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Show Thursday, June MAJORS: Summerhays sizzles with 65 in Am qualifier By BOB HUDSON Assistant Sports Editor MIDWAY Bryan Summer-hay- - worrying about the Oakland Athletics yet. I have no idea how we match up with them because I haven't seen them play. We've got Dave Stewart next and we have to do a job against him." The White Sox and A's meet seven times in the next 11 days and the Chicago players seem to be more excited than Torborg. "I wish we would have saved some of those runs," Lance Johnson said after collecting three hits against Seattle. "You always can use all the runs you can get against Oakland." In other AL games, it was Oakland 3, Texas 2 in 11 innings; Kansas City 11, California 4; Toronto 10, Minnesota 1; Boston 4, New York 1; Milwaukee 7, Baltimore 2, and Detroit 5, Cleveland 4. Dan Pasqua and Ron Kittle hit consecutive home runs in the third inning and Jack McDowell pitched a four-hittfor the White Sox, who had their biggest offensive game of the season with 16 hits. Pasqua hit his fifth homer after Ivan Calderon drew a walk from Erik Hanson (6-and Kittle followed with his 10th homer for a 0 was staked to lead. McDowell (3-a 0 lead in the first three innings before the Mariners scored their runs in the bottom of the third. Here are those who for the Utah State Amateur through competition at a tournament at Wasatch Mountain State Park Wednesday: Summerhays; Summerhays, Ramon Brobio; Marcano; Baxter, Jeff Kinney. Dean Wilson, Dave Rowe. tee Eggertsen; Robinson, Steve Warnick. Marty Romney, Scott Fairbanks, David Mayberry; Overton, Randy McDowell, Dana Nelson, Ron Ellison; Davis, Price. Steve Sargent, Don Randy Danielson: Nielsen. Craig Labium. Corey Carter, Stacey Hall, Todd MIDWAY 11-1- 5. 546-ya- Smyrl. 489-yar- - ' . '' j ' , . and failed to qualify. "Utah Valley is decently represented," Hitchcock noted as he reviewed the scores. Eleven of those who qualified live in or play out of courses in the valley. Included in that group are Doug Baxter, Dave Rowe and Eggertsen (71s); Steve War-nicScott Fairbanks and David Mayberry (72s); Todd Overton (73); Randy Davis and Randy Price (74s) and Kurt Nielsen and Corey Carter (75s). Hitchcock also noted that six of the 14 golfers who had par or better are University of Utah or BYU golfers. That group includes Summerhays, Marcano and Romney from the U and Joseph Summerhays, Wilson and Brobio from BYU. "That's a tribute to the junior golf program in this state," Hitchcock noted. "These kids have been playing tournament golf since they were 10 years old." In . r 5-- 5-- L 1 - yards on the par four No. 6 hole, reaching the green and nearly holing it out. Last year's District 9 winner Jeff Hoye finished second with a drive. 393 378-ya- rd Sports ("They're one division, we're another," said Dennis Swan-so- By DAV E GOLDBERG AP Sports Writer Once, and just once, ABC and .ESPN ought to consider teaming "Jim Valvano and Dick Vitale on the : n, the sports division's president) to team with another recently deposed big name, Brent Musburger on ABC's weekend telecasts. Keith Jackson and Vitale are the others. Valvano thinks the model for the modern analyst is Al McGuire, anNew Yorker (Viother tale is from New Jersey) who was among the first to bring a coaching perspective to television. But he says he'll be Jim Valvano, not McGuire, Billy Packer, Vitale or anyone else. "We'd all like to have our own stamp," Valvano said. "I'd like to be entertaining. I enjoy watching Dick Vitale. I can't think of anybody who brings more energy to a game. But I'm Jim Valvano." same telecast. Just to see which one can drown rout the other. "I love to watch basketball and I love to talk," the latest Coach V to i join the broadcasting ranks said ; after he was tendered a $300,000-a- year contract to analyze college ' basketball the next three years. "What job could be better?" Well, coaching basketball at North Carolina State, for one thing. But that was made untenable H after ABC News reported that some I of Valvano's may have ; been involved in So he was available to ABC point-shavin- fast-talki- g. V I 11-- The BOZEMAN, Mont. (AP) competition has formally opened to see who will host the College National Finals Rodeo in 1992, and Bozeman host city for more than a decade is facing competition from at least four other towns. The National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association, which puts on the annual rodeo, has asked other communities to submit bids. Other communities contending for the event are Lubbock and College Station in Texas, as well as Ogden, Utah, and Rapid City, S.D., said Tim Corfield, the association's executive secretary. The selection process, which officially started Wednesday, has drawn representatives from those communities to Bozeman for the all this rodeo, which is running week. At stake is a event which draws as much as $2 million into the local economy and brings in at least 400 contestants, their families and their fans, said Nick Savko, board member for the Bozcman-base- d group that organizes the an- -' nual rodeo. Bozeman has the contract to host the 1991 rodeo. The decision on the new site will be made next June and announced at that year's rodeo. The rodeo has held the annual event here for 19 of the past 20 rodeos. Most people automatically as10-d- sume that association's primary concern will be financial when it decides where to put the rodeo, m m m m m mm m wa. Valvano also thinks his experience on the inside of college sports will help he was athletic director at N.C. State for six years before being stripped of that job when the university was placed on probation for violations involving sneaker contracts and tickets. "There's a certain value in sharing that with people on the outside who may not have an accurate picture of what's really going on," he says. CZECH MATE How pervasive is American television, with its endless cable channels, compared to TV in the rest of the world? "A lot of our guys have problems as far as television is concerned," says Peter Vermes, of the U.S. soccer team, shut in the Centro homer two years of the contract. Association officials then came back to Bozeman and signed a contract, later extending it an additional two years. The rodeo has grown since it returned to Bozeman in 1980, he said, noting it has become better and financially solvent. part." In 1978 when the association voted to take the rodeo to Lake the BozeCharles, La., in 1979 man rodeo was losing money, he said. "Business is business," Corfield said of association's consideration now of other communities. "Personally, I have developed very close friends in this town. I like Bozeman, Montana. There is something about it. "On the other hand, NIRA needs to entertain proposals from other communities to see what is out there," he added. "It probably needed to leave Bozeman," he said of the rodeo at that time. But the three-yea- r deal at Lake Charles fell through after one year. "We had a good rodeo, but nobody saw it," he said. The organizing committee lost all its money and breached the last mr . m "Thelast thing mv old mower cut was the costof a newSnapper" news." Vermes knows a little bit more about it than most of the Americans. He played for a team in Holland this year. But there they had CNN 24 hours a day. In Tirennia, the American team gets one show. Over and over. Tapes of the Chechoslovakian national team, whom the Americans play in their first game on Sunday. MY SOURCES TELL ME ... ESPN is toning down Fred Edel-steithe gossip specialist on NFL pregame shows who prefaces each item with "my sources tell me ..." n, m. m r m mm mm WctS ln-lA- W ii i i i i ' i m i mm cimmuc co-r- . ."i". SIMMONS IT BEAUTYRESTI I CALIBRE RFAUTYRFST I tXliU 60 00 Last Years Prices 1? L v. ? iiM'.i'ijSI.'iJ .;'.".n: m I two-ru- n 2. Corfield said. "That is really not true," he said. "... What we want is a good, great, excellent rodeo for NIRA contestants. Somewhere down the list, financial concerns do play a big Nazionale di Addestramento, an Italian national training camp in Tirrenia, Italy. "They need their ESPN. They need their CNN m kem at att a t Tnrru1 fmrvcAiTn orrnn nnmm taut Aim ifATrrn taitpVI nrnnivn DLVVUWJ DhAOi Vl UUAL11 BlMlMUUd oLLm oLiol dUli UUft lUUil ' Al' l.ast rplinln Chicago's Dan Pasqua, right, gets a high five from Ivan Calderon after hitting a against Seattle Wednesday. The While Sox won the game Trade i 1 should team Valvano, Vitale on cage 'casts ABC i riA' Competition heats up for rodeo host city Former eager sets long drive record - C3 er k, SALT LAKE CITY Former Weber State basketball star Kurt Moore set a new long drive state record at the Nibley Park golf course Wednesday. Moore blasted a drive a whopping ...... - Page "It's only June," Chicago manager Jeff Torborg said. "So I'm not qualified take medalist honors in the Central qualifying tournament for the Utah State Amateur Wednesday. The amateur will be plaved at Alpine Country Club July Summerhays had no bogeys in his round and made an eagle on the fifth hole. He had a chance for another eagle on the d 18th, but came up short and settled for a birdie, according to Ron Hitchcock, a Utah Golf Association director at the scene. Joseph Summerhays and Ramon Brobio tied for second with 69s while Ross Marcano had a 70 to take fourth. Twenty-seve- n golfers earned berths in the state amateur. The cutoff for qualifying was three over par 75. Hitchcock noted that the cut-- . off wasn't determined until the final card of the day was turned in. He said the field of 27, plus ties, was short one player with six foursomes still on the course. That gave several golf- ers with 76s a glimmer of hope. Lee Eggertsen, a Utah County golfer, ended those hopes when he turned in a 71. Among those Pro- bumped was voan Garth Ford, a fixture on the amateur golf scene for a number of years. . Eddie Fryatt, a BYU golfer who has played well on the open circuit this summer, fired a 77 1" (Continued from Page C2) champion A's, who lead them by a mere two games. 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