The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, April 23, 2021, Page 13, Image 13

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    The BulleTin • Friday, april 23, 2021 B5
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021
TODAY
HIGH
66°
-Sr
SATURDAY
TONIGHT
LOW
36°
Mild with intervals of
clouds and sunshine
SUNDAY
Cloudy and cooler
ALMANAC
TEMPERATURE
Yesterday Normal
Record
66°
58° 84° in 2012
37°
31° 14° in 1972
PRECIPITATION
24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday
0.00"
Record
1.15" in 1929
Month to date (normal)
0.00" (0.56")
Year to date (normal)
1.18" (3.91")
Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.
29.85"
SUN, MOON AND PLANETS
Rise/Set
Today
Sat.
Sun
6:09am/7:59pm 6:07am/8:00pm
Moon
3:54pm/4:49am 5:11pm/5:15am
Mercury 6:21am/8:28pm 6:22am/8:35pm
Venus
6:31am/8:35pm 6:30am/8:37pm
Mars
9:07am/12:48am 9:06am/12:47am
Jupiter
3:45am/2:08pm 3:41am/2:04pm
Saturn 3:07am/12:52pm 3:03am/12:48pm
Uranus
6:27am/8:31pm 6:24am/8:27pm
Full
Last
New
First
fe A I
Apr 26
May 3
May 11
May 19
Tonight's sky: The tiny constellation, Leo
Minor, is beneath Ursa Major, directly below
the bowl of the Big Dipper.
Source: Jim Todd, OMSI
UV INDEX TODAY
10 a.m.
Noon
2 p.m.
4 p.m.
3
5
5
3
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number,
the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low,
3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme.
POLLEN COUNT
Grasses
Moderate
Trees
Very high
Source: Oregon Allergy Associates
53°
29°
Cloudy with brief showers
Mostly cloudy with a couple
of showers
WEDNESDAY
64°
32°
Partly sunny and warmer
Clouds and sun with a
shower possible
Weeds
Absent
High: 75°
at Medford
Low: 20°
at Lakeview
Coos Bay
53/44
53/44
•
#
Cottage
Oakridge
Grove
Grove Oakridge
68/42
68/42 65/41 65/41
Bandon
Bandon
52/45
52/45
Port Orford
Orford
53/47
• 53/47
Gold Beach
51/46
• 51/46
#; AccuWeather
73/46
73/46
•Ashland
Ashland
71/43
71/43
Reservoir
Acre feet
Capacity
Crane Prairie
47298
86%
Wickiup
107632
54%
Crescent Lake
22092
25%
Ochoco Reservoir
11568
26%
Prineville
91291
61%
River fl ow
Station
Cu.ft./sec.
Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie
80
Deschutes R. below Wickiup
921
Deschutes R. below Bend
62
Deschutes R. at Benham Falls
1200
Little Deschutes near La Pine
102
Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake
14
Crooked R. above Prineville Res.
221
Crooked R. below Prineville Res.
313
Crooked R. near Terrebonne
34
Ochoco Ck. below Ochoco Res.
8
Fort Rock
9 68/39
68/39
Silver
Silver
Lake
68/39
68/39
Christmas Valley
Valley
Christmas
68/40
68/40
#
Chiloquin
Chiloquin
65/33
65/33
Klamath
Klamath
Falls
•Falls
66/38
66/38
In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday
Base
72-103
0-205
0-162
52-67
34-64
Source: OnTheSnow.com
Junction
• Burns Junction
69/48
69/48
Rome
71/48
71/48
Paisley
Paisley
70/37
70/37
Fields
69/45
69/45
-0s
0s
10s
20s
NATIONAL
EXTREMES
YESTERDAY (for the
48 contiguous states)
National high: 97°
at Death Valley, CA
National low: -7°
at Climax, CO
Precipitation: 0.40"
at Caribou, ME
30s
40s
50s
Calgar
41/25
McDermitt
McDermitt
64/42
# 64/42
Billings
41/30
Boise
68/50
70s
80s
90s
110s
5/38
M
S I A Boston
• 60/48
s; /43
\jtew York
* 64/49
Philadelphia
J¿4/46
Salt Lake
64/48
hington
ylouiswlle
63/51/
'Nashville' 7
66/5
Charlotte
Birmingham
'0/54
T-storms
Today
Hi/Lo/W
81/52/t
58/39/s
57/41/s
65/41/pc
49/34/s
69/54/c
60/49/s
77/55/t
65/42/s
41/30/c
70/54/c
40/19/c
68/50/pc
61/48/s
61/47/s
53/42/pc
56/42/pc
47/34/c
71/55/pc
67/48/pc
67/52/c
49/29/sh
59/47/pc
60/46/c
59/42/s
51/33/sh
59/50/r
71/51/c
73/59/c
60/41/pc
58/39/s
82/69/r
71/58/t
60/45/pc
56/33/sh
55/44/c
61/42/s
48/31/c
76/54/pc
54/31/s
42/22/c
60/31/s
58/44/pc
58/43/pc
64/45/s
65/40/s
61/43/s
50/34/c
84/72/sh
76/70/t
67/52/c
60/47/pc
71/61/c
75/62/pc
Amsterdam
Athens
Auckland
Baghdad
Bangkok
Beijing
Beirut
Berlin
Bogota
Budapest
Buenos Aires
Cabo San Lucas
Cairo
Calgary
Cancun
Dublin
Edinburgh
Geneva
Harare
Hong Kong
Istanbul
Jerusalem
Johannesburg
Lima
Lisbon
London
Madrid
Manila
55/36/pc
72/59/c
68/58/r
99/69/c
96/81/t
69/54/pc
75/65/s
54/38/pc
69/50/sh
57/35/pc
72/65/t
77/61/s
84/58/s
41/25/pc
87/80/pc
55/41/pc
61/40/pc
66/41/s
77/57/pc
84/75/s
63/52/pc
74/57/s
69/50/pc
71/65/s
67/58/t
61/41/s
66/47/c
90/79/pc
Chihuahua
78/45
‘w Orleans
77/69
^Orlando
80/65
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Warm Front
Stationary Front
Cold Front
l~ ~ ~ I à í -'I \ --I He A- \ l*~ " . I
52/36/0.00
72/53/0.00
65/57/0.00
100/77/0.00
97/81/0.00
63/52/0.00
72/61/0.00
51/38/0.15
72/43/0.01
64/41/0.01
73/66/0.00
86/59/0.00
84/59/0.00
30/25/0.07
86/73/0.06
55/34/0.00
63/33/0.00
66/37/0.00
76/52/0.00
82/73/0.00
64/50/0.00
72/52/0.00
72/49/0.00
69/63/0.00
68/54/0.00
57/37/0.00
64/50/0.21
91/82/0.01
NFL | SEATTLE SEAHAWKS
Prep Track
Geno Smith re-signed as
Russell Wilson’s backup
Continued from B3
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Paisley’s Evan Newton throws the discus while competing at Summit
on Wednesday.
Ted S. Warren/AP file
Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson, center, drops back
to pass next to backup quarterbacks Paxton Lynch, left, and Geno
Smith, right, during training camp in 2019 in Renton, Washington.
BY BOB CONDOTTA
The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — In keeping
with an offseason in which
continuity has been a key
objective, the Seahawks an-
nounced Thursday they have
re-signed quarterback Geno
Smith to again serve as a
backup to Russell Wilson.
This is the third straight
year Smith has signed with
Seattle. Contract details were
not available but it is likely to
again be a one-year deal for
Smith, who made $1.187 mil-
lion last year and $895,000
in 2019.
Smith, 30, has played just
18 snaps in his previous two
seasons with the Seahawks,
all coming at the end of a 40-3
blowout win over the Jets last
December at Lumen Field.
But the 2013 second-round
pick of the Jets out of West
Virginia has 31 starts in his
NFL career, and it’s that ex-
perience that Seattle values
should the team ever sud-
denly need a quarterback to
fill in for Wilson.
Wilson has never missed
a start in his NFL career and
has played 95% or more of
snaps every season — and ev-
ery snap four times, includ-
ing 2018 and 2019 — mean-
ing backup quarterbacks for
Seattle have almost never
been needed since 2012. And
that’s one reason the Sea-
hawks have never invested all
that heavily financially in a
backup.
Seattle had Tarvaris Jack-
son from 2013-15, Trevone
Boykin in 2016, Austin Da-
vis in 2017, Brett Hundley in
2018 and then Smith the past
two years, and likely again in
2021.
Seattle has two other quar-
terbacks on the roster in
Danny Etling and Alex Mc-
Gough, who each ended last
season on the practice squad.
Etling, a 2018 sev-
enth-round pick of the Patri-
ots, was acquired off waivers
from Atlanta in August and
was with Seattle for the entire
season.
McGough, a 2018 sev-
enth-round pick of the Se-
ahawks, was re-signed last
December during a time
when Smith was dealing with
a knee issue and the team
wanted some extra depth.
Neither Etling nor Mc-
Gough has played in an NFL
game.
Smith went 4 for 5 for 33
yards with one sack during
his mop-up duty against the
Jets last season.
Seattle now has 66 play-
ers who are under contract
or who have agreed to terms.
Teams can have up to 90 on
their offseason rosters.
Saturday
Hi/Lo/W
79/53/s
59/45/sh
66/46/pc
76/50/s
47/36/s
72/54/t
61/51/pc
83/51/s
66/51/r
55/40/c
75/53/t
52/31/pc
59/43/c
69/50/s
65/49/pc
62/45/pc
67/45/s
57/31/pc
75/62/t
64/53/t
71/53/r
56/36/pc
57/38/sh
55/43/r
59/44/sh
64/41/s
63/41/sh
72/57/t
76/57/t
59/45/r
70/42/s
92/64/s
76/54/pc
58/44/r
65/42/pc
58/37/pc
55/41/sh
43/27/c
82/56/s
56/29/pc
48/30/pc
63/39/s
56/36/sh
57/29/c
57/49/r
65/50/c
71/48/pc
54/36/c
85/72/pc
85/58/pc
71/51/t
56/42/r
81/55/t
83/66/t
53/36/pc
65/57/sh
68/57/s
99/68/pc
95/81/pc
73/53/pc
80/64/s
51/34/pc
70/50/sh
60/36/s
71/56/pc
81/62/pc
88/63/pc
37/27/c
88/80/s
56/41/pc
56/34/pc
72/46/pc
75/57/pc
83/75/s
58/49/sh
78/56/s
72/49/s
71/63/s
67/57/t
60/40/pc
66/50/pc
91/79/pc
Mask-wearing has been
common practice this past
year, and high school athletes
in Oregon are required to wear
them during competition.
Oregon is one of 20 states to
mandate mask-wearing during
competition.
Turnbull raised the question
of whether or not it is safe for
athletes who are giving max ef-
fort in a race to wear a mask.
“I am concerned with the
mask rule,” he said. “This is
what I am worried about and I
said this at the beginning of the
Yesterday
Hi/Lo/Prec.
55/28/0.00
60/30/0.00
49/25/0.00
79/59/0.00
53/29/Tr
59/23/0.00
62/38/0.00
63/58/0.00
58/37/0.00
62/22/0.00
65/37/0.00
85/73/0.00
55/32/Tr
64/34/0.00
63/35/0.00
70/56/0.00
48/36/0.00
51/37/0.00
57/43/Tr
59/45/Tr
59/28/0.00
80/61/0.00
81/59/0.00
59/30/0.00
50/35/0.00
83/63/0.00
46/31/0.01
39/32/0.02
49/33/Tr
61/32/0.00
56/22/0.00
71/37/Tr
58/36/0.00
42/27/0.04
71/50/0.00
58/32/0.00
64/37/0.00
65/53/0.02
63/58/0.00
62/50/0.00
68/50/0.00
68/34/0.00
65/43/0.00
62/47/0.00
61/32/0.05
64/46/Tr
57/29/0.00
82/63/0.00
82/62/0.00
63/39/0.02
54/36/0.00
55/34/Tr
75/47/0.00
83/56/0.00
Today
Hi/Lo/W
56/36/s
56/47/r
60/43/pc
85/62/s
58/46/s
63/40/c
62/56/r
66/54/pc
63/51/pc
55/42/c
67/55/c
83/76/pc
57/43/pc
55/38/c
66/52/pc
77/69/r
64/49/s
65/47/s
64/48/s
64/50/t
61/40/c
80/65/pc
88/61/s
55/48/c
64/46/s
84/64/s
59/36/pc
56/42/s
60/46/pc
66/44/s
43/28/c
74/49/s
65/41/s
57/42/s
76/49/s
61/51/c
64/48/pc
81/59/t
65/57/c
61/51/pc
66/49/pc
63/32/pc
72/59/pc
62/47/c
59/33/c
62/44/pc
62/51/r
85/72/pc
81/56/s
66/54/t
65/46/s
58/47/r
68/47/pc
86/57/s
Saturday
Hi/Lo/W
57/36/s
63/44/pc
57/37/sh
84/62/s
55/44/r
61/43/pc
72/48/t
67/54/pc
59/46/r
59/30/c
69/51/t
86/76/t
55/35/c
49/32/c
65/51/r
83/65/t
69/51/pc
69/51/pc
69/58/sh
70/46/pc
61/42/pc
87/70/pc
89/62/pc
58/38/sh
67/52/pc
91/64/s
60/45/r
67/43/s
69/48/pc
63/54/r
53/34/c
60/42/c
66/54/sh
62/46/pc
66/48/c
61/44/r
64/50/c
89/58/s
66/56/pc
61/52/c
63/50/pc
73/40/s
77/61/t
53/44/r
54/36/s
50/37/sh
62/41/sh
86/74/pc
89/58/s
71/48/c
66/52/r
67/48/pc
60/35/r
91/56/pc
Mecca
Mexico City
Montreal
Moscow
Nairobi
Nassau
New Delhi
Osaka
Oslo
Ottawa
Paris
Rio de Janeiro
Rome
Santiago
Sao Paulo
Sapporo
Seoul
Shanghai
Singapore
Stockholm
Sydney
Taipei City
Tel Aviv
Tokyo
Toronto
Vancouver
Vienna
Warsaw
103/73/0.00
83/54/0.00
39/27/0.05
55/41/0.03
77/60/0.72
82/73/0.05
91/70/0.00
81/52/0.00
48/34/0.00
43/27/0.04
63/43/0.00
75/70/0.24
63/50/0.08
70/42/0.00
66/59/0.02
50/41/0.00
81/57/0.08
74/58/0.30
82/79/0.16
38/34/0.37
66/54/0.00
91/72/0.08
74/56/0.00
81/58/0.00
41/28/0.01
57/46/0.00
55/41/0.14
52/41/0.07
103/77/s
81/59/pc
57/42/s
65/39/sh
77/61/t
82/72/pc
91/67/pc
75/55/pc
50/34/s
59/41/pc
65/42/s
79/70/pc
68/46/pc
68/45/pc
72/58/pc
61/37/s
73/57/pc
76/65/c
87/77/t
44/30/r
70/52/s
82/71/sh
76/60/s
67/52/pc
61/40/s
57/46/r
59/35/pc
50/32/sh
100/78/s
82/59/pc
65/46/pc
50/34/r
77/61/t
86/74/pc
92/69/pc
72/55/c
48/31/pc
65/43/pc
68/44/pc
79/70/s
70/46/s
76/46/s
74/59/pc
65/39/c
72/51/pc
73/62/c
87/78/t
42/31/sh
70/54/c
84/70/pc
78/61/s
68/57/pc
60/43/pc
53/45/r
61/40/pc
51/30/sh
season. You get a kid running
the 800 with a mask on, it is
actually dangerous. They don’t
get the oxygen that they need.
This rule needs to change.”
Washington changed its
mask mandate for cross-coun-
try and track earlier this year,
and now allows competitors to
run without a mask.
“Unfortunately in Oregon
we have to follow the OHA
(Oregon Health Authority),”
Turnbull said. “And the OHA
is not reasonable. I would like
those people to come out and
run an 800 with a mask on.”
e e
Reporter: 541-383-0307,
brathbone@bendbulletin.com
“We just show up, see what
the lineup card says and
then we go out there and
roll. It’s really not a big thing
with us. (Coach Canham)
takes care of all that stuff, so
we just go out there and do
our job whenever we’re told.”
Baseball
Continued from B3
“I think it’s part of the learn-
ing process to just be present
with whatever situation you
are in,” Canham said. “Just be-
cause you’re hitting in the four
hole, that doesn’t mean you’re
supposed to go and hit home
runs. That means you’re sup-
posed to be you and win each
pitch. Just because you’re hit-
ting in the eight, nine hole, that
doesn’t mean, ‘Eh, the coach
doesn’t think I can hit.’ There
needs to be productivity and
there needs to be responsibility
no matter where you’re at and
whether you’re playing or not.”
And while the Beavers (25-
10) have ascended to the top of
the Pac-12 Conference stand-
ings with exceptional pitching
and defense — they rank third
in the nation in ERA (2.69)
and fourth in WHIP (1.09) —
they also boast a capable crop
of hitters.
Sixteen Beavers have multi-
hit games this season, 14 have
recorded a multi-RBI game
and 12 have hit at least one
home run. Along the way, 20
players have started two games
or more.
Some of this is a result of
2021 roster expansion, which
occurred in the wake of last
season’s coronavirus-canceled
season and has led to what
players have described as “un-
heard of” depth. But most of it
is a result of talent and a coach’s
search for consistency. Can-
ham said he never intended
to use so many lineups and
City
Juneau
Kansas City
Lansing
Las Vegas
Lexington
Lincoln
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Madison, WI
Memphis
Miami
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Newark, NJ
Norfolk, VA
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Orlando
Palm Springs
Peoria
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Providence
Raleigh
Rapid City
Reno
Richmond
Rochester, NY
Sacramento
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Antonio
San Diego
San Francisco
San Jose
Santa Fe
Savannah
Seattle
Sioux Falls
Spokane
Springfi eld, MO
Tampa
Tucson
Tulsa
Washington, DC
Wichita
Yakima
Yuma
INTERNATIONAL
>ronto
l/40_*
Plinnteapol
Phoenj
• 84/64
Honolulu
84/72
Overcast with a couple of
showers possible
NATIONAL
Yesterday
City
City
Hi/Lo/Prec.
Abilene
57/49/0.00
Akron
48/29/Tr
Albany
40/27/Tr
Albuquerque
71/44/0.00
Anchorage
51/31/0.00
Atlanta
64/38/0.00
Atlantic City
51/38/0.00
Austin
65/39/Tr
Baltimore
53/34/0.00
Billings
63/32/0.00
Birmingham
66/35/0.00
Bismarck
66/24/0.00
Boise
69/37/0.00
Boston
47/34/Tr
Bridgeport, CT 49/35/0.00
Buffalo
40/29/0.04
Burlington, VT
40/28/0.52
Caribou, ME
32/30/0.56
Charleston, SC 64/43/0.00
Charlotte
62/32/0.00
Chattanooga
65/33/0.00
Cheyenne
54/25/0.05
Chicago
60/32/0.00
Cincinnati
54/31/Tr
Cleveland
47/31/0.05
Colorado Springs 63/21/Tr
Columbia, MO
57/31/Tr
Columbia, SC
64/38/0.00
Columbus, GA
67/37/0.00
Columbus, OH
50/30/0.01
Concord, NH
41/29/Tr
Corpus Christi
73/59/Tr
Dallas
65/54/0.00
Dayton
51/29/Tr
Denver
51/23/0.03
Des Moines
60/29/0.00
Detroit
50/27/0.00
Duluth
64/28/0.00
El Paso
81/46/0.00
Fairbanks
55/27/0.00
Fargo
65/30/0.00
Flagstaff
58/31/Tr
Grand Rapids
48/25/Tr
Green Bay
57/27/0.00
Greensboro
58/33/0.00
Harrisburg
49/32/Tr
Hartford, CT
49/32/Tr
Helena
51/28/Tr
Honolulu
85/73/0.00
Houston
76/48/0.00
Huntsville
64/33/0.00
Indianapolis
54/31/Tr
Jackson, MS
70/39/0.00
Jacksonville
64/48/0.00
Bismârçk
40/19
oings *
5an Francisco
61/51\
100s
fihntpeg
■s^ñ
63/46
60s
SKI REPORT
Ski resort
New snow
Mt. Bachelor
0
Mt. Hood Meadows
0
Timberline Lodge
0
Aspen / Snowmass, CO
0
Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA
0
Jordan
Jordan Valley
Valley
63/44
63/44 •
Frenchglen
Frenchglen
67/43
67/43
• Lakeview
68/36
68/36
73/46
73/46
Juntura
Juntura
70/46
70/46
Burns
67/37
Riley 67/37
67/36
67/36
NATIONAL WEATHER
-10s
As of 7 a.m. yesterday
Hampton
66/39
66/39
Yesterday
Today
Saturday
Yesterday
Today
Saturday
Yesterday
Today Saturday
Yesterday
Today Saturday
Yesterday
Today Saturday
City
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
City
Hi/Lo/Prec.
Hi/Lo/W
City
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
City
Hi/Lo/Prec.
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
City
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Astoria
55/49/0.00 55/45/c 54/43/r
La Grande
65/37/0.00 65/43/pc 53/37/sh
Portland
65/45/0.00 63/46/c 56/44/r
Baker City
66/26/0.00 67/41/pc 53/33/sh
La Pine
63/29/0.00 64/37/pc 50/27/sn
Prineville
66/28/0.00 68/38/pc 50/29/c
Brookings
66/44/Tr
52/45/c 50/44/r
Medford
75/44/0.00 73/46/pc 59/43/r
Redmond
68/35/0.00 67/38/pc 57/29/c
Burns
69/25/0.00 67/37/pc 56/29/sh
Newport
54/45/0.00 52/43/pc 51/42/r
Roseburg
73/43/Tr
68/45/pc 58/42/r
Eugene
70/41/0.00 65/44/pc 56/41/r
North Bend
57/48/Tr
54/46/c 52/42/r
Salem
68/41/0.00 63/44/pc 55/42/r
Klamath Falls
67/28/0.00 66/38/pc 51/32/c
Ontario
74/42/0.00 73/47/pc 63/43/sh
Sisters
63/48/0.00 67/36/pc 55/29/r
Lakeview
68/20/0.00 68/36/pc 50/29/sh
Pendleton
70/41/0.00 65/43/pc 60/40/sh
The Dalles
65/52/0.00 69/47/pc 60/40/sh
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday
541-683-1577
WATER REPORT
Beaver
Marsh
63/36
63/36
Medford
Medford
52/45
• 52/45
La Pine
Crescent
63/36
63/36
Grants
Pass
74/45
74/45
ne
64/37
64/37
* Roseburg
Roseburg
68/45
68/45
Brookings
Brookings
Plan with confidence
Get the newapp
a
66°
34°
34°
TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is is today’s
today’s weather.
weather. Temperatures
Temperatures are are
today’s
highs
tonight’s
lows.
Shown
today’s
highs
and and
tonight’s
lows.
EAST: Partly
Astoria
Astoria
sunny most of Friday
55/45
55/45
Umatilla
Umatilla
Seaside
although clouds will
Hood
70/46
70/46
56/44 •
56/44
thicken late. Cloudy
River
Rufus Rufus
• Hermiston
Hermiston
Friday night. Rain is
Cannon Beach
64/43
70/47
70/47
64/
3
68/48
Arlington
,68/48 . Arlington
Hillsboro Portland
Portland i
Meacham
Meacham Lostine
Lostine
55/44
55/44
likely Saturday.
63/46
63/43
.
.
70/49
70/49
63/43 63/46
Wasc0
63/40
Enterprise
Wasco
63/40
Pendleton
* 3/40 63/40
Enterprise
Pendleton
The Dalles 55/45
CENTRAL: Some sun
Tillamook
Tillamook •
* • 62/39
62/39
65/45
65/43
Sandy •
. 69/47
69/47
McMinnville
53/45 53/45 McMinnville
followed by afternoon
Joseph
Joseph
Heppner
La Grande
61/43
61/43
Government
.
Maupln
„
•.
Heppner
Maupin
Government
62/43
62/43 •
clouds Friday. Cloudy
65/43
65/43
66/41
C0nd0n Condon
Camp
67/44
66/41
67/44
Union 61/40 61/40
Lincoln City
City
Lincoln
Friday night with rain
54/36
63/43 63/43
54/36
65/43
65/43
Salem •
51/45
51/45
Spray
after midnight. Rain is
Granite .
Springs
Warm Springs
, 6 ™
63/44
Madras
63/44 ...
Madras
69/44
Albany
59/37
59/37
likely Saturday.
Newport
Newport
• Baker
Baker City
City
67/40
67/40
68/39
„
68/39
Mitchell
Mitchell
52/43 •
52/43
61/43
67/41
• *61/43
„
67/41
WEST: Mostly cloudy
Camp Sherman | '66/42
Corvallis Camp Sherrran
66/42
Rec)monc
Redmond
Corvallis
•John
John
Yachats
•Unity
Unity
and cool Friday.
65/36
67/38
59/43
59/43
67/ . 38 •Prineville
Day
Prineville
50/44 *
66/38 Ontario Ontario
c Sisters
Periods of rain Friday 50/44
66/38
iQterc -
estere
68/38 68/38 . Paulina
Paulina
67/43
67/43
73/47
73/47
night into Saturday.
67/36
b7/Jb
Florence
• Eugene
Eugene
«Bend
Brothers 66/39
Bend Brothers
Vale
Vale • è
Chance of showers
53/46
53/46 *
65/44
66/36
66/36
65/38
65/44 Sunriver«
Sunriver J35/38
73/46 «»
73/46
Sunday.
Nyssa
64/35 |_ pj • Hampton
•
64/35
OREGON EXTREMES
YESTERDAY
THURSDAY
68°
<3 37' 37°
OREGON WEATHER
Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest.
High
Low
TUESDAY
52°
30°
55°
30°
Cloudy with a little rain late
MONDAY
— Ryan Ober, Oregon State
baseball player
Leon Neuschwander/For the Oregonian/TNS file
Oregon State’s Ryan Ober went 5 for 12 with seven RBIs in the Beavers’
most recent three-game Pac-12 series — all wins — against California
last weekend.
doesn’t necessarily want to be
this unpredictable, but he will
continue to lean on random
until he finds the dependability
he’s looking for.
“I wouldn’t say I have it
down to an exact science,”
Canham said. “It’s always
learning on our end as well.
But a lot of it is just us read-
ing our guys and what they’re
coming with on a day-to-day
basis, because they’re all still
working on being consistent.
And, again, you (want to) put
them in the best spot where
you find them to be successful
on that given day.”
And what about the play-
ers? How do they feel about the
constant lineup juggling?
“We just show up, see what
the lineup card says and then
we go out there and roll,” Ryan
Ober said. “It’s really not a big
thing with us. Cam’s the big
man on campus. He takes care
of all that stuff, so we just go
out there and do our job when-
ever we’re told.”
Besides, as the Beavers move
into the second half of the sea-
son and face the meat of their
conference schedule, Canham’s
lineup — or the top half at least
— could be settling into some-
thing familiar.
When the Beavers swept the
Bears last weekend, Canham
used the same lineup in Games
1 and 2 and his one-through-
five hitters — Jacob Melton,
Ober, Jake Dukart, Garret For-
rester and Troy Claunch — re-
mained the same all series.
It was the first time this sea-
son Canham’s lineup has fea-
tured the same one-through-
five hitters in three consecutive
games.
Oregon State scored 22
runs on 35 hits and had three
late-inning comebacks in the
sweep.
“In an ideal situation, the
guys can create the lineup,”
Canham said.
“In a perfect world, guys
know where they’re hitting in
the lineup because there’s com-
plete consistency to it. And
they’re going to bring out the
same energy, the same focus,
and you know what you’re go-
ing to get — quality at-bats. I
think that’s what’s important.
It’s not necessarily the hits or
not. You’re going to have 0-4
days, right? But is this guy in
the box the same guy the next
day when he’s 0-4 as if he’s 4-4?
Because you can trust consis-
tency.”