BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2022 A5 SPORTS BAKER BOYS BASKETBALL POWDER VALLEY BOYS BASKETBALL Tigers top Baker, claim GOL title Badgers Baker will have a home play-in game on either Friday, Feb. 25 or Saturday, Feb. 26 BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The La Grande boys basketball team feels so at home in the Baker gym that the Tigers walked out Saturday night, Feb. 19, with one of the nets. This episode of nylon larceny was minor, though, compared to the other things the Tigers left with: The Greater Oregon League championship and a home game in the first round of the Class 4A play- offs March 5. The Tigers had key runs at the end of the sec- ond quarter and the start of the third en route to a 69-52 win over Baker. The Bulldogs never led. The game was reminis- cent of La Grande’s 76-44 win over the Bulldogs, also in the Baker gym, 11 days earlier. In both games the Tigers used their height and quick hands to clog passing lanes and stifle Baker’s normally efficient offense. The Bulldogs are the highest scoring team in the Class 4A ranks, averaging 68 points per game. But after Baker’s 67-41 romp over La Grande on the Tigers’ home floor on Jan. 28, in the two re- matches in Baker the Bull- dogs had their two low- est-scoring games of the season, with 44 and 52 points. (Baker also scored 52 in a loss to Homedale, also in Baker, on Dec. 9.) “Their length worked in their favor for sure,” Baker coach Jebron Jones said of La Grande after the GOL title game. “They got a lot of deflections.” Jones said Baker players aided La Grande by failing and Schow in a 43-second span. Tsiatsos 1 2-5 4, A. Rodri- After Sam Tsiatsos guez 2 1-2 5, Bell 5 12-17 scored on a driving layin, 23, C. Rodriguez 1 2-4 4, the La Grande lead was Huntsman 1 0-0 2, Schow 45-22 with 3:44 left in the 3 2-4 9, Hutchins 7 3-4 22, third quarter. Staab 0 0-0 0. Totals 20 22- Logsdon scored off a 36 69. steal and Spike made con- secutive 3-pointers to get BAKER (52) Baker within 46-30, but Logsdon 5 0-0 11, Gamble- Bell’s late basket inside ton 0 2-2 2, Quintela 0 0-0 gave the Tigers a 48-30 0, Younger 0 0-0 0, Molina 0 0-0 0, Spike 7 0-0 17, Jones lead at the end of the third 3 2-2 8, Long 1 0-0 2, Hob- quarter. son 4 0-0 12, Mitchell 0 0-0 The lead swelled to as 0. Totals 20 4-4 52 much as 24 points, at 57- 33, in the fourth quarter. La Grande 9 22 17 21 — 69 And although Baker Baker 7 13 10 22 — 52 never got closer than 63- 48 on Jaron Long’s layin, Hobson made another Jones said he was happy 3-pointer to tie the score with Baker’s effort despite at 12 with 6:40 left in the the big deficit during the second quarter. second half. Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald It was the final tie. “They did a great job of Baker’s Isaiah Jones goes to the basket against La Grande’s After Bell’s 3-pointer playing hard, and they fin- ished the game the right Jace Schow in the GOL title game on Saturday, Feb. 19, 2022, gave La Grande a 15- 12 lead, Baker’s Hudson way,” he said. in the Baker gym. Spike swished a 12-footer Spike led Baker with to use enough ball fakes the southeast corner of from the key to cut the 17 points. Hobson added and by “staring at the per- the Baker gym, combining lead to 15-14. 12, Logsdon 11 and Isaiah son we’re passing to.” with the raucous Bulldog Then Hutchins and Jones eight. The Bulldogs also missed fans to create an atmo- Bell, two of the Tigers’ se- Baker will now have a multiple shots that they sphere appropriate for a nior leaders, took over. home play-in game either normally make at a high game with playoff impli- Hutchins made con- on Friday, Feb. 25, or Sat- percentage, but on Satur- cations. secutive 3-pointers in less urday, Feb. 26. The time day night refused to drop. After Brady Hutchins’ than a minute to give La and opponent will be de- Jones said that, with 3-pointer — the first of his Grande its biggest lead termined later this week, the exception of too many five — gave La Grande an thus far, at 21-14. said Buell Gonzales Jr., turnovers, he was gener- early 5-0 lead, Baker an- Bell then made six the Baker School District’s ally pleased with Baker’s swered with Jaxon Logs- straight free throws in the athletic director. offensive execution. don’s inside basket and final 3 minutes of the half, If the game is Friday, “We did a good job get- Paul Hobson’s 3-pointer and Alex Rodriguez and Feb. 25, it will take place ting great looks,” he said. to forge a 5-5 tie with 3:35 Jace Schow each had a bas- after the Baker girls game “But those missed shots left in what was a some- ket as the Tigers went on a against Pendleton, which are such morale boosters what sloppy first quarter. 16-6 run to push their lead starts at 5 p.m. The girls for them and such morale Baker’s first points, on to 31-20 lead at halftime. game will be followed by devastators for us. It was a Logsdon’s hoop, came al- Baker’s bid for a quick a ceremony honoring the big disappointment.” most halfway through the comeback to start the 1972 BHS boys basket- La Grande, which played period. second half was foiled ball team, which finished without injured point La Grande’s Devin Bell, when La Grande grabbed second in the state. If the guard Logan Williams, also who led all scorers with three straight offensive boys play-in game is Fri- had an overwhelming ad- 23 points, scored late to rebounds on one posses- day, it will take place im- vantage at the free throw give the Tigers a 9-7 lead sion, leading to Hutchins’ mediately after the cere- line. The Tigers shot 36 after one quarter. basket that boosted the mony, Gonzales said. free throws, making 22. Much more ominously Tigers lead to 35-20. The Baker boys game Baker shot just four, and for Baker, the Bulldogs “They did a great job against Pendleton, orig- made all of them. picked up their seventh of crashing the offensive inally set for Friday, Feb. Baker made enough foul with 1:24 left, mean- boards,” Jones said of the 25, has been canceled due field goals early to keep ing La Grande would shoot Tigers. to the play-in game. the highly anticipated free throws on most fouls Isaiah Jones made The winner of the third game between the ri- for the remaining 9½ min- two free throws, but La play-in game will ad- vals competitive. utes of the half. Grande then scored 10 vance to the first round of A large contingent of La The Tigers took advan- straight points, including the Class 4A playoffs on Grande fans packed into tage. 3-pointers by Hutchins March 4. LA GRANDE (69) BAKER SWIMMING Stadler caps high school career with two 2nd-place finishes happy with both of my races,” Stadler said. “My Brianna Stadler finished times were where I wanted her Baker High School them to be. I would have swimming career by fin- liked to get another first ishing second in two events place, but the two girls who at the Class 4A/3A/2A/1A beat me worked really hard swim meet Saturday, Feb. and are really fast.” 19, at Beaverton. In the backstroke, Stadler, a 4-time state Stadler swam the 100-yard champion, placed second event in 57.82 seconds. She in the 100-yard butterfly said that was her best time and 100-yard backstroke. since she set a state record And although just a in winning the event as a fraction of a second kept freshman in 2019. Stadler from claiming a On Saturday, Stadler fifth individual title — finished second to Sweet and winning at least one Home senior Chloe Taylor, in each of her high school who broke Stadler’s record years — she was satisfied of 56.64 by an eyeblink — with her times. 0.15 of a second. “I’m actually really In the 100-yard butter- BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Ryan Brennecke/The (Bend) Bulletin Brianna Stadler competes in the 100-yard butterfly. fly, Stadler said she almost achieved her goal of finish- ing in less than 58 seconds. Her time was 58.30, just .01 second behind her all- time best and less than half a second behind Adrienne Tam, a sophomore from Catlin Gabel, who finished in 57.77 seconds. That race almost had a disastrous start for Stadler when her goggles broke while she was poised on the starting blocking, pre- paring to dive in. Fortunately her dad, Randy Stadler, who’s also the Baker High School swimming coach, dashed in with an extra pair. “I was a little panicked for a second,” Brianna Stadler said. Randy Stadler said he was especially proud of Brianna for making sure she personally congratu- lated both Taylor and Tam for their races. Brianna, who was the lone Baker swimmer at the state meet, amassed 10 points for her two run- ner-up finishes, giving Baker a tie for seventh in the team standings. Brianna, who will swim for Colorado Mesa Uni- versity this fall, said she plans to take a week or two off before resuming training and competing in some club meets. fall short in OOL title game BY DAVIS CARBAUGH The Observer The pursuit of a perfect league season came just one game short for the Powder Valley Badgers. The Powder Valley boys basketball team battled out a hard-fought Old Oregon League Championship game, but ultimately lost to Nixyaawii 59-51 at Baker High School on Sat- urday, Feb. 19. The Badgers were one game shy of winning all 11 of their league games this year. The matchup went down to the wire, as the two top Old Oregon League teams battled to the last possession in front of a packed house at Baker High School. Senior point guard Re- ece Dixon led the Badgers with 16 points in a gutsy performance after sustaining a leg injury midway through the contest. “I think we just didn’t shoot well. Hats off to them, they came out and played a hard game,” Powder Valley head coach Kyle Dixon said. “I thought we struggled from the floor and they’re a fast team, they’re solid.” Nixyaawii came out quick to start the game, taking an early advantage. The Golden Ea- gles led for the majority of the game, but the Badgers remained within reach. Nixyaawii led 16-7 midway through the first and ended the first quarter up 16-10. The Golden Eagles looked strong early in the second quarter, until the Badgers woke up and put together a late rally. Powder Valley scored several baskets just before halftime to head into the locker rooms trailing 29-26, ig- niting the crowd. Cole Martin was strong for Powder Valley offensively in the first half, scor- ing all 12 of his points in the first two quarters. Nixyaawii’s Baron Moses had another strong performance, scoring 11 of his game-high 19 points in the first half. Nixyaawii and Powder Valley were neck- and-neck in the third quarter, exchanging buckets. The Badgers went on a run midway through the quarter and took a 38-37 lead with 1:55 remaining in the period. On an open fast break that would have given Powder Valley a one-point lead with 45 sec- onds left in the third quarter, tragedy struck the Badgers. Reece Dixon injured his leg on a layup attempt and missed the remainder of the quarter and was limited after returning mid- way through the fourth quarter. “It’s a big difference, we need him in the game,” Kyle Dixon said. “When his knees are hurting like that, it’s hard to play defense and it’s hard to get the jump shot going. We’ll re- cover.” The Badgers hung within two possessions for almost the entirety of the fourth quarter, but the team was unable to overcome the defi- cit. Nixyaawii’s Dylan Abrahamson was very efficient in the fourth quarter, scoring eight points off two field goals and a 4-4 free-throw performance. “We just needed to stay focused and work harder,” Kyle Dixon said. “We did a lot of things we don’t normally do. We turned the ball over a lot and our shooting was terrible tonight.” The loss was a heartbreaker for Powder Val- ley, who came into the championship game 10-0 against league opponents and 21-1 on the season. The win is a major accomplishment for Nixyaawii, who is 22-6 through the end of district play. “We just have to recover,” Kyle Dixon said. “We have state coming up, we’ll be alright.” The Badgers are set to face Condon (15-6) on Feb. 22 in round one of the 1A state tour- nament. “Of course they hate losing, but sometimes it’s good for teams to lose,” Kyle Dixon said. “I think it will make us work harder.” IT’S IN YOUR INBOX before your mailbox Subscribers can receive daily email updates and uninterrupted digital delivery on a computer, tablet and smartphone Sign up for free digital access Call 800-781-3214 BakerCityHerald.com