Wednesday, April 27, 2022 A9 SPORTS FOOTBALL Ad hoc committee makes fi nal recommendation to OSAA Executive board to vote on football plan in early May By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain WILSONVILLE — The fi nal recommendation of the Oregon School Activ- ities Association football ad hoc committee has been made — and little, if any- thing, has been changed from previous proposals. The committee met April 14, and released its fi nal recommendation April 20. The OSAA exec- utive board will vote on the proposal May 2. The fi nal proposal includes support for 1A six-man foot- ball — which has been a pilot program for the last four years — being able to play for an offi cial OSAA state champi- onship. Six-man, under the recommendation, will have an eight-team bracket, con- sisting of three teams from the nine-team Special District 1, and fi ve teams from Special District 2, which has 14 teams in it. Joseph Charter School has been among the most domi- nant during the six-man pilot, having won a de-facto cham- pionship the fi rst season of the six-man pilot and playing for a title in Year 2. It, along with Echo, Huntington, Pine Eagle and Prairie City/ Burnt River, are the six-man schools based in the north- eastern corner of the state. Eight-man football will also see a shake-up at the playoff level, as the 26 schools slated to play at the larger 1A level will be placed into a 12-team bracket, a change from the 16-team format the schools have had for decades. Four teams will automat- ically qualify from both SD1 and SD2, with four additional at-large slots being fi lled based on OSAA rankings. Special District 2 has a large local fl avor, as nine of the 14 schools — Cove, TRACK AND FIELD Elgin, Enterprise, Imbler, Ione/Arlington, Pilot Rock, Powder Valley, Union and Wallowa — are based in either Union, Wallowa, Uma- tilla or Morrow counties. 1A8-Special District 2, in addition to the nine afore- mentioned schools includes Adrian, Crane, Dufur, Lyle/ Wishram/Klickitat, and Sherman/Condon. And 1A6-SD1 has Day- ville/Monument, Harper, Wheeler County and South Wasco County, in addition to the above-named schools. The committee has com- pletely done away with an idea it fl oated of banning schools who play down a classifi cation from the post- season, according to a report from The Oregonian. Region- ally, that keeps Enterprise, Riverside and Umatilla, as schools playing down, eligi- ble for the postseason. The proposal, if approved by the board, will go into eff ect this fall for the 2022- 26 time block. BASEBALL Wallowa Valley splits with Irrigon Chieftain staff Ronald Bond/Wallowa County Chieftain Joseph’s Reece Nelson competes in the long jump at the 1A/2A/3A Regional track meet Saturday, April 23, 2022, in La Grande. Nelson’s strong day pushes Joseph boys to second place By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain Ronald Bond/Wallowa County Chieftain See Track, Page A10 Enterprise’s Nevaeh James competes in the girls 100-meter run at the 1A/2A/3A Regional track meet Saturday, April 23, 2022, in La Grande. L EHS track has strong eff ort at Athena ATHENA — The Enter- prise track and fi eld team posted 20 top-four fi nishes — a dozen on the boys side and eight on the girls side — at the 2A Special District 5 preview meet Tuesday, April 19, in Athena. The lone win April 19 came from Zac Knapp, who won a thriller in the boys 800-meter run. Knapp, who was aiming for the school record in the race, missed by fewer than three seconds, but had enough to hold off two fi erce competitors in the race. His winning time of 2:01.13 edged Trevor Nichols of Heppner by 0.25 seconds, and was 1.25 sec- onds ahead of Alex McIn- tyre of Weston-McEwen. Knapp only ran in the 800, but that didn’t pre- vent the Outlaws from scor- ing well in the distance races. Weston Wolfe and Andrew Hurley went sec- ond and third in the 1,500 with respective times of 4:51.46 and 5:00.77, while Liam Wolfe was sixth in 5:20.01, and Tyler Knapp placed second in the 3,000 in 10:53.12. Levi Ortswam and Ransom Peters were in on fi ve of the top plac- ings. Ortswam took sec- ond in the 200 in 24.90 sec- onds, and third in the 100 in 12.50 seconds. He was a tick ahead of Peters in the 100, as Peters took fourth in 12.55 seconds, and fourth in the 200 in 25.42 seconds. The two were also half of the third-place 4x100 relay team, joining Cory Walker and Alex Nordtvedt to earn a time of 47.78. The younger Knapp, the Wolfes and Hurley took fourth in the 4x400 in 4:16.53. Weston Wolfe added a fourth-place fi nish in the 300 hurdles in 46:98. Roan Flynn was seventh in the same race in 49.03, and was fourth in the long jump at 17 feet, 6-1/2 inches. And Nordtvedt took fi fth in the 400 in 57.13, and eighth in the 200 in 26.67. For the girls, Althea Komiskey, Maddie Nordt- vedt, Lannie Stonebrink and Nevaeh James took second in the 4x100 relay in 54.82 to lead the EHS eff ort. James took third in both the 100 (14.00) and the 200 (29.20), and Sophia Espi- noza added a third-place fi nish in the discus throw with a mark of 84-feet-10¾. A handful of athletes took fourth — as Madison Wigen, Komiskey and Jada Gray all reached a mark of 4-feet-6 to tie for fourth in the high jump, and Gray took fourth in the 100 hur- dles in 21.93. Nordtvedt, Kendall Wigen and Alisha Melville went 5-6-7 in the 400 with times of 1:08.19, 1:09.59 and 1:10.61, respectively. And Stonebrink added an eighth-place fi nish in the 200 in 32.19. The EHS boys took fourth as a team with 75 points, while the Outlaw girls were sixth with 37.2 points. See Baseball, Page A10 SOFTBALL Outlaws bury Irrigon Chieftain staff A GRANDE — Reece Nelson had a big day Saturday, April 23, to help the Joseph track team to second place at the 1A/2A/3A regional track meet at Eastern Oregon University. The senior set three personal bests as he won the high jump and long jump and took second in the triple jump. The eff ort helped the Eagle boys take second with 65 points, just one point behind meet winner Powder Valley. Chieftain staff IRRIGON — The Wal- lowa Valley baseball team settled for a road split at Irrigon in Special District 5 action Friday, April 22, earning a 2-1 win in the opener before falling in the nightcap, 6-4. The teams were score- less in the opener until Spencer Decker’s RBI groundout in the sixth put the Eagles ahead 1-0. Cody Fent added a needed insur- ance run in the seventh with an RBI groundout for a 2-0 lead. He also earned the win on the mound in relief, striking out fi ve, and allow- ing one unearned run on two hits in 2-2/3 innings. The Eagles won despite having just one hit in the game. In the second game, the Knights jumped out to a 6-0 lead after three innings before Wallowa Valley rallied. Jaxon Grover’s two-run double and a Maclane Mel- ville RBI single in the fi fth made it 6-3. Gabe Nobles scored in the sixth to pull the Eagles closer, and Wal- lowa Valley had the tying runs on in the seventh, but fell short. IRRIGON — It didn’t take much for the Wal- lowa Valley softball team to get past Irrigon on Friday, April 22. Both Liz Rowley and Aimee Meyers threw three-inning no-hitters — with Meyers’ being a per- fect game — and the Out- laws needed just six innings to get two wins, 16-0 and 15-0. Both games were over in three frames. Rowley struck out eight of the 10 batters she faced, with just one getting on via a hit by pitch. Meyers kept her slate fl awless, striking out four batters and facing the minimum. In the opener, Wallowa Valley plated nine fi rst-in- ning runs to set the tone for the day. The Outlaws were up by 11 after two and put the 15-run mercy rule in by place with fi ve more in the third. Rilyn Kirkland had fi ve RBIs and fi nished 3-for-3 in the opener. Sydney Hopkins was also 3-for-3, and scored three times. Ten players had at least one hit and nine scored. See Softball, Page A10 GOLF Homan takes second in Union Chieftain staff UNION — Wallowa/ Joseph’s Chase Homan fi red an 81 to take second over- all at the Buff alo Peak Invi- tational in Union Friday, April 22. Homan carded two bird- ies on the day and shot a 39 on the front nine to put him in position for the strong day. Only Ontario Tyce Helmick, who had a 73, was better. Owen Gorham also cracked 100, fi nishing with a score of 98, and Jonas McKee added a 119 for Wal- lowa/Joseph, which had just three golfers take part April 22. Enterprise took second as a team with a score of 413, trailing just Ontario, which shot 367. Dylan Jennings led the way with a score of 97, with Alex Albanez right behind him with a 99. Nathan Lamb was third on the team with a score of 106, Parker Siebe shot 111 and Caleb Sheahan rounded out the scoring with 113. For the Enterprise girls, just three athletes scored: Jordyn Stonebrink turned in a round of 115, Ashlynn Greer posted a 143, and Kimber Stein shot a 159. 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