The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 27, 1984, Image 15

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    Friday, January 26, 1984FThe Battalion/Page 15
Sledders ready for games
Georgia Tech no Rambling Wreck
general
ington Ri
for Los
:r A1 Davis
nmissionen
i Football Li
iuted oolite
OWecouldll & United Press International
it them tost i
kids." The fast tracks for Georgia
the United 1 Fech basketball have been few
gue challtt in d far between, but Bobby Cre-
cases beatir; appears to now have the
atball Leal Rambling Wreck in high gear,
top collect The last winning season was
is disturbed 1978-79, when Tech cagers were
g used,para 17-9. But that also was the season
jyer agents. Fech basketball was in limbo be-
'entsaretri -ause the school had just swilch-
ffofsomei -d from the Metro Conference to
kids don i )P e Atlantic Coast Conference —
t,” Beathan lIlc * wasn’t eligible to compete in
re the Super! : ‘ther.
otofmonei! X The first two years Tech play-
leliverapk'' * n l ^ e basketball-tough ACC,
ar league ill ls ^ague record was 1-13 and
know about ^14. 7 he last two were a little
akemoretli )etter > 3-11 and 4-10, but one
epresent. - would hardly have considered
y good pi Georgia Tech a threat to
signed r basketball hierarchy,
y cases, thej
ery bit as;
e NFL, k
not get as i
ted reponi
‘some aett:
gs to collept
to get tin
United Press International
NEW YORK — Luge and
bobsled are as alien to America as
the 3-6-3 double play is to East
ern Europe.
For those unfamiliar, though,
the difference is simple: in luge,
the risk is flying off an icy course
at 70 miles an hour. In the bob,
it’s flying off course at 70 mph
and having a 500-pound sled
land on you.
Despite the danger, both
sports intrigue the American au
dience — until the Winter Olym
pics end. Then they fade into
obscurity for four years, helping
to explain the USA’s lack of suc
cess in these events.
United States lugers have nev
er finished higher than 11th in
the Olympics, and the bobsled-
ders have not won a medal since a
bronze in the four-man event at
Cortina, Italy, in 1956.
East German and Swiss exper
tise — plus a Soviet sled with tail
fins — should ensure that Amer
icans must be satisfied with im
provement, not medals, in Sara
jevo, Yugoslavia, in February.
In the two-man bob, driver
Brent Rushlaw of Saranac Lake,
N.Y., and brakeman Jim Tyler of
Denver form the USA I. Rushlaw
took sixth at Lake Placid in 1980.
USA II consists of driver Fred
Fritsch and brakeman Wayne
DeAtley, both of Virginia Beach,
Va., and the U.S. navy.
Jeff Jost of Burke, N.Y., will
pilot the No. 1 four-man sled
with Tom Barnes of Dover, Del.; ner, a Stanford University stu
Joe Briski of San Diego, and Hal dent from Mt. Baldy, Calif, won
H oye of Malone, N.Y., as tFm first of the three available
brakeman. spots on the women’s team and
Rushlaw drives the No. 2 sled Toni Damigella and Teresa
with Ed Card of Claverack, N.Y.; Riedl, both of Lake Placid, joined
Pat Murphy of Painesville, Ohio, her.
and Frank Hansen of Albany. “I’ve wanted this ever since 1
“My goal is for a medal at Sara-started the luge,” said the 20-
jevo,” said Jost. “I have the run year-old Warner, who noticed
completely photographed and l he event in the 1980 Olympics,
memorized in my mind.” Two men’s doubles squads
As for the luge, Bonny War- will go to Sara jevo.
the
Even Cremins, now in his third
season as Tech’s basketball
coach, will tell you his team has a
way to go to compete against the
likes of North Carolina and
Maryland.
But he’s bringing the Ramb
ling Wreck up fast.
Starting two juniors, two soph
omores and a freshman, Georgia
Tech won 13 of its first 15 games
this season, losing by 2 points to
18th-ranked Georgia on a neut
ral court and only at Clemson in
its first four ACC outings.
One of those sophomores is 6-
foot guard Mark Price who led
the ACC in scoring as a freshman
last season with a 20.3 average
and got to play in the Pan Amer
ican games. The freshman is 6-
foot-4 New Yorker Bruce Dal-
rymple, who played his high
school basketball in Vermont and
who was Tech’s No. 2 scorer
(14.5 to Price’s 16.3) and No. 2
rebounder (7.6) through those
first 15 games.
Despite the 3-1 start in ACC
action, Cremins has no illusions
about continuing that pace with
in the conference, not with
home-and-away games still
ahead with top-ranked North
Carolina and 5th-ranked Mary
land.
‘‘Things are going to get
tougher for us,” said Cremins,
noting that after hosting Clem
son in a return match Thursday,
Tech visits North Carolina on
Saturday.
“The biggest thing about the
Clemson game is that they gave
us a real whipping (79-69) up
there,” said Cremins. “And play
ing North Carolina in Chapel
Hill will be a huge obstacle for
our kids. Obviously we will have
to play a great game or we will be
in trouble.
“We’re a young team that will
have to play like a senior team,”
said Cremins, “but we’re going to
give it everything we’ve got.”
The prematurely gray Cre
mins, a 36-year-old native of the
Bronx who played his college
basketball at South Carolina is
convinced his young team can
only get better.
Tech has lost only one of its
last 21 home games and in recent
weeks edged Wake Forest and
Virginia (in triple overtime).
“We don’t deserve to be in the
top 20, not just yet,” said Cre
mins. “We have a fine group of
kids here. I really like them. But
nationally ranked? I’ve got to be
honest. We’re not ready for that
yet.”
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General Sales Jan. 23
TOWN
HALL
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ying collegt
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beengoiiij!
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don’t test fl
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ght be intoi
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