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Show SuncUM; Also in this section: Scoreboard F4 Uto ' tlllnnllnnl!? ball was out of the sun, then it was in the sun, then it was out of the sun, then it was in the stfh again. I guess I was just waiting for the sun to move. At least I didnt get hit in the head, if that's any consolation." New York Yankee left fielder Mel Hall, who lost a routine fly ball in the sun with two out in the sixth inning of a 0 tie with the American League West leading Oakland A's. The ball dropped in and the next batter, Jose Canseco, hit a home run as Oakland went on to a 0 win. 0-- 7-- '; COMING UP SHORT: The team came up short in an effort to win the Ricks Invitational Volleyball Tournament, falling in the semifinals Saturday to the College of 154. Southern Idaho, After dropping their opener to Northwest Wyoming, UVCC won five straight matches in the tournament, but after cruising through game one against Southern Idaho 154 in the semis, they lost the next two game. UVCC is now 134 overall. Kathy Hone led the Wolverines with 70 kills and a .281 hitting percentage while Erin Measom added 52 kills and hit .287. 15-1- 2, outside and outraced everyone By BOB HUDSON Astistut Sperts Editor ; ' SALT LAKE CITY Utah's Dennis Smith tied a Western Athletic Conference record for touchdowns by air Saturday night Smith, a senior from Hemet, Calif., caught 11 passes for 145 yards DEGREE OF SUCCESS: -- ar KELLY HIRED: Tom Kelly, the graduate assistant on the BYU basketball staff, has been named head coach at Western Oregon State College, an NAIA school in Monmouth, Oregon. Kelly, 34, replaces Mark Adams, who accepted an assistant coaching position at Washington State. He was a volunteer assistant at BYU in 198647 while starting work on a master's degree. For the past two years he has been the graduate assistant, coaching the junior varsity team. Orem High and BYU standout Brad Eagar was named the Most Improved Player on the Oakland A's Class A farm club in Medford, Oregon. Eagar, a catcher, was chosen by the A's in the June major league draft SUCCESSFUL OPENING: The BYU men's soccer team opened its 1989 season with a 24 win over St. Mary's College at Helaman Field in front of a school-recor- d crowd of 5,272. Chris Watkins scored one goal and Eric Kearney assisted on both goals for the Cougars. BYU's next match is Tuesday against Flamengo at Helaman Field at 7:30 p.m. action at Rice Stadium. Smith's four TD catches tied the WAC record of four held by two former BYU receivers Kirk Pendleton in 1983 and John Vanderwou-de- n in 1976.. Smith also broke the University of Utah record with four TD catches in a game. Several different people held the old record of three. Utah quarterback Scott Mitchell only worked three periods. His team held a 454 lead late in the third quarter when Mike Richmond came in to mop up. Mitchell finished with 28 completions in 41 attempts for 394 yards and five touchdowns. Utah led 244 at the half. The Utes exploded for three touchdowns in the second quarter. They added another three in the third period. . Dennis Smith scored on a nine-yar- d pass from Mitchell with 10:46 left in the third period to tie the WAC mark. He didn't play much tHMMt Mete -- . 3 Dodgara 4. Ortotn-j- m 7. M Jf' i .. " y Jy ;:; k ' N x , j ' 0 II. Aatroe-.- Maar rd y d, On ! 50-ya-rd rfnx f r-wyr- the Utes' first touchdown drive, Clifton Smith ripped off runs of seven, eight and nine yards. Dennis Smith had two catches for 15 yards and Mike Anglesey had catches of 33 and 12 yards. Clifton Smith had runs of 31 and 17 yards on the Utes' second touch- down drive. But, he was whistled with a facemask penalty on the to push Utah back. The Utes got those yards back on Mike catch, a catch from Anglesey and Dennis TD reception. Smith's The Utes' third touchdown was more of the same. It took Mitchell and Co. 11 plays to go 77 yards. Dennis Smith had seven catches for 60 yards and the three TDs at halftone. Clifton Smith had 10 rushes for 101 yards. Last week, against Fresno State, the Utes had 29 yards rushing FOR THE GAME. Mitchell completed 16 of 26 passes for 182 yards while Johnson for 45 yards. managed Utah's defense did a good job against the Aggies, limiting them to just 16 yards total offense. With Smith adding to the Ute total, Utah had 286 total yards. rd & s$r p ' 1 rd rd toil By TM Aaeerleted How the Aaaoctottd Pratt Top 25 collage tootbet teams farad and thair next opponents: 1. Notra Dam did not play; Next: Sapt. 1 at No. 2 Michigan. 2. Michigan did not play; Nut: Sapt. 1 v. No. 1 Notra Dama. 3. Miami, Fit. baat Wisconsin 51-Ntxl: Sapt. 16 California. 4. Nabraaka (144)) baat Northern Illinois Next: Sapt. 1 va. Utah. 5. Auburn (144) baat Pacific 554; Next: Sapt. 1 v. No. 1 Southern Mississippi. . UCLA va. Tennessee; Next: Sapt. 1 at San Diego State. 7. Arkansas (044) did not pity,' Next: Sapt. 1 va. Tulsa. S. Oklahoma (244) baat Baylor 33-Nasi: Sapt. 1 at No. 20 Arizona. Colorado (244) baat Colorado State Next: 10. Sapt va. No. 11 Minors. 1 Ctemeon (244) baat No. II Florida State Nail: Sapt 10 at Virginia Tech. 11. Minors (144) did not play; Naxt: Sapt. II at No. Colorado. 12. Perm State lost to Virginia 144; Nasi: Sapt 10 va. Temple. 13. Southern Cat eld not play; Next Sec4.1t vs. Utah Stat. 14. Syracuse (144) baat Temple 434; Next: vs. Amy. Sopt. 15. Teua AMI lost to Washington It-S- ; Nail: M Texas Christian. lost to No. 10 It. Florida Stal Clameon Naxt: Sept. 11 at No. 21 17. Wast Virginia (244) baat Maryland Nail: Sapt. 1t vs. South Carolina. II. Southern Mlatewippi lost to MisNaxt: Sapt It at No. I sissippi State Auburn. II. Alabama (044) did not play; Next: Sept. 16 vo. MaMnphts Stftte. 20. Afttona loat to Tana Tech Next: Sapt. It va. No. Oklahoma. 21. Louisiana State did not play; Next: v. No. Florid Sort. Sapt. 22. Houston (144) dM net play; Next: Start. 2 at Arizona Stats. 21. Pittsburgh (244) baat Boston Coatge 2t-1Next: Sept. 23 vs. No. 1 Syracuse. 14. Brtghara Young Mat to Washington State 44-- 41 (Thursday); Naxt: Sapt. 11 at Navy. 25. North Carolina Start (244) baat Georgia Next: Sapt. II at Wake Forest Tech 3t-z-t; t it it j ; j New Mexico 45, New Mexico St. 13 At Albuquerque, Terance Mathis returned a kickoff 93 yards for a touchdown and caught two scoring passes from quarterback Jeremy Leach to lead the Lobos to a big win over rival New Mexico State. New Mexico jumped to a 21-- 0 halftime lead, with Mathis catching a TD pass to aid the cause. In the second half, Mathis added a four-yar- d touchdown grab plus the kickoff return. New Mexico is now 1 overall. ' B Li. L y can .24 SA ajao (ItM-Tf-) oWleWCtli Spotto l WMM pfM fm m W NMim 01 Lamar 21, UTEP 19 At El Paso, the Miners fell to 2 on the year with their second loss. straight close In Top 25 games, No. 3 Miami of Florida beat Wisconsin , No. 4 Nebraska beat Northern Illinois No. 8 Oklahoma beat Baylor 33-No. 9 Colorado beat Colorado 0-- non-leag- ue 51-3- 48-1- 7, the fourth St. Louis pitcher, ley, and Salazar followed with his doucorner. ble into the right-fiel- d the fifth Paul Assenmacher, Chicago pitcher, was the winner with one hitless inning. the Cubs tied it in Trailing the eighth with an unearned run. Dwight Smith led off with a single, the fifth hit off Jose DeLeon. Right fielder Tom Brunansky held the ball as if to dare Smith to try for 3-- 2, 3-- 3, 2-- 1, Herald PbotoLane Ltltser . Ute linebacker Darren Patterson batters Aggie quarterback Kirk Johnson (16), causing a fumble in in;iiuu a . nun oaiuiuiij' cvciuug ell rvitc ouiuiiuii. jrtafPtft" t u Sparta The foreword to the recently pub, lished book begins: "NCAA Football Legends contains career figures and honors won by year-by-ye- 357 "i 45-2- 0, No. 14 Syracuse beat Temple 43-Washington beat No. 15 Texas A&M 19-No. 17 West No. Virginia beat Maryland 23 Pittsburgh beat Boston College 0 and No. 25 North Carolina State beat Georgia Tech 8. In night games, No. 5 Auburn beat Pacific 55-No. 6 UCLA played Tennessee, No. 10 Clemson 6, 14-1- 0, 29-1- 38-2- 0, second. Smith took the dare and was safe when Brunansky's throw was wide for an error. Frank DiPino relieved and struck out Mark Grace. Dan Quisenberry retired Dawson on a grounder but Salazar, acquired in a trade with San Diego late last month, followed with a single that scored the tying run. Chicago's Rick Sutcliffe blanked the Cardinals until the sixth when whipped No. 16 Florida State No. 18 Southern Mississippi stunned by Mississippi State 34-2- 3, was 26-2- 3, and unranked Texas Tech edged No. 20 Arizona In perhaps the biggest shocker of the day, unranked Virginia beat No. 12 Penn State 144. Penn State which had its first losing season in 50 years in 1988, 24-2- 0. am : .. a. Art nokej (UPta nil (TNN) NFL, tonga at (MK NFL, Cosrbaya at earn ia U.S. CtaM) (CM Mr Crramsiq II M. Opt Oaf, Tanakj (USA) Fatal Merer CM (ABC It JO p.m. oeeba. CwMnaM at Cut 1 g.a. aeN, OTC North CM (ESPN) ajn. NFL, CMaM M tfanaaa (NK) 3:30 p.n. Hat raotiuj, MarytofMj t man v. 1:11 a.m. Para (Etnq 12:11 p.. baa ai . Mfc major-colleg- e (Division-IA- Marlon Dunn ) as well as 63 coaches who Tightened the game's first 120 years. All players listed in this book are backs and ends runners, passers and receivers. "...the first 225 players are in the rs section which covers players whose careers ended before SPORTS COLUMNIST Old-time- 111 am Auto iacM( (TM) 11 Ji Uttnt, LaoaanJ va. .. Naa, a ; v" . c State ar Elayers 10:30 LVn ' , , didn't start the new campaign: an better. Shawn Moore threw two first-half- -, touchdown passes to Herman Moore : as Virginia upset the (See FOOTBALL, Page F2) ; 12th-rank- ed ANRMfl 1 Vz games Pedro Guerrero singled with one out and took second on a wild pitch as Terry Pendleton struck out. Brunansky singled to score Guerrero with the tying run. In other National League games it was Pittsburgh 8, New York 5; Atlanta 2, Cincinnati 1; Montreal 6, Philadelphia 5; Houston 4, San Francisco 1 and Los Angeles at San Diego, r.AM tOttl 1,7 1i Agalira, Ms Sum taW aHMat) II 3 ?i totter In 3V1 Ion to Royoto. 0.1 10 3 Mania, Dot picked up Mth win ot the year In 74 victory' (n). Moo Mi Mi Mi jfln 3000 three sir-- ' las Friday In waahand spat wM Reds. Lam, CM Cuke) 30 Friday tripled Saturday In 2 win over Card. T 1 trryeter, Ct 1 1 0A Friday doubted in Tlota to lUrinlng Jay Saturday. Javnar, Cat 0000 Friday 3000 BhMa In 1 tain over Rod Sot Frtdy. PMyad late game Saturday. PITCIMMa i TV rJAiiApr ,c 9yntfpMft l lllll Oett llUlMIH p.MIUll, .rsar Mr MM; Zjfii'''' rd Cubs clip Cardinals and up lead to - CHICAGO (AP) Luis Salazar, who singled home the tying run in V te 7, - Mi League racord nwnbw xi s 24-ya- rd Cuba-- jit PJoyals 11 f ' rd Demetrius Brown scored Utah I. Angela - MS II .. v' Wayne Lammle kicked a field goal after the Utes stalled on line. the Aggie Utah got that field position off LaVon Edwards' punt return. The Aggies were punting out of their own end zone after narrowly averting disaster when John Stephens, a senior from American Fork, fell on quarterback Kirk Johnson's fumble at the Utah State four. Utah's offense went into high gear in the second quarter. The Utes scored three touchdowns, all on sustained marches. Smith caught touchdown pass with a three-yar- d 14:57 left in the half to cap an eight-pla- y drive. He later caught scoring passes of 16- - and four yards to cap drives of 80 and 77 yards. State's only touchdown on a run. On the play, Brown cut to the the eighth inning, doubled home the winning run in the 10th as the Chicago Cubs defeated the St. Louis 2 Cardinals Saturday and held onto first place in the National League East The victory gave the Cubs a lead over St Louis. With one out in the 10th, Andre Dawson drew a walk off Ken Day-- OAVW MTTBM) N 1 DtrrtMWT TU IVAMeocs-2- . 307 botttof WMfl " " er. Mitchell's fifth touchdown pass went to Clifton Smith. It went for 16 yards off the Duck formation, which spreads the offense from sideline to sideline. Utah State's offense was anemic throughout the game. The Aggies advanced as far as the Utah 37 once in the first half. They got as far as the Ute 17 twice in the second half . 3-- TOMMY tfV-afY 1-- 0-- 1. 0 , MOST IMPROVED: Former ! ' 35-ya- rd and 'four touchdowns as Utah in bashed Utah State 45-1- TTT I down the left sideline. Russ Moody got the Aggies' other points on a field goal. The Aggies had the ball at the Utah 17 after a fumble recovery but couldnt do anything with it With the victory, Utah improved its record to 1 while Utah State dropped to Next week both teams play nationally ranked squads. Utah travels to Nebraska while Utah State journeys to the University of Southern California. Utah started slowly, managing just three points in the first quart- - after that. Fewer than one in five athletes graduate at colleges with major basketball programs, according to a federal study. The study, reported in Sunday editions of The New York Times, said that graduation rates among football players were not much better. The General Accounting Office report, which has not been published, indicated that 35 of 97 schools surveyed for basketball had graduation rates of 0 percent to 20 percent among players, the Times reported. Only four schools had such comparable rates for the entire student body. In football, 14 of 103 schools studied had graduation rates of 0 percent to 20 percent, the newspaper said. Only five of the same schools had such low rates for the rest of the students. The schools in the study were not identified. The graduation rate was based on completion of degree requirements within a five-yeperiod. 1. Mo-.2- 71 I.WMItSoi-J- El) :; NOTABLE QUOTES: "The UVCC women's volleyball 10. 1989 : F5-- 7 Prep roundup 5, September 11 M Cuba (WON) Mr 1970..." On page 92, you can find the biography and picture of a smiling young man wearing a BYU uniform with the number 88. His statistics are Impressive: 181 receptions for 2,548 yards and 25 touchdowns. The statistics of a legend. The Legend Is Phil Odle, a 6-- 0, 188-pou- nd split end who graduated in 1967 but held the WAC record for career pass receptions until Saturday, when New Mexico's Terance Mathis broke it with three grabs. Phil Odle is one of the NCAA's legends. It follows he is also one of BYU's and the WAC's nass-catchin- pass-catchi- g legends... ...It was early in the second quarter of last Thursday night's nationally televised game between BYU and Washington State in Pro-v- o and BYU's team needed to get something going. WSU had used the big play to score touchdowns on passes of 64 and 66 yards and its talented place-kickJason Hanson had converted field goal. The vi iting a and the qui ition Cougars led, 17-er 22-ya- 7, was: Could the hometown Cougars get back into the game? On first down on their own 20, quarterback Ty Detmer dropped back, and in the face of a furious rush fired the ball deep downfield. The ball came down in the arms of a BYU wide receiver wearing No. 88. It was Matt Odle wearing his famous father's number. And now Matt put the finishing touches on a pass reception that was as spectacular as anything his dad pulled off more than 20 years ago. A WSU defender managed to get a hand on the ball and knock it loose where it seemed to float in the air. Matt Odle reached back, got his fingers on the airborne ball, tipped it toward him, caught it and pulled it to his body as he was being tackled. ;..; Odle hit the ground on the WlJ 39, a gain of 41 yards. The tjig crowd went bonkers. iJ ; BYU's offense had come up with i the spark it needed. And three plays later BYU was! back in the game. Detmer again sat in the pocket, waited and wait ed, then as he spotted the number 88 streaking across the field, fired, the ball right at the numbers. Odle took it just shy of the goal line and stepped into the end zone; It was Detmer's first touchdown pass and it seems fitting and pro per that it was Matt Odle who' caught the ball. For the game, Matt Odle caught five passes for 85 yards and a touchdown. . And in the process he stepped ou, ot nis famous Miners snaaow r |