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Stanford hosts Oregon State following Angel's 21-point game

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Stanford hosts Oregon State following Angel's 21-point game


Oregon State Beavers (11-16, 3-13 Pac-12) at Stanford Cardinal (12-14, 7-9 Pac-12)

Stanford, California; Saturday, 5 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: Stanford plays the Oregon State Beavers after Brandon Angel scored 21 points in Stanford’s 78-65 loss to the Oregon Ducks.

The Cardinal have gone 9-5 at home. Stanford averages 12.5 turnovers per game and is 5-2 when it has fewer turnovers than its opponents.

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The Beavers are 3-13 in conference games. Oregon State is fourth in the Pac-12 allowing 72.2 points while holding opponents to 43.7% shooting.

Stanford averages 9.4 made 3-pointers per game, 2.2 more made shots than the 7.2 per game Oregon State allows. Oregon State averages 6.0 made 3-pointers per game this season, 2.3 fewer made shots on average than the 8.3 per game Stanford gives up.

TOP PERFORMERS: Maxime Raynaud is averaging 14.8 points and 9.9 rebounds for the Cardinal. Angel is averaging 13.3 points over the last 10 games for Stanford.

Jordan Pope is averaging 17 points and 3.4 assists for the Beavers. Tyler Bilodeau is averaging 15.7 points over the last 10 games for Oregon State.

LAST 10 GAMES: Cardinal: 3-7, averaging 74.0 points, 33.5 rebounds, 14.7 assists, 4.7 steals and 2.8 blocks per game while shooting 45.5% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 77.1 points per game.

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Beavers: 2-8, averaging 64.6 points, 30.7 rebounds, 11.2 assists, 5.4 steals and 3.0 blocks per game while shooting 43.5% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 74.5 points.

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.



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100 greatest girls athletes in Oregon high school sports history (Part 1)

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100 greatest girls athletes in Oregon high school sports history (Part 1)


On Feb. 3, 1987, President Ronald Reagan signed Proclamation 5606, declaring Feb. 4, 1987, National Women in Sports Day.

Every year since, National Girls and Women in Sports Day (NGWSD) celebrates female athletes’ accomplishments and honors the progress women in sports have made toward equality in participation and access.

Wednesday, Feb. 4, is the 40th NGWSD.

A year ago, longtime high school sports writer René Ferrán unveiled for High School On SI a list of the 50 greatest girls athletes in Oregon high school sports history.

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Headed up by St. Mary’s Academy legend Anna Maria Lopez through No. 50 Ashley Smith of Oregon City, the list celebrated the rich history of the state’s top female athletes on the 39th anniversary of the creation of NGWSD.

Now, with NGWSD turning 40 this month, The Oregonian/OregonLive tasked Ferrán with adding to the list another 50 athletes who have made significant contributions to the state’s high school sports scene.

We’ll be counting down all week, starting today with No. 100 through No. 91. (The year listed beside each name is the year she graduated from high school.)

Let’s celebrate together the best of the best and their many achievements in their favorite sports.

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100. Piper Daskalos, Jesuit, 2023 (lacrosse)

The Crusaders picked up the mantle as the state’s preeminent girls lacrosse program from Lake Oswego at the end of last decade, ending the Lakers’ three-year championship streak in 2019 to start a run of five consecutive state titles for the Southwest Portland school.

One of the leaders of the changing of the guard was Daskalos, an attacker and midfielder who played on three title-winning teams from 2021-23, earning state player of the year honors in 2022, when she had 62 goals and 21 assists.

She repeated as a USA Lacrosse Magazine All–American her senior year, playing through a broken thumb during the postseason to net three goals in a 15-10 victory over Lake Oswego in the 2023 final. She went on to play at Johns Hopkins University, where she was an Academic All-Big Ten selection last year.

99. Sari-Jane Jenkins, South Salem, 2005 (softball, volleyball, basketball)

Jenkins grew up as the only girl among seven siblings, and she told a reporter at the University of Oregon newspaper, “I worshiped the ground my brothers walked on. I really look up to my brothers as role models.”

One older brother, Andy, starred for the Oregon State baseball team and played six years in the minor leagues, getting as high as Triple-A. Another, Riley, helped Linfield win the NCAA Division III football national championship in 2004.

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And Sari-Jane? She earned 11 letters in three sports with the Saxons, twice making the all-state softball team as a catcher before moving to the outfield when she joined the Ducks, where she was a four-year starter and three-time all-Pac-10 selection. She is second on the school’s career stolen base list with 96 and seventh in hits with 230.

98. Isabella Thorndike, Ashland, 2008 (skiing)

Thorndike won the Oregon Interscholastic Ski Racing Association (OISRA) combined state title in 2006 and 2007 — denying Olympian Jacqueline Wiles the overall title in 2007, the Canby skier’s senior season — and placed second as a senior in 2008.

While Thorndike twice won the overall championship, she never won an individual event title. She twice finished second in the giant slalom and placed third in the slalom each of her final three seasons.

Thorndike didn’t pursue a racing career after college, instead translating her love of the outdoors to becoming a floral design artist in the Medford area and exhibiting with Art Beyond.

97. Rebecca Kim, McNary/Tigard, 2006 (golf)

Kim completed her high school career as a three-time state champion, winning her first two clad in the blue and white of McNary before transferring to Tigard for her final season.

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She was the first girl to win three solo titles in a row, twice winning by 10 strokes, and she had a then-state-record round of 69 in each of her three championships.

Rebecca Kim won three consecutive individual state titles golfing for McNary (two) and Tigard (one).Frederick D. Joe

After her senior year, she won the Oregon Golf Association’s Public Links Championship and the Tournament of Champions, then headed to Duke University, where she played for two years before turning professional.

She played in six USGA events — the 2005 U.S. Girls’ Junior, the U.S. Women’s Amateur in 2006-07, the U.S. Women’s Public Links in 2007-08 and the 2009 U.S. Women’s Open.

96. Stephanie Horton, Tigard, 2007 (track and field)

Nine years ago, The Oregonian/OregonLive asked whether anyone would break several of the state’s longest-held track and field records. While some of them have fallen since that time, one that stands is Horton’s 2005 mark in the shot put.

Horton became the first girl in state history to break the 50-foot barrier at an April 27, 2005, dual meet in Forest Grove, throwing 52 feet, 7 inches — the best throw of the year nationally and breaking North Valley’s Christy Ward’s previous state record by almost four feet.

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Stephanie Horton
Many of the state’s track and field records have been broken in recent years, but the shot put mark set by Tigard’s Stephanie Horton has stood for two decades.Sol Neelman

She won the 4A state titles in the shot put and discus that year before heading to the University of Kansas, where as a freshman she won bronze in the shot at the U.S. Junior National Championships.

As a Jayhawks junior, she was an All-American with an eighth-place finish at the NCAA Championships, throwing 54-2.5 to set the school record (since broken by Alexandra Emilianov).

95. Taylor Wallace, Henley, 2008 (track and field, cross country)

Wallace won 10 individual state championships and three relay titles with the Hornets, becoming the first Oregon runner to win the 1,500- and 3,000-meter gold medals four consecutive years.

She holds the 4A state record in the 800 and 1,500, although she never ran the 800 at the state meet. She did run the 400 as a senior, placing fourth — and then came back to anchor the Hornets to a third victory in the 4×400 to cement the team championship.

Taylor Wallace
Henley legend Taylor Wallace won 15 high school gold medals in cross country and track.Klamath Falls Herald and News

Wallace won two 4A cross country state championships, running the fastest time of the four title-winners as a junior and winning Gatorade Runner of the Year as a junior and senior.

After her senior season, she finished third in the 1,500 at the Pan American Junior Championships in 4:31.76 and won the 2009 Steve Prefontaine Award as Oregon’s best high school runner. She then ran at the University of Oregon, where she became a steeplechaser, qualifying for the NCAA championships in 2012.

94. Kennedy Blanton, Forest Grove, 2025 (wrestling, soccer, track and field)

As girls wrestling continues to increase in popularity, Blanton’s state-record 163 wins likely will fall one day, but until then, the two-time 6A/5A state champion and four-time finalist sits atop the list for most wins and most pins (126) during her four years in a Vikings singlet.

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Kennedy Blanton
Forest Grove’s Kennedy Blanton holds the Oregon girls wrestling records for victories and pins.Mark Ylen

Blanton wasn’t just a standout on the wrestling mat. She was a four-time 6A state qualifier in the pole vault, winning a district title as a freshman and clearing 10 feet in all but two meets her final two seasons. Her steady vaulting never resulted in making the podium at state, as tiebreakers kept her from medaling three times.

She also was a midfielder on the soccer team, playing varsity all four years as the Vikings won 38 games during that time. She decided not to wrestle in college and is attending Oregon State.

93. Madison Odiorne, Summit, 2015 (golf)

Odiorne made history at Trysting Tree Golf Club in Corvallis on May 19, 2015, when she carded an even-par 72 to finish at 4-under 140, tying Daniele Giles of Crater atop the 5A leaderboard to secure a piece of her fourth state title.

Odiorne became the first Oregon golfer (boy or girl) to win four individual championships at any classification. She almost didn’t achieve that distinction — as a freshman, she finished behind Churchill senior Caroline Inglis, who was going for her fourth title, but Inglis was disqualified for signing an incorrect scorecard.

Madison Odiorne
Madison Odiorne of Summit made Oregon history by becoming the state’s first golfer to win four individual state championships.Randy L. Rasmussen

Odiorne’s victory her senior year garnered her the National High School Senior Girls’ Golfer of the Year award from the National High School Coaches Association. Later that year, she won the Future Collegians World Tour girls 13-19 division title.

The two-time Junior America’s Cup team member played at Washington State, where she had three top-10 finishes and seven in the top 20 before graduating and pursuing a medical career. She is now a board-certified physician assistant in cardiology at the Bend Heart and Lung Center.

92. Jamie Stone, Centennial, 2017 (swimming)

Stone dominated the sprints during her four seasons at the Gresham school, becoming the first Oregon swimmer to win four state titles in the 50- and 100-yard freestyles.

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She broke the state record in the 100 freestyle as a junior, winning her third championship in 49.46 seconds. Wilsonville’s Helena Jones broke the record in 2023, but Stone still holds the 6A mark.

Jamie Stone
Jamie Stone graduated from Centennial with her name all over the Oregon high school swimming record book.Miles Vance

Stone never broke the state meet record in the 50 free but held the state record of 22.68 that stood until Kaitlyn Dobler of Aloha surpassed it four years later.

Stone swam at the University of Arizona, where she was a stalwart on the Wildcats freestyle relay teams, earning All-American honorable mention in the 200 and 800 relays as a freshman and sophomore.

91. Sarah Conner, Central Linn, 2019 (wrestling, softball, volleyball, basketball)

Conner was one of the pioneers of girls wrestling in the state, joining North Medford’s Kyleigh Lopez her senior year as one of the first four-time girls state titlists. Lopez and Conner won their first three at OSAA exhibition meets, and they helped the OSAA inaugurate the official girls state championships, with Conner earning the 135-pound title.

Conner was a five-time USA Wrestling All-American, winning a Fargo Cadet national title in 2017, and a three-time Junior National All-American. She was the National Wrestling Hall of Fame’s Outstanding Female Wrestler of the Year for the state as a senior.

That spring, she was a first-team 2A/1A all-state selection as an outfielder for the Cobras softball team, the second time she was an all-state honoree (she made the second team as a sophomore). She was a second-team all-league volleyball player, and she made the 2A all-tournament first team after helping Central Linn place fourth in the state in basketball.

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The Oregonian/OregonLive will be counting down the state’s 100 greatest girls athletes throughout the week. Check back Tuesday for Part 2 of the series.



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Mayor of Portland, Oregon, demands ICE leave the city after federal agents tear gas protesters

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Mayor of Portland, Oregon, demands ICE leave the city after federal agents tear gas protesters


The mayor of Portland, Oregon, demanded U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement leave his city after federal agents launched tear gas at a crowd of demonstrators — including young children — outside an ICE facility during a weekend protest that he and others characterized as peaceful.

Thousands of people attended the “ICE out” protest on Saturday in South Portland, according to the Portland Police Bureau. The protest began near Elizabeth Caruthers Park, and demonstrators later moved to an ICE facility a few blocks away, CBS affiliate KOIN reported. That’s where witnesses said agents deployed tear gas, pepper balls and rubber bullets.

Erin Hoover Barnett, a former OregonLive reporter who joined the protest, said she was about 100 yards from the building in Portland’s South Waterfront when “what looked like two guys with rocket launchers” started dousing the crowd with gas.

“To be among parents frantically trying to tend to little children in strollers, people using motorized carts trying to navigate as the rest of us staggered in retreat, unsure of how to get to safety, was terrifying,” Barnett wrote in an email to OregonLive.

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The use of tear gas continued intermittently through the night as the group of protesters dwindled, KOIN reported.

The federal government “must, and will, be held accountable,” Portland Mayor Keith Wilson said Saturday night. “To those who continue to make these sickening decisions, go home, look in a mirror, and ask yourselves why you have gassed children.

Wilson also said the city would be imposing a fee on detention facilities that use chemical agents.

The mayor said the daytime demonstration was peaceful, “where the vast majority of those present violated no laws, made no threat and posed no danger” to federal agents.

“To those who continue to work for ICE: Resign. To those who control this facility: Leave,” Wilson wrote in his statement Saturday night. “Through your use of violence and the trampling of the Constitution, you have lost all legitimacy and replaced it with shame.”

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The Portland Fire Bureau sent paramedics to treat people at the scene, police said. Police officers monitored the crowd but made no arrests on Saturday.

In a statement posted Sunday to social media, Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek condemned the presence of ICE in the state. 

“Trump’s ICE has no place in Oregon,” Kotek wrote. “The use of tear gas against families, children, and peaceful demonstrators yesterday is a horrific abuse of authority that undermines public safety and violates constitutional rights. Federal agents must stand down and be held accountable.”

The Portland protest was one of many similar demonstrations nationwide against the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in cities like Minneapolis, where in recent weeks federal agents killed two residents, Alex Pretti and Renee Good.

In downtown Los Angeles, federal officers also deployed tear gas into the crowd on Saturday after local police issued an unlawful assembly order, CBS LA reported. At least eight people were arrested, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

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Federal agents in Eugene, Oregon, deployed tear gas on Friday when protesters tried to get inside the Federal Building near downtown. City police declared a riot and ordered the crowd to disperse.

President Trump posted Saturday on social media that it was up to local law enforcement agencies to police protests in their cities. However, Mr. Trump said he has instructed Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to have federal agents be vigilant in guarding U.S. government facilities.

“Please be aware that I have instructed ICE and/or Border Patrol to be very forceful in this protection of Federal Government Property. There will be no spitting in the faces of our Officers, there will be no punching or kicking the headlights of our cars, and there will be no rock or brick throwing at our vehicles, or at our Patriot Warriors,” Mr. Trump wrote. “If there is, those people will suffer an equal, or more, consequence.”



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Johan Munch, Matija Samar lead Oregon State over San Diego 78-76 in OT

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Johan Munch, Matija Samar lead Oregon State over San Diego 78-76 in OT


SAN DIEGO — Johan Munch scored 15 points and Matija Samar added six in the overtime as Oregon State knocked off San Diego 78-76 on Saturday.

Isaiah Sy made two free throws, Samar followed with a 3-pointer and the Beavers never trailed in OT.

Munch added nine rebounds for the Beavers (12-12, 5-6 West Coast Conference). Josiah Lake totaled 12 points, eight assists, five rebounds and four steals. Dez White scored 12 on 4-for-7 shooting from 3-point range. Sy pitched in with nine points, six rebounds and five assists.

The Toreros (10-14, 4-7) were led by Adrian McIntyre with 21 points, six rebounds and six assists. Assane Diop added 13 points, eight rebounds and two blocks. Tim Moore Jr. finished with 11 points, seven rebounds and five blocks.

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Sy scored six points in the first half for Oregon State, who led 30-25 at the break. Lake scored 12 second-half points and hit the game-tying 3-pointer with 14 seconds left in regulation to send the game to overtime tied at 60-all.

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.



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