FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT A5 S PORTS THE BULLETIN " WEd NEs day, Ma r c H 17, 2021 COLLEGE SPORTS OSU board to meet to discuss president The Oregon State board of trustees will meet this week to discuss president F. King Alexan- der’s role in the mishan- dling of sexual miscon- duct cases at his former school, LSU. Board chair Rani Borkar wrote an open letter to the Oregon State com- munity saying the board would meet Wednesday to review a report by an outside law firm commis- sioned by LSU to look into how the school handled the cases. The report con- cluded the school suffered “a serious institutional failure” in its handling of physical and gender vi- olence. After six years at LSU, from 2013-19, King ar- rived at Oregon State, which has endured issues of its own inside the ath- letic department. An Asso- ciated Press investigation uncovered an abusive environment inside the school’s volleyball pro- gram. Three players have told the AP of contemplat- ing suicide over the past five years, while at least a dozen have transferred from or quit coach Mark Barnard’s program. Barnard has been in- vestigated, but remains the team’s coach, and Oregon State is suing the AP to block the news or- ganization’s open-records requests for information about investigations into Barnard and the program. The school turned down requests to speak to King during the inves- tigation and, through a spokesman, disputed characterizations made by players and others close to the program of the volley- ball team as engendering an abusive environment. In an open letter to the school community last week, Alexander said he regretted not taking stronger action against football coach Les Miles, who was a central figure in the 2012 investigation at LSU. Miles was fired ear- lier this month from his job at Kansas. — Associated Press MEN’S NCAA TOURNAMENT 6 officials out due to COVID-19 INDIANAPOLIS — Six officials won’t be working the NCAA Tournament because one tested posi- tive for COVID-19 and five others were deemed close contacts after arriving in Indianapolis. NCAA senior vice pres- ident of basketball Dan Gavitt confirmed the de- tails Tuesday. CBS Sports first reported that the officials received permis- sion to leave for dinner to- gether when their rooms weren’t ready and no food was available as they ar- rived at their hotel. They later returned to the hotel and one of the officials tested positive. The amount of time they would have to quarantine meant they wouldn’t be available for the entirety of the tournament, which begins Thursday with four games before 16 more on Friday. Gavitt didn’t name the six officials who were removed. He noted that when the pool of 60 of- ficials was selected for the tournament, another 17 alternates continued to test in case they were needed. Four of those al- ternates have arrived in Indianapolis to replace the six who were removed. — Associated Press bendbulletin.com/sports PREP VOLLEYBALL A change in perspective Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin photos Summit volleyball coach Jill Waskom, right, runs through drills with her players during practice last week at Summit High School. With no state tournament this season, Summit volleyball switches goal from championship to enjoyment BY BRIAN RATHBONE The Bulletin Y ear after year, Jill Waskom has been coaching talented volleyball teams that are some of the best in the state. Six times since 2007, Summit has reached the state championship match, and has twice brought a state volleyball title to Central Oregon. Looking at the team she had returning for the 2021 season, the pieces were in place for Summit to add to that total. The Storm had one of the state’s top players in Harper Justema, multiple all-conference players and state tournament experience. “We would have been making a really good run at all high school sports in Oregon were canceled for the state championship,” Waskom said. “It is nearly an entire year. not often that you have depth.” Still, it is only natural for a team to think But due to the effects of COVID-19, of what could have been for a group that Inside there will be no state championships had been playing together since grade Prep scores this season. school. and sporting “It sucks of course to not have the “It is bitter sweet not to go back to events on deck in same opportunity to have a chance the state tournament for one more Scoreboard, to make the state title this year,” said time,” said senior Hannah Sauer. “It is A6 junior Hannah Kendall. “But it is nice always so different from other tourna- to be back in the gym and I think we are ments and the season because it is so com- making the most of what we have.” petitive and all the best teams are there. It is The past year has been all about continuously sad that I won’t get to experience that again.” See Summit / A6 making adjustments and finding the positives when COLLEGE BASKETBALL | AP ALL-AMERICA TEAMS Harper Justema hits the ball over the net during practice last week at Summit High School. MOTOR SPORTS Gonzaga, Baylor dominate Suarez makes a historic mark for himself, NASCAR BY DAVE SKRETTA AP Basketball Writer Gonzaga and Baylor spent almost the entire season hold- ing down the top two spots in the Top 25. Makes sense they’d hold down a bunch of spots on The Associated Press All-America teams. The Bulldogs’ Corey Kispert and the Bears’ Jared Butler led the way with first- team nods Tuesday from the national panel of 63 media members that vote each week in the AP Top 25 poll. They were joined by unanimous pick Luka Garza of Iowa, a two-time selection, along with Ayo Dosunmu of Illinois and Cade Cunningham of Okla- homa State. Kispert and Butler had plenty of company, though. The Bulldogs also landed BY JENNA FRYER AP Auto Racing Writer Young Kwak/AP file Gonzaga forward Corey Kispert dunks against BYU in Spokane, Washington, in January. big man Drew Timme and freshman sensation Jalen Suggs on the second team while Joel Ayayi was an hon- orable mention pick. The Bears had Davion Mitchell on the third team and MaCio Teague as an honorable men- tion. See All-Americans / A6 CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Bubba Wallace is the face of NASCAR diversity. Daniel Su- arez plays an equally import- ant role. His road to NASCAR first stopped in upstate New York in the dead of winter. His En- glish was limited and most of Suarez’s racing had been at lower levels in Mexico. But a K&N Pro Series team owner had offered to mentor him, so here Suarez was in Buffalo. In January. He was back home in Mex- ico in a matter of months. Suarez returned to the United States the next year only this time he headed di- rectly to North Carolina, the hub of NASCAR. His English was still a struggle, but the Nicolas Cage movie “Gone in 60 Seconds” with subtitles helped him with both the lan- guage and American culture. Roughly nine years after he left Mexico determined to make it racing stock cars in America, Suarez last weekend became the first Mexican in the Fox Sports broadcast booth for a national NASCAR race. To signify the occasion, Su- arez called a lap in Spanish — a well-meaning crossover cut short by an untimely caution. “Tenemos una bandera am- arilla!” Suarez called. “Caution is out, amigos.” See Motor sports / A7