The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, March 05, 2021, Page 13, Image 13

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    The BulleTin • Friday, March 5, 2021 B5
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021
TODAY
SATURDAY
TONIGHT
HIGH
62°
LOW
33°
Breezy in the morning;
mostly cloudy
Cooler with periods of
clouds and sunshine
ALMANAC
MONDAY
46°
26°
48°
35°
Cloudy with a little snow at
times late
TUESDAY
48°
28°
46°
26°
Cloudy with a couple of
showers possible
Mostly cloudy
WEDNESDAY
A couple of showers
possible
OREGON WEATHER
Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest.
TEMPERATURE
Yesterday Normal
Record
63°
48° 73° in 1929
35°
26°
6° in 1955
High
Low
SUNDAY
PRECIPITATION
24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday
0.00"
Record
0.66" in 1991
Month to date (normal)
0.00" (0.12")
Year to date (normal)
1.09" (2.74")
Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.
30.03"
SUN, MOON AND PLANETS
Rise/Set
Today
Sat.
Sun
6:35am/5:59pm 6:33am/6:00pm
Moon 12:55am/10:19am 2:08am/11:04am
Mercury 5:33am/3:33pm 5:32am/3:34pm
Venus
6:32am/5:28pm 6:30am/5:30pm
Mars
9:31am/12:40am 9:29am/12:39am
Jupiter
5:33am/3:30pm 5:30am/3:27pm
Saturn
5:09am/2:45pm 5:05am/2:42pm
Uranus 8:34am/10:30pm 8:30am/10:26pm
Last
New
First
Full
Mar 5
Mar 13
Mar 21
Mar 28
Tonight's sky: Last quarter moon (5:30
p.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: Mostly sunny today.
Considerable cloudiness tonight.
US 20 at Santiam Pass: Snowfall of 2-4
inches this afternoon into tonight.
US 26 at Gov't Camp: Snowfall of 1-3 inches
this afternoon into tonight.
US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Windy today; clouds
and sun. Rain and snow showers tonight.
ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Becoming cloudy
today. Snowfall of 3-6 inches this afternoon
into tonight.
ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Becoming cloudy
with rain and snow later in the day.
SKI REPORT
EAST: Windy and mild
Friday with a mix of
clouds and sun. Colder
Saturday; a few rain
and snow showers.
Seaside
49/40
Cannon Beach
48/40
Hood
River
NATIONAL WEATHER
0s
10s
20s
30s
40s
50s
60s
70s
80s
90s
100s
110s
NATIONAL
EXTREMES
YESTERDAY (for the
T-storms
Mostly sunny
Yesterday
City
Hi/Lo/Prec.
Abilene
80/53/0.00
Akron
34/32/Tr
Albany
34/30/Tr
Albuquerque
56/42/Tr
Anchorage
18/-1/0.00
Atlanta
70/44/0.00
Atlantic City
47/41/0.00
Austin
77/39/0.00
Baltimore
54/39/0.00
Billings
58/27/0.00
Birmingham
72/35/0.00
Bismarck
63/23/0.00
Boise
63/32/0.00
Boston
43/34/0.00
Bridgeport, CT 46/32/0.00
Buffalo
30/28/Tr
Burlington, VT
27/21/Tr
Caribou, ME
21/11/Tr
Charleston, SC 71/40/0.00
Charlotte
70/34/0.00
Chattanooga
71/37/0.00
Cheyenne
48/25/0.00
Chicago
37/31/0.00
Cincinnati
52/33/0.00
Cleveland
32/31/Tr
Colorado Springs 46/28/0.29
Columbia, MO
69/42/0.00
Columbia, SC
72/34/Tr
Columbus, GA
74/41/0.00
Columbus, OH
41/33/0.00
Concord, NH
34/29/0.00
Corpus Christi
75/49/0.00
Dallas
74/46/0.00
Dayton
44/30/0.00
Denver
42/29/0.17
Des Moines
54/31/0.00
Detroit
34/29/Tr
Duluth
33/24/0.00
El Paso
70/58/0.00
Fairbanks
10/-8/0.01
Fargo
47/30/0.00
Flagstaff
47/30/0.37
Grand Rapids
36/25/0.00
Green Bay
34/22/0.00
Greensboro
66/36/0.00
Harrisburg
47/37/0.00
Hartford, CT
41/32/Tr
Helena
54/25/0.00
Honolulu
80/66/0.04
Houston
72/41/0.00
Huntsville
71/34/0.00
Indianapolis
49/32/0.00
Jackson, MS
72/34/0.00
Jacksonville
73/44/0.00
Today
Hi/Lo/W
60/40/c
36/24/s
27/16/s
63/34/s
25/21/sn
63/43/pc
40/32/s
80/52/pc
44/29/s
59/35/s
65/40/pc
55/31/s
64/41/s
33/20/pc
37/27/s
33/21/pc
21/10/sn
19/3/c
61/42/s
58/35/s
57/38/pc
55/29/s
48/29/s
46/26/s
35/26/s
55/30/pc
53/31/pc
61/40/s
69/43/pc
43/25/s
26/12/pc
80/55/c
65/44/c
44/24/s
58/33/s
52/30/pc
42/22/s
39/20/s
69/43/s
16/-5/c
42/25/pc
54/26/s
42/21/s
43/20/s
52/31/s
42/29/s
33/21/s
56/31/pc
78/67/sh
74/54/t
58/35/pc
48/26/s
69/44/pc
68/49/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
44/30/pc
65/52/pc
76/61/pc
71/48/s
94/78/t
45/25/sh
66/52/pc
42/25/pc
65/50/t
52/27/r
77/62/s
82/60/pc
72/51/s
52/32/pc
81/73/pc
43/32/pc
42/30/pc
52/35/r
76/57/t
74/69/sh
58/48/s
57/38/s
82/60/s
79/70/c
60/50/sh
43/33/pc
62/43/pc
92/76/s
Saturday
Hi/Lo/W
62/45/pc
34/21/pc
25/13/pc
61/38/pc
29/10/sf
58/37/pc
38/30/pc
68/46/pc
45/25/pc
60/34/pc
61/36/pc
61/39/pc
54/33/pc
32/18/s
36/23/pc
28/19/c
23/9/pc
23/3/c
57/36/c
57/29/pc
59/33/pc
61/35/pc
45/25/s
46/21/s
33/21/pc
61/34/pc
58/37/pc
57/32/c
63/37/pc
41/22/s
27/10/s
68/53/pc
63/43/s
43/21/s
65/37/pc
53/38/pc
40/20/pc
38/25/pc
67/41/pc
13/-3/pc
48/37/pc
57/28/s
39/17/pc
40/17/s
53/28/s
40/25/pc
31/16/pc
56/32/pc
80/69/pc
70/47/pc
58/31/pc
47/23/s
64/37/s
62/41/r
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.
41/31/0.02
72/39/0.00
33/26/0.00
67/45/0.00
56/35/0.00
70/26/0.00
71/36/0.00
67/46/0.00
59/39/0.00
34/27/0.00
74/38/0.00
73/60/0.00
33/28/0.00
46/29/0.00
69/35/0.00
71/46/0.00
44/40/0.00
46/35/0.00
57/37/0.00
75/38/0.00
66/30/0.00
74/55/0.00
75/46/0.00
50/30/0.00
49/37/0.00
71/53/0.00
37/31/Tr
37/21/0.00
43/29/0.00
67/34/0.00
63/25/0.00
63/27/0.00
62/35/0.00
29/26/Tr
65/41/0.00
62/37/0.00
57/40/0.00
75/45/0.00
66/52/0.01
63/45/0.00
67/44/0.00
53/36/Tr
75/42/0.00
53/37/0.10
58/29/0.00
59/35/0.00
70/31/0.00
75/57/0.00
68/45/0.00
73/39/0.00
56/40/0.00
73/33/0.01
60/28/0.00
73/49/0.00
Today
Hi/Lo/W
42/33/sn
58/36/c
41/20/s
74/50/s
45/23/pc
56/32/pc
57/37/sh
76/50/s
50/29/pc
42/18/s
57/38/c
79/67/pc
44/27/s
44/25/s
54/33/pc
71/53/sh
36/28/s
37/27/s
47/35/s
55/36/r
57/35/pc
78/59/s
83/55/s
49/29/s
40/29/s
82/61/s
37/24/s
26/11/pc
34/22/s
53/32/s
59/27/s
65/38/pc
49/29/s
31/19/s
67/45/pc
53/33/pc
61/41/s
80/52/s
69/54/s
64/49/pc
68/47/pc
59/27/s
65/46/s
50/41/r
58/31/pc
60/37/pc
51/30/c
78/62/s
82/59/s
58/36/r
45/31/s
59/36/r
59/37/c
81/50/s
Saturday
Hi/Lo/W
40/29/sn
65/43/s
39/15/pc
76/48/s
46/22/s
65/43/s
59/35/s
65/51/pc
51/28/s
41/16/s
59/37/s
77/64/t
40/24/pc
45/32/pc
56/31/s
67/49/s
36/24/pc
37/23/pc
50/36/s
62/40/pc
62/42/s
65/52/r
81/53/pc
50/29/s
40/26/pc
85/56/s
35/18/pc
30/11/s
33/19/s
54/28/s
68/41/pc
53/28/c
51/26/s
25/18/c
62/38/s
57/38/s
65/36/c
67/50/pc
66/53/pc
60/46/s
62/40/s
59/30/pc
61/38/c
51/40/pc
61/43/s
46/33/r
58/35/s
66/53/r
82/51/s
64/41/s
47/28/pc
63/42/s
55/33/pc
84/48/s
86/68/0.00
81/59/0.00
21/16/0.04
34/32/0.14
79/57/0.00
77/72/0.05
91/59/0.00
61/33/0.25
37/27/0.01
18/10/0.00
54/46/0.03
93/76/0.00
59/34/0.00
91/61/0.00
84/70/0.27
39/19/0.00
54/32/0.00
60/47/0.00
91/77/0.03
36/27/0.02
82/61/0.03
72/59/0.20
61/47/0.14
55/41/0.12
27/25/Tr
52/36/0.10
57/36/0.00
39/27/0.08
89/67/s
83/52/s
19/6/pc
28/13/pc
81/61/pc
77/68/pc
88/60/pc
59/52/sh
37/21/s
19/6/pc
44/31/pc
92/77/pc
59/46/c
84/57/s
78/68/t
43/25/pc
59/37/pc
61/50/pc
90/78/pc
33/21/s
74/64/pc
78/64/pc
66/49/pc
59/52/pc
33/18/s
50/41/sh
44/25/r
39/25/sn
93/68/s
76/50/pc
20/6/pc
25/18/c
81/59/c
80/68/t
89/62/pc
61/40/c
41/25/pc
19/4/pc
47/28/s
87/75/t
62/44/sh
84/58/s
74/65/t
27/23/sn
52/30/pc
52/46/sh
90/77/t
42/26/pc
72/63/pc
79/63/pc
67/53/s
61/43/pc
29/16/c
49/40/pc
40/22/s
39/31/s
INTERNATIONAL
48 contiguous states)
National high: 88°
at Fort Stockton, TX
National low: -8°
at Afton, WY
Precipitation: 0.32"
at Hoquiam, WA
In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday
Ski resort
New snow
Base
Anthony Lakes Mtn
0
0-100
Hoodoo Ski Area
0
0-96
Mt. Ashland
0
59-64
Mt. Bachelor
0
111-125
Mt. Hood Meadows
0
0-216
Mt. Hood Ski Bowl
0
70-94
Timberline Lodge
0
0-177
Willamette Pass
0
0-80
Aspen / Snowmass, CO
0
44-58
Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA
0
60-105
Squaw Valley, CA
0
0-109
Park City Mountain, UT
0
58-80
Sun Valley, ID
0
80N.A.
Partly sunny with a shower
possible
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
52/40/0.09 50/40/r
49/40/pc
La Grande
55/25/0.00 54/33/pc 44/32/r
Portland
60/38/0.04 51/40/r
53/40/pc
Baker City
59/23/0.00 54/33/pc 44/28/sn
La Pine
54/26/0.00 54/27/c 42/27/pc
Prineville
64/35/0.00 67/35/c 42/35/pc
Brookings
55/41/0.00 49/38/r
48/40/pc
Medford
67/34/0.00 60/37/r
53/35/pc
Redmond
65/28/0.00 64/33/c 49/31/pc
Newport
55/41/0.23 48/39/r
48/39/pc
Roseburg
66/37/0.00 52/38/r
52/38/pc
Burns
58/24/0.00 60/29/pc 45/25/pc
Eugene
62/38/0.00 50/39/r
52/39/pc
North Bend
58/43/0.06 49/41/r
52/41/pc
Salem
61/35/0.02 48/39/r
52/38/pc
Klamath Falls
55/20/0.00 56/29/pc 44/27/pc
Ontario
60/25/0.00 61/37/s 53/31/pc
Sisters
62/31/0.00 61/33/c 50/32/pc
Lakeview
54/27/0.00 54/28/pc 43/27/sn
Pendleton
68/33/0.00 73/40/pc 53/39/r
The Dalles
60/32/0.00 56/40/r
55/37/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
51°
25°
TRAVEL WEATHER
Umatilla
77/43
Rufus
Hermiston
53/37
77/43
59/40
Arlington
Hillsboro Portland
Meacham Lostine
65/42
49/38 51/40
53/32
Wasco
57/31 Enterprise
Pendleton
The Dalles
CENTRAL: Increasing
Tillamook
55/31
57/38
73/40
Sandy
56/40
McMinnville
50/40
clouds, breezy and
Joseph
Heppner
La
Grande
49/39
Maupin
Government
49/39
mild Friday; a shower
54/33
54/31
Camp
60/36 Condon 70/37
Union
Lincoln City
or two late. Colder
60/34
43/31
56/34
Salem
48/40
Spray
Saturday; rain and
Granite
Warm Springs
48/39
Madras
66/36
Albany
51/32
snow showers.
Newport
Baker City
63/36
65/36
Mitchell
48/39
48/38
54/33
WEST: Cooler Friday
Camp Sherman
60/32
Redmond
Corvallis
John
Yachats
Unity
with periods of rain.
58/33
64/33
49/37
Day
Prineville
47/40
53/31
Mostly cloudy Friday
Ontario
Sisters
67/35
Paulina
59/33
61/37
night and Saturday; a Florence
Eugene 61/33
Bend Brothers 58/30
Vale
few showers.
50/41
50/39
62/33
55/28
Sunriver
64/36
Nyssa
58/30
Hampton
Cottage
La Pine
68/37
Juntura
Oakridge
Grove
54/27
55/29
OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay
Burns
60/32
55/35
51/39
Fort
Rock
48/40
60/29
Riley
YESTERDAY
Crescent
57/29
59/32
High: 68°
52/27
Bandon
Roseburg
Christmas Valley
Jordan Valley
at Pendleton
Beaver
Frenchglen
Silver
49/42
52/38
58/30
56/33
Low: 20°
Marsh
Lake
58/33
Port Orford
50/26
57/30
at Klamath Falls
Grants
Burns Junction
Paisley
51/43
Pass
67/32
Chiloquin
59/28
50/36
Rome
Medford
56/27
Gold Beach
60/37
69/32
49/40
Klamath
Fields
Ashland
McDermitt
Lakeview
Falls
Brookings
59/33
63/34
56/29
56/32
49/38
54/28
-10s
50°
27°
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Astoria
50/40
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
43/39/0.46
64/43/0.00
72/64/0.02
75/57/0.00
95/77/0.05
53/34/0.00
59/52/0.02
43/37/0.01
59/52/0.10
57/32/0.00
81/73/0.02
84/58/0.00
67/48/0.00
52/25/0.00
84/68/0.09
41/37/0.12
41/37/0.06
61/41/0.02
75/59/0.02
68/66/0.25
48/32/0.00
49/39/0.08
75/57/0.00
80/71/0.00
59/55/0.24
43/39/0.31
55/37/0.00
90/73/0.00
44/32/pc
66/51/pc
74/62/sh
74/47/s
95/78/s
38/21/c
66/53/s
42/32/s
66/49/t
45/23/s
75/67/s
81/57/pc
76/52/s
45/25/c
83/73/t
45/35/c
44/35/pc
48/36/pc
77/58/c
76/66/sh
56/40/sh
62/45/s
79/61/t
79/70/pc
67/51/pc
44/31/pc
60/40/pc
91/75/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
NFL
Female owners encourage young women to pursue football path
BY BARRY WILNER
AP Pro Football Writer
It took Sheila Ford Hamp
about one second to respond
when asked about the poten-
tial for women in key roles in
the NFL.
“The sky is the limit for any-
thing females want to do,” said
Hamp, the principal owner of
the Detroit Lions.
Echoing that statement was
Dee Haslam, the Cleveland
Browns’ co-owner:
“We’re seeing more and more
women that love the sport and
who want a career in sports.
The door has swung wide open
and I am so excited. I look for-
ward to the moment when we
don’t have to talk about how we
get the door open for women
and people of color, that the
door is wide open.”
Those words were embraced
by the 40 young women — and
potential pro football employ-
OSU
Continued from B3
Fast forward to Thursday,
when nothing went right at
the offensive end for Oregon
State. The Beavers were pitiful
during the first quarter, scoring
a season-low five points, mak-
ing 2 of 16 shots.
Rueck was blunt about
OSU’s first-quarter offense.
Execution was poor, and the
Ducks’ defense made it worse.
Rueck said he told the team
it felt like they were down 20
points after the first quarter.
In reality, it was only 10-5.
ees — attending the league’s
fifth annual Women’s Careers
in Football Forum late last
month. Although it was held
virtually for the first time due
to the COVID-19 pandemic,
the forum’s message came
through loud and clear.
No more so than when lis-
tening to Hamp, who took over
running the Lions before last
season from her mother, Mar-
tha Ford, and Haslam, who
owns the Browns with her hus-
band, Jimmy.
Hamp related a telling story
about women’s opportunities
decades ago.
“When I graduated from col-
lege all I wanted to do was go
work for the NFL. I loved foot-
ball and grew up with it,” she
said. “I actually knew the com-
missioner, Pete Rozelle. My dad
had taken me to league meet-
ings and I had an opportunity
to sit next to him at dinner and
While Rueck felt like Oregon
had the Beavers playing “on
our heels,” OSU played well
enough on defense, and better
yet, limited the Ducks to one
shot per possession by hitting
the defensive boards.
“Defensive rebounds was
the only reason we were in the
game,” Rueck said.
But the Beavers have been
lights out at the offensive end
of late, and a repeat of the first
quarter seemed unlikely. A
3-pointer by Goodman with
7:45 left in the second quarter
was “a shot in the arm for the
team,” Rueck said.
we kind of became friends and
he was impressed about how
much a girl new about football.
“When I graduated, I went to
see him, and he really tried and
he liked me, but he couldn’t
think of one thing a woman
could do in the NFL.”
That, of course, was decades
ago. Now, as Haslam empha-
sized, there are women making
impacts at every level of the
league — from interns to scouts
to coaches to aides to trainers
to the executive office to the
ownership suites. Indeed, Su-
per Bowl winner Tampa Bay,
Buffalo, Cincinnati, Denver,
Houston, Indianapolis, Tennes-
see, Chicago, New Orleans and
San Francisco also either have
female owners or women mak-
ing key decisions at the highest
team levels.
The league office has a simi-
lar makeup at every step of the
ladder.
“The mountain of women in
the room now who are owner-
ship, it continues to grow and
really is exciting,” Haslam said.
“There are some young women
in the room, which is fantastic.
“As more and more women
are out there and doing the job
at such a competent level, it is
just going to continue to grow.
The Beavers scored 19
points in the second quarter,
but as it turned out, they were
just getting warmed up.
“We found our rhythm and
remembered who we were and
played good basketball on both
ends of the floor in that second
quarter,” Rueck said.
The third quarter was an of-
fensive clinic, by both teams
for several minutes. The Ducks
made 7 of their first 9 shots
in the third, but it didn’t last.
Oregon State was a tour de
force for the entire 10 minutes,
hitting 12 of 15 shots and scor-
ing 31 points.
Rueck said it felt similar to
Sunday’s performance in Eu-
gene, when OSU rolled up 88
points against the Ducks.
“I don’t know if we’ve been
better for a stretch than that,”
he said.
The third-quarter produc-
tion was widespread. It was
pick-and-rolls to Taylor Jones,
who had eight points in the
quarter.
Taya Corosdale hit a pair of
3s and had eight points. Ta-
lia von Oelhoffen had eight
points, including a memorable
three-point play where she got
emotional in the face of Duck
defender Jaz Shelley after the
layup.
Rueck loved it, though he
didn’t think von Oelhoffen
talked trash.
“I can relate. The first time I
was in (the rivalry) I had some
of those same emotions,” he
said. “Seeing her pump her fist,
and get fired up, who doesn’t
love that? This is a team full of
very competitive people and
that’s the reason we’re here.
That’s the reason we were able
to weather.”
Now the Pac-12 semifinals
and No. 1 seed Stanford, the
last team to beat Oregon State.
Jose Juarez/AP file
Sheila Ford Hamp, Detroit Lions principal owner and chairman, watches
during a game against the Chicago Bears in Detroit in September.
Although the Cardinal routed
OSU 83-58 when the teams
played Feb. 13 in Corvallis, it
was a six-point game early in
the fourth quarter. It’ll be an-
other measuring stick to see
how far the Beavers have pro-
gressed.
It’s clear Rueck won’t be sur-
prised if something good hap-
pens Friday. He’s felt all along
this was a solid roster. It just
needed time to mature, time he
wasn’t sure the Beavers had be-
cause of the pandemic.
“I expected us to be compet-
itive with everyone in the con-
ference,” Rueck said.
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Just getting your foot in the
door, especially in the NFL, is
what you need to start out do-
ing. Whatever job comes your
way, do it better than anybody
in the room, and other oppor-
tunities will come your way.”
Hamp noted how the lines
of communications need to
be open regardless of the job
or the people involved. As an
example, she noticed that the
Lions didn’t have a changing
room for some women on the
football staff. She quickly fixed
that.
“It seems little, but it is huge,”
Hamp said. “It means ‘you are
important to us.’
“You have got to have an
organization that people can
speak up, that they can give
you ideas and not be afraid to
speak up. Listen to our employ-
ees and realize we are all in this
together and all want to make
this thing work.”
We’re in
this together
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