MARCH 25, 2015 A10 WEDNESDAY, HERMISTONHERALD.COM Finding a reasonable, viable solution T he ending, if you could call it that, to Hermiston’s baseball game against Redmond Monday was weird, and it should never have happened. The game was called because of the sun glaring off the roof of a storage building behind home plate, something I’ve never heard of being done. But I went out to the mound and to the XPSLUH¶VLQ¿HOGSRVLWLRQV and looked toward home. Sure enough, the glare was blinding. Not only could I not see, but it was so bright my vision was becoming splotchy like I was staring into the sun. It wasn’t safe, and something had to be done to prevent an accident from occurring. We don’t want players or umpires taking line drives in the face because they can’t see. That wouldn’t be good. But just walking off WKH¿HOGZDVQ¶WDJRRG option, either. That’s what the umpires did: They simply walked off the ¿HOG7KH\VDLGLWZDVD liability issue — it was. But they said the game didn’t matter — it did. With how Oregon School Activities Association rankings work, every game matters, and every game matters to every team on any given schedule. So it was really a bad thing to just call that game because of the fallout. Redmond lost out on a near-sure win and a nine-run explosion, and Hermiston has to spend more money on gas and the athletes have to miss more class time because the teams have to make up the game at a neutral site, preliminarily in The Dalles. It really wasn’t the right decision. After talking to people who have a great deal of knowledge about the baseball complex at Armand Larive Middle School, I learned nothing like that had ever happened before. Hermiston Athletic SAM BARBEE FROM THE SIDELINES Sports reporter Director Blaine Ganvoa said, in the construction SURFHVVRI¿FLDOVWKRXJKW about glare coming off the roof of the building in question and the color painted was chosen VSHFL¿FDOO\IRUWKDW reason: to avoid glare. So, in the two or three \HDUVWKDWEDVHEDOO¿HOG has been in use — both for high school and Babe Ruth games — no game had been in jeopardy due to any sort of glare. 0\¿UVWUHDFWLRQZDV WKH¿HOGZDVQ¶WVLWXDWHG properly. In the afternoon, the sun is behind home plate, putting it in the eyes of everyone on the ¿HOGVDYHWKHFDWFKHU and home plate umpire. Then there’s the metal roof which, according to Ganvoa, was painted its dark brown color on purpose. But it didn’t work. It still happened. And though it’s only happened once, a game was still called prematurely, and a contingency plan has to EHWKRXJKWRIRQWKHÀ\ It’s not an ideal situation, and it’s one that could have been avoided. A good portion of the blame, though, has to be put on the umpires. There was no thought on their part about what might happen if they walked RIIWKH¿HOG7KH\GLGQ¶W consider waiting for the sun to move in the sky to eliminate the glare. They had a single purpose, and that was getting off the ¿HOG7KH\GLGSOD\HUV and coaches a disservice LQQRWWU\LQJWR¿QGDQ immediate solution. They took the easy road, and it was the wrong one. Fixing the potential glare issue — it’s not an issue yet, but it could become one — isn’t as simple as throwing a tarp on the roof and calling it good — mostly because WDUSVDUHUHÀHFWLYHWRR SEE SOLUTION/A11 Schimmel leads Cardinals to Sweet 16 Former Hermiston player and current Louis- ville Cardinals guard Jude Schimmel helped lead her third-seeded squad to a 60-52 win over No. 6 South Florida Mon- day night, putting Louis- ville into its third straight NCAA Sweet Sixteen. Schimmel scored 13 points on the night, with HLJKW FRPLQJ LQ WKH ¿QDO three minutes and six in WKH¿QDOVHFRQGV “I knew that I had to be a leader,” Schimmel told the Associated Press. “At that point, we needed somebody to step up and I said ‘Why not me.’ ” Louisville takes on seventh-seeded Dayton at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Al- bany, New York regional VHPL¿QDO GO SEE IT Wednesday, March 25 Lacrosse Hermiston vs. Richland, 5 p.m. Baseball Hermiston @ Kamiakin, 4 p.m. Softball Echo vs. Knappa @ Heppner, 10 a.m. Echo vs. Clatskanie @ Heppner, 2 p.m. Thursday, March 26 Baseball 6WDQ¿HOGYV8QLRQDP Softball Echo vs. Colton, 3 p.m. Friday, March 27 Baseball Hermiston vs. Century (DH), 12 p.m. Saturday, March 28 No events scheduled SPORTS PREP BASEBALL • SCHEDULE Dogs look to retool this season BY SAM BARBEE HERMISTON HERALD The Hermiston baseball team has some shoes to fill. Last year, Hermiston had arms it could rely on to eat up innings when- ever possible in pitchers Austin Monahan, Nychal Gritz and Sean Smith, who helped carry Herm- iston into the playoffs. Those players have grad- uated, and first-year head coach Lance Hawkins doesn’t know yet who will step into those shoes. He’s got some candi- dates, however. Junior left-hander RJ Robles threw four scoreless in- nings in the season open- HU 0DUFK D ORVV to Ridgeview, and Tyler Sexton, a big righty, al- lowed just two runs over six innings in an 8-2 vic- tory over Pasco March 18. Other than those two players, and some relief arms, Hawkins isn’t sure what kind of staff he has yet. “In the past, we’ve had guys that you can say, ‘They’re gonna throw 120 innings,’ ” Hawkins said. “We don’t have that this year. We don’t have that ace. That’s why we’re gonna play five games in eight days and figure out who can throw.” Hermiston, howev- er, has other players on whom it will rely this sea- son. Two-time all-league outfielder Cole Smith is roaming right field and bats third. Senior Jay Lindeman, who primarily played in the outfield last SAM BARBEE PHOTO Hermiston righty Hayden Edmiston delivers a pitch during a non-league baseball game between the Bulldogs and the Red- mond Panthers Monday. The game was called in the bottom of the sixth due to glare, and it is uncertain if the game will be ÀQLVKHG season, has made a case to take over behind the plate and went 3-for-3 in his first game as the start- ing catcher. Landon Gam- mell is in the mix for the catcher spot, too. Dylan Caldwell and Sexton are battling it out at first base, and junior Chase Root is going to start at shortstop “for the rest of his career,” Hawkins said. The other two out- field spots are also up for grabs. Senior Michael Gossler started in center against Ridgeview. Fresh- man Dayshawn Neal got the start in left March 17 until Robles was relieved, and Neal figures to get outfield innings as well. Neal isn’t the only freshman getting playing time, though. Lukus To- lan is on track to secure the third baseman slot for the next four years. Hawkins said he is ex- cited about certain pieces of his team puzzle, but he’s not yet sure how to fit other pieces together. Hawkins isn’t shying away from tweaking his starting lineup from game to game according to matchups, he said. He’ll start his best nine, not his nine best. “I’m not really sure what to expect,” Haw- kins said. “We got some guys that just play hard. Are they true baseball players? I’m not sure, but they’re gonna give you everything they have. I’d rather work with guys like that than have prima donna baseball players.” With a strong and ath- letic roster, Hawkins wants to keep the game moving. He’s going to have his players bunt. They will steal. He’s go- ing to move the defense around and try to the Bulldogs score runs any way possible. His focus isn’t game to game or even inning to inning. It’s pitch to pitch, he said, and, so far at least, that plan has been received well. “We’re gonna play the game,” Hawkins said. Hawkins said he is pushing urgency this sea- son: urgency in prepara- tion, urgency is mindset, urgency at the plate, in the field, on the mound, on the bases. He said, however, not all the play- ers are acclimated to that style of baseball yet. In the game against Ridgeview, Ravens catch- er Even Remick tapped RQH XS WKH ¿UVW EDVH OLQH 5REOHV ¿HOGHG WRRN KLV time and just barely got a hustling Remick at the EDJIRUWKH¿UVWRXWRIWKH inning. Hawkins came out of the dugout to preach ur- JHQF\ +H ¿UPO\ LQVWUXFW- ed the pitcher he wanted him to make a play like WKDW OLNH LW ZDV WKH ¿QDO out of the game, not the ¿UVWRIWKHWKLUGLQQLQJ “I’ve been trying to set this idea in them: We’re gonna battle every pitch, every inning — not show up, and the next thing you it’s the fifth inning and you get your urgency,” he said. “We’re gonna have urgency right now.” Hermiston doubleheader comes to frustrating close Second game called because of glare BY SAM BARBEE HERMISTON HERALD The doubleheader be- tween the Hermiston baseball team and the Redmond Pan- thers came to a strange end Monday afternoon. With Redmond leading 14-5 in Hermiston’s half of the sixth, the game was called due the sun’s glare coming off a shed behind home plate. Redmond had scored nine runs in the top half of the sixth EHIRUHWKH¿HOGXPSLUHFDOOHG the game. In the front end of the doubleheader, Hermiston squeaked out a 2-1 win be- hind a solid pitching perfor- mance from RJ Robles. The day’s end frustrated ¿UVW\HDU%XOOGRJKHDGFRDFK Lance Hawkins frustrated. “My frustration comes down to ... this season we give up the big inning,” he said after the second game was called. “It’s how we do it. We’re not mentally in the game. Physically, sometimes you have some mistakes, but the mental part of the game, we talk about it enough, the kids should know what they’re doing, and we’re not competing a full game. We talk about being great in do- ing all the little things, and we’re not doing that right now — that’s from seniors all the way down.” Hawkins had an extra long talk about that with the seniors after the games Mon- day. Hawkins challenged them to be more mentally fo- cused and prepared for each game. Hawkins pointed out one play as a prime example of the Bulldogs’ lack of focus. With three runs already in and the bases loaded with one out, Redmond’s Brock Penhollow bounced one back to Michael Gossler at the SAM BARBEE PHOTO Hermiston’s Landon Gammell turns away from an inside fastball during the sixth inning of the second non-league baseball game between the Bulldogs and the Redmond Panthers. The game was called two batters later due to glare, and it is still uncertain as to whether the game ZLOOEHÀQLVKHG mound, who should have sent the ball home to start a 1-2-3 double play but instead froze and held the ball, allowing one more run to score. Red- mond found new life after the SOD\ZKLFKRSHQHGWKHÀRRG gates. “That’s I guess getting caught up in the game, but it should just be a reaction deal,” Hawkins said. “It’s thinking about the game too much, probably thinking about at- bats and thinking about other things. You can only control the things you can control at that time. And that’s a dou- ble-play ball ... The baseball gods frown upon mistakes like that.” The game wasn’t a total wash, though. Hermiston WRRN D OHDG LQ WKH ¿UVW when Dylan Caldwell dou- bled home Robles. Redmond FDPHEDFNIRU¿YHLQWKHWRS of the third, highlighted by Hunter Smith’s RBI triple, however. The Bulldogs responded in the bottom half of the third, plating four of their own to WLH WKLQJV DW ¿YH :LWK RQH out, Cole Smith reached on an error, and Caldwell was beaned. Both moved up on a passed ball, and Lukus Tolan singled to score both to pull Hermiston within a run at 5-4. Freshman Keegan Caldwell then doubled to left center, scoring Tolan from second, which knotted the score. “I think we did a great job there (getting back into it), but after you tie the game up, there’s nothing,” Hawkins said. “It was almost like ‘Hey, we did a great job. We came out (and) scored (four),’ and then they were complacent again.” Two innings later, Red- mond scored its nine runs, and the game was called in the bottom of the sixth. In the opener, Redmond got on the board early when Hunter Smith tripled to deep right and scored on a wild pitch. Hermiston answered an inning later when Robles walked, Kyler Mikami dou- bled and then Mitch Brown singled. The game remained WLHG XQWLO WKH ¿IWK ZKHQ Chase Root reached on an error, moved to second on an another error and scored when Caldwell doubled GRZQWKHULJKW¿HOGOLQHZLWK two strikes to take the 2-1 ad- vantage. Robles threw 5.2 innings DQG WRVVHG PRUH WKDQ pitches. He allowed just one hit — the lead-off triple, one UXQ ZDONHG ¿YH DQG VWUXFN out six. Despite the win, Hawkins ZDVQ¶WVDWLV¿HG “It’s how you approach the game,” he said. “You keep battling and you keep your team close. We had some chances to get some timely (hits), and we didn’t again. Again, those are approaches. I gotta put the kids, in prac- tice, (in) those uncomfort- able situations where they’re ready for the game.” Hermiston next takes the ¿HOGDWSPWRGD\IRUDGDWH at Kamiakin (Washington). ——— HERMISTON 2, REDMOND 1 RHS 100 000 0 — 112 HHS 010 010 0 — 240 WP: RJ Robles LP: Daulton Graham 2B: K. Mikami (HHS), D. Caldwell (HHS); 3B: H. Smith (RHS), C. Smith (HHS)