on/Pagf 27,11 sports Battalion/Page 9 July 27, 1982 by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds filing suit i A. Dell menyli ill? ml and n ans :e, 2 wxesatf tn stmi upportei as wl knch’s bat sends Reds )ast Cubs; SF triumphs liguiri, claimed would United Press International Although Johnny Bench is nsidering retirement, his bat l costs It ^L t ii| wording full time. sidentolB Bench, who told the Cincin- Le^Bti Inquirer Sunday that he has ^Bought about retiring after this uld staitB asori) Bit his third home run in ^ n 8 s a i : fcpr days to help the Reds to le in duBeir third straight victory Mon- ■ynight, a 4-2 decision over the thatth#'^ Cubs. osts) is| m bein S m °re patient, ’i idiiBnch said. “I’ve gotten things iavofiW flec * aroun< ^ an( * Cm satisfied he &M k n T’” • Bench missed 10 days of play fer fouling a ball off his foot d his foot was still sore and II nse t year oil available ped, but admitted the hitting awfully good for this one ^ies and I hope it keeps up.” “Bench means a lot to this lib,” Cincinnati Manager Russ Ixon said. “He gives us leader- lip with his bat.” | Dan Driessen and Bench hit ick-to-back homers in the fcjurth inning and Bob Shirley Battered seven hits in eight in- ■ngs to pace Cincinnati. Driessen’s 11th homer and Bench’s eighth of the season ive Cincinnati a 3-1 lead in the lurth inning. ■ Shirley, who snapped a per- r Anal five-game losing streak, I I Wuckout three and walked two ”*■ wfore being replaced by l orn Bume in the ninth. Hume got whichoBe last three outs to record his Times Ip save. Allen Ripley took the Hss. In the only other NL game leduled, San Francisco hwned Los Angeles, 6-1. In the American League, it s Kansas City 8, Cleveland 1; laltimore 6, Chicago 2; Detroit New York 3; Texas 3, Mil- |aukee 1; Boston 3, Toronto 2; iakland 11, California 8; and mnanie^ uiriesota Seattle 4. Theatfll SAN FRANCISCO 6, LOS in Cons’ |NGEL e S 1 — At San Francis- er thdfj’ ro °k‘ e Com O’Malley drove ■ comp- ' n * our 1 uns w ‘^ 1 a bases ~l° ac l e d gham and -perties, > $5 mi' mittee iod’s am yheldim Instead and vi and :mes. double and a sacrifice fly and ve oeenw 10 ^ 6 Laskey pitched a |, festpdiree-hitter to pace the Giants, Tho bunched three hits and Ihree walks in the third to score jve runs off starter and loser ^Bernando Valenzuela. i sene Philhait play a | the He t before -tsofal® c frofflj -nber ® the ga® though g to]® tradiw mpan)' n nonW Tsch« ive neg 1 * great f E provide ; e said ' nizers i the ^ is Best I Down- ivantf 1 Vilson- n on “different spokes for different folks” 403 University (Northgate) Open 10-7 Mon.-Fri. 10-5 Sat. 846-BIKE Johnny Bench Laskey struck out six and walked two, but lost his bid for a shutout in the fifth when Rick Monday tripled and scored on a sacrifice fly by Steve Garvey. This is Hal McRae’s final year on his contract with the Kansas City Royals and the 36-year-old designated hitter is having the kind of season that should make him a millionaire in the free- agent market if he elects to try it next November. If the season ended today, McRae would certainly be a leading candidate for the AL’s Most Valuable Player Award. He collected four hits, including his 17th homer, and drove in three runs Monday night to raise his major league-leading RBI total to 88 and spark the Royals to an 8-1 triumph over the Cleveland Indians. “I just hope to be consistent (in getting RBI) and I don’t have any goals,” sad McRae. “I just hope I don’t hit a dry spell. This is the best I’ve felt in a while. I’ve been struggling for a month.” McRae singled home Jamie Quirk to highlight a three-run third inning against Cleveland starter and loser Tom Brennan and smacked his homer over the left-field fence following a single by George Brett to finish the Royals’ scoring in the seventh. Willie Wilson added a pair of triples to the Royals’ attack to help Vida Blhe to his eighth vic tory against seven losses. RED SOX 3, BLUE JAYS 2 — At Boston, Dwight Evans led off the bottom of the eighth in- Dan Driessen ning with a single and scored on Carl Yastrzemski’s double play grounder, enabling the Red Sox to regain first place in the AL East. TIGERS 5, YANKEES 3 — At New York, Lance Parrish drove in three runs with his 17th homer, a single and a triple and Tom Brookens hit a two-run double in helping the Tigers to victory. ORIOLES 6, WHITE SOX 2 — At Baltimore, Gary Roenicke slammed his 16th home run of the year and knocked in four runs to pace the Orioles to their fifth straight victory. TWINS 10, MARINERS 4 — At Seattle, Gary Gaetti belted a first-inning grand slam to spark the Twins to victory. A’s 11, ANGELS 8 — At Anaheim, Calif., Rickey Hen derson paced a four-run eighth inning rally with an RBI double and a steal of home to lead the A’s to victory. over seats United Press International MINNEAPOLIS — Brad Sterling is hoping about 100 sea son ticket-holders are as upset as he is about where they will sit at the Minnesota Vikings’ football games this season. Sterling, of Burnsville, is looking for some of them to file a class-action suit against the Vikings, charging the club with unfair seat assignments. The Vikings are moving to the new $55 million Hubert Humphrey Metrodome this sea son, from the 21-year-old Met ropolitan Stadium in suburban Bloomington which is destined for demolition. The domed sta dium holds 62,220, compared to 48,446 in the old facility. A season ticket-holder since 1976, Sterling put an advertise ment in local newspapers, seek ing people to help finance the suit. “The fact is, we’re not any closer to the 50-yard line than we were in the old stadium,” Sterling said. “With the influx of more seats, all the people who held seats in the old stadium should be closer. I’ve talked to some people who have actually lost yardage.” However, Viking ticket mana ger Harry Randolph said he’s in a “no win” situation. “We lost 4,314 seats between the goal lines in the dome versus the old stadium,” Randolph said Monday. “We assign 60,000 seats and we obviously can’t make everybody happy. We’re also dealing with a lot of people we’ll never make happy.” The Vikings have 19,800 tick ets assigned to people with a 1960 priority, the year before the club officially began. There are only 19,144 seats between the goal lines in the Metrodome. “When it came to assigning seats,” Randolph said, “it was ex citing. We found a guy with sea son tickets since 1960, sitting dead behind the goal posts. Here’s one of the silent majority who never complains. So we thought we’d give him a break and put him closer to the 50- yard line.” Festival’s ice events feature close battles United Press International INDIANAPOLIS — Vikki de Vries, ranked second na tionally and seventh in the world in ladies’ figure skating, looks positively at her chances in the National Sports Festival singles competition, despite a fall in the short program. In the ladies’ singles event Monday at Market Square Arena, she fell midway through her 2-minute prog ram. Still, de Vries, who turned 18 Sunday, planned to overtake leader Kelly Webster in the long program skating tonight, which counts 50 per cent of the overall total. “I think I can bounce back,” she said. “I feel a lot more confident about my long program. I’m going to shine.” Webster took the lead from de Vries Monday with a good short program performance. The 15-year-old, who trains at Colorado Springs along with de Vries, said she also felt best about her long program routine. “I feel more confident ab out the long program,” Webs ter said, “because there are specific elements required in the short program and in the long program you can do any thing you want.” De Vries was tied for second with Melissa Thomas, Massapequa, N.Y., who had the best score of the short program competition. The pairs competition en ded with Lea Ann Miller and William Fauver taking the gold. There was action on the ice at Carmel Ice Skadium also, where the ice hockey action started. In the first game, Mike Krensing and Gregg Moore scored two goals each to lead North to a 6-5 win over the East, and Rich Costello scored with nine seconds left to give the South a 4-4 tie with the West. Swimmer Michele Richard son, competing for the East team, won the women’s 800- meter freestyle in 8 minutes, 40.24 seconds and took the bronze in the 200-free in 2:05.05 Monday at the In diana University Natatorium. Other swimming winners included Matt Cetlinski of Lake Worth, Fla., in the men’s 800 free; Jacqueline Komenij of Rohnert Park, Calif., in the women’s 100-breaststroke in a Festival-record 1:12.99; and Robert Lager of Mission Viejo, Calif., in the men’s lOObreaststroke in 1:04.21, also a meet record. Your Danskin Headquarters Manor East Mall 779-6718 Prescriptions Filled Glasses Repaired BRYAN 216 N. Main 799-2786 Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. 8-1 COLLEGE STATION 8008 Post Oak Mall.. 764-0010 Mon.-Sat. 10-9 p.m. Texas State ® Of^ticae sc Since 1935. Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. 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