E AST O REGONIAN Thursday, May 12, 2022 FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @EOSPORTS | FACEBOOK.COM/EOSPORTS A8 What a day to be a Pirate Riverside is part of record-setting game amid bussing issues Mike Mitchel/Contributed Photo By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian Former Hermiston football coach Mike Mitchell, shown here during his stint at North Medford High School, where he coached 2012-17, is the new football coach at Caldera High School in Bend. B Oar dMaN — T he r ive r side baseball team was part of a record-set- ting game Friday, May 6, at Nyssa — and it had nothing to do with its bus breaking down three times, or the Pirates return- ing home 23 hours after they left. The Bulldogs and Pirates combined for 66 runs in the second game of their East- ern Oregon League double- header, tying a 45-year-old Oregon record for the most runs in a single game. dufur and Cascade Locks combined for 66 runs in 1977 when the rangers beat the Pirates 63-3. riverside’s 30 runs set an Oregon record for most runs by a losing team. “I was happy,” river- side coach Tyler davis said. “After that first game, we were short on pitchers for the day. We tried to extend the arms as much as we could. It was a close game until we had to go to our bench.” riverside scored nine runs in the first inning, then gave up 11 to Nyssa. Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Riverside’s Tyler Thomas hits the ball April 8, 2022, against Irrigon. Riverside was part of a record-setting game Friday, May 6, at Nyssa, with the two teams combining for 66 runs in one game. “With the inexperience, it has been a pretty up and down year,” davis said. “I was a little worried how they would respond. We hadn’t given up 11 runs in an inning.” r ive r side pit che r s combined to throw 291 pitches, and simply ran out of arms down the stretch as the Bulldogs hung on for a 36-30 victory in a game that lasted nearly four hours. “They did as good as I could have hoped for a bunch of freshmen with little experience.” riley Lantis led the Pirates with three doubles, five runs scored and seven rBIs. Will Killion added four hits, five rBIs and three runs scored. See Pirates, Page A9 Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Riverside runner Riley Lantis crosses home plate while playing Irrigon on April 8, 2022. Plenty of Riverside players made it to home Friday, May 6, on the road against Nyssa — losing 36-30, a state record for most runs by a losing team. Former Hermiston coach on the sidelines in Bend By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian BENd — Former herm- iston football coach Mike Mitchell is returning to the sidelines in Oregon, this time as the coach at Caldera, Bend’s newest high school. “This is a really good opportunity, and I decided to come back and put this together,” Mitchell said. Caldera, which opened last year and played a junior varsity schedule, will make its varsity debut this year. Mitch- ell replaces Neil Fendall, who stepped down to become the defensive coordinator at southern Oregon university. Mitchell grew up in des Moines, Washington, and went to Mount rainier high school. he played football at Idaho for one year under dee andros, then followed andros to Oregon state Something powerful and beautiful is rising from the ashes across our state. Our communal hardship has rekindled in us one of our greatest and most unifying strengths — kindness. So elemental, yet so brave. Awakened by an urgent need for connection and compassion. Kindness has inspired us to listen. To learn. To lend a hand. To take care of each other. Now we have the opportunity to keep it lit. Let's not let it smolder. Let's fan the embers in our hearts. Let's keep kindness at the forefront of our lives, and live as open examples of it. Kindness inspires kindness. And here, in our Oregon, that is what makes us — NeighbORly [ INSPIRING KINDNESS ACROSS OREGON ] L E A R N | CO N N EC T | D O N AT E | G E T I N S P I R E D O R E G O N C F.O R G /N E I G H B O R LY university, where he was a backup quarterback for the Beavers. His first job out of college was as the offensive coor- dinator at Corvallis high school, where he coached a young Mike riley, who would later coach at Oregon state university. The following year in 1969, at just 23 years old, Mitchell accepted the coach- ing job in hermiston. at the time, he was the youngest coach in the state, and was inheriting a program that had gone a combined 0-32 the previous three years. “Jack Jenkins was the principal at the time,” Mitch- ell said. “I told him I wasn’t ready to be a head coach yet. he told me I had to get ready sometime. Best thing that ever happened to me.” See Coach, Page A9