A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2022 SPORTS HOCKEY COLLEGE BASEBALL Avalanche unseat Lightning, Mississippi sweeps Oklahoma to nab 3rd Stanley Cup victory claim first College World Series title BY ERIC OLSON Associated Press BY STEPHEN WHYNO AP Hockey Writer TAMPA, Fla. — Nathan MacKinnon could not find the words. Gabriel Landeskog cracked a smile and a joke. After years of playoff disap- pointments, the Colorado Av- alanche are back atop hockey’s mountain after dethroning the two-time defending champi- ons. Behind a goal and an assist from MacKinnon, the Ava- lanche won the Stanley Cup for the third time in franchise history and first in more than two decades by beating the Tampa Bay Lightning 2-1 in Game 6 of the final Sunday night, June 26. “It’s just been building over time,” playoff MVP-winning defenseman Cale Makar said about the Avalanche’s jour- ney. “I’ve been here only three years. A couple of tough exits in the playoffs. It was just all leading up to this.” It’s the first title for the Avs’ core group led by MacKinnon, captain Gabriel Landeskog, Mikko Rantanen and Makar, and it follows several early postseason exits — in the sec- ond round each of the past three seasons and the first round in 2018. The 2016-17 team was the worst in hockey, finishing with just 48 points. “It’s hard to describe,” said MacKinnon, who led the way in the clincher by blocking shots and taking big hits in ad- dition to his offensive produc- tion. “Some tough years mixed in there, but it’s all over now. We never stopped believing.” With a mix of speed, high- end talent and the experience gained from those defeats, Colorado broke through this time — earning every bit of the championship by knock- ing off a deep and gritty team that hoisted the Cup the past two years. “To beat them is proba- bly a little more satisfying, to be honest, because they are champions,” said veteran for- ward Andrew Cogliano, who hoisted the Cup for the first time at age 35. “They know how to win. And, ultimately, when you can beat the cham- pions, you know you really earned it.” Like the Avalanche fully ex- pected, it wasn’t easy. An early turnover by Makar led to an easy goal by Steven Douglas R. Clifford/Tampa Bay Times-TNS Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Erik Cernak (81) defends the net and Tampa Bay Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy (88) from Colorado Avalanche center Darren Helm (43) during the first period of the game between the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Colorado Avalanche for Game 6 of the Stanley Cup final on Sunday,in Amalie Arena in Tampa. Stamkos, putting Colorado in a hole and several more bumps and bruises followed. The Avalanche tied it when MacKinnon beat 2021 play- off MVP Andrei Vasilevskiy with a near-perfect shot and went ahead on another big goal by trade deadline acqui- sition Artturi Lehkonen. They locked things down by hold- ing on to the puck and held Tampa Bay without a shot on Darcy Kuemper until midway through the third period. When the Lightning finally did, he was there. Brought in from Arizona in a trade last summer to shore up the sport’s most important posi- tion, Kuemper was solid again and made his most important save with under seven minutes left when he slid over to deny star Nikita Kucherov. His teammates finished the job and Colorado improved to 9-1 on the road this post- season. Much like the Lightning went all in multiple times by trading high draft picks and prospects to load up for the best chance to win the Cup, Avalanche general manager Joe Sakic was not afraid to ante up in March to acquire Lehkonen, defenseman Josh Manson and Cogliano. They became the perfect comple- ment to Colorado’s core that had showed plenty of playoff promise but until now hadn’t produced a championship. Sakic, who captained Col- orado’s first two title-winning teams in 1996 and 2001, used a familiar recipe to get his team over the hump. Much like Pierre Lacroix, the archi- tect of those Avalanche teams that had so much success af- ter the organization moved to Denver, Sakic prioritized skill, speed and versatility. That speed overwhelmed ev- ery opponent on the way to the final, from an opening sweep of Nashville through a hard- fought, six-game series against St. Louis and another sweep of Edmonton. It was a different challenge against Tampa Bay, when the Avalanche needed to absorb counter-punches from the back-to-back champs to close it out. Tampa Bay ended up two victories short of becoming the NHL’s first three-peat champion since the early 1980s New York Islanders dy- nasty. “It stings just as much as the first time,” Stamkos said, refer- ring to the Lightning’s loss to Chicago in the 2015 final. Before the series, Makar said he and his teammates were trying to end a dynasty and begin a legacy. That leg- acy finally involves a cham- pionship, thanks in large part to steady coach Jared Bednar, who in his sixth season found a way to focus his team on the mission at hand from the start of training camp. Ace Nursery Customer le a S n io t ia c Appre 30% Everything Growing OFF 3 Days Only Thursday, Friday & Saturday June 30 to July 1 39103 Pocahontas Rd • 541-523-6595 OMAHA, Neb. — The last team to get into the NCAA baseball tournament was the last team standing. Mississippi scored twice on wild pitches in a three-run eighth inning and the Rebels won their first national base- ball title, sweeping Oklahoma in the College World Series finals with a 4-2 victory Sun- day, June 26. The Rebels (42-23) be- came the eighth national champion since 2009 to come out of the Southeast- ern Conference and third straight, and the trophy will stay in the Magnolia State for another year. Mississippi State won last year. “There is so much to be said for how much we over- came this year, how much we had to fight through, how much we had to pick each other up and never let ourselves get down,” team captain Tim Elko said. “The story of our season is going to be told for year and years to come.” Ole Miss benefited from a runner-interference call that took a run away from Okla- homa (45-24) in the sixth inning. The Rebels also over- came a spectacular pitching performance by Cade Hor- ton, who set a CWS finals re- cord with 13 strikeouts. Brandon Johnson struck out the side in a 1-2-3 ninth inning to set off a celebra- tion on the field and in the stands where the majority of the 25,972 were Rebels fans dressed in Ole Miss pow- der blue. Catcher Hayden Dunhurst ran to the mound to embrace and then tackle Johnson after Sebastian Or- duno swung and missed on the final pitch. It was an improbable jour- ney for the Rebels and 22nd- year coach Mike Bianco, who was under fire when his team sat at 22-17 overall and 7-14 in SEC play on May 1. “I think they’ve showed a lot of people that you can fall down, you can stumble and you can fail, but that doesn’t mean you’re a failure,” Bi- anco said. “If you continue to work hard, you continue to push and you continue to believe, you can accomplish anything. That’s not some poster or some tweet to moti- vate you. We’ve all heard that. These guys have lived that this season.” Ole Miss beat out North Carolina State for the final at-large bid and had to go on the road for regionals and super regionals. The Rebels finished the season on a 20-6 run, including 10-1 in the na- tional tournament. Their only loss at the CWS was 3-2 to Arkansas on Wednesday, June 22. The next day, Dylan DeLucia pitched a four-hit shutout to beat the Razorbacks and send the Rebels to the finals. DeLucia was named CWS Most Outstanding Player af- ter allowing one earned run, striking out 17 and walking none in 16 2/3 innings. Ole Miss, which won the CWS finals opener 10-3, was down 2-1 going into the eighth inning Sunday. Tre- vin Michael relieved Hor- ton with one out, and Jacob Gonzalez singled through the right side to drive in the tying run. “Kind of knew we were go- ing to start the scoring in the eighth or ninth,” said Gonza- lez, 3 for 23 in the CWS be- fore singling twice and hom- ering Sunday. “That’s how we are. We’re going to put the pressure on. We’re not going to strike out and sit down. Luckily, I got a hit and I fi- nally got to help the team out this week.” MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER Penalty kick helps Timbers to win PORTLAND (AP) — Se- bastián Blanco converted a tiebreaking penalty kick in first-half stoppage time just after 19-year-old goal- keeper Abraham Rodriguez made his Major League Soc- cer debut in place of injured William Yarbrough, and the Portland Timbers beat the Colorado Rapids 3-0 on Sat- urday night, June 25. Yarbrough, a 33-year-old who has made three inter- national appearances for the U.S., sustained a concussion in a collision with Santiago Moreno at the top of the pen- alty area in the first minute of stoppage time. Referee Rosendo Mendoza awarded the penalty kick, and after a lengthy delay, Ro- driguez entered in the eighth minute of stoppage time. The goalkeeper dived left while Blanco put the penalty kick the other way for his third goal of the MLS season. “I was a little nervous, but ready for that situation,” said Rodriguez, signed by the Rapids in 2020 as a homegrown player from Thornton, Colorado. Jaroslaw Niezgoda scored a pair of second-half goals for Portland (4-6-7), which ended a six-game regu- lar-season winless steak against Colorado. Niezgoda, who has five goals this season, scored off passes from Bill Tuiloma in the 54th minute and Eryk Williamson in the 62nd. Colorado (5-7-4) and Port- land both took 19 shots, but the Timbers had a 7-5 edge in shots on goal. Aljaz Ivacic had four saves for Portland. Text us your tire photo 541-519-8878 we will text back with a quote for new tires! Lew Brothers Tire Service 541-523-3679 210 Bridge St. Baker City, OR