A6 The BulleTin • Thursday, May 6, 2021 ON THE AIR SCOREBOARD THURSDAY AUTO RACING Formula 1, Aramco Spanish Grand Prix, Practice 1 BASEBALL MLB, Regional Coverage MLB, Toronto Blue Jays at Oakland Athletics MLB, Arizona Diamondbacks at Miami Marlins College, Florida at Kentucky College, LSU at Auburn MLB, Tampa Bay Rays at Los Angeles Angels BASKETBALL NBA, Brooklyn Nets at Dallas Mavericks NBA, Los Angeles Lakers at Los Angeles Clippers EQUESTRIAN Horse Racing, America’s Day at the Races FOOTBALL The Spring League Football, Alphas vs Aviators The Spring League Football, Conquerors vs Linemen GOLF European PGA Tour, Canary Islands Championship 2021 Regions Tradition, First Round PGA Tour, Wells Fargo Championship, First Round LPGA Tour, Honda LPGA Thailand, Second Round HOCKEY NHL, New York Rangers at Boston Bruins LACROSSE College, B1G Tournament, Maryland vs Michigan College, Big East Tournament:Teams TBA Women’s College, Pac-12 Tournament: TBA at Stanford College, B1G Tournament: Rutgers vs Johns Hopkins College, Big East Tournament: Teams TBA Women’s College, Pac-12 Tournament: USC vs Colorado TENNIS ATP/WTA, Madrid Open, Men’s Round of 16 ATP/WTA, Madrid-ATP/WTA, ATP Singles & Doubles Quarterfinals Time TV 2:25 a.m. ESPN2 10 a.m. MLB 1 p.m. MLB 3:30 p.m. MLB 4 p.m. SEC 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 6:30 p.m. MLB 4:30 p.m. 7 p.m. TNT TNT noon FS2 4 p.m. 7 p.m. FS1 FS1 6 a.m. 8 a.m. 11 a.m. 8 p.m. GOLF GOLF GOLF GOLF 4 p.m. NBCSN 2 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 4 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. BIG10 CBSSN PAC12 BIG10 CBSSN PAC12 9 a.m. ROOT 4 a.m. TENNIS FRIDAY Listings are the most accurate available. SPORTS BRIEFING BASEBALL O’s John Means throws 1st career no-hitter — John Means threw the major leagues’ third no-hitter this season and came within a wild pitch on a third strike of a perfect game, pitching the Baltimore Orioles over the Seattle Mariners 6-0 Wednesday. Means (4-0) struck out 12 and walked none. Thursday, May 6 Baseball: summit at Bend, 4:30 p.m.; Madras at north Marion, 5 p.m.; sweet home at sisters, 4:30 p.m.; Burns at la Pine, 4:30 p.m. Softball: summit at Bend, 4:30 p.m.; sisters at Wood- burn, 4:30 p.m.; Burns at la Pine, 4:30 p.m. Boys tennis: Mountain View at Bend, 4 p.m. Girls tennis: Bend at Mountain View, 4 p.m. Friday, May 7 Baseball: Bend at summit, 4:30 p.m.; la Pine at Moun- tain View, 4:30 p.m. Softball: la Pine at Mountain View, 4:30 p.m.; Bend vs. The dalles, 2 p.m.; Crook County at Bend, 4 p.m.; Crook County vs. The dalles, 6 p.m. Boys golf: redmond invitational, eagle Crest, 12:30 p.m. Track and field: ridgeview at sisters, 4 p.m.; Madras at Culver, 3 p.m. PREP SPORTS Baseball Tuesday’s Late Games hood river Valley 10, redmond 7 Wednesday’s Game redmond 16, The dalles 3 sisters 3, sweet home 0 Softball Tuesday’s Late Games Mountain View 20, summit 6 Crook County 10, The dalles 8 Wednesday’s Game la Pine at sisters, late Report: Barring a miracle, Stotts is likely out as Port- land head coach after season — The Portland Trail Blaz- ers are expected to move on from head coach Terry Stotts after this season, according to a new report from Shams Cha- rania and Sam Amick of The Athletic. Unless the Blazers pull off a playoff miracle, Portland is expected to opt for a new head coach once the season concludes, per the report. —Bulletin wire reports POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are: 35 36 47 61 63 3 The estimated jackpot was not available at press time. MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are: 4 12 15 36 41 44 The estimated jackpot is now $2.4 million. WESTERN CONFERENCE W l Pct x-utah 47 18 .723 x-Phoenix 47 19 .712 x-l.a. Clippers 44 22 .667 x-denver 43 22 .662 dallas 37 28 .569 l.a. lakers 37 28 .569 Portland 37 29 .561 Memphis 33 32 .508 Golden state 33 33 .500 san antonio 31 33 .484 new Orleans 30 36 .455 sacramento 29 37 .439 Oklahoma City 21 45 .318 Minnesota 20 46 .303 houston 16 50 .242 x-clinched playoff spot Tuesday’s Late Game l.a. Clippers 105, Toronto 100 Wednesday’s Games Boston 132, Orlando 96 Portland 141, Cleveland 105 atlanta 135, Phoenix 103 Phila. 135, houston 115 sacramento 104, indiana 93 Memphis 139, Minnesota 135 Milwaukee 135, Washington 134 new york at denver, late san antonio at utah, late Thursday’s Games Chicago at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Brooklyn at dallas, 4:30 p.m. Washington at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. atlanta at indiana, 5 p.m. Memphis at detroit, 5 p.m. l.a. lakers at l.a. Clippers, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Golden state, 7 p.m. Boys Tennis Portland 141, Cleveland 105 Girls tennis Wednesday’s Match Crook County vs. The dalles, late redmond vs. ridgeview, late Girls Golf Wednesday’s Results Crook County invitational at Crooked river ranch, late Wednesday’s Results Mountain View at Bend high, late redmond at summit, late Gilchrist small school invite, late BASKETBALL NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE W l Pct x-Phila. 45 21 .682 x-Brooklyn 43 23 .652 x-Milwaukee 42 24 .636 new york 37 28 .569 atlanta 37 30 .552 Boston 35 31 .530 Miami 35 31 .530 Charlotte 32 33 .492 indiana 30 35 .462 Washington 30 36 .455 Toronto 27 39 .409 Chicago 26 39 .400 Orlando 21 45 .318 Cleveland 21 45 .318 detroit 19 47 .288 GB — ½ 3½ 4 10 10 10½ 14 14½ 15½ 17½ 18½ 26½ 27½ 31½ Wednesday’s Box Score Wednesday’s Match redmond 7, ridgeview 1 The dalles vs. Crook County, late summit vs. sisters, late GB — 2 3 7½ 8½ 10 10 12½ 14½ 15 18 18½ 24 24 26 PORTLAND (141) Covington 3-7 0-0 9, Jones Jr. 2-2 1-2 5, nurkic 6-10 2-4 15, lillard 10-17 6-7 32, McCollum 3-14 3-4 10, antho- ny 5-8 4-4 16, hollis-Jefferson 2-3 0-0 4, leaf 2-3 0-0 4, Giles iii 3-5 0-1 6, elleby 1-2 2-2 4, little 3-3 1-1 8, Kanter 9-11 0-0 18, Blevins 0-1 0-0 0, simons 4-6 0-0 10. Totals 53-92 19-25 141. CLEVELAND (105) love 7-14 0-0 18, Osman 5-11 2-2 14, allen 3-8 3-4 9, Okoro 2-9 2-5 7, sexton 6-15 3-5 15, hartenstein 3-8 2-2 8, Kabengele 0-5 0-0 0, Wade 5-6 3-4 16, Varejao 0-4 1-2 1, dotson 2-5 0-0 4, Martin 2-4 0-0 5, Thomas 2-3 2-2 8. Totals 37-92 18-26 105. Portland 29 38 35 39 — 141 Cleveland 28 29 23 25 — 105 3-Point Goals—Portland 16-33 (lillard 6-10, Coving- ton 3-7, simons 2-2, anthony 2-4, McCollum 1-5, Giles iii 0-2), Cleveland 13-38 (love 4-10, Wade 3-4, Thomas 2-3, Osman 2-6, Okoro 1-2, Martin 1-3, sexton 0-3, Kabengele 0-4). Fouled Out—none. Rebounds— Portland 54 (Kanter 13), Cleveland 42 (allen 13). As- sists—Portland 26 (lillard 9), Cleveland 23 (harten- stein, sexton 4). Total Fouls—Portland 20, Cleveland 18. A—4,148 (19,432) BASEBALL MLB Boston new york Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L 18 12 15 14 16 15 14 14 15 16 Pct .600 .517 .516 .500 .484 GB — 2½ 2½ 3 3½ Central Division W L Pct GB 16 12 .571 — 16 13 .552 ½ 15 13 .536 1 11 17 .393 5 8 22 .267 9 West Division W L Pct GB Oakland 19 12 .613 — seattle 17 15 .531 2½ houston 15 14 .517 3 los angeles 13 15 .464 4½ Texas 14 17 .452 5 Tuesday’s Late Games Cleveland 7, Kansas City 3 Oakland 4, Toronto 1 Tampa Bay 8, l.a. angels 3 seattle 5, Baltimore 2 Wednesday’s Games Cincinnati 1, Chicago White sox 0, 10 innings Baltimore 6, seattle 0 houston at n.y. yankees, late detroit at Boston, late Texas at Minnesota, late Cleveland at Kansas City, late Tampa Bay at l.a. angels, late Toronto at Oakland, late Thursday’s Games houston (McCullers Jr. 2-1) at n.y. yankees (Cole 4-1), 10:05 a.m. detroit (Turnbull 1-2) at Boston (eovaldi 4-2), 10:10 a.m. Texas (lyles 1-2) at Minnesota (Pineda 2-1), 10:10 a.m. Cleveland (McKenzie 0-1) at Kansas City (duffy 4-1), 11:10 a.m. Toronto (TBd) at Oakland (Fiers 0-1), 12:37 p.m. Tampa Bay (Fleming 1-3) at l.a. angels (heaney 1-2), 6:38 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Philadelphia 16 15 .516 — atlanta 14 16 .467 1½ Washington 12 14 .462 1½ new york 11 13 .458 1½ Miami 13 16 .448 2 Central Division W L Pct GB st. louis 18 12 .600 — Milwaukee 17 14 .548 1½ Cincinnati 14 15 .483 3½ Chicago 14 16 .467 4 Pittsburgh 13 16 .448 4½ West Division W L Pct GB san Francisco 18 13 .581 — los angeles 17 14 .548 1 san diego 17 14 .548 1 arizona 15 15 .500 2½ Colorado 12 19 .387 6 Tuesday’s Late Games Chicago Cubs 4, l.a. dodgers 3, 2nd game Colorado 8, san Francisco 6, 7 innings, 2nd game Pittsburgh 2, san diego 1 Wednesday’s Games Cincinnati 1, Chicago White sox 0, 10 innings Colorado 6, san Francisco 5 st. louis 4, n.y. Mets 1, 7 innings, 1st game Miami 8, arizona 0 atlanta 5, Washington 3 Philadelphia 5, Milwaukee 4 l.a. dodgers at Chicago Cubs, late Pittsburgh at san diego, late n.y. Mets at st. louis, late., 2nd game Thursday’s Games Milwaukee (Woodruff 2-0) at Philadelphia (Wheeler 2-2), 10:05 a.m. n.y. Mets (Walker 1-1) at st. louis (Gant 2-2), 10:15 a.m. atlanta (smyly 0-2) at Washington (lester 0-0), 1:05 p.m. arizona (Bumgarner 3-2) at Miami (lópez 0-2), 3:40 p.m. Kansas City Chicago Cleveland Minnesota detroit Baseball Continued from A5 In a game that went five ex- tra innings, where pitching and defense dominated, a soft line drive off the bat of junior Chase Terry dropped in cen- ter field and brought home Connor Zook for the winning score. The Mountain View bench cleared to chase down the kid who finally put an end to the game that seemed as though it would never end. “I thought he was going to catch it, and then we were go- ing to go on to the 13th inning,” said Terry of his walk-off hit, the first of his high school ca- reer. “I just wanted the game to be done.” Terry had a chance to deliver the game-winning hit earlier in the game, but did not come through. That left his coach a little antsy when he fell behind by two strikes, as he did earlier, in his final at bat. “I was a little nervous be- cause he had taken two straight strikes earlier at bat,” said John- son. “Finally with two strikes he was finally able put one in play and make something hap- pen.” As was the case in the first meeting, both teams sent out their top arms. Zach Reynolds toed the rubber for Summit, Football Continued from A5 BASKETBALL As listed at oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites Prep Sports Track and Field AUTO RACING Time TV Formula 1, Aramco Spanish Grand Prix, Practice 2 5:55 a.m. ESPNU NASCAR Truck Series, Liftkits4less.com 200 4:30 p.m. FS1 BASEBALL MLB, Regional Coverage 4 p.m. MLB College, USC at Oregon State 4 p.m. PAC12 MLB, Seattle Mariners at Texas Rangers 5 p.m. ROOT College, LSU at Auburn 5 p.m. SEC College, Texas at TCU 5:30 p.m. ESPNU MLB, Regional Coverage 7 p.m. MLB BASKETBALL NBA, Boston Celtics at Chicago Bulls 4:30 p.m. ESPN NBA, Los Angeles Lakers at Portland Trail Blazers 7 p.m. NBCSNW NBA, Los Angeles Lakers at Portland Trail Blazers 7:05 p.m. ESPN EQUESTRIAN Horse Racing, America’s Day at the Races 9:30 a.m. FS2 FOOTBALL The Spring League Football, Sea Lions vs Blues 6:30 p.m. FS1 AFL Premiership, Gold Coast Suns vs St. Kilda Saints 9 p.m. FS2 AFL Premiership, Port Adelaide Power vs Adelaide Crows 2:30 a.m. FS2 GOLF European PGA Tour, Canary Islands Championship, Second Round 6 a.m. GOLF 2021 Regions Tradition, Second Round 8 a.m. GOLF PGA Tour, Wells Fargo Championship, Second Round 11 a.m. GOLF LPGA Tour, Honda LPGA Thailand, Third Round 8:30 p.m. GOLF European PGA Tour, Canary Islands Championship, Third Round 3:30 a.m. GOLF LACROSSE College, Patriot League Tournament: Colgate at Lehigh 1 p.m. CBSSN College, Patriot League Tournament: Loyola (Md.) at Army 4 p.m. CBSSN MIXED MARTIAL ARTS Bellator MMA, Bellator 258: Archuleta vs. Pettis 6 p.m. SHO SOCCER Premier League, Leicester City vs Newcastle United 11:55 a.m. NBCSN Premier League, Leeds United vs Tottenham Hotspur 4:30 a.m. NBCSN SOFTBALL College Softball, Northwestern at Purdue 2:30 p.m. BIG10 College Softball, Georgia at Mississippi State 3 p.m. SEC College Softball, Auburn at LSU 3:30 p.m. ESPNU College Softball, Arizona at Oregon 4 p.m. ESPN2 College Softball, Michigan at Minnesota 5 p.m. BIG10 College Softball, Stanford at UCLA 7 p.m. PAC12 TENNIS ATP/WTA, Madrid-ATP/WTA, WTA Singles & Doubles Final, ATP Singles & Doubles Semifinals 4:30 a.m. TENNIS WINTER SPORTS World Women’s Curling Championship, USA vs Russia 8 a.m. NBCSN Oregon Lottery results ON DECK Lyons refers to the model as 9-8-8: eight days of play- ers practicing in helmets and shoulder pads with no live tackling to the ground, nine days in just helmets and no more than eight full-contact days. The current proposal would also limit full-contact practices to no more than two consecutive days. “We’re trying to provide as much flexibility within the model as possible and not dic- tate what days they get to do what, and give each coach the ability to coach how they want to,” Lyons said. “But then also limit the number of contacts that we currently have from a direct hit, head-to-head con- tacts that you currently have in practices.” During live-tackling prac- Dean Guernsey/Bulletin Summit’s Zach Reynolds fires a pitch against Mountain View on Tuesday. while the lefty Aaron Platner was on the mound for the Cou- gars. And once again, the two aces delivered. Reynolds did not allow a baserunner in the first 10 Mountain View batters he faced. It was not until the fourth inning that the Cougars had a baserunner. Joe Vaccaro’s two-out single in the fourth inning was able to drive home two runs for Mountain View to tie the game 2-2. While Mountain View was able to get to Reynolds later in the game, the opposite was true for Platner. After being a little erratic early in the game and giving up a home run to Luke Bents in the fourth, the southpaw set- tled into a groove. Johnson had to visit the mound to try and settle down his pitcher who was trying to throw every pitch by the Summit batters with lit- tle success. “Be around the zone and you will get the results he wants,” said Johnson of what he told Platner on the mound. “He was up in the zone, we just tried to settle him down. The only one who can beat him is himself.” Platner found his zone. Af- tices, no more than 90 minutes of full contact will be permit- ted under the initial proposal. “What I’m hearing, a lot of coaches aren’t using 90 minutes so we may look and say, ‘Is that 75 minutes?’” Lyons said. The study found that 48.5% of the concussions recorded oc- curred during August training camp. The teams involved in the study were Virginia Tech, North Carolina, Wisconsin, UCLA, Air Force and Army. Todd Berry, executive di- rector of the American Foot- ball Coaches’ Association, said there was some concern among coaches that Army and Air Force awould skew the study data. The two academies play a run-heavy, triple-option offense that can lend itself to more contact, he said. Overall, though, Berry said the study is helping guide changes many coaches were al- ready moving toward. “We wanted things based on data rather than assumptions,” Berry said. NCAA rules currently man- date at least two of 25 presea- son practices be contactless and conducted without pads, Berry said, but a survey found most coaches already run about six of those leading up to the season. He said going to nine pad- less practices, essentially walk- throughs, seems like a drastic change to coaches. “To us that’s kind of a giant leap,” Berry said. “We’d rather take a step and then measure the results and say, ‘OK, we ended up in a good place.’ And take another step and keep im- proving along those lines.” Coaches have been mov- ing away from high-impact drills such as Bull in the Ring and the Oklahoma drill, where HOCKEY NHL East GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Washington 53 34 14 5 73 185 157 x-Pittsburgh 54 35 16 3 73 187 152 x-Boston 52 31 14 7 69 156 127 x-n.y. islanders 53 31 16 6 68 148 122 n.y. rangers 54 26 22 6 58 172 149 Philadelphia 53 23 23 7 53 154 195 new Jersey 53 18 28 7 43 140 184 Buffalo 54 15 32 7 37 134 190 Central GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Carolina 53 36 10 7 79 177 126 x-Tampa Bay 53 36 14 3 75 178 133 x-Florida 54 35 14 5 75 180 152 nashville 54 29 23 2 60 148 153 dallas 53 21 18 14 56 146 144 Chicago 53 22 25 6 50 151 178 Columbus 54 17 25 12 46 130 178 detroit 54 18 27 9 45 118 164 West GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Vegas 52 37 13 2 76 176 118 x-Colorado 50 34 12 4 72 176 124 x-Minnesota 52 33 14 5 71 170 143 st. louis 51 24 19 8 56 152 158 arizona 53 22 25 6 50 141 166 los angeles 50 20 24 6 46 133 149 san Jose 52 20 26 6 46 142 181 anaheim 54 17 30 7 41 120 171 North GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Toronto 52 33 13 6 72 174 136 x-edmonton 51 32 17 2 66 167 135 Winnipeg 51 27 21 3 57 154 145 Montreal 52 24 19 9 57 149 152 Calgary 50 22 25 3 47 132 144 Ottawa 53 21 27 5 47 148 179 Vancouver 47 19 25 3 41 123 156 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. x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division Tuesday’s Late Game edmonton 4, Vancouver 1 Wednesday’s Games Columbus 4, nashville 2 Tampa Bay 6, dallas 2 Ottawa 5, Montreal 1 Washington 4, n.y. rangers 2 anaheim 3, st. louis 2, sO Vegas 3, Minnesota 2, OT Colorado at san Jose, late Winnipeg at Calgary, late los angeles at arizona, late. Thursday’s Games Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Chicago at Carolina, 4 p.m. Montreal at Toronto, 4 p.m. n.y. rangers at Boston, 4 p.m. new Jersey at n.y. islanders, 4 p.m. Vancouver at edmonton, 6 p.m. DEALS Wednesday’s Transactions FOOTBALL National Football League deTrOiT liOns — signed Te darren Fells. dallas COWBOys — released dTs antwaun Woods and Walter Palmore, CBs saivion smith and Kemon hall, C adam redmond and de ladarius hamilton. MinnesOTa ViKinGs — agreed to terms with ls Turner Bernard, lBs Tuf Borland and Christian elliss, dT Zean- dae Johnson, Wrs Myron Mitchell, Whop Philyor and Blake Proehl, rB a.J. rose, T Jordon scott and P Zach Von rosenberg. TaMPa Bay BuCCaneers — signed s raven Greene and lB Joseph Jones. ter giving up the home run, he struck out eight of the next 11 batters that he faced over the three-inning stretch. The emotion showed after his final strikeout in the sixth inning captured the intensity of the game. “I was trying to overthrow it and that really messed me up. I just focused more and threw more strikes,” said Platner, who finished with 13 strikeouts in six innings and 111 pitches. “I was happy because I didn’t want anyone to score. It was just building up from the other innings.” Not to be overlooked, the bullpens of both teams seized the moments as well. Moun- tain View’s Jordan Kennedy and Declan Corrigan allowed one hit in six innings of relief, while Summit’s Jake Hendricks allowed three hits in six innings out of the bullpen. Rarely do high school base- ball games go as long as Tues- day night’s game. It was the type of game that neither Terry nor Platner had ever played in, when a doubleheader counts as one game. “This is my first time, it was pretty crazy,” said Platner. “Lot of focus, everyone had to be focused and it was just a good game. I love these games.” e e Reporter: 541-383-0307, brathbone@bendbulletin.com players mostly just run into each other. “Most of our coaches ar- en’t doing it so I don’t know if it’s going to move the needle much,” Berry said. “But I get it.” Berry said scaling back too much on hitting in practice could lead to players not being properly prepared to protect themselves in games. “We’re fearful if we go too far in one direction we’d have a lot of injuries in that first game,” Berry said. “There is a process, a teaching progression to get players to learn how to control their bodies.” The final proposal could look different than the 9-8-8 model, but changes are likely to be small tweaks, Lyons said. “I think the balance is there,” Lyons said. “Do I think there’s enough there to teach and work through it? I think the answer is yes.”