A6 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 2021 ON THE AIR SCOREBOARD WEDNESDAY BASEBALL Time TV MLB preseason, Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh 10 a.m. MLB MLB preseason, L.A. Dodgers at Chicago White Sox 1 p.m. MLB MLB preseason, San Diego at Chicago Cubs 6 p.m. MLB BASKETBALL NBA, Milwaukee at Philadelphia 4 p.m. ESPN NIT, Toledo vs. Richmond 4 p.m. ESPN2 NIT, Western Kentucky vs. Saint Mary’s 6 p.m. ESPN2 NBA, L.A. Clippers at Dallas 6:35 p.m. ESPN SOFTBALL College, North Dakota at Florida 4 p.m. SEC HOCKEY NHL, Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers 4:30 p.m. NBCSN NHL, Edmonton at Calgary 7 p.m. NBCSN SOCCER Copa do Brazil, Salgueiro AC vs. SC Corinthians 5:20 p.m. FS2 FOOTBALL AFL Premiership, Richmond vs. Carlton 12:30 a.m. (Thu) FS2 GOLF European Tour, Kenya Open 3 a.m. (Thu) Golf Prep sports Wednesday, March 17 Volleyball: Ridgeview at Redmond, 6:30 p.m.; Ma- dras at North Marion, 6 p.m.; Sweet Home at Sisters, 6:30 p.m. Boys soccer: Summit at Mountain View, 4 p.m.; Crook County at Hood River Valley, 4:30 p.m.; Madras at North Marion, 4 p.m. Girls soccer: Bend at Summit, 6 p.m.; North Marion at Madras, 4 p.m. Cross-country: Redmond at Crook County, TBD; Ridgeview at Hood River Valley, TBD. Thursday, March 18 Football: Culver at Gervais, 5 p.m. Volleyball: Bend at Summit, 6:30 p.m.; Sisters at Woodburn, 6 p.m.; La Pine at North Lake/Paisley, 6 p.m.; Central Christian at Chiloquin, 2 p.m.; Hosanna-Triad at Central Christian, 4 p.m. Boys soccer: Redmond at Pendleton, 4 p.m.; Hood River Valley at Ridgeview, 4:30 p.m.; Molalla at Estaca- da, 6 p.m.; Sisters at Stayton, 7 p.m. Girls soccer: Pendleton at Redmond, 4:30 p.m.; Ridgeview at Hood River Valley, 6:30 p.m.; Stayton at Sisters, 6 p.m. Cross-country: Clash in the Cascades at Sisters, TBD. PREPS THURSDAY WRESTLING College, NCAA Division I Championships College, NCAA Division I Championships College, NCAA Division I Championships College, NCAA Division I Championship BASEBALL MLB preseason, Washington at N.Y. Mets MLB preseason, Chicago Cubs at Cleveland College, Texas A&M at Florida GOLF PGA Tour, Honda Classic European Tour, Kenya Open SOCCER Women’s college, Nebraska at Illinois Women’s college, Minnesota at Penn St. CONCACAF Olympic Qualifying Championship, United States vs. Costa Rica CONCACAF Olympic Qualifying Championship, Mexico vs. Dominican Republic Women’s college, USC at UCLA BASKETBALL NCAA First Four, Drake vs. Wichita St. NIT, NC State vs. Davidson NIT, SMU vs. Boise St. NCAA First Four, UCLA vs. Michigan St. NBA, New Orleans at Portland HOCKEY Women’s college, NCAA semifinal, teams TBD NHL, Pittsburgh at New Jersey BOXING Ring City USA SAILING America’s Cup FOOTBALL AFL Premiership, Collingwood vs. Western Bulldogs Volleyball 8 a.m. 11 a.m. 3 p.m. 6 p.m. ESPNU ESPNU ESPN2 ESPN2 10 a.m. 1 p.m. 4 p.m. MLB MLB SEC 11 a.m. 3 a.m. (Fri) Golf Golf 12:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m. 3:25 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 6:50 p.m. 7 p.m. Big Ten Big Ten FS1 FS1 Pac-12 TBS ESPN ESPN TBS NBCSNW 4 p.m. 4 p.m. ESPNU NBCSN 6 p.m. NBCSN 8 p.m. NBCSN 1 a.m. (Fri) FS2 Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations. SPORTS BRIEFING SOFTBALL Oregon softball moves up to season-high in polls ahead of Pac-12 play — Oregon softball moved up in the polls ahead of Pac-12 play. The Ducks (16-1) are No. 4 with 691 points in the NFCA coaches poll and and No. 4 with 431 points in the USA Softball poll after beating Sacramento State twice and Oregon State once last weekend. That’s up from No. 5 with 658 points and No. 6 with 386 points, respectively, last week. Oregon opens Pac-12 play with a four-game series against Utah starting Friday. BASEBALL Little League World Series eyes possible return — A year after the pandemic forced the Little League World Se- ries to be canceled, organizers are hopeful the late-summer Classic will return this August. “We are planning as if we are going to have a tournament season,” said Steve Keener, the president and CEO of Little League International. A plan that must include figuring out a way to safely bring together players from all over the globe. Little League has established a Pandemic Response Commission dedicated to figuring out how to pull off the two-week spectacle in Williamsport, Penn- sylvania. BASKETBALL Study: NCAA Tourney teams still have racial gradua- tion gap — A diversity report released Tuesday found that a significant graduation gap continues to exist between white and Black basketball players for the teams competing in this year’s NCAA Tournament, particularly on the men’s side. The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport (TIDES) at Central Florida examined the Graduation Success Rate (GSR) for the teams competing in the upcoming NCAA Tournament and found that white male student-athletes graduated at a rate 13.5 percentage points higher than Black male student-athletes. The gap was 6.1% on the women’s side. OLYMPICS Tokyo torch relay: Masks, quiet cheering and cau- tion — Organizers plan to exercise extreme caution when the Olympic torch relay starts next week, knowing any stumble could imperil the opening of the Tokyo Games in just over four months. The relay will crisscross Japan for the next four months with 10,000 runners carrying the torch. It’s also a symbolic curtain raiser for the postponed Olympics, and there is no room for error. The relay links all 47 Japanese prefectures and presents a real risk of spreading the virus, particularly with much of the organizational staff coming from Tokyo, where the COVID-19 outbreak has been most severe in Japan. — Bulletin wire reports MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn Tuesday night are: 10 41 46 52 69 8 Oregon Lottery results ON DECK x 2 The estimated jackpot is now $93 million. As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites Tuesday’s Games Crook County vs. The Dalles, late North Marion vs. Madras, late Creswell 3, La Pine 0 (25-20, 25-18, 25-18) Culver vs. Sheridan, late North Lake/Paisley vs. Gilchrist, late Central Christian 3, Trinity Lutheran 0 (25-17, 26-24, 25-19) Boys soccer Monday’s Late Game Ridgeview 4, Mountain View 0 Tuesday’s Games Redmond vs. Summit (JV), late La Pine 8, Bend (JV 2) 1 Girls soccer Monday’s Late Game North Marion 8, Madras 0 Tuesday’s Games Crook County vs. Summit (JV), late Summit vs. Sisters, late Redmond vs. Ridgeview, late Molalla vs. Estacada, late NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Phila. 28 12 .700 Brooklyn 27 13 .675 Milwaukee 25 14 .641 Miami 22 18 .550 Charlotte 20 18 .526 Boston 20 19 .513 Atlanta 20 20 .500 New York 20 21 .488 Chicago 18 20 .474 Indiana 17 21 .447 Toronto 17 22 .436 Washington 14 24 .368 Cleveland 14 25 .359 Orlando 13 26 .333 Detroit 10 29 .256 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Utah 29 10 .744 Phoenix 26 12 .684 L.A. Lakers 26 13 .667 L.A. Clippers 26 15 .634 Denver 23 16 .590 Portland 22 16 .579 San Antonio 20 16 .556 Dallas 20 18 .526 Golden State 20 20 .500 Memphis 17 19 .472 New Orleans 17 22 .436 Oklahoma City 17 23 .425 Sacramento 15 24 .385 Houston 11 27 .289 Minnesota 9 30 .231 Monday’s Late Games Milwaukee 133, Washington 122 Charlotte 122, Sacramento 116 San Antonio 109, Detroit 99 Brooklyn 117, New York 112 L.A. Clippers 109, Dallas 99 Phoenix 122, Memphis 99 Denver 121, Indiana 106 L.A. Lakers 128, Golden State 97 Tuesday’s Games Utah 117, Boston 109 Atlanta 119, Houston 107 Chicago 123, Oklahoma City 102 Miami 113, Cleveland 98 Phila. 99, New York 96 New Orleans at Portland, late Minnesota at L.A. Lakers, late Wednesday’s Games Brooklyn at Indiana, 4 p.m. Milwaukee at Phila., 4 p.m. Sacramento at Washington, 4 p.m. Toronto at Detroit, 4 p.m. Boston at Cleveland, 5 p.m. Golden State at Houston, 5 p.m. San Antonio at Chicago, 5 p.m. Charlotte at Denver, 6 p.m. Miami at Memphis, 6 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. GB — 1 2½ 6 7 7½ 8 8½ 9 10 10½ 13 13½ 14½ 17½ GB — 2½ 3 4 6 6½ 7½ 8½ 9½ 10½ 12 12½ 14 17½ 20 DEALS Transactions BASKETBALL HOCKEY Men’s college NCAA TOURNAMENT FIRST FOUR Thursday’s Games In Bloomington, Ind. Mount St. Mary’s (12-10) vs. Texas Southern (16-8), 2:10 p.m. Norfolk St. (16-7) vs. Appalachian St. (17-11), 5:40 p.m. In West Lafayette, Ind. Wichita St. (16-5) vs. Drake (25-4), 3:27 p.m. Michigan St. (15-12) vs. UCLA (17-9), 6:57 p.m. NHL East GP W L OT Pts GF Washington 29 19 6 4 42 103 N.Y. Islanders 30 19 7 4 42 87 Pittsburgh 29 18 10 1 37 94 Boston 27 15 8 4 34 73 Philadelphia 26 14 9 3 31 88 N.Y. Rangers 27 11 12 4 26 76 New Jersey 26 9 13 4 22 65 Buffalo 28 6 18 4 16 60 Central GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 28 20 6 2 42 102 67 Florida 28 19 5 4 42 99 81 Carolina 28 20 7 1 41 97 72 Chicago 30 14 11 5 33 92 98 Columbus 30 11 12 7 29 80 99 Dallas 25 9 9 7 25 72 68 Nashville 29 12 16 1 25 71 97 Detroit 30 9 17 4 22 68 99 West GP W L OT Pts GF GA Vegas 26 19 6 1 39 85 57 Minnesota 27 18 8 1 37 86 64 Colorado 26 16 8 2 34 78 60 St. Louis 28 14 9 5 33 88 92 Los Angeles 27 11 10 6 28 79 78 Arizona 29 12 13 4 28 70 88 San Jose 26 11 12 3 25 76 91 Anaheim 29 8 15 6 22 63 95 North GP W L OT Pts GF GA Toronto 30 19 9 2 40 102 79 Winnipeg 28 17 9 2 36 93 82 Edmonton 31 18 13 0 36 103 91 Montreal 28 13 8 7 33 90 76 Calgary 29 14 12 3 31 80 85 Vancouver 32 14 16 2 30 89 102 Ottawa 32 10 20 2 22 85 127 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. The top four teams in each division will qualify for playoffs under this season’s temporary realignment. Monday’s Late Games Calgary 4, Edmonton 3 Vegas 2, San Jose 1 Tuesday’s Games Washington 3, N.Y. Islanders 1 New Jersey 3, Buffalo 2 Boston 2, Pittsburgh 1 Detroit 4, Carolina 2 Minnesota 3, Arizona 0 Tampa Bay 4, Dallas 3, SO Anaheim at Colorado, late Wednesday’s Games Vancouver at Ottawa, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 4:30 p.m. Montreal at Winnipeg, 6 p.m. Edmonton at Calgary, 7 p.m. San Jose at Vegas, 7 p.m. St. Louis at Los Angeles, 7 p.m. GA 88 67 82 65 87 76 84 97 BASEBALL Major League Baseball American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Agreed to terms with INF Maikel Franco on a one-year contract. Optioned INFs Ry- lan Brannon and Tyler Nevin, OFs Yusniel Diaz and Ryan McKenna and RHP Ashton Goudeau to Norfolk (Triple-A Southeast). Reassigned C Taylor Davis to Twin Lakes camp. Placed RHP Hunter Harvey on 60-day IR. BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned RHPs Eduard Bazardo and John Schreiber and C/INF Connor Wong to alternate training site. DETROIT TIGERS — Optioned RHPs Matt Manning, Franklin Perez and Alex Lange, INF Zack Short and OF Christin Stewart to Toledo (Triple-A Midwest). Reassigned INF Kody Clemens to the mini-camp. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Optioned C Sebastian Rivero and P Tyler Zuber to Omaha (Triple-A East). SEATTLE MARINERS — Optioned RHP Sam Delaplane to Tacoma (Triple-A West) and RHP Juan Then to Everett (High-A West). Re-assigned RHP Moises Gomez and LHP Ian McKinney to the minor league camp. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Optioned INF/OF Vidal Brujan, Summit Continued from A5 This year would have been a new challenge for the Storm. Since moving up and join- ing the Class 6A ranks in 2018, the perennial 5A state title con- tender found itself in a similar position in the state’s highest classification — in the state tournament where the state’s best teams and players meet. “You get there and the girls there are 5 inches taller than the girls you have played all season,” said senior Harper Justema. “We are typically the only team not from Portland, so there are about 300 kids from Portland teams who band together and cheer against you, and you have the sheer mag- nitude of 600 people cheering against you.” Although the Storm have advanced to the final weekend of the season in previous years, they have yet to break through in 6A. In six tournament games the past two seasons, the Storm have only won two matches and have yet to reach the cham- pionship match, as they have six times under Waskom, hoist- ing the 5A state championship trophy in 2011 and 2015. It was not long after walking off the courts at Liberty High School at the 6A state tour- All-Americans Continued from A5 “Thinking about me as a freshman coming to Baylor and not knowing what I’m getting myself into, having no expec- tations for how well I’m going to be or how good I’m going to be — it means a lot to come full circle,” said Butler, the Big 12 player of the year and a third- team All-American last season. It is the first time Baylor, which earned a No. 1 seed for the NCAA Tournament, has had a first-team All-American. “These awards are just team awards,” said Butler, who with- drew from the NBA draft to return for his junior year. “I wouldn’t be here without my teammates just playing with me and giving me confidence. It’s been nice.” Kispert withdrew from the draft and led his team to a No. 1 overall seed, along with help- ing the Bulldogs finish a per- fect regular season. He joined Dan Dickau, Adam Morrison and Kelly Olynyk as first-team All-Americans from Gonzaga. Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin Summit volleyball coach Jill Waskom talks about how to defend the net with her players during practice last week at Summit High School. nament in 2019 that Summit aimed its focus at taking down the Portland-area schools and claiming a state championship. Then COVID-19 came to the United States, and high school sports seasons were postponed and postponed again. Practices were sporadic, sometimes months apart from one another. And once they started back up, the decision was made not to host state championships — a blow to a team with title aspirations. For seniors Justema and Sauer, this year’s season is not one they envisioned — rowdy fans in the stands for the big- gest games and working toward the end goal of a title. The new high school real- ity was no more apparent than when Summit faced off against cross-town rival Bend High last week. Normally a full gym for when the Lava Bears and Storm face off, this time it was an empty gym. “We have one of the bigger student sections that you will see at a volleyball game, but it is just a totally different picture,” Justema said. Normally a crowd helps de- liver energy to the players, but not this year with the limited crowd capacity. Yet the five-set match — which Bend High nearly stole after falling be- “He’s the epitome of a college athlete. He’s a poster child for the term student-athlete, great student, great ambassador for the program, our school and college athletics in general,” Gonzaga coach Mark Few said. “It’s all been because of the work, the time he’s put in, and his growth physically and men- tally. He’s just an unbelievable guy.” So is Garza, the big man from Iowa, who came up two votes of being a unanimous choice last season. In fact, he’s been so dominant that the school’s career scoring leader will have his No. 55 jersey re- tired at the end of the season. Like the Hawkeyes, the Fighting Illini had never had a first-team pick until Dosunmu came along. The two-time All- Big Ten guard led them to the conference tournament title last weekend and a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tourney. Joining those veterans — seniors Garza and Kispert, juniors Butler and Dosunmu — is Cunningham, the favor- ite to be chosen first overall in the NBA draft. The fresh- man forward helped engineer an upset of Baylor in the Big 12 tourney and will lead the fourth-seeded Cowboys into the NCAA Tournament. “Oklahoma State, last year wasn’t the year that they were proud of,” Cunningham said, “but I know there’s a bunch of guys that wanted to win and were going to do everything that it took to win. So having a group of guys like that, with the coach we have and staff we have, that’s what I want to sur- round myself with.” Second team While the first team was full of upperclassmen, the second team belonged to college bas- ketball’s youth. There was Suggs, the fresh- man who led Gonzaga to high-profile wins over Kansas and Iowa early in the season, and Timme, the sophomore who went from key reserve to crucial starter for the West Coast Conference champs. Joining them were a trio of post players: Kofi Cockburn OF Josh Lowe, INFs Kevin Padlo and Taylor Walls, RHPs Drew Stotman, Brent Honeywell and Luis Patino, LHPs Shane McClanahan and Brendan McKay to Durham (Tri- ple-A Southeast). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Optioned RHP J.B. Bu- kauskas, OF Stuart Fairchild and INF Geraldo Perdomo to Reno (Triple-A West). COLORADO ROCKIES — Optioned LHP Yoan Aybar, INF/OF Bret Boswell and RHPs Ryan Castellani, Justin Law- rence and Jose Mujica to Albuquerque (Triple-A West). Re-assigned RHP Jesus Tinoco, C Willie MacIver to the mi- nor league camp. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Agreed to terms with INF Travis Shaw. Placed INF/OF Mark Mathias on 60-day IR. Optioned RHP Phil Bickford to Nashville (Triple-A South- east). Reassigned OF Dylan Cozens, INF Zach Green, C Payton Henry, INF/OF Pablo Reyes, LHP Aaron Ashby and RHP Zack Brown to minor league camp. NEW YORK METS — Optioned RHP Sam McWilliams and OF Khalil Lee to Syracuse (Triple-A East). PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Optioned INFs Rodolfo Castro, Liover Peguero and Oneil Cruz, RHPs Roansy Contreras, Max Kranick and Nick Mears. Reassigned RHPs Cody Bolton, Quinn Priester and Jandel Gustave, C Jason Delay, OFs Cal Mitchell, Travis Swaggerty and Canaan Smith-Njigba, INF Nick Gonzalez and INF/OF Mason Martin. SAN DIEGO PADRES — Optioned RHP Reggie Lawson to San Antonio (Double-A South). FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Re-signed OT Kelvin Beachum to a two-year contract. BALTIMORE RAVENS — Re-signed LB Chris Board to a one-year contract. BUFFALO BILLS — Agreed to terms with LB Tyler Matakevich on a one-year contract extension. CHICAGO BEARS — Agreed to terms with DE Mario Edwards Jr. on a three-year contract extension. CINCINNATI BENGALS — Re-signed S Braandon Wilson to a two-year contract extension. HOUSTON TEXANS — Waived LB Curtis Bolton, DT An- drew Brown and WRs J’Mon Moore and Damion Ratley. MIAMI DOLPHINS — Re-signed LB Vince Biegel. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Released DT Shamar Stephen. TENNESSEE TITANS — Released CB Adoree Jackson and RT Dennis Kelly. HOCKEY National Hockey League BUFFALO SABRES — Recalled Ds Brandon Davidson Henri Jokiharju from the minor league taxi squad. As- signed F Rasmus Asplund and D Jacob Bryson to the minor league taxi squad. CAROLINA HURICANES — Recalled D Joey Keane and G Beck Warn from the minor league taxi squad. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Signed LW Josiah Slavin to a two-year entry-level contract. COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS — Waived LW Mikhail Grigorenko. MONTREAL CANADIENS — Waived RW Paul Byron. SAN JOSE SHARKS — Assigned G Kris Oldham, D Chaz Reddekopp and Fs Kyle Topping, Krystof Hrabkik and Joseph Garreffa to San Jose (AHL). TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Waived RW Jimmy Vesey. VEGAS GOLDEN KNIGHTS — Signed D Daniil Miro- manov as free agent to a one-year, entry level contract. WINNIPEG JETS — Waived G Anton Forsberg. SOCCER Major League Soccer FORT LAUDERDALE CF — Named Darren Powell as head coach. hind 2-0 — was as intense has they have been in the past with packed gyms. Summit won the fifth-and-decisive game to claim the match 3-2. “It is super different, we have to create our own energy,” said junior Kate Doorn. “One of our goals is to stay super loud be- cause there isn’t a student sec- tion to be loud for us. In a way it makes it more intense be- cause we have to focus on vol- leyball when there are no fans.” Justema, Sauer, Kendall and Doorn all said that what made this team a championship con- tender was not just the team’s physical traits or past success, but the chemistry it has been able to foster, especially over the last year. The Storm’s goal has shifted from a state title to simply en- joying the time with one an- other. If there is one thing they have learned the last year, it’s that time together is not always guaranteed. “I love this team and every- one loves each other so much,” Kendall said. “It makes it spe- cial because we all play for each other because we don’t know when it is going to continue or if it is going to stop. So we push each other every moment and enjoy every moment of it.” e e Reporter: 541-383-0307, brathbone@bendbulletin.com of Illinois, Hunter Dickinson of Michigan and Evan Mobley of USC. “Very proud of Evan, his development,” Trojans coach Andy Enfield. “He’s really improved as a player throughout the season and we are going to need him to play at a high level starting the end of this week.” Third team Baylor’s Mitchell was joined on the third team by Quen- tin Grimes, the high-scoring guard from Houston; Herb Jones of Alabama; Cameron Krutwig of mid-major darling Loyola Chicago; and Chris Du- arte of Oregon. Just like the first- and sec- ond-team All-Americans, their teams also will be playing in the NCAA Tournament this week. “You never want to take win- ning for granted,” said Krut- wig, a member of the Ramblers team that reached the Final Four in 2018. “We put a lot of hard work into it. But we were sitting there saying, ‘There’s so much more to go.’”