Connect with us

Oregon

No. 21 Arizona softball’s win over No. 22 Oregon overshadowed by injury to Hanna Delgado

Published

on

No. 21 Arizona softball’s win over No. 22 Oregon overshadowed by injury to Hanna Delgado


No. 21 Arizona softball was looking for a big win on Friday evening. The Wildcats defeated No. 22 Oregon 7-5, but the win was overshadowed by a frightening injury to Ducks centerfielder Hanna Delgado.

With Arizona leading 6-2, Tayler Biehl launched the ball into centerfield. Delgado dove, catching the ball before colliding head-first with the outfield wall. The collision caused her to lose the ball, allowing Biehl to reach third, but the bigger concern was that Delgado didn’t get up.

The outfielder stayed down for over 10 minutes as she was tended to and an ambulance came to take her away on a stretcher with her head immobilized. Meanwhile, Arizona and Oregon players gathered in a circle to pray.

Advertisement

“It kind of is a flash of shock to everybody and then at the same time—we have a lot of girls on our team that are really good friends with her—so just a whole lot of worry,” Arizona head coach Caitlin Lowe said. “We had a lot of concern, especially when you see the paramedics go out there. But just thinking about her.”

Reports during the game indicated that Delgado was moving when she left. Lowe spoke to Oregon head coach Melyssa Lombardi during the game.

“Missy sounded like it was positive, so that makes me feel better, but just thinking about her,” Lowe said. “You never want to see that happen in the game, ever. We’re out here playing a fun game that we love with our friends and it should never have to end that way for someone.”

The injury to Delgado was a difficult event to process, but the game continued.

Arizona has shown it can compete with ranked teams. It has even shown it can beat them. The next step is showing that it can win a series against one. The win was a good start.

Advertisement

The Wildcats have been hot offensively during their four-game winning streak on the road. However, those four games were against Utah, which is 4-11 in conference play, and New Mexico State. While Oregon has some questions in the circle where all of its pitchers have a WHIP of 1.22 or higher, it’s still a dangerous team.

Arizona kept the bats going against the Ducks’ staff. They started immediately, loading the bases with one out against Oregon starter Stevie Hansen in the first inning. The Wildcats didn’t score but it was a promising sign of things to come.

As has been the case of late, things really got going during the second time through the Arizona order. Leadoff hitter Dakota Kennedy started it with a double. Two batters later, Carlie Scupin hit her fourth home run in the last six games, this one coming on her birthday.

“Our goal this year has just been to throw the first punch and score first,” Scupin said. “So right there I’m just looking for a pitch that I can drive and see what I can do with it. Think less these days.”

The two-out long ball put Arizona up 2-0. The Wildcats weren’t done yet.

Advertisement

Blaise Biringer drew a two-out walk, bringing up Olivia DiNardo. DiNardo took a 1-0 pitch out of the park for a two-run homer of her own. Arizona had a 4-0 lead after three.

It was also DiNardo’s second straight start behind the plate after spending most of the season as the designated player. While DiNardo said on Mar. 17 that she was having issues with her hamstring, Lowe said it ended up being a nerve issue.

DiNardo caught for three innings before freshman Emily Schepp entered the game behind the plate and DiNardo went back to designated player.

“I’m excited to be working with the pitchers again and just getting back and locked in with them,” DiNardo said. “And Schepp’s doing really well and I think we work really well together.”

Also getting a start was freshman pitcher Brooke Mannon, who last started on Mar. 2 at Alabama and had only pitched 6 23 innings since then, sometimes on a pitch count.

Advertisement

Mannon gave up just one walk, surrendering no runs and getting one strikeout in her two innings of work. She did not figure in the decision because she was relieved by Aissa Silva in the top of the third inning.

Silva had a 1-2-3 inning in the third before her team’s offense came alive in the bottom of the inning. Her second inning of work was a bit more difficult.

Silva gave up a leadoff double to Delgado for Oregon’s first hit of the game. Ariel Carlson then cut Arizona’s lead in half with a two-run home run.

Silva issued a walk to Alyssa Daniell who moved up on a passed ball. Oregon had another runner in scoring position with no outs. Vallery Wong walked to put two on with no outs, then both runners moved up on a wild pitch.

Arizona’s defense picked up its pitcher with an unusual 9-2-6 double play. Silva got the groundout to end the inning with no more damage.

Advertisement

The Wildcats’ offense responded in the bottom of the inning, which has become a relatively common occurrence lately. Biehl reached on an error and moved up on Jasmine Perezchica’s sacrifice. Biehl then moved to third on a passed ball and was driven in by Regan Shockey’s two-out single.

Shockey got into scoring position when Scupin was hit by a pitch, putting two on for Allie Skaggs. She singled, driving in Shockey, who made another great slide to get in safely. Both Skaggs and pinch runner Paige Dimler moved into scoring position when Oregon went home trying to get Shockey.

Arizona didn’t get any more runs in the bottom of the fourth, but Blaise Biringer’s two-out walk finally drove Oregon’s second pitcher from the game.

Oregon got two on in the top of the fifth, including Delgado. It was her final at-bat of the game before her injury in the bottom of the inning.

After Delgado was taken to a local hospital, the game continued. Perezchica drove in Biehl from third base with a groundout to get another run back. The Wildcats led 7-2 after five innings.

Advertisement

The Ducks struck back in the sixth. Silva got two outs before allowing back-to-back singles to Emma Kauf and Katie Flannery. She then got to a full count against Tehya Bird before Bird launched the ball out of the park for a three-run home run. The lead was down to two when the inning came to an end.

Arizona did what it needed from there out. The seventh started with one of Kennedy’s patented diving catches for the first out. Fellow defensive stars Shockey and Biehl teamed up for the final out, as Shockey got the ball back in quickly after a single to center. Biehl quickly applied the tag on Carlson, who had rounded second and ventured too far to get back. The play was reviewed, but the call was upheld to end the game.

“I think Dakota in the seventh was huge to set that tone because getting the leadoff hitter out,” Lowe said. “I think Regan was—I mean she almost did that twice tonight—just really heads up plays. And then Tayler being ready for that was huge.”

Silva got the win, improving her record to 17-4. She gave up five earned runs on seven hits, three walks, and a hit batter. She struck out one.

The game gave Arizona a 27-12-1 record less than a year after ending 29-25 and missing the postseason for the first time in 35 years. The Wildcats are 8-8 in Pac-12 play.

Advertisement

The Wildcats will try to secure the series on Saturday at 12 p.m. MST.





Source link

Oregon

BLM Expedites Massive Logging Expansion in Western Oregon

Published

on

BLM Expedites Massive Logging Expansion in Western Oregon


The Trump Administration has tasked the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) with boosting resource extraction from public lands across the U.S. That charge includes everything from establishing new oil and gas leasing in Alaska to expanding lithium mines in Nevada.

Now, Western Oregon is the latest area slated for increased commercial output by the BLM. On Feb. 18, the agency announced plans to increase timber harvesting across nearly 2 million acres. Supporters see the move as an economic necessity, while opponents worry about the environmental impacts.

BLM Oregon Timber Harvest: The Plan

The section of public land in question covers about 2.46 million acres of public land across 18 counties in Western Oregon. About 23% of the land is excluded from the project (including areas with low tree density and areas next to streams). That leaves about 1.9 million acres up for harvest.

map of Oregon
Land in yellow is under BLM jurisdiction; (map/BLM)

In a public notice issued on Feb. 19, the BLM announced its intent to revise the resource management plan (RMP) for this area. An RMP is an expansive document that covers recreation use, regulations, and resource extraction for an area of public land. The last RMP for this area was approved in 2016. The agency stated that this “revision” would entail replacing the 2016 RMP with a new one.

The stated goal of the effort is to “seek an increase in sustained yield of timber harvest that aligns with the historically higher levels of production on BLM-administered public lands,” according to the agency.

Advertisement

The 2016 RMP allowed a total harvest volume of 278 million board feet, of which 9% was from large logs. In 2025, the total harvest measured 275 million board feet. The 2026 RMP aims to increase these numbers, but no document explicitly states the target number.

GearJunkie reached out to the BLM for further information, but did not receive a response.

Based on the language in the notice, it’s possible to approximate the levels that the BLM is aiming for. The document says it wants to return production to “historically higher levels of volume.” Data show that harvests peaked in 1964 at 1.638 billion board feet. From 1960 to 1989, the annual average was 1.078 billion board feet.

If the BLM achieves volume 1 billion board feet, that would be around a 260% increase from 2016’s numbers.

‘Reviving Local Economies’ & Reducing Wildfire Threats

The effort to boost timber production relates to Trump’s March 2025 executive order entitled “Immediate Expansion of American Timber Production.” The order mandated that agencies like the BLM and U.S. Forest Service (USFS) “issue new or updated guidance regarding tools to facilitate increased timber production and sound forest management, reduce time to deliver timber, and decrease timber supply uncertainty.”

Advertisement

“Bringing timber production back to historic levels is essential for reviving local economies and reducing the threat of catastrophic wildfires,” Acting BLM Director Bill Groffy said in a press release. “President Trump has made it clear — enhanced domestic timber production is vital for our national security, economic prosperity, and effective wildfire management.”

The notice of intent also cited local economic impacts. It notes that more timber would deliver more jobs. When timber production decreased in the 1990s, “this revenue collapse triggered mill closures, job losses, and shrinking tax bases, devastating local communities and forcing counties to cut services and raise local taxes,” the BLM claimed.

The agency also connected increased timber harvesting with a reduction in wildfire risk.

“This RMP revision will assist in reducing fuel loads in order to battle these unprecedented and destructive fires and will aid in keeping the American people safe,” it said.

One of the counties in the RMP, Marion, experienced a major wildfire in 2020. The Lionshead Fire burned 192,000 acres and destroyed 264 homes.

Advertisement

BLM Oregon Timber Harvest Plan: The Opposition

Oregon Wild

Opposition to the move comes primarily from environmental groups. Oregon Wild, a conservation nonprofit, objected on several grounds. It’s concerned about the long-term health of these forests. It also fears the impact that increased timber production would have on wildlife such as the coho salmon and the northern spotted owl.

owl in a treeowl in a treeowl in a treeowl in a tree
Experts say anywhere from 3,000 to 5,000 Northern spotted owls remain in the Pacific Northwest; (photo/NPS, C. Arreglo)

The production levels the BLM aims to return to in the 1960s occurred before these species were listed under the Endangered Species Act.

“It’s safe to assume the Trump administration is going to try to get back to roughly 1 billion board feet. However, that would be nearly impossible to do without logging coho salmon and other endangered species habitat,” Oregon Wild’s Communications Director Arran Robertson said in an email to GJ.

Oregon Wild also rejected claims that upping timber production would reduce wildfire risk.

“Clearcutting and similar forms of logging increase fire hazards for up to 50 years. Despite hotter, drier, and longer fire seasons, the Trump Administration aims to again prioritize this practice on public lands,” it said in a press release.

salmon in riversalmon in riversalmon in riversalmon in river
A female coho salmon; (photo/NPS, Jessica Weinberg McClosky)

Sierra Club

The Sierra Club also criticized the move as industry-friendly.

“Opening up millions of acres to logging and supercharging harvest quotas isn’t some minor change — it’s a radical and dangerous departure from decades of careful management for the benefit of logging companies,” Forest Campaign Manager Alex Crave said in an email to GearJunkie. “It aims to take us back to the days of logging old growth across the northwest at a pace that was, quite literally, unsustainable.”

Advertisement

The local Oregon chapter of the Sierra Club was deeply concerned about how this effort would affect outdoor recreation.

“The proposed plan to quadruple logging levels is a threat to the very things that make Oregon Oregon: Forests with clear rivers and streams that provide water for thousands of rural residents and critical habitat for fish and wildlife. Rafting, hiking, mountain biking, hunting, fishing, and other incredible recreation opportunities that Oregonians enjoy and that draw the visitors that rural economies depend on,” it said.

What’s Next

The proposal is open for public comment until March 23. The BLM stated that it does not plan to hold any public meetings about the matter. In accordance with the law, the BLM will consult with Tribal Nations.

“Tribal concerns, including impacts on Indian trust assets and potential impacts to cultural resources, will be given due consideration,” it stated.

The agency will also be required to produce an environmental impact study for its proposed RMP. There is no clear timeline yet; the BLM has stated it wants to complete this process “in an expeditious manner.” Past revisions to RMPs have taken 3 to 4 years, and the BLM aims to finish the process more quickly this time.

Advertisement





Source link

Continue Reading

Oregon

Maryland rides big first half to 70-60 win over Oregon to open Big Ten Tournament

Published

on

Maryland rides big first half to 70-60 win over Oregon to open Big Ten Tournament



David Coit scored 17 points, Elijah Saunders added 15, and Maryland defeated Oregon 70-60 in a first-round game of the Big Ten Tournament on Tuesday.

Advertisement

Maryland held Oregon to 3-for-22 shooting (14%) with 0 for 10 from 3-point distance in the first half and the Terrapins led 33-12 at the break. Maryland scored the first nine points and the Ducks made their first field goal at the 8:46 mark, making the score 17-8. Maryland later ran off 10 consecutive points for a 31-10 lead. Coit scored 12 points in the first half.

An 11-2 run helped the Ducks cut their deficit to 12 points early in the second half, but Maryland allowed only three points over the next 5 1/2 minutes and the lead was 58-34 near the 8-minute mark. A dunk and a three-point play from Nate Bittle started a 15-2 run for Oregon and it was 60-49 with 4 1/2 minutes remaining.

The Ducks got within single digits a few times, the last at 67-58 with 53 seconds remaining but Maryland’s Darius Adams made 3 of 4 free throws to preserve a double-digit margin.

Bittle scored 16 points, Kwame Evans Jr. 14 and Takai Simpkins 10 for 16th-seeded Oregon (12-20).

Maryland, seeded 17th, got 12 points, six rebounds and five assists from Andre Mills. Solomon Washington also scored 12 points and Adams finished with 10 points for the Terrapins (12-20).

Advertisement

Maryland defeated Oregon for the first time. The Ducks had won the only two prior matchups — both since joining the Big Ten last season. Most recently, Oregon won 64-54 at Maryland in January.

Up next

Maryland plays ninth-seeded Iowa in the second round on Wednesday.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Oregon

Oregon gas prices highest since Sept. 2025 as oil surges on Hormuz disruptions

Published

on

Oregon gas prices highest since Sept. 2025 as oil surges on Hormuz disruptions


Crude oil prices surged after U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran and stalled tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, pushing gas prices sharply higher across the country, though Oregon and Washington are seeing smaller increases than many other states.

The national average price for regular gasoline jumped 43 cents over the past week to $3.54 a gallon.

Oregon’s average rose 31 cents to $4.26 a gallon, the 42nd-largest week-over-week increase among states.

Washington also increased 31 cents, ranking 44th-largest.

Advertisement

READ ALSO | Oil prices spike amid Iran war; Oregon gas remains above national average

The current national average is at its highest price since July 2024. Oregon’s average is at its highest since Sept. 2025.

“When crude oil prices shoot up, pump prices follow suit because crude oil is the basic ingredient in gasoline and diesel. It’s impossible to predict how high prices might go, but expect elevated oil and gas prices as long as the conflict in Iran continues and tankers are stalled in the Strait of Hormuz,” said Marie Dodds, public affairs director for AAA Oregon/Idaho.

AAA notes that, in general, every $1 increase in the price of crude oil leads to a 2.4- to 2.5-cent increase in the price of gasoline.

Crude oil typically accounts for about 47% of the cost of a gallon of gasoline, with refining at 16%, distribution and marketing at 20%, and taxes at 17%, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Advertisement

About 20% of the world’s oil and refined products flow through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow passageway of the Persian Gulf bordered by Iran.

Tankers traveling through the strait carry oil from major producers including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, the UAE, Qatar, Iraq and Iran. Any disruption can affect global oil supplies. While the U.S. does not rely on Iranian oil, China and India do.

Seasonal factors are also adding upward pressure. Gas prices typically rise starting in mid-to-late winter and early spring as refineries undergo maintenance ahead of the switch to summer-blend fuel, which is more expensive to produce and less likely to evaporate in warmer temperatures.

National gas price comparison/AAA chart

Most areas have a May 1 compliance date for refiners and terminals, while most gas stations have a June 1 deadline to switch to selling summer-blend. Some refineries begin maintenance and the switchover in February.

Advertisement

In Oregon, the average price for regular gas began 2026 at $3.42 a gallon. The highest price of the year so far is today’s $4.26, and the lowest was $3.33 on Jan. 20. Nationally, the average began 2026 at $2.83 a gallon. The highest price of the year so far is today’s $3.54, and the lowest was $2.795 on Jan. 11.

AAA reported that U.S. gasoline demand decreased from 8.73 million barrels per day to 8.29 million for the week ending Feb. 27, compared with 8.88 million a year ago.

Total domestic gasoline supply decreased from 254.8 million barrels to 253.1 million. Gasoline production increased last week, averaging 9.3 million barrels per day compared with 9.2 million barrels per day the previous week.

Crude oil prices have been volatile. West Texas Intermediate surged to near four-year highs around $95 per barrel this week but fell to the $80s today as President Trump signaled the conflict with Iran may end soon.

On the West Coast, all seven states remain in the top 10 for the most expensive pump prices nationally.

Advertisement

California has the highest average for the fifth week in a row at $5.29 a gallon and is the only state at or above $5.

Washington is second at $4.69, Hawaii third at $4.59, Nevada fourth at $4.30 and Oregon fifth at $4.26. Arizona averages $3.97 and Alaska $3.95.

All 50 states and the District of Columbia saw week-over-week increases. California had the largest jump at 62 cents, while Hawaii had the smallest at 19 cents. AAA said Oregon and Washington prices also rose last month after an outage of the Olympic pipeline.

The cheapest gas in the nation is in Kansas at $2.96 a gallon and Oklahoma at $3.01. Kansas is the only state with an average in the $2 range this week. The gap between the most expensive and least expensive states is $2.33 this week, up from $2.05 a week ago.

Compared with a month ago, prices are higher everywhere: the national average is up 62 cents and Oregon’s average is up 68 cents.

Advertisement

Compared with a year ago, the national average is up 45 cents and Oregon’s average is up 53 cents.

Diesel prices also spiked. The national average for diesel rose 89 cents over the week to $4.78 a gallon, while Oregon’s average jumped 72 cents to $5.02.

A year ago, the national average for diesel was $3.63 and Oregon’s average was $3.86.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending