Texas A&M attalion/Page July 6, The Battalion Sports July 6, 1982/Page 9 atched S of av; oans, and gn nk and there] sts the prop /on ARE M( 'O RECEI Diego rally knocks out Montreal, 8-6 United Press International Maybe it’s time to start taking the San Diego dres seriously as National League West pen- nd the brock® nt contenders. holarship sen* jhg Montreal Expos would be the first to most misleatB ree t h a t these Padres aren’t the kind who ervices. t urn the other cheek. ide what ttreiB For the second time in a row at Montreal, he said, hi the Padres put together a big rally late in the ce you thinkSme and whipped the Expos, 8-6, Monday iplication nj^ht. heck in thei^Xhe triumph was yet another example of :he way itv the kind of championship character San Diego bell and hasshown in recent weeks. The Padres did not st problem jarrive in Montreal until 6 a.m. E1DT after an t they thinltH-night flight from the west coast, and they for aid. looked half asleep for six innings against Expo l seemtogelfcit-hander Scott Sanderson, j don'thavesBSanderson was nursing a 6-1 lead when, student tojflddenly, the Padres broke loose for six runs laxin said. ■ the seventh inning. In the two teams’ last j .u . (Beetine at Montreal May 16, the Padres d that over!* , 6 • • 7 • i i . ,. Mged a seven-run ninth inning ;md beat the tarship in r 6 o o 6 vear becaust fP 05 ’ 8-2 ' students I ^' s ^ arc ^ w b eI1 you h;ive to sleep during the m 3 0 than®^ en come out an< ^ play, but this club has 111 ‘ ' Meat character and we’ve shown it by battling , , pnMck against the Expos,” Padres’ manager its naveau; i i*fn' i i n iBick Williams said. I still get salt® The Padres began their comeback when Ruppert Jones led off with a double and scored on a single by Sixto Lezcano. After Terry Kennedy grounded out, Broderick Per kins singled to put runners at first and third. Luis Salazar’s sacrifice fly narrowed the lead to 6-3 and singles by pinch hitter Kurt Bevac- qua and Gene Richards loaded the bases. San derson walked in Tim Flannery to make it 6-4 before Garry Templeton tied the score with a single to right field. The Padres, who sent 11 batters to the plate in the inning, then took a 7-6 lead on Jones’ single. Templeton squeezed home Richards in the ninth with the Padres’ final run. “This reminds me of the last time I was here in Montreal,” said Templeton, “but I wasn’t trying to do anything special at the plate.” Reliever Floyd Chiffer worked two innings to bring his record to 3-1 with Gary Lucas getting the last three outs to record his 12th save. Gary Carter hit his 18th homer for Mon treal. Elsewhere in the NL, Houston beat Pitt sburgh 6-4, St. Louis edged Cincinnati 6-5 in 10 innings, Los Angeles downed New York 4-1, San Francisco topped Philadelphia 3-1 and Atlanta defeated Chicago 7-5. In American League games, Minnesota top ped Detroit 5-3, Texas edged Toronto 3-2, Boston beat Kansas City 4-3 then lost 4-3, Oak land blanked Cleveland 2-0, Baltimore downed California 8-5, Milwaukee walloped Chicago 10-4 and Seattle beat New York 5-4. CARDINALS 6, REDS 5 — At Cincinnati, Ozzie Smith delivered an RBI single with one out in the 10th inning to help the Cardinals hand the Reds their eighth straight loss. Willie McGee led off the 10th with a single off Tom Hume, 1-4, and took second on a sacrifice by Mike Ramsey. After Darrell Porter drew an intentional walk, Smith singled off first base- man Dan Driessen’s glove to make a winner of Jim Kaat, 3-1. DODGERS 4, METS 1 — At New York, Ron Cey and Mike Marshall hit third-inning home runs to support the five-hit pitching of Bob Welch and lift the Dodgers to victory. Welch, 9-5, struck out eight and walked two in besting Pete Falcone, 4-6. Dave Kingman hit his 19th homer for the Mets. GIANTS 3, PHILLIES 1 — At Philadel phia, Chili Davis tripled to touch off a two-run sixth inning that carried the Giants to victory before a regular-season Veteran Stadium re cord crowd of 63,501. Milt May’s run-scoring single delivered Davis with the tie-breaking run and helped Bill Laskey, 7-5, to the victory. BRAVES 7, CUBS 5 — At Atlanta, Glenn Hubbard hit a two-run homer in the seventh inning to spark the Braves to their sixth straight victory. Bob Horner also homered for the Braves, who have won 22 of their last 31 games. Jody Davis and relief pitcher Lee Smith homered for Chicago. ORIOLES 8, ANGELS 5 — Scott McGre gor posted his 12th straight victory over Cali fornia since Aug. 18, 1978 as Baltimore top ped the Angels. Rick Dempsey, Eddie Murray and Floyd Rayford hit two-run homers and Ken Singleton collected two doubles and a single to drive in the other two Baltimore runs. McGregor, 9-6, went 8'/s innings and was touched for home runs by Doug DeCinces in the second and Reggie Jackson and Fred Lynn, a two-run shot, in the ninth before being replaced by Don Stanhouse. BREWERS 10, WHITE SOX 4 —At Chica go, Roy Howell had four hits, including an RBI single in a three-run first and a solo hom er in the seventh to hand the White Sox their fifth loss in their last six games. Milwaukee has won eight of its last 11 and 11 of its last 13 on the road. The White Sox committed seven errors — three by shortstop Bill Almon. TWINS 5, TIGERS 3 — At Detroit, Kent Hrbek led off the second with a home run and John Castjno capped the inning with a two^ run double Monday, leading the Twins. Bobr by Castillo, 4-5, notched his second straight triumph as a starter as the Twins won for the sixth time in their last eight games. RANGERS 3, BLUE JAYS 2 — At Arling ton, Jon Matlack and Danny Darwin combined on a seven-hitter and Billy Sample’s RBI single capped a three-run third that led the Rangers over the slumping Blue Jays. Texas has won seven of its last nine while Toronto has drop ped nine of 12. A’s 2, INDIANS 0 — At Oakland, Calif:, Tom Underwood scattered six hits over 7 2 /3 innings and Dan Meyer belted a solo homer tip lead the A’s. Underwood raised his record to 4-4 by striking out four and walking one be fore Dave Beard relieved with two out in the eighth to secure his seventh save. MARINERS 5, YANKEES 4 — At Seatt%, Julio Cruz went 3-for-4, stole two bases, scored three runs and drove in two to help the Marin ers move into third place in the AL West. Cruz’s two steals set up the winning run fctf Seattle in the seventh inning. Dave Winfield hit his 13th homer for New York. !gS sia )f such 1 to free edt that could a rs for sck e impairing handicap] by Milton Richman UPI Sports Editor EUGENE, Ore. — This |immy Stewart, the former ball- ddeafstudt alayer, not the former actor. to free eters. When he fires the ball back and orth with one of his outfielders ruled retati m the sidelines, you’d think he’s 13, not 43, playing in the big mentthatlf ime again and singing to him- edom. elf over finally having found ficant actin rfiathe’s been looking for all his I down a e rulings of the natii md-order new :y find in ing a wan sions was O’Connor, it opinion, an justice ’s right too indefinite!' JRANCE GIES: e Webb mce Group 823-8* A heavenly life in Eugene Former Astro Stewart enjoying minor-league coaching sei ife. He’s so happy and so trans- orted by what he’s doing after icing out of baseball seven years hat he really is singing inside. “1 got to heaven early,” he ays, motioning the young play- r he’s catching with that he’s years of un sufficiently loose to throw bat- far policel ing practice. “I was miserable n auto stop] seven years. Now I’m happy.” v enforcem It certainly shows. In every thing Jimmy Stewart does and ty in other! everything he says. Guys like Dave Winfield, Mike Schmidt and Gary Carter are making a little more money than he is, but they’re not having as much fun as he is being totally involved with what, for the most part, are school and college kids. They’re the ones he’s hand ling as manager of the Eugene Emeralds in the Class A North west League. It’s his first year managing and since the league opens late, Stewart, who played 13 years with the Cubs, White Sox, Red Sox and Astros, put in his first day as a manager last week. “I was pumped up, just like the kids were,” he says, stopping for only a couple of minutes in the dugout. “That didn’t come very hard for me. For 13 years, I pumped up every day anyway.” He smiles at that. Stewart was called “Super sub” because of his versatility when he played in the big leagues. Maybe he didn’t get to play every day but that wasn’t his fault. He was ready to play every day. He came to play. He isn’t any different as a first-year manager. He doesn’t waste time fooling around. He rKmmxwwwwm.±m.m shows up to work every day and doesn’t expend much wasted motion. His players will tell you that. “This is the big leagues to me,” he say . “Before I got this job, I was southeastern repre sentative for Prince Macaroni Com. in Lowell, Mass. It’s a good company and they make a good product. I was getting good money, a car and an expense account, but I asked myself, ‘Is this what I’m going to spend the rest of my life doing?’ “The years I was out of base ball, from 1974 to 1981, were long years,” Stewart says. “Real long. I had two boys, 12 and 9, when I left baseball after playing for Houston in 1972 and 1973. My wife, Donna, wanted me to get out. Surprisingly enough, she was my biggest booster when it came to me getting back. I guess she could tell how much I wanted to. “This is what I want to spend the rest of my life doing. I want to stay with these people right here,” he says, pointing to the logo on his warmup shirt that says Cincinnati Reds, the club with whom the Emeralds enjoy a working agreement. Most of the Eugene players are rookies. That means they have been professionals only a few days. Orsino Hill, a lean 20- year-old left-handed hitter with good power from Altadena, Calif., comes over and asks Ste wart how many swings everyone is allowed in the cage. Stewart tells him five. The parent Reds do a thor ough investigating job on all their young players before they sign them. They talk to the play ers’ teachers, guidance counse lors and parents to find out ex actly what kind of young men they’re getting. They also let the players know what is expected of them. Bob Howsam, the Reds’ former president, instituted that policy and Dick Wagner, their present one, uses it also. “I guarantee you that when these kids leave here in Septem ber, none of ‘em will have any moustaches or beards and all of them will know how to say, ‘Yes, sir’ and ‘No sir’ and ‘Yes ma’am’ and ‘No ma’am. ” :00 PJ Y ;ial Steak ivy 3 and (her id Butter 5 ;ial )INNER e ng Sutler - any THE VEST OF WARPED Classic strips from the past 2 years of “Warped” by Scott McCullar $3.95 Available at: BOBBIE’S BOOKS Loupot’s Whole Earth, Hast ing’s, & 216 Reed McDonald BUDGET HOUSE BRAND NAMES FOR LESS 203 N. 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