FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT A5 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • WEdNEsday, JUNE 23, 2021 WCL BASEBALL Elks’ Linscott is Player of the Week For the first time this season, a Bend Elk earned West Coast League Player of the Week. Outfielder Sam Lin- scott was selected for that honor after scoring eight runs and driving in another nine runs on nine hits (three doubles, a triple and a home run) during a six-game stretch last week. His .486 batting aver- age over nine games this season tops the WCL. At Lewis-Clark State College in Lewiston, Idaho, Linscott hit .295 in his last collegiate season. Linscott has been a key part of the Elks’ im- provement at the plate since joining the team. The senior-to-be credited Elks’ assistant coach Tyler Graham for helping him get off to a hot start in the batter’s box this summer. The Elks, coming off their first WCL series win at the Wenatchee Apple- Sox, started a three-game series on the road against the Bellingham Bells Tuesday evening. The Elks return to Vince Genna Stadium on Tues- day, June 29, for a three- game series against the Corvallis Knights. Knights left-handed pitcher Ethan Ross was named the Pitcher of the Week in the WCL. The Elks were 3-9 in WCL play entering Tues- day night’s game at Bell- ingham. — Bulletin staff report INSIDE Track — Oregon dis- tance runners Cole Hocker and Cooper Teare try to bring collegiate success to Olympic trials in Eugene. Details, A7. bendbulletin.com/sports U.S. OLYMPIC TRACK & FIELD TRIALS Surviving the trials Bend’s Rebecca Mehra reflects on 1,500-meter final, and looks ahead to possible 800 run BY MARK MORICAL • The Bulletin R ebecca Mehra admitted she did not have the ideal race on Monday night, but she is buoyed by the progress she has made in the last several years. Four years ago, the Bend runner’s 1,500-meter time was 9 seconds off the qualifying mark for the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials. On Monday night, she found herself in the 1,500 final at the trials at Eugene’s Hayward Field. She finished 11th, and was disappointed Christopher Pietsch/The Register-Guard Bend’s Rebecca Mehra competes in the women’s 1,500-meter final at the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field in Eugene on Monday. — but not deflated. “There’s a weight behind the Olympic trials that I haven’t experienced before,” Mehra said. “To see how far I’ve come in five years and to be a part of this spectacular event is very cool.” Mehra, 26, said she was bummed when she crossed the finish line, as she was hoping for at least a top-eight finish. The top three runners qualified for the Tokyo Olympics, set for July 23-Aug. 8. “I thought that it was gonna take a super magi- cal day to be third, but I really thought realistically I could probably be top eight,” Mehra said. “It’s all about the kind of day you have, and I didn’t realize how physically draining the semifinal (on Saturday) was for me. I kind of realized that as I ran, even in the first 300 meters of the race.” Mehra finished with a time of 4 minutes, 8.47 seconds, a little more than 6 seconds behind third- place runner Heather MacLean. Elle Purrier St. Pierre won the race in 3:58.03. Despite some disappointment, Mehra said she was proud to have reached the final. “All you can ever really ask for is your best, and this is disappointing,” Mehra said. U.S. OLYMPIC TRACK AND FIELD TRIALS Bend runners Thursday, 7 p.m., women’s 800 meters first round: Rebecca Mehra, Sadi Henderson and Angel Piccirillo. Thursday, 8:47 p.m., women’s 3,000-meter stee- plechase final: Mel Lawrence. Television: NBC Sports Northwest, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday. See Mehra / A7 NFL Seahawks ready for full capacity SEATTLE — The Seattle Seahawks intend to have full capacity crowds at Lumen Field for the up- coming season after the team received approval from the NFL and local and state health officials to completely reopen the stadium. Fans won’t be required to be vaccinated against COVID-19 to attend games, per the state’s re- opening guidelines for outdoor events, but those who are not vaccinated will be required to wear masks. The team said it will not require proof of vaccination for fans. The Seahawks played the entire 2020 season without fans at their home stadium. Seattle went 12-4 in the regular season and won the NFC West title. The Seahawks went 7-1 at home before losing to the Los Ange- les Rams in the opening round of the playoffs. Seattle’s first regu- lar-season home game is scheduled for Sept. 19 against Tennessee. The Seahawks weren’t the only football team in Washington to announce full capacity crowds for the upcoming season. Washington will have full crowds at Husky Stadium and Washington State will have the same at Martin Stadium. The Huskies and Cou- gars are scheduled to open their seasons at home on Sept. 4. Wash- ington hosts Montana while Washington State hosts Utah State. — Associated Press TOKYO GAMES U.S. Olympic skateboarding team unveiled, rolling toward Tokyo BY GREG BEACHAM Associated Press Richard Vogel/AP Members of the first U.S. Olympic skateboarding team arrive on their boards for a news conference in downtown Los Angeles on Monday. Skateboarding is an Olympic sport for the first time in Tokyo, and the Americans are expected to be a strong team. LOS ANGELES — The 12 members of the first U.S. Olympic skateboarding team stepped on their boards and skated through a corridor of tall American flags in a joyful pack, headed toward an out- door stage to meet the world together. It was an appropriate intro- duction for a bunch of world- class skaters who will represent the best aspects of this Amer- ican-born sport in Tokyo: No leaders, no followers — and plenty of love and support for the whole crew. “I don’t know if any of us imagined we would ever be up here getting ready to skate in the Olympics,” said Nyjah Huston, the five-time world champion and California na- tive recognized as the high- est-paid skater in the sport’s history. “But we’ve all been working for this from a young age, even before it was possible. “I love skateboarding be- cause it’s the funnest thing on Earth, not only if you’re one of us getting ready to skate in the Olympics, or just a kid out there skating in your skate park,” Huston added. See Skateboarding / A6 NBA PLAYOFFS Eastern Conference finalists Bucks, Hawks seeking to end long droughts BY STEVE MEGARGEE Associated Press MILWAUKEE — There’s more than a berth in the NBA Finals at stake when the Mil- waukee Bucks and Atlanta Hawks square off for the East- ern Conference championship. The winner of the series that starts Wednesday also will end decades of frustration. Milwaukee won its lone NBA title in 1971 and last reached the Finals in 1974. The Hawks won their only champi- onship in 1958 and lost in the Finals in 1957, 1960 and 1961 — and that’s when they were still playing in St. Louis. “This is obviously a great chance, a great opportunity for us,” Bucks center Brook Lopez said. “But what is it, you can’t put the cart before the horse or whatever? We’ve got a lot of business to take care of still. We’ve got to go get Game 1.” The Bucks got here by sweeping the Miami Heat and surviving a seven-game series with the second-seeded Brook- lyn Nets. Atlanta beat the New York Knicks in five games and knocked off the top-seeded Philadelphia 76ers in seven. Both the Bucks and Hawks ended their second-round se- ries by earning their first Game 7 road victories ever. It’s been an impressive turn- around for the Hawks, who were 14-20 and 11th in the East standings when they fired coach Lloyd Pierce at the be- ginning of March. The Hawks closed the regular season by going 27-11 under Nate Mc- Millan and have followed that up with an 8-4 playoff record. Trae Young has led the way by scoring 29.1 points per game in his first postseason. “I think our guys have done a really good job of just lock- ing in to that particular game and not thinking about what happened in the past and not thinking about anything other than what we need to do in that game,” McMillan said. The Hawks are in the play- offs for the first time since 2017. The Bucks are more ac- customed to this stage. Milwaukee posted the league’s best regular-season record in 2019 and 2020 but couldn’t translate that success to the postseason. The Bucks blew a 2-0 lead to Toronto in the 2019 East finals and lost in the second round to Miami last year. “I try not as much to focus on the past and what hap- pened,” Bucks forward and two-time MVP Giannis Ante- tokounmpo said. “I learn from it and I just move on. This is a totally different series, differ- ent scenario, different players, different time. It’s going to be hard. It’s not going to be easy.” Budenholzer vs. Hawks Mike Budenholzer coached the Hawks from 2013-18 be- fore leaving for Milwaukee. Budenholzer led the Hawks to their last Eastern Confer- ence finals appearance in 2015, though they were swept by LeBron James’ Cleveland Cav- aliers. But the Hawks have changed quite a bit since Budenhol- zer’s departure. John Collins is the only Hawk who played for Budenholzer in Atlanta. “This is about the Bucks and Hawks,” Budenholzer said. “Our players have got to be ready to play. Coaches coach. At this stage, this time, it’s just about playing and finding a way to win and compete and do whatever it takes. That’s re- ally all this is about.” Home vs. road Of the 16 teams that reached the postseason, only the Bucks have gone undefeated at home during the playoffs. See NBA / A6