FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT A5 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • THUrsday, May 27, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports GOLF PREP WRESTLING Next edition of The Match on July 6 HELENA, Mont. — The next edition of The Match will feature PGA stars Phil Mickelson and Bryson DeChambeau along with NFL quarterbacks Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers. The celebrity fundrais- ing competition will be held at the Reserve golf course at Moonlight Ba- sin in Montana on July 6 and will be televised on TNT starting at 5 p.m. EDT, Turner Sports announced Wednesday. Players will have open mics and will be able to talk with other players and the commentators during the modified alternate shot match play event, which will raise money for Feeding America and other charities. Mickelson, winner of this year’s PGA Cham- pionship, will be paired with seven-time Super Bowl champion Brady to take on 2020 U.S. Open champion DeChambeau and Rodgers, a three-time NFL MVP and Super Bowl champion. Mickelson won the inaugural edition of The Match against Tiger Woods in Las Vegas in 2018. Mickelson and Brady lost the second event to Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning in May 2020. But in November, Mick- elson and former NBA star Charles Barkley upset three-time NBA champion Stephen Curry and Man- ning, who will be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in August. — Associated Press INSIDE • Lefty will try to focus on The Colonial following his historic PGA Cham- pionship victory, A7 MLB Coach banned over harassment probe NEW YORK — Former New York Mets manager Mickey Callaway was sus- pended by Major League Baseball on Wednesday through at least the end of the 2022 season following an investigation of sexual harassment allegations. Shortly after MLB’s announcement of the suspension, the Los Ange- les Angels said they had fired Callaway, the team’s pitching coach since Oc- tober 2019. The Angels suspended him on Feb. 2 at the start of MLB’s inves- tigation. Commissioner Rob Manfred did not release details of what MLB’s probe determined, but said in a statement, “I have concluded that Mr. Calla- way violated MLB’s poli- cies, and that placement on the ineligible list is warranted.” In a report published on Feb. 1, The Athletic said Callaway “aggressively pursued” several women who work in sports media and sent three of them in- appropriate photos. Callaway sent unin- vited and sometimes un- answered messages to the women via email, text or social media and asked one to send nude photos in return, according to the report. He often com- mented on their appear- ance in a way that made them uncomfortable and on one occasion “thrust his crotch near the face of a reporter” while she interviewed him, The Ath- letic said. Manfred said once the 2022 season ends, Calla- way can apply for possible reinstatement. — Associated Press A win-win for Outlaws, Cougars Mountain View and Sisters wrestlers get some experience, as bigger meets are on the horizon BY BRIAN RATHBONE • The Bulletin SISTERS — N o score was kept for the dual meet between Mountain View and Sisters on Tuesday evening at Sisters High Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin photos School. Sisters’ Hayden Kunz (in black) wrestles Mountain View’s Reid Kamperman during a dual meet on Tuesday night at Sisters High School. Even if it was, both coaches would Sisters program. have felt good about the outcome, no “This is good for us because we matter what the scoreboard may have are a growing program with a young shown. team,” said Sisters coach Gary Thor- For Mountain View — one of the son. “Mountain View is a great 6A pro- state’s better wrestling programs gram. Les does an unbelievable in Class 6A coming off of job with that group. Our guys a third-place finish at the got to see up close what a Inside state meet in 2020 — the championship caliber pro- High school meet at Sisters offered gram looks like, acts like scores and results an opportunity for some and wrestles like.” in Scoreboard, younger wrestlers to com- Mountain View won A6 pete in a dual-meet format. seven of the nine matches. “We’ve gotten the events Peter Cole, Jeremiah Reid, for all of our varsity kids, but Liam Williams, Cameron we haven’t gotten a lot of events for Myhre and Grant Lemery all won by our junior varsity kids,” said Mountain pin for the Cougars, while Sisters’ Car- View coach Les Combs. “It is a great son Brown and Hunter Spor pinned way for our guys to get experience in their opponents. a dual-meet format, just try to give ev- While the state wrestling tourna- eryone the most chances they can get.” ment was underway in late February On the opposing side of the mat 2020, the first case of COVID-19 was was Sisters, a 4A program that is ac- detected in Oregon. Not long after the customed to competing in multiteam 2020 state tournament was completed, tournaments but not necessarily dual wrestling became a prohibited sport, meets. Even though Mountain View due to it being considered full-contact did not send their A-team, it was a by the Oregon Health Authority. See Wrestling / A6 beneficial evening for the fledgling NFL | SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS Mountain View’s Cameron Myhre, top, wrestles Sisters’ Scott Henderson during a dual meet on Tuesday night at Sisters High School. COLLEGE BASEBALL What has happened to the Beavs’ bullpen? BY JARRID DENNEY Corvallis Gazette-Times Jeff Chiu/AP photo San Francisco 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo (10) smiles next to quarterback Josh Johnson (1) and fullback Kyle Juszczyk (44) at the team’s training facility in Santa Clara, California, on Tuesday. Garoppolo uses criticism to push to the ‘next level’ BY JOSH DUBOW AP Pro Football Writer SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Jimmy Garoppolo couldn’t help but hear the criticisms all offseason. The San Francisco 49ers couldn’t rely on him because of durability concerns. He lacked the mobility and playmaking ability of the top young quar- terbacks in the league. The Niners needed an upgrade at QB if they wanted to be a pe- rennial contender. The critiques were followed by a blockbuster trade when the 49ers traded the 12th over- all pick and two future first- round selections to move up to No. 3 in the draft where they took Trey Lance to be their quarterback of the future. But for now Garoppolo is still the No. 1 quarterback for San Francisco despite those criticisms and the inevitabil- ity of a change at some point when the Niners decide to go with Lance. “Being in the NFL for as long as I have, you kind of get used to it I guess you could say,” Garoppolo said Tuesday. “It kind of comes with the job. It’s one of those things that keeps pushing you, though. When you hear those critiques and you hear those little things out there, it pushes you to take your game to the next level.” See Garoppolo / A6 At the start of the season, Oregon State adopted a nick- name for it’s pitching staff: The Gauntlet. The group was perceived to be so deep with talented start- ers and relievers that the nick- name felt like an appropriate one at the time. Even if op- posing batters managed to get after one pitcher, Mitch Can- ham had the option of choos- ing from at least a dozen other talented arms on a nightly basis. But at the most important point of the season, the bull- pen has turned out to be Ore- gon State’s Achilles heel. In each of the Beavers’ last four conference baseball se- ries, they have surrendered a lead in the eighth inning or later at least once and gone on to lose. Those games against UCLA, USC, Arizona State and Arizona have loomed large. The sixth-place Beavers sit 4.5 games back of Arizona, which won the conference title in Corvallis last Sunday when it scored five unan- swered over the final two in- nings to add another instance to an ever-growing list of re- cent bullpen mishaps. “I think you can tell if a tough series happens and we have a big loss or something like that, guys will come out the next day and really try to overthrow the baseball,” Canham said. “Wanting to Leon Neuschwander/For The Oregonian, file Oregon State coach Mitch Canham. put the weight of the world on their shoulders and win it right away. It’s just like a hitter going up there to try and hit a grand slam with the bases empty. Like, ‘The team needs this.’ I think we just have to do a better job collectively not putting so much weight on ourselves and trying to do too much.” Statistically speaking, Or- egon State’s staff was among the best in the nation at the start of Pac-12 play. But after the Arizona series, only two relievers who have pitched a significant amount of innings own an ERA that is lower than 4.00 — Bryant Salgado, who has not surrendered an earned run in conference play, and Will Frisch, who is carry- ing a 1.29 ERA. Often, the late-game fail- ures have come at the expense of pitchers who have been reliable, shutdown relievers throughout their careers. “I’d say the bullpen, we’ve had our ups and downs,” closer Jake Mulholland said. “I think that there started to be a few guys who have be- come really confident in their roles. I think that certain guys know when they’re going to pitch and when they’re not. But I don’t think there’s a guy in the bullpen who isn’t going to go out there and fight and compete when you give him the ball.” Canham and pitching coach Rich Dorman have pin-pointed a few reasons for the recent struggles. Part of that, they believe, comes from pitchers overthrowing because they want so badly to succeed in a big moment. See Beavs / A7