Texas A&M The Battalion Sports Wednesday, June 1, 1983/The BattaIion/Page 11 rock ‘satisfied’ with NCAA championship by Joe Tindel Jr. ifip Battalion Staff t/|satisfied coac h is an unusual fehi ' But to say that 1 exas A&M ifijball coach Bob Brock is any- -tingless than satisfied would all jliminate the word from the ■onary. If winning a national lampionship doesn’t bring itisfaction, what does? True, the Aggies’ road to the top wasn’t full of homers or blowouts, nor does Texas A&M’s final 41-11 season record indicate perfection. But Brock’s not losing any sleep over that. As the Aggie coach put it: “It wasn’t pretty, as far as hits were concerned, but it was enough to win.” And winning is what a coach is paid to do. Tuesday afternoon, Brock walked into the women’s athle tics office looking like he’d just set down a 50-pound sack of potatoes. After all, surviving in jury to a key pitcher, less than adequate hitting, and a loss in the first game of NCAA soft- ball’s College World Series can set a coach’s nerves to rest, if ■ fixers grab title H United Press International INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Hit a difference a decade can nake. ■The 1972-73 Philadelphia f Srs compiled a 9-73 record, hekvorst record in the long his- foraPi* the NBA. here we are with the le Isn®>_83 version of the 76ers and GM stamped themselves Tues- lay night as one of the NBA’s 1 1 11-nme great teams with a 115- t° n > 08 drubbing of the defending IB A champion Los Angeles ■ers, completing just the §th championship series p in league history. /hen the regular season en- with 76ers holding a spark- 67-15 record, Philadelphia’s es Malone was asked what nggercieexpected from his team, nt of »‘Four. four, four’” he re- the Bellied. He meant four-game nebps of each of the three play- peries. His expectations almost were 7 K lorly in: I- ) bases q ;banon fulfilled. Only a single loss to the Milwaukee Bucks blemished the 76ers incredible playoff streak and their 12-1 postseason re cord goes into the book as the best in NBA history. Malone, who carried the 76ers to their first NBA crown in 16 years, was named the series MVP after scoring 24 points and grabbing an incredible 23 re bounds in the final game. But he wouldn’t take much of the credit. “This is the greatest moment of Moses’ life,” the burly center gurgled through a mouthful of champagne in the Sixers locker- room. “But this isn’t Moses’ championship. We did it for our fans, and we did it for us, but mostly we did it for the Doctor.” And Julius Erving, the “Doc tor,” was there. Tuesday night he silenced the critics who had said despite his enormous talent he would never play on a cham pionship team. He sat quietly in ts middle of the wild celebration. “I’m not out of control now because of all the things I’ve been through, things that go beyond basketball,” Erving said. “My family is still the most im portant thing to me. They stuck with me through six years of frustration.” Erving finished the game with 19 points, seven coming in the last two minutes when the 76ers, who had not led since the open ing period, bolted back into the game. An Erving steal and dunk with two minutes left tied the score, 106-106. With 59 seconds left, Erving slammed one home and was fouled. He made the free throw and the 76ers led, 109-107. After a free throw by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar pulled the de sperate Lakers within 109-108, Erving dethroned the cham pions by drilling a 10-foot jum per with 24 seconds left. .. and Philly fans party United Press International PHILADELPHIA hbusands of joyful, screaming, -drinking fans took to the ts Tuesday night after the ladelpia Sixers dethroned I Los Angeles Lakers to be- e NBA champions. Fireworks sputtered and tourlef P e d throughout the center "the city and cars raced ugh the streets blowing horns. Garbage trucks ie mlting their nightly rounds ofSanS ed a deeper note with their mifforns. route thdraw t is unjs justice Is' ft nday. id one 1 these 10 sold ison ini i guerr. ounced ult on! s ceniei vithali hich set >r pusli rich ini ee enj ast spn ig chi' e pared: ivili ire root of: n, El Ss' bts The celebrations erupted in bars throughout the city where mahy had spent the evening watching the 76ers take an early lead, fall behind, then fight back to a 115-108 victory. Mayor William Green called the 76ers’ team, with its regular season record and its record set ting 12-1 playoff mark, “one of the finest ever to set foot on a court.” One of the 76ers’ biggest fans and native Philadelphian, come dian Bill Cosby, watched the fin als at his Connecticut home with his wife Camille. “I loved it,” Cosby said. “I kept saying L.^. is going to get tired. They are playing so hard, playing so far above themselves, reaching for every ball, going for every shot. “They ran out of steam in the last seven minutes of the game. They had given as much of themselves as they could.” “It was a happy moment. Even my wife lit up a cigar,” he said. OPEN HOUSE 4 to 6 Daily 12 to 6 Weekends Priced from the $40s Mill Creek is a new neighborhood just two minutes from the University. It’s close enough to the campus for anyone to walkor bike. Mill Creek is nestled next to woods and a College Station park, convenient to all major thorough fares, yet just away from the hustle and bustle of the main campus. Why not visit Mill Creek? We can tell you about our favorable financing, the tax advantages of ownership, our quality of design and construction and much more. Best of all, you can see for yourself how you can be at college and still be right at home. 2 bedroom under $50,000 [RAD 0 [1=0= ■ mums For sales information contact: Mary Bryan, Marketing Agent, 409/846-5701, Green & Browne Realty, 209 E. University Drive, College Station, Texas 77840. vlayor ed tli f 500ai md si der. they’re not already shot. In between a good night’s sleep after Monday’s flight home from Omaha, Neb., and celebration Tuesday, a cheerful Brock sat down to reflect on the championship series. “I just felt like that if we got by UCLA, we were going to win the tournament,” the coach said of the Aggies 1-0 semifinal victory over the Bruins. “The (Aggies’) defense was tremendous. It was actually Cal State-Fullerton’s de fense that made the errors that gave us the game. We never fal tered, we never quit and we nev er made an error. “It’s a good thing. I think (pitcher) Lori (Stoll) was getting at the end of her rope at that 26th inning. She was really talk ing about being tired. We got together and everybody kept saying to each other, ‘hey, we’ve got to get Lori a run; this is one game that we’re not going to let Lori lose.’” That extra effort was for a worthy cause. Earlier this spring in Albuquerque, Stoll went 19 innings against Fullerton and lost. This time she had already pitched 14 innings against UCLA in Sunday’s semifinal. She had to pitch 12 more to se cure Texas A&M’s 2-0 victory over Fullerton in the champion ship game later the same day. The chance to pitch against UCLA was especially important for Stoll, who finished her career as a four-time all- America and one of the best pitchers in the nation. She had lost to the Bruins two years ago in 29 innings, 1-0. Brock said he decided to let Stoll handle a large portion of thejaitching chores because she was on a roll and had momen tum working for her. But relief pitcher Shan McDonald pitched the Aggies to a 2-0 victory early in the series over Louisiana Tech, to help her team bounce back from a 2-0 loss to South Carolina in the first game of the series. “I decided that Lori had got ten us where we were at, and I knew I had Shan in relief when I needed her,” Brock said. “(But) I think Shan pitched a big, big game when she beat Louisiana Tech. “I don’t feel like any of those teams could have beaten Shan or Lori. It’s just that it seemed that Lori had the momentum going. She had a lot of things going her way.” Stoll went straight home to Chillicothe, Mo., after the series. But in a long-distance telephone interview Tuesday, she cited confidence and determination as her motivating factors during her 26-inning pitching marathon Sunday. “I really wanted to win be cause it was my last year, so I decided to pitch as hard as I could,” Stoll said. “I just knew that our defense would hold. I knew we’d get a run sooner or later. It was just a matter of when. “It seemed like I got more tired when I would come in be tween innings and sit on the bench instead of while I was out there.” Stoll and the Aggies were on the hot seat from the outset, hav ing lost the first game of the double-elimination series. But Brock said that’s been par for the course for his team. “It put pressure on a team that had done it before,” Brock said, “and a team that never knew what the word quit meant. It’s not the first time that the Aggies lost the first game. Itjust seems to be part of our makeup — that we’re going to have to lose that first game and battle back.” After its loss to South Caroli na, Texas A&M defeated In diana, 1-0, Friday, before knocking off Louisiana Tech Saturday. The Aggies beat Ful lerton Saturday, 1-0, to earn a chance to play them again in the championship game. The Aggies faced the same problem in the championship series that they faced all spring. But field play made up, and, as Brock said, the hits came at opportune moments. “We didn’t hit very well, but we hit enough, and we hit in spurts,” Brock said. “And our defense and our pitching were so awesome that it wasjust a mat ter of time whenever we could get some hitters that could put something back-to-back.” When the bats did crack, Brock said Iva Jackson, Cindy Cooper and Patti Holthaus were responsible for most of the splinters. Cooper was one of the youngsters who, to say the least, didn’t disappoint Brock this spring. She made the all tournament team — as a fresh man — at third base. “I think the freshmen played outstanding,” Brock said. “In the final two games I had a freshman in left field, a fresh man in right field, a freshman at third base and a freshman at first base.” Cooper, who was home in Bartlesville, Okla., Tuesday, said the newness of the cham pionship series was hard to swal low until the time came to actual ly get out onto the field. “Before every game, I was real nervous,” Cooper said. “It was hard to eat. It was hard to even think about anything else but playing. “I remember every extra in ning that we went out there, we would keep saying, ‘three outs.’” But Cooper and the Aggies were able to throw away all the Lori Stoll nervousness after the 12th in ning Sunday against Fullerton. “I was crazy,” Cooper said. “I mean I was the happiest I’ve ever been. I was so tired from having to play so much, but yet it was like every bit of energy I had left I spent on yelling and hug ging people.” For Brock, the winning ex perience wasn’t a new one. His 1982 Aggies won the AIAW na tional championship. Neverthe less, he had powerful words of praise for his NCAA champion ship team: “I’ve never coached a team that was more together and more team-oriented. (They) never knew what the words ‘give up’ or ‘quit’ or ‘we’re through’ meant. “I’ve never seen a team with more composure and more en thusiasm for the game. And nev er once did they ever say, ‘we can’t win this tournament.’ “I’m very, very proud of them, as a coach. Basically all I did was make up lineups and en courage them. They did it them selves.” Food for Thought at a Discount Rate Texas A&M Students, Faculty & Staff Get a healthy balance of News, Sports, Business, Culture and Humor every day from The HOUSTON CHRONICLE. —SPECIAL SAVINGS— May 31-August 12 $10.00 May 31-August 31 $12.00 CALL 693-7815 or 693-2323 Houston Chronicle