E AST O REGONIAN TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 2021 FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS | FACEBOOK.COM/EOSPORTS A10 Oregon, OSU to require vaccination proof to attend games The Associated Press EUGENE — Oregon and Oregon State became the fi rst Power Five schools to announce they will require proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test for people over the age of 12 to attend football games. In its announcement Friday, Aug. 20, Oregon said the decision was made with public health author- ities and “peer institutions in the state.” The mandate went into eff ect Aug. 23 and came at the end of a week when state offi cials warned of rapidly fi lling hospitals as daily reported cases reached record numbers. Oregon is one of several Pac-12 schools that is requiring students and employees to be vaccinated or apply for an exemption. The Oregon football team opens its season at 54,000-seat Autzen Stadium in Eugene on Sept. 4 against Fresno State. Oregon State begins its home schedule at Reser Stadium on Sept. 11 against Hawaii. Earlier in the day, Hawaii became the fi rst major college foot- ball school to say it would have no fans in attendance for its opening sports events of the season because of a recent COVID-19 surge. Hawaii’s fi rst home football game is Sept. 5 against Portland State. The moves come about a week after Tulane in New Orleans became the fi rst school that plays football at the NCAA”s highest subdivision to require proof of vaccine or negative test to attend sporting events. Tulane’s decision followed a mandate set by city offi cials that also impacts the NFL’s Saints, but schools officials said they were moving toward instituting the policy on their own. NEW, RETURNING BUCKS CONVERGE ON THE MORROW COUNTY RODEO The 99th annual rodeo brought record-breaking crowds to the competition By NICK ROSENBERGER East Oregonian HEPPNER — It was anyone’s game at the Morrow County Rodeo on Saturday, Aug. 21, in Heppner. The day brought dozens of rodeo newcomers and old-timers from across the region to watch competitors face off in the 99th annual Northwest Pro Rodeo Associa- tion Oregon Trail Pro Rodeo for a shot at prize money in front of a record-breaking crowd. Kelton Maxfi eld, a novice bareback rider coming from Nampa, Idaho, was the fi rst winner of the night and was the only bareback rider who managed to stay on for the full eight seconds to receive a score of 81, winning the event in the Oregon Trail Pro Rodeo. “I’m feeling great,” Maxfi eld said. “I mean I’m having a blast.” Maxfield, who attends Columbia High School in Nampa, said this is his second year rodeoing but has squeezed in somewhere around 150 rodeos between school in that time. During his summer break from school, he said he’s able to go to a lot more rodeos but that he’s been training every day on the spur board that he built himself. “Sometimes it just hurts and you’re not having any fun but for the most part it’s just a blast,” he said. “The feelings that come with it are just amazing.” Brailey Shaye Murray, of Harrisburg, felt similarly about her own path in the rodeo world. Having ridden horses her whole life, Murray really only started to get serious a few years ago and marked this weekend as her fi rst time at the Heppner rodeo. “I loved it,” she said. “I love the ground, I loved the community.” Murray said she’s been roping for about three years and barrel racing for about fi ve and rode her horse, Materbug, in both events on Aug. 21. “Just the atmosphere, the people, you can’t get it anywhere,” she said. Her parents were familiar faces to the area, however, after being involved in rodeos all over the state for decades. Her father could even be seen helping out inside the arena on Aug. 21. when they were down a volunteer. But it wasn’t just the competitors that saw the crossroads of returners and newcomers. With red sequins fl ashing and fl ags fl utter- ing through the air, members of the Owyhee Nite Dazzlers fl ew out of the gates, their horses churning the ground into a dusty mist. Coming from Treasure Valley, the group is comprised of long-time flag fliers and newcomers alike with a grandmother-grand- daughter duo while another rode with a current rider’s mother while pregnant with her. Many of them had grown up around horses Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Kelton Maxfi eld, of Nampa, Idaho, hangs onto a bronc in the novice bareback competition for a 78-point ride Saturday, Aug. 21, 2021, at the Oregon Trail Pro Rodeo in Heppner. and it had been a logical jump into the arena; for others, however, it took a little bit more. “I used to be scared of horses,” said Cami Cullen, who’s only recently got involved. “I just got hit in the head by one and stopped being scared.” “Everyone here is amazing,” she said. Billy Gentry, a 92-year-old vet and long- time rodeo fan, has seen generations of newcomers come through the Morrow County Fair. After moving to the Heppner area in 1948 from Missouri and working for Columbia Basin Electric for 35 years, he’s seen his fair share of changes. His children and grandchildren, now fully grown, have had their own experiences at the rodeo and, according to Gentry, his son won the saddle bronc a while back and all his grandchildren have won the saddle bronc event as well. Although never having competed himself, he said this was one of his favorite moments through his history with the rodeo. With a gruff voice, a smile on his face and energy belying his age, Gentry recounted helping rebuild the stadium: replacing wood with metal and climbing the poles to fi x lights. “You take away from the community,” he said, “you gotta help put something back.” Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Brailey Shaye Murray, of Harrisburg, rounds the fi rst barrel Saturday, Aug. 21, 2021, during the barrel racing competition at the Oregon Trail Pro Rodeo in Heppner. SPORTS SHORT ”It’s time”: Star goaltender Henrik Lundqvist retires at 39 The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The King has called it a career. Henrik Lundqvist, one of the greatest goaltenders of his generation, announced his retirement Friday, Aug. 20, less than nine months after heart surgery. “It’s time,” the 39-year-old Lund- Kathy Willens/Associated Press qvist wrote in a social media post. New York Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist (30) reacts after the “For the last 30 years, I have devoted Rangers defeated the Washington Capitals on May 12, 2012, in my life to the game of hockey and Game 7 of a second-round NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoff se- now it’s time to walk away from the ries at Madison Square Garden in New York. game I love and begin a new chapter.” Lundqvist also told the Göte- borgs-Posten newspaper he needs a new heart procedure. “We will see how extensive it will be,” he said. “Treatments are getting better, so we will see if they’ll open up the chest or not. But that will be a problem for the future.” The Swede starred for years for the New York Rangers, where he piled up 459 wins along with a a 2.43 goals- against average and 64 shutouts in 15 seasons. He is sixth in NHL history in wins, seventh in saves (23,509), eighth in games played (887), ninth in starts (871), ninth in time on ice (51,816:51) and 17th in shutouts, according to the NHL. He also helped Sweden win gold at the 2006 Turin Olympics. The Rangers bought out Lund- qvist’s contact in September 2020 and he signed a one-year, $1.5 million contract with the Washington Capi- tals in October. He never took the ice after announcing he had a heart condition. The fi ve-time All Star had surgery in January, but didn’t begin workouts until last month.