The BulleTin • Friday, FeBruary 19, 2021 B5 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY SATURDAY TONIGHT HIGH 42° LOW 26° Cloudy with snow showers this afternoon A bit of morning snow; otherwise, cloudy ALMANAC MONDAY 51° 34° 43° 30° Cloudy with intermittent snow late, 1-3" TUESDAY 55° 29° Cloudy, rain and drizzle in the afternoon WEDNESDAY 43° 30° Breezy in the morning; otherwise, cloudy A couple of showers possible OREGON WEATHER Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 41° 45° 68° in 1920 27° 24° 0° in 1955 High Low SUNDAY PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace Record 1.00" in 1983 Month to date (normal) 0.28" (0.73") Year to date (normal) 0.94" (2.26") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.02" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Sat. Sun 6:58am/5:40pm 6:57am/5:42pm Moon 10:46am/12:57am 11:18am/2:00am Mercury 5:54am/4:00pm 5:51am/3:55pm Venus 6:44am/4:51pm 6:44am/4:54pm Mars 10:02am/12:52am 10:00am/12:51am Jupiter 6:19am/4:08pm 6:16am/4:06pm Saturn 5:59am/3:32pm 5:55am/3:29pm Uranus 9:32am/11:26pm 9:28am/11:22pm First Full Last New Feb 19 Feb 27 Mar 5 Mar 13 Tonight's sky: Nicolas Copernicus' birthday (1473). First quarter moon (10:48 a.m.). 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: A couple of rain or snow showers today into tonight. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Chilly today with periods of snow, expect 3-6 inches. US 26 at Gov't Camp: Snow today, totaling 2-4 inches. Additional snow tonight. US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Cloudy and chilly, a period of snow this afternoon. ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Chilly today with snow at times, accumulating 1-3 inches. Additional snow and fl urries tonight. ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Cloudy today with snow, accumulating up to an inch; cold. SKI REPORT EAST: Rather cloudy with a period of snow in the late afternoon and evening, totaling 1-2 inches. Seaside 46/38 Cannon Beach 46/39 Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the T-storms Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 25/12/Tr Akron 30/19/0.09 Albany 24/18/0.02 Albuquerque 40/23/0.06 Anchorage 31/24/0.05 Atlanta 44/39/0.77 Atlantic City 39/28/0.66 Austin 32/27/Tr Baltimore 31/27/0.45 Billings 26/7/0.01 Birmingham 47/37/1.74 Bismarck 19/4/0.02 Boise 37/20/0.00 Boston 31/24/0.12 Bridgeport, CT 29/26/0.32 Buffalo 27/18/0.03 Burlington, VT 25/9/0.00 Caribou, ME 20/-5/0.00 Charleston, SC 53/48/0.23 Charlotte 38/33/0.59 Chattanooga 45/34/1.38 Cheyenne 26/12/Tr Chicago 26/17/0.04 Cincinnati 28/20/0.11 Cleveland 27/19/0.13 Colorado Springs 23/11/0.17 Columbia, MO 22/1/Tr Columbia, SC 43/41/1.24 Columbus, GA 49/45/0.70 Columbus, OH 30/21/0.13 Concord, NH 27/13/Tr Corpus Christi 48/32/0.01 Dallas 31/24/0.00 Dayton 26/19/0.11 Denver 33/14/0.06 Des Moines 21/2/0.01 Detroit 25/15/0.06 Duluth 15/8/0.04 El Paso 50/33/0.00 Fairbanks 5/-6/0.13 Fargo 16/-10/0.03 Flagstaff 38/15/Tr Grand Rapids 23/6/0.02 Green Bay 26/7/Tr Greensboro 33/30/0.82 Harrisburg 28/24/0.31 Hartford, CT 26/21/0.10 Helena 25/12/0.00 Honolulu 80/71/0.05 Houston 40/31/0.00 Huntsville 37/30/1.06 Indianapolis 25/17/0.13 Jackson, MS 32/28/0.25 Jacksonville 86/52/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 46/29/s 27/10/sf 31/19/sn 43/27/s 12/-2/pc 48/27/pc 37/31/r 40/20/s 39/24/sn 37/23/c 43/21/s 28/13/pc 39/26/c 34/27/sn 36/28/sn 30/18/sn 30/19/sn 19/7/c 46/33/r 48/26/r 45/22/pc 36/18/pc 21/5/c 26/7/c 26/11/sf 44/17/s 30/16/pc 47/28/r 52/28/s 26/8/c 30/22/sn 49/30/s 36/23/s 24/7/c 44/22/pc 23/13/s 28/11/sf 17/-3/pc 56/35/s -11/-29/pc 16/5/s 50/25/s 26/13/sf 21/1/c 45/23/r 39/24/sf 33/24/sn 40/20/pc 80/71/sh 45/26/s 35/16/c 22/7/pc 38/18/s 64/37/r 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 50/47/c 60/44/pc 75/58/s 64/44/s 90/71/s 59/19/pc 57/50/sh 48/34/sh 62/46/t 45/34/c 80/62/pc 76/56/s 64/47/c 35/18/c 85/70/t 54/46/r 52/47/r 58/37/pc 81/62/t 72/63/s 41/30/pc 46/39/sh 85/62/c 76/67/pc 61/56/pc 51/50/sh 63/41/s 82/71/pc Saturday Hi/Lo/W 54/39/s 23/9/c 30/13/c 55/29/s 10/-2/pc 52/31/s 34/26/pc 50/38/s 35/18/s 33/22/pc 52/30/s 39/18/pc 38/22/pc 34/21/c 37/21/pc 26/12/sf 28/12/c 22/8/sf 51/32/s 48/25/s 48/26/s 39/16/sf 26/19/pc 30/17/pc 22/11/pc 45/19/pc 38/29/pc 50/28/s 57/32/s 23/13/pc 31/15/c 62/50/s 46/35/s 25/15/c 45/19/pc 29/25/pc 27/8/pc 20/12/s 68/45/s -3/-29/s 25/18/c 46/17/s 25/13/c 21/9/pc 42/22/s 33/16/pc 33/18/pc 35/24/sh 81/71/sh 55/45/pc 44/25/s 29/18/pc 51/32/s 57/38/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. 39/31/0.04 27/4/0.03 22/6/0.03 56/42/0.00 29/22/0.12 25/8/0.00 32/20/0.12 69/47/0.00 32/23/0.17 25/4/Tr 29/22/0.07 85/75/0.00 27/17/Tr 16/7/0.06 31/28/0.23 47/39/1.11 28/24/0.35 28/24/0.32 42/34/0.85 25/0/0.00 23/9/0.02 87/63/0.02 70/50/0.00 23/10/0.07 30/25/0.53 66/44/0.00 29/22/0.11 26/15/0.00 30/24/0.08 36/32/0.78 20/0/0.00 41/21/Tr 33/30/0.59 25/17/0.05 61/34/0.00 25/14/0.01 36/19/Tr 32/29/0.12 69/46/0.00 65/43/0.00 68/37/0.00 36/20/0.07 64/50/0.07 45/37/0.09 20/-3/0.02 29/11/Tr 22/12/0.01 82/68/0.00 62/38/0.00 27/2/0.00 32/27/0.42 30/4/0.00 34/21/0.04 68/51/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 40/30/sn 34/21/pc 27/10/sf 63/43/s 26/8/c 27/13/pc 33/16/s 71/49/s 29/10/pc 19/1/c 29/12/s 85/64/pc 22/6/c 18/3/pc 32/15/pc 50/35/s 34/26/sn 35/26/sn 40/31/r 33/17/s 25/16/s 80/48/t 74/53/s 21/11/pc 36/26/sn 72/47/s 28/15/sf 30/22/sn 36/26/sn 41/24/r 28/14/c 55/34/c 39/23/i 31/20/sn 58/44/pc 28/15/pc 44/35/sn 45/26/s 68/51/s 59/50/pc 62/47/r 40/21/s 50/36/r 47/39/r 21/8/s 33/27/sn 32/17/pc 73/48/sh 73/46/s 35/20/pc 40/26/sn 31/19/pc 40/23/pc 73/45/s Saturday Hi/Lo/W 38/35/c 38/31/pc 26/10/c 64/42/pc 31/17/pc 33/24/pc 41/28/s 70/50/s 35/20/pc 23/15/pc 39/29/s 75/66/s 24/19/pc 23/19/c 39/23/s 58/46/s 35/21/pc 35/20/pc 39/28/s 38/32/pc 32/25/pc 66/50/s 79/51/s 27/21/pc 34/19/pc 77/47/s 23/10/sf 33/18/c 36/21/c 43/23/s 34/17/pc 46/27/sf 38/20/s 27/14/sf 61/38/pc 37/25/pc 38/26/c 56/41/s 63/50/pc 60/46/pc 61/40/pc 48/22/s 56/35/s 48/43/sh 28/22/pc 32/29/c 40/30/pc 67/50/s 81/42/s 40/34/s 36/21/s 36/29/pc 45/31/pc 79/49/s 76/62/0.02 82/47/0.00 23/3/0.00 9/-4/0.00 84/60/0.00 82/73/0.01 79/57/0.00 45/28/0.04 29/23/0.34 23/1/0.00 51/45/0.22 84/73/0.03 57/44/0.00 81/54/0.00 86/66/0.01 34/27/0.19 32/13/0.00 49/29/0.00 88/75/0.00 30/19/0.00 75/61/0.12 64/55/0.00 58/45/0.57 48/33/0.00 25/16/0.08 43/36/0.12 52/39/0.00 28/15/0.02 80/59/s 72/44/s 24/18/sn 9/-6/s 84/58/pc 83/72/pc 80/55/pc 49/40/pc 38/29/sh 23/14/sn 56/46/pc 83/74/t 59/45/pc 82/56/s 83/65/t 36/30/c 49/35/s 65/45/s 86/77/c 35/32/sh 77/70/sh 70/50/s 57/50/sh 54/41/s 29/14/sn 44/38/sh 47/33/pc 38/33/sh 80/59/s 74/48/s 27/7/c 13/4/pc 82/61/pc 79/69/sh 81/56/pc 60/50/c 41/36/sh 25/4/c 63/46/pc 82/73/t 60/42/s 83/54/s 80/64/pc 40/24/c 54/37/s 74/49/s 88/77/pc 38/35/c 79/70/sh 76/53/pc 60/46/pc 61/49/s 28/8/sf 45/41/c 46/39/pc 39/29/c INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 90° at Immokalee, FL National low: -37° at Ely, MN Precipitation: 2.89" at Walterboro, SC In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Ski resort New snow Base Anthony Lakes Mtn 0 0-48 Hoodoo Ski Area 0 0-85 Mt. Ashland 4 60-62 Mt. Bachelor 6 112-118 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 130-172 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 54-73 Timberline Lodge 0 0-150 Willamette Pass 14 0-60 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 3 44-60 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 70-115 Squaw Valley, CA 0 0-124 Park City Mountain, UT 2 60-70 Sun Valley, ID 0 87-104 A bit of snow and sleet in the morning 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 50/39/0.06 47/37/r 47/43/c La Grande 33/15/Tr 40/27/sf 38/28/sf Portland 42/38/0.17 49/39/r 50/43/sh Baker City 34/15/0.02 38/25/c 38/23/sf La Pine 33/20/Trace 39/23/sf 37/23/c Prineville 39/23/0.05 42/24/sf 37/27/sn Brookings 48/42/0.72 48/41/r 50/40/sh Medford 45/39/0.30 48/38/sh 49/35/sh Redmond 42/24/0.03 43/24/sf 44/27/sn Roseburg 49/40/0.33 49/40/r 48/38/sh Burns 35/16/0.10 39/20/sn 37/20/sn Newport 46/41/0.40 47/39/r 47/43/sh Eugene 49/40/0.38 49/39/r 50/40/c North Bend 52/44/0.59 49/42/r 51/43/sh Salem 46/37/0.36 48/38/r 49/40/c Klamath Falls 35/22/0.27 41/25/sh 40/22/c Ontario 33/16/Tr 39/25/c 41/23/c Sisters 36/23/0.12 43/25/sf 43/30/c Lakeview 34/12/0.06 39/24/c 39/18/sn Pendleton 35/20/0.07 39/30/pc 40/35/c The Dalles 36/31/0.06 42/33/c 46/36/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 -0s A couple of showers possible 49° 28° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 44/31 Rufus Hermiston 43/33 45/32 42/32 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 44/33 49/35 49/39 38/25 Wasco 39/25 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Cloudy with Tillamook 38/22 39/29 39/30 Sandy 42/33 McMinnville 48/39 a period of rain and Joseph Heppner La Grande 46/39 Maupin Government 50/37 snow in the afternoon 40/27 38/22 Camp 40/27 Condon 41/31 Union Lincoln City and at night Rain 39/28 35/30 39/27 Salem 47/41 Spray and snow showers Granite Warm Springs 48/38 Madras 44/27 Albany 36/25 Saturday. Newport Baker City 41/24 43/26 Mitchell 47/39 49/37 38/25 WEST: Areas of fog Camp Sherman 41/26 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity and occasional rain 42/27 43/24 49/37 Day Prineville 47/41 40/25 today into tonight. Ontario Sisters 42/24 Paulina 42/26 39/25 Rather cloudy Sat- Florence Eugene 43/25 Bend Brothers 39/23 Vale urday with lingering 49/42 49/39 42/26 38/23 Sunriver 40/23 showers. Nyssa 40/23 Hampton Cottage La Pine 41/25 Juntura Oakridge Grove 39/23 39/22 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 42/24 44/35 49/40 Fort Rock 49/41 39/20 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 43/25 40/20 High: 52° 39/24 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at North Bend Beaver Frenchglen Silver 49/42 49/40 43/26 39/23 Low: 4° Marsh Lake 42/23 Port Orford 38/21 43/25 at Meacham Grants Burns Junction Paisley 50/43 Pass 47/27 Chiloquin 44/27 48/40 Rome Medford 41/26 Gold Beach 48/38 48/27 49/43 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 44/26 47/37 41/25 40/22 48/41 39/24 -10s 45° 29° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Astoria 47/37 THURSDAY 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 52/45/0.71 57/34/0.00 72/54/0.00 61/51/0.00 90/75/0.00 45/15/0.00 55/45/0.30 51/36/0.00 70/49/0.27 54/36/0.00 82/68/0.00 73/54/0.00 63/48/0.00 25/3/Tr 86/79/0.00 46/36/0.11 46/44/0.03 54/30/0.00 78/59/0.09 73/62/0.00 41/30/0.07 44/32/0.35 83/61/0.00 80/66/0.00 62/54/0.15 50/46/0.13 63/36/0.00 86/75/0.00 60/48/pc 60/47/s 76/58/s 63/43/pc 91/69/s 54/25/pc 59/48/pc 53/38/pc 66/47/t 46/33/pc 76/68/s 75/56/s 65/47/pc 36/20/s 75/69/c 53/42/r 55/44/c 57/36/s 79/64/t 73/63/pc 43/37/c 48/36/pc 85/63/pc 76/67/c 59/49/r 58/50/c 66/48/pc 81/72/c 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 WORLD CUP SKIING | WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS Gut-Behrami edges Shiffrin in giant slalom BY ERIC WILLEMSEN Associated Press CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — After going her entire career without a major champi- onship title, Lara Gut-Behrami added a second gold medal to her burgeoning collection from this year’s skiing world champi- onships. Mikaela Shiffrin, meanwhile, earned a silver medal to give her one of each color — and with her best event still to come. Gut-Behrami edged Shiffrin for gold in the giant slalom on Thursday, making up a deficit on the first-run leader with a blistering final leg to beat the American by two-hundredths of a second. After Shiffrin had completed her run, Gut-Behrami hugged the American and stormed through the finish area to cele- brate with her coaches. “GS has always been so im- portant for me in my entire career,” the Swiss skier said. “I always knew that if I’m ski- ing well in GS then it’s easy to be fast even in the other disci- plines.” However, Gut has been struggling in GS in recent years and failed to win a race in the discipline since triumphing in the season-opening World Cup race in 2016. “This year I was coming back step by step,” she said. “Coming to the finish line, I had already on my mind it’s the first time I’m winning a medal in GS. To win the gold here is unbeliev- able.” Katharina Liensberger of Austria was 0.09 behind in third in what was the closest finish ever of a women’s giant slalom at the worlds. American skier Nina O’Brien was 0.02 be- hind in second after the open- ing run but dropped to 10th after a costly mistake shortly before finishing her final run. Gut-Behrami became the first GS world champion from Switzerland since Sonja Nef won the title 20 years ago. Gut-Behrami also won gold in the super-G and bronze in the downhill at this year’s worlds. Shiffrin extended her Ameri- can record with her 10th career medal at worlds. She won the combined event on Monday and took bronze in the super-G a week ago. Shiffrin dropped 0.14 sec- onds behind Gut-Behrami half- way through her final run but made up time in the flat final section. Settling for silver, she said she was still “happy.” “The first thing I saw was the red, but I felt good with my ski- ing. I was pushing. It was not a perfect run, but it was aggres- sive,” said Shiffrin, who has now won 10 medals from 12 events at the worlds since her debut in 2013. “I have never been shoot- Tennis Continued from B3 Osaka often speaks about wanting more consistency, whether that’s at lower-level WTA tournaments or at every Grand Slam event. She does occasionally stum- ble early at the majors, such as a third-round exit a year ago as the defending champion in Australia or a first-round loss at Wimbledon in 2019. But once she gets close to the end, she seals the deal. “For me, I have this men- tality that people don’t re- member the runners-up. You might, but the winner’s name is the one that’s engraved,” ex- plained Osaka, who was born in Japan to a Japanese mother and Haitian father before the family moved to New York when she was 3. “I think I fight the hardest in the finals,” she continued. “I think that’s where you sort of set yourself apart.” Williams had been 8-0 in Australian Open semifinals Hamish Blair/AP Jen Brady hits a return to Karolina Muchova during their semifinal match at the Australian Open in Melbourne, Australia, on Thursday. until Osaka put a stop to that by winning 6-3, 6-4, reeling off the last eight points of the match after the second set was even at 4-all. When they hugged at the net at the end, this is what went through Osaka’s mind: “Always a surreal moment, just to see her in real life, like, close up.” Osaka has long viewed Wil- liams, 39, as an idol. Their games are quite sim- ilar at the most foundational level: speedy serves, dangerous forehands and that steely atti- tude on court. Brady got a sense of that during the entertaining matchup in New York last year against Osaka. “She just puts a lot of pres- sure on you to serve well, be- cause she’s holding serve in, like, 45 seconds. … She’s com- ing at you with a lot of power, so it also puts a lot of pressure on you to be aggressive and try to get the first strike. Oth- erwise you’re the one running, ing for a number of medals or those records or something,” she said. “Just every time I race, I want to win.” Shiffrin has a shot at another medal on Saturday, when she aims for her fifth straight sla- lom title. “This world champs has been really nice,” she said. “I am having three medals now go- ing into the final race where for sure I have another chance but it has already been incredibly successful.” Approaching her best ca- reer result, O’Brien overcame a scare in between runs when her skis initially failed the standard equipment test by organizers. The International Ski Feder- ation checks ski size and setup after each run based on strict rules. Racers whose skis don’t meet the criteria are disquali- fied. Andreas Krönner, the techni- cal operations manager of FIS, and I don’t want to be run- ning,” said Brady, a 25-year-old from Pennsylvania who played college tennis at UCLA. Brady acknowledged that she expects to deal with some nerves against Osaka this time. That’s only natural, given the stakes. The key will be limiting how much — and for how long — that affects her play. “Listen, I don’t know how I’m going to feel on Satur- day. I can say I can enjoy the moment and just try to play tennis and not really think too much about it. But there’s going to be moments, there’s going to be games, there’s go- ing to be points, where I’m going to be thinking about, ‘Wow, this could be my first Grand Slam title,’” said Brady, who needed five match points in the last game to close her three-set semifinal win over Karolina Muchova. “Yeah, I will definitely have those thoughts,” she said. “But it’s more just trying to control the emotions, really.” Marco Tacca/AP Gold medalist Lara Gut-Behrami, left, embraces silver medalist Mikaela Shiffrin after the giant slalom at the World Championships in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, on Thursday. said “there was an issue with plate in the binding” on one of O’Brien’s skis, which exceeded the allowed height by a mere 0.1 millimeters. However, according to Krön- ner, the plate was “slightly loose” and could be moved within the tolerance, which al- lowed O’Brien to start in the final run. O’Brien seemed on course for a medal but lost control of her left ski when she caught a bump with the finish in sight. “I’m a little disappointed that I made that mistake at the bot- tom,” O’Brien said. “I felt like (the second run) was a little bit wild from the beginning. I just went for it today and it seemed to work out first run.” Prep sports “They opened up a pathway for the contact sports with a lot of things in place on top of the protocols that we have been adhering to for seven, eight, nine months.” Continued from B3 “We aren’t going to have spectators for the time being at any of our events. We will re- evaluate that as time goes on and as county levels change.” Aside from orchestrating a return to athletic competi- tion during a pandemic, Wil- liams will be taking over as athletic director at Caldera High School, the new school in Bend that will open this fall. The fourth Bend high school’s sports facilities are nearly com- plete. Now the focus turns to getting the Caldera High athletic programs fitted with coaches. The jobs present a unique opportunity for the incoming coaches, Williams said. Be- cause the school is starting with just sophomore and freshman classes, the athletic teams, while — Dave Williams, the athletic director of Bend-La Pine Schools playing a varsity schedule, will play against lower-classification programs in team sports. “We are going to hire coaches to run these programs to varsity standards,” Williams said. “We are looking at opportunities for kids to come in and be with varsity coaches for three to four years. So that is a cool opportu- nity to come in with and work with the entire program.” e e Reporter: 541-383-0307, brathbone@ bendbulletin.com Complete interview To see the complete interview with Bend-La Pine Schools athletic di- rector Dave Williams, visit bendbulletin.com/sports.