Show Y 4 J5 s Section i WpjSv j- - Monday May 24 2004 1 v "vr Jw : v''V'-A'- ' ’ (fjS? s ' ' ' - k4‘ - A - " ''s' M ' ' - ' ? £ ' I The' Herald journal I A 't-- - J Page - xii 1 'iTSv1 ?K out of bed he feels the aches £ !f and pains from a lifetime of!''--: racingiThe scars lire a stark: f-Y reminder of the hard hits crazy J crashes and injmesfi:-The trophy case tells another 'ri'W-iWr- s ' r:jT SI J J (11 ' y - 0$ ' “ ' J pfM XTa have the stuff to pitch a noiitter? :V K Did TomGlavine V' v‘ ' B2U SiiapIc hpiAfc JjV'1 If this indeed is the v last time hockey’s most ' precious prize is hoisted Y in celebration for a few £ years --yand the NHL’s i pending labor talks will er driver yritwas only my second Bilbao resigns as: USU softball coach V ' Meats’ six Indianapolis 500 'a poles remain a record he’s tied with A Foyt and Al Unser for : most Indy Wins' and he' was ' chosen as the 1980s Driver of the Decade 7 1 Until his first victory id Indy Y :rn 1979 Meats was just anoth’- - - X'V-'- - :Y t (AP)— This Stanley Cup final arrived like a Lightning bolt from the it ng me Cal-yyt blue a y vs Tampa Bay matchup that might gary time !'" here’’ herecalledy“When I Utah State University softball 0X Debbie Bilbao has resigned her coach fjgA ! position effective immediately it Was for the opportunity to become a head age" said Bil babTThe eerience I gained will be ft 'ctcoach at such a young l§llot in my time hoe and I am qrpre ' dative of die support I have received from die departm I wUh USU die J ini a si St j 7i ''VI sweq)ing threetime defending Big West Champion Cal State Fullotonil I but idi propped 17 sftaigiit games y&eftae finishing the year widi a l04p itecbrd oVeralli inchidingi dm-- (5-- 15 M I 1 1 DNiEAPpiJS(jSuDHQu tpov6ddand tooimportto theM iniKsota Timbc Wolves to be replaced hji just one Sp When CasU’siWjungbackJimi jiDuring'Bilbao8dnee-yea- r AggieSwere fBiDxtfhQ' j - msg K 0' r- 'HR n ipydaU mm'ltoag 4 stintthe'i ay arid m washCtfi iaBandyi wasa threestime pitdherf fatlowa before starting her lopachingj' All-Ameri-ca caneerat her amiaterftorp15 J i)9Shd then worked as ah assisftuif at technickl fouls! anij Neyeafai SadamentpStWebefbreaimihg tUSUahieiad of the 2002 season : trash-talki- ng iystahpddwnsih j ’’a 7 thefel m‘i m 88 I Bourdaisvictonous Ifc &$¥ ? I'V j'si! c5v' ''IK v MB' 'P!p stepping to pit - ? v:wv 7 jor Though the statistic says more about the Lakers’ apparent hbredom than Martin's excellence he Y Outscored Los Angeles’ eptire frontcouit in the first half He scored bn a wild fling at 'thehbop shortly arid he even got cocky glaring at before halftime v-- 1 llftSunday'sscores rh ’ y 1 w1- p - Tampa Bay 5 Cleveland Boston 7 Toronto 2 a m v a - 410 Inn 7 I I 7 to play 7V'£:j£y7E Garnett did the rest scoring 14 points in the second s yy-- ' half v ‘We didn't have a choice” Garnett said of Miri- nesota’s superb team playiOurgeneralwas outWe just kind of looked at ourselves and said ’OKr it’s '! ' up to us now’” " Garnett closed the third quarter with a n that helped Minnesota hold off a by rally Kobe Bryant who scored 27 points and briefly roused the Lakers from their game-lon- g slumber If wasn't the lowestr and matched the Lakers nearly enough y ' - ! V - r' j one-ma- ' ' Xii:f&: " i ‘ ' NL Atlanta 5 Lbs Angeles 1 NY Meta 4 Colorado 0 Cincinnati 7 Houston 0 Milwaukee 2 Pittsburgh 1 Philadelphia 8 San Diego 4 Arizona 4 Florida 3 Chicago Cubs 4 St Louis 3 on B4 See - APphoto Minnesota's Wally Szczeibiak (10) puts up a shot in front of Laker toward Deaven George in the second quarter of Game 2 of the NBA Western Cbnference Finals Sunday in Minneapolis PCL Oklahoma 12 Salt Lake 2 On television MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 5 pm ESPN2 — Regional coverage ' Houston at Cincinnati or Anaheim at Toronto TBS —Atlanta at Montreal 6 pm ' NBA ESPN — Playoffs Eastern Confer- ence final Game 2 Detroit at Indiana TENNIS 6 am ESPN2 — French Open early round at Paris 10:30 am ESPN — French Open early round at Paris 1 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Rulon Gardner walked off the mat Sunday at the US Olympic wrestling trials with an unmistaVible look of determination on his face ' and his shoes still firmly on his feet Gardner who promised to leave his shoes on the mat in' the wrestler's traditional show of retirement if he lost won a pair of tight 2-- 1 overtime decisions over top- Dremiel Byers to gain the return trip to the Olympics that once seemed a long shot “I told myself ‘I'm not putting those shoes out there today “ said Gardner the 2000 Greco-Roma- n super heavyweight gold medalist at the Sydney Games' “I have more matches to wrestle” ‘ While Gardner success- fully wrestled out of the challenge tournament that determined who would meet the UJS rational champions in Sunday’s best-of-thr- ee trials only four others did including the other American big name time NCAA champion Cael Sanderson Sanderson needed three matches to outlast former Iowa college rival Lee Fullhart at 85 pounds winning four-seed-ed 1 an and 4-- 1 overtime loss in the second match Fullhart upset Sanderson at last month's US nationals to gain the No 1 seeding in freestyle Otherwise the wrestlers had relatively little trouble Five of the seven freestyle champions needed the mini-mu- m two matches to earn Athens: Stephen to trips Abas (121 pounds) Eric Guerrero (J 32) Joe : Williams (163) Daniel Counier(211 12) and Kerty McCoy (264 12) 3-- 1 top-seed- ed See OLYMPIC on B4 APphoto Gael Sanderson right of Ames Iowa fends off Lee Fullhart of Colorado Springs Colo during their 185 lbs finals match at the US Olympic Wrestling Team Trials Sunday in Indianapolis |