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Show 10, 1989 Sunday, September THE HEKAli). Provo, Utah. - Paw? ft 1 W feiCs a(t Wtirid.Cup, (Metros pastt llastt Oes'c BARCELONA, Spain (AP) -While Sebastian Coe's majestic career might have ended in controversy, Ana Quirot has ended her season in glory. In a fitting climax to an unblemished season in the 800 meters, Quirot ran the third-faste- st time in history and the best in the World in six years in winning in 1 minute 54.44 seconds at the World Cup track and field on Saturday. In a race marred by a bumping incident around the final turn that might have cost Coe a victory, he was narrowly beaten by Abdi Bite of Somalia in the men's 1,500 meters in 3 minutes 35.56 seconds. Whereas Quirot's victory was decisive and clear, Bile's triumph was tainted and undecided for more than an hour, as Coe, British team officials and meet officials debated the issue and the result. The British team protested the race, although Coe angrily demanded that the result not be contested. "He wants to play the gentlemen," Coe's father and coach, Peter, said. 'In the end, Coe lost, but not without a tough fight. finish 'Coe's second-plac- e e cost the Olympic champion and 1981 World Cup winner his last shot at a gold medal in a major meet. He is pro-robab- ly two-tim- HEW YORK (AP) ;was reinstated by : set aside day for BYU -the Lewis Lloyd NBA, 2'2 yers after the Houston Rockets guard tested positive for cocaine. Under an agreement between the iNBA and the NBA Players Associa-tipplayers testing positive a third time are suspended for life but can apply for reinstatement after two years. Lloyd would be permanently h, banned with no chance for. reinstatement if he were to again test positive. Houston has 30 days to offer him contract at the same a 1989-9- 0 salary he was earning or at an incease. If they do not, he becomes an unrestricted free agent. In six seasons, four with Houston, Lloyd averaged 13.8 points a game. By DICK HARMON Herald Sports Editor ,PGA tour players who will be in Provo Monday Sept. 18th for Cougar Day despite a tight qualifying schedule and the preceding Sunday's final round play in the Bank of Boston Classic is a tribute to their committment to BYU golf, according veteran coach Karl Tucker.1 Riverside Country Club is the site of the annual affair which includes a golf exhibition at 9 a.m., five hole scramble to derby and an raise money for the college program. The public is welcome. Four PGA players will not be able to make Cougar Day, explained Tucker. They include Dan Forsman, Rick Fehr, Bob Clampett and Jim Nelford. But among those who will tee it up include Mike Reid, Johnny Miller, Jay Don Blake, Keith Clearwater, Dick Zokol, Pat McGowan, Ted Lehman, Robert Meyers, Rick Gibson, Jamie Harper, Mike Taylor, Mike Smith, Jimmy Blair, Dave DeSantis, Kean Ridd, Craig Norman, Kent Kluba, Tom Costello, Bruce Brockbank, Mike Smith, Jerry Rose, Ray Leach, and Chip Garris. There are still a few slots available to play in the scramble tournament and attend the banquet where ,door prizes will be awarded. Cost is '$150. Proceeds go to the BYU golf program. le Rose again implicated in testimony - Thomas CINCINNATI (AP) Gioiosa implicated Pete Rose in another racetrack gambling scheme during his drug and trial, giving federal prosecutors more evidence in their investigation of the former Cincinnati Reds manager. Gioiosa Under said that he had cashed a second 'Pile Six ticket for Rose and claimed all the winnings on his taxes. Rose now has been linked to two Pik Six payoffs during Gioiosa's trial. tax-evasi- Gioiosa, a college baseball player who lived with Rose from 1979-84, also testified that he experimented with amphetamines while he played baseball. Those amphetamines came from Rose, he told a psychiatrist who also testified. Hamilton holds off Ellis at Richmond RICHMOND, Va. (AP) iBbbby Hamilton held off -- - Rookie pole-sitt- his Buick on Richmond International Raceway's layout. 0.75-mil- e, er Tommy Ellis over the final 21 laps and won Saturday's Commonwealth 200, his first Busch Grand National victory. Hamilton, who started 29th in the field, averaged 92.040 mph in 36-c- The victory was worth $13,095 for the driver from Nashville and was his fourth top-1- 0 finish in 23 events this season. Bruins, Tigers win in girls soccer T-Bir- Local harriers shine at Invitational meet ;. PLEASANT GROVE and Jimpview's Dan Alder "Mountain View's Diana Pyne merged as the individual win--I juniorsenior divisions the ninth annual Utah County jit ' invitational Cross Country Meet ; .Saturday at Pleasant Grove. " Alder won a close battle with ; Provo's Jason Brown, winning in in Invitational record time of '.15:13 to Brown's 15:20. The old 'record was 15:32 set by former Tiers in the -- .Timpview star David Spence. fountain View's Chad Bybee jvas third at 15:24, with Matt Harmer fourth in 15:34 Olym-tjiu- s' and Kirt Spale of Mountain View ! fifth at 15:37. . In the girls' race, Pyne cruised to victory, beating nearest rival . Julie Sorenson of Orem by nearly 16 seconds. Pyne's time was 18:28.82 while Sorensen came in at 18:44. She was followed by Springville's Heather Witney at 19:25, American Fork's Denise Spriggs at 19:35 and Springville's Kristen Shaw at 20:03. In the freshmansophomore divisions, Mountain View's Scott Brown outdueled Provo's Joe Pritchard 16:11 to 16:16 for first place. It was even closer for third and fourth, with Greg of Mountain View nipping Timpview's Kevin Reynolds at the wire, 16:25 to 16:26. Bingham sophomore Lanette Peterson broke the local stranglehold on first place by winning the freshmansophomore girls title. She finished in 18:14.21, a new Invitational record. It broke the old mark of 18:29 which she set last year. Four Mountain View runners followed her across the line: Juliet Stone (18:47), Amy Allen, Kristen Nuttall and Stacey LeeMaster. ff ds & at the women's high hurdles in 12.60, the fastest in the world this year and a meet record, for her second straight; World Cup title. Her time broke the mark of 12.67 by Grazyna Rabsztyn of Poland in 1979. won 100-met- er . I k Gossen completed only 14 passes- on 46-4- Wyoming. In the meantime the Cougars play Navy Saturday in Washington D.C. and Utah State in Ixgan Sept. 30 after a bye. And Edwards is hoping the young grow up. I.d by sophomore quarterback Ty Detmer, BYU gained 608 yards on Washington State. Detmer's 553 yards was the fifth best total offense in NCAA history. But costly mistakes offensively and defensively mainly untimely interceptions, penalties and poor killed BYU. deep pass coverage BYU players were phil jophical about the loss, accepting mistakes as part of growing up and vowing to do better against Navy. "This game puts no doubt in my mind about this football team," said defensive captain Chad Robin- - Analysis son. "I have no doubt about how good we will be." One concern in coming weeks has to be the vulnerability of BYU to the deep pass. Using three new ; ; players in the secondary is part of the challenge. BYU has three choices: (1) It caft ', But after two games BYU has drop off backers into pass honest; revealed to upcoming opponents an coverage and hope unpressured! obvious Achilles Heel. quarterbacks make mistakes or; The Cougars face a similar of- don't scramble for first downs past fense as WSU in WAC rivals Wyo- containment. (2) It can come witfi ! more blitz pressure and hope the ming and Utah. The problem: if the Cougars vacated coverage isn't exploited, of ' come with a blitz to pressure quart(3) It can hope to improve second-- ; erbacks, they gamble in coverage ary support coverage by (a) getting ; and expose themselves to the run. young personnel more experience at But if BYU holds back the linebackNavy and USU, or (b) gamble, go ers, a three man rush against at back to square one and change least five pass protectors is giving personnel opting for equally inexpeQBs more than enough time to rienced players who may have', exploit the Cougar secondary over more skill. the middle and deep. Traditionally, the most likely op-- " I Thursday WSU quarterback Brad tion is Eft-war- ; ' . 3-- dvij vs. in Bring your PACKAGE INCLUDES: Round trip airfare from Salt Lake to LUGGAGE & Oct. 27 thru Nov. 3 ' JOIN US THIS YEAR! tuts rtMrve Immtdttttly 'Final payment due Sept 15 Waikikl ho- Honolulu, tel, round trip airporthotel and game transfers, game ticket. Hotel upgrades and tour options available. BRIEFCASE REPAIRS in beautiful Hawaii ys - Limited to slum UUGGAGE PLUS University Mall Orem. Utah 84058 226-609- ttlnO 0 33H') i. 4--0. ! I The Bruins put their first points 'on the board with a goal by Christiansen 20 minutes into khe first half. Tisha Cox followed soon after with another goal and later added the final Bruin goal. "Tisha was in on almost every offensive play," Lahargue said. Orem pounded American Fork 1 on the strength of three goals by Joanie Hemond. Michelle Tolman ' scored A.F.'s only goal. 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Coroertbls Ccdctop utilize name 1,600-met-er - Herald Sports Editor When ESPN milked sponsors for every nickle of an exciting football game Thursday night in Provo, BYU players were trying to figure out how to stop the flow of free milk themselves after a 1 loss to Washington State. It was a game they should have won. Despite the loss, there were signs that taVell Edwards' 18th edition will be a powerful force to reckon with when conference play comes around at home Oct. 7 against 6-Mo- row a, would be By Don Beu Herald Correspondent Mountain View, Orem and Tjmpview chalked up wins on the filrst night of conference play as Region 4 opened its inaugural season of girls high school soccer. "I have to give all of the credit to our defense," said Mountain View jcpach Mike Lahargue after his jsquad shut down Provo 4-- Attention Builders "When I saw the time, I almost stopped right there with emotion," said Quirot, who was quickly congratulated by Alberto Juan-torenCuba's 1976 gold medalist in the men's 400 and 800 meters and now one of the country's major sports leaders. She will try and complete the double again Sunday night in the 400 during the final session of the meet. If she wins, it her third gold medal of: the meet Friday night, she anc--; hored the Americas team to victoI ry in the relay. East German Cornelia Oschken-- three-da- y By DICK HARMON j reinstates Lewis Lloyd NBA meters. Cougars vulnerable to deep thread PGA players Briefs final turn and winning by seven mulling quitting, and his decision will be announced this week. The bumping occurred as Coe and Bile came around the final turn. Coe, who will be 33 on Sept. 29, is expected on Thursday to announce his future plans, probably retirement. Quirot followed the fast early pace set by 1988 Olympic champion Sigrun Wodars before whipping past the East German around the omoin) 363 N. Univrity Av. - Current Rate Line 5-3004 (in Salt lake City) Toll Free Telebanking ..".. i 0 Deposits Federally Insured to $100,000. Rates subject to change. "A |