A5 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • MoNday, JUNE 28, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports MLB Mariners ejection 1st under new rule Seattle Mariners pitcher Hector Santiago became the first player to be ejected as part of Major League Baseball’s new foreign substance protocols when he was thrown out of Sunday’s game against the Chi- cago White Sox. Santiago was checked by the umpires as he ex- ited in the fifth inning. His glove was confis- cated, and it was later announced that Santiago had been ejected. Santiago was charged with one run and three hits in 2 1/3 innings in the resumption of Saturday’s game, which was post- poned by rain. Major league umpires last week started regular checks of all pitchers for sticky substances used to get a better grip on the balls, but can also increase the spin of the balls and make hitting them more difficult. Santiago could be sus- pended for 10 games, but there is an appeals process. The Mariners won 3-2. Ashley Landis/AP Heat waves come off the track as Annie Kunz walks to the heptathlon long jump at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials in Eugene earlier Sunday. — Associated Press GYMNASTICS Biles, Lee lock up Olympic spots Simone Biles’ Olympic encore is finally here. The reigning world and Olympic gymnastics champion locked up her spot in Tokyo by easily winning the U.S. Olympic Trials on Sunday night. The 24-year-old’s two-day total of 118.098 earned her one of two automatic spots on the plane to Ja- pan next month, where she will try to become the first female gymnast in more than 50 years to win consecutive all-around Olympic golds. Sunisa Lee also grabbed the other auto- matic bid with a 115.832 while posting the top scores on beam and un- even bars and actually putting up a higher all- around score than Biles on the night. Jordan Chiles — who hasn’t fallen in 24 rou- tines in 2021, something even Biles can’t say — is also heading to Tokyo two years after it ap- peared her elite career might be in jeopardy. Grace McCallum rounds out the four- woman team after com- ing in fourth during trials. MyKayla Skinner, an al- ternate in 2016, will go as a specialist. The 24-year- old will be a threat to medal on vault. Kayla DiCello, Kara Eaker, Leanne Wong and Emma Malabuyo will serve as the alternates. Biles’ teammates will have a front-row spot to what promises to be one of the biggest spectacles in the Games. Biles will arrive in To- kyo as the face of her sport, U.S. delegation and perhaps the Olympic movement. She’s become more than just a gymnas- tics star since her coro- nation in Rio in 2016. Her consistent excellence — her last second-place fin- ish in a meet came more than nine years ago — combined with her cha- risma and her possibili- ty-pushing routines have thrust her into the com- pany of Michael Phelps and Usain Bolt, athletes whose dominance on the world stage have made them Olympic icons. Lee will be the first Hmong American at the Olympics. — Associated Press TOO HOT FOR TRACK Olympic trials halted midafternoon in Eugene BY EDDIE PELLS Associated Press E UGENE — The U.S. track and field trials came to a halt Sunday afternoon with tem- peratures reaching at least 108 de- grees. One athlete, heptathlete Tali- yah Brooks, was carted off the field in a wheelchair and eventually had to withdraw from the competition. Fans were filing into the stadium for the headline races of the final day of Olympic qualifying when, at around 3 p.m., the track announcer came onto the PA system and said action was being suspended due to extreme heat. He asked all specta- tors to evacuate. A USA Track and Field official told NBC that temperatures on the surface of the track exceeded 150 degrees. Brooks had been in fourth place after five of the seven heptath- lon events. She was taken out on a wheelchair during warmups for the sixth event, the javelin. She was listed as a “DNS” — did not start — but hours later, USA Track and Charlie Riedel/AP Taliyah Brooks is helped off the track after collapsing during the heptathlon. Events were suspended due to high temperatures. Brooks’ agent later said she was OK. Field said she had been granted a request to re-enter the javelin com- petition. But when the time came for the throws, she did not appear, and USATF said she had withdrawn from the meet. The meet resumed in the eve- ning, with the temperature reading 99 degrees. Among those waiting deep into the night to try to to se- cure spots in the Olympics were Noah Lyles in the men’s 200, and GOLF | KPMG WOMEN’S PGA CHAMPIONSHIP Dalilah Muhammad and Sydney McLaughlin, who were set to face off in the women’s 400 hurdles. Earlier, JuVaughn Harrison won the high jump, contested under cloudless conditions in 105-degree temperatures. Harrison was also entered in the long jump, which kicked off the evening’s action. With the humidity, Eugene felt like 113 in midafternoon. Third-place high jump finisher Shelby McEwen called the heat “mind blowing.” “It’s crazy. I wasn’t expecting it to be this humid,” he said. “We just had to be mentally locked in, mentally prep ourselves for it, stay hydrated and go out and get the job done.” The men’s 5,000 took place at 10 a.m. in a nod to the forecast, which since early last week had pre- dicted triple-digits over the week- end. In temperatures reaching 90 degrees on the track, Paul Chelimo fended off a pair of runners for a 0.19-second victory. “Honestly,” Chelimo said, “I wanted it a bit hotter.” HOCKEY | STANLEY CUP PREVIEW Whoa, Nelly! A major title Canadiens, Lightning for Korda and No. 1 ranking in Cup Final: It’s NHL royalty vs. Hockey Bay BY DOUG FERGUSON AP Golf Writer JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — First came the tears when Nelly Korda hugged her older sister and didn’t want to let go. That was followed by the spray of champagne on the 18th green to celebrate a day that will be hard for her to top even at age 22. With one round, she became a major champion for the first time and reached No. 1 in the world. “Is this week even real?” Korda said. “It’s amazing.” Just like her performance Sunday in the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship. Korda powered her way to a pair of eagles that wore down Lizette Salas at Atlanta Athletic Club and put an American atop the world ranking for the first time in seven years. BY STEPHEN WHYNO AND JOHN WAWROW AP Hockey Writers John Bazemore/AP Nelly Korda kisses the trophy after winning the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship golf tournament Sunday in Johns Creek, Georgia. Korda nearly holed out with a 7-wood from 243 yards for a tap-in eagle. She seized control by using her length from that graceful swing, leaving her a 6-iron into the par-5 12th hole that narrowly cleared the water and set up an 8-foot eagle putt. The final stroke was a 15-foot par putt for a 4-under 68 and a three-shot victory over Salas. See Korda / A6 TAMPA, Fla. — Brian Eng- blom sat in the lower bowl at Amalie Arena with the Tampa Bay Lightning’s two Stanley Cup banners to his right and the team looking to add a third skating on the ice in front of him. Reflecting on his days play- ing for the Canadiens and winning the Stanley Cup in the late 1970s, Tampa Bay’s TV analyst sees the makings of the Lightning growing a championship culture just as Montreal has for nearly a century. “They already have,” Engb- lom said Sunday. “You’re sup- posed to win it all, and creat- ing that kind of environment is difficult and takes time, but they’re already there.” The Lightning face the Canadiens in the Stanley Cup Final starting Monday, a series pitting the defend- ing champions against the NHL’s most decorated fran- chise. Tampa Bay is going for a third title since beginning play in 1993, the last year the Canadiens — or any team from Canada — won the Cup, making this a matchup of old-school winners against a modern-hockey model of success. “A lot of people need to do a lot of good work in order to build a good organization,” said Lightning general man- ager Julien BriseBois, who cut his teeth with the Canadiens. See Hockey / A6