A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, JANUARY 6, 2022 SPORTS BAKER GIRLS BASKETBALL Bulldogs avenge December loss to Fruitland Baker, which lost by one point to the Grizzlies Dec. 15, prevail in close game Ramos said he was excited to see the team prevail in a game when the outcome was in question almost to the final seconds. Baker’s three losses, to Pend- leton, Fruitland and Crane, were by a combined five points, with the Pendleton and BY JAYSON JACOBY Fruitland losses both by a sin- gle point. jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The Baker girls basketball “It was a great finish for us to team’s rematch with Fruitland, be able to come out with a win Idaho, on Tuesday, Jan. 4, at in that situation,” Ramos said. Fruitland was about as dra- He said he reminded his matic as the teams’ first game players, during a fourth quarter on Dec. 15 in the Baker gym. timeout, that in similar cases But the second chapter in the Bulldogs had fallen just the rivalry, unlike the first, had short. a happy ending for the Bull- “We talked about finishing dogs. the right way this time, and the girls were able to do that,” Ra- After the Grizzlies rallied from an eight-point deficit in mos said. Baker made key free throws the fourth quarter to tie the score at 32, Baker scored four in the fourth quarter, scoring straight points and held on for four of their eight points at the line. a 37-35 win. Sydnee Pierce had two free The Bulldogs improved to throws in the final period, and 8-3 on the season. They are ranked sixth in the state at the Macey Moore and Rylee Elms one each. Class 4A level. Ramos said Elms shrugged “Any time you can go on the off two early fouls to have one road and beat a quality team, it’s a good thing,” Baker coach of her best games, scoring a team-high 13 points. Jason Ramos said. “There’s a Jozie Ramos and Moore had lot of positives to take away eight points each. from this.” other end,” Ramos said. The game was close throughout. Baker led 9-8 after one quarter, and the margin re- mained a single point, 19-18, at halftime. The Bulldogs extended the lead to 29-24 after three quarters, and took their larg- est lead, 32-24, early in the fourth before the Grizzlies rallied. Baker won the JV game, 36-35. Kaydence Thomas and Makea Robb each scored eight points for Baker, Tiyana Stevens had seven, and Ash- lyn Dalton and Aiyana Rad- In the Dec. 15 game at ford four each. Baker, the Bulldogs’ rally fell The Bulldogs are slated to just short after Fruitland led return to the road for their 40-36. third long trip of the season. At Fruitland, by contrast, Baker is scheduled to play the Grizzlies had to play from at Madras on Friday, Jan. 7 at behind. 5:30 p.m., and then take on Jason Ramos said Baker Crook County at Prineville switched to a zone defense on Saturday, Jan. 8 at 11 a.m. late in the game after Fruit- The Baker boys varsity Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald land, taking advantage of team, which is slated to play Rylee Elms, shown here against Burns on Dec. 29, 2021, scored a team- openings in the lane, had host to Fruitland on Thurs- day, Jan. 6, at 7 p.m., will also high 13 points on Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2022, as the Bulldogs beat Fruitland, battled back to tie the score at 32. make the trip to Central Or- Idaho, 37-35. Jozie Ramos (background), added eight points. That shift led to a couple of egon. The boys are scheduled The rematch at Fruitland ularly the fourth quarter. In key defensive stops that kept to play Madras on Jan. 7 at 7 played out much like the ear- both games the teams were tied the Grizzlies at bay, he said. p.m., and Crook County the lier game in Baker — partic- at 32. “And we capitalized at the next day at 12:30 p.m. BAKER (37) Elms 5 3-5 13, Wilde 0 0-0 0, Gyllenberg 1 0-2 2, Pierce 1 1-2 3, Ramos 3 2-3 8, Roy 0 0-0 0, Jaca 1 0-0 2, Moore 3 1-2 8. To- tals 14 7-14 37. FRUITLAND (35) Barnes 0 0-0 0, Roubidoux 2 0-0 4, Drollinger 1 0-0 2, Hardy 0 0-0 0, Gibb 0 0-0 0, Hart 0 0-0 0, Phillips 1 0-0 2, Jerman 5 0-0 10, Huff 6 1-3 13, Fritts 1 2-6 4. Totals 16 3-9 35. Baker 9 10 10 8 — 37 Fruitland 8 10 6 11 — 35 Look for Norway to top medal table again at Winter Olympics off computer models that an- alyze the most recent results The Winter Olympics open in major competitions — and in 30 days, and Norway is smaller ones — in the run-up expected to head the medal to Beijing. standings for the second Norway is predicted to win straight time, even topping its 22 gold medals and 45 overall. record haul of 39 medals in More than half of Norway’s 2018 in Pyeongchang, South medals are predicted to come Korea. in cross country skiing and This is the prediction of biathlon. U.S.-based Gracenote Sports, Second place, if total med- which released its medal ta- als is used for the ranking or- ble forecast on Wednesday, der, will be the Russian Olym- Jan. 5 with the Beijing Winter pic Committee with 11 gold Games opening on Feb. 4. and 32 overall. The team in Nielsen-Gracenote supplies Beijing, as in Tokyo, will be statistical analysis to sports known as the ROC, or the league around the world. Its Russian Olympic Committee. Olympic numbers are based The ROC must compete BY STEPHEN WADE Associated Press Carmen Mandato/Getty Images-TNS Kansas State’s Malik Knowles (No. 4) celebrates a first-half touchdown with Skylar Thompson (No. 7) against LSU during the TaxAct Texas Bowl at NRG Stadium on Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2022, in Houston. without its national flag or anthem, fallout from a state- backed doping program dating from the 2014 So- chi Winter Olympics. Many critics say the punishment is negligible since athletes still compete in national colors. Under the IOC guidelines, the athletes will represent not their country, but the ROC. Germany is picked to finish third with 12 gold and 25 over- all. After this, the next seven countries are closely grouped. They are: United States (7 gold, 22 overall), Canada (6-22), Sweden (7-21), Switzerland (5- 21), Netherlands (6-20), Austria (5-18), and France (2-18). Kansas State dominates short- handed LSU 42-20 in Texas Bowl The Associated Press HOUSTON — Deuce Vaughn and the Kansas State Wildcats finished a streaky sea- son on a positive note Tuesday night, Jan. 4 with a dominant 42-20 win over short-handed LSU in the Texas Bowl. Vaughn, a sophomore run- ning back and first-team All-American as an all-purpose player, rushed for 146 yards on 21 carries. He scored four touchdowns — three rushing and one receiving. “The aggressiveness of our play calling opened up the run- ning game,” Vaughn said. “Ev- erybody was making plays, and our O-line stayed committed to the fight against a really good defense.” Kansas State (8-5) also got a strong performance from quar- terback Skylar Thompson, who returned to make his final col- legiate start after missing the regular-season finale with an ankle injury. “For him to be on point like he was and throwing strikes, he was phenomenal,” Kansas State coach Chris Klieman said. “To see him go out like that was huge. He wanted to play well in this moment and he did.” Thompson completed 21 of 28 passes for 259 yards and three touchdowns and was chosen Texas Bowl MVP. Ma- lik Knowles had two touch- down catches and 42 yards receiving. “It flew by, but it was a special way to end it, for sure,” Thompson said. “Holy smokes, I couldn’t have drawn up a better way to finish it than tonight.” While LSU (6-7) had a tough time slowing Vaughn and Thompson, the Tigers had another uphill battle on offense. With starting quarterback Max Johnson having trans- ferred to Texas A&M, backup Myles Brennan recovering from surgery and a third- string freshman that would have had to burn his redshirt to play, LSU entered the game with a big question mark un- der center. The Tigers turned to se- nior receiver Jontre Kirklin, who hadn’t played quarter- back since high school in 2016. Kirklin had only played in 25 games over five seasons, in- cluding his first two years as a cornerback. The Tigers didn’t get a first down until late in the second quarter. By that time, Kan- sas State already had 12 first downs and a 21-0 lead. LSU later scored on that drive, though, a 23-yard touchdown catch by Jaray Jenkins. Kirklin was 7-of-11 pass- ing for 138 yards, three touch- downs and two interceptions while also rushing for 61 yards on 11 carries. He delivered an 81-yard touchdown pass to Chris Hilton Jr. as time ex- pired. The Tigers were led by in- terim coach Brad Davis, the offensive line coach who was filling in during the transi- tion from Ed Orgeron to for- mer Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly. LSU announced in De- cember that Davis would be returning on Kelly’s staff as the offensive line coach. Davis said LSU had just 38 scholarship players available for the game, but backing out was never an option. “We don’t stand back from a challenge,” Davis said. “There was never a thought in our mind about not playing this game. We fully expected to win.” Kansas State appeared to have a slight edge in the makeup of the crowd, despite Baton Rouge, Louisiana, be- ing nearly 500 miles closer to Houston than Manhattan, Kansas. The Wildcats led 21-7 at halftime. Kansas State enjoyed its most lopsided win over an SEC opponent in school history, improving to 5-17 against the conference. Jay & Kristin Wilson, Owners 2036 Main Street, Baker City 541-523-6284 • ccb#219615 SNOW TIRES are cheaper than a wreck Providing quality and compassion to all his patients. Dr Sanders specializes in all aspects of the foot and ankle. 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