INSIDE: COMICS, OPINIONS & CLASSIFIEDS B S PORTS THE BULLETIN • SaTUrday, JUNE 19, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports LOCAL GOLF Swann, of Tokatee, wins Oregon Open SISTERS — Amateur Kennedy Swann of Toka- tee Golf Club (McKenzie Bridge) won the Oregon Open Invitational Thurs- day by two strokes over PGA professional and de- fending champion Brady Sharp of Wine Valley GC (Walla Walla, Wash.) and Mason Koch of Fairwood G&CC (Renton, Wash). Swann is the first woman to ever win the tournament, which dates back to 1905. The 54-hole Oregon Open was held Tuesday through Thursday at the Glaze Meadow course at Black Butte Ranch. Isaac Buerger, of Eagle Crest Resort, finished tied for sixth, four strokes back of Swann. Buerger led the tournament after day 2, but shot a 75 on Thurs- day, while Swan carded a 69 to take the win. In addition to the indi- vidual competition, the Oregon Open included 48 teams competing in a 36-hole best-2-of-4 net team event and pro-am four-ball. A team including PGA professional David Phay, of Whidbey Golf Club (Oak Harbor, Wash.), PGA professional David Castle- berry and amateur Matt Kline, of Harbour Pointe GC (Mukilteo, Wash.) and amateur Doug Pierce (Whidbey Golf Club) won the net team competi- tion. They fired an impres- sive 34-under par. Winning the four-ball team competition was Phay and Pierce, with a two-day total of 19-un- der par. — Bulletin staff report COLLEGE FOOTBALL Pac-12 wants auto bids on expansion ROSEMONT, Ill. — College Football Playoff expansion took another step forward Friday as the full group of com- missioners who manage the postseason system wrapped up two days of digging into a plan for a 12-team format that would revamp the na- tional championship. The first debate about what the final version of a new playoff will look like has emerged: The Pac-12 is pushing for each Power Five conference to receive an automatic berth. Expect at lot more ne- gotiating to come. Last week, the CFP un- veiled a plan to expand from four to 12 teams. Six spots would be reserved for the highest-ranked conference champions, but no league would au- tomatically qualify. The other six teams would be chosen at-large from the selection committee’s rankings. Incoming Pac-12 Commissioner George Kliavkoff, whose rep- resents the only Power Five conference to pub- licly support playoff ex- pansion, left his first CFP meeting encouraged. “The good news is ev- eryone who’s on this con- ference committee sup- ports expansion. So we’re aligned on that,” said Kliavkoff, who attended the meeting along with outgoing Pac-12 Com- missioner Larry Scott. But the Pac-12 also made clear what it wants in the early going: In a statement, Scott said: “The Pac-12 supports expansion of the CFP and believes that the Au- tonomy Five champions should annually qualify for the CFP.” — Associated Press U.S. OLYMPIC TRACK AND FIELD TRIALS Bend’s Rebecca Mehra advances to 1,500-meter semifinals BULLETIN STAFF REPORT EUGENE — Bend’s Re- becca Mehra finished fourth in her heat to advance to the semifinals of the women’s 1,500 meters at the U.S. Olym- pic Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field on Friday. Mehra will race in the semi- finals on Saturday evening. If she finishes in the top five in her semifinal or as Mehra, who runs one of the next two for the Littlewing fastest runners by Athletics team in time, she will advance Bend that is spon- to the 1,500 finals, set sored by Oiselle, fin- ished with a time of for Monday evening. 4 minutes, 13.71 sec- The top three run- onds. She finished ners in Monday’s final Mehra fourth out of 10 run- qualify for the U.S. ners in the second of three Olympic team for the Tokyo heats on Friday. Games later this summer. Twenty-four of the 28 en- tered runners in the women’s 1,500 advanced to Saturday’s semifinals. Jenny Simpson finished with the fastest time, winning her heat in 4:11.34. Nikki Hiltz was the next fastest in 4:11.42, and Shan- non Osika was third-fastest in 4:11.59. Mehra, who ran collegiately for Stanford and moved to Bend in 2018, is also entered in the 800, which is scheduled for Thursday. On Sunday evening, Bend’s Mel Lawrence, one of Meh- ra’s teammates on Littlewing, is scheduled to run in the first round of the women’s 3,000-meter steeplechase. PREP BOYS BASKETBALL Saints march to state tourney Class 1A Trinity Lutheran goes undefeated in league, now prepares for state title run BY BRIAN RATHBONE • The Bulletin F or the third straight year, Trinity Lutheran will make the trip to Baker to play in the Class 1A boys basketball state tournament next week. The Saints completed an undefeated Mountain Valley League season Thursday night with a 49-45 comeback win over Rogue Valley Adventist Academy. As they begin their march toward a state title, their coach hopes they fi- INSIDE nally put a full game together. “We haven’t practiced in a couple of weeks,” • High school said Kyle Gilbert, the Trinity Lutheran coach. scores, re- sults, and “Through that we haven’t been able to work softball 6A through stuff so it has been a little roller all-city team, coaster-ish. I was proud of the way they contin- B2 ued to battle back and continued to rally. Some good things are happening, we are just looking to put it together into one big game.” When Trinity Lutheran (7-0 MVL, 8-4 overall) takes the court Monday night against Falls City at Powder Valley High School, the Saints will hardly resemble the team that made the past two trips to the tournament. Gone is one of the state’s most prolific scorers in Mat- thew Eidler, as are previous seniors Gideon Schippers, Cash Niemeyer and Abe Clift — key pieces in the Saints’ run to the state title game in 2019. See Saints / B2 Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin Trinity Lutheran’s Scooty Gilbert (34) drives past Rogue Valley’s Alex Wiggers (40) to score during the first quarter Thursday night in Bend. GOLF Richard Bland, Russell Henley share lead in a U.S. Open that is really open BY DOUG FERGUSON AP Golf Writer SAN DIEGO — The U.S. Open prides itself on being the most open of all majors with some 9,000 players from all walks of golf having a chance to compete. Open, indeed. The weekend at Torrey Pines features major champions and major contenders, players who are unknown or unheralded, all of them still within reach of that U.S. Open trophy. Nine shots separated first from last. It starts with Richard Bland, a 48-year-old from England who finally won on the Euro- pean Tour last month in his 478th try. Bland had a 4-under 67 and walked off Torrey Pines with his name atop the leader- board in only his fourth major. His first one was 23 years ago. Russell Henley had a chance to build a two-shot lead Friday afternoon when he stood over an 18-foot birdie putt on the par-5 ninth. He missed, and then watched his 2-foot par putt spin out of the cup. That gave him a 70 to join Bland 5-under 137. They will be in the final group Saturday, with plenty of heavy hitters behind them and getting far more attention. Former British Open cham- Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Richard Bland hits from the second fairway during the second round of the U.S. Open on Friday at Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego. pion Louis Oosthuizen (71) and Matthew Wolff (68), the U.S. Open runner-up last year at Winged Foot, were one shot behind. Another shot back were two- time Masters champion Bubba Watson (67) and Jon Rahm (70), a past winner at Torrey Pines and former world No. 1. Defending champion Bryson DeChambeau and his buddy, Brooks Koepka, were at even par, only five shots behind. They were on the same score. They will not be in the same group. Also at even-par 142 was Jus- tin Thomas, who had a 68. “Most times if I’m five back going into a Saturday, I need to probably make 12, 15-plus birdies on the weekend to hang in there,” Thomas said. “But this is a U.S. Open. It’s a little bit different.” Henley doesn’t know much about Bland except that he pays a little attention to golf worldwide and recalled hearing about his British Masters win to end his long quest for a victory. “I’m sure he knows nothing about me, too,” said Henley, a three-time winner on the PGA Tour who has played 26 majors without a top 10. Bland’s victory in the British Masters made him the oldest first-time winner in European Tour history. That also was the start of a three-tournament series for the leading 10 play- ers to get into the U.S. Open. Travel restrictions from the COVID-19 pandemic elimi- nated the 36-hole qualifier in England. This is only his fourth ma- jor — twice at Royal Birkdale in 1998 and 2017, once at Beth- page Black for the U.S. Open in 2009 — and he came in on a high note. “A lot of guys have a lot more on the CV than I do,” Bland said. “But I’m here to compete and give it everything I’ve got.” Oosthuizen, coming off a runner-up finish in the PGA Championship, finished with two pars in the morning to cap off a 67 to share the first-round lead with Henley. He didn’t get any lower in the second round and shot 71, but was right in the mix. So was Wolff, a surprise only because he lost all joy playing golf after such a hot start out of Oklahoma State that he walked away from the game for two months, even missing a major at the PGA Championship. He returned to the toughest test in golf and shot 70-68, two-put- ting for eagle on the last hole. “It’s awesome that I came out here and played well, but I think more importantly, I’m just getting closer to being more comfortable and being happy and enjoying it,” Wolff said. “I feel like I’ve done a very good job of enjoying it, but I’ve still got a long way to go to keep a level head. Like I said, I’ll probably be working on the same thing that I’m working on now for the rest of my career.” Dustin Johnson and Rory McIlroy were headed the wrong direction. Johnson, who missed the cut in the Mas- ters and PGA Championship, dropped to 4 over until a late rally gave him a 73 and a spot in the weekend. He was seven behind. McIlroy had to birdie two holes down the stretch for a 73. He was six behind. The 36-hole lead at Torrey Pines in the 2008 U.S. Open was 3-under 139. See U.S. Open / B2