The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, March 14, 2021, Page 12, Image 12

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    B2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 14, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
SUNDAY
BASKETBALL
Men’s college, Patriot final, Loyola (MD) vs. Colgate
Women’s college, Atlantic 10, UMass vs. VCU
Men’s college, Atlantic 10, VCU vs. St. Bonaventure
Men’s college, SEC, LSU vs. Alabama
Women’s college, Big 12, West Virginia vs. Baylor
Women’s college, Southland,
Sam Houston St. vs. Stephen F. Austin
Women’s college, NEC, Wagner at Mount St. Mary’s
Men’s college, AAC, Cincinnati vs. Houston
Men’s college, Big Ten, Ohio St. vs. Illinois
Women’s college, Patriot, Lehigh vs. Boston Univ.
NBA, Portland at Minnesota
NBA, L.A. Clippers at New Orleans
MOTOR SPORTS
NHRA, NHRA Gatornationals
NASCAR Cup Series, Phoenix
HOCKEY
College, Big Ten, Penn St. vs. Notre Dame
College, Big Ten, Michigan St. vs. Minnesota
NHL, Los Angeles at Colorado
College, Big Ten, Ohio St. vs. Michigan
SOCCER
Premier League, Arsenal vs. Tottenham Hotspur
Women’s college, UCLA at Utah
Women’s college, Arizona St. at Oregon St.
Premier League, Manchester United vs. West Ham
BASEBALL
MLB preseason, St. Louis at N.Y. Mets
MLB preseason, Kansas City at L.A. Dodgers
GOLF
Players Championship
SOFTBALL
College, Arkansas at South Carolina
College, Alabama at Auburn
College, Mississippi St. at Ole Miss
HORSE RACING
America’s Day at the Races
FOOTBALL
Men’s college, Mississippi Valley St. at Jackson St.
LACROSSE
College, Michigan at Ohio St.
SAILING
America’s Cup
Time
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
TV
CBSSN
ESPNU
CBS
ESPN
ESPN2
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
12:15 p.m.
12:30 p.m.
1 p.m.
5 p.m.
6 p.m.
CBSSN
ESPNU
ESPN
CBS
CBSSN
NBCSNW
ESPN
9 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
FOX
FOX
9 a.m.
1 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
Big Ten
Big Ten
NBCSN
Big Ten
9:25 a.m.
NBCSN
noon
Pac-12
noon
Pac-12 (Ore)
12:10 p.m.
NBCSN
ON DECK
Monday, March 15
Volleyball: Mountain View at Summit, 6:30 p.m.
Boys soccer: Ridgeview at Mountain View,
4:30 p.m.; North Marion at Madras, 4 p.m.; Central
Christian/Trinity Lutheran at Columbia Christian,
4:15 p.m.
Girls soccer: Mountain View at Bend, 4 p.m.; Ma-
dras at North Marion, 4 p.m.; Pleasant Hill at La Pine,
4 p.m.
Tuesday, March 16
Volleyball: Crook County at The Dalles, TBD; North
Marion at Madras, 6 p.m.; Creswell at La Pine, 6 p.m.;
Culver at Sheridan, 5 p.m.; North Lake/Paisley at
Gilchrist, 6:30 p.m.; Central Christian at Trinity Luther-
an, 5:30 p.m.
Boys soccer: Summit JV at Redmond, 6 p.m.; Bend
JV2 at La Pine, 4 p.m.
Girls soccer: Crook County at Summit JV, 4 p.m.;
Summit at Sisters, 6 p.m.; Redmond at Ridgeview,
6 p.m.; Molalla at Estacada, 6 p.m.
PREP SPORTS
BASKETBALL
Football
Friday’s Late Games
Summit 17, Bend 0
Hood River Valley 22, Redmond 0
Pendleton 22, Ridgeview 12
Crook County 28, Molalla 0
Estacada 48, Madras 6
Harrisburg vs. Sisters 42, Harrisburg 6
La Pine vs. Junction City 27, La Pine 22
Jefferson 20, Culver 18
Gilchrist 44, Eddyville Charter 25
Saturday’s Game
Mountain View 55, Aloha 27
Volleyball
10 a.m.
6 p.m.
MLB
MLB
10 a.m.
NBC
10 a.m.
noon
2 p.m.
SEC
SEC
SEC
10:30 a.m.
FS2
noon
ESPN2
Friday Late Games
Hosanna-Triad 3, Trinity Lutheran 0 (no scores reported)
North Lake-Paisley 3, Trinity Lutheran 2 (no scores re-
ported)
Gilchrist vs. Chiloquin 3, Gilchrist 1 (25-20, 25-11, 19-25,
25-16
Saturday’s Games
Ridgeview 3, Hood River Valley 0 (25-17, 25-9, 25-12)
Crook County vs. Pendleton, late
Sisters vs. Hood River Valley, late
Sisters vs. Ridgeview, late
Redmond 3, The Dalles 0 (25-20, 25-16, 26-24)
Pleasant Hill 3, La Pine 2 (25-16, 25-20, 23-25, 23-25,
15-7)
Crane 3, Central Christian 1 (25-19, 20-25, 25-9, 25-22)
Trinity Lutheran 3, Gilchrist 0 (25-20, 25-4, 25-11)
Chiloquin 3, Gilchrist 0 (26-24, 25-12, 25-21)
Trinity Lutheran 3, Chiloquin 0 (25-12, 25-18, 25-12)
Culver vs. Western Christian 3, Culver 2 (25-22, 18-25, 24-
26, 25-11, 15-13)
1 p.m.
ESPNU
Boys Soccer
8 p.m.
NBCSN
Saturday’s Games
Summit vs. Central Catholic, late
La Pine 3, Crosshill Christian 1
MONDAY
Girls Soccer
SOCCER
Men’s college, Rutgers (Camden) at Penn St.
Men’s college, Michigan St. at Indiana
Premier League,
Wolverhampton Wanderers vs. Liverpool
BASEBALL
MLB preseason, Washington at St. Louis
MLB preseason, Cincinnati at L.A. Angels
HOCKEY
College, NCHC semifinal, TBD vs. St. Cloud St.
College, Big Ten semifinal, TBD vs. Wisconsin
NHL, Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers
College, Big Ten semifinal, teams TBD
College, NCHC semifinal, Denver vs. North Dakota
SOFTBALL
College, Mississippi St. at Ole Miss
BASKETBALL
NBA, N.Y. Knicks at Brooklyn
NBA, L.A. Lakers at Golden State
9 a.m.
11 a.m.
Big Ten
Big Ten
12:55 p.m.
NBCSN
10 a.m.
1 p.m.
1 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
4 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
6 p.m.
MLB
MLB
CBSSN
Big Ten
NBCSN
Big Ten
CBSSN
4 p.m.
5 p.m.
7:35 p.m.
SEC
ESPN
ESPN
Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible
for late changes made by TV stations.
Friday’s Late Games
Summit 3, Bend 0
Redmond 4, Mountain View 0
GOLF
PGA Tour
The Players Championship Scores
Saturday at Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
Purse: $15 million
Yardage: 7,189; Par: 72
Third Round
Lee Westwood
69-66-68—203
Bryson DeChambeau
69-69-67—205
Justin Thomas
71-71-64—206
Doug Ghim
71-67-68—206
Paul Casey
73-67-67—207
Jon Rahm
72-68-67—207
Brian Harman
67-71-69—207
Chris Kirk
72-65-71—208
Sergio Garcia
65-72-71—208
Matthew Fitzpatrick
68-68-72—208
Cameron Smith, 71-73-65—209. Si Woo Kim, 72-70-
67—209. Ryan Palmer, 70-72-68—210. Abraham Ancer,
72-70-68—210. Talor Gooch, 71-68-71—210. Harry Higgs,
71-73-67—211. Adam Long, 70-74-67—211. Shane Lowry,
68-74-69—211. Will Zalatoris, 70-71-70—211. Tom Hoge,
69-71-71—211. Patton Kizzire, 70-69-72—211.
Lanto Griffin, 73-71-68—212. Jordan Spieth, 70-74-
68—212. Patrick Reed, 70-72-70—212. Corey Conners,
68-72-72—212. Jason Day, 70-71-71—212. Victor Perez,
73-71-69—213. J.T. Poston, 76-68-69—213. Christiaan Be-
zuidenhout, 70-72-71—213. Jason Kokrak, 70-72-71—213.
SPORTS BRIEFING
Prep football
BASEBALL
Continued from B1
Ducks blank Beavs again, 3-0 — Following Oregon’s Fri-
day night 7-0 shutout of Oregon State to open a three-game
nonconference series in Corvallis, the teams met again Satur-
day afternoon and the Ducks held the Beavers scoreless again
in a 3-0 victory. Oregon pitcher Cullen Kafka threw five in-
nings and gave up just two hits with eight strikeouts and four
walks, earning his first victory of the season. Reliever Andrew
Mosiello threw just 41 pitches over the last four innings for
the save, yielding just two hits and striking out three. Ducks
freshman Josh Kasevich had a two-RBI triple and Aaron Za-
vala drove in Gabe Matthews as Oregon did all its offensive
damage in the sixth inning. Oregon State’s Cooper Hjerpe lost
his first decision of the season. Hjerpe was solid through the
first five innings, but was unable to get through the sixth. He
went 5⅔, giving up six hits and striking out seven with just
one walk. The Beavers will look to avoid a sweep on Sunday,
when the final game of the series kicks off at 1:05 p.m.
GOLF
Westwood adds to lead at Players, DeChambeau on
his heels — One week later, the two leading characters and
the roles they play are still the same. Only the stage — and the
stakes — have changed. Lee Westwood went from surprise
to delight when his tee shot to the island green on the par-3
17th stayed on the top ridge, and then he trickled in a 25-foot
birdie putt that carried him to a 4-under 68 on Saturday at
The Players Championship. Bryson DeChambeau pumped
his powerful arms twice when he made a 15-foot par putt on
the 18th hole, giving him a 67 and leaving him two shots be-
hind and in the final group with Westwood. Among those
three back going into Sunday was Justin Thomas, who started
with four straight birdies and capped off his 64 with a 5-iron
that stopped inches away from the hole on the par-5 16th for
a tap-in eagle. Doug Ghim, who is making his debut in The
Players, also was three behind.
— Bulletin wire reports
POWERBALL
The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
5 11 51 56 61 2
Oregon
Lottery
results
As listed at
oregonlottery.org
and individual
lottery websites
The estimated jackpot was not available at press time.
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
10 14 31 33 34 38
The estimated jackpot is now $3.1 million.
Daniel Berger, 74-68-71—213. Ryan Armour, 74-68-71—
213. Scott Brown, 71-70-72—213. Tyler McCumber, 72-69-
72—213. Denny McCarthy, 69-69-75—213.
Matt Jones, 73-71-70—214. Joaquin Niemann, 73-71-
70—214. Brendon Todd, 74-69-71—214. Phil Mickelson,
71-72-71—214. Charles Howell III, 73-70-71—214. Adam
Hadwin, 74-69-71—214. Harold Varner III, 70-73-71—214.
Scott Piercy, 73-70-71—214. Kyoung-Hoon Lee, 72-71-
71—214. Brian Stuard, 74-68-72—214. Kramer Hickok,
74-68-72—214. Charley Hoffman, 70-68-76—214.
Billy Horschel, 71-73-71—215. Ryan Moore, 75-69-71—
215. Brendan Steele, 72-72-71—215. Zach Johnson, 75-68-
72—215. Keegan Bradley, 70-72-73—215. Dylan Frittelli,
71-68-76—215. Sungjae Im, 72-66-77—215.
Nick Taylor, 70-74-72—216. Russell Knox, 71-73-72—
216. Michael Thompson, 71-73-72—216. Lucas Glover, 75-
69-72—216. Jhonattan Vegas, 73-71-72—216. Aaron Wise,
73-71-72—216. Dustin Johnson, 73-70-73—216. Adam
Scott, 72-71-73—216. Cameron Percy, 73-70-73—216.
Louis Oosthuizen, 73-69-74—216.
Patrick Rodgers, 74-70-73—217. James Hahn, 76-67-
74—217. Rory Sabbatini, 69-75-74—218. Nate Lashley,
74-69-75—218. Collin Morikawa, 71-73-76—220. Martin
Laird, 73-71-76—220. Scott Harrington, 72-71-77—220.
Men’s college
PAC-12 CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT
In Las Vegas
SEMIFINALS
Friday’s Late Game
(3)Colorado 72, (2)Southern Cal 70
CHAMPIONSHIP
Saturday’s Game
(5)Oregon St. vs. (3)Colorado, late
TOP 25 SCORES
Friday’s Late Game
No. 19 San Diego St. 77, Nevada 70
Saturday’s Games
No. 3 Illinois 82, No. 5 Iowa 71
No. 9 Ohio St. 68, No. 4 Michigan 67
No. 6 Alabama 73, Tennessee 68
No. 7 Houston 76, Memphis 74
LSU 78, No. 8 Arkansas 71
No. 13 Texas 91, No. 12 Oklahoma St. 86
Georgia Tech 80, No. 15 Florida St. 75
Georgetown 73, No. 17 Creighton 48
No. 19 San Diego St. 68, Utah St. 57
NBA
Other Central Oregon games
Elsewhere on the Central Oregon grid-
iron, Sisters rebounded in a big way with
a 42-6 win over Harrisburg where the of-
fense scored six touchdowns. A stark im-
provement from last week when the Out-
laws scored just one.
“We had a lot to improve on from the
week before and we did that,” said Outlaws
coach Gary Thorson. “We executed bet-
ter on offense and was more assignment
sound on defense.”
Adam Madox-Castle, Hunter Spor, Ri-
ley Sellers, Wyatt Maffey and Griffin Gard-
ner all had rushing touchdowns for the
Outlaws in the blowout win that featured
NASCAR Cup Series
Thursday’s Late Box Score
Trail Blazers 125, Timberwolves 121
PORTLAND (125)
Covington 3-4 0-0 9, Jones Jr. 4-8 2-3 11, Kanter 8-12
4-5 20, Lillard 7-19 8-9 25, Trent Jr. 5-13 2-3 14, Anthony
8-14 8-8 26, Hood 2-4 2-2 6, Little 3-7 0-0 6, Simons 3-8
0-0 8. Totals 43-89 26-30 125.
MINNESOTA (121)
Layman 1-5 1-2 3, Vanderbilt 1-1 1-2 3, Towns 12-21 8-8
34, Edwards 8-18 2-4 21, Rubio 3-4 4-5 10, Hernango-
mez 4-8 1-3 10, McDaniels 2-2 0-0 5, Reid 4-9 3-4 11,
Nowell 7-14 0-0 17, Okogie 2-4 3-3 7. Totals 44-86
23-31 121.
Portland
33 33 27 32 — 125
Minnesota
24 33 37 27 — 121
3-Point Goals_Portland 13-40 (Covington 3-4, Lillard
3-10, Anthony 2-5, Simons 2-5, Trent Jr. 2-7, Jones Jr.
1-3, Hood 0-2, Little 0-4), Minnesota 10-26 (Nowell 3-6,
Edwards 3-7, Towns 2-4, Hernangomez 1-2, Layman
0-4). Fouled Out_None. Rebounds_Portland 34 (Kanter
11), Minnesota 56 (Towns 10). Assists_Portland 26 (Lil-
lard 10), Minnesota 23 (Rubio 8). Total Fouls_Portland
18, Minnesota 24. A_0 (19,356)
NHL
TOP 25 SCORES
Saturday’s Games
No. 6 Baylor 66, Texas 55
No. 7 Maryland 104, Iowa 84
No. 17 West Virginia 59, Oklahoma St. 50
After more than seven quarters this
season, Summit finally ended the touch-
down drought when junior running back
Ryan Powell broke a couple of tackles and
scored from 33 yards out in the fourth
quarter. With how their defense was play-
ing, the score seemed to put the game on
ice for the Storm.
“It makes it really easy on the offense
when the defense pitches a shutout,” said
Summit sophomore quarterback Hogan
Carmichael who finished with 112 passing
yards.
After a slow start on offense, the Storm
finally found a groove on offense. Even
though they did not score, they were able
to move the ball and win the field position
battle.
“We would have good plays and then
we would shoot ourselves in the foot,” said
Carmichael. “I feel like coming out of half-
time we just had to stop making the men-
tal mistakes and play smart on the field.”
Powell led the Storm with 51 yards rush-
ing and the offense’s lone touchdown, ju-
nior wideout Caden Harris finished with
five catches for 52 yards and senior line-
backer Jake Hendricks scored off a fumble
recovery in the game’s final minutes to give
the Storm a 17-point advantage.
Lava Bears junior quarterback Seve
Castillo finished with 56 passing yards,
senior wideout Jacob Winchester had 56
yards rushing on 12 carries and sopho-
more wideout Blake Groshong caught two
passes for 48 yards.
MOTOR SPORTS
HOCKEY
Women’s college
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Phila.
26
12
.684
Brooklyn
26
13
.667
Milwaukee
24
14
.632
Miami
20
18
.526
Charlotte
19
18
.514
Boston
19
18
.514
New York
20
19
.513
Atlanta
18
20
.474
Toronto
17
21
.447
Indiana
16
20
.444
Chicago
16
20
.444
Cleveland
14
23
.378
Washington
14
23
.378
Orlando
13
25
.342
Detroit
10
28
.263
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Utah
28
9
.757
Phoenix
25
11
.694
L.A. Lakers
25
13
.658
L.A. Clippers
25
14
.641
Denver
22
15
.595
Portland
22
15
.595
San Antonio
19
15
.559
Dallas
19
17
.528
Golden State
19
19
.500
Memphis
17
17
.500
New Orleans
16
22
.421
Oklahoma City
16
22
.421
Sacramento
15
23
.395
Houston
11
25
.306
Minnesota
8
30
.211
Friday’s Late Games
Miami 101, Chicago 90
San Antonio 104, Orlando 77
Utah 114, Houston 99
L.A. Lakers 105, Indiana 100
Saturday’s Games
New York 119, Oklahoma City 97
Brooklyn 100, Detroit 95
Milwaukee 125, Washington 119
Charlotte 114, Toronto 104
Atlanta 121, Sacramento 106
Portland 125, Minnesota 121
Dallas at Denver, late
Indiana at Phoenix, late
Sunday’s Games
Memphis at Oklahoma City, 11 a.m.
Utah at Golden State, 1 p.m.
San Antonio at Phila., 3:30 p.m.
Miami at Orlando, 4 p.m.
Cleveland at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m.
Boston at Houston, 5 p.m.
Portland at Minnesota, 5 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at New Orleans, 6 p.m.
Toronto at Chicago, 6 p.m.
GB
—
½
2
6
6½
6½
6½
8
9
9
9
11½
11½
13
16
GB
—
2½
3½
4
6
6
7½
8½
9½
9½
12½
12½
13½
16½
20½
East
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
N.Y. Islanders 28 18 6 4 40 83 62
Washington 27 17 6 4 38 94 87
Pittsburgh
27 17 9 1 35 89 79
Boston
25 14 7 4 32 70 60
Philadelphia 25 13 9 3 29 83 83
N.Y. Rangers 26 11 12 3 25 72 71
New Jersey
24 8 13 3 19 60 79
Buffalo
26 6 16 4 16 58 88
Central
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Tampa Bay
26 19 5 2 40 97 60
Florida
27 18 5 4 40 93 78
Carolina
26 19 6 1 39 93 67
Chicago
29 14 10 5 33 89 92
Columbus
29 11 12 6 28 79 97
Nashville
28 11 16 1 23 67 96
Dallas
23 8 9 6 22 67 63
Detroit
28 8 16 4 20 63 95
West
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Vegas
25 18 6 1 37 83 56
Minnesota
25 16 8 1 33 79 63
St. Louis
28 14 9 5 33 88 92
Colorado
25 15 8 2 32 74 59
Los Angeles 26 11 9 6 28 78 74
Arizona
27 12 11 4 28 69 81
San Jose
24 10 11 3 23 72 88
Anaheim
28 8 14 6 22 62 92
North
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Toronto
29 19 8 2 40 99 75
Winnipeg
27 17 8 2 36 91 78
Edmonton
29 18 11 0 36 99 85
Montreal
27 12 8 7 31 86 74
Calgary
28 13 12 3 29 76 82
Vancouver
30 12 16 2 26 84 99
Ottawa
30 9 20 1 19 79 121
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.
Friday’s Late Games
Edmonton 6, Ottawa 2
San Jose 6, Anaheim 0
Colorado 2, Los Angeles 0
Saturday’s Games
N.Y. Rangers 4, Boston 0
Columbus 4, Dallas 3, OT
N.Y. Islanders 3, New Jersey 2
Washington 5, Philadelphia 4
Pittsburgh 3, Buffalo 0
Calgary 3, Montreal 1
Tampa Bay 6, Nashville 3
Florida 4, Chicago 2
Winnipeg 5, Toronto 2
Vegas 5, St. Louis 1
Edmonton at Vancouver, late
San Jose at Anaheim, late
Sunday’s Games
Arizona at Minnesota, 11 a.m.
Carolina at Detroit, 2 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at New Jersey, 2 p.m.
Los Angeles at Colorado, 2:30 p.m.
Dallas at Columbus, 4 p.m.
Toronto at Ottawa, 4 p.m.
Phoenix Raceway
After Saturday qualifying
Race Sunday, in Avondale, Ariz.
Lap length: 1.00 miles
(Car number in parentheses)
1, (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford. 2, (5) Kyle Larson, Chevro-
let. 3, (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota. 4, (20) Christopher Bell,
Toyota. 5, (19) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota.
6, (9) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet. 7, (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota.
8, (12) Ryan Blaney, Ford. 9, (22) Joey Logano, Ford. 10, (24)
William Byron, Chevrolet.
11, (47) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Chevrolet. 12, (1) Kurt
Busch, Chevrolet. 13, (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet. 14, (43)
Erik Jones, Chevrolet. 15, (37) Ryan Preece, Chevrolet.
16, (34) Michael McDowell, Ford. 17, (17) Chris
Buescher, Ford. 18, (4) Kevin Harvick, Ford. 19, (6) Ryan
Newman, Ford. 20, (21) Matt DiBenedetto, Ford.
21, (48) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet. 22, (42) Ross Chastain,
Chevrolet. 23, (8) Tyler Reddick, Chevrolet. 24, (41) Cole
Custer, Ford. 25, (23) Bubba Wallace, Toyota.
26, (14) Chase Briscoe, Ford. 27, (99) Daniel Suarez,
Chevrolet. 28, (38) Anthony Alfredo, Ford. 29, (77) Justin
Haley, Chevrolet. 30, (78) B.J. McLeod, Ford.
31, (51) Cody Ware, Chevrolet. 32, (10) Aric Almirola,
Ford. 33, (7) Corey Lajoie, Chevrolet. 34, (53) J.J. Yeley, Ford.
35, (00) Quin Houff, Chevrolet.
36, (52) Josh Bilicki, Ford. 37, (66) Timmy Hill, Ford. 38,
(15) James Davison, Chevrolet.
DEALS
Transactions
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Optioned RHPs Michael Bau-
mann and Isaac Mattson and LHPs Zac Lowther and Al-
exander Wells to Norfolk (Triple-A East).
BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned 3B Hudson Potts,
CFs Marcus Wilson and Jeisson Rosario and RHP Connor
Seabold to Worcester (Triple-A East). Optioned C Ronaldo
Hernandez, RHP Bryan Mata and LHP Jay Groome to the
alternate training site. Reassigned INF Nick Yorke to the
minor league camp.
DETROIT TIGERS — Assigned CF Parker Meadows to
active roster.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Reassigned P Eric Skoglumnd
to the minor league camp. Optioned Ps Daniel Tillo and
Angel Zerpa to Omaha (Triple A-East).
National League
COLORADO ROCKIES — Recalled RHP Ryan Feltner and
LHP Zac Rosscup from the minor leagues.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Agreed to terms with Ps Gen-
esis Cabrera, Seth Elledge, Junior Fernandez, Giovanny
Gallegos, Ryan Helsley, Dakota Hudson, Johan Oviedo,
Daniel Ponce de Leon, Johan Quezada, Angel Rondon,
Tyler Webb, Kodi Whitley and Jake Woodford, Cs Ivan Her-
rera, Andrew Knizner and Ali Sanchez; INFs Tommy Edman,
John Nogowski and Edmundo Sosa, and OFs Dylan Carl-
son, Austin Dean, Tyler O’Neill, Lane Thomas and Justin
Williams on one year contracts. Optioned Cs Pedro Pages
and Carlos Soto, RHPs Junior Fernandez, Johan Oviedo
and Griffin Roberts, LHPs Conner Jones and Garrett Wil-
liams, INFs Luken Baker and Kramer Robertson and OFs
Lars Nootrbaar and Justin Toerner to minor lesgue camp.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
DETROIT LIONS — Signed TE Josh Hill.
LOS ANGELES CHARGERS — Released CB Casey Hay-
ward.
NEW YORK JETS — Re-signed WR Vyncent Smith to a
one-year contract.
Canadian Football League
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS — Released DE Dylan
Donahue.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ANAHEIM DUCKS — Assigned D Jamie Drysdale to
San Diego (AHL). Recalled Gs Alexei Melnichuk and Olle
Eriksson Ek. from San Diego (AHL).
BOSTON BRUINS — Recalled LW Anton Blidh, C Greg
McKegg, G Jeremy Swayman from Providence (AHL) loan.
Recalled D Steven Kampfer, G Dan Vladar, C Jack Studnicka
and D Urho Vaakanainen from the minor league taxi squad.
CAROLINA HURRICANES — Waived D Jake Gardiner.
DALLAS STARS — Designated RW Ty Dellandrea for
assignment to the taxi squad. Recalled Cs Rhett Gardner
and Joel L’Esperance from the minor league taxi squad.
NEW YORK RANGERS — Recalled RW Kaapo Kakko, D
K’Andre Miller and G Keith Kinkaid from the minor league
taxi squad. Recalled LW Artemi Panarin from leave of ab-
sence.
OTTAWA SENATORS — Designated C Clark Bishop for
assignment to the taxi squad.
SAN JOSE SHARKS — Assigned G Josef Korenar from
San Jose (AHL). Recalled G Alexei Melnichuk from minor
league taxi squad.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Recalled RW Scott Sab-
ourin from Toronto (AHL).
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Bend’s Jacob Winchester (11) jumps over a Summit defender to gain extra yards during the third
quarter on Friday night at Bend High.
“We had a lot to improve on from
the week before and we did that. We
executed better on offense and was
more assignment sound on defense.”
— Gary Thorson, Sisters High School
football coach
a running clock after getting ahead by 35
points early in the third quarter. Gardner
also passed for a touchdown to Garrett
Vohs.
Thorson credited a good week of prac-
tice for the team’s improvement from the
previous week.
“We are young and inexperienced so
our potential for growth is huge. We were
dialed in especially later in the week,” said
Thorson.
“The biggest part we are looking for is
improving every week. I think our kids
had a lot of fun.”
In six-man football, Gilchrist got seven
total touchdowns from senior Jaekob
Spurlock, who threw for five and ran two
more in the Grizzlies 44-25 win on the
road against Eddyville Charter.
One of the Spurlock’s touchdown passes
to Micah Ellis traveled 60 yards in the air,
which left his coach in amazement a day
later.
“You don’t see that too many times in
high school football,” said Gilchrist coach
Rick West.
Redmond found itself on the wrong end
of a shutout, falling to Hood River Valley
22-0, a week after Redmond shutout Bend.
Ridgeview suffered its first loss of the sea-
son, losing a close one on the road against
Pendleton, 20-12. Crook County won
its second game of the season, shutting
out Molalla 28-0 at the Cowboys’ home
opener.
Madras dropped its second straight
game, falling 48-6 to Estacada. Trailing
27-6 entering the fourth quarter, La Pine’s
comeback effort fell short in a 27-22 loss
to Junction City. Jefferson came up with a
late stop on a two-point conversion to beat
Culver 201-8.
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Reporter: 541-383-0307, brathbone@bendbulletin.com