SPORTS JUNE 17, 2015 HERMISTONHERALD.COM A6 WEDNESDAY, PREP GOLF • SUMMER SOFTBALL • SCHEDULE • SUMMER BASEBALL The pain of caring too much SAM BARBEE FROM THE SIDELINES Sports reporter W hile the Houston Astros were parading around the bases against the sanity-taking Mariners, I became angry. Not just feign I-wish-this-wasn’t- happening angry. No. It was IXOOÀHGJHG,ZDQWWRSXQFK something-injuries-be-damned angry. Then I realized something: I’ve gotten out of control. I guess it all started when I thought the Mariners would actually be a good baseball team. On paper they are, but games aren’t won with projections and hypotheticals, they’re won with runs. And Seattle has the second-fewest runs in baseball, despite having this guy named Nelson Cruz. So as the Astros scored 13 runs and Seattle mustered just two hits, boy was I upset. I stomped around my apartment and pouted with my arms folded. I WXUQHGLQWRD¿UVWJUDGHUZKR didn’t get to go to McDonald’s because he misbehaved. I texted my dad and told him what was going on. He’s in Europe right now with my mom, taking a cruise from Cologne to Vienna, and somehow the nine-hour time difference synced up properly for us to have a brief conversation. He said to just remember that it’s entertainment and ultimately unimportant. It’s a sentiment I share but had forgotten. Sure, I’m emotionally invested in the teams I root for. When Washington lost a heart-breaking football game to Arizona last fall, I couldn’t watch that day’s highlights. They were too painful. But that’s a rarity. Usually I don’t care enough to have a win or loss affect my mood and my attitude. It’s been happening more frequently lately. My coworkers can attest to my irrational involvement. They see when I FRPHWRWKHRI¿FHDIWHUDVHULHV win and I’m glowing, and I have a rain cloud over my head when the Mariners have lost two of three. Editor Jessica Keller tells me I’m in an unhealthy relationship and I have to get out. And you know what? She’s right. So now I’m trying. I’m trying not to live and die with each inning, with each at-bat, with each pitch. I make fun of football fans in the South who obviously take it too seriously. Remember that story about an Alabama fan who poisoned the almost sacred trees on the campus of Auburn a few years ago? That’s what I was on pace to become. At one point, I was seriously considering hijacking the train that steams across some tracks at Houston’s ballpark as a sort of revenge tactic. See where I was? I had this coming. At the beginning of the spring, I was telling anyone who would listen that the M’s are winning the American League West this season. It turns out I couldn’t have been more wrong, yet I still believed. And I guess some of my negative emotions came from the expectations I made in my own head out of hope and desperation. So, it’s really my fault. I got too involved, too emotionally connected to a sports team. It can happen to the best of us, but it’s also important to have some perspective about the whole situation. By the end of the day Sunday, with these things hashed and re-hashed in my head, I have a new attitude: lethargy. — Sam Barbee is a sports reporter for the Hermiston Herald and East Oregonian based in Hermiston. He can be reached by email at sbarbee@ hermistonherald.com or by phone at 541-564-4542. Fol- low him on Twitter at @Sam- Barbee1 and follow Herald sports at @HHeraldSports Darkness ends ASA scrimmage in tie ton’s turned to play chick- en with the sunset. Two errors and a wild pitch got Hermiston its ¿UVWUXQRIWKHIUDPHZLWK one out, then a single and a walk loaded the bases. Almaguer singled on the BY SAM BARBEE ¿UVWSLWFKVKHVDZJHWWLQJ HERMISTON HERALD two and putting Hermis- Rarely do softball ton down a single run at 7-6 still with one out. A games end in ties. Usually VKDOORZ À\ EDOO WR FHQ- they go to the next inning ter popped out of Jamie with some sort of tiebreak- Christopher’s glove in er to swiftly determine a center, allowing the tying winner. run to cross the plate. In an ASA softball We moved to the scrimmage between eighth, then, and with a Hermiston and Echo Out- PRGL¿HG 7H[DV WLHEUHDN- rage, we got to the eighth er. Instead of just one inning tiebreaker after runner at second and one Hermiston plated four in out, it was decided to the bottom of the seventh have runners at second to tie things up at 7-7. But and third and no outs in during the fourth at-bat an attempt to speed up of the eighth, the game the process. Echo plated was called a 7-7 tie due to a couple of runs before darkness. it got too dark, and both ,WZDVERWKWHDPV¶¿UVW coaches, along with the real competition of the single umpire, decided summer, and both coaches to call the game a tie be- walked away with largely cause of darkness. happy with how the game For Bailey and Echo, was played. who travel to McMin- Hermiston coach Kylee nville for a tournament Lete and Echo coach Bry- this weekend, it was good an Bailey both were sat- SAM BARBEE PHOTO to get some live action. LV¿HG ZLWK WKHLU SLWFKLQJ “It was good to get %XW /HWH ZDVQ¶W VDWLV¿HG Echo’s Mackenzie Gonzales slides safely into second base as Hermiston short stop Mikayla .RSDF]WULHVWRÀQGWKHEDOOGXULQJDQ$6$VFULPPDJH0RQGD\LQ+HUPLVWRQ7KHJDPHZDV over here and get away with the overall effort. from typical practice ³:H ZHUH ÀDW´ VKH FDOOHGDWLHGXHWRGDUNQHVV stuff,” Bailey said. “It said. “We played defense ÀDW :H KLW ÀDW (YHU\- lead in the third, when two Hermiston got another in three walks in the sixth, ZDV GH¿QLWHO\ ZKDW ZH WKLQJZDVÀDW´ errors created a run with the fourth when Almaguer took a base on a bean ball, needed to prepare to go %XWGHVSLWHWKHÀDWQHVV no outs. An out later, Kelly walked to lead off, moved and scored three runs. A to McMinnville for a +HUPLVWRQ VFRUHG ¿UVW McLoughlin singled home to second and third on run scored on a wild pitch tournament.” ——— Jaime Hinkley led off with Echo’s second run of the wild pitches and scored on with Mackenzie Gonzales a double in the bottom day for a 2-1 lead. Hermiston’s second safety at the dish, and she singled ECHO 7, RI WKH ¿UVW DQG PRYHG WR Hermiston responded squeeze on the day for a home another. Gonzales HERMISTON 7 third on a throwing error. in the home half of the 3-2 lead. herself scored on another 002 013 The next at-bat, Julissa third when Hinkley sin- But Echo got one back wild pitch to push Echo ECHO 1 — 7 5 6 Almaguer bunted home gled, moved to second on LQ WKH ¿IWK RQ DQ HUURU WR ahead, 6-3. They got an- STAN 101 100 WKH VSHHG\ LQ¿HOGHU IRU D an error, stole third and tie it again at three. other in the seventh on yet 4 — 7 6 5 B. Nailor, J. Almaguer and T. Betz; M. Gonza- 1-0 lead. scored on a ground out to Then Echo appeared to another wild pitch. les and J. Garza. Echo grabbed a brief tie things at two apiece. take control. Echo worked Then it was Hermis- 2B: J. Hinkley (HERM). Hermiston plated four in seventh to stay alive Four Bulldog golfers honored with scholarships Kings and Queens Tournament gives $1,500 in awards BY SAM BARBEE HERMISTON HERALD Four Hermiston golfers got a lit- tle help paying for college expenses. They are recipients of the Kings and Queens Scholarship, which gives $250 and $500 awards to a male and female golfers from Umatilla and Morrow counties. Paden LaCoursiere and Mad- ison Welch received the $500 scholarships, and Zack Adams and Saige Smith received the $250 scholarships. They were awarded based on involvement in golf, es- says written about how the sport has affected their lives and letters of endorsement from coaches. “They’ve been involved in golf a number of years and just the way they handle themselves on the golf course (was reason to se- lect them),” Committee Chairman Don Obrist said. “I’ve watched them play for several years and they really just stood out.” The scholarship is related to “We saw some ways to raise some money and we decided to raise money to give it away,” Obrist said. “Be- cause all the couples were in- LaCoursiere Welch volved in golf, what better way to give the mon- ey in scholar- ships?” The Kings and Queens Tourna- ment is July 25-26 Adams Smith at Big River Golf Course in Umatil- la. The entry fee is $180 per couple and that includes a dinner Saturday the Kings and Queens Tourna- night. A horse race auction is also on ment, a couples event that’s in its the docket for Saturday. 7KHWRXUQH\LVDKROHÀLJKW- ¿IWK\HDU$\HDURUWZRDIWHUWKH inaugural tournament, Obrist and ed tournament separated into the committee decided to start three categories based on handi- raising money, and that quickly caps. The sign-up deadline is Sat- urday, July 20. morphed into scholarships. 6WDQ¿HOGVSOLWVZLWK7UL&LWLHV%DGJHUVDWKRPH Grogan tosses one- hitter in win, walks doom Tigers in loss BY SAM BARBEE HERMISTON HERALD 7KH 6WDQ¿HOG $$8 baseball team split a pair RIJDPHVLQ6WDQ¿HOGRYHU the weekend. Bolstered by a one-hit- ter from Dylan Grogan LQ WKH RSHQHU 6WDQ¿HOG cruised to an 11-0 win over the Tri Cities Badgers, but a big sixth inning from the Badgers completed a comeback in the second JDPH WR GRZQ 6WDQ¿HOG 11-10. ,QWKHRSHQHU6WDQ¿HOG scored nine runs in the top RI WKH ¿IWK WR EUHDN RSHQ a 2-0 game. Ryan Bailey scored on a single from Grogan in the fourth and Grogan scored on a double play for a 2-0 lead. Mean- while, the lanky sopho- more Grogan was dealing. TCB got its only hit of WKHGD\LQWKH¿UVW²RQD bunt single — and Grogan followed that with a walk. But Grogan struck out the next two batters to slip out of the jam. After a walk in the second inning, Grogan retired 11 straight Bad- JHUV+LV¿QDOOLQHLQ- nings pitched, one hit, no runs, two walks and nine strikeouts. ,Q WKH ¿IWK 6WDQ¿HOG scored all nine with two outs. Damian Curiel sin- gled with two away and Thyler Monkus followed with a walk. Adrian Ren- ner and Bailey both sin- gled, driving in Curiel and Monkus and giving 6WDQ¿HOG D OHDG *UR- gan then walked to load the bases and Tony Flores walked to plate Renner for a 5-0 lead. Klay Jen- son then singled, Hunter Barnes walked, Makiah Blankenship singled and Jason Fitzpatrick dou- bled. Fitzpatrick’s was a three-run, base-clearing two-bagger to put Stan- ¿HOGXS Fitzpatrick was 1 for 3 with three RBIs on the game, Ryan Bailey was 2 for 2 with two runs scored and an RBI, and all but two Tigers had an RBI. ——— 67$1),(/'75, &,7,(6%$'*(56 STN 000 29 — 11 10 0 TCB 000 00 — 0 1 3 D. Grogan and T. Monkus; Nelson, Hartwig, Dickson and Ritala. W — D. Grogan. L — Nelson. 2B: J. Fitzpatrick. ——— 7KURXJK¿YHLQQLQJVRI WKHQLJKWFDS6WDQ¿HOGDS- peared to be in control. Leading 8-5, sophomore right-hander Tony Flores was set to relive starter Hunter Barnes after he went ¿YH LQQLQJV DOORZLQJ ¿YH runs, four earned, on eight hits while walking one and striking out three. But Flores experienced his second straight outing with poor control, walk- LQJ ¿YH %DGJHUV LQ MXVW 1/3 of inning, allowing six earned runs on just one hit. The six-run sixth put the Badgers up 11-8, DQGWKRXJK6WDQ¿HOGJRWD couple in the bottom of the seventh, it wasn’t enough. 6WDQ¿HOGVFRUHGWKUHHLQ WKH¿UVWZKHQ5\DQ%DLOH\ doubled to drive in Thyler Monkus, who walked, and Flores, who singled. Klay Jenson then shot a single into left, plating Bailey for a 3-0 lead. TCB got a two- RBI double in the second to pull within a run at 3-2. After a couple quiet LQQLQJV 6WDQ¿HOG SODWHG another three in the third. Bailey and Jenson each singled again to plate a run HDFK DQG JLYH 6WDQ¿HOG D 5-2 lead. Keith Wampler later walked with the bags packed to send home Dylan Grogan, who had singled. TCB got one back in the visitor’s fourth with a VDFUL¿FH À\ DQG JRW WZR PRUH LQ WKH ¿IWK ZLWK DQ RBI double and single. Wampler and Justin Keeney came up with RBI VLQJOHV LQ WKH KRPH ¿IWK WR H[WHQG 6WDQ¿HOG¶V OHDG back to three at 8-5, then the miserable sixth. An RBI walk, a passed ball, an RBI double, and an 5%, ¿HOGHU¶V FKRLFH SUR- vided TCB’s six runs and the 11-8 lead. Monkus and Flores each walked to lead off the home sixth, then Bailey reached on an er- ror to plate Monkus. Flores moved to third and Bailey to second on the play. Grogan then reached on an error, al- lowing Flores to score. But a ground out and line out end- HG WKH WKUHDW DQG 6WDQ¿HOG couldn’t get anything going in the seventh. 6WDQ¿HOG LV DW $UPDQG Larive for a doublehead- er against Hermiston June )LUVWSLWFKLVVHWIRU SP6WDQ¿HOG¶VQH[WJDPH is at Irrigon June 22. First pitch is set for 5 p.m. ——— TRI CITIES %$'*(56 67$1),(/' TCB 020 126 0 — 11 9 2 STN 303 022 0 — 10 11 1 Mencado, Ritala and Long; H. Barnes, T. Flores, A. Renner, D. Grogan and T. Monkus. W — Mencado. L — T. Flores. 2B: Ritala 2 (TCB), C. Ritala (TCB), Harlow (TCB), K. Jenson (STN), T. Monkus (STN), R. Bailey (STN).