FOUR-PAGE PULLOUT A5 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • TUEsday, JUNE 29, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports LOCAL FOOTBALL High Desert Storm defeat Rush, 44-41 REDMOND — The Oregon High Desert Storm defeated the Tri- City (Wash.) Rush 44-41 on Saturday night in an American West Foot- ball Conference game at the First Interstate Bank Center. With the win, the Storm improved to 4-2 overall at the midpoint of the season. The Storm have two consecutive home games coming up, this Satur- day at 7 p.m. against the Wenatchee Valley Sky Hawks, and July 10 at 7 p.m. against the Yakima Canines. The regular season runs through July 30. The AWFC is a pro arena football league with five teams from the Northwest. Arena football is exclusively played in- doors on a 50-yard field, with eight players on each team. Players can be tackled into walls that run up against the sidelines of the field. Prep Wrestling CULVER, LA PINE BRING HOME STATE TITLES —Bulletin staff report TRACK & FIELD World record caps Olympic trials EUGENE — The close of the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials was worth the wait on Sunday night at Hayward Field. The meet finished with a flourish after a delay of about five hours because of extreme heat in Eugene as hurdler Sydney McLaughlin set a world record, Oregon Ducks star Cole Hocker kicked to victory and sev- eral other young stars made their first Olympic teams. McLaughlin passed Dalilah Muhammad late in the women’s 400-meter hurdles final and clocked a world-record time of 51.90 seconds to break Muham- mad’s 2019 mark of 52.16. In the men’s 1,500 final, Hocker used a big kick to overtake Olympic cham- pion Matthew Centrowitz on the final straightaway. Centrowitz finished sec- ond, with Notre Dame’s Yared Nuguse third. Meanwhile, LSU’s Ju- Vaughn Harrison won both the high jump and the long jump, 19-year- old Athing Mu raced to victory in the women’s 800 and 17-year-old Err- iyon Knighton made the Olympic team with a third- place finish in the men’s 200 final. “It’s one of those mo- ments you think about and dream about and play in your head that you’ll put it together,” Mc- Laughlin said of her world record. Her record was the highlight of a day that included other kinds of history. Harrison became the first American to make it in both the high and long jumps at one Olympics since Jim Thorpe in 1912, according to Olympic his- torian Bill Mallon. Harrison shared the spotlight with Knighton, who is the youngest male member of the U.S. Olym- pic track team since Jim Ryun in 1964. Noah Lyles won the 200 meters to punch his Olympic ticket, then cel- ebrated by kneeling on the track and clasping his hands together. Earlier on Sunday Tem- peratures at Hayward Field reached 108 degrees and the surface of the track exceeded 150. Ac- tion was halted at 3 p.m. and resumed at 8:30 p.m. —Bulletin wire report La Pine’s Dylan Mann (top) attempts to pin Dayton’s Kaiden Abell while wresting in the 132-pound bracket of the 3A state championship in Redmond on Saturday. Mann would go on to win the 132-pound state title. Bulldogs win 2A/1A state title, while Hawks take 3A crown BY BRIAN RATHBONE The Bulletin ate June 2021 felt like winter 2019, as two Central Oregon wrestling teams brought home state titles. For the 13th time since 2007, Culver won the Class 2A/1A team state championship, while La Pine won its second 3A title in three years on Saturday night. Because the Oregon School Activities Association did not sanction state events due to the pandemic, the Oregon Wrestling Association organized the state tournaments that were staged across the state over the weekend. Culver dominated the field scoring at Sweet Home High School with 231.5 points, 137 points more than sec- ond-place Pine Eagle. “It is always a great day to be a Bulldog — some days are better than others,” said Culver coach J.D. Alley. “It was a bit of a redemption year for us. We left no doubt who the best 2A team was.” L See Wrestling / A7 Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin La Pine’s Dylan Hankey waits for the call while wrestling against Riverside’s Tony Jimenez in the 182-pound bracket of the 3A state championship in Redmond on Saturday. TENNIS NBA | PORTLAND Welcome back, Wimbledon Billups gets first chance as head coach Slam returns after being canceled in 2020 BY CHRIS LEHOURITES Associated Press WIMBLEDON, England — Shortly after 1:30 p.m. on Mon- day, two years minus two weeks from the last time a meaningful match was played at Wimbledon, a voice blared over the loudspeakers: “Good afternoon and welcome to Centre Court.” Then came an announce- ment welcoming “special guests in the Royal Box,” including a woman who developed one of the COVID-19 vaccines, prompting the first of the day’s several stand- ing ovations from spectators. And, eventually, came the words, “We’ve waited awhile for this,” before the introduction of Novak Djokovic and the opponent he would go on to beat 4-6, 6-1, 6-2, 6-2 with the help of 25 aces, Jack Draper, a 19-year-old wild-card entry from England ranked 253rd. It was, in some respects, as if Wimbledon had never left, as if the Trail Blazers make hire offical BY ANNE M. PETERSON Associated Press Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP Serbia’s Novak Djokovic celebrates winning a first round men’s singles match against Britain’s Jack Draper on day one of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London on Monday. All England Club hadn’t decided to cancel the oldest Grand Slam tournament for the first time since World War II a year ago because of the pandemic. There was raucous cheering from the stands. There was rain — so much rain that play on courts without a roof was de- layed more than 4 1/2 hours and at least 20 matches were postponed until Tuesday. See Wimbledon / A7 PORTLAND — The Portland Trail Blaz- ers have hired Chauncey Billups as their new coach. Billups, a five-time NBA All-Star over a 17-year playing career, has never been a head coach. He has served as an assistant with the Los Angeles Clippers for the past season. “Portland is a special place and a unique franchise,” Billups said in a statement Sun- day night. “As a player I always loved playing here because the passion and knowledge of the fans brought out the very best in me as a competitor. Now I’m looking forward to being on the other side of that energy and engaging with the Portland community on a whole other level.” The Blazers have scheduled a Tuesday press conference to introduce Billups, 44. He becomes the 15th head coach of the fran- chise. See Billups / A7