Oregon
Arizona Baseball’s slump continues after being swept at home against Oregon
The Arizona baseball crew hosted the College of Oregon for a three-game collection this previous weekend. The Wildcats misplaced all three video games in opposition to the Geese and had been outscored 36-19 over the three video games performed. The Wildcats began the season 12-3 (3-0 in Pac-12 play), however have gone 2-9 of their final 11 video games, together with 9 straight losses in opposition to Pac-12 opponents. Arizona now holds a file of 14-12 (3-9 in Pac-12 play).
Recreation 1: Friday, March 31, at 6 p.m.
Within the collection opener, the Wildcats fell behind early after an unpleasant first two innings. Wildcats beginning pitcher TJ Nichols lasted just one.1 innings after giving up eight runs inside the first 5 outs of the ball sport. Because the Wildcats ready to bat within the backside of the second, they had been already down 8-0.
After middle fielder Chase Davis opened the inning with a leadoff stroll, catcher Cameron LaLiberte doubled to place runners on second and third with no outs. Following the double, second baseman Garen Caulfield drove in Davis with a single to proper subject. The Wildcats added a second run after proper fielder Tyler Casagrande grounded right into a double play. By the tip of the second inning, the Wildcats trailed 8-2.
Finally, the Arizona Wildcats had a pitching efficiency that may solely be described as dreadful, as they surrendered an astonishing 22 hits to the Geese. Having fallen behind early, the Wildcats had been unable to shut the hole within the scoreboard, leading to a disappointing 15-3 loss.
Recreation 2: Saturday, April 1, at 6 p.m.
The Wildcats opened the second sport of the collection by scoring 4 runs within the first inning. Heart fielder Mac Bingham led off the inning with a single. This was instantly adopted by a triple by shortstop Nik McClaughry to drive them each in, with McClaughry scoring on a fielding error. A double by Davis and a single by first baseman Kiko Romero adopted. Two batters later, Caulfield drove in 2 runs with a single to offer the Wildcats an early 4-0 lead within the first inning.
The Wildcats weren’t executed, as they continued firing on all cylinders within the second inning. The Wildcats collected 5 extra hits and added 6 extra runs, giving them a 10-0 lead after two innings. The Wildcats opened the second sport with a lot of vitality after an unpleasant efficiency within the opening sport of the collection.
Arizona beginning pitcher Bradon Zastrow pitched a powerful 5 innings, giving up 3 runs — none of which had been earned — whereas putting out six Oregon batters. Because the ballgame entered the sixth inning, the Wildcats held a 10-3 lead. Nevertheless, either side had been enjoying sloppy protection, as Arizona had dedicated two errors which resulted in 3 runs, whereas Oregon had dedicated three errors which resulted in 2 runs.
After Zastrow’s implausible efficiency, the Wildcats left the sport within the palms of the bullpen. The snug 7-run lead rapidly disappeared after aid pitchers Dawson Netz, Eric Orloff and Chris Barraza gave up a complete of 6 runs of their mixed one inning of aid. After main 10-0 early by means of two innings, the Wildcats had been outscored 10-1 over the following 5 innings, giving them an 11-10 lead because the ball sport entered the eighth inning.
The Wildcat offense had gone quiet after a powerful efficiency early within the sport. Arizona was enjoying sloppy protection and seemed drained after permitting Oregon to claw again after trailing by 10 early. Within the prime of the ninth inning, Arizona noticed an 11-10 lead flip right into a 13-11 deficit after Oregon scored 3 extra runs within the inning.
The Wildcats failed to attain within the backside of the inning and misplaced 13-11 in a sport they had been as soon as main 10-0. The Wildcat bullpen didn’t do their job, giving up 10 runs in solely 4 innings of aid. The bullpen gave up a mixed 17 runs by means of the primary two video games of the collection.
Recreation 3: Sunday, April 2, at 1 p.m.
The Wildcats went into Sunday’s collection finale hoping to keep away from a sweep after two grueling defeats.
Oregon struck first, scoring 2 runs within the first two innings of the sport. Arizona responded by slicing its deficit in half due to a sac-fly by Casagrande within the backside of the second inning. Via two innings, Arizona trailed 2-1.
Within the third inning, Oregon launched a 2-run homer to offer them a 4-1 lead. The lead grew over the following 4 innings as Oregon scored 3 extra runs to realize a 7-1 lead.
The Wildcats weren’t executed but although, as they opened the underside of the seventh inning with back-to-back dwelling runs by Davis — his eleventh of the season — and Romero — his eighth of the season — to chop the Wildcat deficit to three runs. One inning later, proper fielder and pinch hitter Emilio Corona hit a solo dwelling run for his second of the season. As the sport entered the ninth, Arizona trailed 7-5.
Arizona failed to return away with runs within the ninth inning as they misplaced 8-5 to the Oregon Geese. The Geese go away Tucson with the collection sweep and needs to be in nice spirits. Then again, Arizona should determine its points out earlier than it turns into too late to be in postseason competition.
What’s subsequent:
Arizona seems to be to snap their nine-game Pac-12 shedding streak once they host the College of Washington for a three-game collection subsequent week. The collection begins on Thursday, April 6, at 6 p.m., with video games two and three being performed on Friday, April 7, at 6 p.m. and Saturday, April 8, at 1 p.m.
Observe Nathaniel Levin on Twitter
Oregon
People with disabilities are extra vulnerable in major disasters like wildfires, says Oregon advocate
Jake Cornett, Executive Director and CEO of the advocacy group Disability Rights Oregon, says he will forever be haunted by Ashlyn Maddox’s death during the 2021 Oregon heat wave.
The Portland woman, 36, was disabled and living in a group foster home. She was dropped off by a medical transport company, but the company didn’t make sure she made it safely into her air-conditioned home. She ended up wandering around for hours in the heat, and died only 50 feet from safety.
Cornett says, “These deaths are preventable with the right planning, the right strategy for mitigation, the right preparedness and a response plan that complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act and respects the needs of people with disabilities.”
Cornett spoke with “All Things Considered” host Geoff Norcross about Oregon’s ability to help people with disabilities during a natural disaster, such as the deadly wildfires burning in the Los Angeles area.
This conversation has been edited for clarity and length.
Geoff Norcross: If we were to transport those fires in Southern California here, would we see a similar catastrophe for people with disabilities?
Jake Cornett: Surely, we fear that the same disasters we’ve seen play out in the catastrophes in the lives of people with disabilities in LA would play out right here in Oregon as well. And I don’t think this is just a theoretical question. It’s only a matter of time before we have major wildfires along Highway 20, very close by in Portland and in other major cities throughout our state.
Norcross: What is the obligation of local governments to provide for people with disabilities when disaster strikes? I guess I’m asking if the Americans with Disabilities Act applies here.
Cornett: Absolutely. The Americans with Disabilities Act requires that cities, counties, the state and the federal government are taking into account what the needs are of people with disabilities, and providing accommodations for those needs when engaging in disaster planning.
Norcross: Getting information out to people quickly in a disaster is so critical, especially for something that’s as fast-moving as the LA wildfires. For people who are deaf or blind, can you talk about how that’s extra complicated?
Cornett: Absolutely. You know, emergency response notification systems that happen on your phone are a great tool if you have a phone, or if you have the technology to make your phone provide you the information you need. And that’s particularly important for folks who are blind.
I think about a blind person who may not have the same visual access to information as others. If police run around your neighborhood and put a notice on your door that says “get out of town, there’s an evacuation order, you’re under wildfire threat,” that notice on your door might not be enough because you can’t access that information.
And this is where cities, counties and the state really have an obligation to adjust to how they communicate so that it’s effective for all people with disabilities.
Norcross: And again, when you say obligation, you mean a legal obligation, not just because it’s the right thing to do.
Cornett: Absolutely. There’s a legal obligation to do that under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Norcross: Even if an evacuation order gets to affected people quickly, there’s this expectation that most people will get in their car and they will leave. How does that expectation leave people with disabilities in even greater danger?
Cornett: Yeah, that’s another huge issue for people with disabilities, especially when it happens quickly like the LA fires. People think evacuating is getting in the car, driving quickly away to safety.
But many people with disabilities don’t have access to a car, or they can’t physically drive a vehicle. They’re totally reliant on others to transport them to safety. So just providing that notice is not an adequate way to ensure that we are saving the lives of people with disabilities in the way it needs to be done.
Norcross: Is there an event here in Oregon that you can point to that shows us how situated we are to help people with disabilities when disaster strikes, good or bad?
Cornett: Here in Oregon, we’ve seen hundreds die or have serious injuries because of heat in the past few years. Climate change is real. We live in a warming environment, and it’s having a really disproportionate impact on seniors, on people with disabilities and people with underlying medical conditions.
And I’ll forever be haunted by a story of a 30-something year old woman who was dropped off by a medical transport company, but didn’t wait in their air-conditioned van to make sure that she got inside her home where there was air conditioning. Instead, they took off. She wandered around for hours before dying of heat, just 50 feet from her adult foster home.
These deaths are preventable with the right planning, the right strategy for mitigation, the right preparedness, and a response plan that complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act and respects the needs of people with disabilities.
Oregon
Oregon State MBB Fall To San Francisco 81-70 As Dons Drain 13 3’s
On the heels of a milestone victory over Gonzaga on Thursday night, the Oregon State Beavers could not capture the same magic Saturday in San Francisco.
The road issues again reared their ugly head as OSU fell to USF 81-70, dropping the Beavs to 14-6 overall and 4-3 in conference play.
OSU have just one true road win this season, which came against Pacific on January 11. They are 1-4 in that category.
The biggest blows to the Beavers’ efforts came from beyond the arc. San Francisco made 13 of 22 three-point attempts, while OSU made just one on nine attempts. Malik Thomas was the game’s leading scorer with 24 points and four three-point makes.
Michael Rataj led the Beavs in scoring with 18 points, also grabbing six rebounds and two assists. As a team, the Beavs shot 44.4% on the night making 24 of 54 field goal attempts.
Oregon State will have several days off before hosting Pepperdine on Thursday, January 23.
More Reading Material From Oregon State Beavers On SI
Why Oregon State’s 97-89 Win Over Gonzaga Meant So Much To Beaver Nation
Oregon State Men’s Hoops Stuns Gonzaga, 97-89 in OT
Oregon State Women’s Basketball: Portland Gets Revenge on Beavers with 86-61 Win
Oregon
3 things to watch as Iowa women’s basketball looks to stop skid at Oregon
Iowa assistant coach Sean Sullivan: ‘We just need one win.’
The Hawkeyes’ first-year assistant talks defensive lineups, the full-court press, free throws and more amid a four-game losing streak.
IOWA CITY — Following an uncharacteristic run of home struggles, the Big Ten schedule now takes Iowa women’s basketball as far away from Carver-Hawkeye Arena as possible in the league.
The Hawkeyes (12-6, 2-5 Big Ten Conference) are set to begin their first West Coast conference swing, beginning with Sunday’s 4 p.m. game at Oregon (13-5, 4-3) on BTN+. Iowa will then head to Washington next Wednesday for an 8 p.m. showdown. The Hawkeyes are desperately trying to end a four-game losing streak that suddenly has them flirting with the NCAA Tournament bubble.
With that, here are three things to watch ahead of Sunday’s showdown.
Can the Hawkeyes productively channel their desperation?
Everyone inside the program understands the current situation and how it needs to change. But the Hawkeyes can’t let that pressure generate more tight play on the court, an ongoing theme throughout this four-game losing streak.
“We really are just one or two possessions away,” assistant coach Sean Sullivan said Friday. “With a team like this who’s continuing to fight, we just need one win. We just need one to get going because these kids really do believe.
“Everyone knows their role. Everyone is supporting each other, and that’s the best thing you can do at this time during a four-game losing streak. We’re not going down that black hole. We see the light. We’ve just got to get there.”
Until revealed otherwise, expect another tense affair with plenty of late-game opportunities for Iowa to find a better conclusion. The Hawkeyes need to bring this one home.
How does Iowa handle Oregon’s full-court pressure while potentially leaning more on its own press?
Iowa had some trouble in December with pressing teams, most notably Tennessee and Michigan State, that resulted in heavy turnovers and late struggles. On the flipside, the Hawkeyes have implemented their own press, just sporadically, mainly in moments of desperation.
Iowa leaned on more pressure in Thursday’s loss to Nebraska with some success. Could Sunday be a moment to match the Ducks’ energy there?
“Oregon is going to be pretty intense with ball pressure. That’s not what we do, but we’re slowly doing a little bit more of a press,” Sullivan said “First we did a press break of some type of 2-2-1. Now we’re like, ‘OK, let’s change it up a bit. What do our players feel comfortable with?’ (Thursday) night, we had a lot of success. We’re starting to see what they’re good at.
“Now, we’ve just got to have fun with it. Let’s start doing some random things because when you do something consistently, it’s easy to scout. But when you start changing things up, Nebraska didn’t handle our pressure well. And that builds us confidence. So I think for the future, you’ll definitely start to see some more stuff.”
What does Iowa have in store for Ava Heiden in her Oregon homecoming?
Even as far back as media day, Ava Heiden’s excitement for the Oregon trip was apparent. Her hometown of Sherwood, Oregon, sits about 100 miles north of the Ducks’ campus, so expect a strong cheer for Heiden when Iowa takes the floor Sunday.
“Ava is so athletic,” Sullivan said. “She can jump out of the building. She can get rebounds. And that’s what we’ve got to start figuring out. How can we utilize her a little bit more too?
Heiden’s minutes have been up and down this year, more down lately as Hannah Stuelke has shifted back to the “5” position for more consistency. Heiden didn’t play against Nebraska but could certainly see more usage Sunday.
Dargan Southard is a sports trending reporter and covers Iowa athletics for the Des Moines Register and HawkCentral.com. Email him at msouthard@gannett.com or follow him on Twitter at @Dargan_Southard.
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