Wednesday, November 3, 2021 A9 SPORTS CROSS-COUNTRY VOLLEYBALL Wallowa Valley boys win district; girls fi nish in fourth Joseph rolls to 20th consecutive win Outlaws will compete in state meet Nov. 6 in Eugene By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — It was yet another solid performance for Zac Knapp and the Wallowa Val- ley boys cross-country team, and a solid gear-up for the state meet this weekend. Knapp set the school record for the second time this season, win- ning an individual district title in a time of 15:14.7 to lead the Outlaws to a 3A District 3 title Friday, Oct. 29, in John Day. “They have been working harder than any team I have had, ever,” head coach Dan Moody said. “They want to make a state- ment. They did that this weekend, but want to at state.” Knapp won by nearly a minute, and was one of fi ve runners in the top 10. All seven Wallowa Valley runners, in fact, fi nished in the top 15 as the Outlaws scored 26 points, outpacing Burns (46) and La Pine (80) for the district title. Bayden Menton was the second Wallowa Valley runner to cross the fi nish line, placing third with a time of 16:23.9. Ian Goodrich followed in fi fth (17:05.1), Levi Ortswam placed seventh (17:32.4) and Chase Homan rounded out the top fi ve for Wallowa Valley in 10th (17:37.8). The rest of the Wallowa Valley runners included Weston Wolfe in 12th (17:49.8) and Andrew Nordt- vedt in 15th (18:29.4). “This is possibly the best team I’ve ever had,” Moody said. “They want to let everyone know this is one of the best teams that has run at state. They are going there to win it no matter what. “Hopefully, in the process, we are going to have everybody (set a personal record) again.” The Wallowa Valley girls placed fourth with a team score of 78 points, behind Union/Cove (33) Burns (52) and Heppner (68) in 3A/2A/1A District 3. The fourth- place fi nish left the girls team two spots shy of qualifying for state. “They did a great job,” Moody said. “We had a bunch of PRs in that race, too. They did everything we could, and we fell short.” Maddie Nordtvedt was the top fi nisher for the Outlaws, tak- ing 11th with a time of 21:50.6. In 18th was Lannie Stonebrink, who posted a time of 22:18.6, and close See Outlaws, Page A10 Eagles sweep Wolves in second-round home playoff game By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain JOSEPH — The Joseph volley- ball team ran its winning streak to 20 straight matches, exacted a lit- tle revenge for a 2019 playoff loss and reached the state quarterfi nals for the fi rst time in three years by sweeping Days Creek in a sec- ond-round home match Saturday, Oct. 30, 25-16, 25-14, 29-27. Players and coach Jill Hite alike said that the Eagles had really good energy during the fi rst two sets, and managed to com- plete the sweep despite lacking some of that energy in the third. “I think in the beginning we did a good job of talking, but toward the end we kind of fell out (of rhythm),” setter Aimee Mey- ers said. “But that just goes to show when we put our mind to it we can do it.” Few, if any, teams in Class 1A have played better than Joseph during the last two months, and the Eagles kept that momen- tum rolling right into Saturday’s match against the Wolves. That the Eagles have played — and defeated — several other highly ranked teams helped entering the playoff s. “I think when we come out of those games (against good teams) and win, it shows us that we can win through anything if we put our mind and work toward it,” Cooper Nave said. The Eagles opened up a dou- ble-digit lead in each of the fi rst two sets, trailed just once the entire match and were only threat- ened by Days Creek late in the third set. Joseph opened the match on a 13-2 run to quickly take an Ronald Bond/Wallowa County Chieftain Joseph’s Cooper Nave serves during a second-round state playoff matchup against Days Creek on Saturday, Oct. 30, 2021. NORTH DOUGLAS VS. JOSEPH MATCH RESULTS ONLINE Due to the North Douglas vs. Joseph quarterfi nal match being played after the Chief- tain’s deadline on Tuesday, Nov. 2, a recap of that match will be online at wallowa.com Wednesday, Nov. 3, and more from that match will be in print Wednesday, Nov. 10. 11-point fi rst-set lead thanks to three kills in four points from Molly Curry. Kills by Emma Orr and Nave gave Joseph its largest lead of the fi rst set at 18-6. Ronald Bond/Wallowa County Chieftain See Joseph, Page A10 Abby Orr returns a ball during Joseph’s playoff match against Days Creek on Saturday, Oct. 30, 2021. Meyers headlines all-league squad as player of the year By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain JOSEPH — The news was a shock to Aimee Meyers. The sophomore setter for the Joseph volleyball team was one of fi ve players named to the Old Oregon League all-league team, and headlined the group by being named the OOL player of the year for the role she played in helping the Eagles to an undefeated league season, a district tournament title and a state playoff berth. “I was honestly very sur- prised,” Meyers said. “I did not think that was something I could get awarded, and was very hon- ored to get that.” She said the quality of players throughout the league, and play- ing what she described as not a big-name role as the setter, was part of why she thought the des- ignation would go toward some- one else. “In the league, there’s just a high number of good players, and as the setter you don’t get as much recognition as the hitter, and that was something that was super honorable for me,” she said. Meyers brings a versatility to the fl oor on both the off ensive and defensive side of the ball. The setter primarily is responsi- ble for getting attackers ready for a kill attempt. And while Mey- ers did so in spades this fall, she Ronald Bond/Wallowa County Chieftain See Meyers, Page A10 Aimee Meyers sets the ball against Days Creek on Saturday, Oct. 30, 2021. Meyers was chosen as OOL’s player of the year. FOOTBALL Outlaws do make playoff s, face long road trip for fi rst game By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — Enter- prise did indeed make it into the 1A state football playoff s. Now, the Outlaws seek their fi rst playoff victory in 23 years. Enterprise, which fi n- ished the regular season ranked 10th in the OSAA rankings, will hit the road to face No. 7 Myrtle Point on Friday, Nov. 5. The Bobcats, like the Outlaws, will be looking to end a lengthy drought of postseason success. Myrtle Point, which enters with a record of 8-2 overall, hasn’t played a state playoff game since 2015, a 49-6 loss at Regis when the team played 2A football. The Bobcats’ last playoff victory was a 12-0 fi rst-round win over Rainier in 2006. Enterprise, which enters the game at 5-3 overall and got in via ranking after for- feiting its position in the Special District 2 crossover, hasn’t played in the postsea- son since a 33-0 loss to Ken- nedy in 2017, and hasn’t won a playoff game since the 1998 semifi nals when it defeated Lost River 23-13. The teams enter with their off enses humming as of late, having both scored at least 50 points the last three times each took the fi eld — all wins. Myrtle Point has reached the 60-point mark twice this year, and is averag- ing 44.9 points per game. Defensively, the Bobcats are allowing 22 points per game. The Outlaws are averag- ing 33.4 points per game on off ense, and 21.7 points per game on the defensive end. At more than 550 miles, the Outlaws will have the longest road trip of anyone playing this weekend when they travel to Southwestern Oregon. Kickoff for the Fri- day contest is at 7 p.m. The winner faces either Powder Valley or Perrydale in the state quarterfi nals next weekend. Eagles eliminated in loss to Powers The Joseph football team hung with Powers for four quarters and did enough defensively to stay in the 1A six-man quarterfi nals Satur- day, Oct. 30, but the Eagles couldn’t generate any off ense against the Cruisers’ defense in a 14-0 loss. Powers, one of three undefeated teams entering the playoff s, recorded its fi rst shutout of the season, though it didn’t register any- thing near the 39.5 points per game it had during the regular season. In fact, a safety was all that was put on the score- board during the fi rst half as the Cruisers took a 2-0 lead into the locker room. Pow- ers, though, put the game away with two second-half touchdowns. Joseph, which traveled roughly 580 miles to South- western Oregon for the con- test — the longest road trip of any team last weekend — fi nished the season with a fi nal record of 4-4 overall. Change it up for the Holidays! 20 % OFF All In-Stock Furniture 800 S. River St., Enterprise, OR 97828 541-426-9228