A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2022 SPORTS BAKER GIRLS BASKETBALL Bulldogs tame Tigers again, this time for GOL crown Baker’s 3rd win over La Grande ensures home playoff game on either March 4 or March 5 BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Brooklyn Jaca thought the ball was going in when it spun off her fingers. But she still had to wait, and watch. When the ball plunged through the net with 14 sec- onds left in the third quar- ter, the Baker girls’ bid for the Greater Oregon League cham- pionship was all but assured. Jaca’s 3-pointer boosted Baker’s lead over La Grande to 41-28, and the Bulldogs went on to a 50-39 win on Saturday evening, Feb. 19. Their third victory this season over the rival Tigers clinched a home playoff game for Baker on either Friday, March 4, or Saturday, March 5. The opponent has yet to be determined. The winner will advance to the Class 4A state tournament March 10-12 in Coos Bay. Buell Gonzales Jr., Baker School District athletic direc- tor, said he would prefer to schedule the playoff game for Friday, March 4, because it would be easier to incorporate the game into the schedule for the state Class 1A tour- nament, which takes place at Baker High School from March 2-5. “I was glad it went in,” Jaca said with a smile, and a bit of understatement, about her key 3-pointer. Her shot capped a 7-0 Baker run that was possible largely because the Bulldogs snared five straight offensive re- bounds in the final 50 seconds of the third quarter. The first sequence, with one offensive board from Jaca and three from Jozie Ramos, led to Ramos being fouled with 18.1 seconds left in the quarter. Ra- mos made the first free throw to give Baker a 38-28 lead, its largest to that point. She missed the second shot but another offensive re- bound, from Rylee Elms, gave Baker yet another chance. Sydnee Pierce saw Jaca alone and made a crosscourt pass to set up Jaca’s 3-pointer. Jaca said Pierce’s pass, and the offensive rebounds that set up the play, exemplified the importance of teamwork. “We played together as a team, and that’s when we have our best moments,” she said. “Brooklyn’s three was a big shot,” Baker coach Jason Ra- mos said. “She had a great game.” Baker’s 7-0 run at the end of the third quarter was a deci- sive sequence, he said. “That was huge, getting that separation right there at the end of the quarter,” Ramos said. “It gave us some momen- tum.” And it continued into the final quarter, as Makenzie Fla- nagan scored just 10 seconds into the quarter and Macey Moore made a pair of free throws to extend Baker’s lead to 45-30. LA GRANDE (39) Shorts 1 1-6 3, Collman 2 7-8 12, Strand 1 2-2 4, Jensen 0 0-0 0, Kump 1 0-0 2, Wilcox 4 0-1 8, Neer 3 0-3 6, A. Dunlap 2 0-0 4. Totals 14 10-20 39. BAKER (50) Elms 4 3-4 11, Flanagan 3 0-0 6, Wilde 0 0-0 0, Gyllenberg 0 1-2 1, Pierce 1 0-0 2, Ramos 2 6-10 10, Roy 0 0-0 0, Jaca 4 0-0 10, Moore 2 6-7 10. Totals 16 16-23 50. La Grande 10 14 4 11 — 39 Baker 12 17 12 9 — 50 Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Baker’s Rylee Elms and La Grande’s Makenna Shorts vie for a loose ball during the GOL title game on Satur- day, Feb. 19, 2022, in the Baker gym. La Grande never got closer than 9 points after that. Jason Ramos said Baker excelled at getting the ball to players in the key, where they were able to draw fouls when they didn’t score. “They (La Grande) were in foul trouble, and we tried to take advantage,” he said. Baker made 16 of 23 free throws. Ramos was also happy with the Bulldogs’ defensive effort. Baker controlled La Grande’s Makenna Shorts in particular. The junior guard led the Tigers in both previ- ous games, scoring 11 points in Baker’s 51-43 win at La Grande on Jan. 28, and 13 points in the Bulldogs’ 43-25 win on Feb. 8 at Baker. On Saturday, Shorts scored just three points. Both teams struggled early to establish any offensive mo- mentum in a first quarter marked more by fouls and turnovers. La Grande committed its seventh foul with 51 seconds left in the quarter, ensuring Baker would shoot free throws on most fouls for the rest of the half. The Bulldogs took advan- tage, making nine of 11 free throws. Moore made four of her five free throws. Baker led 12-8 late in the first quarter, but La Grande’s Addy Dunlap swished a 15-footer at the buzzer, and the Tigers scored the first four points of the second quarter to take their first lead at 14-12 with 6:52 left in the half. La Grande extended the lead to 18-14 on Shorts’ free throw with 4:53 left, but Elms scored two baskets in the next minute, the last on a rebound of her own miss, to tie the score at 18 with 3:56 left in the half. Jaca then swished a 17-footer as part of an 11-2 Baker run that gave Baker a lead it would never relinquish. Baker led 29-24 at halftime, and after the Bulldogs pushed the lead to eight points early in the third quarter, La Grande got as close as 34-28 on Maezie Wilcox’s basket midway through the quarter. Baker then went on the 7-0 run capped by Jaca’s 3-pointer. Baker, which improved to 18-5, had one of its most bal- anced scoring games of the season. Elms led the way with 11 points. Ramos, Jaca and Moore had 10 points each. Fla- nagan added six. “It’s great to know that we’ve got players out there that can score,” Jason Ramos said. Baker will conclude its regu- lar season schedule by playing host to Pendleton on Friday, Feb. 25, at 5 p.m. POWDER VALLEY GIRLS BASKETBALL Badgers finish second in OOL tournament a 5-1 lead through the first five minutes of action and slowed A valiant effort ultimately down the pace. came up short for the Powder The Golden Eagles ran the Valley girls basketball team, press on defense early and often, which finished as runners-up fighting back to take a 9-7 lead in the Old Oregon League dis- at the end of the first quarter. trict tournament. Nixyaawii’s Sistine Moses was The Badgers stayed within steady offensively all game long, reach early, but a big second scoring six of her game-high 16 half propelled Nixyaawii to a points in the first quarter. 59-39 victory in the champion- The Badgers found them- ship game on Saturday, Feb. 19, selves trailing for the ensuing at Baker High School. three quarters, but the game Powder Valley relied on its was far from lost. Powder Val- high defensive intensity early ley cut the lead to 12-11 with on, holding a high-octane 6:15 remaining in the second Nixyaawii offense within check quarter — a packed house at early on. The Badgers built up Baker High School was loud BY DAVIS CARBAUGH The Observer from start to finish. The Bad- gers trailed 24-18 at halftime and looked to be in conten- tion for the district title. The third quarter was an exchange of runs, which ulti- mately proved costly to Powder Valley. Nixyaawii jumped out to a 26-18 lead out of halftime, to which the Badgers answered with a 7-0 run of their own. With Nixyaawii leading 28-25, the Golden Eagles completely tilted the scales in their favor. Nixyaawii rattled off a 16-0 run that extended into the fourth quarter and helped the Golden Eagles take a 44-25 lead. E Come and see us for all O of your vision needs • A great selection of frames to choose to get the look you want. • We carry both regular and prescription sunglasses. • In house repairs and special packages starting at $ 99 Late in the game, Powder Valley fought back to bring the game within 11 — the Badgers trailed 50-39 with three minutes remaining. Nixyaawii closed out the game with a 9-0 run to cap off a 20-point victory in the district title game. Dallee Bingham was ef- fective throughout the game for Powder Valley, scoring a team-high 10 points. Jacey Anderson and Maddy Leggett both scored nine points each. The win for Nixyaawii clinches the team’s spot at the top of the Old Oregon League in the state playoffs. Powder Valley, as runner-up, will play at home against Trout Lake (Washington) on Feb. 23. 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