The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, July 29, 2021, Page 6, Image 6

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    A6 The BulleTin • Thursday, July 29, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
THURSDAY
AUTO RACING
Formula 1 Racing, Hungarian Grand Prix, Practice 1
BASEBALL
MLB, Regional Coverage
MLB, Regional Coverage
MLB, Regional Coverage
MLB, Regional Coverage
Minor League, Tri-City Dust Devils at Hillsboro Hops
EQUESTRIAN
Horse Racing, Saratoga Live
GOLF
LPGA & European Tour: ISPS HANDA World Invitational
OLYMPICS
Tokyo Olympics, Men’s Basketball: Spain vs Argentina
Tokyo Olympics, Women’s Volleyball: U.S. vs Turkey
Tokyo Olympics, Men’s Golf, Second Round
Tokyo Olympics, Gymnastics, Swimming, Track & Field
Tokyo Olympics, Beach Volleyball
Tokyo Olympics, Track and Field
Tokyo Olympics, Rowing, Rugby
Tokyo Olympics, BMX Racing
Tokyo Olympics, Women’s Basketball: U.S. vs Japan
Tokyo Olympics, Trampoline Gymnastics
Tokyo Olympics, Water Polo, Archery
Tokyo Olympics, Diving
Tokyo Olympics, Women’s Soccer, Quarterfinal
Tokyo Olympics, Women’s Rugby, Quarterfinal
Tokyo Olympics, Swimming
Tokyo Olympics, Women’s Soccer, Quarterfinal
SOCCER
Copa do Brazil Soccer, CR Flamengo vs ABC FC
CONCACAF Gold Cup, Qatar vs United States
CONCACAF Gold Cup, Mexico vs Canada
Time
TV
2:25 a.m. ESPN2
9 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
4 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
10 a.m.
6 a.m.
MLB
MLB
MLB
MLB
ROOT
FS2
GOLF
5:10 a.m. NBCSN
5:45 a.m.
USA
3:30 p.m. GOLF
5 p.m.
NBC
5 p.m.
CNBC
5 p.m.
USA
6 p.m.
CNBC
7 p.m.
CNBC
9:30 p.m. USA
10 p.m.
CNBC
11:30 p.m. CNBC
11:30 p.m. USA
1 a.m.
NBCSN
1:30 a.m.
USA
3 a.m.
USA
3 a.m.
NBCSN
4 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
7 p.m.
FS2
FS1
FS1
FRIDAY
BASEBALL
MLB, Regional Coverage
MLB, Seattle Mariners at Texas Rangers
EQUESTRIAN
Horse Racing, Saratoga Live
FOOTBALL
AFL, North Melbourne Kangaroos vs Geelong Cats
AFL, Gold Coast Suns vs Melbourne Demons
AFL, Collingwood Magpies vs West Coast Eagles
GOLF
LPGA & Euro Tour: ISPS HANDA World Invitational
LACROSSE
Athletes Unlimited, Team Wood vs. Team Treanor
Athletes Unlimited, Team Warden vs. Team Arsenault
OLYMPICS
Tokyo Olympics, Women’s Soccer, Quarterfinal
Tokyo Olympics, Beach Volleyball
Tokyo Olympics, Men’s Volleyball: ROC vs France
Tokyo Olympics, Triathlon
Tokyo Olympics, Men’s Golf, Third Round
Tokyo Olympics, Track & Field, Beach Volleyball, etc.
Tokyo Olympics, Beach Volleyball
Tokyo Olympics, Track and Field
Tokyo Olympics, Archery, BMX Freestyle
Tokyo Olympics, Women’s Volleyball: U.S. vs ROC
Tokyo Olympics, BMX Freestyle
Tokyo Olympics, Rugby
Tokyo Olympics, Fencing, Badminton
Tokyo Olympics, Men’s Water Polo: U.S. vs Hungary
Tokyo Olympics, Trampoline Gymnastics
Tokyo Olympics, Diving
Tokyo Olympics, Archery
Tokyo Olympics, Men’s Soccer, Quarterfinal
Tokyo Olympics, Rugby
Tokyo Olympics, Baseball: South Korea vs U.S.
SOCCER
MLS, Atlanta United FC at Orlando City SC
MLS, Portland Timbers at LA Galaxy
Time
4 p.m.
5 p.m.
TV
MLB
ROOT
10 a.m.
FS2
8 p.m.
10 p.m.
11 p.m.
FS2
FS1
FS2
6 a.m.
GOLF
2 p.m.
5 p.m.
CBSSN
FS1
5 a.m.
NBCSN
6 a.m.
NBCSN
7 a.m.
NBCSN
3:30 p.m. USA
3:30 p.m. GOLF
5 p.m.
NBC
5 p.m.
CNBC
5 p.m.
USA
6 p.m.
CNBC
7:10 p.m. CNBC
8 p.m.
USA
9 p.m.
CNBC
9:45 p.m. CNBC
10 p.m.
USA
10:30 p.m. CNBC
11:10 p.m. USA
11:45 p.m. CNBC
1 a.m.
NBCSN
1:30 a.m.
USA
3 a.m.
NBCSN
5 p.m.
7 p.m.
ESPN
ESPN
Listings are the most accurate available.
SPORTS BRIEFING
FOOTBALL
NCAA won’t re-evaluate penalties for Bush, other
cases — The NCAA said Wednesday it will not re-evaluate
penalties handed down for infractions cases, a decision that
will keep former Southern California running back Reg-
gie Bush from having his 2005 Heisman Trophy victory re-
stored. Earlier this month, the Heisman Trust said it would
return the Heisman to Bush if the NCAA were to reinstate
him for the 2005 season. The NCAA released a statement say-
ing that recent changes to rules regarding how athletes can be
compensated for their names, images and likenesses still do
not permit “pay-for-play type arrangements.” Bush had his
Heisman victory vacated after the NCAA ruled he received
impermissible benefits while playing at USC. The games Bush
played in for USC in 2005 were also vacated because he was
deemed ineligible because of the NCAA violations.
49ers QB Trey Lance, 3rd overall draftee, signs rookie
deal — San Francisco 49ers quarterback Trey Lance signed
his rookie contract Wednesday morning ahead of the team’s
first practice of training camp. Lance’s agency CAA made the
announcement on Twitter before the team later confirmed it.
Selected No. 3 overall in the draft, Lance will receive a fully
guaranteed four-year, $34.1 million deal. The Niners have the
option to add a fifth year, as teams do with all first-round-
ers. Lance practiced Wednesday and got reps with the second
unit as coach Kyle Shanahan had promised on Tuesday, with
Jimmy Garoppolo entrenched as the team’s No. 1 QB.
—Bulletin wire reports
POWERBALL
The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
25 30 53 59 60 05
Oregon
Lottery
results
As listed at
oregonlottery.org
and individual
lottery websites
The estimated jackpot was not available at press time.
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
11 19 29 31 32 37
The estimated jackpot is now $1.1million.
PARITY WITH A PADDLE
BASEBALL
MLS
MLB
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
Pct
Boston
63
40
.612
Tampa Bay
60
42
.588
new york
53
47
.530
Toronto
50
48
.510
Baltimore
35
65
.350
Central Division
W
L
Pct
Chicago
60
41
.594
Cleveland
50
49
.505
detroit
49
55
.471
Kansas City
43
56
.434
Minnesota
43
60
.417
West Division
W
L
Pct
houston
63
40
.612
Oakland
57
46
.553
seattle
55
48
.534
los angeles
50
50
.500
Texas
36
66
.353
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
Pct
new york
54
46
.540
Phila.
50
50
.500
atlanta
50
52
.490
Washington
46
54
.460
Miami
44
58
.431
Central Division
W
L
Pct
Milwaukee
60
42
.588
Cincinnati
52
49
.515
st. louis
51
51
.500
Chicago
50
52
.490
Pittsburgh
38
63
.376
West Division
W
L
Pct
san Francisco
63
37
.630
los angeles
61
41
.598
san diego
59
45
.567
Colorado
44
57
.436
arizona
32
71
.311
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Tuesday’s Late Games
Texas 5, arizona 4
detroit 6, Minnesota 5, 11 innings
san diego 7, Oakland 4
Colorado 12, l.a. angels 3
houston 8, seattle 6
Toronto at Boston, ppd.
Wednesday’s Games
Cleveland 7, st. louis 2
Toronto 4, Boston 1, 7 innings, 1st game
detroit 17, Minnesota 14
Oakland 10, san diego 4
houston 11, seattle 4
Boston 4, Toronto 1, 7 innings, 2nd game
n.y. yankees 3, Tampa Bay 1, 10 innings
Baltimore 8, Miami 7
arizona 3, Texas 2
Chicago White sox at Kansas City, late
SOCCER
GB
—
2½
8½
10½
26½
GB
—
9
12½
16
18
GB
—
6
8
11½
26½
GB
—
4
5
8
11
GB
—
7½
9
10
21½
GB
—
3
6
19½
32½
Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP
With the first-ever group of women’s Olympic paddlers, 17-year-old Evy
Leibfarth of the United States competes in the C1 heats of the canoe
slalom Wednesday in Tokyo, as the games move closer to gender parity.
Colorado at l.a. angels, late
Thursday’s Games
n.y. yankees (Cole 10-5) at Tampa Bay (Patiño 1-2),
10:10 a.m.
Chicago White sox (rodón 8-4) at Kansas City (hrnándz
1-1), 11:10 a.m.
Baltimore (Wells 1-0) at detroit (Mize 5-5), 4:10 p.m.
Toronto (ryu 9-5) at Boston (rodríguez 7-5), 4:10 p.m.
Oakland (Montas 8-8) at l.a. angels (Cobb 7-3),
6:38 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Kansas City at Toronto, 4:07 p.m.
Baltimore at detroit, 4:10 p.m.
Boston at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m.
n.y. yankees at Miami, 4:10 p.m.
seattle at Texas, 5:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Chicago White sox, 5:10 p.m.
Minnesota at st. louis, 5:15 p.m.
Oakland at l.a. angels, 6:38 p.m.
houston at san Francisco, 6:45 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Tuesday’s Late Games
Cincinnati 7, Chicago Cubs 4
san Francisco 2, l.a. dodgers 1
san diego 7, Oakland 4
Colorado 12, l.a. angels 3
Wednesday’s Games
Cleveland 7, st. louis 2
Oakland 10, san diego 4
Milwaukee 7, Pittsburgh 3
n.y. Mets 2, atlanta 1
Baltimore 8, Miami 7
arizona 3, Texas 2
Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, late
Colorado at l.a. angels, late
l.a. dodgers at san Francisco, late
Washington at Phila., ppd.
Thursday’s Games
Washington (scherzer 7-4) at Phila. (Velsqez 3-5),
9:05 a.m., 1st game
atlanta (smyly 7-3) at n.y. Mets (Walker 7-4), 9:10 a.m.
Cincinnati (Castillo 4-10) at Chicago Cubs (Mills 4-3),
11:20 a.m.
Washington (TBd) at Phila. (TBd), 12:05 p.m., 2nd game
l.a. dodgers (Price 4-0) at san Francisco (Cueto 6-5),
12:45 p.m.
Milwaukee (Peralta 7-3) at Pittsburgh (Kuhl 3-5),
4:05 p.m.
Colorado (Freeland 1-5) at san diego (Musgrove 6-7),
7:10 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Chicago Cubs at Washington, 4:05 p.m.
Phila. at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at n.y. Mets, 4:10 p.m.
n.y. yankees at Miami, 4:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at atlanta, 4:20 p.m.
Minnesota at st. louis, 5:15 p.m.
l.a. dodgers at arizona, 6:40 p.m.
houston at san Francisco, 6:45 p.m.
Colorado at san diego, 7:10 p.m.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF
new england
10 3 3
33 30
nashville
6 1 8
26 24
Orlando City
7 4 4
25 23
Phila.
6 4 6
24 20
Columbus
6 3 6
24 16
ny City FC
7 5 2
23 26
CF Montréal
6 5 4
22 20
d.C. united
6 7 2
20 21
new york
5 6 3
18 18
atlanta
2 5 8
14 14
Toronto FC
3 8 4
13 20
Cincinnati
3 7 4
13 17
Chicago
3 9 3
12 17
inter Miami CF
2 8 3
9 10
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF
seattle
9 2 5 32 25
sporting KC
9 3 3 30 28
la Galaxy
8 6 1 25 23
Colorado
7 4 3 24 21
la FC
6 5 4 22 20
Minnesota united 6 5 3 21 15
real sl
5 4 5 20 24
Portland
6 7 1 19 18
houston
3 4 8 17 17
FC dallas
3 7 5 14 18
san Jose
3 7 5 14 17
Vancouver
3 7 5 14 16
austin FC
3 7 4 13 10
nOTe: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Wednesday’s Games
Minnesota at la FC, late
Friday’s Games
Columbus at ny City FC, 4:30 p.m.
atlanta at Orlando City, 5 p.m.
Portland at la Galaxy, 7 p.m.
GA
19
14
19
16
12
15
18
18
17
18
32
29
27
23
GA
12
17
26
16
17
17
16
22
20
23
25
25
15
NWSL Glance
W L T Pts GF
Portland
7 3 1
22 17
Gotham FC
5 1 4
19 12
Washington
5 3 3
18 14
Chicago
5 5 2
17 12
north Carolina
5 4 2
17 15
houston
5 5 1
16 13
Orlando
4 4 4
16 14
reign FC
4 6 1
13 10
louisville
3 5 2
11
7
Kansas City
0 7 4
4
5
nOTe: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
GA
7
6
11
17
8
12
15
13
15
15
DEALS
Wednesday’s Transactions
FOOTBALL
National Football League
seaTTle seahaWKs — Placed Wr d’Wayne eskridge
and rB Travis homer on the active/physically unable to
perform (PuP) list. Placed G Pier-Olivier lestage on the
active/non-football injury list.
Tokyo Games
U.S. women capture 3-on-3 gold
sians and its first medal of the
Games.
Bronze medals went to Chi-
na’s women and Serbia’s men.
Much as they did in the fi-
nal, the Americans dominated
through most of the five-day
tournament. They played nine
games and lost only one.
Plum, who became the all-
time leading scorer in NCAA
history during her four years
at Washington, led the way in
this event, as well. She scored
55 points over the nine games.
In the final, she scored all five
of her points early to stake the
U.S. to a lead it never relin-
quished.
“I didn’t think this was go-
ing to happen,” said the guard,
who suffered an Achilles injury
last year and has been on a long
road back. “I didn’t think it was
in the cards with my Achilles.
And for Lou to get COVID
and Jackie to come in. So many
things. This group kept dealing
with it.”
“Lou,” is Katie Lou Samuel-
son, whose positive COVID-19
test earlier this month forced
a quick shuffling of the roster
and opened a spot for Young.
All four players who made
it to Tokyo are in the midst of
successful WNBA careers. All
made it there after college ca-
reers that made stops at the
Final Four. Dolson played at
UConn, Gray at South Caro-
lina and Young was at Notre
Dame. Of the four, Plum is the
only one who didn’t win a na-
tional title in college.
The gold medal seems like
much more than a consolation
prize.
“USA Basketball didn’t quit
on me,” Plum said. “So, this
would probably rank the high-
est so far.”
When the U.S. game ended,
Plum got in a hug huddle with
her teammates, then they made
it over to the stands for a visit
with IOC President Thomas
Bach.
U.S. First Lady Jill Biden was
at the Aomi Urban Sports Park
for the opener last weekend.
Yes, this foursome is offi-
cially part of the see-and-be-
seen crowd in Tokyo.
Time will tell if the half-court
version of this sport — brought
to the Olympic program with
the intent of luring a younger
audience, and a more diverse
collection of countries, into the
game — turns into one of the
cool kids on the Olympic pro-
gram.
helped build the walls. She’s
embraced — winkingly, most
of the time — her status as the
Greatest of All-Time.
It takes a special kind of
swagger to compete in a le-
otard with a bejeweled goat
you’ve nicknamed “Goldie.” A
documentary series has spent
the last two years chronicling
her path. The acronym for
the post-Olympic Gold Over
America Tour she is headlining
this fall is not a coincidence.
A room overlooking the
massive gym her family runs
in the northern Houston sub-
urbs turned into a TV studio
over the spring. Outlets asking
for a piece of her time came
and went, asking her the same
questions over and over again.
She accommodated as many
as she could. It’s all part of the
process.
Internally, however, things
were shifting. Her perfor-
mances during the spring com-
petition were ... OK, at least by
her standards. Yes, she drilled
her Yurchenko double pike
vault when she unveiled it in
May. She also fell off uneven
bars the same night. During
the U.S. Olympic Trials in June,
she actually finished behind
Olympic teammate Sunisa Lee
on the final day of the compe-
tition, the first time that’s hap-
pened in eight years.
Things didn’t get any bet-
ter in Tokyo. Biles topped
qualifying as usual but an un-
characteristically messy block
on her Cheng vault sent her
nearly sideways off the table.
She bounded all the way off
the competition mat following
one tumbling pass on floor.
She carried so much momen-
tum on her beam dismount
she took three huge steps back-
ward.
Something wasn’t right.
The doubts that have cropped
up at times during her career
re-emerged. And rather than
brush them back, she accepted
their presence. They lingered
when she walked onto the
floor Tuesday for the team fi-
nal. Her warm-up wasn’t great.
Her vault was even worse, as
the planned 2 1/2 twists of her
Amanar became 1 1/2 instead.
This wasn’t the first time she
felt like this. She was a newly
minted senior elite at the U.S.
Classic in 2013. Things went
badly. She fell on each of the
first three events. Then coach
Aimee Boorman withdrew the
16-year-old from the competi-
tion in an effort to protect her
from herself.
Asked on Tuesday night if
there were any similarities be-
tween that long night in Chi-
cago, Biles laughed.
“I was dumb and stupid
(back then),” she said. “I was
pulled out. I wanted to go out
there and compete.”
She’s not “dumb and stupid”
anymore. As she sat down with
U.S. team doctor Marcia Faus-
tin while waiting for her score
to flash inside a stunned, fan-
less Ariake Gymnastics Cen-
ter, she realized she could no
longer push through as she’s
done so many times before.
Too much was on the line both
mentally and physically. For
her team. And for herself.
A gymnast flying through
the air without any idea of
where she might be going is
a dangerous thing. Biles bent
gravity to her will so easy for so
long, people forgot there’s no
such thing as autopilot.
BY EDDIE PELLS
AP National Writer
TOKYO — Their scrap-
books and trophy cases are
filled with memories from
Final Fours, national titles,
All-America honors and even
some impressive showings in
the pros.
Now, they have Olympic
gold medals to go with all that.
The U.S. team of Stefanie
Dolson, Allisha Gray, Kelsey
Plum and Jackie Young took an
early lead against the team from
Russia, then held on for an 18-
15 victory Wednesday to win
the title in the debut of 3-on-3
basketball at the Olympics.
“In 10 years, we’ll look back
and say ‘Damn, we did that,’”
Dolson said. “Hopefully we
started something.”
Dolson did the honors
during the medals ceremony,
taking the gold prizes and plac-
ing them over her teammates’
necks. They stood with hands
over hearts during the national
anthem.
Their celebration couldn’t
beat Latvia’s, though.
After Karlis Lasmanis
drained a shot from behind the
arc to close out the men’s final,
he found himself at the bot-
tom of a four-man dogpile. The
game-winner gave his country
a 21-18 victory over the Rus-
Biles
Continued from A5
Biles made a promise to
herself when she came back
that she would be doing it on
her terms. Her way. She spent
much of the run-up to Tokyo
desperately trying to hold onto
that vision. She won a world
championship in 2018 despite
battling a kidney stone that left
her in agony and became the
most decorated gymnast ever
with a five-medal haul in Ger-
many a year later.
Everything was primed for
a golden goodbye in Japan last
August. Then the coronavi-
rus pandemic hit, pushing the
Games back a full 12 months.
And everything had to be reca-
librated.
She fended off depression,
steeling herself to go on. There
was a brand to build. Sponsors
to please. Fans to honor. Crit-
ics — both internal and ex-
ternal — to silence. Much like
Olympic greats Michael Phelps
and Usain Bolt, the 24-year-old
became a prisoner of her own
excellence.
To be fair, in some ways she
Jeff Roberson — staff, AP
United States’ Kelsey Plum, left, Stefanie Dolson (13), Jacquelyn Young
(8) and Allisha Gray celebrate after defeating Russian Olympic Commit-
tee in a women’s 3-on-3 gold medal basketball game Wednesday at the
Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan.