FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT B3 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • FrIday, aprIL 2, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports TRACK & FIELD Hayward reopens for Premiere meet The new Hayward Field will reopen to track and field competition Friday as the Oregon Ducks play host for the Hayward Pre- miere meet. Reconstruction of the revered venue at the Uni- versity of Oregon began in June 2018. Work was completed in June 2020. No meets have been held at Hayward Field for the past nine months amid the pandemic. But with the start of the 2021 outdoor track and field season, Hayward’s re- opening has arrived. The Ducks will compete against more than a dozen other track and field teams at the Hayward Premiere. Oregon State, Portland, Portland State and Wash- ington State are among the participating schools include. The meet will be livestreamed on runner- space.com. UO is currently allow- ing only guests of players and coaches to attend events at Hayward Field. The Premiere is the first of four meets the Ducks will host at Hayward be- fore the NCAA champion- ships return to the venue from June 9-12. The West Coast Classic is set for April 17, followed by the Oregon Relays on April 23-24 and the Ore- gon Twilight on May 7. Hayward Field is sched- uled to host the U.S. Olympic trials for track and field from June 18-27, ahead of this summer’s Tokyo Olympics. The 2022 World Athletics Cham- pionships are coming to Hayward in July 2022. — The Oregonian PREP GIRLS SOCCER Bend, Summit tie in rubber match Bears, Storm draw 2-2 in 3rd meeting of season BY BRIAN RATHBONE The Bulletin J amie Brock does not often get nervous coaching a game. But late in Thursday afternoon’s match against Bend High, the Summit girls soccer coach found her hand shaking as senior Molly Beaulieu lined up for a penalty kick. Beaulieu’s kick found the back of the net to even the score at 2-2, which would prove to be the final score in the third game this season between the Storm and Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin the Lava Bears. Summit’s Grace Gardner (19) and Bend’s Peyton Gardner (15) fight for possession of the ball during the first half Thursday. The three-game series between the two rival schools ended as Thursday’s game did — in a tie. “It was nice to play a rival and it means something,” Brock said. “It doesn’t always end how you want, but it is not what you wouldn’t want either.” Each team entered Thursday’s match with a single loss. Summit beat Bend in the first match 3-0 on March 12, then the Lava Bears returned the “It was nice to play a rival and it means something. It doesn’t always end how you want, but it is not what you wouldn’t want either.” — Jamie Brock, Summit girls soccer coach favor with a 6-1 win over the Storm five days later. “We would have liked to get that last one,” said Bend coach Gavin Mey- ers. “But Summit is a good team and it feels good to battle against them.” Summit got on the board first when sophomore Joe Porter found the back of the net. But it was not long before senior Katelyn Jolley got behind Sum- mit’s backline to score her first goal of the match for Bend. “The first goal the ball got over the defense and I was able to run up on to it,” Jolley said. “Then I had an open shot at the goal. “It makes our intensity go up,” Jolley added about how the game changed once Bend was down a goal. “It makes the adrenaline come, you get nervous, but we have to make sure we stay composed.” See Soccer / B4 MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL Garza, Howard win AP awards Luka Garza, the 6-foot- 11, 265-pound senior center for Iowa is The As- sociated Press men’s col- lege basketball national player of the year after finishing second last sea- son. He was the runaway choice for the award announced Thursday, receiving 50 of 63 votes from AP Top 25 voters. Ayo Dosunmu, who led Illinois to the Big Ten Tournament title and a No. 1 NCAA seed, was second with six votes, fol- lowed by Oklahoma State freshman Cade Cunning- ham with three. Gonza- ga’s Corey Kispert and Baylor’s Jared Butler each earned two votes. Garza ranked second nationally by averaging 24.1 points with 8.7 re- bounds. . Garza finished as the career scoring leader (2,306) at Iowa, which will retire his No. 55 jersey. Also Thursday, Michi- gan coach Juwan Howard was named AP men’s col- lege basketball coach of the year, receiving 35 of 63 votes from a national media panel. Gonzaga’s Mark Few was second with 16 votes, and Bay- lor’s Scott Drew and Al- abama’s Nate Oats each received five. The Wolverines reached as high as No. 2 in the AP Top 25 and fin- ished No. 4 after a 19-3 regular season. Also Thursday, North Carolina head coach Roy Williams surprised many when he announced his retirement after 18 sea- sons with the Tar Heels and 33 overall as a head coach. Williams said he came to the decision be- cause he no longer feels that “he is the right man for the job.” — Associated Press WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL | FINAL FOUR MLB | OPENING DAY Snow, stars, fans and a virus postponement BY BEN WALKER AP Baseball Writer Stephen Spillman/AP file Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer speaks with guard Kiana Williams during a game against Oklahoma State in the second round of the women’s NCAA Tournament in San Antonio on March 23. Stanford’s VanDerveer, South Carolina’s Staley prepare for rematch BY DOUG FEINBERG AP Basketball Writer SAN ANTONIO — Dawn Staley remembers talking to her Olympic coach Tara VanDerveer before she took the job at Temple two decades ago. INSIDE The long- time Stanford • Arizona’s coach actually McDonald, UConn’s suggested that Bueckers Staley not be- lead teams come the head in Final Four, coach at the B5 Philadelphia school because she was still playing in the WNBA and wouldn’t have the time to do both well. Twenty-one years later and Staley admits she still has a bit of a chip on her shoulder about that conversation and has used it as motivation both at Temple and now South Carolina. “I don’t look down on her because she put that chip on my shoulder,” Staley said. “I just needed that, the past 21 years. I thank her for making the chip a little bit bigger.” The two friends meet Friday night in the Final Four when VanDerveer and Stanford take on Staley’s Gamecocks. VanDerveer said she has the utmost respect for her former Olympic point guard. “As a player, she saw the game so well she really has great instincts, a great un- derstanding of the game,” VanDerveer said Thursday. “She’s a great leader of her team.” VanDerveer knew when she was coaching Staley in the 1996 Atlanta Games that she would be successful in what- ever occupation she chose. See Final Four / B5 Miguel Cabrera took a trot, eventually, in the snow at Co- merica Park. Mookie Betts started the champion Los Angeles Dodgers with a hit at Coors Field. And the Bleacher Creatures did their thing at Yankee Stadium. All-Stars on the diamond for opening day, fans in the socially distanced stands ea- ger to cheer them. “Just having those smells hit you, walking in and hav- ing that experience back, it’s invigorating,” Tonia Smith of Sussex, Wisconsin, said Thursday before Milwaukee hosted Minnesota. Along with the hits, runs and errors, there was a stark reminder of what baseball went through last year. The New York Mets’ game in Washington — a prime pitching matchup between Ja- cob deGrom and Max Scher- zer — was postponed because of COVID-19 concerns. Na- tionals general manager Mike Rizzo later said three players had tested positive for the vi- rus and a fourth was consid- ered a “likely positive.” “It’s one of those things that brings it to light that we’re not through it yet,” Atlanta manager Brian Snitker said. “We’re still fighting this. We have to tend to business and not let up. It’s just a reminder that this thing is still out there and real.” Major League Baseball had 45 games postponed because of the coronavirus last sea- son during the shortened, 60-game schedule, when fans weren’t allowed. No games were lost in spring training this year, but that streak didn’t last long. At Fenway Park, the opener Shafkat Anowar/AP A family poses for a photo outside of Wrigley Field on opening day ahead of a game between the Chicago Cubs and the Pittsburgh Pi- rates on Thursday in Chicago. From New York to Seattle and every- where in between, wat is a much different opening day in 2021. Fans are back at the ballpark after they were shut out during the regular season last year because of the coronavirus pandemic. between the Boston Red Sox and Baltimore was called be- cause rain was in the fore- cast. They’ll start up Friday instead. “One day, two days, three days — I really don’t care, to be honest with you,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “I know there are a lot of guys that are excited, but I think it’s for the best. Tomorrow will be a better day weather-wise.” There were flurries in Cin- cinnati, where St. Louis new- comer Nolan Arenado sin- gled during a six-run burst in the first inning during an 11-6 win. It was 36 degrees at Wrigley Field as heralded rookie Ke’Bryan Hayes hom- ered to help Pittsburgh beat the Chicago Cubs 5-3. And the field looked bet- ter suited for snowballs than baseballs in Detroit where it was 32 degrees when Cabrera connected for his 488th ca- reer home run. The flakes were coming down so hard, Cabrera couldn’t tell if the ball left the park, and he slid into second base, just in case. “It was almost kind of laughable for everybody that we were playing baseball in an environment like that,” new Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said after a 3-2 win over Cleveland. “It would come and go, then it got kind of warm when the sun came out. It’s always fun on opening day to take those mental snap- shots and enjoy the moment.” A quick note for weather watchers: Yes, MLB has tried in the past to open the season with all games in warmer cli- mates and cities with domes. Fact is, it doesn’t work out that easily. Teams don’t always enjoy starting out on the road. Clayton Kershaw and the champion Dodgers were in Denver, where it was a pic- ture-perfect 70 degrees. See MLB / B4