FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT A5 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports MEN’S NCAA TOURNAMENT Beavs’ tourney bid is 2nd in 31 years If you’re looking for re- cent history for Oregon State in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, well, it’s not a long story. The Beavers’ 2021 appearance is just the school’s second in 31 years. As a No. 12 seed, they are a scheduled to play fifth-seeded Tennes- see on Friday at 1:30 p.m. on TNT. But Oregon State does have a decent tourna- ment history. This is their 18th tournament appear- ance. OSU heads to Indi- anapolis looking to end a drought, as the Beavers have lost seven consec- utive games. The past six were in the first-round. The last time Oregon State won in the NCAAs was 1982, when the Bea- vers advanced to the West Regional final, losing to Georgetown 69-45. During this losing streak, OSU lost in 1984, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1990 and 2016. The Beavers’ best seed was 1990, when as No. 5 they lost to Ball State 54-53. The last time OSU played in the NCAA Tournament, the sev- enth-seeded Beavers lost to Virginia Common- wealth 75-67 in 2016. Oregon State’s all-time tournament record is 12- 20, including 3-7 in first- round games. OSU earned several first-round byes. The Beavers best tour- nament performance came in 1963, when they reached the Final Four be- fore losing to Cincinnati. OSU’s all-time sin- gle-game scorer is Gary Payton, who scored 31 points in the Beavers’ overtime loss to Evansville in 1988. —The Oregonian NCAA CROSS- COUNTRY OSU women earn best ever finish STILLWATER, Okla. — The 23rd-ranked Or- egon State women’s cross-country team re- corded the best team finish in program history, 16th (375 points), at the 2021 NCAA Champion- ships on Monday morn- ing at the Oklahoma State University Cross Country Course. Kaylee Mitchell and Batya Beard both earned All-American honors for placing in the top 40. “We executed a terrific plan today,” said head coach Louie Quintana. “This was a very tough course and we really rose to the occasion. Two All Americans in Kaylee and Batya is amazing!” No. 2 BYU (96) claimed the team title, followed by fifth-ranked NC State (161), and fourth-ranked Stanford (207). It was another strong showing for Mitchell, posting the highest indi- vidual finish in program history as she came in 20th with a time of 20 minutes, 38.5 seconds. Beard tabbed a 37th- place finish after finish- ing the 6 kilometers in 20:57.7. After completing the race in 21:33.9, Audrey Lookner finished 111th in the field of 256. Meagen Lowe (21:50.0) recorded a 148th finish, while just five spots back was Greta Van Calcar (21:53.7) in 153rd. Alyssa Foote notched a time of 22:08.9, finishing in 178th. Grace Fether- stonhaugh (22:40.5) took 220th. —Bulletin staff report Women’s NCAA Tournament WIDE-OPEN No. 6 seed Oregon will play South Dakota Monday; No. 8 seed Oregon State will play Florida State on Sunday Oregon State’s Aleah Goodman (1) drives around Oregon’s Maddie Scherr (23) in the second round of the Pac-12 tournament on March 4 in Las Vegas. John Locher/AP BY DOUG FEINBERG AP Basketball Writer Conn is in its normal spot with a No. 1 seed for the women’s NCAA Tournament. Famil- iar territory for Stanford and South Carolina, too. It’s a brand new day for North Caro- lina State. And the Huskies, while used to their position in the bracket, are fac- ing some uncertainty after coach Geno Auriemma tested positive for the coro- navirus. N.C. State is a No. 1 seed for the first time, joining Stanford, South Carolina and Connecticut on the top lines for the San Antonio-themed regions for the U women’s tourney. The Cardinal earned the overall No. 1 when the field was re- vealed Monday night. Hall of Fame coach Tara VanDerveer downplayed being the top choice. “What I really tell our team is seeds do not matter,” she said. “It’s not like you get any extra points when you show up at the gym.” VanDerveer said being healthy and ex- cited to play was most important. Teams basically will be locked down in hotels except to head to practice or games as part of the stringent COVID-19 safety protocols. Auriemma’s Texas arrival will be de- layed. He will remain in isolation for 10 days and can rejoin the team on March 24. The other members of UCo- nn’s travel party have tested negative for COVID-19. Auriemma will miss the Huskies’ open- ing game against High Point — one of four first-timers in the NCAAs — and a potential second-round matchup against either Syracuse or South Dakota State. “I’m an innocent bystander right now. I’m going to sit back and watch them do their thing,” he said. “(Assistant coach Chris Dailey) is undefeated in tourna- ment play. I don’t think you can get a coach who has a better record in the tournament than she does.” See Women’s / A6 SLED-DOG RACING PAC-12 | COMMENTARY Seavey wins fifth Iditarod race, matches most wins by a musher View from Las Vegas has changed BY MARK THIESSEN Associated Press ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Ever since Dallas Seavey became the youngest musher to win the Idi- tarod Trail Sled Dog Race in 2012, he’s been bombarded by questions on whether he would eventually get five race titles, the most ever by a musher. “I think it was probably 10 min- utes after I won that first race that somebody mentioned five,” he told The Associated Press before this year’s race. “At that point, I said I got to worry about No. 2 first. I may be homeschooled, but I know that much, two comes after one.” Now Seavey, a 34-year-old con- sidered by many to have the po- tential to become the race’s great champion, will have to start fending off questions about No. 6. Seavey on Monday collected his fifth Iditarod title, winning the pandemic-short- ened race by more than three hours over second-place musher Aaron Burmeister. He matched the record of five wins by Rick Swenson, known as the King of the Iditarod for picking up those titles from 1977-91. “It’s a big deal,” Seavey said at BY JOHN CANZANO The Oregonian L Marc Lester/Anchorage Daily News via AP Dallas Seavey poses with his dogs after winning the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race near Willow, Alaska, early Monday. the finish line after a race official checked to make sure his sled was complete with a sleeping bag, axe, dog booties and other mandatory gear. His 5 a.m. finish was televised statewide. Seavey said he didn’t allow him- self to think about a fifth win on the trail because he didn’t want to jinx it. “That’s huge, man,” he said. “I looked up to the Iditarod champi- ons my whole life and I’ve dreamed about this my whole life. And now to actually go from that, to see it happen, to realize that, that’s pretty cool.” See Iditarod / A7 AS VEGAS — It was just a couple of years ago that Pac-12 Conference commissioner Larry Scott checked himself into the two-bedroom “Sky Villa” at ARIA Resort and Casino. The 3,370-square foot suite came with the 24-hour butler ser- vice, a private elevator, and a marble jacuzzi soaking tub. Upon arrival, Scott and his wife were served a bottle of Veuve Clicquot champagne and choco- late-dipped strawberries. Scott Nightly room rate: $7,500. This was 2019 and Scott’s cash-strapped conference was slogging through a four- day men’s basketball tournament, trying to crown a champion. The suite was a “comp,” Scott soon claimed, pointing out that it came as part of the conference’s sponsor- ship package with MGM Resorts to hold the tournament in Las Vegas. “That didn’t really matter,” said one cur- rent Pac-12 AD. “The optics were beyond bad.” See Canzano / A7