A10 SPORTS Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, January 26, 2022 Outlaw grapplers compete at John Day Chieftain staff Ronald Bond/Wallowa County Chieftain, File Joseph quarterback Trace Collier tries to elude a Wheeler County defender Friday, Oct. 15, 2021, in Joseph. The OSAA football ad hoc committee is fully supportive of adding an offi cial state championship for six-man football beginning this fall. Football: Continued from Page A9 It is considering add- ing a week to the beginning of the season or to the end, making the season 10 weeks for nine games to be played. It says the consideration would help with odd-num- bered leagues, help offi cials whose ranks are stretched thin and help with transpor- tation issues, among others. Two possibilities are being looked at: one would add a week to the start of the season, moving the fi rst practice this fall to Aug. 8 and the earliest fi rst game to Aug. 25, as opposed to Aug. 15 and Sept. 1. The other option would move the sea- son ending a week later, with the cutoff date Nov. 5 instead of Oct. 29, and the championship games for 1A through 5A on Dec. 3 instead of Nov. 26. The next ad hoc com- mittee meeting is slated for Wednesday, Feb. 2. JOHN DAY — Five Enter- prise wrestlers took to the mat at the Grant Union Tourna- ment on Saturday, Jan. 22, and three of them had success. Gabby Delapena, Will Ogden, and Gunnar McDow- ell all went undefeated in their wrestling pods to lead the Outlaws’ eff ort. Delapena, wrestling in the 125-pound girls bracket, won all three matches by fall. It was a similar day for Ogden at 195, who went 2-0 with two wins by fall, and for McDowell at 220, who went 4-0 and won all his matches by fall. Pearce Schnetzky went 1-3 at 138 pounds, and Tegan Evans dropped four matches at 145. The Outlaws return to the mat Thursday, Jan. 27, at Baker City and Saturday, Jan. 29 at Caldwell. COVID keeps Joseph off the mat The Joseph wrestling team did not compete this week due to COVID-19. The Eagles are slated to return to the mat Saturday, Jan. 29, in Irrigon. Girls: Continued from Page A9 CLAYTON PERRY Pr onsore d b y p S OF THE gle Cap position to win the Ea t, but in ’t sn wa rry Pe on yt Cla e to the final checkpoin Extreme when he cam ove with his team and ended m took a chance, made a rn of the race at about 2:38 a.m. tu re e th g in nn inutes up wi ished in 38 hours, 31 m to seven fin rry Pe . 22 n. Ja . ay Saturd gs (which was down He and his team of do d of the race) are this week’s by the en athletes of the week. oudly op) n Morris Bish (Contributed photo by Elle ally added on in the second half to seal the victory. Libby Fisher added seven points, and Moeller fi nished with six points. Wallowa (9-6 overall, 3-2 Old Oregon League) hosts Imbler Jan. 28 and visits Pine Eagle Jan. 29. “We have a tough stretch coming up the next two weeks, and it will tell us a lot,” Oveson said. I sincerely want to thank all of Wallowa County! The business owners and our community have been very supportive of my journey in helping me become 2022 Miss Teen Rodeo Oregon! Coronation was a huge success because of the love and support of our community! Thank you, Ellen Morris Bishop/For the Wallowa County Chieftain, File Enterprise’s Will Ogden, right, wrestles during the Jo-Hi Wrestling Tournament Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022. Wednesday, Jan. 19 Joseph 45, Pine Eagle 31: Aimee Meyers went off for 15 of her game-high 22 points in the second half, and the Joseph girls bas- ketball team opened an early double-digit lead and coasted to a 45-31 road win against Pine Eagle Wednes- day, Jan. 19, in Old Oregon League play. A balanced eff ort helped the Eagles break out to a quick lead, as they charged ahead 14-1 after one quar- ter and maintained the dou- ble-digit margin at the half, 24-10. Meyers had seven points in the opening 16 minutes, and Molly Curry had all eight of her points in the opening half to lead all scorers. Then Meyers took over, scoring all 11 of Joseph’s points in the third quarter to help the Eagles extend the lead to 35-18. She had seven of the team’s nine fi eld goals after the break. Sarah Orr added six points in the win for Joseph. “We were able to get all 12 girls in the game for signifi cant minutes,” head coach Lance Homan said. “It was fun to see.” Ellen Morris Bishop/For the Wallowa County Chieftain Joseph’s Molly Curry (5) shoots over a pair of Nixyaawii defenders Friday, Jan. 21, 2022. Destiny Wecks Boys: Continued from Page A9 photo credit: Robert McLean the stretch. When the teams met on Jan. 10, Stanfi eld ran away with a 70-41 victory. On Jan. 22, Enterprise grabbed a fi rst-quarter lead and, despite giving up 23 second-quarter points, was down just seven at the half at 34-27. The teams combined for just 12 points in the third, with the lead reaching nine by the end of three. Enter- prise found a rhythm on off ense again in the fourth, with Spencer Decker scor- ing 10 in the period to spark the off ense, but the rally fell short. Decker fi nished with 20 points, a game-high, put- ting in 12 in the second half. Jackson Decker added 10 points and Roan Flynn had seven points, all from the free-throw line. Enterprise (2-13 over- all, 0-5 BMC) visited Hep- pner Jan. 25, then hosts Pilot Rock Jan. 26 and travels to Union on Jan. 29. IT’S IN YOUR INBOX before your mailbox Subscribers can receive daily email updates and uninterrupted digital delivery on a computer, tablet and smartphone free with your subscription. Sign up for free digital access Call 800-781-3214 wallowa.com/newsletters