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Show Clips Page B2 THE HFRALD, Provo, Utah, Saturday, May Timpview, Provo record soccer playoff wins NOTABLE QUOTE By BOYD KARREN ""There's something odd about going up to Michael Jordan and clipping himS16aday." Birmingham Baron manager Tern Francona on doling out Double A meal money. FISHING In Thursday's Fishing Report in The Daily Herald, there w as a confuting statement about the limits at Scofield Reer ior. The limit at Scofield Resen ior is eight fish. The limit for the creek at Scofield is four fish. The w riter of the report in ited fishermen to read the proclamation about limits, but was unclear in distinguishing limit amounts for the stream as opposed to the lake. We apologize for the confusion. FOOTBALL While Los Angeles Lakers owner Jerry Buss was reiterating Friday his desire to buy part ot the Los Angeles Rams, a Baltimore contingent was returning home after a brief visit w ith officials of the NFL team. Peter Angelos. owner of the Baltimore Orioles, and Larry Lucchino, former president of the Orioles, arm ed in Los Angeles on Thursday to begin talks about buy ing a pan of the franchise and mo ing it to Baltimore. They left town Friday after presumably meeting w ith Rams owner Georgia Frontiere and Executiv e Vice President John Shaw. Shaw refused to comment. Meanwhile. Buss, who had approached Frontiere last October about his interest in buy ing pan of her franchise, said he w ill do o again. He is interested only in the franchise remains in Los Angeles. BASKETBALL Stu Jackson, who guided Wisconsin to its first NCAA tournament appearance in 47 y ears, received a one-- y ear contract extension Friday through 1999. Three in an S8 million lawsuit Friday that New teen-age- charged rs 14, 1994 Jersey Nets basketball play ers Derrick Coleman and Jay son Williams beat them after they teased them about a play off loss to the New York Knicks. The alleged fight broke out between 2 a.m. and 3a.m. April 30 w hen the teens spotted Coleman and Williams outside Rebar. a Chelsea nightspot at Eighth Avenue and West 6th Street, by Williams. Eric H. (ireen, lawyer for the y ouths, said they started taunting the hoop stars with comments such as "the Nets can't hang w ith Knicks." a reference to the Nets' 0 loss to the Knicks in the first the playoffs. of game 1 91-8- Herald Correspondent we loosened up and dominated most of the first half," said Winn. Neer mind the smoke coming it was just from the soccer fields out-of-to- 0 1 1 Timpvtew 3, Bear River 0 Vww 2. Jordan 1 Ban Lomond 3. Judge 0 Murray 5, Ogden 1 Tooele 2. Mountain Crest Orympus 4. Spnngvtlle 1 Woods Cross 2. Payson 1 first "It wasn't our best overall game." noted Timpview coach Mike Winn. "We came out really tight." A slight case of nerves to begin state playoffs is understandable, especially in the case of Timpview , which has relatively few players with state playoff or tournament did experience. But the settle down. 1 Sour-icha- 2 30 p. m Murray vs. Provo 4 15 p m Ben Lomond vs. Woods 6 pm. Timpvtew vs. Tooele 7:45 p.m. Olympus vs. Sky View terfinals Tuesday at Cross p.m. at 6 Mountain View High School, and w ill face Tooele, a 1 w inner over Mountain Crest. 2-- For Provo, Friday the 13th could've turned out to be a nightmare, after the Bulldogs lost a coin toss to Timpview to enter the playoffs as Region 8's No. 2 seed, and then drew the always tough East High Leopards in Game 1. But, instead, the Bulldogs shook it off and blew out the "Bear River had some fast guys who matched up with Mike Hen-stroAaron Warner and Spencer Bramwell (Timpview's three fastest players)." noted Winn. Timpview advances to the quar- - Holy Bull, the beaten favorite , w ill skip the Preakness because of minor physical problems. The gray colt's blood count w as off and he w as being treated ith antibiotics, Jimmy Croll informed Leonard Hale, on Pimlico's vice president-racinFriday "'There were a couple of owner-traine- w r g, . things w rong." Croll said from his base at Monmouth Park. "Nothing drastic, but the vet said it would be better to give him seven or eight extra days." He added that he felt e finish in the Holy Bull's Derby w as not due to any physical problem, '"but was strictly a case of bad circumstances." Holy Bull was bumped badly at the start of the Derby and slammed again in the first turn. 12th-plac- 3-- half and decided to finish the game," said Provo coach Cesar Cardoso. Nate Lundquist and Nate added goals No. 4 and 5 to seal the deal. Mountain View's Alex Jensen was second in the shot put, throweffort by ing 55-- 0 34 to a 58-- 7 Northridge 's James Parker. American Fork's Mike Cosgrave took third in the long jump, going 21- 10. Skyline's France Davis won at By BOB HUDSON Assistant Sports Editor Mountain View has the most powerful girls' track team in the state. And. the Bruins have 39 points after the first day of the First Security Bank Utah High School Activities Association 5A meet Friday. t let ' , Fork picked up three firsts, two on the boys' side, in 4A competition. Bryan Jones overcame a slippery surface slickened by a heavy morning rain to win the Teammate Jared high jump at 4-- : 2-- Sheehan i snares ieaa ij in LPGA test By DAVID GINSBURG AP Sports Writer : WILMINGTON, Del. Patty Sheehan blew past the competition 68 to Friday with a gain a share of the lead after two rounds of the windswept LPGA Championship. m lofanl i n rr pkomni- Cl,aal,on oll(.lliau, lilt. uiv.uuiiig wiiumpitie on, started the day in a for 17th place. She had four birdies and one irksome bogey for a 2- U11UC1 IUIUI, lltU WUIl 1WUIH 10-w- ay 9. Sky- 6. Jamie Barney won the long jump for Spanish Fork. She leaped to edge Cyprus' Amity Jacket-ta- , who went 17-- 7 V. Timpview 's Jamie Hollingshead was third at line, the runnerup to the Bruins' in nearly every major meet, has 24 points. Orem is third with 15. "It's been a weird meet," Houle said of Friday's action. "Our sprint relay team, which has been one of the best in the state, had the baton slip out of their hands while they were running in the rain. They dropped it and didn't qualify. And we only scored one point in the mile. (Actually the Bruins didn't score any.) "About then I'm thinking we're in trouble," Houle continued. in the high jump "Then we go in the discus..." and to Holly Hull leaped w in the high jump for the Bruins. Orem's Lindsay Gardner was second at 4 with Mountain View's AmeriJoy Hannant third at can Fork's Shanae Nixon was fourth, also at Shelly Thomas and Lori Henry-wenone-tw- o for the Bruins in the 17-V- A 17-- uj ( rnrn i f 1 14. Spanish Fork leads the girls' title chase with 20 points after four events. Logan is second with 17!2. Judge has 25 points to lead the boys' chase while Spanish Fork has 20. 'Av Springville's Seth Herring took second in the discus with a throw of 159-- while Judge's Paul North-wa- y won at 172-3- . And Timpview's Mike Strauss took 1 -3 second in the 3200 with a time of 9:43.18. Cyprus' Cameron Harrison won at 9:39. 14. The Dons' Lynzi Kidman placed second in the girls' javelin at 103- 11. Aimee Ardema of Ogden won at 5-- 3. t discus. The Bulldogs move to the stafe quarterfinals Tuesday and a 2:30; p.m. game against Murray, a 5lj winner over Ogden, at Mountain View High School. At Olympus, Jeremy Holmgen rtrolc QC thf Titan r ti;-rolled over Springville 1 , knock-- . ma me Kea uevus oui ui mc payoffs. The Red Devils scored early on Matt Jarman's goal, but then went dry. The Titans, meanwhile, got two goals from Jeremy Holmgren and single goals from Ryan Love-lan- d and Eric Parish. And, at Woods Cross, Wade Nielsen and Tracy Hokum scored early goals as the Wildcats broke on top 0 in the first five minu'tesZ Th I irmc rmr Q onul h;rV nn Jl direct free kick, but could never .- get the tying goal. Woods Cross had 22 shots on goal while Payson had just se'ven only one of which came in half. 6-- 6. Scott won the pole, vault at 14-His nearest competitor jumped 12-- over." Thirteen events remain. M- .Spanish f 1 But. don't tell coach Dave Houle the gold trophy belongs to the Bruins just yet. "'It's not in the bag." Houle said. "We'll wait until we get some events 22-- 8 5-- 3. in the Kentucky Derby goal. Then Jake Clark, also selected to the Region 8 first team, punched second goal, courtesy of a Matt Dalebout assist. The fire got hotter, and the Leopards were running for cover as Patzke scored again, this time off a Casey Jackson assist, to give the Bulldogs a 0 lead. "We turned it on in the second Sp. Fork, Mtn. View fake early leads in state track & field championships 5-- HORSE RACING er Jared Patzke. "We just started scoring." y Patzke took an assist from Soriphon for the game's first Tuesday's schedule Defense and overall team speed vicagain were keys to the tory. Keeper Tim Jones recorded his seventh shutout of the season, but for the first time this season, Timpview found the opposition's speed matched up w ith their own. . first-team- Sfcy Things opened up in the second half as Spencer Bramwell and Steve Sandberg got into the flow, adding one goal each. blasted East while Woods Cross nipped Pay son and 2-- Prove 5. East 0 John er goal, an unassisted shot to put Timpview up by one at halftime. 3-- 0. 4-- first-team- W'inn scored the opponents in the 4A inter-regio- n play offs Friday afternoon. The Thunderbirds blasted past Bear River. to send the Region 5 fourth seed packing. Provo Oly mpus beat Springville 8 All-Regi- the Timpview and Provo boys' soccer teams burning their 5-- Leopards. But would you believe the game w as scoreless at halftime? ' 'We had the w ind (in the second half), I guess," said Region 8 "After five or seven minutes, Brandi Daniels placed fourth as Mountain View tallied 23 points. Thomas threw 17-- 9 while Henry's best was 107-- 1 . Daniels threw 103-missing third by an inch. Shauna Rohbock. the Bruins' stellar field event performer, is favored in both the long jump and the javelin. If she were to win both, Mountain View would have 59 points out of four events. And the Bruins have other performers who can score in those events. Of course, the Bruins also have plenty of other weapons. Still, Houle isn't assuming anything. "Strange things happen at state Herald PhotoJason Olson 1 Springville's Lindsey Argyle brings the baton home in first during trials in the 4A medley relay at the state track and field meet Friday. Argyle and teammates Missy Bolen, Mindy Bolen and Heidi Witney won the heat in 4:23.24. 9, '' every year, he pointed out. Orem's Adi Sorensen was the top local finisher in the 1600. She took third at 5:10.89. Skyline's Susan Taylor (5:00.48) and Hansen (5:05.37) went one-tw- o for 1 8 of the Eagles' 24 points. Northridge, the boys' 5A favorite is in third after five events on the first day. Weber leads with 34 Ste-fan- ie points while Roy had 21 Vi and Northridge has 26. Davis has 19'2 and Mountain View 19 to round out the top five. Orem's Jeff Hartman outdueled Roy's Troy Schiffman to win the pole vault. Both jumped 14-- 9 with Hartman clearing that height on his first jump. Schiffman made it on his third. 106-- 2. East's Rosy Gardner, who will compete at the University of Oregon next year, won the 1,600 in 4:51.21, four seconds faster than the listed state record set by Alta's Kristen Aure in 1984. Provo's Mary Huang and Tara Rohatinsky were second (5:11.13) and third (5:17.90). Several local athletes also fared well for the smaller (2A and 3A) schools. Manti's Jenny Henning-sowon the 2A javelin with a throw of 105-The Templars' n 4. Rebecca Campbell took second in the shot put (30-8- ). Juab's Bart Garrett won the 2A 3,200-metrun in 10: 10.54 while Lehi's Scott Cummings took second in the 3A race w ith a 9:59.45 clocking. er and . . . V. a .hnofv with .nirnips tnr ...... tnnr .... n 70. Alice Ritzman shot a 73 for a - .: 141. Sheehan, Walton and Ritzman were the only players under par after two trips over the 6,386-yar- d DuPont Country Club course. For a second straight day, players had to contend with swirling winds up -to 30 mph. : ; wind came and "The gusted from everywhere," Ritzman said. "It seemed like it changed direction every five seconds. It was a ' nightmare." Laura Davies eagled her final hole for a 72 that tied her with Meg Mallon at 142. Val Skinner had a 69 for 143. -. , nit 11111i lit tui waa ai . .u: ., Col Ull IUU1 mis ycai. iU WU1IUW Walton was pleased to be in contention for her first title after two ; straight 70s. 7-- ..,,),' . i i i like mis every weeK, but get trashed," she said.. Sheehan has had her own pror lems lately. She qualified for the LPGA Hall of Fame last year, but" finish this sea-- " has only one top-1- 0 son and is an uncharacteristic 32nd ' - "- ' on the money list. I shoot I usually "I'm just thrilled to death. It was' probably one of my best rounds of the year," she said. Starting on the back nine, Sheehan got three birdies on the first five holes. She hit a birdie orT putt on No. 11 and Nos. 12 and 14. 12-fo- ot -- "That certainly put me in good; position, knowing I was not in dan" ger of missing the cut," she said.. " "It's the first time this year I felt" in control." SOFTBALL Several Utah Valley State College softball players were 8 recently named to team. Markay Moss, Kat Andrus, and Aimee Ludlow were all named to the first team. Teammates Amy Patterson. Heidi Wickham. Jenny Sheehan. Jennifer Erdmann. and DeNae Fuller were all listed as Honorable Mention. f QfflEflP Saturday a.m. Rodeo (TNN) 10 a.m. Auto racing. Indy 500 time trials (ABC Channel 4) 10 a.m. Tennis. Italian Open (ESPN) 10 a m. Volleyball, U.S. vs. Greece (PSN) 11 a.m. College baseball, BYU at Wyoming (KSRR 1400 AM) 11 a m. NBA Playoffs. Hawks at Pacers (NBC Channel 2) 11:35 a.m. Baseball, Braves at Mets (TBS) Noon. Senior PGA, PaineWebber Invitational (ESPN) Noon. College baseball, Mississippi St. at LSU (PSN) 12 10 p.m. Baseball, Marlins at Cubs . (WGN) 12:30 p.m. PGA, Byron Nelson Classic (ABC) 1 30 p m. NBA Playoffs, Jazz at Nuggets (NBC. KISN 570 AM) 1:30 p.m. America a Morse (EbfNi 2 p.m. LPGA Championship (CBS Chan nel 5) 2 p m. Auto racing (TNN) 2 30 p.m. Wide World of Sports, figure skating, horse racing (ABC) 2:30 p.m. Auto racing (ESPN) 1 p.m. U.S. Olympic Gold, boxing (TNT) 4 p.m. Gotf, Benson Hedge Interna tional Open (PSN) 6 p.m. College basebsll, SWC tourna6 30 p.m. Baseball, White ment (PSN) Son at Rangers (WGN) 7 p.m. PCL baseball, Salt Lake at Las Vegas (KISN 570 AM) 9 p.m. Boung (PSN) 8 t Sunday 7:20 a m. Auto racing. Formula Prti of Mont Carlo (ESPN) 1 Grand women golfers in good shape NCAA regional in lightning-delaye- d BYU - 78, Lisa Christie 38-4- 1 Ng 39-3- 9 79 and Kara Weitz a 43-4- 3 86. Most of the Cougar players still had nine or 10 holes left to play in the second round when the teams were called from the course be- FollowALBUQUERQUE ing a cancellation of the first round ofthe NCAA Women's West Regional Golf Championship Thursday, teams completed 18 holes Friday morning before a lightning delay forced a suspension of the non-counti- cause of lightning. After two hours, play was resumed briefly and then suspended again because of darkness. "We were doing pretty well until play was suspended the first time," said BYU coach Gary Howard. "We're still in pretty second round. In the morning, BYU's squad, led by Stephanie Brockbank of Provo, came in with 308 strokes to field. place 1 1th in the 19-tea- m Brockbank, the newest player on the Cougar team, carded nines of 36-3- 9 for a par 75. Ai Lian Lim shot 37-3- 9 76, Doreena er good er a tournament with a 69 to lead the individuals. The 54-ho- le championship will be completed today. shape." grab lead in Seniors' event Non-winne- rs CHARLOTTE. N.C. (AP) -BBaird and Bobby Nichols, were at 67. Jay Sigel, Larry Ziegler and utch non-winne- rs after eight holes, Ng is Brockbank is after nine, Christie and Weitz are both after nine and Ai Lian is after eight. San Jose State is leading the pack with a course record 286 on the Par 73, 6,069-yar- d Championship Golf Course on the campus of the University of New Mexico. Jamille Jose of Stanford tied the course record for the first round of on the Senior PGA Tour since 1989, got off to good starts to possibly break the string at the PaineWebber Invitational on Friday. Nichols, who has come close to winning at the TPC at Piper Glen the previous two years, fired a 66. Baird was the first to reach the clubhouse with that total as he birdied his last three holes. Tom Shaw and Dale Douglass Bob Dickson played in the same threesome and matched one another with 68s. Jim Colbert and Jim Dent also shot 68. Ten golfers were at 69 and leading money-winn- ' er Lee Ray Floyd and runner-uTrevino were at 70. Defending champion Mike Hill was at 71. Arnold Palmer, who designed the course and is the designated host for the event, struggled in with a 75. p Baird and Nichols admitted their scores were far different from recent performances. "It's been a three or four years as far as what I'd like to see myself do," Baird said. "You're always striving out here to improve your areas that you feel you're a little deficient Get one step ahead of your competition and advertise your business card on the popular Business-CarPage! For just $25 you can put your name and services before Utah County residents. There will be 33,000 copies of the Herald distributed with your business card printed on the Business Card Page. There Is no cheaper way to let subscribers know of your services! DON'T WAIT!! "Here's itly Card" will be published Monday, May 23. We need your business card and payment by Wed., May 18. For more information Call ext. 255. Boyd Karren 373-505- 0 in." Baird pointed to putting as a problem, but he had seven birdies to get his share of the lead. (Tfjc ; Itothj licrnto d |