THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — 5A New sports season begins for Baker ■ Traditional spring sports are playing, and athletic directors are working on plans for unofficial playoffs and state championships By Corey Kirk ckirk@bakercityherald.com No high school sports season can fairly be called normal during the pandemic, but it appears that at least some Baker High School athletes will have a chance to compete for an unofficial state title in their sports later this spring. The Oregon School Activi- ties Association (OSAA), which oversees prep sports in the state, is not sponsoring any regular playoffs or state cham- pionship events this spring. Instead, athletic directors and coaches can set up what- ever system works depending on the school, conference and classification level. Oregon has six levels, rang- ing from the smallest schools in Class 1A, to the largest, in Class 6A. Baker is a member of Class 4A. In late March the OSAA executive board decided to give school officials discretion on how to schedule the final week of competition for the season for traditional spring sports, which is underway. That final week — OSAA calls it the “culminating week” — for baseball, softball, tennis, golf and track and field is May 17-22. The situation was similar for traditional fall sports. Baker’s cross-country teams competed at a state meet for Class 4A runners on April 10 in Eugene. “The Board believes that providing local discretion for culminating week events al- lows schools to make the best decisions for their school and community,” OSAA Executive Director Peter Weber wrote in a memo. With pandemic conditions, and state-imposed restrictions, varying among counties, OSAA officials decided that having traditional playoffs and cham- pionship events, which require schools to travel across the state in some cases, wasn’t feasible. “OSAA-sponsored state championship events would re- quire travel across the state for many schools and potentially include overnight stays depend- ing on the sport, thus creating the type of largescale public events that the OHA and gov- ernor continue to advise against at this time,” Weber said. Suzy Cole, who coaches Baker’s cross-country and track and field teams, said she sup- ports the OSAA’s decision. “I have never encountered an action they have made that has been anything but what they feel is 100 percent the best interest of the athlete,” Cole said. “They go to extremes that they research things, they have a pulse on the entire state and all the schools. So when they come out saying this is what we think is best, I respect it 100 percent.” With the ball in school of- ficials’ court, Buell Gonzales Jr., athletic director for the Baker School District, started laying out a blueprint to coaches of spring sports in a Zoom meet- ing April 6. “There’s just not a one-size- fits-all, and the unique thing about the 4A classification is that it’s bigger but it’s not too big and it’s not too small,” Gonzales said. “There’s enough in the 4A classification where we can do a lot of this, we are spread out, it’s the perfect size, everything just worked out really well.” Enrollment in Oregon’s 34 Class 4A high schools ranges from 355 (Elmira, near Eugene) to 1,118 (Woodburn), according to OSAA. Baker is one of the smaller Class 4A schools, with an enrollment of about 408. As was the case with the Baker High School spring sports SOFTBALL April 17, at Ontario (2 games); April 20, vs. La Grande (2 games, 3 p.m., 5 p.m.); April 21, vs. Grant Union/Prairie City, 4 p.m.; April 27, vs. Nyssa, 5 p.m.; May 4, vs. Ontario, 4 p.m.; May 6, at La Grande (2 games); May 13, vs. Enterprise/Wallowa/Joseph (2 games, 3 p.m., 5 p.m.); May 15, at Nyssa (2 games) BASEBALL April 14, at Grant Union/Prairie City; April 16, vs. Heppner/ Ione (2 games, 3 p.m., 5 p.m.); April 17, vs. Ontario (2 games, noon, 2 p.m.); April 20, vs. La Grande (2 games, 3 p.m., 5 p.m.); April 27, vs. Nyssa (5 p.m.); May 1, vs. La Grande (2 games, 11 a.m., 1 p.m.); May 4, at Ontario; May 8, at La Grande (2 games); May 12, vs. Joseph/Enterprise/ Wallowa/Elgin, 6 p.m.; May 15, at Nyssa (2 games) GIRLS/BOYS TENNIS April 16, at Ontario; April 19, vs. La Grande, 4 p.m.; April 22, at Vale; April 26, at Nyssa; April 30, at Four Rivers (Ontario); May 3, vs. Ontario, 4 p.m.; May 7, at La Grande; May 10, vs. Vale, 4 p.m.; May 14, vs. Nyssa, 4 p.m. BOYS/GIRLS GOLF April 19, Baker Invitational at Quail Ridge Golf Course; April 26, at Burns; May 3, at Ontario; May 10, at La Grande S. John Collins/Baker City Herald File Baker’s Gabbie Treblecock in a 2019 tennis match. “I have a core group of kids that haven’t stopped training since last March, and have remained hopeful even when it’s been very grim.” —Suzy Cole, Baker track and fi eld coach traditional fall sports, Baker teams mainly will compete against schools in Eastern Oregon. In the case of sports that will have a state champion- ship event, the offi cials from the four schools in the Greater Oregon League — Baker, La Grande, Ontario and Mac- Hi — will determine the top two teams that would qualify, Gonzales said. In the case of track and fi eld, golf and tennis, individual performance is also important, as the top fi ve competitors will have a chance to qualify for a season-ending event along with the top two teams. Cole said the goal for track TRACK AND FIELD April 15, Baker Invitational; April 22, at Nyssa; April 29, at Burns; May 7, at La Grande; May 15, at Ontario core group of kids that haven’t stopped training since last March, and have remained hopeful even when it’s been very grim that they would still get a chance to compete,” Cole said. and fi eld is to arrange a state championship event similar to Team sports the cross-country state meet. For baseball and softball, The track meet would take a committee comprising place at a Class 4A school, coaches from each of the six rather than the traditional venue of Hayward Field at the University of Oregon in Eugene. No date or site has been chosen. “We are just having 4A at the meet to limit the size of participants and spectators,” Cole said. She’s excited about the pros- pect of Baker athletes again having the chance to compete against their counterparts from Class 4A schools across the state. “I’m super excited. I have a Class 4A conferences will determine the schedule for competition between the top two teams from each confer- ence. Baker baseball coach Tim Smith will be a member of that committee for his sport. Complicating the situa- tion, he said, is that for base- ball, the Greater Oregon League’s roster of teams is “They’re excited and we’re excited to coach but I reminded them that we have to enjoy what we are doing, we have to work hard, we have to take the COVID protocols seriously because this can be yanked out from under us just like it was a year ago.” — Tim Smith, Baker High School baseball coach different from other sports. “I am not sure how they are going to work ours because we have a hy- brid league, our league is Ontario, La Grande, Nyssa, Burns and Vale,” Smith said. “Two of those schools don’t even have varsity teams.” Although he’s eager to return to the diamond for the fi rst time in more than a year — the 2020 season was canceled while prac- tices were underway but before the Bulldogs’ fi rst game — Smith is expecting fewer players to turn out for baseball than in the past. “I know our numbers at Baker High School for extracurricular activities are going to be low,” Smith said. “We anticipate having 20 to 21 players out for baseball; in a normal year we will have 30 to 35. 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