Arizona
No. 21 Arizona wins first Top 25 series this season with game 3 victory over No. 22 Oregon
Technically, the No. 21 Arizona Wildcats won a series against a Top 25 team last season, but it was an early-season victory over a No. 22 ASU team that quickly fell out of the rankings and into the basement of the Pac-12. A series win over No. 22 Oregon, which entered the weekend fourth in the conference standings, seemed like a much bigger deal. The Wildcats closed that deal with a 2-1 series win, defeating the Ducks 3-2 in game three on Sunday afternoon.
It didn’t come easily, though. It took the Wildcats eight innings to dispatch the visitors. The Wildcats led 2-1 going into the top of the seventh, but they couldn’t get the three outs they needed to end it there. Oregon’s Paige Sinicki hit her second home run of the season to tie it up.
Arizona outfielder Jasmine Perezchica came up in the bottom of the eighth with one out and the bases loaded. Arizona had squandered so many chances with runners in scoring position over the weekend that it was no sure thing.
A sacrifice fly would have worked with a different kind of hitter, but Perezchica has just one sacrifice fly in her entire career. That came earlier this season.
“She’s mentally tough,” Lowe said. “I mean, that’s a bases-loaded situation with force outs everywhere. It’s the hardest situation to slap hit against a very good pitcher with the pressure on, and she completely stayed calm and perfectly herself, and it’s exactly what you want to see from a senior.”
Perezchica would go with what she knows: the short game.
The senior came through, knocking in fellow senior Ali Blanchard from third base. Perezchica slapped it high into the air and Blanchard took off, sliding in before Oregon catcher Vallery Wong could apply the tag.
“I was just running as fast as I could,” Blanchard said. “It was a really high chop, so I knew I had a chance.”
The play was reviewed, but the walk-off stood.
“The sad thing about the reviews, you have to kind of like hold your [excitement],” Lowe said. “I mean, I said to [assistant coach Lauren Lappin], ‘Just let me be happy for a second before they go to the camera.’ That’s what’s a bummer about that, but then they get two applauses.”
The Ducks saw a lot of Arizona ace Aissa Silva this weekend despite the fact that she didn’t make a start in the three-game series. Silva pitched 15 2⁄3 innings over three games, getting two wins in the process.
“I think for the first time she kind of reinvented herself for a Sunday and just had, some different tools working today that she didn’t have before and quite frankly, not consistently all year,” said Arizona head coach Caitlin Lowe. “And she just came out and was a different person today…I’m just so proud of the way she performed. She was composed, trusted her stuff, and just went at people, and that was just fantastic to see. I mean, she has all those tools normally and they aren’t necessarily all working on the same day. Everything was working…Didn’t see her overthrow…I’m just very proud of her performance.”
Freshman pitcher Brooke Mannon got her second start of the series. She wasn’t quite as effective as she was in Friday’s game, allowing one run and working deep into counts in her two innings of work. She kept her team in it until she handed the ball to Silva to start the third.
Lowe said that Mannon is still being worked back into things after being out with an injury, but the four innings she was able to pitch over the weekend gave Silva a bit of a break.
The Ducks’ run against Mannon came in the top of the first. Kai Luschar singled then immediately stole second base, putting a runner in scoring position with no outs on her 22nd steal of the season. Two batters later, Ariel Carlson drove her in with a double.
Arizona responded in the bottom of the inning, getting one run back. Blaise Biringer doubled to right-center, driving in Regan Shockey from third.
The Wildcats could have had a lot more, though. As has been the pattern all weekend, they failed to get big hits with runners in scoring position. The inning ended on a strikeout from Emily Schepp with the bases loaded.
Arizona’s seven-hitter first inning accomplished something beyond a single run. The Wildcats drove starter Oregon Raegan Breedlove from the game after just two-thirds of an inning. That brought game-two starter Elise Sokolsky into the circle.
Arizona struggled against Sokolsky’s wileyness. In Saturday’s loss, the Wildcats got eight hits and a walk against her but could only push two runs across. It was more of the same on Sunday afternoon.
“She changes speeds and she does it really well,” Lowe said. “She hides the ball and when you try to do too much, she’s really effective. And I thought we were trying to swing at her pitches quite often in both of her appearances instead of really letting the game come to us.”
Olivia DiNardo was one of the hitters Lowe credited with letting it come to her eventually. She put the home team up 2-1 with a solo home run off Sokolsky in the third inning, but that’s the last success either team had off the opposing pitchers until the final innings.
After Sinicki’s home run in the top of the seventh, Arizona’s offense hoped to walk it off in the bottom of the inning. They still couldn’t get to Sokolsky, though. The Oregon pitcher got two groundouts.
Despite her success against the Wildcats all weekend, Oregon head coach Melyssa Lombardi decided to lift Sokolsky in favor of Morgan Scott with two outs and a 1-0 count on Carlie Scupin. Scupin had been one of the hitters who had most struggled with Sokolsky’s off-speed stuff, so it was a bit of a surprise.
Scott threw Scupin three more balls to put her on base, but she got the final out when Allie Skaggs popped up behind the plate to Wong.
Silva was back in the circle an inning after giving up the lead. She had a short memory and got right back to work, trusting that her teammates would pick her up with their offense.
“It definitely sucks to give up a home run and tie the game, but we’re definitely used to extra innings,” Silva said.
Oregon got a two-out single in the top of the eighth but couldn’t do anything with it. Arizona had another shot at the walk-off.
DiNardo gave the Wildcats a one-out base runner when Sinicki committed an error on the ground ball to short. Blanchard came in to run.
Schepp walked on four straight pitches to put two on. Still just one out for Tayler Biehl, who came into the game with at least one hit in five of her previous six games. Make that six of her last seven.
Biehl hit the ball back to Scott in the circle. The Oregon pitcher couldn’t come up with it, and everyone was safe. Bases loaded with one out.
That’s when Perezchica made her presence known. The only ball that left the infield in the inning was the error on Sinicki that reached shallow left field, but it was enough for the Wildcats.
“You can see throughout our conference and throughout the country, Sunday is what it’s about—being gritty and just finding a way,” Lowe said. “Jaz didn’t feel great that whole day and just…did a great job and was able to close it out for us.”
Arizona stays at home to host rival ASU beginning Friday, Apr. 19 at 5 p.m. MST.
Arizona
Arizona Head Start programs face uncertainty amid government shutdown
PHOENIX (AZFamily) — Around 17,000 children in Arizona are currently enrolled in Head Start programs. But funding uncertainty amid the ongoing government shutdown threatens to disrupt the help the program gives.
The 60-year-old federally funded program helps the youngest in a community by providing education, nutrition and family services to help set children up for success.
“I love watching when families and children enter our program,” said Keri Flathers, the child development manager at Educare Arizona. “It’s a concern on everyone’s minds.”
According to the National Head Start Association, 140 programs nationwide will lose their operational funding if the government shutdown continues into November, including about 210 kids and 37 staff in Arizona.
“For Head Start programs, the November 1st date has a significant impact. One, because there’s many grantees who are still waiting for their notice of award to continue providing services. But then we also serve families that are SNAP recipients,” said Eve Del Real, president of the Arizona Head Start Association.
Program grants are approved on a rolling basis, but the longer the government shutdown lasts, the greater the impact. Del Real says more than 2,200 kids could be impacted by December, depending on how the shutdown continues to play out.
“One of the biggest challenges that we have in projecting out how to prepare if a notice of award does get issued is the backlog of fiscal actions,” Del Real explained.
Without the Head Start program, Del Real said it could be devastating for families who rely on it.
“Families would have to rely then on unlicensed care or relying on family, friends, neighbors, to be able to compensate for the loss of this service,” she said.
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Arizona
Arizona Cardinals injury report: Kyler Murray limited Thursday
Check out the Cardinals’ first injury report of Week 9.
The Arizona Cardinals opened their practice week on Thursday for Monday’s game against the Dallas Cowboys. Back from their bye, there was a short “bonus” practice Tuesday, but this is the first injury report of the week.
Back on the practice field were cornerback Garrett Williams, who is on injured reserve (IR), and outside linebacker BJ Ojulari, who is on reserve/physically unable to perform (PUP). Each began their 21-day practice windows this week with Williams on Tuesday and Ojulari Thursday.
Injured in training camp on Aug. 2, Ojulari revealed Thursday that he tore other ligaments in addition to the ACL and said the rehab has “been hell, for real.”
Defensive lineman Walter Nolen III, who is also on PUP, returned to practice prior to the Week 7 game against the Green Bay Packers.
The full details of the first injury report are below. Starters are noted with an asterisk.
Cardinals Thursday injury report: Did not participate
- T Kelvin Beachum (not injury related/rest)
Limited participation
- S Kitan Crawford (ankle)
- RB Emari Demercado (ankle)
- WR Zay Jones (knee)
- *QB Kyler Murray (foot)
- DL Walter Nolen III (calf/practicing while on reserve/PUP)
- LB BJ Ojulari (knee/practicing while on reserve/PUP)
- *CB Garrett Williams (knee/practicing while on IR)
When asked prior to Thursday’s practice what the “mile markers” are for Murray returning to play, head coach Jonathan Gannon said, “Get him fully healthy (to) play.” When asked if Murray is being prepared to start, Gannon said, “Yeah.”
Crawford and Demercado were inactive for the game against the Packers in Week 7.
Cowboys Thursday injury report
Did not participate
- S Alijah Clark (ribs)
- LB Jack Sanborn (groin)
- S Donovan Wilson (elbow/shoulder)
Limited participation
- T Ajani Cornelius (knee)
- LB DeMarvion Overshown (knee/practicing while on reserve/PUP)
- CB Shavon Revel Jr. (knee/practicing while on reserve/NFI)
- *LB Tyler Smith (knee)
- *S Juanyeh Thomas (migraine)
- DT Perrion Winfrey (back/practicing while on IR)
Full participation
- C Cooper Beebe (ankle/practicing while on IR)
- *DT Kenny Clark (elbow)
- DE Marshawn Kneeland (ankle)
- CB Reddy Steward (thigh)
Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.
Arizona
Arizona’s Biosphere 2 is now home to endangered Sonoyta pupfish
Endangered Sonoyta pupfish finds home at Arizona’s Biosphere 2
Peter Reinthal talks about introducing a population of the endangered Sonoyta pupfish into a desert spring habitat at Biosphere 2.
ORACLE, AZ — Four dozen Sonoyta pupfish are now swimming beneath the towering glass pyramids of the University of Arizona’s Biosphere 2 after a multi-year effort to conserve the critically endangered species.
The rare desert fish were introduced into a newly constructed desert stream habitat at the research facility on Oct. 24, welcomed by a cheering crowd of university students, biologists and self-proclaimed fish lovers.
“Biosphere 2 is a theater of all possibilities,” said Joaquin Ruiz, director of the facility. “In addition to what we do to try to understand how ecosystems operate, we’re also going to be the safe harbor of a species that is endangered.”
The release is a collaboration between the University of Arizona, U.S. Fish and Wildlife, and the Arizona Game and Fish Department.
Measuring about two inches long, the small blue-green and brown-striped fish are also called Quitobaquito pupfish because they can only be found in the wild at Quitobaquito Springs, a small, spring-fed oasis in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument near the U.S.-Mexico border.
“Whenever I talk about pupfish in my class, I know they’re really easy to identify. They’re very cute. They’re called pupfish because they look like little puppy dogs,” said University of Arizona associate professor Peter Reinthal, who originated the idea for the pupfish introduction.
A new use for a storied structure
After teaching a hands-on portion of his class on ichthyology (the study of fish) inside Biosphere 2, Reinthal wrote a grant through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife’s Desert Fish Habitat Partnership to fund the construction of the stream inside a giant habitat once intended for humans.
Biosphere 2 — named after the planet Earth, the original biosphere — was built in the late 1980s by Space Biospheres Ventures, a private company with a goal of creating an entirely self-sustaining Earth ecosystem beneath the glass walls. In the 1990s, the facility gained national attention when researchers were locked inside Biosphere 2 for two years to simulate a futuristic space colony. The first two “missions” failed and the structure evolved into a science laboratory.
The University of Arizona gained ownership of the property in 2011 and now operates the facility as an Earth Systems Research Center and tourist destination.
State and federal agencies collaborated with the university and drafted a Safe Harbor Agreement, a voluntary agreement that allows individuals and organizations to keep populations of endangered species and contribute to their recovery.
The introduced pupfish are a part of a backup population meant to safeguard the species from extinction if the wild population declines.
The entire project took about two years of planning and implementation.
“I’ve been a scientist all my life and every project I ever do it’s to collect data or produce papers. This is the first one we did where we actually built something physical,” said Reinthal. “I really, really enjoyed that.”
Habitat loss drives population declines in hardy desert fish
Behind their “cute” faces and chubby bodies, the Sonoyta pupfish are survivors.
Adapted to live in extreme environments, the pupfish are capable of surviving drastic temperature changes, a range of pH levels and low-oxygen water.
“They can survive in 110-degree water, which is wild. And they can handle a lot of salinity,” said Brett Montgomery, topminnow and pupfish specialist with the Arizona Game and Fish Department. “They can exist in springs and streams with all those things that you wouldn’t think would allow fish to survive.”
Despite their hardy nature, the primary threat to the pupfish species has been habitat loss.
The Sonoyta pupfish were listed under the Endangered Species Act in 1986, and today, their total population is about 2,000.
The species was once found south of the border in the Rio Sonoyta, but since groundwater pumping has depleted the river, there has been no observable population in the watershed.
“A good number of animal species rely on streams like this in the natural world, and they’re valuable places to a large diversity of species, both plants and animals. We need to take care of them,” said Jason Deleeuw, terrestrial biome manager at Biosphere 2.
Habitat is also an educational tool
Deleeuw constructed the desert stream with a local construction company and help from student workers. The stream features several pools to hold the endangered fish and includes native vegetation to emulate their disappearing natural environment.
About 34,000 fish species are expected to go extinct in the next 25-50 years, according to Reinthal. A recent study co-authored by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature found that 26% of all freshwater fish species were at high risk of extinction.
Reinthal hopes the population of endangered fish will serve as an educational resource for both university classes and for those visiting Biosphere 2 as a tourist destination.
“It’s a great outreach tool,” said Reinthal. “Biosphere 2 gets about 80,000 visitors a year here, so the public can learn about fish.”
As pupfish settled into their new home right away, establishing territory and chasing each other in circles, the biologists are already planning for future introductions.
Montgomery said he hopes to introduce additional Sonoyta pupfish once the government shutdown ends, and after the pupfish are acclimated, the team plans to introduce the endangered Gila topminnow to the Biosphere 2’s desert stream habitat.
“They make people happy,” said Reinthal. “And I tell my class, if you don’t like pupfish, it means you’re a mean person.”
John Leos covers environmental issues for The Arizona Republic and azcentral. Send tips or questions to john.leos@arizonarepublic.com.
Environmental coverage on azcentral.com and in The Arizona Republic is supported by a grant from the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust.
Follow The Republic environmental reporting team at environment.azcentral.com and @azcenvironment on Facebook and Instagram.
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