E AST O REGONIAN FOLLOW US ON SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2021 TWITTER @EOSPORTS | FACEBOOK.COM/EOSPORTS “SHE IS OUR LEADER BECAUSE SHE JUST TAKES CHARGE. SHE’S NOT NECESSARILY LOUD, BUT SHE TAKES CONTROL. WE HAVE A LOT OF SUPPORT BEHIND HER. HER PRESENCE ON THE COURT WILL VERY MUCH BE MISSED.” — Echo volleyball coach Des Thew B1 ON THE SLATE Saturday, Oct. 2 College football Eastern Oregon at Southern Oregon, 1 p.m. College volleyball Northwest at Eastern Oregon, 5 p.m. Prep volleyball Southridge at Hermiston, 1 p.m. Pilot Rock vs. Enterprise at Grant Union, 3:30 p.m. Pilot Rock at Grant Union, 5 p.m. McLoughlin at Dayton-Waitsburg, 12:30 p.m. Irrigon at Vale, 10 a.m. Irrigon at Nyssa, 3 p.m. Riverside at Nyssa, noon Riverside at Vale, 2 p.m. Umatilla at Burns, 1 p.m. Griswold at Imbler, 10 a.m. Prep cross-country Hermiston at Oxford Classic in Bend, 2 p.m. Pendleton, McLoughlin, Stanfi eld/Echo, Weston-McEwen at Pasco Big Cross Invite, 10:30 a.m. Prep girls soccer Nyssa at Stanfi eld/Echo, noon Four Rivers at Umatilla, 2 p.m. Prep boys soccer Four Rivers at Umatilla, noon College men’s soccer Blue Mountain at Wenatchee Valley, noon College women’s soccer Blue Mountain at Yakima Valley, noon Sunday, Oct. 3 College men’s soccer Eastern Oregon at College of Idaho, 3 p.m. College women’s soccer Eastern Oregon at College of Idaho, 5:30 p.m. Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Echo High School’s Faith McCarty prepares to serve the ball Tuesday, Sept. 28, 2021, during a win over the Sherman Huskies in Echo. Monday, Oct. 4 Prep volleyball Heppner vs. Enterprise (at Stanfi eld), 4 p.m. Enterprise at Stanfi eld, 6 p.m. A COMPETITIVE EDGE Echo’s Faith McCarty knows how to work for what she wants By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian ECHO — The McCarty family is competitive, whether it be board games or basketball. That has been very apparent at Echo High School, where the four McCarty sisters — Elizabeth, Hannah, Rachel and Faith — have put their stamp on every- thing from volleyball to basketball to soft- ball and track. That run is about to end as the young- est, Faith, will graduate in the spring of 2022. “It’s the end of an era, for sure,” Echo volleyball coach Des Thew said. “Faith is the fourth of the four girls, and the last one. It has been a good run. In all my years coaching, I’m pretty sure I have had a McCarty the whole time. It will be a loss, for sure, but somebody will step up and fi ll her shoes, just like with the others.” While basketball is McCarty’s favorite sport, you wouldn’t know it by the way she controls the play on the volleyball court. The 5-foot-7 senior is a setter, but when she plays the front row, she plays outside. She will even hit middle for one rotation. “She not tall, but she can jump,” Thew said. “She just knows where to put the ball, and she reads the court really well. She keeps them on their toes. She’ll hit line, they will adjust, and then she will hit cross court, or she will tip. I think if Faith had her way, she’d stay in high school and play forever.” Thew, who is in her second year as head coach of the Cougars, has been coaching at Echo for 12 years. Her fi rst year at the school, McCarty was in the fi rst grade. Now she’s team captain. “Time goes by really fast,” Thew said. Tuesday, Oct. 5 Prep volleyball Pendleton at La Grande, 6:30 p.m. Hanford at Hermiston, 7 p.m. Nixyaawii at Pilot Rock, 6 p.m. McLoughlin at Umatilla, 5:30 p.m. Irrigon at Riverside, 5 p.m. Ione/Arlington at Echo, 5 p.m. Prep girls soccer Hermiston at Hanford, 7 p.m. Pendleton at Hood River Valley, 4:30 p.m. Baker at McLoughlin, 5 p.m. Stanfi eld/Echo at Irrigon, 4 p.m. Umatilla at Riverside, 4 p.m. Prep boys soccer Hood River Valley at Pendleton, 4:30 p.m. Ukiah/Long Creek at Irrigon, 6 p.m. Umatilla at Riverside, 6 p.m. Prep slowpitch softball Moses Lake at Hermiston (2), 4 p.m. Area schools mixed on OSAA classifi cation proposals Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Echo High School’s Faith McCarty (13) waves to spectators during introductions be- fore the beginning of a Tuesday, Sept. 28, 2021, match with the Sherman Huskies in Echo. The Cougars went on to defeat the Huskies. “She is our leader because she just takes charge. She’s not necessarily loud, but she takes control. We have a lot of support behind her. Her presence on the court will very much be missed.” This season, McCarty is averaging eight kills, six assists, 10 digs and two aces per match. The Cougars are 4-0 in Big Sky League play and 11-3 overall. “She is usually our leading attacker, and she shares the setting responsibilities with Nevaeh (Thew),” Thew said. “We run a 6-2, and I love that if something isn’t going well at the net, I can switch things up and somebody produces.” McCarty is more about the team than the numbers. “I have been playing with most of those girls since sixth grade,” McCa- rty said of her teammates. “We all have our own piece that we bring to the team. We are a good team. Once we do some- By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian thing bad in a game, the coaches will pick something out and that’s what we work for that day.” McCarty said she knew the Cougars had something special when they played North Clackamas Christian and South Wasco County in a preseason tournament. “We lost to North Clackamas in three, but we kept up with them,” McCarty said. “They are No. 1 right now. We expect a lot from our team, knowing what we are capable of. Our coaches really work us. We hope to go far.” The Cougars will get a taste of other top teams in the state on Saturday, Oct. 2, when they play in the Eagle Invitational at Damascus Christian. “We are looking forward to the Damas- cus Christian Tournament to see what we are made of,” McCarty said. PENDLETON — Travel time and expense, time lost in the classroom by student-athletes, and league size are some of the biggest concerns by local athletic directors when it comes to the Oregon School Activities Association’s classi- fi cation and districting proposals. At present, the Pendleton OSAA has six clas- sif ications, rang- would like to ing from 6A, which see a change, incorporates the larg- est schools in the state, whereas to 1A, which has the La Grande smaller schools. The OSAA has started would not using en rollment numbers for grades 9-11, instead of 9-12. Everyone else falls in between, and that’s where some of the issues lie. The six-classifi cation proposal would keep schools from Bend and the Salem area together in the 6A Mountain Valley Conference. See McCarty , Page B2 See Schools, Page B2 SPORTS SHORT Mountaineers look to bounce back against Southern Oregon By DAVIS CARBAUGH The Observer Alex Wittwer/The Observer Eastern Oregon University quarterback Kai Quinn hands off to Jordan Eggers during a game Sept. 25, 2021, against the College of Idaho. The Mountaineers lost the game 24-7, dropping the team seven spots in the NAIA Coaches’ Poll ahead of a matchup with Southern Oregon on Saturday, Oct. 2. LA GRANDE — A week after suff er- ing its fi rst loss of the season, the East- ern Oregon University football team faces another big test — this time, on the road. Eastern dropped a 24-7 decision on Sept. 25 at home against the College of Idaho, ending an undefeated start to the season. The loss dropped Eastern from No. 11 to No. 18 in this week’s National Associ- ation of Intercollegiate Athletics Coaches’ Poll. Now at 3-1 on the year, the Mountain- eers will be looking to turn things around against the Southern Oregon Raiders. “I think that the ability to go back out and go to work is the answer,” head coach Tim Camp said. “It was a tough one to swallow, but at the same time there’s still a lot of football to be played.” Each team enters this week’s matchup coming off a very diff erent outcome in Week 4. Southern Oregon trailed Carroll College 33-14 with just more than 11 minutes left in regulation, but scored 20 unanswered points to stun the Saints and earn the team’s second win of the season. The Raiders are currently just one game behind the Mountaineers in the Frontier Conference standings. Against the College of Idaho, East- ern struggled to move the ball off ensively throughout the losing eff ort. The Moun- taineers totaled 259 yards, compared to 419 from the Yotes, and rushed for just 70 yards as a team. The loss comes on the heels of a narrow 10-7 victory at Carroll College in which Eastern tallied just 179 yards of total off ense. Moving into this week’s matchup, Camp emphasized the importance of getting the off ense rolling. “We have to make plays off ensively,” he said. “They’re out there to be made and we’re not making the ones that we’re used to making in the past. It’s not going to change until we change it, so that’s one of the main focus points.”