BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 2022 A5 SPORTS BAKER SPRING SPORTS BEGINNING OREGON MEN’S BASKETBALL IN NIT Baker High baseball team excited to return to Arizona Ducks roll past Utah St. in 2nd half Annual spring break trip was canceled previous 2 years BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The Baker High School baseball team prob- ably will play games in three states this season before it has one complete practice on its home field. Which isn’t an altogether bad situation, coach Tim Smith said — in part because one of those states is Arizona. He’d be more disappointed by the delay in getting onto the diamond at the Baker Sports Complex if not for the revival of what had be- come a spring break tradition for the Bulldogs. That’s the long drive to the desert South- west to play several games in temperatures that sometimes don’t grace Baker City until the high school baseball season is already over hereabouts. Smith scheduled the first Arizona expedition in 2015, and the Bulldogs returned each of the next four Marches as well. But then came the pandemic. The tournament that brought Baker to Ari- zona was canceled in 2020 and 2021. There was no spring high school sports sea- son in Oregon in 2020, and the 2021 schedule was shortened to little more than a month. The Bulldogs went 10-6 during the abbreviated slate in April and May. But this year, with COVID-19 waning, the Arizona trip is back on Baker’s schedule. And Smith is excited to bring the Bulldogs to cactus country for the first time in three years. “It’s a good team-building trip,” he said. “We spend a lot of time together. It’s a fun time.” In addition to playing four games in Arizona, the Bulldogs will watch the Arizona State Sun Devils play, Smith said. In past years the trip usually included tak- ing in a Major League Baseball spring training game, but this year a labor dispute delayed the start of spring training. By the time the sides had settled, Smith said it was too late to make arrangements for the Bulldogs to watch the ma- jor leaguers play. But he’s still excited about the chance to get away, however briefly, from the chilly and some- times damp Baker County spring. “It’s always good baseball, and it’s nice to get in the good weather,” Smith said. Since practice started on the last day of Feb- ruary, the Bulldogs have spent much of their time in the batting cage building at the Sports Complex, Smith said. They’ve done some drills on the grassy out- field at the Complex, and on the soccer fields where a temporary diamond was set up. Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Baker baseball player Connor Chastain takes a swing in the batting cages at the Baker Sports Complex on Tuesday, March 15, 2022. But the dirt infield on the field has been too damp and muddy to use. Smith said this is just the second spring in the past eight where the entire field wasn’t playable before the first game. The Bulldog roster is at full strength this week now that three players — Jaxon Logsdon, Hayden Younger and Hudson Spike — have fin- ished the basketball season. Baker was slated to open the season Wednes- day, March 16, at Parma, Idaho, followed by a doubleheader at Heppner/Ione Thursday, March 17, starting at noon. Baker will then travel to Arizona, playing two Colorado teams, Doherty and Monitou Springs, on Monday, March 21, then taking on Buena Vista, Colorado, on March 23, and Apollo, Ari- zona, on March 24. The Bulldogs’ home opener is set for Wednesday, March 30, at 4 p.m. against Homedale, Idaho. Baker then returns to the road for five straight games, including a weekend trip to the Oregon Coast to start April. The Bulldogs will play a doubleheader at As- toria on Friday, April 1, starting at 4 p.m., fol- lowed by a single game at Seaside/Jewell at noon on Saturday, April 2. Greater Oregon League play starts April 6 with a doubleheader at Mac-Hi starting at 2 p.m. BY JAMES CREPEA oregonlive.com LOGAN, Utah — Oregon weathered a first half shooting barrage from Utah State, then it unleashed one of its own. De’Vion Harmon scored 16 of his 19 in the first half to keep Oregon in it and Jacob Young scored 13 of his 17 in the second half to close out an 83-72 comeback win for the Ducks over No. 4 seed Utah State in the first round of the men’s National Invita- tion Tournament on Tues- day night, March 15, before a raucous crowd of 7,023 at the Dee Glen Smith Spectrum. Oregon (20-14) shot 50.8% from the field and 42.1% from three, its best outing from the floor since Jan. 29 against Oregon State and best from behind the arc since Jan. 23 against Washington. “I’ve been fortunate to play in some NIT games,” said Or- egon coach Dana Altman, who notched his 300th win at UO while securing a 12th straight 20-win season. “The student section today was really good. It was a great environment. Our guys re- sponded and hit some shots, which we haven’t been doing, we’ve just shot it so poorly. We just finally hit some shots.” The Ducks advance to face top-seeded Texas A&M (24- 12) in the second round this weekend in College Station, Texas. Utah State built a 32-23 lead with 4:41 to go in the first half thanks to 12 assists on 14 baskets, but failed to create open shots in the sec- ond half. The Aggies (18-16) went from 7 of 16 from three- point range in the first half to just 2 for 12 from behind the arc and 10 of 34 (32.4%) overall from the field during the second half. “We made some scouting report mistakes in the first half not running (Steven Ashworth) off the line,” Al- tman said. “We knew what he wanted to do. Second half we did a much better job. We gave him that one where we screwed up in transition late there, but other than that our contests on threes were so much better. The first half he got it going; he hit four there and we never ran him off the line one time.” Oregon held USU leading scorer Justin Bean, who en- tered averaging 17.7 points and 9.8 rebounds with 20 double-doubles, to just nine points on a season-low 18.2% (2 for 11) from the field. It was just the third time this season Bean was held to un- der 10 points, though he still had 16 rebounds. “They were a really phys- ical team,” Bean said. “Give them credit. It made us un- comfortable. Obviously, of- fensively we weren’t great, but defensively was really where they took over. We weren’t filling up the gaps like we had planned. Their athleticism — they were getting downhill on us. They made eight threes, but they had a lot of points in the paint for sure. “It was just one of those games. You try to make a lit- tle run and they come back with a big momentum play or a dunk or an easy layup. It’s hard to overcome those. In the second half, we just didn’t quite get over the hump and they ran away with it.” Utah State hosted a Pac-12 team for the first time since 2013-14 on a stage fitting of postseason college basketball: a raucous on-campus envi- ronment where the game, al- beit in a consolation tourna- ment, mattered a great deal to those on the floor and those in the stands, who were over- whelmingly standing. “We’re grateful to be here,” Quincy Guerrier said. “Obvi- ously we were trying to be in the March Madness, but we’re in the NIT now and we’re go- ing to take full advantage of the opportunity for everyone. It’s on ESPN and it’s a big thing for everyone, especially for the vets to showcase, and we’re go- ing to try to win the NIT.” Oregon opened with a 10-2 lead, but Ashworth (20 points) hit three straight three-pointers to fuel an 11-0 Utah State run. A second 11-0 run by the Aggies made it 32-23 with 4:41 to half, but Harmon scored nine of Oregon’s final 10 points of the half to get the Ducks within 37-33 at the break. Just as it did in the first half, Oregon opened the second half with a 10-2 run, regained and steadily in- creased the lead and cruised from there. Other Baker High spring sports teams are in action Baker’s other spring sports teams are also preparing for their first competition or, in some cases, are already into their schedule. Softball The Bulldogs are slated to open the season Thursday, March 17, with a doubleheader starting at noon at Heppner/Ione. Tennis Baker’s first match, set for Tuesday, March 15, at Four Rivers in Ontario, was postponed by rain until Thursday, March 17, at 3 p.m. PDT. Golf Baker had its first girls tournament on Monday, March 14, at Weiser, Idaho. Two of Baker’s six girls players competed in the 9-hole event. Caitlin Lien shot a 50, and Gretchen Morgan carded a 68. The Baker boys team has 11 players out, said Mike Long, who coaches both the boys and girls teams. Eight boys players competed in an 18-hole tournament at River Bend Golf Course near Homedale, Idaho. Results will be published in a later issue. Track and field The Bulldogs are slated to open the season with the Ontario Icebreaker on Thursday, March 17, starting at 3:30 p.m. Insurance from Gregg Hinrichsen NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT Indiana tops turnover-prone Wyoming in First Four make shots,” Indiana coach Mike Woodson said. “But DAYTON, Ohio — Uni- we just kept grinding, and versity of Dayton Arena was I found another player to- rocking, thanks to hordes night off the bench and that of Indiana fans who made was Geronimo, who gave us the drive to the First Four to a major, major lift tonight. see the Hoosiers play in the And Trayce was who he’s NCAA Tournament for the been pretty much all year.” first time since 2016. Indiana opened a 10-point The 13,400-seat newly ren- lead over the Cowboys (25- ovated venue just got louder 9) with less than two minutes as Indiana pulled away late left. Wyoming’s Drake Jef- to cap a 66-58 win over turn- fries hit a pair of foul shots over-prone Wyoming on Tuesday night, March 15, sending the 12th-seeded Hoosiers (21-13) to a first- round East regional game to face fifth-seeded St. Mary’s on Thursday, March 17. Trayce Jackson-Davis had 29 points and nine rebounds, Jordan Geromino — who av- eraged 3.9 points this season — scored a career-high 15. “I thought our defense was really the key when we were struggling offensively to BY MITCH STACY Associated Press to get the Cowboys within six with 14 seconds to go, but Jeffries had to foul Indiana’s Xavier Johnson, who hit a pair from the stripe to put it out of reach. Hunter Maldonado paced the Cowboys with 21 points but turned the ball over 10 times. Graham Ike had 17 to go along with and nine re- bounds. 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