SIX-PAGE PULLOUT B3 S PORTS THE BULLETIN • FrIday, JULy 23, 2021 bendbulletin.com/sports PREP SOFTBALL Bend High players are All-Americans A pair of Bend High softball players were named to the Underclass- men MaxPreps All-Amer- ican Softball Teams on Thursday. Addisen Fisher (first- team pitcher) and Gracie Goewey (second-team infielder and pitcher) were the only Orego- nians to be named to the 34-person teams made up of only freshmen and sophomores. Bend High was also the only team to have two players named to the underclassmen all-American team. “You have a big sea- son and the awards keep coming,” said Bend High softball coach Tom Maul- din. “They are unique tal- ents and work really hard. They are two of the hard- est working kids I know and they are wonderful teammates.” There may need to be a larger trophy case built for Fisher considering all the awards she’s won fol- lowing her freshman cam- paign with the Lava Bears. She was first-team all-state as a pitcher, the Oregon Softball Gatorade Player of the Year, and was recently named Ore- gon’s USA Today Softball Player of the Year, as well as the state’s Rising Star of the Year among all Ore- gon high school athletes. She finished the year with a 9-0 record in the circle, 127 strikeouts in 56 innings, and a 0.25 earned run average. The sophomore Goewey, also first-team all-state and a finalist for the the Oregon Softball Gatorade Player of the Year, set several Bend High records in the bat- ter’s box: 10 home runs, a .574 batting average, and 39 RBIs in 19 games. She also struck out 46 batters and finished with a 0.62 ERA in 222/3 innings of work as a pitcher. Though no postseason was played due to the pandemic, the Lava Bears were arguably the state’s top softball team after finishing the season 18-1. Basketball BY CHRIS HANSEN • The (Eugene) Register-Guard E UGENE — The last time Maarty Leunen was back on campus, the Oregon men’s basketball team still played in McArthur Court and Ernie Kent SEEING GREEN was the coach. That’s pretty much how Tajuan Porter remembers it as well. So when those two joined former teammate Bryce Taylor on the court at Matthew Knight Arena earlier this week for the first practice with the Al- ways Us alumni team, it took some getting used to. “It’s like a foreign country here because I’ve never seen all of this,” said Porter, the No. 6 scorer in Ore- gon history. “These guys are spoiled now,” smiled Redmond’s Leunen, the Ducks’ No. 2 all-time rebounder. “They have no idea what we had to go through at Mac Court. ... But it’s well-deserved. The program is at a very high level and I kind of feel like we were a huge part of starting this whole process. This was being talked about when we were playing, so to see it first hand is pretty sweet.” Leunen, Porter and Taylor, who were all starters on the 2007 Elite Eight team, are teammates once again as they join nine other former Ducks on a team that will play in The Basketball Tournament (TBT), a $1 million winner-take-all single-elimina- tion event that begins for Always Us at noon Sunday in Peoria, Illinois. Always Us is the No. 4 seed in the 16-team Illinois regional and will open against the No. 13 Peoria All- Stars. Also on the team are Casey Benson, Dwayne Benjamin, Shakur Juiston, Elijah Brown, Jalil Ab- dul-Bassit, Johnathan Loyd, Mikyle McIntosh, Paul White and Mike Moser, who is in his first season as an assistant coach on the Oregon women’s team. See Basketball / B4 Redmond’s Maarty Leunen joins Oregon alumni team in The Basketball Tournament, a $1 million winner-take- all single-elimination event Submitted photo Redmond’s Maarty Leunen has played professional basketball in Italy for the past 11 years. He is joining other for- mer Oregon Ducks players on a team that will play in The Basketball Tournament (TBT), which begins for the Oregon alumni team Always Us at noon Sunday in Peoria, Illinois. OLYMPICS Smith, Carlos, Berry demand change in Olympic protest rule BY EDDIE PELLS AP National Writer — Bulletin staff report NBA Bucks celebrate title with parade MILWAUKEE — Thou- sands of fans lined down- town Milwaukee streets on Thursday to catch a glimpse of their beloved Bucks in a parade to cel- ebrate the city’s first NBA championship in half a century. The procession in- cluded a hook-and-ladder fire truck, occasionally blaring its horn, and open- air buses and flatbed trucks carrying Bucks stars including Finals MVP Gi- annis Antetokounmpo and Jrue Holiday, as well as the trophy they cap- tured Tuesday night with a Game 6 victory over Phoenix. Antetokounmpo held his son, 1-year-old Liam, atop a bus as fans along the route chanted “MVP!” “Milwaukee, we did it baby! We did it!” Antetok- ounmpo said to a cheer- ing crowd in the Deer Dis- trict, the area outside the Bucks’ Fiserv Forum. Neil and Rachana Bha- tia, both 34 and from sub- urban Waukesha, brought 1-month-old son Zain to the Deer District. “It unifies the city and puts the city on a global stage,” said Neil Bhatia. “It’s just bringing everybody together to celebrate something that hasn’t happened in 50 years,” he said. — Associated Press Charlie Riedel/AP file Gwendolyn Berry holds her Activist Athlete T-shirt over her head during the medal ceremony after the finals of the women’s hammer throw at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials in Eugene in June. TOKYO — Tommie Smith, John Carlos and Gwen Berry are among the more than 150 athletes, educators and activists who signed a letter Thursday urging the IOC not to punish participants who demonstrate at the Tokyo Games. The five-page letter, pub- lished on the eve of the Olym- pics, asks the IOC not to sanc- tion athletes for kneeling or raising a fist, the way Smith and Carlos did at the 1968 Mexico City Games. Berry, the American ham- mer thrower who triggered much of this debate, has said she intends to use her Olym- pic platform to point out racial inequality in the United States. She turned away from the flag when the national anthem played while she was on the medals stand at the Olympic trials last month. The IOC has made changes to its Rule 50 that bans political demonstrations at the Games, and has said it will allow them on the field, so long as they come before the start of action. Players from five Olympic soc- cer teams took to their knees Wednesday before their games on the opening night for that sport. But the IOC did not lift the prohibition on medals-stand demonstrations, and has left some of the decision-making about punishment up to indi- vidual sports federations. “We do not believe the changes made reflect a com- mitment to freedom of expres- sion as a fundamental human right nor to racial and social justice in global sports,” said the letter, which was posted on the website of the Muhammad Ali Center and also signed by Ali’s daughter, four-time box- ing world champion Lalia Ali. The letter disputed the IOC’s long-held position that the Olympics should remain neu- tral, arguing that “neutrality is never neutral.” “Staying neutral means stay- ing silent, and staying silent means supporting ongoing in- justice,” it said. The letter also took issue with an athlete survey con- ducted by the IOC athletes’ commission that found wide- spread support for Rule 50. The commission cited the survey as a central reason for making the recommendation to largely keep the rule intact. See Protest / B5 Sounds of the Games: NBC does not plan on adding crowd noise BY JOE REEDY Associated Press One of Molly Solomon’s fa- vorite memories from the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics was watching Lindsey Vonn in the start house. Cameras would focus on the skiing great, with microphones picking up her breathing while she listened to final instruc- tions. With no spectators in the stands during the Tokyo Games, Solomon is hoping to pick up on more of those mo- ments. The NBC Olympics execu- tive producer said that the net- work will not add additional crowd noise to its coverage. The hope is that fans will hear the Games as they haven’t been “We’ve pivoted to know that we’ve got access to all of these fields-of-play microphones. So, we really feel like we can enhance the sounds of the Games. You’ll hear it as the athletes hear it.” — Molly Solomon, NBC Olympics executive producer able to before, whether it is the action in the pool during swimming or conversations be- tween competitors and coaches during gymnastics. “You look at gymnastics and think about the distinctive in- tricacies of each apparatus, and we really feel like we’ll be able to bring the viewer closer to the athlete’s experience here in To- kyo than ever before,” said Sol- omon, who is working her 11th Olympics for NBC. The only crowd noise that viewers may hear is ambient crowd noise that venues might use to generate atmosphere for the athletes. With more than 300 events at the Olympics, it would be a logistical nightmare for NBC and Olympic Broadcasting Ser- vice, which provides the world feed, to layer in crowd noise, es- pecially with each sport having its own cadence and pace. See Sounds / B5 Manu Fernandez/AP People sit in an empty tribune during a volleyball team training ses- sion at Ariake Arena at the 2020 Summer Olympics Thursday in Tokyo, Japan.