B4 The BulleTin • Friday, april 9, 2021 ON THE AIR SCOREBOARD FRIDAY HORSE RACING America’s Day at the Races TENNIS WTA, Volvo Car Open WTA, Volvo Car Open GOLF The Masters BASEBALL MLB, regional coverage MLB, regional coverage College, Arkansas at Ole Miss College, Minnesota at Iowa College, West Virginia at Baylor College, Oregon St. at Oregon MLB, regional coverage SOFTBALL College, Minnesota at Northwestern College, Utah at California College, UCLA at Oregon WATER SPORTS World Surf League, Championship Tour: Newcastle Cup MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Xfinity Series, Martinsville (VA) SOCCER NWSL Challenge Cup, Chicago at Houston Time 10 a.m. TV FS2 10 a.m. 4 p.m. Tennis Tennis noon 1 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 1 p.m. 3 p.m. 5 p.m. ESPN MLB MLB SEC Big Ten ESPNU Pac-12 MLB Prep sports FRIDAY Football: Mountain View at Bend, 7:15 p.m.; pend- leton at Summit, 7:15 p.m.; The dalles at redmond, 7 p.m.; ridgeview at la Salle prep, 7 p.m.; henley at Crook County, 6 p.m.; South umpqua at la pine, 7 p.m.; Sisters at philomath, 7 p.m.; alsea at Gilchrist, 1 p.m. SATURDAY Cross-country: Oxford Classic, at Juniper park in Bend, 1 p.m.; 4a state championships, at Tillamook; 3a/2a/1a state championships, at lebanon. PREP SPORTS Volleyball Thursday’s Games Bend 3, Mountain View 1 (25-17, 23-25, 25-17, 25-15) Sisters 3, Junction City 0 (25-15, 25-16, 25-20) ESPNU Pac-12 Pac-12 Thursday’s Games Bend vs. north eugene, late 3:30 p.m. FS2 Thursday’s Games Bend 3, north eugene 0 5 p.m. FS1 Boys soccer Girls soccer 5:30 p.m. CBSSN 6:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. CBSSN FS1 SATURDAY MOTOR SPORTS Formula E, Round 3 NASCAR Cup Series, Martinsville (VA) SOCCER Premier League, Liverpool vs. Aston Villa Men’s college, Big Ten, Ohio St. at Penn St. Premier League, Crystal Palace vs. Chelsea Women’s international friendly, U.S. at Sweden Men’s college, Big Ten, Northwestern at Indiana Men’s college, Georgetown at St. John’s Men’s college, Stanford at Oregon St. TENNIS WTA, Volvo Car Open WTA, Volvo Car Open SOFTBALL College, Alabama at Arkansas College, South Carolina at Ole Miss College, Utah at California, Game 1 College, Indiana at Purdue, Game 1 College, UCLA at Oregon, Game 1 College, Auburn at Texas A&M College, Utah at California, Game 2 College, Indiana at Purdue, Game 2 College, UCLA at Oregon, Game 2 BASEBALL MLB, N.Y. Yankees at Tampa MLB, Seattle at Minnesota College, LSU at Kentucky MLB, Oakland at Houston MLB, regional coverage College, Florida at Tennessee College, Oregon St. at Oregon MLB, regional coverage HORSE RACING America’s Day at the Races America’s Day at the Races Arkansas Derby LACROSSE Men’s college, Army at Loyola (Md.) Men’s college, Air Force at Jacksonville FOOTBALL College, Alabama A&M at Jackson St. College, Delaware at Delaware St. GOLF The Masters HOCKEY Men’s NCAA Division I Championship, St. Cloud St. vs. TBD BASKETBALL NBA, L.A. Lakers at Brooklyn NBA, Detroit at Portland BOXING Joe Smith Jr. vs. Maxim Vlasov ON DECK 7 a.m. NBCSN 9 a.m. Big Ten 9:30 a.m. NBC 10 a.m. FOX 11 a.m. Big Ten 12:30 p.m. CBSSN 5 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore) 7:45 a.m. 10 a.m. Tennis Tennis 9 a.m. 9 a.m. noon 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 4 p.m. ESPN2 SEC Pac-12 Big Ten ESPN2 SEC Pac-12 Big Ten Pac-12 10 a.m. 11 a.m. 11 a.m. 1 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. MLB Root SEC FS1 MLB SEC Pac-12 MLB 10 a.m. noon 4 p.m. FS1 FS2 NBCSN 10 a.m. 2:30 p.m. CBSSN CBSSN noon 3 p.m. ESPN ESPN2 noon CBS Cross-country Wednesday Late Results Intermountain Conference Championships at Sorosis Park Boys 5,000 Meters Team Scores — hood river Valley 36, The dalles 58, pendleton 85, Crook County 92, redmond 120. Individuals (top 15) — 1. alec Carne, CC, 16:40.7; 2. Juan diego Contreras, dal, 16:47.3; 3. elliot haw- ley, hrV, 17:07.0; 4. Finn anspach, rV, 17:33.1; 5. nick Caracciolo, dal, 17:54.8; 6. leo lemann, dal, 18:01.4; 7. Jackson Bullock, hrV, 18:23.9; 8. Thomas Ziegler, hrV, 18:46.4; 9. James Thatcher, pen, 18:49.3; 10. Wil- liam Bunch, hrV, 19:06.9; 11. alex Vail, CC, 19:12.1; 12. Joshua humann, hrV, 19:16.2; 13. Brad alexander, rV, 19:23.4; 14. Geoffrey Shoaf, hrV, 19:38.2; 15. Sam el- dridge, red, 19:39.5. Girls 5,000 Meters Team Scores — hood river Valley 25, The dalles 53, pendleton 66, Crook County 89, redmond 115. Individuals (top 15) — 1. Chloe Bullock, hrV, 20:25.8; 2. hanna Ziegenhagen, dal, 21:47.5; 3. phoe- be Wood, hrV, 22:00.2; 4. Savanna pitman, rV, 22:03.7; 5. Kendall Bonzani, pen, 22:25.1; 6. Mieka McKnight, hrV, 22:25.3; 7. Sophie Kaden, hrV, 22:40.3; 8. emily Johnson, dal, 22:42.5; 9. lindsey Mode, CC, 22:47.3; 10. lizzie albin, rV, 22:58.2; 11. Caitie Wring, dal, 23:06.2; 12. lucy hennessy, hrV, 23:08.1; 13. Jordyn Murphy, pen, 23:11.4; 14. ellaynah Brown, pen, 23:13.3; 15. Charis Bronson, hrV, 23:44.9 GOLF The Masters Masters Scores Thursday at Augusta, Ga. Yardage: 7,475; Par: 72 First Round Justin rose 35-30—65 Brian harman 36-33—69 hideki Matsuyama 33-36—69 Will Zalatoris 36-34—70 Webb Simpson 34-36—70 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 33-37—70 patrick reed 34-36—70 Si Woo Kim 34-37—71 Jason Kokrak 38-33—71 Shane lowry 34-37—71 Tyrrell hatton 38-33—71 Jordan Spieth 38-33—71 Michael Thompson, 37-35—72. Kevin Kisner, 35-37— 72. Cameron Champ, 35-37—72. Xander Schauffele, 36- 36—72. Jon rahm, 36-36—72. Mackenzie hughes, 36- 36—72. Marc leishman, 33-39—72. hudson Swafford, 34-39—73. henrik Stenson, 35-38— 73. Brendon Todd, 36-37—73. Corey Conners, 34-39—73. Viktor hovland, 37-36—73. paul Casey, 33-40—73. Gary Woodland, 37-36—73. Scottie Scheffler, 37-36—73. Justin Thomas, 39-34—73. Collin Morikawa, 36-37—73. Matt Jones, 36-38—74. Stewart Cink, 36-38—74. Se- bastian Munoz, 36-38—74. Bernhard langer, 36-38—74. ian poulter, 39-35—74. Charl Schwartzel, 37-37—74. harris english, 38-36—74. Bubba Watson, 36-38—74. Brooks Koepka, 36-38—74. dustin Johnson, 37-37—74. Martin laird, 36-38—74. Bernd Wiesberger, 35-39—74. robert Macintyre, 38- 36—74. Matt Wallace, 37-37—74. Francesco Molinari, 37-37—74. ryan palmer, 37-37—74. Tommy Fleetwood, 39-35—74. Matt Fitzpatrick, 35-39—74. adam Scott, 38- 36—74. Max homa, 37-37—74. Tony Finau, 37-37—74. Cameron Smith, 40-34—74. robert Streb, 38-37—75. Joaquin niemann, 36-39— 75. abraham ancer, 35-40—75. daniel Berger, 37-38— 75. Jimmy Walker, 37-38—75. Jose Maria Olazabal, 39- 36—75. Kevin na, 37-38—75. phil Mickelson, 37-38—75. dylan Frittelli, 39-37—76. ian Woosnam, 40-36—76. Jim herman, 39-37—76. danny Willett, 37-39—76. Mat- thew Wolff, 37-39—76. Sergio Garcia, 40-36—76. rory Mcilroy, 39-37—76. lanto Griffin, 38-38—76. Charles Osborne, 38-38—76. Billy horschel, 39-37—76. Bryson deChambeau, 40-36—76. louis Oosthuizen, 36-40—76. Jason day, 38-39—77. Zach Johnson, 39-38—77. Sungjae im, 35-42—77. lee Westwood, 40-38—78. Brian Gay, 37-41—78. Mike Weir, 40-38—78. Victor perez, 40- 38—78. Matt Kuchar, 38-40—78. Vijay Singh, 39-40—79. C.T. pan, 41-38—79. Fred Couples, 40-39—79. patrick Cantlay, 38-41—79. Tyler Strafaci, 39-41—80. Sandy lyle, 42-39—81. Joe long, 43-39—82. Carlos Ortiz, 39-43—82. larry Mize, 42- 42—84. BASEBALL MLB AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 4 3 .571 — Boston 4 3 .571 — new york 3 3 .500 ½ Toronto 3 3 .500 ½ Tampa Bay 2 4 .333 1½ Central Division W L Pct GB Minnesota 5 2 .714 — Chicago 4 4 .500 1½ detroit 3 3 .500 1½ Kansas City 3 3 .500 1½ Cleveland 2 3 .400 2 West Division W L Pct GB houston 5 1 .833 — los angeles 4 2 .667 1 Texas 3 3 .500 2 Seattle 3 4 .429 2½ Oakland 1 6 .143 4½ Wednesday’s Late Game Baltimore 4, n.y. yankees 3, 11 innings Thursday’s Games Boston 7, Baltimore 3 Chicago White Sox 6, Kansas City 0 Minnesota 10, Seattle 2 l.a. angels at Toronto, late Oakland at houston, late Friday’s Games n.y. yankees (Kluber 0-0) at Tampa Bay (hill 0-0), 12:10 p.m. l.a. angels (heaney 0-1) at Toronto (Zeuch 0-0), 4:07 p.m. detroit (Teheran 1-0) at Cleveland (plesac 0-1), 4:10 p.m. San diego (Musgrove 1-0) at Texas (arihara 0-0), 5:05 p.m. Oakland (Manaea 0-1) at houston (McCullers Jr. 1-0), 5:10 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB philadelphia 5 1 .833 — new york 2 2 .500 2 Washington 1 2 .333 2½ atlanta 2 4 .333 3 Miami 1 6 .143 4½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cincinnati 5 1 .833 — St. louis 5 2 .714 ½ Chicago 4 3 .571 1½ Milwaukee 3 4 .429 2½ pittsburgh 1 6 .143 4½ West Division W L Pct GB los angeles 5 2 .714 — San diego 4 3 .571 1 San Francisco 3 3 .500 1½ Colorado 3 4 .429 2 arizona 2 5 .286 3 Wednesday’s Late Game Colorado 8, arizona 0 Thursday’s Games n.y. Mets 3, Miami 2 Chicago Cubs 4, pittsburgh 2 Colorado 7, arizona 3 St. louis 3, Milwaukee 1 Friday’s Games Washington (ross 0-0) at l.a. dodgers (Buehler 0-0), 1:10 p.m. Colorado (Gomber 0-1) at San Francisco (Cueto 0-0), 1:35 p.m. philadelphia (Wheeler 1-0) at atlanta (Morton 0-1), 4:20 p.m. San diego (Musgrove 1-0) at Texas (arihara 0-0), 5:05 p.m. Cincinnati (Mahle 1-0) at arizona (Widener 1-0), 6:40 p.m. BASKETBALL NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Brooklyn 36 16 .692 phila. 35 16 .686 Milwaukee 32 18 .640 Charlotte 26 24 .520 atlanta 27 25 .519 Miami 27 25 .519 Boston 26 26 .500 new york 25 27 .481 indiana 23 27 .460 Chicago 22 28 .440 Toronto 20 32 .385 Cleveland 19 32 .373 Washington 18 32 .360 Orlando 17 34 .333 detroit 15 36 .294 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct utah 38 13 .745 phoenix 36 14 .720 l.a. Clippers 34 18 .654 denver 33 18 .647 l.a. lakers 32 20 .615 portland 30 20 .600 dallas 28 22 .560 Memphis 26 23 .531 San antonio 24 25 .490 Golden State 24 27 .471 new Orleans 22 29 .431 Sacramento 22 29 .431 Oklahoma City 20 32 .385 houston 14 37 .275 Minnesota 13 39 .250 Wednesday’s Late Game denver 106, San antonio 96 phoenix 117, utah 113, OT Thursday’s Games Chicago 122, Toronto 113 Cleveland 129, Oklahoma City 102 Miami 110, l.a. lakers 104 Milwaukee at dallas, late detroit at Sacramento, late phoenix at l.a. Clippers, late portland at utah, late Friday’s Games indiana at Orlando, 4 p.m. Memphis at new york, 4:30 p.m. Minnesota at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Chicago at atlanta, 5 p.m. phila. at new Orleans, 5 p.m. Charlotte at Milwaukee, 6 p.m. San antonio at denver, 6 p.m. houston at l.a. Clippers, 7 p.m. Washington at Golden State, 7 p.m. GB — ½ 3 9 9 9 10 11 12 13 16 16½ 17 18½ 20½ GB — 1½ 4½ 5 6½ 7½ 9½ 11 13 14 16 16 18½ 24 25½ HOCKEY NHL East GP W L OT Pts GF GA n.y. islanders 40 26 10 4 56 121 92 Washington 40 25 11 4 54 134 122 pittsburgh 40 25 13 2 52 135 112 Boston 37 21 10 6 48 106 93 philadelphia 39 18 15 6 42 116 141 n.y. rangers 39 18 16 5 41 127 108 new Jersey 38 14 18 6 34 97 121 Buffalo 39 9 24 6 24 90 137 Central GP W L OT Pts GF GA Carolina 39 27 9 3 57 128 94 Tampa Bay 40 27 11 2 56 138 101 Florida 41 26 11 4 56 132 111 nashville 41 22 18 1 45 109 116 Chicago 41 18 18 5 41 114 129 dallas 38 14 14 10 38 105 100 Columbus 42 15 19 8 38 106 137 detroit 42 13 23 6 32 91 135 West GP W L OT Pts GF GA Colorado 39 26 9 4 56 140 95 Vegas 38 25 11 2 52 120 88 Minnesota 38 24 12 2 50 116 97 arizona 40 19 16 5 43 110 122 St. louis 39 17 16 6 40 107 125 San Jose 38 17 17 4 38 106 127 los angeles 38 15 17 6 36 104 110 anaheim 40 12 21 7 31 92 131 North GP W L OT Pts GF GA Toronto 40 27 10 3 57 133 100 edmonton 41 25 14 2 52 134 115 Winnipeg 40 24 13 3 51 129 109 Montreal 37 17 11 9 43 118 103 Vancouver 37 16 18 3 35 100 120 Calgary 40 16 21 3 35 103 124 Ottawa 41 13 24 4 30 107 153 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. Wednesday’s Late Games St. louis 3, Vegas 1 los angeles 4, arizona 3 Minnesota 8, Colorado 3 Soccer 4 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. ESPN Continued from B3 ABC NBCSNW ESPN Listings are the most accurate available. SPORTS BRIEFING BASKETBALL Beavers’ Tariq Silver to transfer — Tariq Silver is leav- ing the Oregon State men’s basketball team, the program an- nounced Thursday. Silver, a junior guard from Clarksville, Tennessee, was with the Beavers for one season. He played one year at Eastern Michigan and one at Tallahassee Community College before coming to OSU. “I would like to thank Coach (Wayne) Tinkle and the coaching staff for giving me the op- portunity,” Silver said in a release. Silver averaged 1.6 points and 7.4 minutes in 23 games for the Beavers. Silver joins red- shirt freshman guard Julien Franklin in entering the NCAA transfer portal. Franklin made his announcement last week. The Beavers have already signed transfers Ahmad Rand, a 6-foot-8 forward, and 6-3 guard Dashawn Davis. UCLA extends coach Cronin after Final Four run — As a reward for taking UCLA back to the Final Four, Mick Cro- nin has received a two-year contract extension. The contract extension will be worth a guaranteed $4 million per year. The additional years will keep Cronin under contract through the 2026-27 season after he guided the Bruins to their deepest NCAA Tournament run since 2008. Eleventh-seeded UCLA won five games before losing to Gonzaga on a 40-footer at the overtime buzzer in a national semifinal in Indianapolis. The Bruins (22-10) finished with a No. 7 national ranking in the USA Today coaches poll after having entered the NCAA Tournament unranked and on a four-game losing streak. Blazers sign Hollis-Jefferson to 10-day contract — The Portland Trail Blazers have signed forward Rondae Hollis-Jef- ferson to a 10-day contract, the team announced Thursday. The news of Hollis-Jefferson joining the Blazers was con- firmed last week but he couldn’t begin playing with the team until he completed the NBA’s health and safety protocols, which included passing multiple COVID-19 tests. Signing Hollis-Jefferson allows the Blazers to reach the league-re- quired roster size of 14 players that teams must meet by Fri- day. The team is also hoping to sign forward T.J. Leaf to a two- way contract. He is in the process of clearing protocols. — Bulletin wire reports Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin Redmond’s Jillian Bremont (3) kicks the ball down field during the first half against Ridgeview on Wednesday night. Penalty kicks are rare in high school soccer in Oregon. There is no overtime or penalty kicks in regular season games. Only in postseason matches are games decided by penalty kicks — something the Redmond players had not experienced. “I’m just telling the girls to take a deep breath and place the ball,” said Redmond coach Martha Segura. “Which is not what we did. But that’s OK, you have to find something to learn from every experience. I feel for these girls because they have never had that pressure put on them.” DEALS Transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball American League BOSTOn red SOX — activated lhp eduardo rodri- guez from the il. ChiCaGO WhiTe SOX — placed OF Billy hamilton on the 10-day il. Selected the contract of OF nick Williams from alternate training site. Transferred lhp Jace Fry from the 10-day il to the 60-day il. lOS anGeleS anGelS — Selected the contract of 1B preston palmeiro from high point(n.C.). OaKland aThleTiCS — placed lhp a.J. puk on the 10-day il retroactive to april 7. Selected the contract of rhp deolis Guerra from alternate training site. Transferred rhp Trevor rosenthal from the 10-day il to the 60-day il. National League ariZOna diaMOndBaCKS — recalled 2B andrew young from alternate training site. placed 2B Ketel Marte on the 10-day il. aTlanTa BraVeS — Optioned rhp Jacob Webb to alternate training site. neW yOrK MeTS — placed rhp dellin Betances on the 10-day il. Selected the contract of rhp Trevor hild- enberger from alternate training site. WaShinGTOn naTiOnalS — Optioned lhp Ben Bray- mer to alternate training site. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association nBa — Suspended Toronto Gs deandre Bembry and Fred Van Fleet and los angeles lakers G Talen hor- ton-Tucker for one game without pay. Fined Toronto F OG anunoby $30,000 and los angeles lakers F/C Mon- trezl harrel $20,000 for an on-court altercation. WaShinGTOn WiZardS — Waived G Jerome rob- inson. FOOTBALL National Football League denVer BrOnCOS — released dB nate hairston. deTrOiT liOnS — Signed S dean Marlowe. hOuSTOn TeXanS — Signed dl Jaleel Johnson. neW yOrK GianTS — named russ Callaway offensive quality control coach and ryan anderson and Carter Blount defensive quality control coaches. neW yOrK JeTS — re-signed S Bennett Jackson. TaMpa Bay BuCCaneerS — Signed lS Zach Triner to a one-year tender for the 2021 season. HOCKEY National Hockey League ariZOna COyOTeS — Waived lW drake Caggiula. ChiCaGO BlaCKhaWKS — Traded d lucas Carlsson and C lucas Wallmark to Florida in exchange for d riley Stillman, C henrik Borgstrom and rW Brett Connolly and a seventh-round draft pick in 2021. FlOrida panTherS — acquired d lucas Carlsson and C lucas Wallmark in trade with Chicago. SOCCER Major League Soccer aTlanTa uniTed FC — Signed CB alan Franco as designated player via transfer from argentine primera division to a five-year contract and will occupy an interna- tional roster spot pending the receipt of his international transfer certificate and p-1 visa. FC CinCinnaTi —acquired $250,000 in general alloca- tion money, a 2022 MlS superdraft first-round selection plus future performance-based incentives from the la Galaxy in exchange for the discovery priority for Valenci- ennes FC W Kevin Cabral. inTer MiaMi CF — named Xavier asensi chief busi- ness officer. la GalaXy — Signed W Kevin Cabral to a five-year contract with a one-year option pending receipt of his p-1 visa and international transfer certificate. OrlandO CiTy SC — Signed d rio hope-Gund to a one-year contract with club options in 2022, 2023 and 2024. National Women’s Soccer League ChiCaGO red STarS — named Vicky lynch chief business officer. WaShinGTOn SpiriT — Signed MF Chinyelu asher, d Camryn Biegalski and F Cali Farquharson to national team replacement contracts. Ridgeview (4-5-2 overall) will face Hood River Valley in the IMC championship match on Friday, while Redmond’s best season in recent memory ended abruptly. The Panthers finished 6-2-2 overall. “It is everything we wanted in a season,” Segura said. “Com- ing down to a battle, having to work hard, I’m just so proud of our girls because they played so hard the entire season, with no letdowns. That is the beau- tiful thing about soccer, you can work so hard and it comes down to PKs and it doesn’t end in your favor. I’m just proud of our season and what we did.” e e Reporter: 541-383-0307, brathbone@bendbulletin.com “The most important thing is being aware of the ball when you’re trying to make a tackle. Always try to make an attempt at the ball.” Beavers Continued from B3 Inside linebacker Omar Spei- ghts, second on the team in tackles with 63 a year ago, said he’s looking to add to his ap- proach. “The most important thing is being aware of the ball when you’re trying to make a tackle,” Speights said. “Always try to make an attempt at the ball. You might not make every at- tempt, but it’s going to come out some of the time.” Tibesar said Speights and Avery Roberts, who led Oregon State in tackles a year ago, bring the heat just fine. He needs to see others do the same. Tibesar said OSU defenders can’t worry about missing tackles. “Shoot your gun and play fast and aggressive and then we’ve got to count on the rest of the guys running their tail off to get there and cover if you do miss the tackle,” Tibesar said. Oregon State could stand to add to its interception total, Thursday’s Games edmonton 3, Ottawa 1 new Jersey 6, Buffalo 3 pittsburgh 5, n.y. rangers 2 Winnipeg 4, Montreal 2 Carolina 3, Florida 0 Boston 4, Washington 2 Tampa Bay 6, Columbus 4 n.y. islanders 3, philadelphia 2, SO nashville 7, detroit 1 dallas 5, Chicago 1 Vancouver at Calgary, ppd. Friday’s Games n.y. rangers at n.y. islanders, 4 p.m. pittsburgh at new Jersey, 4 p.m. Washington at Buffalo, 4 p.m. Minnesota at St. louis, 5 p.m. arizona at Vegas, 7 p.m. Colorado at anaheim, 7 p.m. los angeles at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. — Omar Speights, Oregon State inside linebacker Amanda Loman/AP file Oregon State defensive back Alex Austin holds up the ball after recov- ering an Oregon fumble to end the game and clinch a victory in Corval- lis in November. too. The Beavers had only five last season, and 16 over the past three years. In this case, it’s a multiplayer approach. Interceptions are of- ten the product of a ferocious pass rush, which leads to poor throws that can be swiped by the defense. OSU’s pass rush was sub-par a year ago, as op- posing quarterbacks completed 63% of their passes. The Bea- vers had just seven sacks. Oregon State’s least produc- tive area on defense has been its defensive interior front. There is cautious optimism that the Beavers are about to emerge, though the proof comes in September. OSU returns its top three linemen in defensive ends Simon Sandberg and Isaac Hodgins, and tackle Evan Ben- nett. “We’re starting off at a com- pletely different level, a step up and more ready to go this time,” Sandberg said. “After these two years, there’s more hunger, that we’re much more than what we have shown. I think everybody wants to show it now.” Sandberg only makes one promise for the 2021 season. “We’re gonna ball out. That’s what we’re gonna do,” he said.