A6 The BulleTin • Tuesday, June 22, 2021 ON THE AIR SCOREBOARD TUESDAY BASEBALL MLB, Cincinnati Reds at Minnesota Twins College World Series, Game 7: Texas vs Tennessee College World Series, Game 8: Miss. St. vs Virginia MLB, Regional Coverage MLB, Colorado Rockies at Seattle Mariners BASKETBALL NBA, Conference Final: L.A. Clippers at Phoenix Suns HOCKEY NHL, Montreal Canadiens at Vegas Golden Knights SOCCER UEFA Euro Championship, Czech Republic vs England UEFA Euro Championship, Croatia vs Scotland Time 10 a.m. 11 a.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. TV MLB ESPNU ESPN2 MLB ROOT 6 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. NBCSN 11:30 a.m. ESPN 11:30 a.m. ESPN2 WEDNESDAY BASEBALL MLB, Regional Coverage MLB, Regional Coverage MLB, Colorado Rockies at Seattle Mariners MLB, Regional Coverage College World Series, Game 9: Stanford vs Vanderbilt MLB, Los Angeles Dodgers at San Diego Padres BASKETBALL NBA, Atlanta Hawks at Milwaukee Bucks EQUESTRIAN Horse Racing, America’s Day at the Races GOLF Euro PGA Tour, BMW International Open, First Round HOCKEY NHL, Tampa Bay Lightning at New York Islanders SOCCER UEFA Euro Championship, Slovakia vs Spain UEFA Euro Championship, Sweden vs Poland UEFA Euro Championship, Portugal vs France UEFA Euro Championship, Germany vs Hungary Copa America, Ecuador vs Peru Copa America, Brazil vs Colombia MLS, Portland Timbers at Houston Dynamo Time 10 a.m. 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m. TV MLB MLB ROOT MLB ESPN ESPN 5:30 p.m. TNT 3 p.m. 3:30 a.m. 5 p.m. FS2 GOLF NBCSN 8:30 a.m. ESPN 8:30 a.m. ESPN2 11:30 a.m. ESPN 11:30 a.m. ESPN2 2 p.m. FS1 5 p.m. FS1 5:30 p.m. ROOT Listings are the most accurate available. SPORTS BRIEFING ON DECK Prep sports Tuesday, June 22 Boys basketball: Mountain View at south eugene, 6 p.m.; la Pine at sisters, 7 p.m. Thursday, June 24 Boys basketball: Mcnary at Mountain View, 6:30 p.m.; la Pine at Bend, 5:30 p.m. Friday, June 25 Boys basketball: Mcnary at Bend, 2 p.m. Wrestling: Class 6a state meet at newberg, TBd. Saturday, June 26 Boys basketball: south salem at summit, noon. Wrestling: Class 3a state meet at Redmond, TBd; Class 2a/1a state meet at Central linn, TBd. Swimming: Bend, Mountain View at Bend City Meet 4, Juniper swim & Fitness Center, TBd. BASKETBALL NBA Playoffs CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Tuesday’s Games l.a. Clippers at Phoenix, 6 p.m., Phoenix leads series 1-0 Wednesday’s Game atlanta at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m. Thursday’s Game Phoenix at l.a. Clippers, 6 p.m. Friday’s Game atlanta at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m. WNBA Glance EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Connecticut 8 5 .615 new york 7 6 .538 Chicago 7 7 .500 Washington 6 6 .500 atlanta 5 7 .417 indiana 1 14 .067 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct seattle 12 2 .857 las Vegas 10 3 .769 Phoenix 6 7 .462 dallas 6 7 .462 Minnesota 5 7 .417 los angeles 5 7 .417 Tuesday’s Games Chicago at new york, 4 p.m. dallas at Connecticut, 4 p.m. Washington at seattle, 7 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Minnesota at atlanta, 4 p.m. Thursday’s Games Chicago at new york, 4 p.m. dallas at indiana, 4 p.m. Washington at los angeles, 7:30 p.m. MLB High court sides with ex-athletes in NCAA compen- sation case — The Supreme Court decided unanimously Monday that the NCAA can’t enforce rules limiting educa- tion-related benefits — like computers and paid internships — that colleges offer to student athletes. The case doesn’t decide whether students can be paid salaries. Instead, the ruling will help determine whether schools decide to offer athletes tens of thousands of dollars in those benefits for things including tu- toring, study abroad programs and graduate scholarships. The high court agreed with a group of former college athletes that NCAA limits on the education-related benefits that colleges can offer athletes who play Division I basketball and football are unenforceable. Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the court that the NCAA sought “immunity from the normal operation of the antitrust laws,” which the court declined to grant. Under current NCAA rules, students cannot be paid, and the scholar- ship money colleges can offer is capped at the cost of attending the school. The NCAA had defended its rules as necessary to preserve the amateur nature of college sports. BASEBALL Hot-hitting Stanford sends Arizona packing — Brock Jones homered, doubled and drove in five runs to lead one of Stanford’s most productive offensive performances of the season in a 14-5 victory over Arizona in a College World Se- ries elimination game Monday. The Cardinal got their bats cranked up again after losing 10-4 to North Carolina State Saturday. They also got payback for the 20-2 beatdown they took from their Pac-12 rival May 8. Stanford led 10-0 in the fourth inning and, after Arizona cut the lead in half, tacked on four more runs in the seventh to assure itself of extending its first CWS appearance since 2008 at least two more days. The Cardinal (39-16) entered the tournament averaging 6.7 runs per game and have upped their scoring rate to 9.6 over the last eight games, including double-digit runs in four of them. Their batting average has gone from .276 in the regular season to .326 in tournament games. BASKETBALL Oregon men’s basketball alumni team to play in TBT — The Oregon alumni team Always Us will open its time in The Basketball Tournament (TBT), the $1 million, winner- take-all summer basketball event, in the Illinois regional. The 11-member Ducks squad is the No. 4 seed and will face the No. 13 seed Peoria All-Stars at the Peoria Civic Center on July 25 at noon. If Always Us advances to the second round it will face the winner of Autism Army and SCD Hoops on July 26 at 11 a.m. TV broadcast information will be announced soon. The third and final games of the Illinois regional will take place on July 28. The other top teams in the region are No. 1 seed Golden Eagles (Marquette alumni), No. 2 seed House of ‘Paign (Illinois alumni) and No. 3 seed Boeheim’s Army (Syra- cuse alumni). Two teams will advance from each of TBT’s four regionals to compete in championship weekend in Dayton, Ohio at UD Arena with quarterfinals on July 31. Harden commits to U.S. Olympic men’s team for Tokyo — USA Basketball’s Olympic men’s roster is getting closer to filled, with now as many as eight spots on the 12-person team claimed. Brooklyn’s James Harden has told the national team that is committed to playing U.S. men’s national team next month at the Tokyo Games, said a person familiar with the de- cision. Miami’s Bam Adebayo has also informed USA Basket- ball of his intention to play for the team at the Tokyo Games. Adebayo’s decision was first reported by ESPN, and he con- firmed it Monday to The Associated Press. The eight commit- ments, for now, all either confirmed by people with knowledge or by the player publicly: Adebayo, Harden, Brooklyn’s Kevin Durant, Golden State’s Draymond Green, Washington’s Brad- ley Beal, Boston’s Jayson Tatum, Phoenix’s Devin Booker and Portland’s Damian Lillard. —Bulletin wire reports MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are: 1 7 GB — 1½ 5½ 5½ 6 6 BASEBALL COLLEGE SPORTS Oregon Lottery results GB — 1 1½ 1½ 2½ 8 8 21 25 46 The estimated jackpot is now $4.4 million. As listed at OregonLottery.org and individual lottery websites Boston Tampa Bay new york Toronto Baltimore Chicago Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota detroit houston Oakland seattle los angeles Texas AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct 43 29 .597 43 30 .589 38 33 .535 35 35 .500 23 48 .324 Central Division W L Pct 43 29 .597 39 30 .565 32 38 .457 30 41 .423 30 42 .417 West Division W L Pct 43 28 .606 44 29 .603 38 36 .514 36 36 .500 25 46 .352 GB — ½ 4½ 7 19½ GB — 2½ 10 12½ 13 GB — — 6½ 7½ 18 NATIONAL LEAGE East Division W L Pct GB new york 37 29 .561 — Phila. 34 35 .493 4½ Washington 33 36 .478 5½ atlanta 33 37 .471 6 Miami 31 40 .437 8½ Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 40 32 .556 — Milwaukee 40 32 .556 — st. louis 36 36 .500 4 Cincinnati 35 35 .500 4 Pittsburgh 25 45 .357 14 West Division W L Pct GB san Francisco 46 26 .639 — los angeles 44 27 .620 1½ san diego 42 32 .568 5 Colorado 30 43 .411 16½ arizona 20 53 .274 26½ AMERICAN LEAGUE Monday’s Games houston at Baltimore, late. Cleveland at Chicago Cubs, late Oakland at Texas, late Cincinnati at Minnesota, late Tuesday’s Games Cincinnati (Miley 6-4) at Minnesota (Ober 0-0), 10:10 a.m. Chicago White sox (Giolito 5-5) at Pittsburgh (ander- son 3-7), 4:05 p.m. houston (Greinke 7-2) at Baltimore (lópez 2-8), 4:05 p.m. Kansas City (singer 3-5) at n.y. yankees (Cole 8-3), 4:05 p.m. Boston (Rodríguez 5-4) at Tampa Bay (Kittredge 5-1), 4:10 p.m. st. louis (Oviedo 0-2) at detroit (skubal 4-7), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (stripling 2-4) at Miami (alcantara 4-6), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland (Morgan 0-1) at Chicago Cubs (hendricks 9-4), 5:05 p.m. Oakland (irvin 4-7) at Texas (lyles 2-5), 5:05 p.m. san Francisco (desclafani 7-2) at l.a. angels (heaney 4-4), 6:38 p.m. Colorado (Freeland 0-2) at seattle (Flexen 6-3), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Chicago White sox at Pittsburgh, 9:35 a.m. st. louis at detroit, 10:10 a.m. san Francisco at l.a. angels, 1:07 p.m. Colorado at seattle, 1:10 p.m. houston at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. Kansas City at n.y. yankees, 4:05 p.m. Boston at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Toronto at Miami, 4:10 p.m. Oakland at Texas, 5:05 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE Monday’s Games n.y. Mets 4, atlanta 2, 7 innings, 1st game Cleveland at Chicago Cubs, late atlanta at n.y. Mets, late, 2nd game Cincinnati at Minnesota, late Milwaukee at arizona, late l.a. dodgers at san diego, late Tuesday’s Games Cincinnati (Miley 6-4) at Minnesota (Ober 0-0), 10:10 a.m. Chicago White sox (Giolito 5-5) at Pittsburgh (ander- son 3-7), 4:05 p.m. Washington (scherzer 5-4) at Phila. (Wheeler 5-3), 4:05 p.m. atlanta (Morton 6-3) at n.y. Mets (stroman 6-5), 4:10 p.m. st. louis (Oviedo 0-2) at detroit (skubal 4-7), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (stripling 2-4) at Miami (alcantara 4-6), 4:10 p.m. Cleveland (Morgan 0-1) at Chicago Cubs (hendricks 9-4), 5:05 p.m. san Francisco (desclafani 7-2) at l.a. angels (heaney 4-4), 6:38 p.m. Milwaukee (Peralta 6-2) at arizona (Gallen 1-2), 6:40 p.m. Colorado (Freeland 0-2) at seattle (Flexen 6-3), 7:10 p.m. l.a. dodgers (Kershaw 8-6) at san diego (snell 2-3), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Chicago White sox at Pittsburgh, 9:35 a.m. Washington at Phila., 10:05 a.m. st. louis at detroit, 10:10 a.m. Milwaukee at arizona, 12:40 p.m. san Francisco at l.a. angels, 1:07 p.m. Colorado at seattle, 1:10 p.m. atlanta at n.y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. Toronto at Miami, 4:10 p.m. l.a. dodgers at san diego, 7:10 p.m. NWSL NCAA College World Series At TD Ameritrade Park, Omaha, Neb. (Double Elimination; x-if necessary) Monday’s Games Game 5 — no. 9 stanford 14, no. 5 arizona 5, arizona eliminated Game 6 — n.C. state 1, no. 4 Vanderbilt 0 Tuesday’s Games Game 7 — no. 3 Tennessee vs. Texas 1, 11 a.m. Game 8 — Virginia vs. no. 7 Mississippi st., 4 p.m. Wednesday’s Game Game 9 — stanford vs. no. 4 Vanderbilt, 4 p.m. Thursday’s Game Game 10 — Game 7 winner vs. Game 8 loser, 4 p.m. HOCKEY NHL Playoffs CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7, x-if necessary) Monday’s Game Tampa Bay 6, n.y. islanders 0, Tampa Bay leads series 3-2 Tuesday’s Game Montreal at Vegas, 6 p.m., series tied 2-2 Wednesday’s Game Tampa Bay at n.y. islanders, 5 p.m. Thursday’s Game Vegas at Montreal, 5 p.m. SOCCER MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF new england 6 1 2 20 14 Orlando City 4 1 3 15 11 Phila. 4 2 3 15 11 Columbus 4 2 2 14 9 new york 4 4 0 12 12 d.C. united 4 5 0 12 9 ny City FC 3 3 2 11 15 CF Montréal 3 3 2 11 10 atlanta 2 1 5 11 11 nashville 2 1 5 11 9 inter Miami CF 2 5 2 8 8 Toronto FC 1 5 2 5 10 Chicago 1 6 1 4 4 Cincinnati 1 5 1 4 6 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF seattle 6 0 3 21 16 sporting KC 5 3 2 17 17 Colorado 5 2 1 16 14 la Galaxy 5 3 0 15 12 Portland 4 4 0 12 11 Real sl 3 1 3 12 12 houston 3 3 3 12 12 san Jose 3 5 1 10 11 la FC 2 3 3 9 9 austin FC 2 4 3 9 6 Minnesota united 2 4 2 8 7 Vancouver 2 5 1 7 7 FC dallas 1 3 4 7 9 nOTe: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Tuesday’s Game san Jose at Orlando City, 4:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games new york at new england, 4 p.m. Columbus at Phila., 4:30 p.m. atlanta at ny City FC, 4:30 p.m. austin FC at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Cincinnati at Chicago, 5 p.m. d.C. united at CF Montréal, 5 p.m. Colorado at sporting KC, 5:30 p.m. Portland at houston, 5:30 p.m. Toronto FC at nashville, 5:30 p.m. Real sl at seattle, 7 p.m. FC dallas at la FC, 7:30 p.m. la Galaxy at Vancouver, 7:30 p.m. GA 9 6 7 6 10 11 10 9 9 8 14 15 13 17 GA 4 13 8 13 12 8 13 12 10 9 12 12 12 Lawrence Continued from A5 This is the second Olympic trials for Lawrence, who grew up in Reno, Nevada, and moved to Bend in 2013. She reached the finals and finished eighth in the 2016 Olympic trials at Hay- ward. Lawrence raced in the second of two heats on Sunday. She said she watched the first heat on television in the call room be- low the new stadium. “The first heat was pretty bunched up and there was some jostling and someone fell,” Law- rence said. “I think Emma Co- burn saw that and she was like, alright, I’m not messing around. So she just took it out fast.” Knowing she had three days before racing again, Lawrence made the decision to try to stay with Coburn and Falland and punch her ticket to the finals with a top-five finish in the heat. She ran in third position for most of the race and fin- ished that way, with a sizable Calkins Continued from A5 “Couldn’t be more excited about this group going for- ward,” Mariners manager Scott Servais said. “We’re playing on top of our game right now. It’s really fun to watch the young players’ confidence grow, and what they can do and the ex- citement they bring. Hopefully our fans are enjoying it.” They’re certainly enjoying the results. The way the results are achieved might have aged each fan 10 years, but they’re enjoying them. In games de- cided by two runs or less this season, the Mariners are 21- 15. In games decided by one run, the Mariners are 16-6. That’s how they’ve managed to be two games over .500 despite having allowed 46 more runs than they’ve scored. Doesn’t hurt that the bull- pen has been scorching. Just Christopher Pietsch/The Register-Guard Bend’s Mel Lawrence (on top of the barrier) competes in the women’s steeplechase on Sunday night of the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field in Eugene. gap behind her to the fourth runner. “The last two laps I was look- ing at the jumbotron and I could see I had a good amount of space, so I kind of backed off, especially on the last lap,” Law- rence said. once — in the ninth Satur- day against the Rays — have the M’s given up a run in the eighth or ninth inning in any of their past seven wins. Paul Sewald has gone nine straight appearances without giving up a run. Drew Steckenrider hasn’t allowed a run in 12 of his past 13 appearances, in- cluding his last seven. The two blanked the Rays in the eighth and ninth, respectively, on Sunday, with Sewald fanning two and Steckenrider striking out the side. Doesn’t hurt that the young talent is starting to prosper. Shortstop J.P. Crawford, 26, leads the team in Wins Above Replacement (2.3) and has watched his slugging percent- age jump from .330 at the start of the month to .404 currently. After struggling mightily in his first two starts, 24-year-old pitcher Logan Gilbert has gone at least five innings in his past four starts, at least six innings in two of his past four starts, and has watched his team win in each of his past five appear- ances. Doesn’t hurt that their ace seemed to rediscover his form Sunday, either. Even before the forearm strain that sidelined him for all of May, Marco Gonzales had been struggling for the M’s. He came into Sun- day’s game with an ERA of 5.44, but ended up throwing 6 1/3 innings vs. the Rays while giving up just two runs. His striking out Austin Meadows to end the sixth with two on might have been the play of the game before Long’s 10th-inning heroics. If he keeps churning out perfor- mances like that, this team has a chance come September. “I felt like I finally had the fastball command that I’ve been after,” Gonzales said. “Be- sides a couple pitches, I really felt confident in a lot of at-bats against these guys.” W L T Pts GF Orlando 3 0 3 12 8 Portland 4 2 0 12 12 Washington 2 1 3 9 6 Gotham FC 2 1 2 8 3 Chicago 2 2 2 8 5 north Carolina 2 2 1 7 8 houston 2 3 1 7 6 louisville 2 2 1 7 3 Reign FC 1 3 1 4 3 Kansas City 0 4 2 2 2 nOTe: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Tuesday’s Game Chicago at Reign FC, 7 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Orlando at Kansas City, 11 a.m. north Carolina at louisville, 4:30 p.m. GA 5 4 6 2 8 4 7 8 5 7 DEALS Monday’s Transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball American League BalTiMORe ORiOles — Placed RhP Cesar Valdez on the 10-day il. Recalled RhP Travis lakins, sr. from norfolk (Triple-a east). Kansas CiTy ROyals — Recalled 1B Ryan O’hearn from Omaha (Triple-a east). Placed ss adalberto Mondesi on the 10-day il. lOs anGeles anGels — Optioned RhP Jaime Barria to salt lake (Triple-a West). Optioned RhP Chris Rodriguez to Rocket City (double-a south). Reinstated lhP Jose Quintana from the 10-day il. neW yORK yanKees — Optioned 1B Chris Gittens to scranton/Wilkes-Barre (Triple-a east). OaKland aThleTiCs — selected the contract of RhP domingo acevedo from las Vegas (Triple-a West). Op- tioned lhP Jesus luzardo to las Vegas. TaMPa Bay Rays — Optioned RhP drew Rasmussen to durham (Triple-a east). TeXas RanGeRs — Recalled 3B andy ibanez from Round Rock (Triple-a West). Optioned lF Jason Martin to Round Rock. TOROnTO Blue Jays — Optioned RhP Jeremy Beasley to Buffalo (Triple-a east). National League aRiZOna diaMOndBaCKs — Recalled RhP humberto Castellanos from Reno (Triple-a West). Placed RhP Matt Peacock on the bereavement list. aTlanTa BRaVes — Optioned RhP Jacob Webb to Gwinnett (Triple-a east). Recalled lhP Kyle Muller from Gwinnett. ChiCaGO CuBs — Reinstated RhP adbert alzolay from the 10-day il. Optioned lhP Kyle Ryan to iowa (Triple-a east). lOs anGeles dOdGeRs — Recalled RF Zac Reks from Oklahoma City (Triple-a West). Optioned RhP edwin uceta to Oklahoma City. MilWauKee BReWeRs — selected the contract of RhP Jake Cousins from nashville (Triple-a east). designated RhP Zack Godley for assignment. neW yORK MeTs — Reinstated 2B Jeff Mcneill from the 10-day il. Placed RhP Robert Gsellman on the 10-day il, retroactive to June 20. Recalled lhP stephen Tarpley from syracuse (Triple-a east). Placed RhP Jeurys Familia on the 10-day il. Recalled RhP yennsy diaz from syracuse. san FRanCisCO GianTs — Reinstated lF alex dicker- son and lF darin Ruf from the 10-day il. Optioned 3B Jason Vosler and lF laMonte Wade, Jr. to sacramento (Triple-a West). BASKETBALL NBA G League G leaGue iGniTe — signed G dyson daniels. Womens’s National Basketball Association WashinGTOn MysTiCs — signed C Megan Gustafson. FOOTBALL National Football League aRiZOna CaRdinals — Waived WR Krishawn hogan. las VeGas RaideRs — signed s Trevon Moehrig to a four-year contract. neW enGland PaTRiOTs — signed WR devin Ross. neW yORK GianTs — announced eli Manning has ac- cepted a role working with business operations and fan engagement initiatives. The race marked her first time competing at the new Hayward Field, which she called “amazing.” Though she admitted she did not really take it all in because she was so fo- cused on advancing to Thurs- day’s finals. “Once I got out there, I felt like I hardly looked up,” Law- rence said. In addition to her teammates on Littlewing, Lawrence has her husband and sister at Hayward to cheer her on. She said she enjoyed being able to race in front of a crowd again, even at limited capacity due to the pandemic. “We haven’t had that at all, and Eugene is such a track town,” Lawrence said. “A lot of people in the stands are more family and coaches, but it was really cool.” The women’s steeplechase final is scheduled for 8:47 p.m. Thursday and will air live on NBC Sports Northwest. e Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com It seems the whole team is starting to feel confident. Win- ning breeds confidence in gen- eral, but winning these types of games will grow that confi- dence exponentially. Still, it’s important to keep perspective. Despite the M’s’ 38-36 record, fangraphs.com gives them just a 1.1% chance of making the playoffs. The site likely sees that minus-46 run differential and figures the close ones will start going their opponents’ way. Doesn’t mean this isn’t fun, though. Sunday, Long was asked at what point he thought people would start taking notice of what the Mariners are doing despite many of the injuries they’ve endured. Answered Shed: “If they ha- ven’t yet, then they better now.” Take notice, folks. These wins might not keep coming, but they’re coming in droves right now.