Thursday, May 3, 1984/The Battalion/Page 15 endl selected best tennis player of 1983 Jt G-foot-9 OH Oil li (j n j te( j p ress International ni ings andtli, t Rambis'o/i| £fv YORK — Well rested g forwardV^ ^ a y s °f leisure and as faced a [/ting a nice Florida suntan, 1 Lendl was upbeat about inson, wliu^tiling except his tennis ailed a si»U e - ing blitz inifcf act > after receiving an , turning jK Wednesday as the out- lowoul tiing tennis player of 1983, ^ hard as till said: “I’d like to repeat in' /•v'n'lii n cxt year, but the way my ,nieandw '>s!game is now, I think I o happen H orec t 1 ancein g° lf - 1P ing happet'j P roblem Wllh Lendls kind of soi ic Mavericbi nine nothind ole in the il game is that he hasn’t been able to play for almost two weeks be cause of a hamstring injury in his left leg. Tuesday was the first day he practiced without pain. With the $500,000 Tourna ment of Champions beginning Sunday at Forest Hills, bringing with it possible matches against old rivals like John McEnroe and Jimmy Connors, this doesn’t allow Lendl much time to find his form. “I definitely didn’t have as much practice as I would have liked,” Lendl said, “but I’ll prac tice as much as I can the rest of this week. Obviously I would like to do well, and I’ll do the best I can under the limited cir cumstances.” Lendl was still overjoyed at Wednesday’s award, which car ried a prize of $10,000. Al though he failed once again to capture a Grand Slam championship in 1983, the 24- year-old Czechoslovakian was judged by computer rating to be the outstanding men’s tennis player of the year. McEnroe, the Wimbledon champion and Lendl’s personal choice as the No. 1 player for 1983, was a close runner-up in the computer ranking while Connors, who beat Lendl in the final of last year’s U.S. Open, was third. Lendl won 68 of 81 matches in 1983 for an .839 percentage, good enough to bring him eight championships. But although he says it doesn’t bother him particularly, he continues to be haunted by his failure to win due of the four Grand Slam ti tles. “Obviously I would like to win some,” he said, “but I’m not running out of time. I still have a few years left.” If he had his druthers of the Big Four, Lendl would prefer to win the U.S. Open because of its strong field of competition. idJ aseball: An Italian dream ed its United Press International BtSBURGH — David Fa- of nearby McKeesport, nsylvannia may make it into or league baseball via m. Italy, and that country’s npic team. righthander in the Italian Hill League, Farina keeps who raiikJig his mother, Molly Fa ll seven I , hot to gel her hopes up ilHe’ll catch on with the . gritan professional baseball blishmenl. v arina wants to break into 1 U majors intensely. But his Dodgers. ■ r wanls even more for ’ l , , v eldest of three athletically- t-hander ntedsons te gani^ Olympic Games in 0 against ^tigeles may be Farina’s and Hhance to fulfill his life- ,atcr : Hmbition — making it to miim- major leagues. ,e b (avid will fly his mother to fornia to see him and the htec ‘ ll! ia ns take on the Olympic dugoiiu u j n t ) ie non _ me dal compe- n. tenders itp, ' lt * 111 [fs definitely David’s dream iinair ee some thing happen (with 1,1 , | American team) from this,” bes '' ina’s mother said. “Baseball lS ?8 e ’ jHife and il is his dream to rmgApn j|L t j le jj g j_| e f ee i s if j ie Jp’t make it this year, he’s no1 S°* n 8 lo ma k e > l - Jn high school, he had a n'ti nil with the Pittsburgh Pi le tiiu , S) | )Ut t j lat was j ast L j nie i ■ading al , W of j f ee i he’s qualified for it that ft theft* qualified major leagues, but I’m his ie in iklahonts Hing out his 90-plus mph Conte T iiigs for Parma Parmalot, this p 1S | ina led the Italian Baseball n strikeouts the last years while compiling re- f 14-2, 17-2 and 16-2. king it' 111 The Soon f'etence r« >t) gantf* iiied Big I lived in Italy before emigrating. “We had to provide marriage licenses of my in-laws and all kinds of documents,” she said. The league’s American scout, John Noce of California, writes to schools about good players of Italian descent, she explained. The first time Noce contacted David at Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, Farina declined to join the league. “The second year he (Noce) came back to the house one day,” she said. “David loves baseball. That’s all he talks about. And he thought he didn’t have anything to lose. This is his fifth year over there Farina, who had starred for several local sandlot teams, quit a construction job to accept the offer in Italy in 1979. He and his wife, Janet, leave for his apartment in Parma in March, then return to McKees port in September or October, where they live with his mother, his brother, Deron, 18, a foot ball player at the University of North Carolina, and his sister Donna, 24, who quipped, “I’m not athletic.” Molly Farina spoke of David’s “gorgeous” trophies and med als, won in world tournament competition with Parma, noting her husband, David, who died in 1976, would be proud. “He was an avid baseball player,” she said. “He coached Little League. He worked every day of his life with David and his brother, Dom. This would be his dream. He taught them all he knows even up until 1976.” ar said he qualifies to play Italian Olympic team be- years " se i ie ; s Italian-American — 5 has 1 ;e 0 f h[ s four grandparents •d ana W ja to sntucky Derby field still ", pt down to final 20 horses United Press International trimmed to 20 just before the 3, said afjUISVILLE, Ky. Normally Jpon, unremarkable occur- the the arrival of horse vans jng to Churchill Downs Wednesday 0 n the oeiled an inordinate amount [iiniei^itteution. Ii built fRtpie directly connected ecause lb the 110th running of the jgh” Uucky Derby Saturday — m hot walkers to owners to pro 1 * 1 oners — were, in particular, Ic Ban 1 cerned by the sight of truck e en at l( s L os i n g around corners of >ney sin Kcrowded lanes woven gh the barns of Chur- backstretch. jat’s because all of them ifraid those vans might be ng in still more candi- for the already too-large bv field that must be post positions are drawn Thurs day. “It seems the cast of charac ters is changing daily,” Harold Rose, owner and trainer of Rex- son’s Hope, complained Wednesday. “Il makes it really difficult to try to figure out what’s going lo happen Satur day.” Instead of reducing and clar ifying the field for the Derby, the withdrawals of early favor ite Devil’s Bag and Santa Anita Derby winner Mighty Adver sary Tuesday did just the oppo site. Devil’s Bag, the two-year-old colt of the year in 1983, had withdrawn Tuesday because the 3-year-oldwas not conditioned to run the 1 '/i mile race. mi iDaniMaitfi/ /tical fy t0 II ^ ilties Just Prelease Your Furniture before May 31st, and We’ll Deliver it FREE!!! i Packages Tailored to Your Personal Tastes and Comfort. Freshman Package $39.95 Sophomore Package $49.95 Junior Package $59.95 Senior Package $69.95 Graduate Package $79.95 All Packages consist of a complete Living Room, Dining Room and Bedroom. (Individual Pieces Also Available) DEPENDS ON AVAILABILITY/STYLES SUBJECT TO CHANGE RENT NOW AND SAVE $ ——Certified FURNITURE RENTAL 913-D Harvey Road Woodstone Shopping Center College Station. Texas 77840 too may be afflicted with that old urge to play ball. Dom, a teacher and baseball coach at nearby Serra High School, and his wife will visit David in Italy this spring before the Olympics. “I’m just wondering what’s going to happen when he goes there now,” Farina mother said. VOTE MAY 5 th babtow Republican ______ U.S. Congress i McCrady, Treasurer ATTENTION Summer Students! The summer SHUTTLE BUS service for this year has been RESTRICTED to a few choice apartment properties. These few properties have shown enough concern for the needs of their residents to provide substantial subsidy to the shuttle bus program to enable them to offer this service EXCLUSIVELY to their residents. These are the ONLY properties that will have bus passes to issue, and any other properties advertising that they are "on the shuttle bus route" are doing so with the knowledge that their residents WILL NOT be allowed to ride the bus. Investigate thor oughly before signing a lease. Ulilkuiiick apartments 430 SW Parkway 693-1325 Dom, 26, a former baseball star at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, was as good a catcher as David was a pitcher, Molly Farina said, adding he MISSION. AMERICA’S CHOICE FOR LOW-PRICED JEWELRY FASHION TRUNKSHOW 14K GOLD BEADS 3mm BEAD REG. . 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