Oregon
Back for More: Will Richardson Withdraws from 2022 NBA Draft
The celebrities are aligning for Dana Altman and the 2022-23 Oregon Geese.
Veteran Guard Will Richardson will withdraw his identify from the 2022 NBA Draft and return to Oregon for his fifth and closing season, as first reported by Stadium’s Jeff Goodman.
Richardson took his time along with his choice to postpone his skilled profession, ready all the way in which till the deadline of June 1 to take away his identify from the draft pool. The choice additionally comes sooner or later after Richardson was Southern California understanding for the Los Angeles Lakers with a lot of different potential professional’s.
Richardson’s final season in Eugene was a rollercoaster. At his finest, Richardson was dropping 28 factors on the highway towards USC to steer Oregon to back-to-back top-five wins on the highway.
At his worst, Richardson was a no-show. After just a few poor video games to finish the season, Richardson was absent from Oregon’s Pac-12 Match and N.I.T. run. Altman has since stated that Richardson was affected by mononucleosis.
However Oregon’s late-season collapse nonetheless left a poor style within the mouths of Duck followers, and plenty of pointed criticism in the direction of workforce chief Richardson.
Oregon Guard Will Richardson
No matter how the final season ended, Richardson returning is large for Oregon subsequent season. He led the workforce in scoring (14 factors per recreation) and three-point proportion (38.8%) whereas additionally taking a majority of the ball-handler duties.
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Altman has been working his offseason magic once more, even exterior of Richardson returning to high school. A number of days earlier, ahead Quincy Guerrier eliminated his identify from the NBA Draft and introduced his personal return to Eugene.
Becoming a member of Richardson within the again courtroom are guards Jermaine Couisnard and Keeshawn Barthelemy, who transferred to Oregon from South Carolina and Colorado respectively. Each gamers have prior Division 1 expertise and have the expertise to slip proper into the beginning unit.
The Geese have additionally secured transfers from JUCO stars Tyrone Williams, who led all Division 1 JUCO gamers in scoring final season, and Brennan Rigsby from Northwest Florida State, a college that is emerged as Oregon recruiting hotspot lately.
Altman may also be welcoming two of probably the most thrilling commits in Oregon basketball historical past this summer season in ESPN 100 recruits Kel’el Ware and Dior Johnson. Ware ought to slot in completely with Richardson as a really perfect pick-and-roll companion; Johnson could not.
Johnson is used to having the ball in his fingers rather a lot. With Richardson again within the fold, will probably be attention-grabbing to see how Altman aligns this yr’s Rubik’s Dice.
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Oregon
Strong winds knock out power to thousands on Oregon coast
CANNON BEACH, Ore. (KPTV) – Strong winds overnight caused power outages throughout northwest Oregon and southwest Washington.
On Tuesday, the National Weather Service issued a High Wind Warning along the Oregon coastline and a Wind Advisory in the I-5 corridor. The winds began to calm by 4 a.m. Wednesday.
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As of 6:35 a.m., Pacific Power was reporting about 16,632 customers without power from Cannon Beach to Astoria. About 235 customers were without power in the Lincoln City area.
Pacific Power confirmed the outages were due to storm damage. Crews are working to make repairs and restore service.
The Jewell School District, the Neah-Kah-Nie School District and the Warrenton-Hammond School District will all be starting on a two-hour delay due to power outages on the coast.
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Portland General Electric was reporting about 1,860 customers without power throughout their service area Wednesday morning.
Due to power outages, the Colton School District in Clackamas County is starting three hours late Wednesday.
Welches School (K-8) and Firwood Elementary in the Oregon Trail School District will be closed due to no power.
Vancouver police responded to a downed tree on Northwest Lincoln Avenue between Northwest 59th Street and Northwest 62nd Street. Crews quickly cleaned up the debris and reopened the roadway.
Clark PUD was reporting about 667 customers were without power just before 7 a.m.
View the latest weather forecast from the FOX 12 Weather team here.
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Oregon
Oregon women’s basketball crushes Air Force
It was a one-sided affair Tuesday night as the Oregon Ducks routed Air Force 98-36 in a nonconference women’s basketball matchup in Eugene.
Phillipina Kyei scored 14 points in 18 minutes, and Nani Falatea and Sarah Rambus added 11 points each for the Ducks (8-3) as 4,551 watched at Matthew Knight Arena.
Oregon got contributions from up and down the roster, with 10 players scoring at least eight points and no one needing to play more than Deja Kelly’s 22 minutes. Kelly finished with eight points, eight rebounds and four assists. Elisa Mevius added eight points and eight assists.
The Ducks, who entered having lost three of their past four games, handed the Falcons (9-2) their second loss of the season and first since Air Force fell 57-51 to Army in overtime on Nov. 15.
Oregon raced to a 22-9 lead by the end of the first quarter and then matched that score in the second quarter for a 44-18 halftime lead. The Ducks continued to pull away in the second half, steadily increasing their lead the rest of the way. A 21-0 run in the fourth quarter extended Oregon’s lead to 65 before the Falcons trimmed it to a 62-point final margin.
The Ducks shot 58.9% from the field and held Air Force to 23.2% shooting. Oregon scored 68 points in the paint, 56 points on layups and 32 points off of turnovers. The Ducks also had a 23-0 advantage in fast-break points and racked up 31 assists compared with seven for the Falcons.
— Joel Odom
Oregon
Meteorologists warn heavy rain, snow, wind could impact Oregon Christmas week
Safe winter driving tips in Oregon
Here are some tips to keep you safe on the roads.
A long-range forecast says heavy rain, high-elevation snow and strong winds could impact Oregon and the Pacific Northwest during the busy Christmas travel period.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration issued a “hazards risk” for the Dec. 24 to 28 period that includes potential impacts for anyone traveling.
“Travel conditions may be negatively impacted by unsettled weather,” NOAA said in a statement.
The concern is fueled by forecasts for a low pressure system that could develop into an atmospheric river or “bomb cyclone.”
Prepare for rainy, windy Christmas travel in Oregon
National Weather Service meteorologist Noah Alviz said the key message is to be prepared and watch the forecast before hitting the road around Christmas.
“Right now there is moderate confidence,” or about 40-60% chance of a major impact, Alviz said. “The key point to take home is that if you’re on the Oregon Coast or Coast Range, to prepare for possible flooding, and if you’re traveling over the Cascades, to prepare for winter weather.”
Bomb cyclone or atmospheric river could create flooding in Pacific Northwest
Days to watch for heavy precipitation in the Northwest — and possible mountain snow — include Dec. 24 and Dec. 25-28, NOAA said.
In Oregon, long-range forecasts are trending toward the weather being warmer than normal, which could indicate a greater threat for flooding than snow, Alviz said.
“We’re into a wet pattern, with rivers gradually rising, so if we end up with another low-pressure system, bomb cyclone or atmospheric river, that could lead to some flooding,” he said. “But people will just have to stay turned on that and make sure to keep an eye out.”
NOAA echoed that sentiment.
“Please stay tuned to shorter-term forecasts, as specific impacts remain unclear for any given location at this extended forecast range,” the alert said.
Zach Urness has been an outdoors reporter in Oregon for 16 years and is host of the Explore Oregon Podcast. To support his work, subscribe to the Statesman Journal. He can be reached at zurness@StatesmanJournal.com or (503) 399-6801. Find him on Twitter at @ZachsORoutdoors.
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