FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT A5 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 2021 HIGH SCHOOL ALPINE SKIING Summit skiers dominate regional High school alpine ski- ing regional finals were staged this past week at Hoodoo and Willamette Pass ski areas. The R.A.C.E.S. league included teams from Summit, Mountain View, Redmond, Sisters, Marist, South Eugene, Sheldon, Churchill, Corvallis, Cres- cent Valley and West Al- bany. In the boys giant slalom on Saturday at Willamette Pass, Harrison Schock of Summit won with a two- run combined time of 2 minutes, 9.82 seconds. Summit’s Preston Schock was second (2:10.77) and Bela Chladek of Sisters fin- ished third (2:11.16). In the girls giant slalom, also Saturday at Willa- mette Pass, Zoe Doden of Summit won in 2:13.13. Erin Kirksey of Moun- tain View took second in 2:15.09 and the Storm’s Ni- cole Fournier placed third (2:15.30). In the boys slalom at Hoodoo on Wednesday, Chladek won in 1:52.66. Preston Schock finished second (1:55.09) and Har- rison Schock was third (2:01.26). In the girls slalom, also at Hoodoo Wednesday, Morgan Berg of Moun- tain View won in 2:01.47. Brooke Leggat of Sum- mit took second (2:05.70) and Lily Nelson of South Eugene placed third (2:10.17). High school alpine ski teams in Central Oregon were allowed to start training and racing Feb. 1. The 2021 Oregon High School Alpine State Cham- pionships are scheduled for Thursday and Friday at Mt. Hood Skibowl. —Bulletin staff report PAC-12 WOMEN’S BASKETBALL bendbulletin.com/sports PREP SPORTS | SOCCER Madras nets big win as sports return BY BRIAN RATHBONE The Bulletin Madras started off the high school sports season with a re- sounding win. In its season opener, the White Buffaloes boys soccer team rolled Molalla 6-1, get- ting two goals each from junior Luis Benitez and senior Leo Gutierrez. It was the first high school sports played in Central Or- egon in nearly year, since the COVID-19 pandemic started in March 2020. “I think we were a little more prepared and a little more skilled at the skill positions,” said Madras coach Clark Jones. “A unit of eight to 10 kids have been playing consistently two to three times a week since Au- gust. The leadership and the Creswell 1, La Pine 0 The girl’s soccer battle against Creswell fell short, as the Hawks fell 1-0 on a muddy football field in their season opener in La Pine. Creswell broke the scoreless tie with 10 minutes left in the second half. It was an evenly played game with Creswell tak- ing one more shot on goal than La Pine (6-5). Although the shots were close, there was a feeling the team left some goals on the field. See Preps / A7 “THE PLACE WHERE WIND IS BORN” GARY LEWIS K nelt down in the sandy soil next to a bison, before the good hard work begins, one cannot help but to run fingers through the rich wool. Silky soft. In February and March, the woolly “down” of the bison is at its longest. There is no finer robe. At once, a person marvels at the great store of meat, the uses of hide and the fiber, and on the hoof, its superior fitness for the plains. The Lakota called it tatanka. To the Sho- shone, it was bozheena. The Blackfeet called it real food. Through the Sand Hills of Nebraska, even the roads are built on the buffalo trails be- cause over thousands of years the animals found the best ways to water, food and shel- ter. See Lewis / A7 —The Oregonian Molalla again on Thursday for back-to-back matches. “To get a successful team, you have to have discipline and fo- cus,” Jones said. “We are hoping to keep that the next three days and get another positive result.” Outdoors | Bison hunting Beavs on roll going into tourney Oregon State’s 88-77 win over Oregon, the Bea- vers’ sixth win in seven games, is resonating in places that have national implications. The Beavers (9-6, 7-6 Pac-12) appeared in the Associated Press’ Top 25 poll for the first time in nearly two months. The Beavers didn’t crack the top 25, but received votes for the first time since Jan. 4. The last time OSU was ranked among the top 25 teams was Dec. 14. OSU also shot up seven spots to No. 29 in the NCAA NET rankings, a key tool used by the women’s basketball tournament committee in determining berths and seeds. To gauge how far the Beavers have come in the NET rankings, in mid-Jan- uary they were No. 102. And, in what proba- bly matters most to Ore- gon State’s program, the Beavers are solidly in the NCAA tournament accord- ing to ESPN’s Bracketol- ogy. In Monday’s iteration of the bracket, OSU was 10-seed, an improvement from last week, when the Beavers were one of the fi- nal four teams in the field. Oregon State is 4-5 against top 50 teams in the NCAA NET rankings. As a comparison, Oregon is 4-7 against top 50 op- ponents. Oregon State, No. 5 seed, opens at 11 a.m. Wednesday against 12- seed California. Should the Beavers win, they’ll face 4-seed Oregon at 11 a.m. Thursday. chemistry was there.” Junior Manny Flores and senior Isarael Penaloza each pitched in to the scoring while senior Javier Sedano finished with three assists on the team’s six goals. After one of the more mem- orable season openers for Jones, it will be a quick turn- around, as Madras travels to face Tri-Valley League rival From left, Tracy Wilson, of Vancouver, Washington, Super Bowl champ John Howell and Gary Lewis walk a windy ridge on a bison hunt in Nebraska. Photo courtesy Samuel Pyke A herd of bison in Nebraska’s Sand Hills. This herd has been on the Howell property for 25 years. Gary Lewis/For The Bulletin NFL DRAFT 2021 Kiper shares evaluations of Sewell, other Ducks BY JAMES CREPEA The Oregonian EUGENE — Mel Kiper Jr. sees several Oregon players be- ing selected in this year’s NFL Draft, headlined of course by offensive tackle Penei Sewell. The ESPN draft analyst shared his early evaluations of five former Ducks including Sewell, who he sees going in the top five. “I think it’s ideal at Cincin- nati at 5,” Kiper said. “I think you get a left tackle. People say well he was a little overrated, I’m not buying that. He didn’t play this year. Had he built on what he did in 2019 he would have been regarded as the next (Tony) Boselli, (Jonathan) Og- den or (Orlando) Pace. I get why you wouldn’t put him in that category right now be- cause he didn’t play this year, but for Cincinnati he’s exactly what they’re looking for and I think he would be an ideal pick at that point. I would think Sewell to me would be no later than five. Some are project- ing him down at 10, I don’t see that happening, that’s just me. I think the Bengals will be the ideal spot.” The 2019 Outland Trophy winner and the third unani- mous All-American in Ore- gon program history, Sewell opted out of the 2020 season. He did not allow a sack as a sophomore and led the Ducks with 58 knockdowns and led the nation with a run-blocking grade of 95.3 from Pro Foot- ball Focus and was third with a pass-blocking grade of 91.1. Kiper also has draftable grades for four UO defensive backs: Jevon Holland, Thomas Graham Jr., Brady Breeze and Deommodore Lenoir. Holland, who was among the players to opt-out of the 2020 season, had 66 tackles with 4.5 for loss, four intercep- tions and four pass breakups and averaged 15.25 yards per punt return in 2019. See Ducks / A7 The Oregonian file Former Oregon offensive lineman Penei Sewell is projected to be a top NFL draft pick.