B2 The BulleTin • SaTurday, auguST 21, 2021
ON THE AIR
SCOREBOARD
SATURDAY
SOCCER
Premier League, Manchester City vs. Norwich City
Premier League, Aston Villa vs. Newcastle United
Bundesliga, Bayer 04 Leverkusen vs.
Borussia Muenchengladbach
Premier League, Brighton & Hove Albion vs. Watford
MLS, Sporting Kansas City at Minnesota United
MLS, Seattle at Columbus
MLS, New York City FC at New York Red Bulls
Women’s, Int’l Champions Cup, Portland vs. Lyon
Scottish Premier League, Dundee vs. Hibernian
TENNIS
ATP/WTA, Cincinnati
ATP/WTA, Cincinnati
BASKETBALL
WNBA, Phoenix at Atlanta
BIG3, Week 8
LACROSSE
Athletes Unlimited, Team Cummings vs. Team Glynn
Premier Lacrosse League, quarterfinals
Premier Lacrosse League, Redwoods vs. Whipsnakes
BASEBALL
Little League World Series
MLB, Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees
Little League World Series
MLB, Seattle at Houston
MLB, N.Y. Mets at L.A. Dodgers
Little League World Series
MLB, regional coverage
Little League World Series
MLB, regional coverage
FOOTBALL
NFL preseason, Buffalo at Chicago
CFL, Winnipeg at Toronto
NFL preseason, N.Y. Jets at Green Bay
NFL preseason, Detroit at Pittsburgh
NFL preseason, Denver at Seattle
AFL Premiership, Adelaide vs. North Melbourne
GOLF
PGA Tour, The Northern Trust
PGA Tour, The Northern Trust
PGA Tour Champions, Boeing Classic
Korn Ferry Tour, Boise Open
Women’s British Open
HORSE RACING
Saratoga Live
BOXING
PBC: Pacquiao vs. Ugas, prelimary bouts
MOTOR SPORTS
NASCAR Xfinity Series, Michigan
IndyCar, Madison (Ill.)
TRACK AND FIELD
Prefontaine Classic
ACTION SPORTS
Cornhole, ACL Pro Shootout 7
RODEO
PBR Bull Riding, Music City Knockout
Time
7 a.m.
7 a.m.
TV
USA
NBCSN
NFL preseason
9:25 a.m.
ABC
9:30 a.m.
NBC
12:30 p.m.
ESPN
2:30 p.m.
FOX
5 p.m.
FS1
7 p.m.
ESPN2
4 a.m. (Sun) CBSSN
8 a.m.
3 p.m.
Tennis
Tennis
9 a.m.
10 a.m.
ESPN2
CBS
9 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
3 p.m.
FS2
NBC
NBCSN
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
noon
1 p.m.
1 p.m.
3 p.m.
4 p.m.
5 p.m.
7 p.m.
10 a.m.
1 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
11:30 p.m.
ESPN
FS1
ABC
Root
FS1
ESPN
MLB
ESPN
MLB
NFL
ESPN2
NFL
NFL
NBC
FS2
10 a.m.
noon
2 p.m.
4 p.m.
4 a.m. (Sun)
Golf
CBS
Golf
Golf
Golf
11 a.m.
FS2
12:30 p.m.
FOX
12:30 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
NBCSN
NBCSN
1:30 p.m.
3 p.m.
CBSSN
5 p.m.
CBSSN
6 a.m.
8 a.m.
10 a.m.
10 a.m.
11 a.m.
11 a.m.
4 p.m.
6 a.m.
8:30 a.m.
1 p.m.
2 p.m.
4 p.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
11 a.m.
ESPN
ESPN
ESPN
TBS
ABC
Root
ESPN
NBCSN
NBCSN
CBSSN
Pac-12
Pac-12
NBC
Golf
CBS
10 a.m.
NFL
4:30 p.m. NBC, NFL
noon
ESPN
noon
noon
FOX
NBCSN
Listings are the most accurate available.
SPORTS BRIEFING
GOLF
Rahm has 1-shot lead at Northern Trust — Jon Rahm’s
bogey-free round of 67 gave him a one-shot lead over Tony Fi-
nau (64) at the Northern Trust. Olympic gold medalist Xan-
der Schauffele tied his personal best on the PGA Tour and the
course record at Liberty National in New Jersey with a 62 and
was in the group at 10-under 132 along with Justin Thomas
(69) and Keith Mitchell (64). Jordan Spieth had two consecu-
tive eagles and fired a 62 to get to 8 under and is tied for 10th
with Brooks Koepka (64), a stroke behind a group that in-
cludes Tom Hoge (64) and Kevin Na (66).
Korda struggles at Women’s British Open but still in
the mix — Nelly Korda could barely raise a smile after tap-
ping in for the first birdie of her second round at the Women’s
British Open. On a day her putter turned cold, it had taken
14 holes for the world’s top-ranked player to pick up a shot
at Carnoustie. Georgia Hall, the 2018 champion, overcame a
double-bogey on the 15th hole to shoot 3-under 69 and take
a share of the 36-hole lead with Mina Harigae (67) at 7-under
overall. One stroke back was No. 4 Sei Young Kim (71), a major
champion from last year, and Lizette Salas (69). Lexi Thomp-
son shot 70 and was part of a group of seven players at 5 under.
— Bulletin wire reports
MEGA MILLIONS
The numbers drawn Friday night are:
41 43 51 57 70 1
Oregon
Lottery
results
x
WEEK 2
Friday’s Games
Kansas City 17, arizona 10
Washington 17, Cincinnati 13
Saturday’s Games
Buffalo at Chicago, 10 a.m.
new york Jets at green Bay, 1:25 p.m.
Baltimore at Carolina, 4 p.m.
atlanta at Miami, 4 p.m.
detroit at Pittsburgh, 4:30 p.m.
Tennessee at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m.
houston at dallas, 5 p.m.
indianapolis at Minnesota, 5 p.m.
las Vegas at los angeles rams, 7 p.m.
denver at Seattle, 7 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
new york giants at Cleveland, 10 a.m.
San Francisco at los angeles Chargers, 4:30 p.m.
Monday’s Game
Jacksonville at new Orleans, 5 p.m. (eSPn)
BASEBALL
MLB
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Tampa Bay
75
48
.610
—
new york
71
52
.577
4
Boston
70
54
.565
5½
Toronto
63
57
.525
10½
Baltimore
38
83
.314
36
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Chicago
72
51
.585
—
Cleveland
59
61
.492
11½
detroit
59
65
.476
13½
Minnesota
54
69
.439
18
Kansas City
53
68
.438
18
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
houston
71
50
.587
—
Oakland
69
53
.566
2½
Seattle
66
56
.541
5½
los angeles
62
62
.500
10½
Texas
42
80
.344
29½
Friday’s Games
Kansas City 6, Chicago Cubs 2
atlanta 3, Baltimore 0
n.y. yankees 10, Minnesota 2
Cleveland 9, l.a. angels 1
detroit 4, Toronto 1, 10 innings
Boston 6, Texas 0
Chicago White Sox 7, Tampa Bay 5, 11 innings
Seattle at houston, late
San Francisco at Oakland, late
Saturday’s Games
Minnesota (Maeda 6-4) at n.y. yankees (Cole 11-6),
10:05 a.m.
Chicago White Sox (Keuchel 8-6) at Tampa Bay (Patiño
2-3), 10:10 a.m.
Kansas City (Bubic 3-6) at Chicago Cubs (Thompson 3-2),
11:20 a.m.
detroit (Peralta 3-2) at Toronto (ryu 11-6), 12:07 p.m.
San Francisco (gausman 12-5) at Oakland (Manaea 8-8),
1:07 p.m.
l.a. angels (detmers 1-2) at Cleveland (McKenzie 2-5),
1:10 p.m.
Seattle (gilbert 5-4) at houston (Odorizzi 5-6), 1:10 p.m.
atlanta (Smyly 8-3) at Baltimore (harvey 6-12), 4:05 p.m.
Texas (lyles 5-10) at Boston (rodríguez 9-6), 4:10 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W
L
Pct
GB
atlanta
66
56
.541
—
Philadelphia
61
60
.504
4½
new york
60
61
.496
5½
Washington
52
68
.433
13
Miami
51
72
.415
15½
Central Division
W
L
Pct
GB
Milwaukee
74
48
.607
—
Cincinnati
67
57
.540
8
St. louis
62
58
.517
11
Chicago
54
70
.435
21
Pittsburgh
42
79
.347
31½
West Division
W
L
Pct
GB
San Francisco
78
43
.645
—
los angeles
76
46
.623
2½
San diego
67
56
.545
12
Colorado
55
66
.455
23
arizona
41
81
.336
37½
Thursday’s Late Game
l.a. dodgers 4, n.y. Mets 1
Friday’s Games
Kansas City 6, Chicago Cubs 2
atlanta 3, Baltimore 0
Cincinnati 5, Miami 3
Washington at Milwaukee, late
Pittsburgh at St. louis, late
arizona at Colorado, late
San Francisco at Oakland, late
n.y. Mets at l.a. dodgers, late
Philadelphia at San diego, late
Saturday’s Games
Kansas City (Bubic 3-6) at Chicago Cubs (Thompson 3-2),
11:20 a.m.
n.y. Mets (hill 6-4) at l.a. dodgers (Scherzer 10-4), 1:05 p.m.
Washington (espino 3-4) at Milwaukee (lauer 4-4), 1:05 p.m.
San Francisco (gausman 12-5) at Oakland (Manaea 8-8),
1:07 p.m.
Miami (TBd) at Cincinnati (Miley 10-4), 3:40 p.m.
atlanta (Smyly 8-3) at Baltimore (harvey 6-12), 4:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Peters 0-1) at St. louis (happ 7-6), 4:15 p.m.
arizona (gallen 1-7) at Colorado (Freeland 4-6), 5:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (nola 7-7) at San diego (Musgrove 8-8),
5:40 p.m.
BASKETBALL
WNBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Connecticut
17
6
.739
Chicago
11
11
.500
new york
11
13
.458
Washington
8
13
.381
atlanta
6
16
.273
indiana
5
18
.217
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
las Vegas
17
6
.739
Seattle
17
7
.708
Minnesota
13
9
.591
Phoenix
12
10
.545
dallas
10
14
.417
los angeles
9
13
.409
Thursday’s Late Games
Phoenix 77, Washington 64
los angeles 66, atlanta 64
Friday’s Games
Seattle 99, new york 83
indiana 83, dallas 81
Saturday’s Games
Phoenix at atlanta, 9 a.m.
Minnesota at Chicago, 5 p.m.
GB
—
5½
6½
8
10½
12
GB
—
½
3½
4½
7½
7½
SOCCER
GOLF
MLS
PGA Tour
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
T Pts GF GA
new england
14
3
4 46 40 25
nashville
7
2 11 32 32 20
ny City FC
9
6
4 31 34 19
Phila.
8
5
7 31 26 19
Orlando City
8
4
7 31 29 24
d.C. united
8
9
3 27 31 29
CF Montréal
7
7
6 27 26 25
Columbus
6
8
6 24 21 25
atlanta
5
6
9 24 23 25
new york
6
9
4 22 23 24
Chicago
5 10
5 20 23 32
inter Miami CF
5
9
4 19 18 30
Cincinnati
3
7
8 17 18 30
Toronto FC
3 11
6 15 24 41
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
T Pts GF GA
Seattle
11
3
6 39 33 16
Sporting KC
11
4
5 38 36 21
la galaxy
11
7
2 35 31 30
Colorado
10
4
4 34 27 18
real Sl
7
6
6 27 29 21
Minnesota united 7
6
6 27 22 23
Portland
7
9
3 24 26 36
la FC
6
8
5 23 24 26
San Jose
5
7
8 23 22 28
FC dallas
5
9
6 21 23 28
Vancouver
4
7
8 20 21 29
houston
3
8
9 18 21 30
austin FC
4 11
4 16 14 23
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Friday’s Game
San Jose at la galaxy, late
Saturday’s Games
Sporting KC at Minnesota, 12:30 p.m.
Seattle at Columbus, 2:30 p.m.
atlanta at d.C. united, 5 p.m.
Toronto FC at Miami, 5 p.m.
Cincinnati at new england, 5 p.m.
ny City FC at new york, 5 p.m.
Chicago at Orlando City, 5 p.m.
CF Montréal at Phila., 5 p.m.
FC dallas at houston, 5:30 p.m.
Portland at austin FC, 6 p.m.
real Sl at Colorado, 6 p.m.
la FC at Vancouver, 7 p.m.
The Northern Trust Leaderboard
Friday at Liberty National in Jersey City, N.J.
Yardage: 7,410; Par: 71
Second Round
Jon rahm
63-67—130
Tony Finau
67-64—131
Justin Thomas
63-69—132
Keith Mitchell
68-64—132
Xander Schauffele
70-62—132
Kevin na
67-66—133
alex noren
69-64—133
harold Varner iii
66-67—133
Tom hoge
69-64—133
Brooks Koepka
70-64—134
Jordan Spieth
72-62—134
NWSL
W L T Pts GF
Portland
9 3 2
29 21
north Carolina
7 4 3
24 18
gotham FC
5 2 6
21 14
Orlando
5 4 6
21 18
Chicago
6 7 3
21 16
Washington
5 5 4
19 17
reign FC
6 7 1
19 17
houston
5 6 3
18 17
louisville
4 6 4
16 12
Kansas City
1 9 4
7
7
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Saturday’s Games
Kansas City at north Carolina, 4 p.m.
gotham FC at reign FC, 7 p.m.
Sunday’s Game
Orlando at Washington, 1 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
louisville at Kansas City, 5 p.m.
gotham FC at Portland, 7:30 p.m.
GA
8
9
9
17
22
17
15
20
20
20
Women’s British Open
Leaderboard
Friday in Carnoustie, Scotland
Purse: $4.5 million
Yardage: 6,737; Par: 72; (a)-amateur
Second Round
Mina harigae
70-67—137
georgia hall
68-69—137
lizette Salas
69-69—138
Sei young Kim
67-71—138
Moriya Jutanugarn
72-67—139
leona Maguire
72-67—139
Wichanee Meechai
71-68—139
yealimi noh
70-69—139
nanna Koerstz Madsen
70-69—139
lexi Thompson
69-70—139
yuka Saso
68-71—139
DEALS
Transactions
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
American League
SeaTTle MarinerS — recalled rhP yohan ramirez
from Tacoma (Triple-a West). Placed rhP Casey Sadler
on the paternity list.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
indiana PaCerS — Signed F Torrey Craig.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ariZOna CardinalS — Claimed CB luq Barcoo off
waivers from the Jacksonville Jaguars.
aTlanTa FalCOnS — Signed Te david Wells. Placed
Te ryan Becker on the injured reserve list.
ChiCagO BearS — released Wr Thomas ives with
an injury settlement.
CleVeland BrOWnS — Signed lBs Montrel Meander
and Willie harvey. released Wr JoJO Ward and Crey Taylor.
released CB Kiondre Thomas with an injury settlement.
dallaS COWBOyS — Placed P hunter niswander on
the injured reserve list.
green Bay PaCKerS — Signed Wr damon hazelton.
released CB dominique Martin.
hOuSTOn TeXanS — released nT Brandon dunn.
MiaMi dOlPhinS — released dB Terrell Bonds.
neW OrleanS SainTS — Signed K aldrick rosas. re-
leased Te Josh Pederson.
neW yOrK JeTS — Signed S Bennett Jackson. Placed
S Zane lewis on the injured reserve list.
TenneSSee TiTanS — released Og adam Coon with
an injury settlement.
NBC
SUNDAY
BASEBALL
Little League World Series
Little League World Series
Little League World Series
MLB, Chicago White Sox at Tampa Bay
Little League World Series
MLB, Seattle at Houston
MLB, L.A. Angels at Cleveland
SOCCER
Premier League, Wolves vs. Tottenham
Premier League, Arsenal vs. Chelsea
NWSL, Orlando at Washington
Women’s college, Boise St. at Utah
Women’s college, Santa Clara at California
GOLF
Women’s British Open
PGA Tour, The Northern Trust
PGA Tour, The Northern Trust
FOOTBALL
NFL preseason, N.Y. Giants at Cleveland
NFL preseason, San Francisco at L.A. Chargers
BASKETBALL
WNBA, Seattle at Washington
MOTOR SPORTS
NHRA, Lucas Oil Nationals
NASCAR Cup Series, Michigan
FOOTBALL
2
The estimated jackpot is now $256 million.
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
Little League
Continued from B1
They had realized their hard
work had paid off and they
reached their goal of making it
to Williamsport.
“Each stage got a little bigger
and we performed at our best,”
said Renner.
A week later, the team was
on the East Coast in what Steve
Mora described as “Disneyland
on steroids.”
Once in Williamsport and
on the Little League campus,
the players not yet in high
school are treated as royalty.
Crowds of over 100 people
attend their practices, adults
and older kids come up and
ask players for autographs and
photos and major news outlets
are asking for interviews.
“You are famous for a week,”
said Renner.
All that before even stepping
on the field. Once on the field
— a field that Reynolds said
could only be topped by Major
League spring training fields in
terms of quality — they were
playing in front of crowds ex-
ceeding 10,000 people, playing
in front of a national television
audience.
When the game started, the
team was able to zone out the
noise and focus on the game.
“It was different than play-
ing in front of 40 parents,”
said Renner. “It is easy to get
distracted. But you can’t get
distracted. You need to stay fo-
cused and let it bother you af-
ter the game.”
On the field, the team lost
a heartbreaker to Tennessee
3-2, then fell out of contention
by losing to Rhode Island 8-0.
Bend North would finish the
tournament with a win over
Italy 6-2.
It was the experiences, not
the games that stood out to
most during the time in Wil-
liamsport. They shared a dorm
with a team from South Korea,
Boxing
Continued from B1
A presidential campaign
would be longer and more gru-
eling than any training camp in
Los Angeles, where he teamed
up again with Freddie Roach
to prepare for one more title
challenge.
“The thing about Manny is
he’s almost always been pre-
pared when it’s time to start,”
Roach said recently at the Wild
Bulletin file photo
Bend North beat Lynnwood (Washington) Pacific 5-1 in San Bernardino, California, to become the first Cen-
tral Oregon team to reach the Little League Baseball World Series in 2016.
where neither team spoke the
other’s language. But by the
end of the week, the two teams
had figured out ways to com-
municate through nonverbal
cues and Google translate.
The two teams from differ-
ent countries exchanged me-
mentos and gear.
“One of my favorite memo-
ries was meeting other players
from out of the country and
understanding their culture,”
Platner said.
Steve Mora saw it as an im-
portant lesson for preteens to
experience.
“It was fun to see the kids get
outside the Bend bubble and
see that kids are kids and base-
ball players are baseball play-
ers,” he said.
Now, in 2021, the players
that made up the World Series
team are entering their final
year of high school. Some of
the area’s top athletes, not just
in baseball.
Twice this spring, Reynolds
and Platner were in pitch-
er’s duals when Summit and
Mountain View met on the di-
amond. When the Storm and
Cougars meet on the diamond,
it is like a mini reunion.
There are lessons that have
carried over to today. They
learned about the sacrifice it
takes to accomplish a goal, how
to work together and compete
Card Gym. “Even this time, af-
ter two years away — the lon-
gest he’s ever gone without a
fight — he came into camp in
shape, and the speed was still
there.”
Pacquiao faces much stiffer
odds in his latest political am-
bition than he does in the ring.
He is a solid favorite to beat
Ugás (26-4, 12 KOs), the cagey
Cuban veteran who got a sur-
prising chance for a life-chang-
ing win at late notice after
Pacquiao’s original opponent,
Errol Spence Jr.. discovered he
had a torn retina during a pre-
fight physical.
“I feel young right now,”
Pacquiao said. “I’m just happy
with what I’m doing, because
boxing is my passion.”
Pacquiao’s power and speed
hadn’t diminished signifi-
cantly in his last bout against
Keith Thurman. If he shows
up against Ugás with the same
combination of skills, it likely
and how to play fearless.
“I don’t put any pressure on
myself anymore,” said Platner.
“I Played on ESPN, had those
big moments. That transfers
over today.”
Five years does not seem like
that long ago, but soon they
will head off into their post-
high school lives. But what the
little league team from North
Bend was able to accomplish in
2016 will be a tall accomplish-
ment to top.
“I told them,” Steve Mora
said, “you won’t understand the
gravity of the experience until
10 to 20 years down the road.”
e
Reporter: 541-383-0307,
brathbone@bendbulletin.com
would be too much for the
man who holds the belt Pac-
quiao took from Thurman in
2019 before the WBA abruptly
awarded it to Ugás earlier this
year.
“I didn’t like that someone
took my belt without challeng-
ing me in the ring,” Pacquiao
said.
“I’m glad that we can settle
that dispute about the WBA
title. It’s always better to talk in
the ring.”