FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT B3 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • FrIday, JUNE 18, 2021 COLLEGE SPORTS OSU projects a budget deficit CORVALLIS — The pandemic is slowly loos- ening its grip on Oregon State athletics, but an- other year that includes some belt-tightening is ahead. Athletic director Scott Barnes said the school ends its 2021 budget year on June 30 with a defi- cit of about $33 million, down from a projected $35 million. The picture brightened in recent months with improved conference revenue, OSU baseball was allowed to sell some tickets for home games, and a few unex- pected cost reductions. A new budget year be- gins July 1, with a far bet- ter outlook on revenue, driven by football. Barnes is forecasting a deficit of $15-17 million for the up- coming year, but that is assuming Reser Stadium at 50% capacity. It is likely, based on what Gov. Kate Brown has said in recent weeks, that OSU will be able to sell every seat for home games this season. Next year’s budget also includes full salaries for athletic department employees and coaches. Last year, OSU cut 23 po- sitions from the depart- ment, with remaining employees taking a salary reduction. Coaches gave up their contract bonuses last year. Barnes does not ex- pect to have a deficit from the 2023 budget that be- gins July of 2022. Oregon State’s most prominent financial item for the upcoming school year is the start of Reser Stadium’s west side ren- ovation. Barnes said the project is on track to be- gin teardown when the final 2021 home game is completed. bendbulletin.com/sports PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL Cougars’ defense shows up Mountain View holds off Summit to end a short, packed season BY BRIAN RATHBONE • The Bulletin S everal weeks ago, Mountain View coach Megan Dickerson was hoping that her squad would figure out what kind of defensive team it wanted to be down the final stretch of the season. In the final half of the final game of the short- ened girls basketball season played in late spring, the Cougars put on a defensive clinic Wednesday night to close their season with a 42-38 win at cross-town rival Summit. INSIDE “I felt like we played it really smart,” Dickerson said. “I thought • High school it went beyond the physical abil- scores and results in ity to fly around, but also using our Scoreboard, heads and playing smart. We boxed B4 out and rebounded, which was one of our weaknesses, and we did well limiting them to one shot at most possessions.” Trailing 20-19 at halftime, the Cougars held the Storm to just two points in the entire third quarter. “It started on defense,” said Mountain View’s Julia Towle, who scored a game-high 17 points. “Com- municating brought a lot of energy, which translated into offense. I think we were mentally in this game. We really wanted this win.” Towle, coming off an injured ankle, carried the Cougars’ offense in the first half, as the 6-foot senior scored 11 of their 19 points in the half. See Cougars / B4 Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin Mountain View’s Julia Towle (22) shoots around Summit’s Healy Bledsoe (15) during the third quarter Wednesday night at Summit High School. — The Oregonian TENNIS Osaka, Nadal not playing Wimbledon Rafael Nadal and Naomi Osaka are sitting out Wimbledon, leaving the oldest Grand Slam tennis tournament with- out two of the sport’s biggest stars as it returns after being canceled last year because of the coro- navirus pandemic. Nadal, a two-time champion at the All En- gland Club, announced via a series of social media posts Thursday that he would also miss the To- kyo Olympics to rest and recover “after listening to my body.” Osaka’s agent, Stuart Duguid, said Thursday in an email that the four- time Grand Slam cham- pion does plan to head to the Summer Games after skipping Wimbledon. “She is taking some personal time with friends and family,” Duguid wrote. “She will be ready for the Olympics.” Last month, Osaka was fined $15,000 when she didn’t speak to reporters after her first-round vic- tory at the French Open. The next day, Osaka pulled out of the tourna- ment entirely, saying she experiences “huge waves of anxiety” before meet- ing with the media and revealing she has “suffered long bouts of depression.” In a statement at the time, she said she would “take some time away from the court now, but when the time is right I really want to work with the Tour to discuss ways we can make things bet- ter for the players, press and fans.” — Associated Press GOLF | U.S. OPEN TRACK AND FIELD Chances fade for banned runner to race at Olympic trials BY EDDIE PELLS AND PAT GRAHAM AP Sports Writers Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Matthew Wolff plays a shot from a bunker on the 11th hole during the first round of the U.S. Open on Thursday at Torrey Pines in San Diego. For Matthew Wolff, being happy is the ultimate goal BY TIM DAHLBERG AP Sports Columnist SAN DIEGO — The open- ing tee shot was frightening, and the three straight three- putts maddening. Matthew Wolff had no idea how things would play out Thursday in a roller coaster of a round at Torrey Pines, but he was pretty sure of one thing. He was going to finish with a smile on his face. Because 18 holes into the U.S. Open, Wolff was already feeling like a win- ner. “No matter what happened today — the score that I shot — I just have been having fun,” the former Oklahoma State star said, pausing before add- ing: “And I haven’t had fun out here in quite a while.” So little fun that Wolff was questioning his career before it even had a chance to really take off. So little fun — includ- ing a disqualification at the Masters — that he walked away from golf for two months to try and get his head together. Wolff wants to win the Open, yes, just like any player in the field. But what he wants most is to simply be happy — a word he repeated over and over again as he spoke candidly about the pressures of being on the big stage at the age of 22. Playing golf for a living isn’t nearly as easy as it looks, even for one of the top young talents in the game. “Unless you’re actually a professional athlete or playing a sport, you just don’t know the emotions that come along with it,” he said. “It’s just a lot. And it’s really hard.” See Golf / B5 EUGENE — The odds of banned runner Shelby Hou- lihan running at the U.S. Olympic trials diminished sharply late Thursday when the country’s Olympic com- mittee said it would follow all antidoping rules and USA Track and Field received long- awaited official notice of her suspension. The developments capped a whirlwind day that be- gan with USATF saying it would not bar the American record-holder at 1,500 and 5,000 meters from running in Friday’s preliminary heats until she had exhausted every appeal. USATF stood by that prem- ise at the end of the day, as well, but said it was comfort- able taking Houlihan off the start lists since it had received official word from the Ath- letics Integrity Unit, which conducted the test that led to the suspension, that Houli- han had been banned for four years. “Process is important, par- ticularly when individuals’ careers and lives are at stake,” USATF CEO Max Siegel said. “The letter from the AIU, re- ceived tonight, formally noti- fying us of the consequences of the decision is welcomed and, in line with our pro- cesses, we will act accordingly.” Earlier this week, the Swiss- based Court of Arbitration for Sport upheld Houlihan’s Tim Ireland/AP file Shelby Houlihan, right, reacts after finishing a women’s 5,000-meter heat during the World Athletics Championships in London in 2017. The odds of the banned runner participating in the U.S. Olympic tri- als in Eugene diminished Thursday after there had been some dis- cussion about her ability to race while appeals are pending. four-year ban for testing pos- itive for trace amounts of the performance enhancer nan- drolone. She blamed her positive test on a pork burrito she ate 10 hours before a test in De- cember. Contaminated meats have led to positive tests in other cases, many of which have been dismissed. But Houlihan did not receive any leniency, and her ban would keep her out of the upcom- ing Olympics and the 2024 Games. There remains a sliver of hope for Houlihan, but it is very slim. The 28-year-old would have to appeal to and receive fast-track relief from Switzerland’s highest federal court to conceivably be put back in the races. Her representatives re- mained quiet about their plans. But victories in sports cases at the Swiss tribunal are ex- tremely rare, and barring that sort of last-minute reprieve, Houlihan is considered sus- pended and ineligible to race under international antidop- ing rules. “The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, to- gether with USATF, can con- firm that we will adhere to the (international antidoping) code and any CAS decisions that govern athlete partici- pation in sanctioned events,” USOPC CEO Sarah Hirsh- land said late Thursday. See Track / B4