| OCR Text |
Show Psge - THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, 6 Tuesday. September 17, 1985 An, orts n A full i i By United Within the Preii International 14-1- Award. Just weeks ago, it appeared certain Gooden would add the award to the Rookie of the Year J T. A. 8 19-- 8 honor earned last season. Now Tudor is very much in the picture, and the division title as well as Cy Young award will hinge on their performances in the stretch run. Both recorded victories yesterday, but the Cardinals, by virtue of their double-heade- r sweep of the Pirates, gained ground in the standings, moving a full game ahead of the Mets. Gooden cruised to 21-- 4 with a two-hi- v WliiiW 9-- 0 4A 32 Davis 0 (4) 2. Orem 31 (3) 12 3. Olympus 1 7 4. Brighton 1 5. Mt. View 1 6 Others receiving votes: Bountiful, Granger, Highland, Taylorsville. 1. 3-- 3-- 0 2-- 2-- 2-- rious over the weekend. That usually keeps things on an even keel. Here's how things shape up this week: 4A The Davis Darts kept the top spot in this week's poll, but only by the very narrowest of margins over the Orem Tigers, who proved they are for real with an impres- sive victory over Hillcrest last week. Davis got four first-plac- e votes to Orem's three and leads the Tigers by one point in the overall standings. Olympus moved up from fifth to third with a win over Taylorsville last week, while the Warriors and the Alta Hawks dropped out of the poll after losing. Brighton, with a over American Fork, the fourth spot, while View, after edging Alta, first appearance in the Mountain made its poll at the No. 5 spot. In local games involving Top 5 schools, Orem is at Alta Friday and Mountain View is at Bingham. 3A Again, no change at the top as No. 1 Springville and No. 2 Bear River both won and both retained their 2 positions. Springville picked up all but one first-plac- e vote, and that went to the Bears. The No. 3 and 4 spots stayed the same, also, as No. 3 Timpview and No. 4 Pleasant Grove both had impressive victories last week. The undefeated Logan Grizzlies jumped into the No. 5 spot when last week's No. 5, Judge, lost. In Top 5 games locally this weekend, Springville hosts Spanish Fork, Timpview hosts Carbon and Pleasant Grove hosts Uintah. 2A The Richfield Wildcats hung on to the top spot after a victory over 3A 44 8) Springville 2. Bear River 36 (1) 3. Timpview 0 22 4. PI. Grove 19 5. Logan 0 9 Others receiving votes: Ben mond, Jordan, Ogden, West. 1. 3-- 0 3-- 0 3-- 0 Lo- 12 5 Other receiving votes: Delta, Emery, Lehi, Manti, San Juan, Union. 1. Kanab 23 20 0 11 10 (1) - "I felt comfortable and loose," said Cailan, a junior transfer from Tulsa University. "My approacii shots were the best part of my game today." New Mexico placed four of five golfers in the top 20 to take the team lead with a 289. UCLA and Arizona State are three back of the Lobos at 302. BYU is four strokes off the pace at 303. "I'm not really surprised at the good score we posted," commented Cougar coach Gary Howard. "I've late June afternoon Others receiving Monticello. P. (Jim) Dusara and his wife, Vasanti, had guests for dinner. votes: Dugway, (V 1A Marion Dunn Kanab and Duchesne both won last Friday and are still 2 in the 1A poll. North Sevier and South Summit switched places weekend, while Beawith its first victory and remained No. 5. there yet. But this round shows what we're capable of." UCLA's Kay Cockerill and New Mexico's Tara Fleming were one shot behing Cailan after one round. "This is a very good target course. I hit the fairway and 14 greens," commented Fleming. "Consistenly was they key to my game," said BYU sophomore Karen Zielenski, who carded a 74. Mariana Pacheco and Martha Vargas, two other BYU golfers, each shot a 79. Other team finishes were: Arizona (304 Weber State (309); New Mexico State (311); Hawaii (311); Washington (320); Washington State (322i; Sacramento (328); Air Force (344) and Wyoming (344). d Cal-Stat- e Herald Sports Editor after won and South Sum- nau u ieeling we would be about that good. I'm not sure if we're first-roun- and and lead Glanti ( At Cincinnati, Gary Redus raced home from third on Mark Davis' wild pitch with one out in the 11th to lift the Reds. Expos 8, Cubii At Montreal, Scot Thompson snapped a 5 tie with a sacrifice fly in the seventh and Tim Raines added a two-ru- n single to power the Expos. 5-- Dodgers 2 At San Diego, Carmelo Martinez hit his 18th homer of the season with two on in the seventh tie and lift the to break a Padres. Mariners S, P.oyali 1 At Kansas City, Danny Tarta-bu- ll homer to belted a two-ru- n pitching of support the five-hi- t Mike Moore and give the Seattle Mariners a victory Monday night over the Kansas City Royals. Padres 4, 1 1 Moore struck out five and walked three to improve his record to 15-- 8 with his 11th complete game of the year. The loss was only the third in the last 16 games for the Royals and it reduced their lead in the American League West to two games over the idle California Angels. Jack Perconte opened the game for Seattle with a triple and, after a walk to Phil Bradley, PerDanny Jackson conte home and Bradley to secwild-pitche- d ond. Catcher Jamie Quirk as charged with a passed ball two to pitches later, allowing Bradley take third, and Jackson preceded to walk Alvin Davis, firman Thomas then grounded into a double play to score Bradley for a 0 lead. Kansas City got one back in its half of the first on a double by George Brett and a single by Hal McRae but Danny Tartabull belted a two-ruhomer, his first of the season, in the second inning to move the Mariners comfortably in front, Indians 9, Yankees 4 At New York, Julio Franco hit n a two-rutriple during a ninth inning and Andre Thornton two-ru- n homers ripped a pair of to power the Indians. Orioles 14, Tigers 7 At Detroit, Cal Ripken hit a pair of home runs and highlighted attack that paced the a Orioles. Brewers 5, Red Sox 3 At Milwaukee, Cecil Cooper collected three singles and Bob balked in the Ojeda, run in the seventh inning to lift the Brewers. Twins 7, Rangers 6 At Minneapolis, Gary Gaetti's solo homer with one out in the bottom of the 11th inning lifted the Twins. 2-- n 4-- six-ru- n go-ahe- Heisman Trophy candidate Bo Jackson, the Auburn Tigers improved to 0 Saturday with a victory over Southern Mississippi. No. 1 The Tigers, the pick last year before losing their first two games, amassed 549 votes in points and 23 first-plac- e the UPI poll. Oklahoma, the top 2-- 29-1- 8 pre-seaso- n choice since the pre-seaso- dropped to second with 528 points and 10 top votes. The Sooners' first game is Sept. 28 at Minnesota. Southern Cal, with 466 points and five No. 1 selections, remained No. 3. Iowa (408 points) and Ohio State (406) round out the top five. The Hawkeyes jumped from seventh and the Buckeyes fell one spot. No. 6 Florida State (400) and No. 7 Oklahoma State (281) received the remaining first-plac- votes. e Both dropped one position. Completing the top 10 are Penn State, Louisiana State and BYU. South Carolina maintained 11th place while Alabama climbed from 16th to 12th and UCLA, which tied Tennessee, fell from eighth to 13th. Rounding out the poll are Michigan, Maryland, Nebraska, West Virginia, Arizona and Texas. Notre Dame and Pitt, losers to Michigan and Ohio State, respectively, fell from the ratings. The UPI College Coaches Board Dick Anderson, includes: EAST Rutgers; Jack Bicknell, Boston College; Foge Fazio, Pitt; Dick MacPherson, Syracuse; Don Neh-leW. Virginia; Bobby Ross, Earle Maryland. MIDWEST Bruce, Ohio St; Gerry Faust, Notre Dame; Hay den Fry, Iowa; Lou Holtz, Minnesota; Dave Wisconsin; Dan Simrell, Toledo. SOUTH Bobby Bowden, Florida State; Dick Crum, No. - Mc-Clai- n, - Carolina; Vince Dooley, Georgia; Danny Ford, Clemson; Johnny Majors, Tennessee; Ray Perkins, AlaDon Morton, bama. MIDLANDS Tulsa; Mike Gottfried, Kansas; Bill McCartney, Colorado; Tom Osborne, Nebraska; Barry Switzer, Oklahoma; Lee Moon, Kansas St. - - Fred Akers, TexSOUTHWEST as; Ken Hatfield, Arkansas; Sam Robertson, SW Louisiana; Jackie Sherrill, Texas A&M; Grant Teaff, Baylor; Jim Wacker, TCU. MOUNFisher DeBerry, Air TAINS Lee Dunn, New MexiJoe Force; co; LaVell Edwards, BYU; Leon Fuller, Colorado St; Al Kincaid, Wyoming; Larry Smith, Arizona. Rich Brooks, Oregon; PACIFIC Terry Donahue, UCLA; Jack Stanford; Claude Gilbert, San Jose St; Don James, Washington; Jim Sweeney, Fresno St. - El-wa- y, playing soccer at various fields in the area and they came through the house talking loudly about the games they had played, about the caliber of the other players and about their chances for a share of the ice cream. While they were eating, the newspaperman asked them how they felt about BYU's soccer team for the coming season. All three were enthusiastic. All V 1 three predicted the Soccercats the weekend, and South Sevier kept pace by winning and retaining its No. 1 spot. Wasatch's victory over South Summit helped the Wasps hang on to the No. 3 spot, while Park City moved into the poll at No. 4 and last week's No. 2 team, Grantsville, fell to No. 5 after losing 10-- 6 to Union. This weekend, Wasatch hosts Union in Heber City. North Sevier mit lost last ver came up of the season this summer, BYU soccer coach Shavja 7 Juco Transfer Fires 71 To Pace T' Ladies Golf HOBBLE CREEK Nancy Cailan. playing her first competitive golf for "BYU's women's golf team, got off to a great start at the BYU Invitational being held at the Hobble Creek Golf Course as she card71 to lead the ed a individual scoring. On a Their company consisted of associate dean of physical education Dr. Elmo Roundy and his wife, Merle, and a newspaperman and his wife. Vasanti had prepared 1A 2. Duchesne 3-- 0 3. N. Sevier 3-- 0 4. S. Summit 2-- 1 2 5. Beaver 7, first fi occercafs Running With the Best 13 2-- 1 2-- 3 19 2-- 0-- 2 24 (3) (1) 3-- 0 3 Daily Herald Wire Services Auburn, benefiting from two victories while Oklahoma remains idle, climbed past the Sooners today to assume the No. 1 spot in the college football ratings after voting by the UPI Board of Coaches. In the Associated Press poll, Auburn and Oklahoma remained in the ratings, while Southern Cal moved up to third place despite taking the weekend off. The BYU Cougars, meanwhile, used a 31-- victory over the Washington Huskies to move back into the Top 10 in the UPI and CNN-USToday polls. The Cougars are 10th in UPI and CNN, moving up from 13th last week in both polls. In AP, BYU moved up from 16th to 13th and jumped for 18th to 13th in ESPN. Spearheaded by the running of 2A Richfield 1 2. So. Sevier 3. Wasatch 1 4. Park City 1 5. Grantsville 1. 9-- 0 8-- r Redi ,11 Polls Both in Three Leap ougars Of Herald Prep List grabbed thrashing of the Philadelphia Phillies at Shea Stadium, running his streak of shutout innings to 31, of an inning short of the team record. is the first The winner in the majors, and notched his seventh shutout, tying a club record. It was the 25th time in his career he has struck out at least 10 in a game. "After the third inning I realized I had a pretty good fastball and 1 couldn't get the curve over, so I made some adjustments," said Gooden, who had two hits and two RBI. "I think I was trying to throw too hard with my curve instead of trying to go over Top Team Loses in Rankings victory in the Mets two-thir- New York's Dwight Gooden hurled the Mets to a shutout over the Phillies and his 21st victory of the season. By DOROTHY KNOELL Prep Sports Editor There were some shakeups at the bottom of several classifications in this week's Daily Herald-Medi- a high school football poll, but things stayed pretty stable at the top. That's because every No. 1 and No. 2 team except one were victo- performance t, 3 four-hitte- f -- 1 11 I If for his major-leagu- e complete game Jose Cruz, Jerry Mumphrey Denny Walling homered to the Astros. hurled a t t 11 ooor rf reft the top." Gary Carter chipped in with an homRBI single and a three-ru- n er. Kevin Gross, lasted 3 innings, surrendering nine hits and six earned runs. After a start, Tudor imwith an 4 victoiy proved to in the opener, and has supplanted Joaquin Andujar as the ace of the Cardinals staff. His string of scoreless innings was snapped at 31 in by Bill Almon's grand-slathe fourth. Andy Van Slyke and Terry Pendleton each knocked in two runs in the opener. Relievers Jeff Lah-t- i and Ken Dayley and Todd Worrell finished. Worrell pitched to one batter for his second save. Pirate starter Jose DeLeon, lasted just 1 innings. Willie McGee singled home Vince Coleman in the eighth inning to snap a 1 tie in the pitched nightcap. Pat Perry, of hitless relief.. the final 2 took Reliever Pat Clements, the loss. Elsewhere, Houston downed Atlanta Cincinnati topped San Francisco 6 in 11 innings, Monand treal defeated Chicago San Diego beat Los Angeles In AL its was: Cleveland 9, New York 5; Baltimore 14, Detroit 7; Seattle 5, Kansas City 1; Milwaukee 5, Boston 3; and Minnesota 7, Texas 6 in 11 innings. Astros 7, Braves 2 At Atlanta, Jeff Heathcock, race for the National League East title, John Tudor and Dwight Gooden are waging a private war for the Cy Young 1 v. commentary orr winners, losers and coming events Mi Only report and Indian curry. The Roundy's home-mad- e ice cream. the other couple only their brought And appetites. It was late evening, the sky was covered with dark, threatening clouds and there was a cool wind coming down from the Wasatch range of the Rocky Mountains. Just as dinner was being served, the power went off in east Orem so the party moved outside to the porch. As permanent summer guests the Dusara's had a pair of young soccer stars, George Belazo Onen, midfielder from a Uganda, East Africa; and Yugoslavian Dragisha Ignjatovic, a mid-fiel- d defender whose "last stop had been junior college in Escondido, Calif. As ice cream was being served the two young athletes, accompanied by a third member of the soccer team and a permanent resident with the Dusaras, Shridhar 130, who graduated Dusara, (5-from Orem High School earlier that month, was looking ahead to playing forward for his father's team i. talked about the coming season. The threesome had spent the day 6-- 1, 160-pou- would be winners despite a schedule against some of the best teams outside the World Cup. This Wednesday, (that's tomorrow night), Dusara's Soccercats will host Free University of Berlin, West Germany team. The game will be played on Haws Field just west of the Smith Fieldhouse. Starting time is 7 p.m. and don't let this scare you away but there is no admission charge. It is a strange phenomenon to me that in this world of fun and games, if an event doesn't charge a big admission price, fans generally think it isn't worth going to. That isn't the case. Sometimes the best things in life are really free. This is one of those times. The German team is a semi-pr- o team from a hotbed of world soccer. The last time Free University's soccer team played here was 1969 and the German team won, Dusara said this morning that if Free repeats that score he'll give $100. He didn't say who he would give the money to, just that he would give it. I think he meant it. top-flig- 6-- "We are going to surprise them." Dusara said. "The score will be low, or or something like that. And I think we'll win. I'm very proud of this team. We have young players with the potential to win and with the determination to win. "Look at our record. We have played four home games and we have four shutouts. We are 0 in scoring at home. The only team that scored on us, we lost to and that was UNLV in Las Vegas and they are ranked No. 9 in the nation." The two young summer house guests of the Dusaras have played big roles in the team's success. 2-- 2 9-- Joseph Ngassa is a strong force on the BYU soccer team. Onen, who was a member of the Uganda National Team, has scored three goals to lead the team in scoring and Ignjatovic has been a leader on defense. But junior Joseph Ngassa, 178, from Cameroon, West Africa, has also been an important factor. Ngassa had been a defender but Dusara moved him to offense for scoring punch and he has two goals at center forward. All of the team's defenders are juniors and sophomores and ace 205, goalie Gary Niedermeier, of Rochester, N.Y., is a sophomore so it is a very young team. "Our real strength is in our bench," Dusara says. "We have some freshmen who are very etrnnir " These freshmen include, Jim's son, Shridhar, midfielder Keiith Kernsley from Valencia, Calif., and forward Julio Benites from Lima, Peru. 6-- 6-- Other top players are: defender Glen Collingridge, a junior from Vernon, Canada; defender Dee Jay Smith, a junior from Arvada, Colo.; defender Bernhard Kramer, a sophomore from Frankfort, Germany; Corey Findlay, a sophomore defender from Seattle; Brian Cowley, a junior defender from Sacramento, and sophomore midfielder Randy Russo from St. Louis, Mo. If the West Germans can tally at least six points while.holding BYU to only one or less, you might have a claim on Dusara for $100. |