The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, May 22, 2021, Page 10, Image 10

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

    B2 The BulleTin • SaTurday, May 22, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
SATURDAY
TENNIS
ATP, Geneva/Lyon; WTA, Belgrade/Parma
College, NCAA National Championships,
women’s & men’s team championships
ATP, Lyon/Belgrade/Parma; WTA, Strasbourg
ATP, Lyon/Belgrade/Parma; WTA, Strasbourg
MOTOR SPORTS
Formula 1, Monaco Grand Prix qualifying
NASCAR Truck Series, Austin (TX) qualifying
NASCAR Cup Series, Austin (TX) practice
NASCAR Xfinity Series, Austin (TX) qualifying
NASCAR Truck Series, Austin (TX)
IndyCar, Indianapolis 500 qualifying
IndyCar, Indianapolis 500 qualifying
NASCAR Xfinity Series, Austin (TX)
GOLF
PGA Championship
PGA Championship
LPGA Tour, Pure Silk Championship
BASEBALL
College, Tennessee at South Carolina
College, Xavier at Creighton
MLB, Chicago White Sox at N.Y. Yankees
MLB, regional coverage
College, Maryland at Michigan
College, Stanford at Oregon
MLB, L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco
College, Penn St. at Illinois
MLB, Seattle at San Diego
College, Arizona at Oregon St.
MLB, Oakland at L.A. Angels
LACROSSE
College, NCAA, Georgetown vs. Virginia
College, NCAA, Rutgers vs. North Carolina
SOFTBALL
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
HOCKEY
NHL, Florida at Tampa Bay
NHL, Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders
NHL, Montreal at Toronto
NHL, Vegas at Minnesota
BASKETBALL
NBA, Miami at Milwaukee
NBA, Dallas at L.A. Clippers
NBA, Boston at Brooklyn
NBA, Portland at Denver
Time
5 a.m.
TV
Tennis
2:30 p.m.
2 a.m. (Sun)
3 a.m. (Sun)
Tennis
Tennis
Tennis
5:55 a.m.
6 a.m.
7 a.m.
8 a.m.
10 a.m.
11 a.m.
noon
1 p.m.
ESPN2
FS2
FS2
FS1
FS1
NBC
NBCSN
FS1
7 a.m.
10 a.m.
noon
9 a.m.
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
1 p.m.
2 p.m.
3 p.m.
4 p.m.
5 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
6 p.m.
7 p.m.
SEC
CBSSN
MLB
MLB
Big Ten
Pac-12
FOX
Big Ten
Root
Pac-12
MLB
9 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
ESPNU
ESPNU
9 a.m.
11 a.m.
noon
1 p.m.
2 p.m.
3 p.m.
5 p.m.
7 p.m.
FOOTBALL
The Spring League, Blues vs. Generals
College, Stanford Spring Game
The Spring League, Sea Lions vs. Jousters
SOCCER
MLS, LA Galaxy at Portland
GYMNASTICS
U.S. Classic
BOXING
Top Rank, Jose Ramirez vs. Josh Taylor
ESPN
CBS
Golf
ESPN2, ESPNN
ESPN2
SEC
ESPN2, ESPNN
SEC
ESPN2, ESPNN
ESPN2, ESPNN
ESPN2, ESPNU
9:30 a.m.
noon
4 p.m.
5 p.m.
CNBC
NBC
CNBC
NBC
11 a.m.
1:30 p.m.
5 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
ESPN
ESPN
ABC
ESPN,
NBCSNW
noon
1 p.m.
4 p.m.
12:30 p.m.
FOX
Pac-12
FS1
ABC
4 p.m.
NBCSN
5 p.m.
ESPN
SUNDAY
MOTOR SPORTS
Formula 1, Monaco Grand Prix
IndyCar, Indianapolis 500 qualifying
NASCAR Cup Series, Austin (TX)
GOLF
PGA Championship
PGA Championship
LPGA Tour, Pure Silk Championship
SOCCER
Premier League, Leicester City vs. Tottenham
Premier League, Wolves vs. Manchester United
Premier League, Liverpool vs. Crystal Palace
Premier League, Manchester City vs. Everton
MLS, Atlanta at Seattle
NWSL, OL Reign at Portland
MLS, Austin at Nashville
LACROSSE
Men’s college, NCAA, Loyola (MD) vs. Duke
Men’s college, NCAA, Notre Dame vs. Maryland
SOFTBALL
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
College, NCAA Regional
BASEBALL
College, Nebraska vs. Ohio St.
MLB, regional coverage
College, Arizona at Oregon St.
MLB, Seattle at San Diego
College, Ohio St. at Indiana
MLB, Chicago Cubs at St. Louis
BASKETBALL
WNBA, New York at Chicago
NBA, Washington at Philadelphia
NBA, L.A. Lakers at Phoenix
NBA, Atlanta at New York
NBA, TBD at Utah
RODEO
PBR Bull Riding, Bad Boy Mowers Invitational
HOCKEY
NHL, Carolina at Nashville
NHL, Colorado at St. Louis
NHL, Boston at Washington
NHL, Edmonton at Winnipeg
TRACK AND FIELD
Boston Games
5:55 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
7 a.m.
10 a.m.
noon
ESPN2
NBC
FS1
ESPN
CBS
Golf
7:55 a.m.
8 a.m.
8 a.m.
8 a.m.
1:30 p.m.
3 p.m.
6 p.m.
NBCSN
Golf
NBC
CNBC
FOX
CBSSN
FS1
9 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
ESPNU
ESPNU
9 a.m.
ESPN2
11 a.m.
ESPN2
1 p.m. ESPN, ESPN2
3 p.m.
ESPN2
5 p.m.
ESPN2
7 p.m.
ESPN2
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
noon
1 p.m.
2 p.m.
4 p.m.
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
4 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
Big Ten
MLB
Pac-12
Root
Big Ten
ESPN
ESPN
TNT
ABC
TNT
TNT
11 a.m.
CBSSN
11:30 a.m.
2 p.m.
4 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
NBCSN
NBCSN
USA
NBCSN
1:30 p.m.
NBC
Listings are the most accurate available.
MEGA MILLIONS
The numbers drawn Friday night are:
6 9 17 18 48 8
Oregon
Lottery
results
x
3
The estimated jackpot is now $515 million.
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
ON DECK
Prep sports
SATURDAY
Softball: Bend at Mcnary, 5:30 p.m.
Boys basketball: Mountain View at Crook County,
2 p.m.; Summit at north Medford, 1:45 p.m.
Girls basketball: Crook County at Mountain View,
1:30 p.m.; Chiloquin at Gilchrist, 1 p.m.
Wrestling: Central Oregon Officials Tournament, at
Sisters, 10 a.m.
Track and field: Oregon 6a Showcase, at Pioneer
Memorial Stadium, Oregon City, 10:30 a.m.; 5a invi-
tational, at Wilsonville high School, 10 a.m.; 4a state
championships, at Siuslaw high School, 11 a.m.; 2a
state championships, at union high School, 10 a.m.
PREPS
Boys basketball
Thursday’s Late games
Bend 56, ridgeview 37
Crook County 78, Summit 63
Molalla 52, Madras 48
Friday’s Games
The dalles at Bend, late
ridgeview at la Pine, late
Sisters at Sweet home, late
Trinity lutheran at hosanna-Triad, late
Girls basketball
Thursday’s Late Games
Madras 53, Molalla 49
Friday’s Games
Summit at ridgeview, late
Sweet home at Sisters, late
Trinity lutheran at hosanna-Triad, late
Baseball
Friday’s Games
Mcnary 5, Summit 4
West Salem 6, Mountain View 2
Sprague 5, Bend 3
Mountain View 13, Mcnary 7
Sprague 5, Summit 1
West Salem 9, Bend 8
BASKETBALL
NBA playoffs
PLAY-IN SECOND ROUND
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Friday’s Game
(9)Memphis at (8)Golden State, late
FIRST ROUND
(Best of 7)
Saturday’s Games
Miami at Milwaukee, 11 a.m., Game 1
dallas at l.a. Clippers, 1:30 p.m., Game 1
Boston at Brooklyn, 5 p.m., Game 1
Portland at denver, 7:30 p.m., Game 1
GOLF
PGA Championhip
Friday at Kiawah Island, S.C.
Purse: $8.1 million
Yardage: 7,876; Par: 72
Second Round
Phil Mickelson
70-69—139
louis Oosthuizen
71-68—139
Brooks Koepka
69-71—140
Branden Grace
70-71—141
Christiaan Bezuidenhout
71-70—141
hideki Matsuyama
73-68—141
Corey Conners
67-75—142
Gary Woodland
70-72—142
Kevin Streelman
70-72—142
Sungjae im
70-72—142
Paul Casey
71-71—142
richy Werenski, 71-72—143. Joaquin niemann, 71-
72—143. harry higgs, 72-71—143. Martin laird, 70-73—
143. Jason Kokrak, 71-72—143. Bryson deChambeau, 72-
71—143. Charley hoffman, 73-70—143. Matt Fitzpatrick,
73-71—144. Padraig harrington, 71-73—144. ian Poulter,
74-70—144. Shane lowry, 73-71—144. Keegan Bradley,
69-75—144. Viktor hovland, 69-75—144.
daniel van Tonder, 75-70—145. Cameron Smith, 72-
73—145. Will Zalatoris, 71-74—145. Bubba Watson, 72-
73—145. lee Westwood, 73-72—145. Tom lewis, 71-
74—145. Collin Morikawa, 70-75—145. abraham ancer,
74-72—146. Tony Finau, 74-72—146. Patrick Cantlay,
73-73—146. Tyrrell hatton, 71-75—146. Scottie Schef-
fler, 72-74—146. Matt Wallace, 73-73—146. Brad Marek,
73-73—146.
rasmus hojgaard, 71-76—147. Jon rahm, 72-75—
147. Carlos Ortiz, 73-74—147. Justin rose, 72-75—147.
Steve Stricker, 76-71—147. Cam davis, 69-78—147. Joel
dahmen, 74-73—147. rickie Fowler, 71-76—147. Jimmy
Walker, 73-74—147. Stewart Cink, 71-76—147. rory Mcil-
roy, 75-72—147.
adam hadwin, 77-71—148. russell henley, 78-
70—148. daniel Berger, 79-69—148. Jordan Spieth, 73-
75—148. lucas herbert, 76-72—148. dean Burmester,
74-74—148. Matt Jones, 73-75—148. Byeong hun an,
73-75—148. robert Macintyre, 75-73—148. danny Wil-
lett, 77-71—148. Jason Scrivener, 73-75—148. Brian Gay,
77-71—148. aaron Wise, 69-79—148.
robert Streb, 77-72—149. Wyndham Clark, 75-74—
149. Sam horsfield, 69-80—149. Jason day, 74-75—149.
Patrick reed, 74-75—149. Billy horschel, 77-72—149.
Webb Simpson, 75-74—149. Ben Cook, 72-77—149. Talor
Gooch, 71-78—149. Brendan Steele, 75-74—149.
harold Varner iii, 73-76—149. Garrick higgo, 73-76—
149. Tom hoge, 74-75—149. henrik Stenson, 73-76—
149. harris english, 75-74—149. alex noren, 77-72—
149. emiliano Grillo, 77-72—149. Chan Kim, 75-74—149.
denny McCarthy, 73-76—149.
HOCKEY
NHL playoffs
WNBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Connecticut
3
0
1.000
Chicago
2
0
1.000
new york
3
1
.750
Washington
1
2
.333
atlanta
1
2
.333
indiana
0
4
.000
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
dallas
1
0
1.000
Phoenix
2
1
.667
Seattle
2
1
.667
las Vegas
1
1
.500
Minnesota
0
3
.000
los angeles
0
1
.000
Friday’s Games
Washington 101, new york 72
atlanta 83, indiana 79
Connecticut at Phoenix, late
los angeles at las Vegas, late
Saturday’s Game
Seattle at dallas, 5 p.m.
GB
—
½
½
2
2
3½
GB
—
—
—
½
2
1
FIRST ROUND
(Best-of-7)
Thursday’s Late Game
Vegas 5, Minnesota 2, Vegas leads series 2-1
Friday’s Games
Boston 4, Washington 1, Boston leads series 3-1
nashville 5, Carolina 4, 2OT, Carolina leads series 2-1
Winnipeg at edmonton, late, Winnipeg leads series 1-0
Colorado at St. louis, late, Colorado leads series 2-0
Saturday’s Games
Florida at Tampa Bay, 9:30 a.m., Tampa Bay leads series
2-1
Pittsburgh at n.y. islanders, noon, Pittsburgh leads se-
ries 2-1
Montreal at Toronto, 4 p.m., Montreal leads series 1-0
Vegas at Minnesota, 5 p.m., Vegas leads series 2-1
Softball
Continued from B1
“I was 10 years old and I
didn’t know what work ethic
meant,” Mauldin recalled. “But
it made an impression upon
me that he didn’t like what I
was doing by the way he said
it.”
Fast forward to 2016, and
the pitcher Mauldin was work-
ing with went home in tears.
“I told my wife that I was the
meanest, worst coach alive,”
Mauldin. “Because I made a
10-year-old cry.”
“Effort” was then scrapped
from his vocabulary when
working with his team. Instead,
when the team would be play-
ing flat, the word “energy” be-
came the motivating word of
choice.
“Your energy is how positive
you are and the energy you are
putting out there,” said sopho-
more Gracie Goewey. “Effort
is how hard you are trying — I
think everyone out here is try-
ing their hardest.”
It has paid off for the Lava
Bears, morphing them into
a team of doers. When the
COVID-19 pandemic canceled
their 2020 season days before
their first game, they did not
stop working together.
The team wrote a book titled
“Zombie, I guess,” for which
each player wrote a chapter.
The players remodeled the
locker room located behind the
team’s dugout and built an in-
door batting cage. Players’ pets
were used as weights for team-
wide squat challenges when
they were not able to practice
together.
Those times were fun, but
the real fun started in April of
this year, when Bend High was
able to take the field for the
first time since May 2019. In
2021, the Lava Bears have been
nothing short of dominant.
They have won 16 of their
17 games, with 13 shutouts.
Rarely do their games last
more than five innings due to
mercy rules.
The Bend pitching has been
so dominant that entering the
May 15 game at Eugene’s Shel-
don High — the defending 6A
state champion — 59 of the 61
outs came by strike out. That
left the coaching staff worried
about how prepared the team’s
defense would be in a game
Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin
Bend High softball pitcher Ad-
disen Fisher practices on Tuesday.
“We are playing better
teams now and we
like that. It is no knock
against the teams that
we have played. We knew
what we had pitchingwise
and we knew it was going
to be tough to beat us.”
— Tom Mauldin,
Bend High softball coach
where plays in the field would
have to be made. (Bend won
3-1.)
Six of the Bears’ contests
have ended in either perfect
games or no-hitters.
“It is a lot easier for me,” said
Bend catcher Sophia Weathers.
“Because I know when I give
a sign, I know I can expect the
pitch to go where it is called.
Since I work with them every-
day, even when they make a
mistake, I know where the mis-
take is going to go. It makes my
job a lot easier because I don’t
have to drop and block every-
thing. It’s right to the mitt.”
That 10-year-old that Maul-
din sent home in tears is now
BASEBALL
MLB
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Boston
28
18
.609
—
new york
26
19
.578
1½
Tampa Bay
26
19
.578
1½
Toronto
23
19
.548
3
Baltimore
17
27
.386
10
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Chicago
26
17
.605
—
Cleveland
23
19
.548
2½
Kansas City
20
22
.476
5½
detroit
17
26
.395
9
Minnesota
16
28
.364
10½
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
houston
26
18
.591
—
Oakland
26
19
.578
½
Seattle
21
23
.477
5
los angeles
19
25
.432
7
Texas
19
27
.413
8
Friday’s Games
n.y. yankees 2, Chicago White Sox 1
Washington 4, Baltimore 2
Minnesota 10, Cleveland 0
Boston 11, Philadelphia 3
Tampa Bay at Toronto, late
houston at Texas, late
detroit at Kansas City, late
Oakland at l.a. angels, late
Seattle at San diego, late
Saturday’s Games
Chicago White Sox (Cease 2-0) at n.y. yankees (Cole 5-2),
10:05 a.m.
Baltimore (Zimmermann 2-3) at Washington (lester 0-2),
1:05 p.m.
houston (McCullers Jr. 3-1) at Texas (lyles 2-3), 1:05 p.m.
detroit (Boyd 2-4) at Kansas City (Singer 1-3), 1:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Maeda 2-2) at Cleveland (Bieber 4-3), 1:10 p.m.
Boston (eovaldi 4-2) at Philadelphia (howard 0-0), 4:15 p.m.
Tampa Bay (McClanahan 1-0) at Toronto (ray 2-1), 4:37 p.m.
Seattle (Sheffield 3-3) at San diego (Weathers 2-1),
5:40 p.m.
Oakland (Bassitt 3-2) at l.a. angels (Bundy 0-5), 7:07 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
new york
20
17
.541
—
Philadelphia
22
23
.489
2
atlanta
21
24
.467
3
Miami
20
23
.465
3
Washington
18
23
.439
4
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
St. louis
25
18
.581
—
Chicago
22
21
.512
3
Milwaukee
21
23
.477
4½
Cincinnati
20
23
.465
5
Pittsburgh
18
26
.409
7½
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
San Francisco
28
16
.636
—
San diego
27
17
.614
1
los angeles
26
18
.591
2
arizona
18
27
.400
10½
Colorado
15
29
.341
13
Thursday’s Late Game
l.a. dodgers 3, arizona 2
Friday’s Games
Washington 4, Baltimore 2
atlanta 20, Pittsburgh 1
Cincinnati 9, Milwaukee 4
Boston 11, Philadelphia 3
n.y. Mets at Miami, late
Chicago Cubs at St. louis, late
arizona at Colorado, late
l.a. dodgers at San Francisco, late
Seattle at San diego, late
Saturday’s Games
arizona (Bumgarner 4-3) at Colorado (Senzatela 1-4),
12:10 p.m.
Baltimore (Zimmermann 2-3) at Washington (lester 0-2),
1:05 p.m.
the ace for the Lava Bear pro-
gram. Freshman Addisen
Fisher has struck out 116 of
the 170 batters that she has
faced and has only given up
two earned runs in 51 innings
of work.
No 6A team in Oregon can
come close to Bend’s nine runs
allowed in 17 games. Accord-
ing to the nationwide database
MaxPreps.com, Bend ranks
second nationally with a .15
team earned run average.
“We kinda knew that we
were going to be good,” Fisher
said. “But we didn’t think that
this is where we would be.”
This season, without a state
tournament and a region-
al-based schedule, is a tricky
one to gauge. On one hand, the
record and stats look great. But
the level of competition is not
always consistent.
“We still manage to practice
hard and make sure we are giv-
ing our best effort,” Parker said.
“When you play teams that are
not at your same level, some-
times you play down. But we
never do.”
Wins over Ridgeview and
Sheldon, both defending state
champions in their respective
classifications, have been state-
ment wins for the young Lava
Bear program and why Satur-
day’s game against an unbeaten
McNary team is being viewed
as a championship game.
“We are looking at it as a
couple of state championships,”
said Mauldin of the games
against Sheldon and McNary.
“We are playing better teams
now and we like that. It is no
knock against the teams that
we have played. We knew what
we had pitchingwise and we
knew it was going to be tough
to beat us.”
Bend is still a young team, as
only two of the 15 players on
the varsity roster are seniors.
Once the state tournament re-
turns next year, there are aspi-
rations of competing for a state
title.
All it took was a little “en-
ergy” a couple of years ago.
“It is amazing how that came
full circle with this group when
they were younger, switch-
ing to energy and they started
to thrive on it,” Mauldin said.
“They seem to get better with it
— they don’t lose focus.”
e e
Reporter: 541-383-0307,
brathbone@bendbulletin.com
Milwaukee (anderson 2-3) at Cincinnati (Gray 0-3),
1:10 p.m.
n.y. Mets (TBd) at Miami (lópez 1-3), 1:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Keller 2-5) at atlanta (TBd), 1:10 p.m.
Boston (eovaldi 4-2) at Philadelphia (howard 0-0), 4:15 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (alzolay 2-3) at St. louis (Mikolas 0-0),
4:15 p.m.
l.a. dodgers (Buehler 2-0) at San Francisco (TBd), 4:15 p.m.
Seattle (Sheffield 3-3) at San diego (Weathers 2-1),
5:40 p.m.
SOFTBALL
NCAA Regionals
Scores had not moved as of The Bulletin’s press
deadline; scores for first two days of Regionals will
appear in Sunday’s edition
SOCCER
MLS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
new england
3 1 2 11
7
6
Orlando City
2 0 3
9
6
2
ny City FC
2 1 2
8 10
4
atlanta
2 1 2
8
6
4
Montreal
2 2 2
8
8
7
Phila.
2 2 2
8
5
5
inter Miami CF
2 2 2
8
8
9
nashville
1 0 4
7
6
4
new york
2 3 0
6
7
6
d.C. united
2 4 0
6
5 10
Columbus
1 2 2
5
3
4
Toronto FC
1 2 2
5
7
9
Chicago
0 4 1
1
3 10.
Cincinnati
0 3 1
1
4 13.
WESTERN CONFERENCE.
W L T Pts GF GA.
Seattle
5 0 1 16 13
2.
la Galaxy
4 1 0 12 10
8.
Sporting KC
3 2 1 10
9
7.
Colorado
3 1 1 10
8
6.
San Jose
3 3 0
9 10
8.
houston
2 2 2
8
7
8.
real Sl
2 1 1
7
6
4.
Vancouver
2 3 1
7
5
7.
Portland
2 3 0
6
6
8.
austin FC
2 3 0
6
5
7.
Minnesota united 2 4 0
6
5 10.
FC dallas
1 2 2
5
6
6.
la FC
1 2 2
5
5
6.
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Saturday’s Games
Cincinnati at Montreal, 10 a.m.
la Galaxy at Portland, 12:30 p.m.
Miami at Chicago, 3 p.m.
Toronto FC at Orlando City, 4 p.m.
Columbus at ny City FC, 4:30 p.m.
real Sl at FC dallas, 5 p.m.
new york at new england, 5 p.m.
Vancouver at houston, 6 p.m.
Sporting KC at San Jose, 7 p.m.
Colorado at la FC, 7:30 p.m.
NWSL
W L T Pts GF
louisville
1 0 1
4
2
Portland
1 0 0
3
5
Gotham FC
1 0 0
3
1
Orlando
0 0 1
1
1
Kansas City
0 0 1
1
0
north Carolina
0 0 1
1
0
reign FC
0 0 1
1
0
Washington
0 1 1
1
1
houston
0 1 0
0
0
Chicago
0 1 0
0
0
nOTe: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Friday’s Game
louisville 2, Washington 0
Saturday’s Games
Orlando at north Carolina, 4 p.m.
Gotham FC at Chicago, 5 p.m.
GA
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
3
1
5
Panthers
Continued from B1
“We’re thrilled we were
able to do this and it
turned out the way it
did. The performances
were great.”
— Jeff Roundtree,
Redmond girls golf coach
Mercedes Marriott, of
Crescent Valley, won in-
dividual honors with a
13-over-par 85. Crook
County’s Merritt O’Gorman
finished second with a 92.
Leading the way for
Redmond was third-place
McKenzie Richardson (95),
fourth-place Klanci Hinton
(96), and Elizabeth Richard-
son (97), who tied for fifth.
Bayley Gustaveson finished
13th (105) for the Panthers.
“We’re thrilled we were
able to do this and it
turned out the way it did,”
Roundtree said. “The per-
formances were great.
Scores don’t matter to me.
My philosophy is match
play — try to teach them
how to play hole by hole and
shot by shot. We try to limit
the major errors. If we get in
trouble, we play out of it.”
The 16-team 5A final was
organized by Thurston girls
golf coach Nathan Wieden-
mann. The Panthers qual-
ified for the final through
their performance at re-
gional events at Meadow
Lakes Golf Course in
Prineville and Juniper Golf
Course in Redmond earlier
this month.
Conditions Wednesday
at hilly, challenging Pine
Ridge included on and off
rain and wind, according to
Roundtree.
But the Redmond golf-
ers kept their cool on a de-
manding course on their
way to the state title.
“It was a thrill,”
Roundtree said. “It wasn’t
even close. The nearest team
was 29 strokes back. We
really performed well on a
very difficult golf course.”
e e
Reporter: 541-383-0318,
mmorical@bendbulletin.com