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Show i n m i ni(i i DAILY H Prep soccer, PaysonatSpringville CORRECnQN The caption for the American e Peak high school football game in Saturday's Daily Herald identified the wrong school mascot for American Fork. That mistake waS also inadvertently edited in to the story after it had been submitted correctly by writer Beky Beaton. American Fork's masFork-Lon- cot is - . 0 The Daily Francisco begins Golf serving suspension er ADAM COQUANESE Associated Press Senor Swinger, with Edgar Prado aboard, captures The Belmont Breeders' Cup on Saturday at Belmont Park. Ma-ha- ot Perez (63), Todd Fischer (63), Tim Clark (64), Patrick Sheehan (65), Scott Simpson (66), Ryan Palmer (67) and J J. Henry (67) at 198. Second-roun- d leader Dean Wilson, a former BYU golfer, and Heath Slocum (64) were an- other shot back at 199. Wilson shot an even-pa- r 70 Saturday. I Kane, Kung share lead: At Portland, Ore., Candie Kung and Lo-rKane overcame the wind and the rain and a rally by Annika Sorenstam to top the Safe- ie , OITTHEAIR TV I '. STATION TIME EVENT " Frank ANAHEIM, Calif. Francisco, one of three Texas ot SAN ANTONIO Bart Bryant matched the PGA Tour's lowest round of the year with a 60 Saturday to build a three-shn lead over Hunter in the Texas Open. Bryant's score broke the single-day course record on the La Cantera Golf Club course and. left him at 194 after three rounds. The round tied the 60 shot by Robert Gamez in January at the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic. The previous mark at the Texas Open was 61, set by Garrett Willis in 2002 and matched by Ted Purdy in Thursday's opening round. Mahan (62) was at 197, while Joe Ogilvie shot a 61 to join Pat Prepsoooer TimpviewatProvo 330 p.m. 2004 a 1 ' Baseball Boston at N.Y. Yankees Detroit at Chicago White Sox " Milwaukee at Houston 11 a.m. 1p.m. 6 p.m. WNBA Basketball Charlotte at Detroit Noon ; ESPN , " WGN ESPN2 ESPN2 ) NFL Football Bryant shoots 60, takes lead three-sh- TUESDAY " Prepvofleybal Lone Peak at Pleasant Grow. 6:30 n.rn. Baseball Herald regrets the error. 1 Sunday. September TUESDAY " while with the Lakers, O'Neal said he was pleased that a sexual assault charge against Bryant was dropped earlier this month, "I'm glad that he got off. You never want to see a player of his caliber go down tor something like that," O'Neal said. "Now he can go back to being a family man." VIP - ' n TUESDAY AMBRffiFM ERALO way Classic leaderboard. 68 to Kung shot a match Kane (69) at 137, two strokes ahead of two-tim- e defending champion Sorenstam, Janice Moodie and Carin Koch with a round left. Grace Park (69) and Christina Kim (71) were in a group at after enduring wind gusts to 24 mph and occasional downpours at Columbia Edge-watCountry Club. Rangers relievers suspended for their part in a bullpen brawl with fans in Oakland earlier this week, began serving his season-endin- g ban on Saturday. Francisco was suspended by the commissioner's office Friday for the rest of the season 16 for throwing a chair k'ames that struck a woman and broke her nose during Monday's game. The right-handappealed the suspension and pitched one inning in the Rangers' 9--5 loss to the Anaheim Angels on Friday night, allowing a solo home run by Vladimir Guerrero. "This was Frankie's desire, after looking at all the options that presented themselves," general manager John Hart said. "Frankie wanted to do what was in the bests interests of the dub, and for himself . I think that MLB and the union worked to try to make this as feasible as can be." to be that scapegoat," ' enough said O'Neal, traded by the Lakers to Miami in July. "Who's going to be the scapegoat now? Who are they going to point at now?" O'Neal said with a laugh. The Heat's new center was back in town Saturday to host a kids' basketball camp. O'Neal feels that he was unfairly blamed for the Lakers' failure to win the NBA title the past two seasons including this year's loss to Detroit af- -' ter winning three in a row. "My thing is, if I'm going to Shaq feels Lakers made be the scapegoat, let me be in him scapegoat charge and let me do it my BOXING way," said O'Neal whose fricSANTA MONICA, Calif. tion with teammate Kobe Bryant Shaquille O'Neal believes the Los was well documented. "So if I'm Hopkins stops De La in charge and everybody Angeles Lakers made him The knows I'm in charge and we're Hoya in ninth round Big Scapegoat. "It was just guys upstairs doing it my way and it don't who can't step up and do what LAS VEGAS Bernard Hopwork, then they can, 'Say hey, kins suddenly ended a Close fight they're supposed to do. They've you did it.' And I'll say, 'You know what, I did it."' with two left hooks to the body in got to have a scapegoat, and the ninth round Saturday night to they know that I'm strong Despite their differences . er Basketball Denver at Jacksonville 11a.m. 11a.m. San Francisco at New Orleans Buffalo at Oakland Miami at Cincinnati CBS ; FOX CBS ESPN 2:15 p.m. 6:30 p.m. ft 10 a.m. 2 p.m. Ryder Cup Texas Open, ESPN " Auto Racing NASCAR Nextel Cup Motorcycle racing, AMA NHRA Luca Oil Nationals Motocross, AMA Motocross, AMA ' NBC j ' j 11a.m. TNT Superbikes 1p.m. 2 p.m. 9 p.m. 10 p.m. SPEED ESPN2 ESPN2 ESPN2 ' ,1 " ' Horse Racing Futurity Stakes, Ruffian Handicap 2 p.m. ABC , ' : stop Oscar De la Hoya and ruin his bid to become the undisputed middleweight champion. The punches put De La Hoya on the canvas on his hands and knees in obvious pain. When he rolled over on his back, referee Kenny Bayless stopped the fight to a halt at 138 of the ninth round. While Hopkins celebrated, De La Hoya remained on his knees, his face buried in his gloves. He repeatedly pounded the canvas in frustration after being stopped for the first time in his brilliant career. "I felt a sense of urgency," Hopkins said. "I wasn't sure if I was winning or not" Hopkins was ahead on two scorecards and behind on a third in a cautiously fought bout when he suddenly landed the punches just bekwDe La Hoya'srb cage to re- tain his undisputed rnkkfleweight title in his 19th title defense. d "A body shot," De La Hoya said. De La Hoya was a 1 underdog in only his second fight as a middleweight and was taking on a champion who hadn't lost in 11 well-place- 2-- years. Spikers fall to No. 6 UCLA; Men's tennis wins meet Wolverines split in tourney DAILY BYU ROUNDUP Jordan Jensen HERALD CORRESPONDENT After Utah knocked off the No. 6 UCLA volleyball team on Friday night, the BYU Cougars tried to do the same thing Saturday at the Smith Fieldhouse. For one game, it looked like the Cougars might just do that, but then the Bruins took control and went on to a 8 victory over BYU. The Cougars have had trouble with maintaining a high level of play throughout matches this season. "It isn't a conditioning issue. We are in great shape," said freshman hitterblocker Erica Lett. "We just lose our mental edge, down the stretch," added sophomore Lindsy Hartsock. BYU controlled the first game, getting four kills each from Lauren Richards, Lexi Brown and Hartsock and 24-3- 0, 29-3- 1, 30-2- 6, 30-1- blocks from Lindsey Metcalf and Hartsock. But the Bruins stormed back in Game 2, leading by three or four points through most of the game and going on to the victory. Game 3 was throughout. The game was tied nine times by the time the score was That continued through the latter part of the game, as a loud, supportive crowd helped the Cougars gain momentum and take a 8 neck-and-nec- k 10-1- 0. 29-2- lead. But the Bruins scored the final three points to earn the win and the important 1 lead. The fourth game was all the Bruins. Lett and Hartsock led BYU with kills with 18 and 12, respectively. "I was very impressed with 2-- their hitting on the tape. Their setter Lauren Richards is fantastic as well" said UCLA coach Andy Banachowski. The Cougars open conference play Friday when they host , Utah at 7 p.m. in the Smith Fieldhouse. ' "Utah's always a big game for us," Hartsock said. I Men's tennis: BYU won both the singles and doubles titles at the Cougar Invitational Jeff Das handed teammate Chip Hand his first singles loss of the season, winning the sin-- ' 1 gles championship final at the BYU courts. In the doubles final BYUs Jose Lechuga and Nima Roshan defeated a Montana State's Mark Gebicki and Braden Olsen 85. "This was a great tournament," said BYU coach Brad Pearce. "There were great teams and great play on every court. These are good kids on and off the court." ' 6-- 6-- I Women's soccer BYU strug- UVSC ROUNDUP HERALD Three PORTLAND, Ore. closely played games all went in the Wolverine's favor in a sweep of Portland State in the Nike Portland Pilot Invitational on Saturday. UVSC beat PSU then came back Saturday evening and lost 5 to host Portland in the final match. One of the keys to the victory over PSU was UVSCs block. The Wolverines had 14 team gled to a 1 loss to Loyola Marymount.BYU "We got outworked and out hustled," said BYU coach Jen Rockwood. "Until we learn to compete and play harder, we are going to continueto struggle against good teams." BYU was lethargic early in the game, prompting Rockwood to make some roster changes 20 minutes into the game. The score was tied at halftime, although LMU outshot BYU BYU had a 1 advantage in corner kicks and had several other scoring opportunities, but couldn't convert. Lori Sims gave Loyola the lead with a goal in the 47th minute, then made it with a goal from Kelly Lewandowski in the 72nd 2-- 30-2- 8, dose out the match. Koelliker had 38 assists. had 14 kills and ,. Krystal Taylor 12. Against Portland, Deise Borghetti and Koelliker led UVSC with nine kills each. I Cross Country: At Bozeman, Mont., UVSCs men and women each finished fifth at the Bobcat InvitationaL Amanda Olson finished second overall in the women's three-mil- e race. It was her second straight runner-u- p finish, as she was second at the BYU Autumn Classic last week. Saturday, she covered the course laid out on Bridge Creek Golf Course in 17:11 Darcie Gribble finished 19th (1821). The women recorded 122 points.' For the men, Joe Bendoski covered the five-micourse in 25:12 to finish sixth. Mark Lott finished 11th (25:19). The men scored 115 points. 30-2- 8, 33-3- 30-2- 4, 30-2- 1, 30-1- 0-- 0 blocks. UVSC only hit .163 during the match, but the Wolverines were able to execute big 7-- 2. 7-- plays when they needed them. "In the third game we were down 28-2so we called a timeout," said UVSC coach Sam Atoa. "The first play out of the timeout was a service error by PSU, and then Lacee Koelliker served an ace to tie the score at 28-We had several plays like Lacee's ace that kept us in every game and allowed us to 2-- 0 minute. BYU (34-1- ) finally scored in the 79th minute on a header by Claire Thomas off a corner kick from Kimmie Martins. le AF wins team titles at meet DAILY HERALD Every penny generated goes directly to fight this serious problem. SIGN UP TODAY! $500 hole sponsorship includes I crtiflp c j if m . a foursome and signage The fee also makes your company a year-lon- g sponsor of the Daily Herald's literacy program. Your logo will appear every week in the Daily Herald showing your support to area Students. I Great H prizes and lunch to boot! Lehi's Daniel Urry and Payson's Melissa Baird were the individual winners at the Doug Owen Memorial Cross Country meet at Pleasant Grove on Saturday. American Fork won both the boys and girls team titles. Urry finished the course in 16:18, followed by three American Fork runners: Michael Felix (1622), Tyler Jackson (1629) and John Bell (16:39). Payson's Michael Hales (17:10) rounded out the top five. For the girls, Baird finished well ahead of her competition, finishing in 20.04. American Fork's Leslie Rose was second (2056), followed by East's Madison Worsham (21:06), American Fork's Lisa Tubb (21:11) and Pleasant Grove's Sarah Goodrich (21:14). . American Fork, with five runners in the top seven, won the boys meet with 22 points. LeM was second at 69 and Payson had 86. For the girls, American Fork scored 36 points, followed by host Pleasant Grove at 54. tm-l- r- I Dm .e a want mm 1. Arnlcai Fortt J. LeN 86, 4. Norton 113, 6. Ptaaart Grew 126, & 139, 7. Snow Canyon 157, MUM. 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