FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT B3 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • FrIday, MarcH 12, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports PREP FOOTBALL Bend-Summit highlights weekend The second week of the prep football season kicks off on Friday — with fans allowed in the stands. Here is a quick glance at what is ahead for Central Oregon football teams: Two of Bend’s high schools were humbled in the opening week of the 2021 football season as neither team found the end zone. Bend High (0-1) was shutout 35-0 by Red- mond, while Summit (0-1) managed just a field goal in its 33-3 loss to Mountain View. The Lava Bears will try to get their fifth straight win over the Storm when they host Summit Friday. Also Friday, Redmond (1-0), coming off that state- ment win over Bend, hosts Hood River Valley (1-0), which started its year with a 30-14 win over La Salle Prep. The first points scored in Friday’s game between Ridgeview (1-0) and Pend- leton (1-0) will be the first points either team has given up all year. The Buck- aroos shutout Parkrose 46- 0, while the Ravens shut- out Putnam 33-0 last week. In its home opener Friday, Crook County (1- 0) looks to improve to 2-0 against Molalla (1-0), which held Madras score- less last week. Seeking their first points of the season, Madras (0- 1) will travel Friday to face Estacada (0-1), which fell to Gladstone 35-22 last Friday. Two teams looking to rebound after a Week 1 de- feat will meet in Sisters Fri- day when the Outlaws (0- 1) play host to Harrisburg (0-1), which was shutout last week. Coming off a last-min- ute win to beat Siuslaw, La Pine (1-0) faces a tough challenge Friday on the road against Junction City (1-0), which dominated Harrisburg last week. After a controversial game last week, Culver (1-0) will play its first of four consecutive games on the road, starting with Jefferson on Friday, which beat Gervais (1-0) 28-18 a week ago. Gilchrist (1-0) will make its way to the Central Coast hoping to improve to 2-0 with a win over Eddyville Charter (0-1) on Friday. Playing at a neutral field in Salem on Saturday due to travel restrictions, Mountain View (1-0) will cap off the second week against Aloha (1-0), which beat Westview 27-21 in the first week. — Bulletin staff report TENNIS Federer loses in Qatar Open QFs DOHA, Qatar — Roger Federer failed to convert a match point before losing 3-6, 6-1, 7-5 to Ni- koloz Basilashvili in the Qatar Open quarterfinals on Thursday, his second match back on tour after a 13-month injury layoff. Basilashvili saved a match point at 5-4 in the deciding set and then broke Federer’s serve in the next game. It was a second straight grueling three-setter for Federer after his win Wednesday over Dan Ev- ans took nearly 2½ hours. The 39-year-old Federer was playing in his first tournament since the 2020 Australian Open fol- lowing knee surgery. Federer announced later on Twitter that he decided it was best to re- sume training and had therefore decided to with- draw from next week’s tournament in Dubai. — Associated Press MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL | PAC-12 TOURNAMENT Beavs stun Bruins in quarterfinals Associated Press LAS VEGAS — Warith Alatishe scored a career-high 22 points with 10 rebounds, Ethan Thompson scored all 18 of his points after halftime and Oregon State rallied from a 16-point deficit to beat UCLA 83-79 in overtime on Thursday in the Pac-12 Conference tour- nament. Alatishe got a floater to fall in the lane with 11.2 seconds left in regulation to put the Beavers up 70-69 and UCLA’s Jules Bernard tied it with a free throw after missing the first. Gianni Hunt’s heave at the buzzer, from near midcourt, went over the backboard. Rodrigue Andela was sent to the line with 57.8 seconds left in overtime — after miss- ing four of his first eight free- throw attempts — and sank both free throws for a 79-78 lead. Seconds later, he blocked Bernard’s shot. After an Oregon State miss, Bernard raced down the court but turned it over and Ja- rod Lucas, a 91% free-throw shooter, made two for an 81-78 lead with 4 seconds left. Ore- gon State elected to foul and Johnny Juzang made the first of two free throws. He missed the second and Andela made two more free throws to seal it after grabbing the rebound. Oregon State will play regu- lar-season champion Oregon on Friday in the semifinals. The No. 5 seed Beavers began the tournament against the fourth-seeded Bruins after the Pac-12 adjusted the format due to Arizona not playing. The Ducks opened with an easy win over Arizona State, and will look to take a 2-1 series against their rivals after an 80-67 win in the regular-season finale. See Pac-12 / B4 Al Powers via Pac-12 Oregon State’s Warith Alatishe drives to he basket over multiple UCLA defenders in the Pac-12 Conference tournament quarterfinals on Thursday in Las Vegas. Alatishe had a double-double with 22 points and 10 rebounds in the Beavers’ 83-79 overtime victory. OSU will face Oregon in the semifinals on Friday. MLB Bouncing back Orioles’ Trey Mancini heads list of players returning after missing 2020 due to surgery for cancer BY ROB MAADDI Associated Press T rey Mancini had surgery for colon cancer last year on the same day Paul Sancya/AP file Major League Baseball shut down spring training due to COVID-19. Baltimore Orioles’ Trey Mancini (16) celebrates his solo home run against the Detroit Tigers in Detroit in 2019. Mancini had surgery for colon cancer last year on the same day major league baseball shut down spring training due to COVID-19. Baseball returned later in 2020. Mancini is back now, healthy and ready to go. Baseball returned later in 2020 and Mancini is back now, healthy and ready to go. His comeback story has been a highlight of spring training. Mancini is not only the best player on the Baltimore Orioles, he’s the most popular. “There were times, especially when I was diag- nosed early on where I wasn’t totally sure if I was ever going to play baseball again,” Mancini recalled upon his return. “Just being able to feel like my- self, feel great and participate in everything fully is something I’m very appreciate of and I don’t take for granted at all.” Mancini, who turns 29 next week, had a breakout season in 2019, batting .291 with 35 homers and 97 RBIs. He singled in his first at-bat in nearly a year and got a standing ovation from a socially distanced crowd at the ballpark. “I can’t remember a bigger hug that I gave any- body than seeing him for the first time,” Orioles in- fielder Rio Ruiz said. Many players are returning from injuries that forced them to miss last season or cut their season short. Nearly 20 guys are back after opting not to play because of coronavirus concerns, including for- mer All-Stars David Price, Buster Posey, Lorenzo Cain, Marcus Stroman and Ryan Zimmerman. Here are five more players looking to rebound in 2021: Stephen Strasburg The 2019 World Series MVP pitched five innings last season before carpal tunnel surgery. He struck out four of the six batters he faced in his spring training debut this week, and the 32-year-old righty is expected to make four more appearances for Washington before the season. Strasburg has made than 10 trips to the disabled and injured lists throughout his career. “This isn’t my first rodeo when it comes to injuries and stuff,” Strasburg said after his outing. “So I’m kind of at a point where I’m going to go out there and give it ev- erything I have and roll with the punches.” See MLB / B4 MOTOR SPORTS | NASCAR CUP SERIES Hendrick off to fast start with 2 wins heading into Phoenix BY JENNA FRYER AP Auto Racing Writer CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Hen- drick Motorsports celebrates each race win with a Victory Bell that is carted across the campus for every employee to ring. If not for the pandemic, the bell would have made two trips so far this season. The Hendrick folks believe the count should actually be at four. Hendrick Motorsports is off to a blazing start this sea- son with two wins through NASCAR’s first four races, a marked uptick for an orga- nization that went deep into the schedule the last few years before its program found a rhythm. William Byron and Kyle Larson have Hendrick on a two-race streak heading into this weekend’s race at Phoenix Raceway, where Chase Elliott won in November to clinch his first Cup Series championship. Elliott and Alex Bowman are winless through the first month, but Bowman won the pole for John Locher/AP Hendrick Motorsports driver Kyle Larson does a burnout after winning a NASCAR Cup Series race on Sunday in Las Vegas. the Daytona 500 and Elliott, a week after a runner-up finish in that marquee event, had the field covered at Daytona’s road course until a questionable cau- tion jumbled the race. “I mean, certainly the Hen- drick guys have come to play,” said Kyle Busch, a former Hen- drick driver who has since won two Cup championships with Joe Gibbs Racing. The momentum is a car- ryover from last season when Elliott gave Rick Hendrick his first title since Jimmie Johnson won it in 2016. The team had failed to advance a driver into the championship round in the three years between titles, a stretch that included an embar- rassing 2018 season in which Elliott accounted for the only three wins for the entire orga- nization. The slow rebuild has focused on behind-the-scenes reorgani- zations and improving perfor- mance on 1.5-mile tracks. Hen- drick Motorsports trailed its rivals in nearly every statistical category, including victories, at those tracks last season. But after two stops at the bread-and-butter NASCAR circuits, Hendrick Motorsports is undefeated on intermedi- ate tracks. NASCAR this year has diversified the schedule but there are still two 1.5-mile tracks in the third round of the playoffs, where a win earns an automatic berth into the cham- pionship finale. “We’ve delved in pretty deep as a group to try to get our col- lective knowledge base higher,” said Chad Knaus, who moved this year to vice president of competition at Hendrick after nearly two decades as a crew chief. “Each team has its own identity, for sure, and the lee- way to do whatever it is that they need to do, but they really collectively work together.” Knaus even suggested that winning seven championships with Johnson might have pre- cipitated the lean years. John- son went winless his final three seasons and the Hendrick or- ganization needed significant time to adapt to the new Ca- maro introduced by Chevrolet in 2018 and then again in 2020. The team has now had a full season with the new Camaro but Hendrick is also not follow- ing the lead of one team. “Sometimes if you get some- body in there who is too over- powering, or maybe even too successful, they can lead the group in the wrong direction,” Knaus said. “The success that Jimmie and I had for years, it ruined a lot of advancement at Hendrick Motorsports. We won races that we maybe shouldn’t have and what hap- pens is a driver and a crew chief say ‘Well, let’s just do it like the 48.’ That’s not always the health- iest thing.” This quick start has given Hendrick 265 victories, just three short of the record held by Petty Enterprises. The boss isn’t celebrating just yet. “I think you build momen- tum slowly in this sport,” Hen- drick said. “We’ve still got work to do. We’ve got work to do in the pits. But we’ve got good speed. I just feel like the chem- istry is so good right now. I don’t know if I ever remember it being any better across the board with all four cars.”