6A — BAKER CITY HERALD THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 2021 BAKER SOFTBALL Baker nips Nyssa, 9-8 By Corey Kirk BAKER BASEBALL ckirk@bakercityherald.com Corey Kirk/Baker City Herald Baker’s Cody Skidgel fouls off a pitch against Nyssa on Tuesday, April 27. Bulldogs blast Nyssa, 11-1 By Corey Kirk ckirk@bakercityherald.com After almost a week since their last contest, the Baker baseball team didn’t show any signs of rust in rout- ing Nyssa 11-1 on Tuesday, April 27 at the Baker Sports Complex. Baker improved its season record to 4-2. Nyssa dropped to 0-6. Moving from his usual position behind home plate to the pitcher’s mound, senior Mason Van Arsdall breezed through the fi rst three innings, holding Nyssa scoreless. “It’s kind of weird. I haven’t pitched in a re- ally long time. Being on the mound is weird because I’m always behind the plate,” Van Arsdall said. Baker also failed to score in the fi rst two innings. But in bottom of the third, after Andrew Zellars got on base, Jake Wright found a fastball to his liking from Nyssa pitcher Collin Hysell, crushing the ball over the left fi eld wall for a two-run homer. “That was huge, you can feel it, you can feel it on the Nyssa side, you can feel it on our side,” Baker coach Tim Smith said. “We needed a spark, we needed some- thing, and we got it.” Prior to Wright’s blast, Smith was disappointed in his team’s sluggish start offensively. “We started out awful slow,” Smith said. “That’s two dates now that we came out not ready to go.” Nyssa scored its only run in the top of the fourth to briefl y cut Baker’s lead to 2-1. But Baker responded im- mediately with fi ve runs in the bottom of the inning. With the insurance runs, Van Arsdall continued to hold Nyssa at bay. He allowed just four hits and struck out nine. Van Arsdall credited his battery mate in Zellars, who is one of Baker’s top pitch- ers, and Baker’s defense. “Zellars did a really good job sticking the ball where it was — he got me a lot Corey Kirk/Baker City Herald Baker’s Mason Van Arsdall, who usually plays catch- er, was the winning pitcher against Nyssa on Tuesday, April 27. He struck out nine in fi ve innings. “I haven’t pitched in a really long time. Being on the mound is weird because I’m always behind the plate.” — Mason Van Arsdall of strikes I didn’t know I would have had with any- body else back there,” Van Arsdall said. “I just had a lot of good back up behind me tonight.” Baker continued its offensive momentum with four runs in the bottom of the fi fth to end the game by 10-run mercy rule. Zander Arriaga led the way going 3-for-4 with four RBIs. Hayden Younger was aggressive on the basepaths with three stolen bases. “I thought Hayden Younger was a spark on the bases, he’s just a go getter,” Smith said. “He runs the bases like we want everyone to run the bases.” Smith was also happy with Baker’s offensive per- formance in the fi nal three innings. “We fi nally started to put the ball in play and capital- ize on their mistakes,” Smith said. He was impressed with the work of sophomores Kai Ogan and Thomas Smith- son, who moved up from junior varsity for Tuesday’s game. “I thought they did a good job for us,” Smith said. Baker now welcomes ri- val La Grande to the Sports Complex for the teams’ second doubleheader, this one set for Saturday, May 1 with a fi rst pitch at noon. La Grande dominated the fi rst twinbill against Baker on April 20, winning 16-3 and 18-3. Van Arsdall said Baker’s performance against Nyssa, despite the score, won’t be good enough against the Tigers. “We had way too many K’s today, backward K’s, backward K’s are the worst, against a team like La Grande, they will make us pay,” Van Arsdall said. His coach agreed. “We are going to work on early count hitting, early count pitching, we want to throw strikes, (and) we did not do that against La Grande,” Smith said. “We can’t put La Grande on the bases, we can’t give up any freebies.” Baker’s softball team used late-inning heroics to claim its fi rst win of the season with a 9-8 victory over Nyssa on Tuesday afternoon, April 27 at the Baker Sports Complex. Baker was down to its last three outs trailing 8-5. The Bulldogs tied the score at 8, but there were two outs when sophomore Skylar Roy stepped to the plate. After taking a few pitches per her coaches’ instructions, Roy rapped a single for the walkoff win for the Bulldogs (1-3). “I was pretty nervous,” Roy said. “I was proud of myself. I was excited to be able to hit that, and to be the one to do it.” Baker coach Sonny Gulick was happy to see Roy shine in such a high-pressure moment. “She fi nally put her weight back, and gave us the hit we needed,” Gulick said. With a team made of primarily sophomores, Roy among them, Gulick said he was optimistic going into Tuesday’s game against Nyssa (1-5) due largely to the Baker junior varsity’s strong per- formance on April 24 against Vale. The Bulldogs swept the twinbill, 14-4 and 18-7. “We just had won two games in JV so I was very con- fi dent in how we were going to play against them,” Roy said. But Tuesday’s varsity game against Nyssa didn’t have a promising start, as Nyssa scored three runs in the top of the fi rst. Baker responded in the bottom of the second, with senior Rebekah Davis and sophomore Taylor Gyllenberg each getting an RBI as Baker tied the score at 3. Gulick was excited to see his players capitalize on their opponents’ mistakes, and heeding his advice to be more patient at the plate. “We were going to see a pitch, because what we found is that if a pitcher is throwing a little slower, we’re not very patient,” Gulick said. “Every- body is going to see a pitch, ball or strike, before they were going to swing.” Corey Kirk/Baker City Herald Kaycee Cuzick went the entire way in the circle for Baker in a 9-8 win over Nyssa on Tuesday, April 27. Nyssa regained the lead but Baker stayed close thanks in part to sophomore pitcher Kaycee Cuzick, who pitched the entire game. “I really loved how she (Cuzick) battled through some early location issues, and in the last two and a half innings she was right down the zone, really just shut them down and gave us an opportunity to win,” Gulick said. Baker took advantage of that opportunity with the last-inning rally. Baker returns to varsity action on Tuesday, May 4 by playing host to Ontario in a doubleheader starting at 3 p.m. NFL draft heavy on quarterbacks chie Manning, Dan Pastorini) and 1999 (Tim Couch, Donovan McNabb, Akili Smith) as the As soon as the San Francisco 49ers traded only drafts with quarterbacks taken with the three fi rst round picks to move up to No. 3 top three picks. overall, it became clear that quarterbacks A record could be set with four QBs going in would come off the board at a record pace at the top four if Atlanta drafts the successor to the NFL draft starting this evening. Matt Ryan or trades down to a quarterback- While QBs are widely expected to go 1-2-3 needy team. for just the third time in the common draft If Fields, Jones and Lance all get taken in era that started in 1967, there are still ques- the top 10, that would also be a fi rst, beating tions about how many others will follow in the four top-10 QBs taken in the 2018 draft the top 10 and fi rst round. when Baker Mayfi eld, Sam Darnold, Josh Trevor Lawrence and Zach Wilson are ex- Allen and Josh Rosen all went off the board pected to be the top two picks, to Jacksonville quickly. and the New York Jets, with the Niners likely All fi ve of those QBs are almost assuredly choosing among Mac Jones, Trey Lance and fi rst-round picks, something that also hap- Justin Fields at No. 3. pened in 1999 when the fi ve came off in the That would match 1971 (Jim Plunkett, Ar- top 12, and in 2018. By Josh Dubow AP Pro Football Writer BRINGING QUALITY PRODUCTS AT AFFORDABLE Blazers snap 5-game losing streak franchise record and became the first NBA player to open a game with nine consecutive 3s INDIANAPOLIS — Anfernee Simons deliv- since Klay Thompson made 10 straight on Jan. ered the knockout flurry for Portland on Tuesday. 21, 2019. Simons wound up 9 of 10 from beyond His teammates and coaches enjoyed watching the arc and 9 of 13 overall. it. How good was he? Simons made his first nine 3-pointers, finished “The man of the hour, talk to him,” Lillard said with 27 points and helped the Portland Trail when Simons showed up for his postgame Zoom Blazers snap a season-high, five-game losing call. “Nine 3s.” streak with a 133-112 rout at Indiana. Lillard added 23 points and the Blazers shot a “After the first 3 I made in the second half, season-best 57.1% from beyond the arc. I knew it was going to be a good night for me,” With the Trail Blazers going 20 of 35 from Simons said. “After that, I felt like it didn’t matter 3-point range, Indiana never really had a chance. who was contesting or how close they were, I Portland broke open the game in the second knew it was going to go in.” quarter by taking advantage of a 13-5 discrep- They did — time after time. ancy in offensive rebounds and, of course, the Simons fell two 3s short of Damian Lillard’s long-range shooting. Corey Kirk/Baker City Herald Taylor Gyllenberg waits for a pitch Tuesday against Nyssa. PRICING TO EASTERN ORE- GON By Michael Marot AP Sports Writer Try the SHIP TO STORE feature at millershomecenter.com 3109 May Lane, La Grande 541-963-3113 3815 Pocahontas Road, Baker City 541-523-6404