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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1982)
sports Battalion/Page 13 June 10, 1982 -- MK M c NAMAlliV WE GOT Off ICES’ AMP WE GOT STATkDNERV. MOW LET'S’ GET SOWE Team cwme^g mm? 9tk roOTBAi LEM by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds here's- iue computer ppikitoot OF TUE HorrE&T TOO&PEOS’. THET OWM A RXLG-FaCHCE MNP MERCEPEE* ANP RAMS? SEASON TICKETS. ANP A CONCO lM VECAE, ANP WEAR MORE THAN TWO GOU? CHAlMS ATOMCE. Reds pick Luecken; three sign A&M letters of intent I H y^eteran Carlton strikes ut 16 in Philly victory United Press International fter struggling earlier in the Ison, Steve Carlton seems to |iave regained the form that med him three Cy Young " wards. ’0 »Carlton scattered 10 hits and Buck out 16 batters Wednesday Bht to lead the Philadelphia s eacli fbillies to a 4-2 victory and a ngs ea; Ihree-game sweep of the Chica- nappedl 0 ^ U * 3S ' t JrJ “He had all his stuff moved N'^'-or.” Phillies’ Manager 1 PatCorrales. “He’s still a power ieNL*P er \’ ■Bo Diaz and Mike Schmidt hit flme runs to back Carlton, who Blked only two batters, to raise ■ record to 7-6. The Cubs have e , low lost 10 in a row. ■The Phillies opened the scor- ) pin the first inning when Greg Boss led off with a single, went to third on a Pete Rose single r^Nand scored on Gary Matthews’ k ^ L sacrifice fly. y IDiaz hit his 10th homer of the nr in the second to give Phi- Kelphia a 2-1 lead and Schmidt ■this fifth in the fourth inning ■ make it 3-1. Both homers ie off Chicago starter Fergu- Jenkins, 3-8. he Phillies added another in the eighth on walks to rl “senotfttthews and Diaz and a single family % Garry Maddox, selling il'ln other NL games, it was 981. fiontreal 5, St. Louis 1; New ngMal«York3, Pittsburgh 2; Cincinnati ableplawSan Diego 3, and Atlanta 11, nd-leadps Angeles 5. ;on, wol lEXPOS 5, CARDINALS 1 — .{aloof!!At Montreal, Gary Carter crack- e’s laded a two-run homer in the 'ashingt fourth inning and Bill Gullick- racts llson, 4-5, pitched a strong 8 2-3 the higlfldngs to pace the Expos, ilayer. |METS 3, PIRATES 2 — At New York, pinch-runner Rusty spokestijuman SC ored from third base nss wa! B a fielder’s choice with one out 0 e1 ' in the ninth inning to cap a two- K l MII ';run rally that gave the Mets the y ear ' ar victory. :ss n101 ® REDS 4, PADRES 3 — At San ee t0S J|Bego, Tom Seaver, after one of ^ ei the worst starts in his career, thersa 1 Mched s t ron g innings to lA seastfcj ^ j^ ec j s v i c t or y was he rodjhis third in nine decisions. | seel BRAVES 11, DODGERS 5 — atherMAt Los Angeles, Biff Pocoroba acktolwent 5-for-5 and drove in five iton wtuns to back the pitching of Rick rtunitt fMahler, who threw seven shut- andrelout innings. ■ In the American League, Joe llolan hit a three-run homer and singled in another run to ^help the Orioles complete a |three-game sweep of Milwaukee ^ with an 8-3 victory. 1 "^' s a bout time I started hit ting. It feels good to contribute,” y [Fairbanks’ replacement ^ hired at CU United Press International BOULDER, Colo. — The University of Colorado finally has a new head football coach. ► f CU announced Wednesday that Michigan assistant Bill McCartney had been named the school’s 20th head coach. gMcCartney said he hopes to Build a team with intensity and i pride, and field an offense with imagination. “I think we’ll do up an foffense that has a lot of imagina- Ition and resourcefulness, AlcCartney said Wednesday. “I dya^ [don't know the personnel very ftery? 3 Bdl and 1 don’t know a lot about rhat they did in spring practice. | have a lot of homework to do.” The 41-year-old former Mis- tiri linebacker served as de fensive coordinator at Michigan and will replace Chuck Fair banks, who resigned last week to bsume the head coaching duties Ifith the New York entry of the [United States Football League. “Bill had impressive inter views with President Arnold jVeber, a faculty committee, the CU Regents and me,” said CU Athletic Director Eddie Crow der. | Fairbanks, who never had a losing season in six years at klahoma, led his team to re- ords of 3-8, 1-10 and 3-8. said Nolan, who entered the game hitting .148. “I was strug gling. I still am. One game doesn’t take you out of it. But you have to walk before you can run.” Nolan looked like he was doing handstands as he staked the Orioles to a 3-0 lead in the second. He tagged starter Moose Haas, 3-3, for his first homer of the season. His blast over the right-field wall fol lowed a walk to Jim Dwyer and a double by Cal Ripken. Baltimore chased Haas with a five-run sixth. Ken Singleton led off with a single and, with two outs, Dwyer walked. Both scored on Ripken’s second dou ble of the night. In completing the sweep, Baltimore won its fifth straight. Mike Flanagan won his fourth straight game, raising his record to 5-4. In other games, Kansas City beat Minnesota, 8-5, Oakland nipped Chicago, 5-4, Boston edged New York, 3-2, Seattle outlasted Texas, 4-3, in 11 in nings and Toronto beat Califor nia, 5-4. In a double-header, De troit beat Cleveland, 2-1, in the first game and the second game was suspended after 14 innings due to the AL curfew, tied at 3-3. ROYALS 8, TWINS 5 — At Minneapolis, Amos Otis hit a three-run homer and George Brett drove in two runs with a double and triple as Kansas City extended its winning streak to eight games. A’s 5, WHITE SOX 4 — At Chicago, Tony Armas hit a three-run homer in the eighth inning, snapping a 2-2 tie and helping Oakland break a five- game losing streak. RED SOX 3, YANKEES 2— At Boston, Reid Nichols scored one run and singled in another to lead the Red Sox to their fifth straight victory and hand New York its fifth straight loss. MARINERS 4, RANGERS 3 — At Arlington, Richie Zisk singled in Manny Castillo from second base with one out in the 11 th for the Mariners. BLUE JAYS 5, ANGELS 4 — At Toronto, pinch-hitter A1 Woods’ RBI groundout with none out in the ninth capped a two-run rally for the Blue Jays’ victory. TIGERS 2-3, INDIANS 1-3 — At Detroit, Toby Harrah belted a two-run homer in the eighth inning of the second game to tie the score, 3-3. The game will be resumed Aug. 24. In the opener, Jerry Turner cracked a two-run homer in the seventh and Jack Morris pitched a seven-hitter to lead the Tigers. The Cincinnati Reds selected Aggie pitcher Rick Luecken in the 12th round of the summer amateur baseball draft, making him the third Texas A&M play er chosen in the draft. Catcher Joe Szekely and pitcher David Flores were drafted during the top three rounds Tuesday. Luecken, who compiled a 6-2 record and had a 2.65 ERA dur ing the past season, had been drafted in the first round by the San Francisco Giants after finishing his high school career at Spring Woods High School in Houston. During his freshman year with the Aggies, Luecken had a 9-5 record and a 2.70 ERA, and during an injury- shortened sophomore season, the 6-5, 212-pound Luecken had a 5-2 record and a 2.86 ERA. Luecken said Wednesday that he hadn’t anticipated being drafted by the Reds. “I was looking toward another organization, but the Reds picked me instead,” Lueck en said. Luecken said he’d “rather not say right now” which dub he had thought would draft him. As a result of a groin injury during his sophomore season and arm problems during his junior season, Luecken said, he wasn’t able to pitch as well as he hoped. “I was hurt during the middle of two seasons,” he said, “and that slowed me down a lot. But there’s nothing you can do when you get hurt.” In other Texas A&M baseball news, Coach Tom Chandler has signed three recruits for the 1982-83 season. First baseman-outfielder Mike Scanlin, from Houston Westbury, signed a letter of in tent with the Aggies. Scanlin, a 5-11, 180-pound left hander, hit .434 during his senior season, and was chosen all-district, all city and honorable all-Greater Houston. Bubba Jackson, a catche’£ from McKinney High Schoo^ signed a letter of intent WednesJ day. Jackson hit four home runs' and hit .323 this season, and wai^ named all-District 7-AAAA fo£ the third straight year. Switch-hitter Tim Cartright, a second baseman from Angelina Junior College also signecj- Wednesday after having beem named to the all-conference; team. Cartright, who attended’ Baytown Sterling High School,- hit .347 this season. *i YESTERDAYS “a fine entertainment establishment” BILLIARDS BACKGAMMON 4403 S. TEXAS AYE. 846-2025 HOUSE DRESS CODE Uext to Luby's :e IV! des 3 lattfe COIl^ Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. 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