SPORTS SATURDAY, MAY 15, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — 7A BAKER TENNIS Pac-12 names Plummer qualifies for state commissioner By Corey Kirk ckirk@bakercityherald.com By Ralph D. Russo Baker junior Sarah Plummer will represent the Bulldogs at the state tennis tournament next week at the Umpqua Tennis Center in Roseburg. Plummer, Baker’s lone girls singles player, fi nished second in the district tournament Thursday, May 13 at the Ash Grove Courts in Baker City. “I’m proud of how hard she works to improve every day at practice,” Baker coach Amy Younger said of Plummer. “I’m very pleased with her ability to adapt, learn, and try to implement stuff we talked about while practicing.” Plummer beat La Grande’s Breena Bushman 6-0, 6-1 in the fi rst round, and Ontario’s Emma Navarrette 6-3, 6-1 in the semifi nals. In the district championship match, Plummer lost 7-6, 6-4 to La Grande’s Presley Justice. In girls doubles, Baker’s team of freshman Tristen Tritt and sophomore Riley Shaw won their fi rst- round match but lost in the semifi nals. In boys action, Baker singles players Karsten Cikanek and Lincoln Nemec lost in the fi rst round, as did the doubles teams of Weston Downing and Noah Lien, and Davis Macias and Austin Hays. “The overall efforts of the team were fantastic, they played and tried hard and as a coach that’s all I can ask for,” Younger said. AP College Football Writer Corey Kirk/Baker City Herald Sarah Plummer qualifi ed for the state tennis tournament The Pac-12 hired George Kliavkoff to be the confer- ence’s next commissioner Thursday, replacing Larry Scott with another college sports outsider and charging him with rebuilding the football brand. Kliavkoff has been the president of sports and enter- tainment for MGM Resorts International in Las Vegas since 2018. University of Oregon President Michael H. Schill, the chairman of the Pac-12’s fi ve-member search committee, called Kliavkoff “a highly experienced and pioneering sports, entertainment and digital media executive.” Kliavkoff, 54, has previously worked with Major League Baseball Advanced Media and Hearst Enter- tainment & Syndication, and was also the chief digital offi cer with NBC Universal Cable. “He is very much a new prototype for sports commis- sioner,” Schill said. “He is the sort of person we need for this decade and the decades beyond. Even without serving a day in the job, George has thoughtfully chal- lenged us to envision what is possible for the Pac-12. What is possible for the coming era of new technologies and media.” The Pac-12 university presidents conducted a secre- tive nearly four-month search with the executive search fi rm, TurnkeyZRG. BAKER SOFTBALL Baker salutes softball seniors before final home games By Corey Kirk ckirk@bakercityherald.com The Baker softball team honored its three seniors before taking on Grant Union at the Baker Sports Complex Wednesday, May 12. Seniors Jordynn Fine, Rebekah Davis and Shelby Griffi th were recognized by the small crowd prior to the fi rst game. The Prospectors (9-2) swept the twinbill, 11-0 and 21-3. Baker coach Sonny Gulick, who taught some of the seniors in elementary school, Corey Kirk/Baker City Herald said he’s grateful that they continued to play despite the Senior Shelby Griffi th at bat Wednesday, May 12. challenges of the past two seasons, with 2020’s schedule “I appreciate them sticking jobs and made shifts at work being canceled and this year’s it out, it’s been a tough year, so they can be here,” Gulick being shortened. and some of them have had said. In game one, sophomore Kaycee Cuzick started in the circle. Although the Prospec- tors hit the ball hard, Gulick was proud of Cuzick’s effort. “She’s putting the ball where the hitter could hit, and that’s all that you can ask for,” he said. “Right now we have to do a better job in the fi eld supporting her, which I’ve said consistently all year.” Stepping up to the plate, the Bulldogs struggled to spark any momentum dur- ing the fi rst game, striking 11 times. Gulick said the Bulldogs need to be more patient at the plate rather than swinging at pitches that would be called balls. “There were times where we were helping the pitcher making sure they were ahead of the count,” Gulick said. After scoring seven runs in the fi rst four innings, the Prospectors plated four runs in the fi fth and held Baker scoreless to win 11-0 by mercy rule. In game two, the Bulldogs put sophomore Teygan Coley in the pitcher’s circle, and the Prospectors again showed their offensive prowess. “They were hitting her hard, they were hitting gaps, everything they did, they did pretty well,” Gulick said. The Bulldogs had a stron- ger showing in game two at the plate, however. In the bot- tom of the fi rst, Fine drove in sophomore Taylor Gyllenberg with Baker’s fi rst run. Then, in the bottom of the third, sophomore Kaci Anderson drove in two runs with a deep shot that turned into a triple. “I was pretty happy, Jor- dynn and Bekah (Rebekah Davis), two of our seniors, had a hit when we needed to move some runners around and to score them, and of course Kaci Anderson with that two-run triple there, which was great,” Gulick said. Grant Union continued to score often, and again ended the game after fi ve innings. Baker concludes its season today by traveling to Nyssa for a doubleheader. How do we rebuild a better Oregon? After a year of tremendous hardship, how do we rebuild a more interconnected, equitable, resilient Oregon? How do we help each other recover, rebuild, and restart our lives and businesses? How do we start listening to and considering each others’ point-of-view? How do we inject opportunity, across the state so everyone has a chance to add to the greater good? The answer — Together. Join us as we learn and share how to rebuild a better Oregon, for all Oregonians. L E A R N | C O N N E C T | D O N AT E BRINGING OREGONIANS TOGETHER SINCE 1973 PORTLAND | BEND | SALEM | EUGENE | MEDFORD O R E G O N C F. O R G