OCR Text |
Show Saturday, June 6, 1998 1 B-8 The Park Record Game of the Week : :;-: 3 ) Wood Blinds Shutters Verticals Soft Shades Aluminums jlBuggetn : SUPER STORE TO YOUR DOOR!" An independently owned and operated fnnehiee Evary Mom Brand 1 Hunter Douglas 1 Levolor 1 LouverDrape Davanza's rolls to 19-7 win Mark PVC f.rahwr 'f r"i f if j 1 i srM -888-88BUDGET sMa AST ICS! or 801-561-0440 The Best Selection of Window Comings at Unbeatable Prices are Coming Right to YoarBoor. IFISEEIOFFWO OPRFEEE ln-llome ;ij Consul (alio n : and Esti mates We're it your service! I I I j With $250.00 J Purchase With coupon. Good only at time of I purchase. Expires 7-31-98 With $500.00 Purchase With coupon. Good only at time of purchase. Expires 7-31-98 Custom Installation I For the Perfect Look! Brand New Commercial Space With On-Site Designated Parking!! Sun Peak Professional Plaza The Sun Peak Plaza, located at 1840 West Sun Peak Drive, is conveniently located on the only commercial space with on-site designated parking between Park City and Kimball Junction. This class "A" office plaza with 15,000 net rentable square feet has been professionally designed with spacious common areas and true Mountain Design throughout. The Sun Peak Plaza is only minutes from both Park City and Kimball Junction and is less than one mile from Utah's newest ski and snowboard resort, The Canyons, as well as the 2002 Olympic venue, the Utah Winter Sports Park. Suites vary from 2,500 square feet to 15,000 square feet. Lease or purchase as an office condominium. Please call Candace Kuhn or Mike Sloan today at 655-7745 extensions 207 & 205 for a full color brochure, as well as architectural plans for individual suites. 1771 V A L i WARNING GAS PIPELINE BEFORE DIGGING OR IN AN EMERGENCY CALL QUESTAR PIPELINE CO. TOLL FREE 1-800-300-2025 flj - -. i i f ft 1 t IT MARKS HIGH PRESSURE UNDERGROUND NATURAL GAS PIPELINES OF QUESTAR PIPELINE CO. Call before you dig. State law requires that if you're doing any excavating, exca-vating, seismic work, road grading, building or any other construction near these markers, you must notify the appropriate company. A Questar Utah Pipeline representative will come and locate our existing underground pipelines for you at no charge. Questar Pipeline is a participant in the following utility notification centers: Blue Stakes 1-800-662-4111 (in state) or 1-801-532-5000 (out of state) Wyoming One Call Concepts 1-800-348-1030 Colorado Utility Notification Center of Colorado .... .1-800-922-1987 You can also call Questar Pipeline directly at 307-382-8882 (Direct calls only notify Questar Pipeline, not other utilities or pipeline companies.) Be able to recognize and report pipeline hazards. The uncommon conditions below may indicate a pipeline problem or emergency. Please immediately report it by calling the telephone number below. SJD vsssji I Hissing or blowing sound Dirt being blown into the air Fire at or near exposed piping 1 7SA Fire apparently emanating from the ground Water blowing into the air at a pond, creek or river Bubbling action of outside surface water ' Questar EMERGENCY TELEPHONE: Pipeline CO. T0LL FREE 1-800-300-2025 (Day or Night) . U - 1 aifiswsi Vimmmmmmmm ; 1 ' j-,- h .. . . r ,(, w--. .;7 . '-.uw - r.v- " ' DAVE FIELDSPARK RECORD Doz Mendoza swings at one of the three softballs he hit out of City Park Wednesday. Mendoza smacks three homers in defending champ's opening game by Dave Fields OF THE RECORD STAFF Davanza's started its Wednesday night softball league title defense with a 19-7 win over Szechwan in The Park Record Game of the Week at City Park. Doz Mendoza smacked three home runs and a double in a Davanza hit party that only made it to the fourth inning before the 50-minute time limit expired. Champions, however, are never happy. "We've played a lot better," said Davanza manager Nick Caravaglia. Szechwan put together a five-run five-run rally in its final at-bat but couldn't come close to the big hitting of Davanza - the champs from last summer's Wednesday and Friday night league. Even defending 1 champions make concessions for John Stockton and Karl Malone. When not at bat or in the field, Davanza players huddled behind the home-plate fence where a television was running off a portable generator. Some confusion confu-sion ensued on the Davanza bench as players would ask the score and a TV-watching teammate team-mate would respond, "17 to 17 at Defeat of the Week Irish Camel def. Riverhorse 36-7 the end of the first." "Jazz game and beer," said Caravaglia, "we have our priorities priori-ties in life." Davanza's potent offensive attack was supported by strong defense in the field. Right-fielder Melanie Lees made a nice catch to end the Szechwan rally. "Melanie's a stud," said the team's manager." I'd match Melanie up with any guy in the league. It was Lees who made a game-winning game-winning diving catch in the outfield out-field during a previous season, despite the fact she was five months pregnant. Sticking with tradition, Davanza's fearless leader, Pat Ott, missed the beginning of the season due to injury. Ott, who achieved fame earlier this year by delivering a pizza to the First Family during their visitj to Park i City,. broke his hand be$M Jfje season began. n ,, Despite losing their fitstgame. of the season the Szechwan players play-ers said they had a good time and went away with smiles on their faces. "I'm real happy with the way we played," said Szechwan manager man-ager Mike Berliner. "It was too little, too late but we had fun and that's the most important thing." Other scores from the first week of the softball league: Monday U.S. Ski Team (1-0) def. Park r . v . DAVE FIELDSPARK RECORD Szechwan pitcher Sher Jackson couldn't slow down Davanza's hot bats. City Group (0-1) 13-7; Chimayo (1-0) def. Jtech (0-1) 13-9; Team Naga (1-0) def. Park City Mountain Resort (0-1) 21-6. ;Intermountaini- Mortgage (1-0) ";def. Plaza PrWsers (0-1) 25-18. Tuesday Campagrie Specialty Foods (1-0) def. Silver King Hotel (0-1) 26-10; Irish Camel (1-0) def. Riverhorse Cafe (0-1) 36-7; The Sox (1-0) def. Adidas (0-1) 13-12. 13-12. Wednesday Deer Valley Lodging (1-0) def. Nutraceutical (0-1) 14-13; Davanza's (1-0) def. Szechwan (0-1) 19-7; O'Shuck's (1-0) def. Deer Valley Snow Sox (0-1) 18-13; 18-13; Planet Reidbok vs. O'Shucks rained out. Kitt, Moe retire from World Cup Continued from B-7 Team. He plans to race professionally, profes-sionally, he said, and, among other projects, do promotional work for Jackson Hole Mountain Resort. Moe, who grew up skiing in Montana, won two gold medals at the 1989 World Junior Championships. He also raced in the first of his four World Championships that same year. Moe reached the height of his career in the 1994 Olympic season. sea-son. In addition to his success in Lillehammer, he won a World Cup super G (Whistler, B.C.) and had four other top-3 results and 10 top-lOs overall. Kitt started on the World Cup during the 1988 season. "I'm going to miss standing at the top of the course in Kitzbuehel Austria and Val d'isere France, where he won in December 1991, and then racing rac-ing those big hills in Europe, and standing the finish area with my colleagues. But the reality is I'm not as motivated any more to achieve everything necessary to do that ... I've always done this with success in mind. I'm used to being in the top three, used to finishing at the top, and when you et bounced back to a different level, it's hard to take," he said. After a poor season in 1994, Kitt fought back to top form in 1995 to finish second in two World Cup races and win the Aspen downhill for a second time. Kitt never really made the comeback he wanted after tearing tear-ing the ACL in his left knee while preparing for the December, 1995 World Cup downhill in Val d'isere. He said he and his wife, Nancy, are looking into broadcast broad-cast television opportunities for her. "I'm still going to be traveling travel-ing for the different things I do, so I can live anywhere. We want to get a good situation for Nancy and go live wherever that may be." He plans to stay involved with Ski Team activities - perhaps per-haps as a guest coach at some training camps in addition to pursuing several options, from competing in professional downhill races to working with a variety of promotional opportunities. oppor-tunities. The only U.S. man to race in four Olympics, he has been a spokesman for many years for Rolex Watch U.S.A., which sponsors the annual alpine Junior Olympics. Kitt grew up in Rochester, N.Y. and started on wooden skis at two at Swain Ski Center where his parents, Ross and Nancy, were part-time instructors. instruc-tors. He graduated from Green Mountain Valley School and moved onto the World Cup tour during the 1988 Olympic season. sea-son. He competed in four Olympics (1988, '92, '94 and '98) and four World Alpine Ski Championships (1989, '91, '93 and '97), taking home the bronze medal in downhill from the '93 championships in Morioka-Shizukuishi, Japan. He "won" four World Cup races but receives credit for only one official victory, the season-opening downhill at Val d'isere, France in December 1991. Two apparent victories at Aspen, Colo, in 1993 and 1995, and another at Val d'isere were canceled because of poor weather. He had five other World Cup top-3s in his career, was third in the 1992 World Cup downhill standings and won four U.S. ski championships in his career. Snowboarders hold Park City camp Continued from B-7 Ott, who competes in alpine and freestyle events. Even though she is in peak physical condition and trains constantly, con-stantly, Ott said the diagnostic testing at TOSH "was really brutal, bru-tal, but that is normal." "Every year they step it up a bit," Ott said of the off-season training camps. The recent growth in a competitive com-petitive international field of snowboarders has forced the once-dominant U.S. riders to take things like off-season camps and training more seriously, according to Stern who travels with the American snowboarders during the competition season. Stern says the Americans who invented the sport could once rely on natural ability to win competitions. Now that's chang-, ing. "Now they know they have to stay really focused," said Stern. , "The rest of the world is catching our team." Part of that year-long focus is cross training with water jumps and trampolines, says Head U.S. Snowboard Coach .Peter Foley who accompanied his team to Park City. He says even though none of his athletes perform inverted tricks, flipping on the trampoline teaches "body awareness." aware-ness." In the process, athletes like Ott and Pogue forget they're really working while Lpside down. Besides, says Pogue, "In summer, you kind of think it's your break." 'I jWUriMMM" POOF |