and 1979. The Bucks were fi fth at state in 1978 and third in 1979. He and teammates Miles Hancock and Jim Fitter took part in the Oregon Cultural Exchange Team in the summer of 1979. They traveled to Italy to compete. Burnside went on to wrestle at Oregon State University, but a knee injury cut his career short. His love of wrestling never wavered. He refereed middle school and high school matches, volunteered with the Pendleton Youth Wrestling Program, and helped Rollin Schimmel and others construct the Pendleton wrestling building. A longtime fi refi ghter, he keeps in shape by doing marathons, the Pacific Crest Duathlon and the Hood-to-Coast with his daughter Tara. Jim Malcom (1979-1982) One of the top high school line- men in his day, Malcom was a three- year letterman and a starter for the 1980-81 playoff teams. His senior year, he earned fi rst- team all-conference honors on both sides of the ball and earned an invite to the 1982 Shrine Game. Malcom still is in the Pendleton baseball record book as a pitcher (ERA) and hitter (batting average). After high school, he played one year of football at Columbia Basin Junior College, then played two years of baseball at BMCC. He went onto Oregon State University where he played rugby and earned a business degree in forest products. John Vorvick (1977-80) Another football great in the Requa era, the 6-4, 215-pound Vorvick was a dominating tackle for the Bucks. He was a fi rst-team all-conference and first-team all-state lineman his senior year. He See Greats, Page B2 OSU tackle feeling ‘natural’ with off season weight gain By NICK DASCHEL The Oregonian Oregon State University/Contributed Photo Oregon State off ensive lineman Brandon Kipper (68) prepares to make a block during a game against Cal Poly in September 2019. CORVALLIS — The scales show formidable weight gains throughout Oregon State’s roster from a year ago. It’s no surprise the off ensive line is among the leaders in piling on pounds. The Beavers’ starting off ensive line of a year ago, intact from right tackle to left tackle, has increased its mass by a collective 48 pounds. Right guard Nous Keobounnam is up 17 pounds to 292, center Nathan Eldridge up 15 pounds to 297, and right tackle Joshua Gray up 11 pounds to 300. Right tackle Brandon Kipper tops them all at 310 pounds, a meaty 15-pound increase from his spring practice weight. Since his fresh- man year, when Kipper started at Hawaii, he has added 40 pounds to his 6-foot-6 frame. “I’m physically seeing the changes from myself and the guys around me and I’m excited to get on the fi eld and see how the changes aff ect us on the fi eld,” Kipper said before the start of Oregon State’s preseason camp. Kipper said this season’s weight gain felt diff erent. “This is the most weight I’ve put on where I felt natural, where it felt good,” Kipper said. Kipper felt the COVID-19 atmo- sphere and protocols impacted him physically during the 2020 season. He found it diffi cult to eat at a level to maintain a 300-pound-plus body. Kipper’s focus during 2021 is nourishment, and adding weight at a level where it felt right. “I feel more natural being this heavy, so it’s not something that my body is suddenly shocked by,” Kipper said. “I never felt so good in my life being 310, 315.” Kipper was an all-conference lineman in 2019, but failed to earn honors last season. The fi fth-year junior, who has started 19 of the 23 games he’s played at Oregon State, spent plenty of time pouring over game video of his play. In fact, that’s an area where Kipper hopes to improve in 2021. “This is my fi fth year, and I’ve watched a lot of fi lm. That being said, there’s always more you can learn from the fi lm,” Kipper said. “I’ve really taken the time this off season to try to improve every aspect of my game.” SPORTS SHORT Ducks defensive backs facing charges for alleged shooting By JAMES CREPEA The Oregonian EUGENE — Two of Oregon’s starting defensive backs are facing charges following their alleged shooting of three people with an airsoft gun late Tuesday, Aug. 3. Ducks nickel safety Jamal Hill and boundary cornerback DJ James are each facing three charges of reckless endangering, assault, unlawful discharge of a fi rearm, and disorderly conduct, according to Eugene Police. Police said a man reported being shot in the face with a “real- istic-looking airsoft gun at 14th and Willamette by someone in a sedan that had driven past him,” at 11:44 p.m. Aug. 3. Two other people reported similar incidents in a close time and proximity, including one riding an elec- tric scooter who claimed he was “almost hit by the vehicle as it left the area,” police said. The vehicle was spotted by responding offi cers near 11th and Willamette and Hill and James were cooperative, said police, who cited them for the aforementioned charges in lieu of arrest. “We have high standards and expectations for the student-ath- letes in our program,” Oregon coach Mario Cristobal said via a spokesman. “We were made aware of the situation and are in process of gathering all of the related information, after which we will take appropriate action.” Under Oregon law, reckless endangering is a Class A misde- meanor, disorderly conduct is a Class B misdemeanor, unlawful use of a weapon is a Class C felony and assault can be either a misde- meanor or felony depending on the degree charged. Class A misdemeanors are subject to a $6,250 fi ne and/or one year in jail, Class B misdemeanors are subject to a $2,500 fi ne and/or six months in jail and Class C felo- nies can result in up to fi ve years in prison and/or a $125,000 fi ne. Ashley Landis/The Associated Press, File Oregon safety Jamal Hill (19) celebrates after a play during the fi rst quarter of the Pac-12 Conference championship Dec 18, 2020, against Southern California in Los Angeles.