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Show i '' ' , . . "'" j . ' ' , .. - - . ' J f s - ' ; ' ' - . ' , ' f - ; ! - I s ' -' - ' ' " ' V .... , , ', ' . " : .-.- '. " , , , ' - - - x - J ? ' " , f s '.', M - ' , - - ' "' ' N ' i v ; . .: V;. ' - 1 ' " ' . " ' ' ' J , ' s. ' 58 ' 4 ' " ' - . ' - t DON HASLEM'S racket sends the ball over the net during the UBIC tennis tournament in Roosevelt last week. A tennis tour- , - ' . . ; . . : ' f X VERNAL NETTER, Tom Sprouse, who is originally from Roosevelt, sends the tennis ball on a blazing mission to John Hullinger on the other side of the net. nament is slated in Vernal this week. Base bci 11 EHoueicluEp DODGERS CRUSH BRAVES Manager Tom Lasorda was as amazed as everyone else by the sudden sud-den surge his Los Angeles Dodgers made in nine days, cutting the Atlanta Braves' seemingly insurmountable insur-mountable division lead of 10V2 games to l'z. The rush reached its peak Sunday as Bob Welch ' and Tom Niedenfeur combined for a 2-0 shutout to give the Dodgers consecutive weekend four-game sweep over the floundering flounder-ing Braves. "I've never seen a team gain so much ground in so short a period," Lasorda said. "Not even in the minor leagues. "There's nothing more exciting than being 10 V2 games behind and looking up nine days later and seeing yourself 1 1 a games behind. It has to be the greatest heist since the Brinks express robbery." Lasorda couldn't pinpoint pin-point the reason for the Dodgers' surge. "You can't say there's just one thing that turned us around," he said. "We're just doing things that win games. Like get ting good relief pitching and pinch hits." Braves Manager Joe Torre did his best to keep his chin from dragging. "I still feel we can play the way we did in the first 100 games rather than the way we did the last 10 days," he said. "We're still in first place in August and we look forward for-ward to the games ahead." Ken Landreaux scored twice after stealing second se-cond base and Welch fired a three-hitter over -eight innings. The win was the sixth in a row and 10th in 11 games for the Dodgers as well as their ninth in a row over the Braves. Welch, 13-7, retired the first 13 men he faced before giving up a single to Bob Horner in the fifth. Niedenfuer worked the ninth inning for his sixth save. Padres 3, Reds 1, at San Diego - Rookie lefthander left-hander Dave Dravecky, making his first major league start, allowed four hits over six innings to enable San Diego to pull to within three games of Western Division leading Atlanta. Tim Flannery drove in a pair of runs. Dravecky had appeared in 19 games for San Diego in relief. All of Cincinnati's Cincin-nati's hits were singles. Expos 2, Cards 1, at St. Louis - David Palmer and Woodie Fryman combined combin-ed on a six-hitter and Tim Raines doubled in a run to lift Montreal to victory. Palmer, 6-4, allowed five hits before he was lifted in the sixth in favor of Fryman. Fryman then allowed only one hit over the final three innings he pitched. Giants 3, Astros 2, at San Francisco - Jack Clark's ninth inning single drove in the winning run in the first game of a scheduled doubleheader. Clark' singled off reliever Frank LaCorte, who replaced starter and loser Bob Knepper, who pitched for San Francisco in the 1980 season. Fred Breininj; toiled three scoreless innings inn-ings for the Giants to notch the victory. Trailing Trail-ing 2-1 entering the ninth, San Francisco used a walk, a single by Chili Davis and an RBI single by Joe Morgan to tie the game and set the stage for Clark's winning hit. |