BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2022 A3 SPORTS BAKER BOYS WRESTLING AT REGIONAL TOURNAMENT 14 Bulldog wrestlers qualify for state Baker finishes 2nd to La Grande in team standings Baker City Herald Fourteen Baker High School boys wrestlers qualified for the state meet with strong perfor- mances at the regional tourna- ment on Saturday, Feb. 11, at Sisters High School. Baker, led by regional cham- pions Jaden Martin and Aldo Duran, and runners-up Joey Duncan, Marcus Chamberlain, Gauge Bloomer and Alex Rit- ter, placed second in the team standings with 303 points. La Grande won the team title with 447 points. The top four wrestlers in each weight class qualified for the state tournament on Satur- day, Feb. 26, at Cascade High School near Salem. “We were really proud of our effort at the regional tourna- ment,” Baker coach Brandon Young said. “Our kids just kept going despite the score, and overall outworked their oppo- nents. That’s something that this group does well, they work very hard and have been ex- tremely dedicated.” Young said Baker will be seeking to earn a trophy at the state tournament, which are awarded to the top four teams. “COVID has had a huge impact on everyone, but this group has been very resil- ient in maintaining a posi- tive mind set, and all of us are happy to have the opportunity to wrestle,” Young said. “That is what has made wrestling so important for this group and a huge motivator for their suc- cess. They understand first- hand how quickly something can be taken away, that noth- ing is guaranteed, and they are determined to make their shot at something count.” With Sheylin Karolski and Sarah Plummer having qual- ified for state during the girls regional tournament last week- end, Baker will send a record 16 wrestlers to state, Young said. The girls state tourna- ment is Feb. 24 in Culver. Andy Dieckhoff/Madras Pioneer Aldo Duran was one of Baker’s two individual champions at the regional wrestling tournament Feb. 12, 2022, at Sisters. Andy Dieckhoff/Madras Pioneer Baker’s Gavin Stone (top) placed third at the regional tournament Feb. 12, 2022, to qualify for the state tournament. ing byes in the first and quar- terfinal rounds, Chamberlain pinned Jake Lawrence of Ma- dras in the second period. “We decided to bump Marcus Chamberlain to 113 pounds for a couple of reasons,” Young said. “Marcus hit a growth spurt here at the end of the season and 113 was a better fit for him, and he had seeding criteria to be the top seed at 113. Marcus proved that he was a force to be reckoned with as he pinned his way to the finals. Marcus is on fire right now.” Martin continued his dom- inating performances over the past few weeks. After receiving a first-round bye, Martin pinned La Grande’s Cain End in the first period in the quarterfinals, and pinned Ontario’s Jose Moncada in the first period in the semifinals. In the district championship match, Martin pinned Corbett’s Ian Brown in just 33 seconds. “Jaden Martin hammered down on everyone, pinning every opponent to become a two-time regional champion,” Young said. “He has his eyes set on a state championship. Jaden has improved tremendously this season and has become a real handful.” At 195 pounds, defend- ing state champion Gauge Bloomer received two byes to advance to the semifinals. There, he pinned Gladstone’s Brodey Kitzmiller in the first period. In the championship match against a familiar foe, La Grande’s Brody MacMil- lan, Bloomer battled into the third period before MacMil- lan got the pin. At 220 pounds, Ritter, who entered the tournament un- seeded, had a first-round bye, then pinned Ontario’s Tommy Ishida in the first pe- riod in a quarterfinal match. In the semifinals, Ritter pinned Henry Rard of Sisters in the first period. In the championship match against Tanner Wells of Mac-Hi/Weston-McEwen, Wells won by fall in the sec- ond period. “Alex Ritter missed quite a bit of the season and we are starting to get him back to where he was before Christ- mas and he is regaining his confidence,” Young said. “That is the thing with wres- tling, so much of it is a men- tal battle, if you believe it, you can make it happen. That is something that Alex is going to take with him from all this, confidence in himself that he can attain anything he sets his mind to.” second period, in the third- place match. At 145 pounds, Baker’s Gavin Stone advanced to the semifinals with a first-round bye and a win by fall over La Grande’s Austin Higgins in the quarterfinals. In the semifinals, Ben Coo- per of Sisters won by 3-2 de- cision. Stone rebounded by pinning Dolan Pool of Sisters in the consolation semifinals, then pinning Jonas Porter of Gladstone in the first period of the third-place match. At 132 pounds, Baker’s Cole Hester received byes in the first and quarterfinal rounds. In the semifinals against La Grande’s Jaxson Leonard, Hester lost by fall. He then won by forfeit in the consolation semifinals and beat teammate Samuel Nelson by fall in the third-place match. Nelson advanced to the third-place match by pinning Jayden Esquiro of Madras. At 182 pounds, Baker’s Adrian Allen had a first-round bye. In the quarterfinals, he pinned Ontario’s Steven Luna in the first period, then lost by fall to La Grande’s Jarrett Arm- strong in the semifinals. Allen then won a 9-3 deci- sion of La Grande’s Preston Westenskow in the consolation Baker’s district champions District runners-up semifinals, and pinned Madras’ Duran, wrestling in the At 106 pounds, Duncan re- Demarcus Scott in the third- 113-pound division, received ceived byes in the first and place match. byes in the first and quarterfi- quarterfinal rounds. In the “Adrian Allen had a great nal rounds. semifinals, he won by fall over Other state qualifiers weekend and qualified for state In the semifinal round, he La Grande’s Bobby Gulzow in At 120 pounds, Baker’s Sage a second time,” Young said. pinned Sisters’ Carter Van Me- the third period, avenging a Darlington had a first-round “Adrian has come a long way ter in the first period. loss to Gulzow earlier in the bye and then pinned Jayvon since middle school and we are In the championship match, season. Tovar of Madras late in the sec- proud of the young man he has Duran pinned teammate Mar- “This time we had a better ond period in the quarterfinals. become.” cus Chamberlain in the first game plan,” Young said. “The In the semifinals, Darlington At 132 pounds, Baker’s Ri- period. match was back and forth go- faced La Grande’s Kai Carson, ley Martin had a bye in the first “Aldo Duran has a shot to be ing all the way into the third and Carson won by fall in the round. In the quarterfinals, he state champion this season as period when Joey found his first period. lost a 4-3 decision to Ontario’s a freshman,” Young said. “Aldo moment and earned the fall Darlington then won an 8-7 Jamis Gonzalez. works so hard every single day, with 24 seconds left in the decision over Madras’ Chase Martin then won two he is very driven, and great match.” Strawbridge in the consola- straight matches in the con- things are coming for him.” In the championship match, tion semifinal, gaining the key solation bracket, pinning La Chamberlain finished sec- Duncan lost by fall to La 2 points with just a second left Grande’s Michael Gisi and Dar- ond and also advanced to the Grande’s Mason Walcott late in in the match. Then Darlington ius Squiemphen of Madras. state tournament. After receiv- the first period. pinned Tovar again, also in the In the consolation semifinals, Martin won a 4-3 decision over Carson Brown of Sisters in an intense match with Riley lead- ing late and then riding out Brown to finish the win. In the third-place match, Martin lost in sudden death to Gonzalez in the second over- time period. “Riley Martin was a man on a mission,” Young said. At 160 pounds, Baker’s Ryan Brown had a first-round bye. In the quarterfinals, Brown lost by fall to Cael White of Madras, before beating Jared Miller of Sisters by fall and Brady David of Madras by disqualification to advance to the third-place match. “Ryan Brown has really come around this season,” Young said. In the semifinal match against David, David had the lead but with less than 45 sec- onds left, David did an illegal mat return, slamming Brown to the mat. Due to concussion protocol, Brown was not able to continue to wrestle. David was disqualified. “We hope Ryan is able to recover from this before state, but if not he really turned a corner this season,” Young said. At 285 pounds, Baker’s Rus- sell Walden had a first-round bye and pinned Ontario’s Jorge Ortiz in the quarterfinals. In the semifinals, Walden lost a 15-12 decision to Cor- bett’s Ian Brown. Walden then pinned La Grande’s Cain End in the consolation semifinal to advance to the third-place match, where he lost by fall to Ontario’s Jose Moncada. In the semifinal match against Brown, Walden was leading by 2 points with just 20 seconds left. He tried a head and arm but was countered, and Brown earned the take- down and held Walden on his back until time ran out. “Russell has a big heart and gave it everything he had,” Young said. Other Baker wrestlers Baker’s Cody Eskew at 170 pounds, and Ethan Morgan at 182, both just missed qualify- ing for state with their fifth- place district finishes. Eskew won two matches to advance to the fourth-place match, where he lost by no contest to Alex Arreola of Madras. Morgan won an 8-6 decision over Ontario’s Leonardo Bec- erra in the quarterfinals, then lost to Reece White of Madras in the semifinals and to De- marcus Scott of Madras in the consolation semifinal. Morgan then pinned La Grande’s Pres- ton Westenskow in the fifth- place match. “Ethan Morgan had a great tournament and gave it every- thing he had,” Young said. At 220 pounds, Baker’s Jayden Clark won his first two matches by fall. In the semifi- nals, Clark faced Tanner Wells of Mac-Hi/Weston-McEwen, and Wells won by fall. In the consolation semifi- nals, Clark was leading Ontar- io’s Tommy Ishida but Ishida was able to get the fall in the second period. Clark then pinned La Grande’s Kenai Huff to claim fifth place. At 132 pounds, Baker’s Mi- chael Endersby placed eighth. Jimmy Sullivan wrestled at 145 pounds, and Ben Coburn com- peted at 152 pounds. “Michael Endersby had a tough draw into the tourna- ment,” Young said. “Michael is a great teammate and has a great motor. He will have his time here in the next few seasons.” “Jimmy Sullivan had a great tournament losing two close battles where they were back and forth,” Young said. “Jimmy sustained an injury early in the season and was able to get released just before regionals. He has a great work ethic and he’s not afraid of a good fight. Hopefully we can get him to put in sometime in the off sea- son and stay healthy next year.” “Ben Coburn had a tough draw into the tournament,” Young said. “Ben really im- proved a ton this season, I think with his great attitude and work ethic he is going to have a shot at qualifying for state.” “River Clark was unable to compete due to an injury, and we feel like he would have also been one of the top guys,” Young said. SUPER BOWL 56 Rams squeak by Bengals on late touchdown made unbelievable plays; that’s what he does.” INGLEWOOD, Calif. — What Los Angeles did on Their defense laying siege that drive finally measured up to the Bengals, the Rams to what its defense was doing needed something — any- most of the night: overwhelm- thing — from their slumber- ing Cincinnati’s blockers, sack- ing offense. ing Joe Burrow a Super Bowl How about a precise 79-yard record-tying seven times. The drive to the Lombardi Trophy? pressure, led by Aaron Donald It wasn’t a classic march, and Von Miller, was nonstop. aided by three successive Ben- “You got to be relentless,” said gals penalties and mired by Donald, who added a crown- some bad throws. No matter: ing achievement to his certain When Cooper Kupp caught a Hall of Fame career. “You want 1-yard pass from Matthew Staf- something bad enough you’ve ford with 1:25 remaining, LA’s got to go get it. You know it was offense indeed had awakened right in front of us ... all offsea- just in time for a 23-20 Super son you work, you train, you got Bowl victory Sunday, Feb. 13. camp, you got a long season just “That’s hard work, that’s for this one game. You know we hours together,” Stafford said. the last team standing.” “I just thank coach (Sean Mc- Standing in a venue built Vay) for putting it ... ‘Hey, Mat- for champions, with the Rams thew, you and Coop go get (16-5) earning their first NFL this thing done.’ He kept call- title since the 1999 season — ing plays for him, kept finding and their first representing Los ways to get him the ball. He Angeles since 1951. BY BARRY WILNER AP Pro Football Writer A Smarter Way to Power Your Home. REQUEST A FREE QUOTE! ACT NOW TO RECEIVE A $300 SPECIAL OFFER!* (844) 989-2328 *Off er value when purchased at retail. Solar panels sold separately. They did so in their home, the $5 billion SoFi Stadium, making the Rams the second consecutive host to win the championship after Tampa Bay became the first a year ago. “As far as building this stadium,” said Rams owner Stan Kroenke, the man who moved them back from St. Louis in 2016, “I think it turned out all right.” The winning series, during which game MVP Kupp’s 4-yard touchdown reception was negated by offsetting pen- alties, ended soon after with the NFL Offensive Player of the Year easily beating Eli Apple in the right corner of the end zone for the winning score. Kupp had four receptions for 39 yards, and a 7-yard run on fourth-and-1 from the Rams 30 on the championship drive. Cincinnati (13-8) was pe- nalized the second-fewest times (72) for the fewest yards (620) in the regular season but flags hurt badly — including pass interference on Kupp in the end zone. “I’ve said it all year, what- ever is asked of me whatever my job is gonna be, I just want to execute to the best of my abilities,” said Kupp, who won the triple crown of receiving in 2021, leading in catches, yards and touchdowns. “I trust as the game goes on I’ll have opportu- nities as well, and I just want to stay ready for those things stay locked in.” As locked in as that pass rush. Fittingly, Burrow was under pressure on fourth-and-1 and threw incomplete, setting off a football fiesta this city has not seen since the LA Raiders won the 1983 championship. A tearful Donald said after the game, “I wanted it so bad. I dreamed this.” Ten points because of two plays in a span of 22 sec- onds at the outset of the third quarter put Cincinnati ahead for the first time. Tee Higgins’ 75-yard score made it 17-13 and was fol- lowed one play later by Chi- Baker City's Newest Brewery dobe Awuzie’s pick. Evan McPherson tied Adam Vi- natieri’s postseason record with his 14th field goal, a 38-yarder. The rookie didn’t miss in the postseason. Higgins beat All-Pro corner- back Jalen Ramsey on the first play of the second half — the receiver clearly tugged Ram- sey’s face mask on the play. Af- ter Stafford was intercepted on the next play, the Bengals got McPherson’s field goal. Winter is here! Cold weather can mean icy spots in shaded areas! Taproom Hours: Wed-Fri 4pm to 8pm Sat 2pm to 8pm Closed Sun-Tues Snacks | Beer | Cider 541-519-1337 | 1935 1st St, Baker City, OR 2390 Broadway, Baker City 541-523-5223