Oregon
What Mark Few said after Gonzaga beat Oregon
Over the first few weeks of the college basketball season, not many Gonzaga fans were looking at a Dec. 21 matchup between the Bulldogs and Oregon as being one of the Zags’ toughest games on their nonconference schedule, considering the caliber of some of the other power conference teams scattered on the docket throughout November and December.
Nonetheless, Nate Bittle and the Ducks made sure to give general followers of the sport a fun matchup to watch going into the holiday break.
The Ducks (6-6) didn’t make things easy for the Zags (12-1), who managed to come away from the Moda Center on Sunday with their smallest margin of victory in nonleague play, a 91-82 win, thanks in large part to Braeden Smith’s masterful performance in the second half.
With Graham Ike bottled up for most of the night and Braden Huff dealing with foul trouble, Gonzaga’s backup point guard stepped up when it mattered most to steer the Zags toward their eighth win over a power conference team this season.
Smith, who played extra minutes due to an ill Mario Saint-Supéry, got under the Ducks’ skin just when it looked as if Gonzaga’s lead was in jeopardy of switching hands. The former Patriot League Player of the Year at Colgate finished with 21 points, 16 of which came after halftime, and dished out seven assists without committing a turnover in 27 minutes of action off the bench. He accounted for 13 consecutive points during a pivotal stretch in the second half that saw Gonzaga’s lead swell to 15 after Smith dished to Steele Venters for a crucial 3-pointer.
With the win, Gonzaga finished nonconference play with six wins combined over the SEC and Big Ten — five of which were considered Quad 1 or 2 games — and eight wins over top 100-rated KenPom teams (Oregon was No. 74, third-lowest ahead of No. 78 Arizona State and No. 100 Maryland). The Zags won all those games by double-digit margins, making Sunday’s victory over the Ducks their first of the season by fewer than 10 points.
Here’s what Mark Few had to say about Smith’s performance, and more, after the game.
On the pro-Gonzaga crowd in attendance
“We have a great following, and I really, really, really appreciate everybody that showed up today. I mean, that was the plan when Dana [Altman] and I set this thing up. I gotta be honest with you, I thought, we’d have more Zag nation than we had. We usually draw like crazy wherever we go, and especially in the Northwest.”
“So, little disappointed in that, but I was so happy for everybody that did show, and then the teams put on a great show. Quite frankly, those were two high level teams going at it.”
On Braeden Smith and Mario Saint-Supéry
“Braeden was exceptional tonight. Mario’s had the flu — I don’t know what the heck’s going on, but he hasn’t been able to practice this whole week. And he even woke up feeling not as good as we thought he was going to be today. So we tried him a little bit, and God bless him, he couldn’t really function too well out there. So, we leaned on B Smith hard, and he responded big time. He saved us and was huge key to the game.”
On Gonzaga’s success in nonconference play
“I’ve been doing 27 years of this stuff, and we’ve always tried to schedule difficult. Especially this last — I don’t know, 10 years or 12 years; we’ve been trying to schedule to be a number one seed in a [nonconference play]. And I think — I’m sure somebody will dispute this with ‘analytics’ — but I think it’s the best run we’ve had in the nonconference.”
“I mean, literally, with who we’ve played, where we’ve played, how the games have stacked up; it just felt like that, and that’s not taking anything away — I mean, we’ve had teams go undefeated, as you know, to the very, very end of the season. But sometimes we weren’t able to play the type of schedule we played. The COVID year we certainly weren’t, and I can’t, off the top of my head, remember how we did in ’17 or ’19, but certainly not as good as we’ve done in the nonconference. Super proud of these guys.”
On Oregon center Nate Bittle
“We recruited Nate. He comes from a great family and he had a great high school career. It’s great to see him healthy. And then I think when you see him healthy, you can see how skilled he is. And I think when you play him, you forget how big he is.
“And listen, there are a lot of guys in college basketball that are [playing more than four seasons]. He’s not the only one, and they’ve taken advantage of it, and good for them. And until we can get some organization and some rules around this thing, I think we’ll continue to see that.”
On whether the Zags have room for growth
“There’s always [another level to reach]. We’re not even halfway through our season. The teams that continue to get better — I’ve said this every year, you got to continue to get better. Those are the ones that will win and advance in the NCAA Tournament. Teams that get stuck with how they’re playing in late December, it’s not going to happen. So, we have to stay on that growth plane.”
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Oregon
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Statesman Journal
The Oregon Department of Forestry is transforming an off-highway vehicle staging area into a new campground in the Tillamook State Forest.
The Diamond Mill OHV staging area is currently undergoing reconstruction into a full campground that is scheduled to open in the Tillamook State Forest on April 1.
“Diamond Mill is in the heart of some of the most active OHV usage areas in the Tillamook State Forest,” said Ben Burns, the recreation facilities manager for ODF. “Historically, Diamond Mill has been a staging and parking area for mostly single track (motorcycle) trail users.”
The campground is being prepared with boulders, soil, gravel and vegetation, along with site contouring to give campers more privacy and a more comfortable overnight experience, according to the agency.
Here’s what to know about the campground at Diamond Mill.
How many campsites will be at Diamond Mill?
The new campground at Diamond Mill will have 16 sites, multiple posts and signage, new picnic tables, fire grates and a double-vault pit toilet.
What is the Diamond Mill fee?
The fee for the sites at Diamond Mill will be $20 a night.
Can people reserve camping sites at Diamond Mill?
Camping sites at Diamond Mill are not available for reservation in 2026.
“For this first year the campground ground will remain a first come first served area,” Burns said. “Then, we will consider user feedback and might go to a reservation system in 2027.”
When does Diamond Mill open?
Diamond Mill and other seasonal State Forests campgrounds open on Wednesday, April 1.
People can learn more about camping at state forest campgrounds on the ODF website at oregon.gov/odf/recreation/pages/camp.aspx.
Ginnie Sandoval is the Oregon Connect reporter for the Statesman Journal. Sandoval is a lifelong Oregonian who covers trending news, entertainment, food and outdoors. She can be reached at GSandoval@statesmanjournal.com or on X at @GinnieSandoval.
Oregon
Gresham grocery store identified as measles exposure site
GRESHAM, Ore. (KPTV) – The Oregon Health Authority identified a grocery store in Gresham as a measles exposure site on Thursday evening.
Shoppers who visited the WinCo Foods at 2511 SE 1st St between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. on March 7 may have been exposed to measles, according to OHA.
Community members who visited the store during that timeframe are advised to contact their healthcare provider immediately.
Data from OHA’s website shows the measles case count in Oregon for 2026 sits at six total cases as of March 12. Of those six cases, five patients were unvaccinated and one had an unknown vaccination status.
More information about measles in Oregon can be found here.
Copyright 2026 KPTV-KPDX. All rights reserved.
Oregon
An iconic Oregon waterfall was put up for sale on Redfin. Lawmakers approved the money to buy it
The state of Oregon may soon have some new public property: A spectacular waterfall, beloved by generations, that was recently put up for sale on Redfin.
Abiqua Falls — known for its 92-foot (28-meter) vertical drop over a columnar basalt cliff — has been privately owned for over a century but open to the public. Its owner, a nonprofit that supports a community of Benedictine monks, put it on the market earlier this year.
The listing worried fans of the natural wonder. But at the tail end of the legislative session this month, a bipartisan group of lawmakers stepped in and approved $2.1 million to buy the falls and its surrounding land.
“It’s not every day where you see a waterfall come up for sale on Redfin or Realtor.com with no price,” said Travis Williams, president of the Willamette River Preservation Trust, a conservation nonprofit. “The public was really confused and fearful that the site would be closed off.”
The waterfall is about 30 miles (50 kilometers) east of the state capital, Salem, and roughly 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Portland. It’s reached by a rough, unpaved road and short, steep hike — so steep that previous visitors have left ropes in some spots for assistance.
In a statement, Republican state Sen. Fred Girod, whose district includes the waterfall, said “Oregon is pledging that Abiqua Falls will continue to be protected and accessible for generations to come.”
The waterfall was acquired by Mount Angel Abbey in 1908 and transferred to The Abbey Foundation of Oregon, a nonprofit that supports the abbey, in 2002, according to Amanda Staggenborg, the foundation’s communications director.
“We just realized that it was time,” she said. “There were a lot of people that were hiking on the property, and while we welcome that, we wanted to ensure that the proper stewardship was overseeing it.”
The foundation put the property up for open auction in early February, meaning there was no minimum or maximum bid, she said. It accepted the offer the state made under the bill that passed.
The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department must complete due diligence, including reviewing environmental and archaeological information, before the purchase can move forward, spokesperson Katie Gauthier said in an email.
The property won’t necessarily become a state park, which would require additional money, she added. It could be managed by a local or tribal government or another state agency.
“Abiqua Falls is a beautiful but very remote and difficult-to-access site, and we are concerned about the impact managing a property like this could have on an already stretched state park system and our current budget shortfall,” Gauthier said
Many people who commented on the Willamette River Preservation Trust’s social media posts on the issue welcomed the idea of the falls becoming public land, although some worried that state acquisition might lead to fees and crowds.
The trust, which submitted a bid soon after the waterfall was listed for sale, has supported the state’s move to acquire it, said Williams, the trust’s president.
“It has a sense of spirituality about it,” he said. “It’s just gorgeous.”
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