Cannon Beach gazette. (Cannon Beach, Or.) 1977-current, April 19, 2019, Page A12, Image 12

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    A12 • Friday, April 19, 2019 | Cannon Beach Gazette | CannonBeachGazette.com
Former Gazette owner leads Bend softballers
By MARK MORICAL
Bend Bulletin
Tom Mauldin says he can
pitch his age.
He is 68 years old and can
still throw a softball 68 mph.
“That’s about the equiv-
alent of a 93-mile-per-hour
baseball,” Mauldin says.
That comes in handy
when Mauldin — the new
softball coach at Bend High
— throws batting practice to
his players.
Mauldin seemingly lives
and breathes softball. He
played fast-pitch softball
semiprofessionally for many
years — sometimes more
than 200 games per year.
In addition to coaching the
Lava Bears, Mauldin is the
assistant director for Fast-
pitch Northwest and a pri-
vate pitching/hitting coach.
He is also national softball
and volleyball editor for
CBS-owned MaxPreps.
Mauldin coached the Sis-
ters High School softball
team from 2007 to 2010,
and Redmond High in 2013
and 2014. Before taking the
Bend job, he was an assis-
tant coach for Walla Walla
(Washington)
Commu-
nity College and College
of Idaho, and he remains a
pitching consultant with col-
leges around the Northwest.
Mauldin says he consid-
ered retiring from coaching
before players and parents
encouraged him to take the
Bend High position.
“This will be my last
coaching job, so I’m look-
ing forward to it more than
any other year that I’ve
coached,” Mauldin says.
So far, he has led the
Bears — who have eight
returning seniors — to a 4-2
record.
“I challenged them to out-
hustle everybody,” Maul-
din says. “We don’t have
10 (NCAA Division I-cali-
ber) kids, but we can outhus-
tle people. That is something
we can control. Our girls are
hustling. We’ve amped up
the intensity and the number
of reps. They’re responding
really well.”
Diamond sports runs in
Bend Bulletin
Tom Mauldin
Mauldin’s blood. Accord-
ing to Mauldin, his father,
Mason “Mule” Mauldin,
played football and base-
ball at Clemson University
in South Carolina and was
a journeyman minor league
player who had brief stints
with the Brooklyn Dodg-
ers, Washington Senators
and Chicago Cubs before
going on to a career in the
Air Force.
“I wasn’t as good as my
dad (at baseball),” Mauldin
says. “But I fell in love with
fast-pitch softball at a young
age. I played for a long time.
I got to play with some great
players who really inspired
me. I don’t think I was trying
to live in my father’s foot-
steps. I just fell in love with
the game of softball. Here it
is 50 years later and I’m still
doing it.”
Mauldin grew up in
South Carolina and started
his journalism career as a
sports writer in California
for the Bay Area’s Fairfi eld
Daily Republic and Vacav-
ille Reporter. He covered the
Oakland A’s when they won
three straight World Series
(1972-74) and he also cov-
ered the Joe Montana-led
San Francisco 49ers in the
1980s.
Mauldin and his wife, Cat,
eventually became newspa-
per owners on the Oregon
Coast, running the Cannon
Beach Gazette and the North
Coast Citizen in Manzanita.
The Gazette was honored
by the National Newspa-
per Association six times as
America’s best small news-
paper when the Mauldins
were publishers.
The Mauldins — who
have fi ve children and 11
grandchildren — sold their
newspapers 12 years ago and
moved to Sisters. In 2011
they moved to Redmond,
where they remain.
While coaching high
school and college softball,
Mauldin has maintained
his roles as a private pitch-
ing coach and an editor for
MaxPreps.
He says he has coached 50
all-state pitchers privately.
“As a private pitching
coach, I get to travel a lot,”
Mauldin says. “People fl y
me to Hawaii for pitching
clinics. How do you say no?”
He also handles the
national high school softball
rankings for MaxPreps.
“I rank who’s in the top
100,” he says. “One is a
computer poll and the other
one is mine.”
While Bend High, which
fi nished 9-16 last season, is
not in those national rank-
ings, Mauldin says he has
seen improvement in the lit-
tle amount of practice time
the team has had. The Bears
did not have their fi rst full
outdoor practice until March
21 due to lingering snow on
the fi elds.
“We’re a week behind, but
the girls are really respond-
ing,” Mauldin says. “I think
by the time we start league
we’ll be a pretty good soft-
ball team. We want to take
care of league play and we
want to make the playoffs.”
Taking batting practice
against a pitcher like Maul-
din will certainly help.
HAPPENINGS IN BRIEF
Writers workshops
in Manzanita
Authors Jennifer Haupt
and Liz Prato share the stage
at Manzanita Writers’ Series
for an Authors in Conversa-
tion event, at 7 p.m. at the
Hoffman Center for the Arts
in Manzanita on Saturday,
April 20.
Haupt and Prato kick off
the new format for the Man-
zanita Writers’ Series for
2019, two authors in con-
versation sharing a similar
theme.
Haupt will read from and
discuss her novel, “In the
Shadow of 10,000 Hills,”
recently selected as a fi nalist
for the 2018 INDIES Book
Awards.
Prato will read from
her book of essays “Volca-
noes, Palm Trees and Privi-
for her new memoir “I Am a
Stranger Here Myself.” She
will appear at the Lunch in
the Loft series, Thursday,
April 18, at 2 p.m., at Beach
Books in Seaside.
In this book, Gwartney
explores the life and legacy
of Narcissa Prentiss Whit-
man, the fi rst white woman
to cross the Rocky Moun-
tains and to give birth on the
frontier.
Whitman, driven by reli-
gious fervor to “settle” the
American West, was one
of fourteen people killed at
the Whitman Mission (near
today’s Walla Walla, Wash-
ington) in 1847 by a band of
Cayuse. In Whitman’s story,
the author recognizes her
own ancestors who settled in
Idaho.
Blending history and
memoir, Gwartney grapples
Authors Jennifer Haupt
and Liz Prato
lege,” which explores what
it means to be a white tourist
in a seemingly paradisiacal
land that has been formed,
and largely destroyed, by
white outsiders.
Admission for the eve-
ning reading is $7. Doors
open at 6:30.
Author Gwartney
at Beach Books
Author Debra Gwartney
will be touring the Northwest
with her family’s exploit-
ative past and present and
asks what it means to claim
a land as one’s own.
“I Am a Stranger Here
Myself.” will be published
March 15 by the Univer-
sity of New Mexico Press.
Beach Books is locatedat
616 Broadway.
The mystery of
D.B. Cooper
On Thursday, April 25,
explore the history and leg-
ends that make Oregon
unique.
Acclaimed
Oregon
author and historian Wil-
liam L. Sullivan leads a
journey through legendary
northwest folk heroes from
Sacajawea and D.B. Cooper
to Bigfoot.
Alaina Giguiere
Owner/Principal Broker
c: 503.440.3202
f: 877.812.1126
e: alainagiguiere@mac.com
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CoastalAdvantage.com
Marty Giguiere
Owner/Broker
c: 503.440.7676
o: 503.436.1777
e: mr007@pacifier.com
Susan Tone
Broker
c: 503.440.1648
e: egranebrown@gmail.com
Broker
c: 503.354.4072
e: susantone@nehalemtel.net
Andrea Mace
Hilary Herman
Shelley Parker
Broker
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e: Andrea.k.mace@remax.net
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c: 503-791-4718
e: HilaryHerman@hotmail.com
Broker
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e: Shelley.Parker@mail.com
Cheryl Johnson
Abbas Atwi
Broker
c: 503-739-1977
e: Cheryl.Johnson@remax.net
Broker
c: 503-310-8464
e: Abbas.atwi@remax.net
Member of 2 MLS Systems Each office is independently owned & operated
26650 BEACH STREET
Egrane Brown
Broker
c. 503.440.9280
e: maryanns@remax.net
219 N. Hemlock, Cannon Beach 503.436.1777
430 Laneda, Manzanita 503.368.1777
187 W MADISON
Sullivan will share enter-
taining and educational tales
about the historical fi gures
that helped defi ne the spirit
of the Pacifi c Northwest,
as told by the author of the
thriller, “The Case of D.B.
Cooper’s Parachute.”
Sullivan has written four
novels and a dozen nonfi c-
tion books about the North-
west, including “Hiking
Oregon’s History” and “Ore-
gon Favorites.” His journal
of a 1000-mile hike he took
across Oregon, “Listening
for Coyote,” was chosen by
Maryann Sinkler
2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!
/REMAXCoastalAdvantage
Artist’s rendition of D.B. Cooper
the Oregon Cultural Heri-
tage Commission as one of
Oregon’s “100 Books,” the
100 most signifi cant books
in the state’s history.
This event is free and
open to the public. Sulli-
van’s presentation starts at
4 p.m. Seating and park-
ing is limited for this pre-
sentation. The doors close
at 4:15 p.m. While you’re
at the museum, check out
the latest exhibits on display
there.
The Cannon Beach His-
tory Center and Museum
also features the history of
Cannon Beach and Arch
Cape, a longhouse replica,
tide pool exhibit, and the
cannon that Cannon Beach
is named for. For more infor-
mation visit www.cbhistory.
org, fi nd us on Facebook or
call 503-436-9301.
89916 MANION DR
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