SPORTS BAKER CITY HERALD • THuRsDAY, FEBRuARY 3, 2022 A5 BAKER BOYS BASKETBALL Third-quarter surge sends Baker past Nyssa BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com In the span of about 2 min- utes, everything that hadn’t worked for the Baker boys bas- ketball team in the first half Tuesday, Feb. 1, at Nyssa began to yield riches. Steals. Layins. Points. Lots of points. Isaiah Jones scored the first 9 points of a 12-0 Baker run early in the third quarter that rapidly turned a close game into a rout. Baker scored 20 of the last 22 points of the third quarter and breezed to a 62-40 win. It was the eighth straight win for the Bulldogs, who are 14-3 overall and ranked sixth in the Class 4A standings. The key to the game-chang- ing stretch in the third quarter was defense, Baker coach Jeb- ron Jones said. Specifically, his decision to switch from the fullcourt press that Baker deployed, with little effect, in the first half, to a half- court trap. Nyssa was perplexed by the latter tactic. After Zack Kausler hit a 3-pointer to cut Baker’s lead to 32-29 early in the third quarter, the combination of Baker’s de- fense and Isaiah Jones’ array of offensive moves quickly shifted all the momentum to Baker. Jones hit a tough turnaround jumper from 15 feet, and he followed less than 30 seconds and Grant Gambleton made a free throw to push the lead to 44-29. Kayno Flores ended the 12-0 run with a 15-footer, but Baker then scored the final eight points, with four players scor- ing two points each — Drake Harper, Hudson Spike and Hobson each had baskets, and Jones capped the quarter with a pair of free throws as Baker led 52-31 after three quarters. The final period was an- ticlimactic as Nyssa never mounted a comeback. Jebron Jones said he changed to the halfcourt trap after Baker’s fullcourt press “wasn’t doing anything pro- ductive in the first half.” Jaxon Logsdon had an early steal on the press that led to Hobson’s layin and Baker’s 4-0 lead. But for the rest of the first half Nyssa handled the Baker press with aplomb, although there were multiple plays when a Nyssa player barely managed to grab a somewhat errant pass. “They beat us to all the 50- Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald, File 50 balls, and they outhustled Baker’s Paul Hobson, shown here against Ontario on Jan. 21, 2022, us,” Jebron Jones said. “That scored 12 points in Baker’s 62-40 win over Nyssa on Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2022. was a point of emphasis at halftime. I challenged the guys later with a layin to give Baker quarter, he twisted through the to step it up or we’ll lose.” lane for a basket, drew a foul a 36-29 lead, its largest of the After Isaiah Jones’ inside and made the free throw. game to that point. basket gave Baker a 10-8 lead Baker led 41-29 with 5:41 Jones completed his per- late in the first quarter, the left in the quarter. sonal 9-0 run with a layin off lead changed hands nine times Paul Hobson scored on a a steal, and, after a Nyssa tim- during the remainder of the eout with 5:48 left in the third breakaway after another steal, first half. The score was tied three times as well, the last time on Andrew Enders’ 3-pointer for Nyssa with 1:33 left in the half. Hayden Younger’s basket in the lane gave Baker a 30-26 lead at halftime. Jebron Jones said he had “no complaints” about Baker’s per- formance in the decisive third quarter, outscoring Nyssa 22-5. “I was just disappointed it took so long for the kids to want to play hard,” he said. But he noted that despite the first-half struggles, Baker still had the lead at halftime. “Even though we didn’t play our best half, we still scored more points than they did, and at the end of the day that’s what matters,” Jones said. “Some games are pretty and some games are ugly. This game was ugly.” Jones said the absence of freshman guard Jaron Long, who injured his knee in Bak- er’s 67-41 win at La Grande on Jan. 28, had a noticeable effect against Nyssa. Long might have the quick- est hands on the team, and he’s usually responsible for a significant share of the team’s steals. He’s also adept at driv- ing into the lane and creating his own shot. “He’s a big part of the ma- chine,” Jones said. “We defi- nitely missed Jaron. It left a hole on our team.” Jones said Long will miss Baker’s two upcoming home BAKER (62) Logsdon 0 0-0 0, Harper 1 0-0 2, Gambleton 2 1-2 5, Quin- tela 0 0-2 0, Younger 1 1-2 3, Molina 2 0-2 4, Spike 6 1-2 13, Jones 9 3-3 21, Hobson 6 0-0 12, Charbonneau 0 2-2 2, Mitchell 0 0-0 0. Totals 27 8-15 62. NYSSA (40) C. Ramirez 0 0-2 0, Fales 1 0-0 2, Zuniga 1 0-0 2, Enders 5 2-2 15, Flores 1 0-0 2, E. Ramirez 0 0-0 0, Iniguez 1 0-0 2, Kausler 4 0-0 11, Bueno 1 0-0 2, Sanders 1 0-1 2, Vela 1 0-0 2. Totals 16 2-5 40. Baker 14 16 22 10 — 62 Nyssa 13 13 5 9 — 40 games — Friday, Feb. 4, against Mac-Hi (7:30 p.m.) and Saturday, Feb. 5, against Powder Valley (5:30 p.m.). Long could return next week. Baker plays host to La Grande in a game that could decide the Greater Oregon League title on Tuesday, Feb. 8, at 7:30 p.m. Isaiah Jones led all scorers with 21 points at Nyssa. Spike added 13 points and Hobson 12. Eight Bulldogs scored. In a curious statistical anomaly, Baker didn’t make any 3-pointers, while Nyssa had six. Baker’s 27 to 10 ad- vantage in two-point shots more than made up the dif- ference. BAKER GIRLS BASKETBALL Nyssa snaps Baker’s win streak at 6 games Nyssa’s 6-foot-5 Gracie Johnson has key rebound basket late Dirk Shadd-TNS Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady waves to fans while walking off the field after the Tampa Bay Buccaneers defeated Philadelphia Eagles 31-15 Sunday, Jan. 16, 2022, in Tampa. BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Nyssa’s Gracie Johnson didn’t dominate the game against the Baker girls basket- ball team on Tuesday, Feb. 1, at Nyssa, but at a key juncture late, the junior used every bit of her 6-foot-5 frame to make the decisive play. After Baker, which never led, had cut the lead to 45-42 with 2:12 left in the game, Nys- sa’s Laney Hartley went to the free throw line for a one-and- one. Hartley missed the shot, but Johnson reached above the Baker rebounders, grabbed the ball and banked it in to push the lead back to 47-42 with 1:55 left. Nyssa then made 9 of 11 free throws to hold off Baker for a 58-48 win that ended the Bulldogs’ winning streak at six games. Nyssa, ranked third in the Class 3A standings, improved to 18-2. Baker, which hadn’t lost since Jan. 8 at Crook County, fell to 14-5 and dropped to fifth in the Class 4A rankings. Baker coach Jason Ramos said Johnson’s rebound basket was the last in a series of cru- cial plays that Baker failed to make. “There were a lot of little things,” Ramos said. And it started from the opening minute. Nyssa scored the first 5 points of the game and ex- tended its lead to as much as 11, at 19-8, on Hartley’s 3-pointer late in the first quarter. Baker narrowed the lead to 25-22 on Macey Moore’s two free throws with 11.1 seconds left in the first half. That was as close as Baker had been since early in the game. But this was followed by the first of the sequences in which Baker seemed poised to seize the momentum, only to have Nyssa respond almost imme- diately. Nyssa’s Clarita Arizmendi banked in a 3-pointer with 5.5 seconds left to boost the lead back to six, 28-22, at halftime. “I thought the key early on was they hit some key shots and got a cushion,” Ramos said of Nyssa. “We played hard to come back but we couldn’t overcome that early deficit. We came close a cou- ple times.” The first time was in the Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald, File Baker’s Rylee Elms, seen here in a December 2021 game, had 13 points in Baker’s 58-48 loss at Nyssa on Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2022. opening minute of the second half. Moore and Taylor Gyllen- berg each scored to cut the lead to 28-26. But Nyssa scored 4 straight points — on two buckets by Johnson — to get back to a 6-point edge. Nyssa led 36-31 after three quarters. After Nyssa took a 39-32 lead early in the fourth quarter, Baker rallied again. Brooklyn Jaca swished a 3-pointer from the corner to get Baker to within 41-38 with 5:18 left. But Nyssa went on another quick 4-0 run to push the lead back to five, at 43-38. Baker’s final rally, led by Jozie Ramos’ four free throws, cut the lead to 45-42, but Johnson followed with the back-breaking rebound basket off the missed free throw. Jason Ramos said Johnson influences games in multiple ways. Her presence in the key on defense forced Baker out of its normal offensive rhythm, he said. “We struggled a little bit offensively,” he said. “She’s a factor.” Baker squandered multi- ple chances to keep the game closer with free throws, making just 18 of 34. Nyssa was 14 of 22 from the line. Nyssa also had an advantage from longer range, with five 3-pointers to Baker’s two. “We need to have better free throw shooting down the stretch,” Ramos said. BAKER (48) Elms 5 3-6 13, Flanagan 2 1-6 5, Gyllenberg 1 1-2 3, Pierce 0 1-2 1, Ramos 3 7-9 14, Roy 1 0-0 2, Jaca 1 0-0 3, Moore 1 5-9 7. Totals 14 18-34 48. NYSSA (58) Hartley 2 2-3 8, Johnson 8 6-9 22, B. Johns 3 0-0 6, Trinidad 0 0-0 0, Clarita Arizmendi 4 0-0 11, M. Johns 0 0-0 0, Long 2 5-6 10, Vineyard 0 0-2 0, Torres 0 1-2 1, Medrano 0 0-0 0. Totals 19 14-22 58. Baker 11 11 9 17 — 48 Nyssa 19 9 8 22 — 58 Despite the disappointment of a loss, the nonleague setback has no effect on Baker’s playoff prospects, as the Bulldogs re- main atop the Greater Oregon League at 3-0. “We talked about it in the locker room, that we have to have some takeaways from this, and we will,” Ramos said. “Having games like this down the stretch is always good preparation for what’s coming.” Jozie Ramos led Baker with 14 points, although Johnson’s presence inside contributed to Ramos having just three field goals, including a 3-pointer. Rylee Elms had 13 points, Moore added seven and Mak- enzie Flanagan five. Johnson led all scorers with 22 points. Baker returns to GOL play Friday, Feb. 4, when the Bull- dogs play host to Mac-Hi at 6 p.m. Tom Brady retires after 22 seasons, 7 Super Bowl titles “Right now, it’s best I leave reer leader in yards passing the field of play to the next (84,520) and TDs (624). He’s TAMPA, Fla. — Tom generation of dedicated and the only player to win more Brady walked away from the committed athletes,” Brady than five Super Bowls and NFL on his own terms, still at said. was MVP of the game five the top of his game. Brady thanked the Bucca- times. Brady, the most successful neers organization, his team- Brady won three NFL quarterback in league his- MVP awards, was a first-team mates, ownership, general tory and one of the greatest All-Pro three times and was manager Jason Licht, coach champions in professional selected to the Pro Bowl 15 Bruce Arians, his trainer sports, has retired after win- Alex Guerrero, agents Don times. He was 243-73 in his ning seven Super Bowls and Yee and Steve Dubin and his career in the regular season setting numerous passing re- family in his nine-page post. and 35-12 in the playoffs. cords in an unprecedented “To finish a 22-year career He didn’t mention the New 22-year career. while still performing at his England Patriots, where he “This is difficult for me spent his first 20 seasons and peak was nothing short of to write, but here it goes: I won six Super Bowls playing extraordinary,” Licht said. “I am not going to make that for Bill Belichick. But Brady wish we had more time with competitive commitment Tom, but I understand and thanked the Patriots and anymore,” Brady wrote in a their fans on Twitter, saying: respect his decision to leave lengthy post on Instagram. the game in order to spend “I’m beyond grateful. Love “I have loved my NFL ca- more time with his family.” you all.” reer, and now it is time to Brady went from 199th Brady said he’s still figuring focus my time and energy out how he’ll spend his time, pick in the 2000 draft to re- on other things that require but he plans to be involved in placing an injured Drew my attention.” his TB12 health and wellness Bledsoe in 2001 and leading The 44-year-old Brady has company, Brady clothing line New England to a Super Bowl long stated his desire to spend and NFT company. victory over the heavily fa- more time with his wife, su- “I know for sure I want to vored Rams that season. permodel Gisele Bundchen, He led the Patriots to con- spend a lot of time giving to and three children despite secutive Super Bowl titles fol- others and trying to enrich his unique ability to perform other people’s lives, just as lowing the 2003-04 seasons. exceptionally well at an age No team has since repeated so many have done for me,” as champions. when most athletes are way he said. But New England wouldn’t past their prime. Brady led the NFL in yards Brady goes out after lead- passing (5,316), touchdowns win another one for a decade, twice losing to the New York ing the Tampa Bay Bucca- (43), completions (485) and Giants in the Super Bowl, in- neers to a Super Bowl title attempts (719) in 2021, but cluding a 17-14 defeat on Feb. last season and NFC South the Buccaneers lost at home 3, 2008, that prevented the championship this season. to the Los Angeles Rams in Patriots from completing a News of Brady’s pending the divisional round. perfect season. retirement leaked Satur- Brady leaves as the ca- day, Jan. 29, but he said Monday night, Jan. 31, on his SiriusXM podcast he wasn’t ready to finalize his 2192 Court Avenue, Baker City • 541-523-5357 plans. That came Tuesday Services Provided: morning, Feb. 1. 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