E AST O REGONIAN SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2021 FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS | FACEBOOK.COM/EOSPORTS Griswold head volleyball coach Chelsa Hopper poses on Oct. 15, 2021, with her varsity team in an Oregon Army National Guard helicopter that landed on the school fi eld. Hopper is a mem- ber of the unit based out of Pendleton. B1 Mountaineers look to end losing streak in matchup with MSU-Northern By DAVIS CARBAUGH The Observer ONE COOL JOB Griswold volleyball coach works with helicopters in Army National Guard See EOU, Page B2 By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian HELIX — The whole “my job is cooler than your job” ends with Griswold High School volleyball coach Chelsa Hopper. The 2013 Pendleton High School graduate is in her second year of coaching the Grizzlies, but her day job for the past eight years has been with the U.S. Army National Guard. Sgt. Hopper, 27, is a fl ight oper- ations specialist — FOS — with a helicopter crew based out of Pendleton. She helps with mission planning and giving coordinates when the helicopter is in the air. “I wish my job was on the heli- copter,” Hopper said. “I joined with the intent on being a pilot.” After filling out reams of paperwork, Hopper and a fl ight crew on Oct. 15 fl ew a CH-47F Chinook helicopter to Helix for the entire school and community to enjoy. The volleyball team also had team pictures taken with the helicopter, which has a special connection to the community. The fl ight from Pendleton to Helix is just under 10 minutes. Staff Sgt. James McKnight, a fl ight engineer, is a 2006 Gris- wold graduate. He has the option of giving the helicopter a special f lair, which he did with the school’s mascot on the front of the helicopter, and the word Grizzly with two bears paws on the back ramp. Also from Helix is Chief Warrant Offi cer 3 Ray Talking- ton, an instructor pilot and a 1999 graduate. “We talked about getting it here last year, but it didn’t work out,” Hopper said of the Chinook, which can seat 33 people with seat belts. “Then we decided to bring it here and let everyone enjoy it. It’s pretty cool to have your team mascot on the side of a helicopter.” School students from kinder- garten through high school were ON THE SLATE Saturday, Oct. 23 Photos by Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Griswold High School volleyball coach Chelsa Hopper poses in front of the Chinook helicopter she sup- ports as a member of the Oregon Army National Guard unit based out of Pendleton. Hopper and the heli- copter crew visited Helix on Oct. 15, 2021. able to get a close up view of the Chinook, and take a tour inside. They also got Army stickers and lanyards. Residents of the small farming community also took in the sights. When a town of 184 people gets a Chinook helicopter land at the school, it’s a community event. “She was a student when I worked in Pendleton,” Helix Superintendent/Principal Brad Bixler said. “It’s so exciting to see her working with kids. With her guard experience and coaching, she is giving back to her commu- nity. My dad was a pilot in the Air Force and I always enjoyed being at the fi eld. She put in a lot of paperwork to get this here.” Military in her veins Hopper’s dad, 1st Sgt. Richard Shaver with the Army National Guard, was in the Guard when she was growing up. “I was always interested when I was younger,” Hopper said. “My junior and senior year in high school, I was a little more invested. They let me hang out ilders and go inside the Chinook. I was hooked.” Hopper joined the National Guard her senior year in high school, and participated in the Recruit Sustainment Program one weekend a month. The program introduces new recruits to the fundamentals of the U.S. Army before they leave for basic train- ing. Right out of high school, Hopper went to basic training at Fort Jackson in Columbia, South Carolina. From there, she did her military occupational special- ties training at Fort Rucker in Alabama. Hopper was deployed to Kuwait and Iraq in 2015-16, and spent 9 months in country. “It was defi nitely hot there,” she said. “It got up to 130 (degrees) on a couple of occasions. You sweat so much.” Since she’s been back, she’s had her sights set on becoming a helicopter pilot. “I have been dragging my feet,” Hopper said. “I have been study- ing. The school to fl y Chinooks is a year and a half in Alabama. It’s a lot of work to get there, but that is my goal.” Her husband, Darren Pahl, who is an accountant, has mixed feelings on the pilot program. “We have talked about it a lot,” Hopper said. “He hasn’t lived anywhere but Oregon. He doesn’t want to move to Alabama, but he wants me to achieve my goals.” There aren’t very many female pilots in the military, regardless of the branch, but that doesn’t deter Hopper. “I have been the only female at schools I have been to,” she said. “It’s not anything new. There are more FOS than mechanics. We just don’t have very many females in the military.” For now, Hopper gets her fi x when the helicopter is going to Salem to pick something up or on a training fl ight. “There is a jump seat between the pilots, but I like sitting in the back end and dangling my feet as we fl y,” she said. “That is my favorite place.” College football Eastern Oregon at MSU-Northern, noon Prep volleyball Echo vs. Ione at Big Sky League tour- nament, 10 a.m. Hermiston at Walla Walla, 3 p.m. BMC District tournament: Heppner at Weston-McEwen, 4 p.m. Prep girls soccer Stanfi eld/Echo at Nyssa, 11 a.m. Umatilla at Four Rivers, 11 a.m. Prep boys soccer Umatilla at Four Rivers, 1 p.m. Prep slowpitch softball Hermiston at University, 11 a.m. College volleyball Multnomah at Eastern Oregon, 5 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 24 College men’s soccer Walla Walla at Eastern Oregon, 4 p.m. Monday, Oct. 25 Prep volleyball Kamiakin at Hermiston, 7 p.m. La Grande at Pendleton, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 26 Prep volleyball Walla Walla Valley Academy at McLoughlin, 7 p.m. Prep girls soccer Irrigon at Stanfi eld/Echo, 4 p.m. Hood River Valley at Pendleton, 4:30 p.m. McLoughlin at Baker, 5 p.m. MCC/GSL District Tournament: Hermiston at Mead, 7 p.m Prep boys soccer Irrigon at Ukiah/Long Creek, 4 p.m. Pendleton at Hood River Valley, 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 27 Boys prep soccer Baker at McLoughlin, 5 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 28 Prep volleyball Hermiston at Richland, 5:30 p.m. Prep girls soccer Riverside at Umatilla, 4 p.m. NEED ed Bu c n e i r e xp g E ow Hirin N LA GRANDE — Things have taken a rough turn for the Eastern Oregon University football team, but this could be a bounce-back week for the Mountaineers. Coming off a bye week, Eastern will be looking for a win against an 0-7 MSU-Northern team on the road. While the Mountaineers have strug- gled offensively this year and stand EOU at 3-3, the team will have a great has lost opportunity to get 3 games back in rhythm in a matchup with the in a row Lights on Saturday, Oct. 23. “The bye week was exactly what the doctor ordered, getting some guys healthy and getting back to basics,” head coach Tim Camp said. “We got work done and worked on getting back to fundamental foot- ball.” Eastern has fl oundered in its last three matches, dropping games to the College of Idaho, Southern Oregon and Rocky Mountain. The team’s last win came on Sept. 18 against Carroll College in a low-scoring 10-7 victory. New Barn or Office? Tobias Unruh, owner 600 David Eccles Rd Baker City, Oregon Sales Elkhorn Barn Co. Custom Barns and Storage 541-519 -2968 • Elkhornbarns@gmail.com • 509-331-4558