INSIDE: COMICS, OPINIONS & CLASSIFIEDS B S PORTS THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports WNBA Former player part of Dream sale ATLANTA — Former Atlanta Dream guard Re- nee Montgomery made history on Friday as part of a three-member in- vestor group that was approved to purchase the team. The ownership change follows pressure on for- mer Sen. Kelly Loeffler, a Republican who angered WNBA players with her opposition to the league’s racial justice initiatives, to sell her share of the Dream. Real estate investor Larry Gottesdiener was approved as majority owner of the team. The investor group also in- cludes Montgomery and Suzanne Abair, president of Northland Investment Corp. in Massachusetts, the firm Gottesdiener founded. Montgomery becomes the first former player to become both an owner and executive of a WNBA franchise. She said she would play an active role with Abair in the leader- ship of the team. Montgomery said she first began considering her role in an ownership group after Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James tweeted about the pos- sibility of being part of such a group. “That tweet prompted my mind,” Montgomery said, adding she “started to figure out if that could become a real possibility.” James applauded Montgomery’s ownership role by posting on Twitter: “So proud of this Queen. This is everything we are about!” Montgomery recently announced her retire- ment from the league after 11 seasons and two WNBA championships. — Associated Press FOOTBALL Redmond’s new pro team looking for local talent BY BRIAN RATHBONE The Bulletin Football players chasing pro- fessional dreams will be mak- ing their way to the First Inter- state Bank Center in Redmond in hopes of landing on the Ore- gon High Desert Storm’s train- ing camp roster. Central Oregon’s new pro- fessional indoor football team will hold a combine-style try- out Saturday to help round out the 40-person roster when the team begins training camp in mid-April in preparation for its inaugural season in the Ameri- can West Football Conference. The High Desert Storm have already signed 11 players to their roster, most of whom have played college football, and some who have profes- sional experience. The team’s first signee, wide receiver L.J. Castile, played college football at the University of Houston, and played in four presea- son games for the Cleveland Browns after competing in var- ious arena football leagues. When the team kicks off its season against the Idaho (Nampa) Horsemen on May 8, Niners GM expects Garoppolo as QB The San Francisco 49ers are reportedly interested in Houston Texans’ quar- terback Deshaun Watson. They may have even had a chance to sign Tom Brady before he signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2020. The 49ers’ reported interest in a quarterback would seem to indicate their dissatisfaction with Jimmy Garoppolo after the team posted a 6-10 record in 2020, raising the possibility of replacing him in 2021. However, San Francisco general manager John Lynch ex- pressed confidence that Garoppolo will be the team’s starting quarter- back in 2021. Lynch was asked if Ga- roppolo is healthy, is there any doubt in his mind that he will be the team’s start- ing quarterback in Week 1. “No, not at all,” Lynch said Wednesday on the Eye Test For Two podcast. “I really believe that.” The 49ers have been very good when Garop- polo starts. They are 22-8 when he has started in regular season games and they reached Super Bowl 54 following their 13-3 season in 2019. The problem for the 49ers and Garoppolo is keeping him on the field. Garoppolo has missed 23 games due to injury since the start of the 2018 season and he missed 10 games due to high ankle sprains in 2020. “When he’s healthy, he’s played at a high level,” Lynch said Wednesday on the Eye Test For Two podcast. — The Oregonian — Keith Evans, High Desert Storm coach 21 players will suit up. But even the players who have already been signed must earn their spot on the active roster. “I am bringing about 40 people into training camp, some are signed, but none are guaranteed a spot on the team,” said High Desert Storm coach Keith Evans. “These kids who are signed are trying to get to the next level. This is not semi- pro, not even close.” Athletes will be clocked with a 40-yard dash time and will perform an assortment of agil- ity drills, similar to an NFL combine. There will also be a conditioning test and a va- riety of one-on-one drills for coaches to assess the prospects. Evans is hoping someone flashes some speed and passes the eye test. There are at least 40 partic- ipants expected at Saturday’s tryout, which will include ath- letes from Central Oregon, the Portland area and out of state. While there are advantages to bringing in athletes from Cen- tral Oregon, finding the best players to field a winning team is the priority. “It is always about getting local talent because that gets butts in the seats,” Evans said. See Football / B2 WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL Revenge game Oregon State’s maturing, retooled team eager to show December performance against Oregon was a one-off BY NICK DASCHEL The Oregonian S eventy-seven days separate the games, but it doesn’t seem possible it was just over two months ago when Oregon routed Oregon State 79-59. NFL “It is always about getting local talent because that gets butts in the seats. But this is also about us competing for a championship.” The Ducks could have named the score on Dec. 13 in Gill Coliseum. It was that one-sided. Oregon was up 21 points at halftime, and led by as many as 29 points in the second half. For Oregon State to make up that much ground and catch the Ducks, it seems the page would have to turn to next season. Yet here we are, in late Feb- ruary, and most following the programs have to say Sunday’s 3 p.m. game in Eugene is a toss-up. Some might even look at the events in Pauley Pa- vilion last weekend and claim, advantage Beavers. On Feb. 19, then-No. 8 UCLA manhandled Oregon 83-56. Two days later, Oregon State led for more than 28 minutes and handed the Bruins a 71-64 loss. “It’s going to be a battle. It’s not going to be a 20-point game like last time,” Oregon coach Kelly Graves said. What happened? Bryan Byerly/Utah Athletics file Oregon State’s Talia von Oelhoffen (22) looks for space around Utah’s Niyah Becker on Sunday, Jan. 31, 2021, in Salt Lake City. Von Oelhoffen has been a difference maker for the Beavers since arriving on campus mid-season. “It’s going to be a battle. It’s not going to be a 20-point game like last time.” — Kelly Graves, Oregon women’s basketball coach Oregon State grew up. And added a big piece since the first Oregon game that completely changed the Beavers’ backcourt. Both teams had inexperienced rosters heading into that Dec. 13 game, but the Ducks had a team full of 5-star freshmen and key transfers eager to show what they could do. Oregon outscored OSU 36-9 from 3-point range, and had 25 assists on 31 overall baskets. It got worse before it got better for Oregon State. The Beavers lost to Washington State in Pullman on Dec. 19, then the following day put the program on pause for nearly four weeks because of a COVID-19 outbreak. When OSU returned to action, it immediately lost to Arizona and Washington State, running the Beavers’ losing streak to a rare five games. But along the way, the roster began to mature. Transfer forward Ellie Mack found her place. Fresh- man Sasha Goforth began to blossom on defense. Jelena Mitrovic, a 6-foot-9 center, became a key sub- stitute. Senior guard Aleah Goodman emerged as one of the Pac-12’s top talents. After sinking to 3-5 at one point, the Beavers have won five of six games heading into Sunday’s show- down in Eugene. “It will be kind of a cool comparison because we were so fresh and new the first time,” Good- man said. “We’re finally getting into a little bit of a rhythm.” See Revenge / B3 MLB Brewers’ Yelich eager for fresh start BY STEVE MEGARGEE Associated Press Milwaukee Brewers out- fielder Christian Yelich has never believed the results of one season have any carryover effect into the next year. He didn’t think that when he was coming off an MVP season in 2018 or a second straight batting title in 2019. Nor does he feel that way that now as he tries bouncing back from the most disappointing season of his career. “Good or bad, the previous year really doesn’t mean any- thing,” the 29-year-old Yelich said Friday from the Brewers’ spring training site in Phoe- nix. “You can’t do anything about it. Whether you were the MVP the previous year or you sucked, everybody starts at zero in spring training and the new year. We live in a busi- ness where it’s, ‘What have you done for me lately?’ What I’ve done lately is play terribly, so I’m looking forward to a fresh start and starting a new year.” During a pandemic-short- ened 2020 season in which many stars struggled, Yelich arguably was the most notable example. He hit .205 after win- ning NL batting titles in 2018 and 2019. He still produced a .356 on- base percentage thanks to 76 walks and had 12 homers and 22 RBIs in 58 games. But his .786 OPS was his lowest since 2015 and significantly off his NL-leading totals in of 1.000 in 2018 followed by 1.100. “I thought I was pretty much all-around terrible,” Yelich said. “It just wasn’t good. But it is what it is. This is baseball. That stuff happens. You can’t change it now and you can’t do any- thing about it.” The Brewers hope for Yelich to bounce back after signing him to a $215 million, nine- year contract prior to last sea- son. Their hopes for a fourth straight playoff berth depend largely on him returning to form. But they aren’t showing any signs of concern regarding their franchise player. Brewers manager Craig Counsell said at the start of spring training camp that Yelich “wants to be better, and he’s going to be bet- ter.” “I just don’t worry much about Christian,” hitting coach Andy Haines said. A look inside the numbers offers cause for optimism. Yelich ranked sixth in the majors in hard-hit percentage, behind only Fernando Tatis Jr. Miguel Sano, Ronald Acuña Jr., Corey Seager and Eloy Jiménez. The problem was that he struck out over 30% of the time. Before last season, Yelich had struck out in only 19.6% of his career plate appearances. He said Friday he has a few ideas over what went wrong and feels he now has a handle Jae C. Hong/AP Milwaukee Brewers’ Christian Yelich gets ready for batting practice during the team’s spring training workout in Phoenix, Arizona, on Tues- day. Yelich is looking for a bounce-back season after slumping in 2020. on the situation, though he declined to go into specifics. Yelich also says he spent time this offseason working with Haines in Nashville, Tennessee. While Yelich hasn’t used the unusual circumstances of 2020’s pandemic-delayed sea- son as an excuse, he acknowl- edged that “whatever routine you had last year pretty much got thrown out the window.” Even before the pandemic started, Yelich already was hav- ing a different type of year. See Yelich / B3