FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT A5 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • THUrsday, May 13, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL PREP BASEBALL Some Bend High girls in quarantine Eight days before the Bend High girls bas- ketball team was set to tip-off its season against Ridgeview, a positive COVID-19 case within the team sent more than a dozen members of the program into quarantine, Bend High athletic di- rector Lowell Norby said Wednesday. When the Lava Bears practiced Wednesday afternoon, they had less than five players avail- able out of the more than 30 players in the program. Several of the players, however, are still participating in spring sports. “It’s been a vicious roller coaster that I can’t seem to get off of,” said Bend High girls basket- ball coach Allison Gard- ner. “But we are still try- ing to stay positive.” Gardner is expect- ing her varsity players, who have already been in quarantine and un- able to practice when it opened this week, back on Saturday. The recent group to go into quarantine is the younger kids in the pro- gram that need the most development, said the Lava Bear coach. Since the pandemic started, basketball has been one of the sports most affected by the health restrictions. Until guidelines changed and the Oregon Health Au- thority allowed basket- ball to be played, teams were only able to con- dition and do individual drills — scrimmaging was not allowed during that time. Gardner said she is disappointed that after working through all the guidelines the past year, that many of the players will have to sit out some time while in quarantine. “I have a pit in my stomach,” said Gardner. “It is literally one day at a time.” —Bulletin staff report HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL Lava Bear pitchers get fifth no-hitter The Bend High softball pitching staff notched its fifth no-hitter of the season in Tues- day’s 14-2 win over Red- mond. Four pitchers — Ad- disen Fisher, Raeann Nel- son, Allison Parker and Gracie Goewey — com- bined for the no-hitter against the Panthers. Fisher, Parker and Goewey each pitched a no-hitter during a three game stretch against Mountain View, Summit and The Dalles earlier this month. Parker also re- corded a perfect game in the Lava Bears’ 11-0 win over Hood River Valley on April 30. Fisher was perfect against Summit on May 6, another 11-0 win for Bend. It has no doubt been a dominating season for the Lava Bear pitching staff. In its 12 games this season, the staff has al- lowed just 18 hits, and only one of the eight runs given up this season was earned. With less than two weeks left in the season, the 11-1 Lava Bears have a pair of games against Mountain View on Thurs- day and Friday. —Bulletin staff report Panthers get signature win Photos by Dean Guernsey/Bulletin Redmond’s Colton Horner (8) attempts to tag Bend’s Cole Young during the Panthers’ 10-9 victory on Tuesday in Redmond. Young Redmond team finds groove in upset of Bend High BY BRIAN RATHBONE The Bulletin R EDMOND — With the spring season winding down to its fi- nal few days, Redmond baseball had been looking for a win. Not just any win, rather a win that could vault the program forward, according to Panthers coach Stan Manley. That signature victory came Tues- day afternoon at Redmond High School in a 10-9 triumph over Bend High, a team that entered the game as one of Central Oregon’s hottest teams, having won its previous six games. “Bend is always one of those teams that you need to beat to go somewhere,” said senior Isaac Er- hardt, who had three hits and three RBIs in the win. “I think this win is going to help the rest of the season.” For a team entering the game with only three victories in 10 games, the Panthers (4-7 overall) were loose — cracking jokes and enjoying the sunny spring day. “I felt like today we were having fun,” said junior Brenden Eberle, whose three-run home run punctu- ated the five-run opening inning for the Panthers. “I was like, I hope that leaves be- cause I don’t know if I can hit one any farther,” Eberle said of his home run. “My approach was to hit the first pitch fastballs — I just took a good hack at it.” See Baseball / A6 Redmond’s Brenden Eberle celebrates with teammates during the Pan- thers’ 10-9 win over Bend High on Tuesday in Redmond. BASKETBALL BASEBALL | COMMENTARY WNBA tips off 25th season Friday MLB to PDX effort gets boost with A’s news BY DOUG FEINBERG AP Basketball Writer NEW YORK — The WNBA will tip off its 25th season on Friday af- ter an eventful offseason that was full of player movement, including Candace Parker returning home to Chicago. The former league MVP headed home after playing her entire 13- year career in Los Angeles since be- ing drafted by the Sparks in 2008. “I’m so excited to be home and I say that from the bottom of my heart,” Parker said. “I didn’t real- ize how amazing the Chicagoland area was with basketball in general until I went out in the world and I saw how truly special and how they really embrace their homegrown talent.” The 12 teams were also heading home this season after playing last year in a bubble in Florida because of the coronavirus pandemic. While attendance will be limited, teams will play in their home markets. “We’re working with the play- ers’ association and teams to create a plan to safely conduct our sea- son amid this pandemic,” WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said. “We’re excited about the abil- ity to return to our home markets, so we’ll be in our 12 arenas. But we know we need to stay vigilant to But now it needs a champion BY JOHN CANZANO • The Oregonian T The Aces also made a huge move in the offseason signing free agent point guard Chelsea Gray. Reign- ing league MVP A’ja Wilson will be the only starter returning from last season’s Finals run. Liz Cam- bage is back after being medically excused from last season because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Kelsey Plum is healthy after tearing her Achilles tendon before the start of last season. he whale investors backing the Port- land Diamond Project must have been stoked with the big news on Tuesday. The Oakland A’s have reportedly received permission to explore relocation options should the crumbling plans for their latest ballpark continue to disintegrate. Portland’s group is well organized, says it’s well funded and very much thinks it’s in play as an option. In fact, I asked Craig Cheek, founder of the effort to bring Major League Baseball to Oregon exactly that on Tuesday night. Is Portland in play for the A’s? Really? Even with the city’s brand trading at all-time lows? “I won’t comment on another MLB team’s plans for obvious reasons,” Cheek said, “but this is what we’ve been planning for.” As Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, “Nothing great was ever achieved without en- thusiasm.” Or better yet, as legendary A’s phi- losopher Rickey Henderson once said, “Noth- ing’s impossible for Rickey. You don’t have enough fingers and toes to count out Rickey.” See WNBA / A6 See Canzano / A7 Chris O’Meara/AP file Seattle Storm forward Breanna Stewart (30) gets between Las Vegas Aces center A’ja Wilson (22) and forward Cierra Burdick (11) during Game 3 of the WNBA Finals in Bradenton, Florida, in October. The WNBA will tip off its 25th season on Friday. minimize risk as much as possible.” The defending champion Seat- tle Storm, led by Sue Bird and Bre- anna Stewart, won’t be playing at their home arena, which is under- going renovations this summer, in- stead competing at the Angel of the Winds Arena in Everett, Washing- ton. The Storm played seven games there in 2019, going 6-1. They’ll open their season on Sat- urday in a Finals rematch against the Las Vegas Aces.