The BulleTin • Friday, January 29, 2021 B5 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY SATURDAY TONIGHT HIGH 44° LOW 29° Mostly cloudy ALMANAC TUESDAY TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 46° 42° 66° in 1931 27° 25° -15° in 1980 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace Record 0.66" in 1954 Month to date (normal) 0.64" (1.41") Year to date (normal) 0.64" (1.41") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29.65" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Sat. Sun 7:26am/5:11pm 7:25am/5:13pm Moon 6:22pm/8:25am 7:36pm/8:56am Mercury 8:02am/6:39pm 7:56am/6:36pm Venus 6:48am/3:58pm 6:48am/4:00pm Mars 10:54am/1:13am 10:52am/1:12am Jupiter 7:28am/5:05pm 7:25am/5:02pm Saturn 7:14am/4:42pm 7:11am/4:39pm Uranus 10:53am/12:46am 10:49am/12:43am Last New First Full Feb 4 Feb 11 Feb 19 Feb 27 Tonight's sky: The Little Dipper stands in the north tonight and every night. The star at the tip of its handle is Polaris, the North Star. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 1 1 1 0 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. ROAD CONDITONS For web cameras of our passes, go to www.bendbulletin.com/webcams I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Cloudy and chilly today into tonight with a fl urry or two. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Partly to mostly cloudy Friday with a few snow showers. US 26 at Gov't Camp: Mostly cloudy and chilly Friday with a few snow showers. US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Partly to mostly cloudy with a light rain or snow shower. ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Mostly cloudy and chilly Friday with a few snow showers. Snow moving in later Friday night. ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Chilly today with plenty of clouds and a few snow showers. SKI REPORT 44° 29° 41° 19° Cloudy with a little rain in the afternoon Cloudy with a bit of snow; ice at night Morning fl urries; otherwise, mainly cloudy EAST: Cloudy to partly sunny and chilly Friday with a few fl urries. Partly cloudy and cold Friday night. Astoria 46/40 Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s Base 0-46 0-57 42-49 73-77 82-126 26-48 0-95 48-80 28-41 80-110 0-96 32-36 66-77 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 56/29/0.00 Akron 23/20/0.08 Albany 21/17/0.03 Albuquerque 45/23/0.00 Anchorage 22/10/0.06 Atlanta 47/34/0.00 Atlantic City 34/29/0.00 Austin 56/32/0.00 Baltimore 37/32/0.00 Billings 45/19/0.00 Birmingham 48/35/0.00 Bismarck 22/5/0.00 Boise 52/41/Tr Boston 31/29/0.20 Bridgeport, CT 34/30/0.00 Buffalo 20/16/0.01 Burlington, VT 23/18/0.03 Caribou, ME 28/23/0.05 Charleston, SC 53/44/0.02 Charlotte 48/37/0.51 Chattanooga 44/34/Tr Cheyenne 49/17/0.00 Chicago 26/8/0.00 Cincinnati 30/19/0.04 Cleveland 23/21/0.06 Colorado Springs 54/11/0.01 Columbia, MO 35/12/0.00 Columbia, SC 53/41/0.04 Columbus, GA 53/37/0.00 Columbus, OH 25/20/Tr Concord, NH 31/26/0.07 Corpus Christi 61/44/0.00 Dallas 49/28/0.00 Dayton 29/19/Tr Denver 56/15/0.03 Des Moines 26/0/0.00 Detroit 23/16/Tr Duluth 13/-15/Tr El Paso 62/35/0.00 Fairbanks -1/-26/0.00 Fargo 20/9/0.02 Flagstaff 48/10/0.00 Grand Rapids 24/16/0.07 Green Bay 19/-1/0.00 Greensboro 38/32/0.57 Harrisburg 35/28/Tr Hartford, CT 31/26/0.00 Helena 49/25/0.00 Honolulu 78/72/0.03 Houston 62/39/0.00 Huntsville 44/32/0.00 Indianapolis 32/18/0.02 Jackson, MS 52/38/0.00 Jacksonville 57/48/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 63/53/pc 25/15/c 13/0/pc 55/31/pc 22/9/sn 52/33/s 29/20/s 67/58/pc 34/21/pc 42/27/pc 54/34/s 28/22/c 43/31/r 19/10/sf 22/12/pc 18/11/sf 11/3/sf 18/4/c 49/30/s 47/25/s 49/30/s 51/29/pc 29/24/pc 33/21/s 25/18/sf 55/28/pc 46/35/pc 50/26/s 56/33/s 30/17/s 17/4/pc 69/62/pc 60/53/pc 31/19/s 57/31/s 34/30/pc 26/13/s 22/19/c 68/44/c -2/-10/c 25/22/c 34/16/sn 27/14/pc 26/19/pc 42/22/s 31/21/pc 18/6/s 39/25/c 80/71/sh 63/55/pc 51/31/s 34/23/s 59/41/s 57/36/s Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 49/31/r 58/49/pc 69/57/pc 70/46/pc 90/74/pc 32/10/s 58/55/r 33/27/sn 69/42/t 43/38/r 83/74/t 79/57/pc 62/49/pc 23/8/s 75/69/pc 49/36/pc 40/32/r 50/40/r 75/64/t 66/58/s 48/45/pc 47/44/sh 69/63/c 75/67/pc 60/54/pc 52/38/r 61/48/pc 82/73/pc Saturday Hi/Lo/W 69/40/s 32/26/pc 15/-4/s 48/25/pc 18/0/c 54/45/pc 34/22/s 77/47/pc 38/23/s 41/24/c 58/52/c 29/13/c 47/31/c 22/9/s 27/13/s 21/12/c 11/-3/pc 14/4/pc 54/44/s 48/37/pc 52/44/pc 40/23/pc 34/30/pc 40/33/pc 32/27/pc 47/19/pc 45/33/r 52/40/pc 60/49/pc 35/29/pc 18/0/s 79/55/pc 72/41/pc 37/29/pc 47/22/pc 35/27/r 29/25/pc 27/24/c 60/33/s -4/-14/c 28/18/sn 37/15/pc 29/24/pc 32/26/c 43/31/pc 35/22/s 21/3/s 41/23/c 81/71/s 72/54/c 54/47/c 38/32/sn 63/54/c 64/50/s City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 22/11/0.00 34/18/0.00 22/15/Tr 54/40/0.00 27/18/0.06 28/9/0.00 42/31/0.00 65/46/0.00 33/22/0.07 20/-7/Tr 44/30/0.00 76/70/Tr 24/9/Tr 21/9/0.00 40/30/0.03 57/43/0.00 34/27/Tr 35/28/0.15 39/33/0.14 47/19/0.00 28/7/0.00 64/56/0.00 65/43/0.00 29/8/0.00 34/28/0.00 73/47/0.00 24/20/0.02 31/27/0.02 33/31/0.02 39/33/0.88 51/12/0.00 38/32/0.45 40/30/0.01 18/15/0.03 50/48/0.62 32/14/0.00 49/26/Tr 57/38/0.00 64/46/0.00 54/50/0.49 51/49/1.30 47/14/0.00 58/43/0.00 47/39/0.33 25/11/Tr 38/28/Tr 40/26/0.00 69/56/0.17 72/50/0.00 45/30/0.00 37/32/Tr 38/19/0.00 42/30/0.05 66/46/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 31/27/sn 47/39/s 24/9/s 52/36/sh 35/21/s 37/32/pc 52/40/pc 56/44/t 38/27/s 25/20/pc 52/40/pc 70/60/pc 29/26/pc 26/23/c 47/30/s 61/50/s 23/16/pc 25/15/pc 37/28/s 56/48/pc 36/32/pc 64/45/s 58/43/sh 34/27/s 29/18/s 63/45/sh 25/16/sf 22/8/sn 19/9/sf 41/20/s 44/22/c 38/20/c 38/20/s 15/11/sf 54/39/pc 41/32/s 44/31/c 64/58/pc 59/47/r 55/44/pc 56/39/pc 51/30/pc 54/33/s 46/40/pc 32/29/c 37/30/c 49/38/s 65/48/s 68/41/c 56/48/pc 36/24/pc 52/43/pc 42/30/pc 63/40/pc Saturday Hi/Lo/W 34/22/sf 47/31/r 28/23/pc 53/37/s 44/36/pc 38/27/r 59/43/r 59/47/s 45/39/r 32/27/c 57/48/r 72/66/pc 34/29/c 32/25/sn 52/46/r 72/63/c 29/17/s 30/16/s 38/29/s 63/33/c 39/27/sn 70/54/pc 64/45/s 37/32/sn 33/21/s 61/42/pc 31/25/pc 22/6/s 24/7/s 43/30/pc 37/22/c 39/23/pc 41/26/pc 18/7/c 56/43/c 43/37/r 41/23/c 74/49/pc 62/44/s 56/48/c 58/44/c 43/20/pc 59/47/s 48/43/sh 33/24/sn 41/34/sn 51/34/r 72/57/pc 59/38/s 62/36/r 40/29/s 50/30/r 43/34/sh 64/42/s 91/70/0.00 68/48/0.00 19/14/0.18 37/27/0.40 81/57/0.00 79/68/0.00 65/45/0.00 54/39/0.04 13/5/0.00 10/8/0.11 58/46/0.25 95/78/0.00 54/32/0.02 84/61/0.00 87/66/0.00 27/25/0.19 34/27/0.04 50/37/0.00 85/77/0.07 28/12/0.22 72/64/0.27 58/57/0.06 63/51/0.49 47/42/0.31 18/8/0.00 45/36/0.12 40/27/0.35 34/28/0.16 81/58/s 71/49/pc 11/-3/pc 35/23/sn 82/58/s 70/60/c 65/44/s 41/31/pc 16/-2/pc 8/-5/s 53/44/c 92/79/pc 62/43/sh 76/61/c 89/70/pc 33/22/sn 27/15/s 48/37/s 86/76/c 27/11/sn 74/70/r 63/57/c 61/55/sh 49/34/s 19/8/c 44/39/c 47/42/r 31/23/c 82/60/s 74/50/s 11/-4/s 28/22/c 82/58/c 72/64/c 66/44/pc 47/36/pc 15/6/pc 9/-5/s 54/40/r 91/79/s 61/51/sh 71/59/r 91/73/pc 31/20/sn 45/18/sf 58/47/pc 84/76/t 16/8/sn 82/72/pc 71/57/s 64/57/pc 46/36/s 20/12/pc 45/41/r 50/30/pc 30/21/sn INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 78° at Hollywood, FL National low: -37° at Cotton, MN Precipitation: 2.84" at Lompoc, CA T-storms Cloudy with a bit of rain in the afternoon NATIONAL Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 49/39/0.01 46/40/pc 47/43/r La Grande 43/36/0.00 44/30/c 44/37/c Portland 46/39/0.25 47/42/c 50/45/sh Baker City 42/37/Tr 43/28/c 41/32/c La Pine 41/30/0.02 39/28/pc 41/32/c Prineville 45/36/0.00 45/29/pc 41/39/c Brookings 46/40/0.30 47/42/sh 50/47/r Medford 44/32/0.16 46/36/c 52/41/c Redmond 47/28/0.00 44/29/pc 47/37/c Burns 37/25/0.31 37/24/c 39/24/c Newport 48/37/0.08 46/41/pc 48/45/r Roseburg 45/38/0.47 49/41/c 52/45/c Salem 47/41/0.11 46/41/c 48/45/sh Eugene 47/38/0.27 48/41/c 51/45/sh North Bend 49/41/0.02 49/43/pc 52/46/r Sisters 44/25/0.04 45/26/pc 47/36/c Klamath Falls 40/29/0.05 38/30/c 41/33/c Ontario 51/37/0.05 47/31/sn 48/32/c The Dalles 48/34/0.01 47/35/c 47/37/r Lakeview 37/26/0.17 34/27/c 37/23/sf Pendleton 51/38/Tr 43/35/c 55/47/c Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday -10s Sun and areas of low clouds 42° 22° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 47/35 Rufus Hermiston 46/35 47/35 48/36 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 47/34 45/40 47/42 42/29 Wasco 41/26 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Partly to Tillamook 40/24 45/33 43/35 Sandy 47/35 McMinnville 47/41 mostly cloudy Friday Joseph Heppner La Grande 44/40 Maupin Government 45/42 with a few scattered 44/30 40/24 Camp 46/32 Condon 44/36 Union Lincoln City fl urries. Mainly dry 41/31 37/31 43/30 Salem 46/42 Spray and cold at night. Granite Warm Springs 46/41 Madras 44/32 Albany 41/27 Newport Baker City 46/28 48/30 Mitchell 46/41 46/41 43/28 WEST: Mostly cloudy Camp Sherman 40/31 Redmond Corvallis John Unity and cool Friday. Peri- Yachats 45/28 44/29 46/39 Day Prineville 44/25 ods of rain and areas 45/41 Ontario Sisters 45/29 Paulina 41/29 47/31 of fog Friday night into Florence Eugene 45/26 Bend Brothers 36/27 Vale Saturday. 48/43 48/41 44/29 36/26 Sunriver 48/32 Nyssa 42/28 Hampton Cottage La Pine 48/33 Juntura Oakridge Grove 39/28 36/25 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 41/27 46/37 49/42 Fort Rock 49/42 37/24 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 39/26 35/26 High: 51° 39/28 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Ontario Beaver Frenchglen Silver 49/44 49/41 38/26 38/27 Low: 18° Marsh Lake 38/27 Port Orford 37/26 39/27 at Crater Lake Grants Burns Junction Paisley 48/45 Pass 43/28 Chiloquin 38/29 46/40 Rome Medford 39/31 Gold Beach 46/36 45/29 47/44 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 39/24 46/38 38/30 38/24 47/42 34/27 Seaside 46/40 Cannon Beach 45/41 THURSDAY 40° 20° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Ski resort New snow Anthony Lakes Mtn 0 Hoodoo Ski Area 3 Mt. Ashland 11 Mt. Bachelor 3 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 3 Timberline Lodge 2 Willamette Pass 6 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 1 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 45 Squaw Valley, CA 28 Park City Mountain, UT 2 Sun Valley, ID 25 WEDNESDAY OREGON WEATHER Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low MONDAY 48° 37° 45° 38° Considerable clouds with a bit of snow Periods of clouds and sun SUNDAY Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: OnTheSnow.com 43/39/1.03 48/34/0.00 75/65/0.12 70/59/0.02 93/77/0.00 28/14/0.00 60/52/0.29 39/32/0.01 70/41/0.00 38/16/0.24 80/74/0.22 79/56/0.00 64/55/0.00 10/3/0.12 83/75/0.18 54/46/0.28 39/37/0.76 54/36/0.91 74/61/0.27 73/61/0.00 41/34/0.14 53/45/0.08 68/56/0.61 80/64/0.00 59/53/0.01 55/47/0.78 56/46/0.00 83/75/0.07 37/25/c 65/48/pc 74/56/pc 61/41/pc 91/72/s 44/12/s 63/57/r 34/20/sn 69/43/pc 51/31/pc 76/66/t 79/56/s 67/55/s 32/18/pc 78/73/c 39/35/r 40/28/c 46/41/r 75/63/t 67/60/s 49/45/sh 52/47/pc 72/61/c 74/67/pc 59/52/c 40/33/r 55/43/pc 80/71/s Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw COLLEGE FOOTBALL | SENIOR BOWL Players who opted out look to shake off rust BY JOHN ZENOR Associated Press MOBILE, Ala. — Former Wake Forest quarterback Ja- mie Newman hasn’t played in a game in about 400 days since first switching schools and then opting out of the 2020 season. Newman is hardly alone among the players trying to shake off the rust after long layoffs leading up to Saturday’s Senior Bowl for senior NFL prospects. A number of the Senior Bowl players had shortened seasons or none at all because of the coronavirus pandemic. Some chose to opt out of the season and start preparing for the draft — including New- man, Michigan wide receiver Nico Collins and Washing- ton defensive tackle Levi On- wuzurike. Others had their seasons postponed to spring or their teams played few games, if any. The lack of 2020 game film makes this week, and Satur- day’s game, more important than usual. Beavers Continued from B3 “That was unacceptable,” said Canham, the one-time Beavers All-American catcher who is entering his second sea- son as coach. “It really made us look at the mirror and think about what we wanted to be. In the end, I think, it just makes this team hungry now.” The good news, Canham said, is that his team had an in- spiring week of practice after the debacle, fueled in part by a players’ meeting, and seemed poised to turn things around. “We now realize that, at any given moment, things can change,” Claunch said. “And we realize there are still a lot of questions with this sea- son. We’ve grown a lot closer through all this, we’ve spent a lot more time together, and guys are just really looking to take advantage of the moment. “If there ever was a year when playing in the game was important, it would be this year to see how you play with the bullets flying,” said Caro- lina Panthers and American team head coach Matt Rhule. “What do you do?” It will be Newman’s first live game action since the Pinstripe Bowl against Michigan State on Dec. 27, 2019. He passed for 2,868 yards and 26 touch- downs against 11 interceptions that season. Then Newman captured considerable headlines by transferring to Southeastern Conference power Georgia, where he was expected to start before choosing to opt out of the season. “There was definitely some rust,” Newman said. He said his family’s input was the biggest factor in his de- cision to opt out despite some criticism from Georiga fans on social media. “No regrets of not playing this season,” Newman said. One American team team- mate praised Newman’s prac- It’s not about the next game be- cause the next game might not happen. We’re just appreciating the moment.” At the moment, the Beavers are scheduled to play their next game Feb. 19, and they say it’s the first step toward their an- nual goal of winning another College World Series title. At the very least, Oregon State is littered with talent and depth. Abel, the World Series star and freshman of the year in 2018, is back after a two-year recovery from Tommy John surgery. He’s 10-1 with a 3.04 ERA and 133 strikeouts over 97⅔ innings during his college career. He will anchor a formidable rotation that also features vet- eran right-handers Jake Pfen- nigs (2-2, 3.57 ERA in 2020) and Nate Burns (0-1, 4.66). Left-hander Cooper Hjerpe and hard-throwing right- hander Will Frisch, who com- tice week. “I think he’s shown that he can play with some of the best people in the country,” said Texas A&M quarterback Kel- len Mond. “I feel like he’s been super efficient both in the run and the pass game.” There are number of players at the Senior Bowl returning after a long absences from the field. Sage Surratt, a former Wake Forest teammate of Newman, also opted out of the season af- ter racking up 1,001 receiving yards in nine games in 2019. Collins also sat out after hav- ing 37 catches for 729 yards and seven touchdowns in 2019. Collins faced questions about his rationale from some NFL teams. “I came back for my senior year and they ended up cancel- ing the season (opener) against Purdue and nobody could tell me or knew the next time we would play, and I felt like I was in No Man’s Land,” Collins ex- plained. “So I sat down with my family and had to make a business decision.” Florida State safety Ham- sah Nasirildeen only played in two games after attempting to return from a knee injury sus- tained in November 2019. A number of small-school prospects had their seasons moved to the spring, not opti- mal for players preparing for the draft. That group at the Senior Bowl includes offensive line- men Dillon Radunz (North Dakota State), David Moore (Grambling State), Quinn Meinerz (Wisconsin-White- water) and Spencer Brown (Northern Iowa), along with Northern Iowa defensive line- man Elerson Smith. Arizona State wide receiver Frank Darby was expecting to finally be the go-to receiver but only recorded stats (six catches) in two games, missing one game with an injury and the finale because of a fam- ily issue. The Sun Devils have had receivers — N’Keal Harry and Brandon Aiyuk — drafted in each of the past two first rounds. Darby trained in Las Vegas Nati Harnik/AP file Oregon State’s Kevin Abel (23) works against Arkansas during Game 3 of the 2018 College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska. Abel, one of the team’s CWS heroes during the 2018 title run, is eager to prove doubters wrong in 2021. bined to strike out 28 batters in 22⅓ innings as freshmen last season, also will be in the mix. Jake Mulholland, who vac- illated between the rotation and bullpen last season, is ex- pected to return to his roots as the Beavers’ closer. He went 3-3 with eight saves and a 1.93 ERA in 2019. Matthew Hinton/AP American Team quarterback Jamie Newman of Wake Forest (7) throws during Senior Bowl practice in Mobile, Alabama, on Wednesday. Se- niors who opted out of the 2020 season due to the pandemic are shak- ing off the rust to play in the Senior Bowl in preparation for the 2021 NFL draft. for the Senior Bowl and the now-canceled combine. “A lot of things are clicking back,” said Darby, who aver- aged 19.9 yards per reception with eight touchdown catches in 2019. “It’s kind of like riding a bicycle. You haven’t ridden in a long time but once you get on it, you might fall a little bit to start off, but after you get going you get going.” Rhule believes it was a smart decision for these players to participate in the Senior Bowl, no matter how rusty they might have been. He still wants to hear the reasons behind any decisions to opt out. “I think opting out is just like transferring to me,” Rhule said. “It’s just like any other personal decision. I just always want to understand why. COVID has affected everyone so differently that I’m not here to judge any- one on their reaction to it. But it’s always big decisions.” But it’s the return of Abel, who pitched a two-hit shut- out against Arkansas to close out the Beavers’ World Se- ries title three years ago, that pushes this staff from good to potentially great. Abel has been cleared for full pitching activities since July and said he “couldn’t be happier with how my rehab went.” The offense loses Alex Mc- Garry, who signed with the Cincinnati Reds as an unre- stricted free agent. But it re- turns everybody else, includ- ing outfielder Kyler McMahan — who batted .439 and led the Beavers in hits (25), runs (11), doubles (six), and slugging per- centage (.544) last season — in- fielders Jake Dukart and Andy Armstrong, and Claunch, who was named to the Buster Posey Award watch list in 2020. Freshman Justin Boyd, whom Canham likens to Bea- vers great Cole Gillespie, and junior Ryan Ober could be poised for breakout seasons, while transfer Kyle Froemke and freshman Garret Forrester turned heads in the fall. “Our talent, from top to bot- tom, is incredible,” Abel said. “Our depth is kind of unheard of at the college level.” It’s been 10 months since the Beavers hastily departed that plane at Portland International Airport, and they’re eager to make up for lost time. “All of Beaver Nation is ready for us to play,” Canham said. “They want games. They want sports. They want nor- malcy. It’s a nice reminder for us that we’re not just playing for ourselves and we’re not just playing for the guys here on the field. We’re playing to in- spire people and bring joy to others. Everything we do has a purpose. Everything we do is with the goal to be elite, and we’re ready to be elite.”