INSIDE: COMICS, OPINIONS & CLASSIFIEDS B S PORTS THE BULLETIN • SaTUrday, JUNE 12, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports LOCAL GOLF Bend golfer wins PNGA tournament Walla Walla, WASH. — Bend’s Rosie Cook won the 34th Pacific North- west Golf Association Se- nior Women’s Amateur, held Tuesday through Thursday at Wine Valley Golf Club. The tournament was a 54-hole stroke-play com- petition. In very windy condi- tions, Cook shot a 2-over- par 74 in Thursday’s final round, which included shooting 2-under-par on the back nine. She cruised to a fairly easy win, with second-place finisher Lisa Smego, of Oro Valley, Ar- izona, coming in at nine shots back. Cook is a mainstay in OGA championships, and has been selected several times to represent Ore- gon in the PNGA Lamey Cup and the former USGA Women’s State Team event. This is her first PNGA title. “My first thought is to play my own game,” Cook said after her round. “I don’t think about win- ning. I try to think about enjoying the day, and enjoying the round. I did struggle on the front nine, so I just tried to fo- cus on my putting, which is a stronger part of my game. So, I just tried to hit greens, make it close, and go from there. I was a little nervous, so it was great to get out there and meet other players; it’s good to know them, and learn from them.” Redmond’s Michael Jackson finished tied for second in the 56th PNGA Senior Men’s Amateur, also a a three-day, 54- hole stroke-play com- petition at Wine Valley. PNGA Hall of Famer Tom Brandes, of Bellevue, Wash., won the tourna- ment, shooting all three rounds under par (71-69- 70), the only player in the field to do so. He finished six shots clear of sec- ond-place Jackson and Erik Hanson, of Kirkland, Wash. — Bulletin staff report NBA ‘Melo a finalist for social justice award Portland Trail Blazers star Carmelo Anthony is among the five finalists for the inaugural Kareem Ab- dul-Jabbar Social Justice Champion award, the NBA announced Friday. The award, named after NBA Hall of Famer Kareen Abdul-Jabbar, is given to the player who best em- bodies his message of civil rights, Black empower- ment and racial equality. Anthony is nominated for the award alongside Sacramento Kings’ Har- rison Barnes, Milwaukee Bucks’ Jrue Holiday, Phila- delphia 76ers’ Tobias Harris and Golden State Warriors’ Juan Toscano-Anderson. The five finalists were cut down from an original list of 30 nominees — one from each NBA team. They’re in consideration for a $100,000 award that the league will donate to a social-justice-focused organization of the win- ner’s choosing. The four re- maining finalists will each receive $25,000 donations. Anthony’s efforts con- tributing to social justice are through the Social Change Fund he and Phoenix Suns guard Chris Paul and former NBA Dwyane Wade created in July 2020. The winner of the award will be announced before Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals on TNT. — The Oregonian PREP BOYS BASKETBALL Putting the Cowboys on the map Kevin Sanchez, senior class enjoying historic 2-year run for Crook County BY BRIAN RATHBONE • The Bulletin R EDMOND — Kevin Sanchez recalls telling his older brother two years ago that by his junior year, Crook County would be playing in the Class 5A state basketball tournament. The elder Sanchez brother certainly had his doubts. Crook County was known for wrestling, Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin not basketball. Crook County’s Kevin Sanchez (23) drives past Redmond’s Skyler Jones (4) to score Thursday night in Redmond. “He said we were going to finish fourth or fifth place in the confer- ence,” Sanchez recalled. But the Cowboys made the leap from a middling Class 5A team in the 2018-19 season into one of the classi- fication’s top squads in one year. Crook County won the Intermoun- tain Conference and reached its first ever state tournament, and Sanchez was named the Most Valuable Player of the IMC. The team advanced to the state fourth-place game in March 2020 before the remainder of the tournament was canceled due to COVID-19. “We knew that if we kept working and kept getting better then something good would happen. And it’s happened. I’ve always known deep down that we were going to do something special.” — Cayden Lowenbach, Crook County senior boys basketball player Now a senior, Sanchez and the Cowboys are looking toward a possi- ble undefeated regular season heading into the final week. “This is all crazy,” Sanchez said. The two-year run the Cowboys are on has not come as a surprise to those within the program. “I knew what I was stepping into last year and how good we could be,” said second-year Crook County coach Jason Mumm. “And I knew we would be just as good if not better this year.” Even coming off a 1-7 IMC campaign in 2018-19, there was a belief that the program could dramatically improve. “We knew that if we kept working and kept getting better then some- thing good would happen,” said se- nior double-double machine Cayden Lowenbach. “And it’s happened. I’ve always known deep down that we were going to do something special.” Whether from unwavering confi- dence or teenage naivety, or perhaps a combination of both, the seed that Crook County could become a great team on the hardwood was planted before this year’s senior class even stepped foot in the hallways of Crook County High. See Cowboys / B2 TENNIS | FRENCH OPEN Djokovic hands Nadal 3rd loss in 108 matches at clay-court major; will face Tsitsipas in final BY SAMUEL PETREQUIN Associated Press PARIS — Sprinting, sliding and stretching, anticipating each other’s moves for four sets and more than four hours, No- vak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal produced a masterpiece in the French Open semifinals. Djokovic, as it happens, is one of only two men in ten- nis history who knows what it takes to beat Nadal at Roland Garros. And now Djokovic has done it twice — this time ending Nadal’s bid for a 14th championship there and re- cord-breaking 21st Grand Slam title overall by coming back to win their 58th career matchup 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (4), 6-2 on Friday night. “Just one of these nights and matches that you will re- member forever,” said the top- seeded Djokovic, who trailed 2-0 in the closing set before getting in a big-time groove and reeling off the last half- dozen games to reach his sixth final at the clay-court major tournament. See French Open / B2 Christophe Ena/AP Novak Djokovic stretches to return the ball to Rafael Nadal during their semifinal match of the French Open on Friday in Paris. MIXED MARTIAL ARTS Adesanya puts UFC belt on the line in rematch with Vettori BY JOHN MARSHALL Associated Press GLENDALE, Ariz. — Mar- vin Vettori walked to the cen- ter of the octagon expecting to have his arm raised. It wasn’t. Israel Adesanya won the fight in a split decision, yet wasn’t satisfied. The fight was far closer than he expected. The two middleweights had since been hoping for a re- match and will get it Saturday night at UFC 263, back in the desert three years later. This time, Adesanya’s cham- pionship belt will be on the line. “I’m here to get revenge from that first fight, whatever it was, and become the first Italian UFC champion,” Vettori said during a heated news con- ference this week. Adesanya (20-1) and Vettori (17-4-1) won’t be the only re- match with a title on the line at Gila River Arena. Flyweight champion Deiveson Figueiredo will put L.E. Baskow/Las Vegas Review-Journal via AP, file UFC middleweight champion Israel Adesanya of Nigeria, kicks chal- lenger Yoel Romero of Cuba during UFC 248 in Las Vegas in 2020. his belt on the line against No. 1 contender Brandon Moreno in a rematch of a draw at UFC 256 in December. The main card also will include No. 3 welterweight Leon Edwards against fan favorite Nate Diaz, welterweights Demian Maia against Belal Muhammad, and light heavyweights Paul Craig and Jamahal Hill. Adesanya and Vettori last fought in 2018 in a non-title fight in Glendale. Adesanya was considered an up-and- comer in the division but had his hands full with the heavy- handed Vettori. Known as a puncher, Vettori surprised Adesanya with his wrestling adeptness, muscling him around the mat when he took the Nigerian freestyle fighter down. Adesanya did most of his work, as he usually does, with agility, kicks and strikes to win the split decision. Adesanya won the interim middleweight title with a unanimous decision over Kel- vin Gastelum and took the title unification bout with a sec- ond-round knockout of Robert Whittaker in late 2019. Now Adesanya gets another shot at Vettori. “This time we won’t need the judges,” Adesanya said in front of a rowdy crowd at Thursday’s news conference. The second title fight figures to be just as testy. Figueiredo (20-1-1) and Moreno (18-5-2) have plenty of animosity between them, exac- erbated by a draw at UFC 256 in Las Vegas that left neither fighter feeling satisfied. The two flyweights have traded barbs leading into Sat- urday’s co-main event. “He talks a lot and I’m go- ing to shut him up by knock- ing him out in the first round,” Figueiredo said. Diaz (21-12) had plenty of support, particularly from Mexican-American fans, at the news conference, but Edwards is the favorite among odds- makers. Edwards (18-3-0) has won eight straight matches since losing by decision to current champion Kamaru Usman and is looking to build his resume against Diaz to hopefully earn a shot at the title. “Nate Diaz has this repu- tation and all of the hype and that’s actually good for me,” he said. “Everybody will be watch- ing and when I do what I do, people are going to want me to be the one (to get a title shot).”