The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, June 25, 2021, Page 12, Image 12

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    B4 The BulleTin • Friday, June 25, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
FRIDAY
MOTOR SPORTS
Formula 1, Styrian Grand Prix practice
ARCA, Pocono
Formula 1, Styrian Grand Prix practice
GOLF
Women’s PGA Championship
PGA Tour, Travelers Championship
European Tour, BMW International Open
HORSE RACING
America’s Day at the Races
BASEBALL
College World Series, Vanderbilt vs. NC State
College World Series, TBD vs. Mississippi St.
MLB, regional coverage
MLB, Seattle at Chicago White Sox
OLYMPICS
U.S. Olympic Trials, Track and Field
HOCKEY
NHL playoffs, N.Y. Islanders at Tampa Bay
SOCCER
MLS, Orlando City at Inter Miami
BASKETBALL
NBA playoffs, Atlanta at Milwaukee
MIXED MARTIAL ARTS
Bellator 261, Johnson vs. Moldavsky
Professional Fighters League
FOOTBALL
AFL Premiership, N. Melbourne vs. Gold Coast Suns
AFL Premiership, Port Adelaide vs. Sydney
CYCLING
Tour de France, Stage 1
Time
TV
5:55 a.m.
ESPNU
3 p.m.
FS1
2:55 a.m. (Sat) ESPN2
8 a.m.
noon
4:30 a.m. (Sat)
Golf
Golf
Golf
9:30 a.m.
FS2
Prep sports
FRIDAY
Boys basketball: Mcnary at Bend, 2 p.m.
Wrestling: Class 6a state meet at newberg, TBd.
SATURDAY
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.
PREPS
11 a.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
5 p.m.
ESPN2
ESPN
MLB
Root
2 p.m.
NBCSN
5 p.m.
NBCSN
5 p.m.
FS1
5:30 p.m.
TNT
6 p.m.
7 p.m.
8:30 p.m.
11:30 p.m.
Sho
ESPN2
FS2
FS2
3:30 a.m. (Sat) NBCSN
SATURDAY
MOTOR SPORTS
Formula 1, Styrian Grand Prix qualifying
NASCAR Truck Series, Pocono
NHRA, Nationals qualifying
NASCAR Cup Series, Pocono
SRX Series, Eldora
SOCCER
UEFA European Championship, Wales vs. Denmark
UEFA European Championship, Italy vs. Austria
MLS, Los Angeles FC at Sporting Kansas City
MLS, Minnesota United at Portland
HORSE RACING
America’s Day at the Races
BASKETBALL
WNBA, Washington at Dallas
NBA playoffs, Phoenix at L.A. Clippers
GOLF
Women’s PGA Championship
PGA Tour, Travelers Championship
PGA Tour, Travelers Championship
PGA Tour Champions, Senior Players Championship
European Tour, BMW International Open
BASEBALL
College World Series, Game 13 (if nec.)
MLB, Cleveland at Minnesota
MLB, Seattle at Chicago White Sox
MLB, Kansas City at Texas
MLB, Chicago Cubs at L.A. Dodgers
College World Series, Game 14 (if nec.)
OLYMPICS
U.S. Olympic Trials, Men’s Gymnastics
U.S. Olympic Trials, Track and Field
HOCKEY
NHL playoffs, Montreal at Vegas (if nec.)
CYCLING
Tour de France, Stage 2
ON DECK
5:55 a.m.
9 a.m.
11 a.m.
noon
5 p.m.
ESPN2
FS1
FS1
NBCSN
CBS
8:30 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
2:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
ESPN
ABC
ESPN
Root
9:30 a.m.
FS2
10 a.m.
6 p.m.
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
noon
noon
4:30 a.m. (Sun)
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
1 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.
CBS
ESPN
NBC
Golf
CBS
Golf
Golf
ESPN
MLB
Root
FS1
FOX
ESPN2
1 p.m.
6 p.m.
NBC
NBC
5 p.m.
NBCSN
4:30 a.m. (Sun) NBCSN
Listings are the most accurate available.
SPORTS BRIEFING
GOLF
Lizette Salas grabs 1st round Women’s PGA Champi-
onship lead — Lizette Salas was in her happy place Thurs-
day, and not just because she kept bogeys off her card at tough
Atlanta Athletic Club and posted a 5-under 67 for a one-shot
lead in the Women’s PGA Championship. Her game is round-
ing into form as the Solheim Cup approaches. But the broad
smile went well beyond golf. The COVID-19 pandemic took
its toll on the 31-year-old Californian, dulling her usual spark
and creating anxiety that she initially mistook for nerves. “I
really didn’t like myself in 2020, and I think with the whole
COVID and not being able to work and have golf as my outlet,
that really hit hard,” Salas said. She led by one shot over Char-
ley Hull of England, who had a 68. Jessica Korda and former
U.S. Women’s Open champion Jeongeun Lee6 were in a group
at 69. Nelly Korda, who last week became the first two-time
winner on this LPGA Tour season of parity, was at 70 along
with a trio of major champions, including ANA Inspiration
winner Patty Tavatanakit, who started with three birdies in
five holes and closed with a pair of birdies.
BASKETBALL
Pacers hire former Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle —
When Kevin Pritchard hired a new coach in October, he
took a calculated risk. This time, the Indiana Pacers presi-
dent of basketball operations went for the known commodity.
Pritchard hired longtime Dallas Mavericks coach Rick Carl-
isle on Thursday, reuniting the 61-year-old with the team that
helped relaunch his head coaching career almost two decades
ago. Carlisle becomes the third Pacers coach in less than 12
months. Nate McMillan was fired in August following his
fourth straight first-round playoff exit, just weeks after signing
a contract extension. His replacement, Nate Bjorkgren, lasted
one tumultuous season in his first NBA head coaching gig.
FOOTBALL
Beavers land top center recruit Dylan Lopez for 2022
— The Oregon State Beavers football program loaded up
the month of June with more than two dozen official vis-
itors, hoping to hit the ground running after the NCAA’s
15-month-long emergency dead period in response to
COVID-19. The Beavers landed a big commitment Thursday,
as ESPN four-star prospect Dylan Lopez, the nation’s No. 2
center, announced his commitment to Oregon State over of-
fers from multiple Power 5 conference programs. In the end,
Lopez’s decision boiled down to two schools, and he ulti-
mately chose Oregon State over Cal.
— Bulletin wire reports
Boys basketball
Wednesday’s Late Scores
redmond 58, hood river Valley 49
Crook County 59, ridgeview 47
Thursday’s Scores
Mcnary at Mountain View, late
la Pine at Bend, late
Girls basketball
Wednesday’s Scores
Pendleton 61, Crook County 43
ridgeview 68, redmond 24
Thursday’s Scores
South Wasco County 60, Trinity lutheran 58
BASKETBALL
NBA playoffs
BASEBALL
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
new york
38
31
.551
—
Washington
35
36
.493
4
atlanta
35
38
.479
5
Philadelphia
34
37
.479
5
Miami
31
42
.425
9
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Milwaukee
42
33
.560
—
Chicago
41
33
.554
½
Cincinnati
36
36
.500
4½
St. louis
36
38
.486
5½
Pittsburgh
26
46
.361
14½
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
San Francisco
48
26
.649
—
los angeles
44
30
.595
4
San diego
45
32
.584
4½
Colorado
31
44
.413
17½
arizona
21
55
.276
28
Wednesday’s Late Game
San diego 5, l.a. dodgers 3
Thursday’s Games
atlanta at Cincinnati, late
Washington at Miami, late
Pittsburgh at St. louis, late
Chicago Cubs at l.a. dodgers, late
Friday’s Games
Colorado (Gray 4-6) at Milwaukee (Burnes 3-4), 1:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (nola 5-4) at n.y. Mets (Walker 6-3), 1:10 p.m.,
1st game
atlanta (Smyly 4-3) at Cincinnati (Gutierrez 3-1), 4:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Moore 0-1) at n.y. Mets (Peterson 2-5),
4:10 p.m., 2nd game
Washington (lester 1-2) at Miami (lópez 3-4), 4:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Crowe 0-4) at St. louis (Kim 1-5), 5:15 p.m.
Oakland (Manaea 6-3) at San Francisco (Cueto 5-3),
6:45 p.m.
arizona (Martin 0-2) at San diego (Paddack 4-5), 7:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (arrieta 5-8) at l.a. dodgers (Gonsolin
0-0), 7:10 p.m.
MLB
College World Series
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Eastern Conference
Atlanta 1, Milwaukee 0
Friday: atlanta at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m.
Sunday: Milwaukee at atlanta, 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday: Milwaukee at atlanta, 5:30 p.m.
x-Thursday, July 1: atlanta at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m.
x-Saturday, July 3: Milwaukee at atlanta, 5:30 p.m.
x-Monday, July 5: atlanta at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m.
Western Conference
Phoenix 2, L.A. Clippers 0
Thursday: Phoenix at l.a. Clippers, late
Saturday: Phoenix at l.a. Clippers, 6 p.m.
x-Monday: l.a. Clippers at Phoenix, 6 p.m.
x-Wednesday: Phoenix at l.a. Clippers, 6 p.m.
x-Friday, July 2: l.a. Clippers at Phoenix, 6 p.m.
WNBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Connecticut
9
5
Chicago
9
7
Washington
7
6
new york
7
8
atlanta
5
8
indiana
1
15
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Seattle
12
3
las Vegas
10
3
dallas
7
8
Phoenix
6
7
Minnesota
6
7
los angeles
5
7
Thursday’s Games
Chicago 91, new york 68
dallas 89, indiana 64
Washington at los angeles, late
Friday’s Games
las Vegas at Minnesota, 5 p.m.
Tampa Bay
Boston
new york
Toronto
Baltimore
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Chicago
44
30
.595
—
Cleveland
40
31
.563
2½
Kansas City
33
40
.452
10½
detroit
32
42
.432
12
Minnesota
31
42
.425
12½
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
houston
46
28
.622
—
Oakland
46
31
.597
1½
Seattle
39
37
.513
8
los angeles
36
38
.486
10
Texas
27
48
.360
19½
Thursday’s Games
n.y. yankees 8, Kansas City 1
Oakland 5, Texas 1
Toronto 9, Baltimore 0
Tampa Bay 1, Boston 0
houston at detroit, late
Cleveland at Minnesota, late
Friday’s Games
Baltimore (harvey 3-9) at Toronto (Manoah 1-0), 4:07 p.m.
houston (Valdez 4-0) at detroit (Peralta 0-1), 4:10 p.m.
l.a. angels (Canning 5-4) at Tampa Bay (Fleming 6-4),
4:10 p.m.
n.y. yankees (Germán 4-4) at Boston (Pérez 5-4), 4:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Minor 6-4) at Texas (dunning 2-6), 5:05 p.m.
Cleveland (Quantrill 0-2) at Minnesota (dobnak 1-6),
5:10 p.m.
Seattle (Kikuchi 4-3) at Chicago White Sox (rodón 6-2),
5:10 p.m.
Oakland (Manaea 6-3) at San Francisco (Cueto 5-3),
6:45 p.m.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
45
31
44
31
40
34
38
35
23
52
Pct
.643
.563
.538
.467
.385
.063
GB
—
1
1½
2½
3½
9
Pct
.800
.769
.467
.462
.462
.417
GB
—
1
5
5
5
5½
Pct
.592
.587
.541
.521
.307
GB
—
½
4
5½
21½
In Omaha, Neb.
(Double Elimination; x-if necessary)
Thursday’s Game
Game 10: no. 2 Texas 8 vs. Virginia, late
Friday’s Games
Game 11: n.C. State vs. Vanderbilt, 11 a.m.
Game 12: no. 7 Mississippi St. vs. Game 10 winner, 4 p.m.
MLS
HOCKEY
NHL playoffs
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Montreal 3, Vegas 2
Thursday: Vegas at Montreal, late
x-Saturday: Montreal at Vegas, 5 p.m.
Tampa Bay 3, N.Y. Islanders 3
Friday: n.y. islanders at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.
GOLF
Women’s PGA Championship
Partial Scores
Thursday in Johns Creek, Ga.
Yardage: 6,740; Par: 72
First Round
lizette Salas
34-33—67
Charley hull
33-35—68
Jeongeun lee6
34-35—69
austin ernst
35-34—69
Jessica Korda
35-34—69
alena Sharp
34-35—69
Xiyu lin
33-36—69
yealimi noh
35-34—69
dani holmqvist
35-34—69
Patty Tavatanakit
33-37—70
ariya Jutanugarn
34-36—70
Madelene Sagstrom
34-36—70
in Gee Chun
34-36—70
Maria Fassi
34-36—70
Gerina Piller
36-34—70
dottie ardina
35-35—70
Giulia Molinaro
35-35—70
Cydney Clanton
37-33—70
Mina harigae
35-35—70
nelly Korda
35-35—70
Chella Choi
35-35—70
nanna Koerstz Madsen
37-33—70
hyo Joo Kim, 36-35—71. Caroline Masson, 35-36—71.
anna nordqvist, 37-34—71. inbee Park, 37-34—71. ryann
O’Toole, 34-37—71. esther henseleit, 37-34—71. hannah
Green, 35-37—72. angela Stanford, 35-37—72. amy yang,
36-36—72. So yeon ryu, 35-37—72. leona Maguire, 37-
35—72. Marina alex, 36-36—72. Brittany lincicome, 35-
37—72. lydia Ko, 37-35—72. yu liu, 37-35—72. Sandra
Changkija, 35-37—72.
Celine Boutier, 35-38—73. Jennifer Chang, 35-38—73.
danielle Kang, 36-37—73. Minjee lee, 37-36—73. aza-
hara Munoz, 37-36—73. hee young Park, 37-36—73.
Megan Khang, 37-36—73. Caroline inglis, 35-38—73.
Pornanong Phatlum, 36-37—73. ally ewing, 37-36—73.
lindsey Weaver, 38-35—73. Jeongeun lee, 38-35—73.
lauren Kim, 37-36—73. Sarah Burnham, 34-39—73.
yuka Saso, 37-36—73. lexi Thompson, 38-35—73. albane
Valenzuela, 35-38—73. Sophia Popov, 35-38—73. Jaye
Marie Green, 37-36—73. Wichanee Meechai, 37-36—73.
Brittany altomare, 36-37—73. lindy duncan, 36-37—73.
Su Oh, 37-36—73. aditi ashok, 35-38—73.
Maria Fernanda Torres, 37-37—74. alison lee, 37-37—
74. Mel reid, 37-37—74. Brittany lang, 38-36—74. Brooke
M. henderson, 38-36—74. Shanshan Feng, 39-35—74.
eun-hee Ji, 38-36—74. Pajaree anannarukarn, 35-39—
74. alisa rodriguez, 33-41—74. Paula reto, 40-34—74.
Klara Spilkova, 36-38—74. Mariah Stackhouse, 37-37—74.
SOCCER
NWSL
W L T Pts GF
Orlando
4 0 3
15 11
Portland
4 2 0
12 12
north Carolina
3 2 1
10 10
Washington
2 1 3
9
6
Gotham FC
2 1 2
8
3
Chicago
2 3 2
8
5
reign FC
2 3 1
7
5
houston
2 3 1
7
6
louisville
2 3 1
7
3
Kansas City
0 5 2
2
3
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Saturday’s Games
louisville at Chicago, 11 a.m.
Gotham FC at reign FC, 1 p.m.
Portland at north Carolina, 4 p.m.
Orlando at houston, 5 p.m.
Washington at Kansas City, 5:30 p.m.
GA
6
4
4
6
2
10
5
7
10
10
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
new england
7 1 2 23 17 11
Orlando City
5 1 3 18 16
6
Phila.
5 2 3 18 12
7
ny City FC
4 3 2 14 16 10
Columbus
4 3 2 14
9
7
nashville
3 1 5 14 12 10
d.C. united
4 5 1 13
9 11
new york
4 5 0 12 14 13
CF Montréal
3 3 3 12 10
9
atlanta
2 2 5 11 11 10
inter Miami CF
2 5 2
8
8 14
Cincinnati
2 5 1
7
7 17
Toronto FC
1 6 2
5 12 18
Chicago
1 7 1
4
4 14
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Seattle
7 0 3 24 18
5
Sporting KC
6 3 2 20 20 14
la Galaxy
6 3 0 18 14 14
Colorado
5 3 1 16 15 11
Portland
4 4 1 13 13 14
houston
3 3 4 13 14 15
real Sl
3 2 3 12 13 10
la FC
3 3 3 12 11 10
Minnesota united 3 4 2 11
9 12
San Jose
3 6 1 10 11 17
austin FC
2 5 3
9
6 11
Vancouver
2 6 1
7
8 14
FC dallas
1 4 4
7
9 14
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Wednesday’s Late Games
Seattle 2, real Sl 1
la FC 2, FC dallas 0
la Galaxy 2, Vancouver 1
Friday’s Game
Orlando City at Miami, 5 p.m.
DEALS
Transactions
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
American League
BOSTOn red SOX — Placed inF Christian arroyo on
the 10-day il, retroactive to June 21. recalled inF/OF Mi-
chael Chavis from Worcester (Triple-a east).
CleVeland indianS — Placed rhP aaron Civale on
the 10-day il. designated C ryan lavarnway for assign-
ment. Selected the contract of rhP Justin Garza from
Columbus (Triple-a east).
hOuSTOn aSTrOS — Sent rhPs austin Pruitt, enoli
Paredes and Bryan abreu to Sugar land (Triple-a West)
on rehab assignments.
SeaTTle MarinerS — recalled rhP Keynan Middle-
ton from Tacoma (Triple-a West). Optioned rhP Vinny
nittoli to Tacoma. designated lhP daniel Zamora for
assignment.
TaMPa Bay rayS — Placed SS Taylor Walls on the 10-
day il, retroactive to June 23. Traded 1B Wyatt Mathisen
to Seattle Mariners for cash considerations. recalled rhP
drew rasmussen from durham (Triple-a east).
National League
aTlanTa BraVeS — Transferred lhP Tucker davidson
and C alex Jackson from the 10-day il to the 60-day il.
Optioned rhP Kyle Wright and rhP Ty Tice to Gwinnett
(Triple-a east). Selected the contracts of rhP Jesse Chavez
and rhP Tanner roark from Gwinnett.
lOS anGeleS dOdGerS — Sent lhP Scott alexander
to Oklahoma City (Triple-a West) on a rehab assignment.
MiaMi MarlinS — Optioned rhP Jordan holloway
to Jacksonville (Triple-a east).
neW yOrK MeTS — Signed rhP Vance Worley to a
minor league contract.
PhiladelPhia PhillieS — Sent SS didi Gregorius
to lehigh Valley (Triple-a east) on a rehab assignment.
WaShinGTOn naTiOnalS — assigned lhP Ben Bray-
mer outright to rochester (Triple-a east) after clearing
waivers.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
CarOlina PanTherS — Signed OT Brady Christensen
to a rookie contract.
neW yOrK GianTS — Waived rB raquel armstead.
PiTTSBurGh STeelerS — released rG david de-
Castro. agreed to terms with OG Trai Turner on a one-
year contract.
COLLEGE
aMeriCan u. — named Garland Bartlett head coach
of men’s and women’s swimming and diving.
Tennis
Continued from B3
Coco Gauff, now 17, returns
to the site of her big break-
through at 15. Could there be
yet another new Slam cham-
pion?
What matters most to many
is simply that The Champion-
ships — as it’s known to locals
— will be played after being
the only Grand Slam site that
remained silent during the
COVID-19 outbreak.
“In my mind — and I think
in a lot of players’ minds —
it’s the biggest tournament in
the world, and the most pres-
tigious. It was a bitter disap-
pointment to everybody. And
it was historical,” said Evert,
who won three of her 18 major
singles trophies at Wimbledon.
“It made you realize how bad
the world was and how bad the
pandemic really was.”
The French Open shifted
from May-June to Septem-
ber-October in 2020, then
was played again this year, de-
layed just one week. That shift
left just two weeks, instead
of three, between the clay of
Paris and the grass of London,
which could be an advantage
to those most at ease on the
lawns of Wimbledon, such as
eight-time champion Federer
or seven-time champ Williams.
The U.S. Open was played in
August-September 2020, albeit
without fans, and the Austra-
lian Open was delayed by three
weeks in 2021.
But the All England Club,
unlike groups running other
majors, had cancellation in-
surance that paid 180 mil-
lion pounds ($250 million),
according to chairman Ian
Hewitt.
“Everything happened very
quickly. … We were all not
sure, anymore, what was going
on,” said Federer, who missed
most of 2020 after two opera-
tions on his right knee.
There are changes this time
— and on the horizon.
There will be fewer fans
than usual for most of the two
weeks — they’ll need to prove
they’ve been vaccinated, tested
negative for COVID-19 or had
the illness within the preced-
ing six months — and while
the customary Middle Sunday
without competition remains
in effect, that will change in
2022, when the full fortnight
will see matches.
The athletes and their en-
tourages must stay at a desig-
nated hotel in London as part
of what the tournament is
calling a “minimized risk en-
vironment,” with coronavirus
testing and a “track-and-trace
program.”
“Obviously it’s not going
to be normal,” said Johanna
Konta, a British player who is
a three-time Slam semifinal-
ist, including at Wimbledon in
2017. “But it’s still grass. It’s still
home. It’s still a home crowd.
It’s still home comforts, in that
sense, so I think it will just be
exciting.”
Track
speed and the pattern of the
400 hurdles.”
ter racewalks to 7 a.m. — two
hours earlier than originally
scheduled.
The women’s 10,000-me-
ter final was moved to Satur-
day at 10 a.m., and the men’s
5,000-meter final was moved
to Sunday at 10 a.m.
promised no such letdown in
his signature event, the 200,
with the first round Friday and
the final Sunday in the final
event of the trials.
“I plan to go into the 200
and dominate,” Lyles said.
“Point blank.”
It’s a loaded field that also in-
cludes Terrance Laird, the LSU
standout who just announced
he was turning pro. Laird re-
cently won the 100 meters at
the NCAA championships and
finished second in the 200.
Continued from B3
Her best time this season
(52.83) is nearly 2 seconds bet-
ter than Muhammad’s (54.50).
Muhammad is still round-
ing into form after suffering a
hamstring injury earlier this
season.
“I’m lucky enough to have
a lot of muscle memory in the
event,” Muhammad said. “So it
doesn’t take a lot at this point
of my career to figure out the
Tim Ireland/AP file
Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer walk with the trophies after the men’s 2019 Wimbledon final in London.
At this year’s Wimbledon, Djokovic will try to equal Federer and Rafael Nadal with 20 major championships.
Beat the heat
There are still many Tokyo
spots up for grabs over the fi-
nal few days, the last two of
which are expected to reach
100 degrees, with a potentially
record-setting heatwave de-
scending on the Pacific North-
west.
To beat the heat, USA Track
and Field moved the start
times for Saturday’s 20-kilome-
Noah’s arc
World champion sprinter
Noah Lyles had visions of a
100-200 sprint double. But
it didn’t work out in the 100,
where he finished seventh. He