Page 14 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1979 Lyle enjoys memories of ‘Bronx Zoo’ By MILTON RICHMAN UPI Sports Editor POMPANO BEACH, Fla. — Sparky Lyle was talking one day about all the screeching, scrapping and back-biting that went on in the New York Yankees’ clubhouse and suddenly the phrase came out naturally, almost automatically. It was just like “the Bronx Zoo,” he said. That was long before the second half of last season, when he pitched so little he nearly died of neglect and couldn’t wait to get out of the Bronx Zoo. Now that he has, would you be lieve this — he misses it. “I’m happy here,” he says, mean ing with the Texas Rangers, who dealt for him last November, “but I had a good rapport with all the guys over there. That’s what you miss most, the guys you spent so much time with. There’s a bunch of nice guys here, too. I’ve got a lotta memories from my time over there. Good and bad. But you know how that is. You forgive and forget.” Among the better memories is how Lyle led the American League twice in saves while he was with the Yankees and how he won the Cy Young Award as the No. 1 pitcher in the circuit two years ago. Among the bad ones, is how he hardly ever was called upon to pitch after last year’s All Star break. A year before, whenever the game was on the line, the call would go out to the bullpen for him. Last year, Goose Gossage was the one who always got the call. Lyle never complained once. He caught up on a lot of sleep in the bullpen because he knew he wouldn’t be called upon. “People wondered why I wasn’t bitching” he said, toweling his chest after showering in the Rangers’ clubhouse. “It’s so simple. Who are you gonna pitch if one guy is making four-fifty and the other guy is mak ing one-thirty? You pitch the guy making four-fifty. I’d have done the same thing. George (Steinbrenner) didn’t have any choice. They would’ve crucified him if I had pitched and done well.” The “four-fifty” Lyle was talking about was the $450,000 a year being paid Gossage, and the “one-thirty” was the $130,000 being paid him. Lyle’s salary always was a source of unhappiness with him, particularly after he became the first relief pitcher ever to win the Cy Young Award in 1977. If you ask the 34-year-old lefthan der the last time he pitched last year, other than his one brief ap pearance in the playoff with Kansas City, he says he doesn’t remember. Press him on it, and he tries to think and then says he still doesn’t re member. “It bothered me at first but after awhile, it didn’t anymore,” he ex plains regarding his inactivity. “I knew I was gonna be traded at the end of the season. I knew it almost from the beginning. When the deal finally was made, I was happy. It was something I wanted. I don t want to waste what years I do have left just sitting around and not doing anything.” Lyle, who still has one of the best hard sliders in the business, put his spare time to some use last year by collaborating on a book about his experiences with the Yankees. “It’s not gonna be a Ball Four or anything like that,’’ he says. “They’re calling it The Bronx Zoo. The publishers picked the name iffOAL cmpm WMff i 100 EXTRA SftH GREEN STAMPS ! wm PROCESSING OF YOUR FIRST ROLL OF FILM THIS COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY YOUR ORDER NAME ADORFSS CHY STATE E*to: _ 3/10/79 Unft 0m CMfM Per fmOf TALC POWDER mma uraw vw wujuw rw > bhHhHBMHP | THESE PRICES GOOD THURS, FRI, SAT MARCH 8-9-10 Cashmere 10 oz. can list *1" Vr* shampoo ANTI-PERSPIRANT.. Zl&Z... 99M* FROZEN DINNERS 49 FISH STICKS..... 39 ORANGE JUICE.^“2^.89111 Pepperidae Farm Coconut • ••••••• 12 oz. pkg.—jfT VALUABLE COUPON WORTH >2.00 TOWARD TNI PURCHASE OF THIS WEEK'S FEATURED ITEM SSil 3 TABLECLOTH UNDERLINERS '*§|fi COUPON GOOD THRU 3/13/79 LAYER CAKE 3 TABLECLOTH LINERS SMOKED HAM ■ mm am am ■i;a am am ■P ■ | Moisture Added ■ii BUTT *§! lit l&i 1 ■■ hhi gg/g Honey Suckle |j TURKEYS ■ | 59*,u ■ ■ j PUII . _ HALF.. 119 y* PORK LOIN Contains normal portions of RIB-END CENTERS AND *Ma LOIN END CHOPS MEAT f» WIENERS *'..1 BEEF ^ £fl UVER ‘IF# CANNED 0“ HAMS S/.-O SLICED »» BACON !...l RIB PORK CHOPS ..'1 w LOIN PORK CHOPS BREAKFAST PORK CHOPS!'*.?.’** SM0KEES.. CHOPPED HAM... 0 r. , "r. , .7!7. 1 1 S9 HAM & CHEESE qw Split Top White ■ B ^ IB BBSA ft Absorbent oSe rainbo bread { ■ MwmmmmL M «* 3a ^ >« ! ■ SMBf 3; hL Sh"* ,0 ° 3'°' 1 • m WW 1m ™ii.. 1 lb. 16 oz. ppijjPM.^arf* v ^ ^ ^ PEPSI COLA I | Yme Pink ™ ™ ■■ ■■ ■■" % \ | SALAD TOMATOES..*...39* ( \ S QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED NAVEL ORANGES 6 pack 12 oz. cans APPLES RUSSET POTATOES US#1 CaWomia CELERY LEMONS 3 Louisiana YAMS Afei MEU0RINE K §K. rtt. 59 POTATO CHIPS 8 «z. Mi 79* 59 HAWAIIAN PUNCH 59* MILN0T a »«•— *1 CHIU W«EN«Bmm t9*z. mi KETCHUP ^ 32 S9* PAMPERS i” - " I> *~’ 9 « » *“ ’J 39 vlasic PiwUsi^^??* «V.“. 79* CINNAMON ROUS...49- PORK & BEANS ^ * - 1 •2700 Texas Ave. S •3516 Texas Ave. •200 E. 24th St. •9 Redmond Terrace COLLEGE STATION Bud BRYAN, TEXAS Double fi&H Green Stamps every Tuesday wrtti^2.more purchase. out, not me. It’s kindoftai guess.” For the most part, Lyle I the problems that aroseintll kees’ quarters were not thall different than those in anj| clubhouse. “The same two guys whol each other in the clubhousel be fighting side by sides field,” he says. “The imp thing is what goes on behJ white lines, and in that i| those guys (the Yankees) werl pletely united. Whatever[ ences they had in the were the same ones you’ll | every clubhouse. They’d just right out and say it straight Ii face, and I think that makes better club.” Sparky Lyle can’t see aft beating the Yankees inthefft Division this year. ^ “I think they’ll win ;ui HOfo says. “Who’s gonna stop enyBdnes< d five srth pf Guthrii to race at TW! United Press International I HOUSTON — Race carl Janet Guthrie Tuesday crashes in stock car races wer^BJ for the gate but not necessari^Bt for the future of the motorstH “I really believe the spa who comes hack race afte The C comes there to see the goodift^ the exciting driving and nft v ( crashes,” said Guthrie as she break in her preparation fori j US AC race of the year. “I believe,” she said, “tle^B ^ tators who come to seethecfP 1) j are temporary and will goa«^F a find more gratifying, ^F u1 participatory violence, i.e. key or boxing.” ^Bde igtotr More competitive racesimflftt, all the participants was nee^Biat improve the gate on a Ion: Mayo basis, she said. She added oncem believed the governing botercent; race car driving were striv:ihAul that goal. “The cost of championshi^Bfo petition has gotten out o! Hoi That’s why you see such a tween front runners and b Mhlity ners,” Guthrie said. “In any leakt ra racing more money buysr 6 : speed. In NASCAR moren^Fh buys smaller increments ai (than in championship radn;IB us believe US AC is moving in ll^ft 6 rection. This will be extreme! ! ^S e 1 fol to competition. folder Guthrie’s decision to n % United States Auto Club i%^ a " dropped its “conflict rule”Wft> unexpected offer of a spoiis(F re( Hold, “^ys Janet Guthrie for Sunday’s Aggieland 250 Texas World Speedway. Befo got the offer, the first womanl] in the Indianapolis 500 was [ ing already for this year’s ] and Tom Bigelow drove new(| Ontario two weeks ago. “We both have new Cosworths, the same kind all three 500-mile races she said. “Before we tooktkl two weeks ago we would nol believe it if someone had that we would have run rightj (Indy) qualifying times despit| 12 inches less boost than wail last year. We are both abso] tickled.” Despite her sponsor beini out from under” her in 1978,| He still showed the passion | helped convert her from phyii] race car driver in the 1960s. “Racing is not a sensible! vocation,” she said. “It’s son you do when you cannot otherwise.” Guthrie, 41, said the laij years have been good to her] cially. “But I would probably ahead of the game if I had ( to be a physicist,” she said. 1 job in that field was working! advanced orbiting solar obseii where she had to convince! modynamicist that “he didntl two-inch hold in the sun-faciif of the observatory.” She has recently appeal] television ads for a motor oill explained that the endorsemf| part of her package deal tfflj sponsor, a major oil company! “I still make more (mone| ing,” she said. She does not believe l down speeds will make pionship car racing any safer I My opinion is that the diflij between 195 and 200 mpl 1 ] percent,” she said. fex; >Ul [0V( re gl