Baker City herald. (Baker City, Or.) 1990-current, October 21, 2019, Page 5, Image 5

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    BAKER CITY HERALD — 5A
MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2019
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Ducks rally past Washington, 35-31 Oregon State
defensive showdown turned
into an offensive shootout with
SEATTLE — For all he’s ac- both Herbert and Washington
complished in his Oregon ca- quarterback Jacob Eason tak-
reer, Justin Herbert had never ing the spotlight.
faced the challenge of rallying
Eason was great.
from this much of a defi cit,
Herbert was better.
on the road and against the
Down 28-14 after Puca
Ducks’ most hated rival.
Nacua caught a 33-yard TD
Doing so would all but lock pass from Eason on the open-
up the Pac-12 North, keep
ing drive of the second half,
Oregon on the very fringes of Oregon’s touted defense fi nally
the College Football Playoff
showed up and gave Herbert a
conversation and put a nail in chance to rally the Ducks. The
Washington’s hopes of repeat- Ducks pulled within 31-28
ing as conference champs.
on the fi nal play of the third
“I don’t even think we did
quarter when a well-designed
that in high school. It was a lot screen pass on fourth-down
of fun today and glad we got
found Mycah Pittman, and
the win,” Herbert said.
the freshman raced untouched
Herbert capped Oregon’s
36 yards for the score.
rally from a 14-point second-
The Ducks’ defense forced
half defi cit with a 5-yard TD
consecutive three-and-outs,
pass to Jaylon Redd with 5:10 and Oregon marched its way
left, and No. 12 Oregon rallied to the go-ahead score. Be-
to beat No. 25 Washington 35- tween Travis Dye and Cyrus
31 on Saturday.
Habibi-Likio, the Ducks went
What was expected to be a 70 yards in 3 ½ minutes, and
By Tim Booth
AP Sports Writer
Herbert found Redd in the
fl at for the fi nal 5 yards and
the lead. It was the last of
Herbert’s four TD tosses.
“We talk about the harder
it gets the better we play and
that showed up in the second
half,” Oregon coach Mario
Cristobal said.
Herbert fi nished 24 of 38
for 280 yards. He threw TDs
of 12 yards to Spencer Webb
and 16 yards to Redd in the
fi rst half.
The victory gave Oregon (6-
1, 4-0 Pac-12) complete control
in the North Division. Four of
the fi ve other teams already
have three conference losses,
with Oregon State at 2-2 the
closest to the Ducks.
Washington (5-3, 2-3)
reached the Oregon 38 with
2 ½ minutes left, but Eason
was sacked on second and 6
by Popo Aumavae and lost 12
yards. It was the fi rst sack of
the game by either team.
nips California
The Huskies faced third
and 23 after a false start but
got 20 yards back on a pass
to Marcus Spiker. On fourth
and 3, Eason’s pass for Nacua
was high and the Ducks cel-
ebrated a second straight win
over their rivals. Washington
argued there should have
been pass interference on the
throw to Nacua.
“What did it look like to you
guys? You guys got a better
vantage than me. I think we
know,” Washington coach
Chris Petersen said.
Whether it was interference
on not, Washington helped
give away the game with
its stagnant fourth-quarter
on offense. After exposing
Oregon’s defense in ways it
hadn’t during its fi ve-game
win streak since dropping its
season opener to Auburn, the
Huskies had just 52 yards of
offense and two fi rst downs in
the fourth quarter.
By Michael Wagaman
Associated Press
BERKELEY, Calif. —
Having seen his team
dominate California all
game, Oregon State coach
Jonathan Smith felt it was
appropriate that lineback-
er Hamilcar Rashed Jr.
put an emphatic stamp on
the day with with a game-
ending sack.
It was the season-high
ninth sack by Smith’s
defense and helped erase
any lingering memories
the Beavers had after suf-
fering a 45-point loss one
week earlier.
“Overall for our defense
to be able to fi nish it that
way was huge,” Smith said
after Oregon State’s 21-17
win over California on Sat-
urday. “We talked about
putting the previous game
to rest and I thought our
guys did it. Had a great
week of work, energy and
attention to detail, and it
played out today.”
B.J. Baylor scored on a
13-yard touchdown run
with 4:41 remaining for
the game-winning score
after Oregon State blew a
14-point lead.
Jake Luton threw a
pair of touchdown passes,
Artavis Pierce ran for 80
yards to help the Beavers
(3-4, 2-2 Pac-12) win for
the second time in three
games.
“We’re not the same
BYU upsets No. 14 Boise State, 28-25
second home win for the Cougars (3-4)
over a Top 25 opponent this season.
PROVO, Utah — Facing a Top 25
“We needed a game like this to get
team in his fi rst career start didn’t faze that stone rolling again,” Bushman said.
Baylor Romney.
The Cougars’ hopes for a bowl game
Romney threw for 221 yards and two were looking dim after blowing fourth-
touchdowns to help BYU upset No. 14
quarter leads in back-to-back games
Boise State 28-25 on Saturday night.
against Toledo and South Florida. This
The Cougars snapped a three-game
time around, BYU used a big third
losing streak with their fi rst victory over quarter to build a large enough cushion
the Broncos since 2015.
to hold on.
BYU turned to Romney, its third-
The Broncos trimmed an 18-point
string quarterback, with Zach Wilson
defi cit to three late in the fourth quarter.
and Jaren Hall both sidelined with
Chase Cord hit Octavius Evans with
injuries. He threw two scoring passes
a 13-yard TD pass and then Akilian
to Matt Bushman and helped deliver a Butler with a 5-yard TD pass to make it
By John Coon
Associated Press
28-25 with 3:17 remaining.
“There wasn’t one point where we
thought we were going to lose,” Boise
State lineman John Molchon said.
“That’s the one thing about us. No one
had their head down. No one felt very
comfortable in the situation. We all re-
ally truly believed that we were going to
come out on top.”
The Cougars were able to run out the
clock after Austin Kafentzis picked up
a yard on 4th-and-inches from the BYU
34 with 2:17 left.
Boise State (6-1) was dealt a serious
blow to its New Year’s Six bowl hopes
after just its third loss in the series.
Oregon State team as last
year,” said defensive end
Jordan Whittley, referring
to the Beavers’ 49-7 loss to
the Golden Bears in 2018.
“Different team.”
Especially on defense.
Rashed had three sacks
and four tackles for losses,
tied for third-most in
school history. Riley Sharp
also had three sacks.
“It’s the most fun I’ve
ever had,” Sharp said. “Be-
cause our run defense was
really, really good today,
in some situations they
were forced to pass which
allowed us to run some
play calls that allowed
multiple blitzers coming
off the edge and different
schemes to help us get to
the quarterback.”
The defense helped
offset a sporadic day from
the Beavers offense.
Oregon State’s offense
was shut down in the
second half until driving
80 yards for the game-win-
ning score. The Beavers
converted three third
downs on its way to the
end zone, the third coming
when Baylor bulled his
way through the defense
and stretched across the
goal line to score.
Baylor was initially
ruled down short of the
end zone until a side of-
fi cial came in and signaled
touchdown. The play was
reviewed and confi rmed.
NATIONAL WOMEN’S SOCCER LEAGUE
MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER PLAYOFFS
Chicago tops Portland Thorns, 1-0
Real Salt Lake ousts Timbers, 2-1
BRIDGEVIEW, Ill. (AP) —
Sam Kerr scored in the ninth
minute and the Chicago
Red Stars advanced to the
SANDY, Utah (AP) — Jefferson Sava-
rino scored in the 87th minute and Real
Salt Lake beat the Portland Timbers 2-1
in the fi rst round of the MLS playoffs
National Women’s Soccer
League championship match
with a 1-0 victory over the
Portland Thorns on Sunday.
The Red Stars are heading
to a fi nal for the fi rst time
after four straight semifi nal
losses.
Saturday night.
Real Salt Lake advanced to play at the
Seattle Sounders in the conference semifi -
nals Wednesday night.
S COREBOARD
TELEVISION
All Times PDT
Monday, Oct. 21
New England at NY Jets, 5:15 p.m. (ESPN)
Tuesday, Oct. 22
World Series, 4:30 p.m. (FOX)
New Orleans at Toronto, 5 p.m. (TNT)
LA Lakers at LA Clippers, 7:30 p.m. (TNT)
Wednesday, Oct. 23
World Series, 4:30 p.m. (FOX)
Boston at Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m. (ESPN)
Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. (NBCSN)
Denver at Portland, 7 p.m. (ESPN, CNS)
Thursday, Oct. 24
World Series, 4:30 p.m. (FOX)
SMU at Houston, 4:30 p.m. (ESPN)
Milwaukee at Houston, 5 p.m. (TNT)
Washington at Minnesota, 5:20 p.m. (FOX)
LA Clippers at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. (TNT)
Friday, Oct. 25
World Series, 4:30 p.m. (FOX)
Dallas at New Orleans, 5 p.m. (ESPN)
USC at Colorado, 6 p.m. (ESPN2)
Utah at LA Lakers, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)
PREP STANDINGS
Greater Oregon League Football
W
L
3
0
2
1
0
4
Friday games
Baker 47, Ontario 0
La Grande
Baker
Ontario
Special District 3 Football
East
W
L
Adrian/Jordan Valley
5
0
Elgin
4
1
Crane
4
1
Powder Valley
3
3
Pine-Eagle
1
4
Wallowa
1
4
Cove
0
5
Friday games
Crane 56, Wallowa 40
Elgin 50, Pine-Eagle 20
Powder Valley 54, Cove 0
Special District 5 Football
(6-man)
W
L
Joseph
5
0
Prairie City/Burnt River 3
0
South Wasco
3
2
Echo
2
2
Sherman/Condon
2
2
Huntington
1
2
Dayville/Monument
1
3
Mitchell/Spray/Wheeler 0
6
Friday games
Joseph 93, Mitchell/Spray/Wheeler 7
Sherman/Condon 43, South Wasco Co. 19
Prairie City/Burnt River 39, Dayville/
Monument 28
Greater Oregon League Volleyball
W
L
5
0
3
2
1
4
1
4
Saturday matches
No league matches
La Grande
Baker
Mac-Hi
Ontario
Old Oregon League Volleyball
W
L
Powder Valley
10
0
Joseph
9
3
Wallowa
9
3
Imbler
8
3
Cove
6
5
Elgin
5
7
Griswold
2
10
Pine-Eagle
1
10
Nixyaawii
1
10
Friday matches
Elgin 3, Pine-Eagle 0
Powder Valley 3, Cove 0
Saturday matches
Joseph 3, Nixyaawii 0
Joseph 3, Griswold 0
Cove 3, Pine-Eagle 1
Powder Valley 3, Nixyaawii 0
High Desert League Volleyball
W
L
Crane
7
0
Adrian
6
1
Jordan Valley
5
2
Prairie City
4
3
Dayville/Monument
3
4
Huntington
2
5
Harper
1
6
Burnt River
0
7
Friday matches
Huntington 3, Harper 2
Prairie City 3, Dayville/Monument 0
Dayville/Monument 3, Burnt River 0
Greater Oregon League Boys Soccer
W
L
T
Ontario
4
0
1
Mac-Hi
2
2
1
La Grande
2
3
0
Baker
1
4
0
Friday matches
Mac-Hi 1, La Grande 0
Saturday matches
Ontario 3, Baker 1
Greater Oregon League Girls Soccer
W
L
T
La Grande
5
0
0
Ontario
4
1
0
Baker
1
4
0
Mac-Hi
0
5
0
Friday matches
La Grande 6, Mac-Hi 1
Saturday matches
Ontario 2, Baker 0
Jefferson PDX 50, Lincoln 18
Jesuit 63, Southridge 12
Kennedy 27, Colton 6
La Grande 70, Cottage Grove 6
La Salle 49, Milwaukie 14
Lake Oswego 41, Canby 7
Lebanon 63, South Albany 12
Liberty 42, Century 21
Lowell 68, Mapleton 28
Madras 20, Scio 18
Marist 49, Junction City 14
Marshfi eld 16, Elmira 0
Mazama 28, Klamath 0
McMinnville 30, Glencoe 7
McNary 28, Bend 20
Monroe 49, Central Linn 8
Nestucca 55, Portland Christian 13
North Douglas 44, Yoncalla 38
North Lake def. Prospect, forfeit
North Marion 26, Gladstone 20
North Medford 54, Roseburg 7
Oakland 35, Creswell 7
Oakridge 60, Elkton 20
Oregon City 39, South Salem 16
Parkrose 30, Pendleton 19
Pilot Rock/Nixyaawii 50, Dufur 30
Redmond 36, North Bend 24
Scappoose 48, Wilson 13
Sheridan 48, Gervais 0
Siletz Valley Early College 52, Mohawk 6
Silverton 33, Crescent Valley 0
Sisters 16, Philomath 0
South Eugene 55, North Eugene 19
Sprague 18, Summit 13
St. Mary’s 14, Brookings-Harbor 3
Stanfi eld 46, Vernonia 0
Stayton 14, Sweet Home 8
Taft 50, Willamina 0
The Dalles 38, Estacada 14
Thurston 63, Willamette 7
Tigard 41, Lakeridge 14
Tillamook 28, Valley Catholic 22
Triangle Lake 28, Gilchrist 7
Vale 71, Irrigon 19
Warrenton 41, Neah-Kah-Nie 6
West Albany 49, Corvallis 7
West Linn 34, Tualatin 20
West Salem 29, Mountain View 14
Wilsonville 52, St. Helens 0
Yamhill-Carlton 34, Corbett 8
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Friday’s College Football Scores
EAST
Pittsburgh 27, Syracuse 20
Saturday College Football Scores
EAST
Boston College 45, NC State 24
Minnesota 42, Rutgers 7
Navy 35, South Florida 3
Penn St. 28, Michigan 21
Pittsburgh 27, Syracuse 20
SOUTH
Clemson 45, Louisville 10
Florida 38, South Carolina 27
Georgia 21, Kentucky 0
Georgia Tech 28, Miami 21
Indiana 34, Maryland 28
LSU 36, Mississippi St. 13
Texas A&M 24, Mississippi 17
Vanderbilt 21, Missouri 14
Virginia 48, Duke 14
Virginia Tech 43, North Carolina 41
Wake Forest 22, Florida St. 20
MIDWEST
Illinois 24, Wisconsin 23
Iowa 26, Purdue 20
Kansas St. 24, TCU 17
Ohio St. 52, Northwestern 3
SOUTHWEST
Auburn 51, Arkansas 10
Baylor 45, Oklahoma St. 27
Iowa St. 34, Texas Tech 24
Oklahoma 52, West Virginia 14
Texas 50, Kansas 48
FAR WEST
Fresno St. 56, UNLV 27
Idaho 45, Idaho St. 21
Oregon 35, Washington 31
Oregon St. 21, California 17
Portland St. 38, N. Colorado 30
Sacramento St. 49, Montana 22
UCLA 34, Stanford 16
Utah 21, Arizona St. 3
Washington St. 41, Colorado 10
Weber St. 51, N. Arizona 28
Wyoming 23, New Mexico 10
Green Bay
Minnesota
Chicago
Detroit
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East Division
W
L
T
New England 6
0
0
Buffalo
5
1
0
N.Y. Jets
1
4
0
Miami
0
6
0
South
W
L
T
Indianapolis 4
2
0
Houston
4
3
0
Jacksonville 3
4
0
Tennessee 3
4
0
North
W
L
T
Baltimore
5
2
0
Cleveland
2
4
0
Pittsburgh
2
4
0
Cincinnati
0
7
0
West
W
L
T
Kansas City 5
2
0
Oakland
3
3
0
Denver
2
5
0
L.A. Chargers 2
5
0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W
L
T
Dallas
4
3
0
Philadelphia 3
4
0
N.Y. Giants 2
5
0
Washington 1
6
0
South
W
L
T
New Orleans 6
1
0
Carolina
4
2
0
Tampa Bay 2
4
0
Atlanta
1
6
0
Pct
1.000
.833
.200
.000
Pct
.667
.571
.429
.429
Pct
.714
.333
.333
.000
Pct
.714
.500
.286
.286
Pct
.571
.429
.286
.143
Pct
.857
.667
.333
.143
W
6
5
3
2
W
San Francisco 6
Seattle
5
L.A. Rams
4
Arizona
3
North
L
1
2
3
3
West
L
0
2
3
3
T
0
0
0
1
Pct
.8579
.714
.500
.417
T
0
0
0
1
Pct
1.000
.714
.571
.500
Sunday’s Games
San Francisco 9, Washington 0
Green Bay 42, Oakland 24
Buffalo 31, Miami 21
Arizona 27, N.Y. Giants 21
L.A. Rams 37, Atlanta 10
Indianapolis 30, Houston 23
Minnesota 42, Detroit 30
Jacksonville 27, Cincinnati 17
Tennessee 23, L.A. Chargers 20
Baltimore 30, Seattle 16
New Orleans 36, Chicago 25
Dallas 37, Philadelphia 10
Today’s Game
All Times PDT
New England at N.Y. Jets, 5:15 p.m.
Thursday’s Game
Washington at Minnesota, 5:20 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 27
Arizona at New Orleans, 10 a.m.
Tampa Bay at Tennessee, 10 a.m.
N.Y. Giants at Detroit, 10 a.m.
Cincinnati vs L.A. Rams at London,
10 a.m.
Denver at Indianapolis, 10 a.m.
Philadelphia at Buffalo, 10 a.m.
N.Y. Jets at Jacksonville, 10 a.m.
Seattle at Atlanta, 10 a.m.
L.A. Chargers at Chicago, 10 a.m.
Carolina at San Francisco, 1:05 p.m.
Oakland at Houston, 1:25 p.m
Cleveland at New England, 1:25 p.m.
Green Bay at Kansas City, 5:20 p.m.
PREP FOOTBALL
Friday’s Scores
Aloha 22, Mountainside 16
Amity 24, Rainier 20
Bandon 20, Toledo 17
Banks 34, Seaside 6
Barlow 42, Centennial 21
Beaverton 48, Sunset 34
Blanchet Catholic 21, Salem Academy 8
Burns 35, Nyssa 6
Camas Valley 56, Myrtle Point 0
Cascade 63, Newport 0
Cascade Christian 50, Douglas 2
Central 7, North Salem 6
Central Catholic 63, Sandy 17
Churchill 44, Eagle Point 13
Clackamas 55, Reynolds 35
Clatskanie 61, Dayton 6
Coquille 54, Lakeview 18
Crater 48, Ashland 13
Crook County 31, Woodburn 6
Crow def. Jewell, forfeit
Dallas 35, McKay 7
Days Creek 60, Glendale 6
Eisenhower, Wash. 20, Hermiston 14
Glide 14, Lost River 8
Grant 79, Madison 6
Grant Union 54, Riverside 16
Grants Pass 21, Westview 15
Gresham 28, David Douglas 7
Harrisburg 37, La Pine 31
Henley 26, North Valley 6
Heppner 52, Weston-McEwen 0
Hidden Valley 41, South Umpqua 7
Hillsboro 42, Cleveland 14
Hood River 36, Forest Grove 22
Hosanna Christian 54, Chiloquin 6
Ione 41, Imbler 24
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