E AST O REGONIAN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2021 FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS | FACEBOOK.COM/EOSPORTS A9 Playoff s on the line for local football teams TigerScots looking to keep a hold on BMC’s No. 2 seed By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian ATHENA — The easi- est way for Kenzie Hansell to keep the Blue Moun- tain Conference race to the playoffs straight is for Weston-McEwen to simply win its game on Friday, Oct. 29, against Grant Union. “That has been our goal all season long,” Hansell said of making the state playoff s. “And, to get better every week. We have done that. Not only as a team, but as a program for the future.” The TigerScots come into the game with a 4-1 BMC record. Heppner, at 5-0, already has won the confer- ence title. The Prospectors are tied with Umatilla at 3-2. The Vikings host Heppner on Oct. 29. The top three teams from the BMC will advance to the state playoff s. “Grant Union is a great program and is well coached,” Hansell said. “The have an aggressive defense, they are disciplined and they do a lot of things well.” The TigerScots, which have a balanced attack between the run and the pass, have scored 206 points this season, and have allowed just 66 points. The Prospectors have scored 188 points, but also have allowed 148. “It will be a great night for football,” Hansell said. “This is what the student-athletes have worked all season. It’s nice to fi nish with a game that has state implications.” Also that night, the TigerScots will induct the 1996 football team, Casey Perkins (quarterback of the 1996 team), John Shafer and Karen Smith Albert into the Weston-McEwen Hall of Fame. “We are excited to have the 1996 team come back and be inducted on a night when two of the top Blue Moun- tain Conference teams are competing for playoff spots,” Hansell said. SPECIAL DISTRICT 2 PLAYOFFS — There will be a full day of football at East- ern Oregon University on Oct. 29 with four games that have state seeding implications. The Ione/Arlington Cardi- nals (5-3) will play Powder Valley at 4 p.m. in the third- fi fth game. “I wasn’t even sure what we were doing until today (Tuesday),” Ione/Arlington coach Dennis Stefani said. “It’s for placement in our league since there are two sides (East and West). We are a little dinged up and a week off would have helped.” There are six guaranteed state playoff spots to be had. In the other games, Elgin and Lyle/Wishram will play at 10 a.m. The winner still is in line for an at-large state berth. Crane and Imbler will play Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File Weston-McEwen’s Levie Phillips (18) carries the ball during an Oct. 1, 2021, game against the Heppner Mustangs in Ath- ena. The TigerScots face the Grant Union Prospectors on Fri- day, Oct. 29, in a game with signifi cant playoff implications. at 1 p.m. in the fourth-sixth game, and Dufur and Adrian will play for 1-2 seeding at 7 p.m. The one wrinkle thrown into all of this is Enterprise, which opted not to play a crossover game. The Outlaws have a majority of their team going to the 94th National FFA Convention this week- end in Indianapolis. The Outlaws still have a shot at an at-large berth because of their state rank- ing. They could snap up the at-large berth that the winner of the Elgin-Lyle/Wishram game is hoping to get. H E R M I ST ON AT HANFORD — The Bull- Bulldogs are going trophy hunting Hermiston draws Lake Washington in fi rst round of state By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian HERMISTON — The Hermiston Bulldogs are no stranger to the 2A/3A slowpitch softball state tournament. The Bulldogs placed second at state in 2019, and despite a few hiccups along the way this season, coach Amy Stone feels her girls have a good shot at bring- ing home some hardware. “The girls just need to show up and play,” Stone said. The Bulldogs (13-8) will open the 2A/3A state tournament at 10 a.m. Friday, Oct. 29, against Lake Washing- ton at the Gateway Sports Complex in Yakima Kathy Aney/East Oregonian “The girls are defi nitely going to Hermiston High School softball head coach Amy Stone pitches to a batter during practice on Tuesday, Oct. 26, have to come out strong and get their 2021. The Hermiston Bulldogs play Oct. 29 in the 2A/3A slowpitch softball state tournament. jobs done,” Stone said. “We have noth- ing to lose. You play game by game and we are one of a few teams that don’t play your heart out. You make them have a majority of their varsity players playing. Some play soccer and volley- beat you, you don’t beat yourself.” Hermiston earned a spot in the ball and others don’t want to play. The fi nal eight after splitting its games girls we do have, they have had to work with University and Mt. Spokane last hard to learn the game, and fi x the things they can.” weekend. All season, outfi elder Eliza Rodri- “Beating University was pretty neat,” Stone said. “They came out guez has powered the Bulldogs at the excited and ready to go. The rough plate. Heading into state, she is hitting part was we came out fl at against Mt. .701 with seven home runs, 32 RBIs Spokane. If we would have come out and has scored 36 runs. She also has not and played, it would have been a much committed an error through 21 games. Alli Serna has hit .621 with 17 RBIs better game.” Hermiston opened the season and 34 runs scored, while Hailey South winning seven of their first eight hit .600 with four home runs, and Macey games, then went into a funk, losing Tovar hit .656 with a handful of doubles. Adding to the fi repower are fresh- their next six games. In the fi nal push at the end of the man Rylee Richman, who is hitting season, Hermiston won fi ve games in a .547 with 12 RBIs and 34 runs scored, row entering the District 8 Tournament. and Kendyl Inners, who is hitting .636 “The girls got nervous playing with fi ve home runs. “She has really stepped up this last against the bigger names and didn’t trust what they could do,” Stone said. half of the season, which has been “They let themselves beat themselves.” great,” Stone said of Inners. Tickets for the state tournament are What makes the Bulldogs a wild card in the tournament, is a majority of sold exclusively online. A ticket for the Kathy Aney/East Oregonian their fastpitch players are not playing entire tournament is $20 for adults and Hermiston High School freshman softball player Rylee Richman $14 for students/seniors/military. Fans fi elds a throw to fi rst base during practice Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2021. slowpitch. “It’s kind of neat,” Stone said. “We also can purchase single-day tickets. Richman has a .547 batting average with 12 RBIs and 34 runs scored. dogs (1-7) are riding high after their 63-36 win over Pasco last week. Quarterback Chase Elliott scored a school record eight touchdowns — fi ve passing, two rushing and one intercep- tion return — against Pasco. The Falcons (1-7) are coming off a 63-28 loss to Mid-Columbia Conference regular-season champion Kamiakin. The winner of the Herm- iston-Hanford game will host Ferris on Nov. 4, in an MCC-Greater Spokane League crossover game. The loser will travel to play Ridgeline on Nov. 4. PENDLETON HAS A BYE — The Bucks will have the week off after Parkrose forfeited to Pendleton last week. The Bucks (9-1 overall, 7-0 SD1), which won the Special District 1 title last week with a 35-6 road win over Ridgeview, will wait with the rest of the teams for the 5A state pairings to come out Oct. 31. ON THE SLATE Thursday, Oct. 28 Prep volleyball Hermiston at Richland, 5:30 p.m. Prep girls soccer Riverside at Umatilla, 4 p.m. Pendleton at Ridgeview, 4:30 p.m. Prep boys soccer Ridgeview at Pendleton, 4:30 p.m. Riverside at Umatilla, 6 p.m. College volleyball Southern Oregon at Eastern Oregon, 7 p.m. College men’s soccer Eastern Oregon at Northwest, 12:30 p.m. College women’s soccer Eastern Oregon at Northwest, 3 p.m. Friday, Oct. 29 Prep football Ione/Arlington vs. Powder Valley, 4 p.m., EOU Hermiston at Hanford, 7 p.m. Heppner at Umatilla, 7 p.m. Nyssa at McLoughlin, 7 p.m. Stanfi eld at Irrigon, 7 p.m. Grant Union at Weston-McE- wen 7 p.m. Prep cross-country Heppner, Nixyaawii, Pilot Rock, Riverside, Stanfi eld/Echo, Umatilla, Weston-McEwen at 3A/2A/1A Special District 5 Cham- pionships, John Day, TBD McLoughlin at GOL District Championships, Milton-Freewa- ter, TBD Slowpitch softball 2A/3A Tournament: Hermis- ton vs. Lake Washington, 10 a.m., Yakima College volleyball Big Bend at Blue Mountain, 6 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 30 Prep volleyball 1A state tournament: Echo vs. TBD 2A state tournament: Portland Christian at Stanfi eld Prep girls soccer District 8 playoff s: Hermiston at Southridge, 1 p.m. College football Carroll College at Eastern Oregon, 1 p.m. SPORTS SHORT Josh Frost named Linderman Award winner East Oregonian COLOR A DO SPR I NGS, Colo. — The Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association Linderman Award is one of the most prestigious awards in pro rodeo. It recognizes a cowboy who won at least $1,000 in three events, and those events must include at least one roughstock and one timed event. The PRCA announced the 2021 Linderman Award winner is Randlett, Utah, cowboy Josh Frost. This past season Frost earned $130,192 in bull riding, $4,110 in tie-down roping, and another $1,070 in steer wrestling. Frost, a two-time Wrangler National Finals Rodeo qualifi er, said in the press release the award means a lot to him, calling it the “most cowboy award” in the sport of pro rodeo. “You have to compete on both ends of the arena in roughstock and timed events,” he stated, “so it’s an award that is hard to qualify for and especially hard to win.” Frost now has won back-to-back Linderman awards. His fi rst came in 2019, then the honor was not awarded in 2020. He said it’s an award he shoots for every season, but it was more diffi cult than ever in 2021. “Every year I set out with the goal of being in the running for the Lind- erman Award,” Frost said. “This year was a little diff erent, I had a big goal of trying to be the PRCA World Champion Bull Rider this year. I went to as many rodeos as anybody, so I was on the road a lot and didn’t get to do as much as I wanted to do in the other events.” Kyle Whitaker holds the PRCA record for most Linderman Awards won with 10 in his ProRodeo career. Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File Josh Frost, of Randlett, Utah, rides Magic Mike for 84.5 points Sept. 15, 2021, on the opening day of the Pendleton Round-Up. Frost is the recipient of the 2021 Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association Linderman Award.