E AST O REGONIAN TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 2022 FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS | FACEBOOK.COM/EOSPORTS A10 Jennings hits best throw in the nation at La Grande Invite Pendleton javelin thrower breaks own school record By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian LA GRANDE — Pend- leton’s Sam Jen n i ngs unleashed a throw of 209 feet, 5 inches to win the jave- lin event by more than 70 feet on Friday, April 8, at the La Grande Invite. The throw was the best in the nation this spring, and Jennings also broke his own school record of 198-11, set on April 30, 2021. “He was throwing into the wind and still threw 209,” Pendleton coach Larry Brizendine said. “He hit that on his fi rst throw. It was 40 to 50 feet out of the fl agged-in area.” Jennings said it was all about timing the wind. “It would stop blowing for like 30 seconds,” he said. “Once the wind gets a hold of it, you aren’t getting it back. I Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group Pendleton’s Sam Jennings had a winning javelin throw of 209 feet, 5 inches on Friday, April 8, 2022, at the La Grande Invitational. Jennings’ mark is the longest in the nation this spring. was hoping for a little more, but the conditions weren’t ideal for big throws. I was happy to get over 200 feet.” The Pendleton boys won the team title with 152 points, followed by Baker (73), College Place (65) and host La Grande (62). “We had a fantastic day,” Brizendine said. “It was a cold, windy day and they still did a whole bunch of good stuff .” Starting with senior Drew Reyburn, who won the 300 hurdles in a time of 43.76 seconds. He also was fourth in the 110 hurdles (18.65). “Drew just absolutely exploded today,” Brizendine said. “He was really good in the 300s. We were really strong in the hurdles today.” So phomo r e Nat h a n Neveau won the shot put with a mark of 45-7 ¼, and was second in the discus (137-2). Both marks were personal bests. Pe n d l e t o n’s B r o c k Mackey won the 200 (23.66), was third in the 100 (11.73), and ran the second leg on the 4x100 relay team (46.51) that placed second to Baker by a half step. Nolan Mead of Pendle- ton cleared 6 feet to win the high jump, and had a leap of 18-5 ¾ to fi nish second in the long jump. Teammate Ben Jennings was third in the long jump (18-3 ¾) seventh in the triple jump (36-3 ½). James Thatcher added a second-place fi nish in the 800 (2:06.38) for the Bucks, while Trey Boston was second in the 400 (53.69). Mac-Hi’s Johnny Koklich ran a personal best 11.70 to NO HOLDING HER BACK place second in the 100, and was seventh in the 200 (24.55). In the girls’ meet, Pend- leton won the team title with 122.5 points, followed by Baker (95.5) and La Grande (88). Pendleton’s Reilly Lover- check won the 100 hurdles (17.09), the 300 hurdles (48.58) by almost 4 seconds, and soared to victory in the long jump with a mark of 16-2 — a foot better than teammate Muriel Hoising- ton, who was second. Kelsey Lovercheck won the 200 (27.32), and led a parade of three Pendleton pole vaulters with a height of 9 feet. Julia Naughton (8-0) was second, and Shaelynn Silva (7-6) was third. Pendleton’s Jamie Gau won the high jump at 4-10. Stanfi eld/Echo’s Jacque Kerns had a busy, yet productive day. She placed second in the high jump (4-8), was third in the 400 with a personal best time of 1:05.54, and she fi nished fi fth in the long jump (14-6). ON THE SLATE Schedules are subject to change TUESDAY, APRIL 12 Jenness to play volleyball at Thiel College to watch the team play. I was still hurt at the time.” While Jenness played mostly middle for the Bucks, she also has played outside hitter, a position she plays for her club team East- ern Heat 18U. “I’m playing outside for my club team, and I think he (North) wants me to play outside too. I like outside a lot better.” By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian P EN DLETON — College volleyball didn’t look too prom- ising for Daisy Jenness after she missed her senior year at Pendleton High School. The 5-foot-11 middle/outside hitter tore her ACL on June 17, 2021, during the third quarter of a basketball game against Redmond and did not return. She had surgery, went through months of rehab, and was able to play the last few games of her senior year of basketball. “At fi rst I didn’t think I would be able to play college sports and I kind of lost myself for a bit,” Jenness said. “I was determined to get back for basketball season. I think I played fi ve games. The doctor said I wouldn’t be able to come back for basketball, but I got to. I was excited to be back.” College sports are now a real- ity for Jenness, who recently signed to play volleyball for Thiel College in Greenville, Pennsyl- vania. “They found me through a recruiting app I have,” Jenness said. “The head coach (Tyler North) reached out to me. I did a lot of research when I got his text.” Jenness made a visit to the campus in December. It felt like home, she said, minus the Pend- leton Round-Up. “It was really nice, but it was cold,” Jenness said. “It was really pretty. I am going so far away to go to a town just like Pendleton.” Thiel College is a private A three-sport star East Oregonian, File Pendleton’s Daisy Jenness (9) leaps to hit the ball during the fi rst set against Hermiston on March 11, 2021. Jenness has signed to play vol- leyball at Thiel College in Pennsylvania. liberal arts school with an enroll- ment of about 800 students in the heart of scenic northwest Penn- sylvania. Volleyball is one of its 25 NCAA Division III varsity and club sports. The Tomcats play in the Pres- idents’ Athletic Conference, where they lost in the champion- ship quarterfi nals last fall. They finished 11-7 in PAC play and 11-19 overall. “I liked the idea of going to a small school,” said Jenness, who plans to major in biology and minor in journalism or Spanish. “It seemed like a good place to start. I got to go to an open gym Jenness also is a talented basketball and softball player, but volleyball always has been her favorite. “I think volleyball has been my favorite since I’ve been in high school,” she said. “I wanted to play in college. It will be sad not to play basketball and softball. Going to a school like Pendleton lets you be able to try diff erent things. You can play multiple sports and not have to pick one or another.” Jenness was named a second- team Intermountain Conference middle her sophomore and junior volleyball seasons. “She wanted to pursue volley- ball and she made it happen,” said former Pendleton volleyball coach Amanda Lapp, who stepped down after last season. “She’s put in a lot of hard work coming back from her injury, but she’s ready to dive in.” Despite missing the last three games of her junior basketball season, Jenness earned first- team Intermountain Conference honors. This spring, she’s playing her fourth year of softball for the Bucks, who are 8-1 to start the season. Jenness is hitting .346 with two doubles, one triple, one home run and seven RBIs. “I’m really liking it this year,” said Jenness, who plays center fi eld. “We have a pretty good team.” Prep baseball Irrigon at Umatilla, 4 p.m. Pilot Rock at Riverside, 4 p.m. Weston-McEwen at Stanfi eld/Echo, 4 p.m. Southridge at Hermiston, 4 p.m. La Grande at Pendleton, 4:30 p.m. Heppner at Grant Union, 4:30 p.m. Prep softball McLoughlin at Echo/Stanfi eld (2), 3 p.m. Pendleton at La Grande, 4 p.m. Irrigon at Umatilla, 4 p.m. Pilot Rock at Riverside, 4 p.m. College Place at Weston-McEwen, 4:30 p.m. Hermiston at Kennewick, 5 p.m. Boys soccer Hermiston at Pasco, 7 p.m. Prep tennis Hermiston at Southridge, 4 p.m. Weston-McEwen at Ione/Heppner, 3:30 p.m. Stanfi eld/Echo at McLoughlin, 4:30 p.m. College softball Blue Mountain at Columbia Basin (2), 2 p.m. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13 College baseball Blue Mountain at Treasure Valley (2), noon Prep tennis Pendleton boys at The Dalles, 3 p.m. The Dalles girls at Pendleton, 3 p.m. Prep golf Echo at Burns Invite, Valley Country Club, TBD Pendleton girls at Hood River, noon THURSDAY, APRIL 14 Prep baseball Pendleton JV at Heppner, 3 p.m. Irrigon at La Grande JV, 4 p.m. Prep softball Pendleton JV at Irrigon, 4 p.m. Boys soccer Hermiston at Chiawana, 7 p.m. Prep golf Hermiston at MCC pod, Richland, 10:30 a.m. Prep tennis Weston-McEwen boys and girls at Pendle- ton, 3 p.m. Hanford at Hermiston, 4 p.m. Riverside at Sherman, 4 p.m. Stanfi eld/Echo at Arlington, 4:30 p.m. Track and fi eld Hermiston at River City Relays, Hanford, TBD Ione, Irrigon, Umatilla at Columbia River Invitational, Riverside, 3:15 p.m. SPORTS SHORT Forfeit improves Bend semipro indoor football team to 2-1 EO Media Group R E DMON D — T h e Oregon High Desert Storm indoor semipro football team improved its record to 2-1 after the SoCal Red Tails forfeited the game Saturday, April 9. The Storm lost its season opener March 26 at Pasco against the Tri-City Rush 51-13, but then rebounded on April 3 at home, defeating the Washington Elite 58-20. The Storm (2-1) play in the American West Football Conference, which this season includes six teams: the Storm, the Elite, the Rush, the Idaho Horsemen, the Wenatchee Valley Skyhawks, and the SoCal Red Tails. The Red Tails’ home arena is the Grand Arena in the City of Industry, California, east of Los Ange- les. The Storm is scheduled to play nine regular season games, the fi nal game slated for June 18. Their next home game is against the Rush on April 30. Tickets, a complete schedule and more information are avail- able at www.oregonstorm.com. The Oregon High Desert Storm’s Parker Lapsley (22) runs through the Idaho Horsemen’s defenders during a semipro indoor football playoff game in 2021 in Redmond. The Storm is at 2-1 in the new season after the SoCal Red Tails forfeited Saturday, April 9, 2022. Dean Guernsey/ The (Bend) Bulletin, File